Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 09, 1906, EDITORIAL SECTION, Page 10, Image 10
I 10 TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 100(5. The Omaha Daily Bee. . E. HOSE WATER, EDITOR. Enteied at Orraha Foalofflce as second c.ass mail matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ialy Kee (without Sunday), one year. .$100 Dully Hm ami Bunduy, one year ' Mutidny Uee, one year.... ' itaturoay Hre. one year 150 DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Illy He (Including Sunday), per week.tTc pally He (without Sunday), per week...Ke Kver.lnsj Pee (without Sunday), per week. 6c Kvenlng Hee (with Sunday), per week...J0o Sunday Hte, per copy A'lclres complaint of Irregulerltles In de livery to City CI rcnlatlnn Department. OFFICES. Clnaha 1 Ik- Rep Building. H.jiitlt Omaha city Hull Building. Council muffs 10 Pearl Street. 'lilcagobHO I'nlty Building. w York-15" Home Life Ins. Building. Washington 501 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edl. t'M'lal matter should he addressed: Omaha K", Edlloilal Department. REMITTANCES. Icemlt hv draft, express or postal Order payable tci The Bee Publishing Coinpauy. 'July 2-onit stamps received aa payment of mall accounts Personal checks, except on 'Jtnshs or eastern exchange, not accepted, run BEE publishi.no COMPANY. STATEMENT OF PUBLICATION. Sts-le of -Nebraska, Doulaa County, ss: C. C. Rose water, general manager of Tha lice Publishing Company, being duly sworn, snys that the solum uumler of full and omrlrto copies of The Daily, Morning, livening and Sunday Bee printed during tha month of Mhv. 1906. was oa follows: i nu,vro is 81, mo t..r a:i.s20 i: at. so 3 31.KTO IS 31.HWI 4 ri.i:hi io aa,a7o h hv,:vm a :m,.v HO.OfMi , 21 St,)) 7 ai.mto 22 :n,to a Ht.niio 23 ai.o )..: ai..VM 24 ai.HNi ) .'II.CMM 23 3I.HB0 n ai.ttno ' 2t ,4fo 12 3K.ii.'0 21 Ht.HBO n ;mi.iiu ' is ai.Dto 14 51, TOO 29 34,740 i 31.S20 30 ai,at 31 8t,f40 Total e)0,B7o L-sit un.-ioM coplel.. lO.KMfl Net total sales 78,H4 Daily average 31,670 C. C. ROSE WATER, General Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me tills 4th day of June, 190. tacal) M. B. H UNGATE. Notary Public WHEN OUT OP TOWN, fcnbarribera leaving; the pity tean imrarlly ehoald have The Be mailed to them. Address will ! changed aa aftea aa reqoested. ; LB , Commissioner Nelll see nig to a "standpatter" of no uncertain sort. Fortunately Iowa Is a little too far north for lynchinsn to be fashionable State legislators who saved ' the Louisiana rapltol building; from fire can at least point with pride to this part of their record. Russian officers who served in Asia can paraphrase Admiral Slgsbee's re marks to the effect that there Is "trou ble enough to go around." At this distance it Is hard to see whether Chief Clerk Boyer was dis charged because he took rebates or becauae ho told about them. The next deal will have to include an arbitration commission to carry on negotiations between the democratic mayor and the democratic council. The. comparative easo with which John Mitchell settled the coal strike In Missouri causes wonder as to why the game methods do not prevail In Ohio. ' A man has been arrested for falsely representing himself to be a Denver policeman. He should be able to escape punishment on an Insanity plea. Five of the candidates filed in the Interest of father-in-law's candidacy for the senate are employes of the World-Herald oa rta.Ures of lta pro prietor. Keep It In the family. Pennsylvania atate constabulary seem more anxious to justify their em ployment than to preserve the peace- not An uncommon thing with men who draw salaries because of trouble. And now It la whispered unofficially that tbe water works appraisement may be expected before the end of thta month. On this aubject. how ever, the people of Omaha are from Missouri. ' The circus license ordinance will have to be doctored up again. The revised draft should be made more specific and tell exactly how many free tickets each Inmate of the city hall la entitled to. One of the holdup men whose crime resulted la the death of Street Car Conductor Flury has been sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment In the penitentiary. A few examples' like thla should put a decided damper on the holdup business. ' The statement that Speaker Cannon may not be a candidate for the presl daucy for fear that he may be called old la the flrat intimation that the apeaker fears anything but perhaps he la really reaching the age when a men develop caution. The appropriation made by the last legislature to pay wolf lountlea has been exhausted. It takes neither prophet nor the son of a prop net to see that the wolf bounty r?ihn will be entered in big figures in the next legislative appropriation sheet. Nebraska populists have an oppor t unity to make a strike by calling their state convention lo advance of the democratic atate convention and naming a populist ticket for the demo crats to endorse. If they wait for the democrata to act first they may be sure that their candidate will con atltute merely a populist tail to the democratic kite. INS PKCTION LtOtSLA TION 1MPKR A TITS. That there will be national legisla tion for extending and perfecting in spection of meat and meat products and the places and processes of their preparation so far as interstate and foreign commerce is concerned, Is now seen to be necessary tad Inevitable. Public sentiment Is all one war on the general proposition,' and those who fere engaged In the slaughter and packing industries profess willingness to have larger and stricter regulations. Ob viously, the Impression in the public mind at home apd abroad requires such legislation as a purely business necessity for rehabilitating and pre serving the market for our meats, if for no other reason. It is, of course, a legislative func tion, and the president, by his mes sage transmitting the report of the special Investigators who examined conditions at the Chicago packing houses, has signally emphasized the re sponsibility of congress. This was merely In addition to the fact that the Beverldge bill for amplified Inspection and regulation had passed the senate as a rider to the sundry civil appropria tion and was already before the house. The president, on the representations In the report of his agents, simply urges immediate legislation. As the cae stands the Chicago pack ing interests challenge the correctness Of many of those statements and ob ject positively to -some of the features of the pending Beverldge bill as un neceRsary, impractical, - burdensome and Injurious to packing 'and related industries, Including especially live stock. These interests, although they are not the only ones to be consid ered, arc of vast and vital importance, and it will be agreed on all hands that they" are worthy of the serious atten tion which congress is disposed to give to them in the preparation of a meas ure In line with the president's rec ommendation. But there Is no getting away from the Imperative necessity of evolving a system of Inspection so thorough and comprehensive as , to set the public mind at reBt regarding that vast por tion of the food supply which comes through the packing houses. Under existing conditions it is especially in cumbent on the packing Interests to co-operate to this end, making It clear to the world that they are pursuing no ulterior or merely obstructive pur pose. And In any event matters have come to such a pass that, congress must settle the question at this session If only to protect the meat and live stock industries from further damage. TBE SCNATK P THK CANAL. The prospect of a dead-set between tbe two branches of congress regard ing the Panama canal Is especially ex asperating at this time when the state of affairs on the. Isthmus Is becoming critical. Nothing less can be foreshad owed by the threats reported i from Washington to attach in the senate a Bea-level requirement to the bill car rying the appropriation for canal work for the ensuing year. Until congress met no one dreamed that the question of a sea-level canal would be seriously raised even in the senate canal committee, and even after it had returned a majority report in favor of that type the general belief was that the senate would decide against It. That belief now appears to have been incorrect. Beyond ques tion the house stands with the admin istration for a canal with locks. An appropriation rider requiring a sea level cnal could not. therefore, be construed otherwise than aa a direct slap at the president and as originat ing in hostility to the successful pros ecution of canal construction. Its first effect would be to precipitate an ardu ous struggle between the house and the senate. Meantime the canal authorities are reiterating their warnings that con gressional delay haa gone as far as It can go without bringing actual work on the isthmus . to a standstill. Sen ators, before they push this matter to the last extreme, should realize that they will be held by the country to a strict responsibility for the conse quences. PENNSYLVANIA REPUBLIC AN t . All reports, whether from friendly or hostile sources, agree that the re cent Pennsylvania republican conven tion was of an unprecedented char acter in that state, being free from ma chine dictation and registering the de liberate Judgment of the party at large. In no state in the union haa boas autocracy gone to greater lengths or more ruthlessly Imposed upon the people both tickets and platforms pre determined by those in control of party organization. It la significant that Pennsylvania newspapers, commenting on the con trasting condltiona of thla year's con vention very generally declare that those days are over, and point out that In lta proceedings and results no club was brandished, no delegate driven against his will, no cut and dried program rammed through. These statements are strongly corroborated by the result, tor whatever may be said aa to the ticket, which is of more Immediate local concern, there h nowhere been expression of more pro gressive republicanism than Is. con talned in tbe Pennsylvania platform. Though more elaborate than state platforms usually are expected to be, it takes advanced ground on all vital issues, evading and temporizing with none, and is especially strong not merely In general commendation of the president's policy, buf in specific approval of Its salient points, with spe cial emphasla upon his attitude towards public control of great corpor ations and cognate questions. r Such a showing In the great state of Pennsylvania Is by Itself a most notable and conspicuous sign at this Juncture when the nationwide strug gle is commencing in the congres sional and state legislative districts which will determine Whether Presi dent Roosevelt is to be sustained dur ing the last half of his term of office. It ought to move his supporters In other states to bestir themselves to make sure that no failure come through their default. ANOTHER THADK EXCURSION. The Commercial club Is arranging for another trade excursion to cover for the most part Nebraska territory, which looka exclusively to Omaha as the commercial metropolis. The suc cess of the projected excursion Is, of coarse, assured In advance, but the de gree of success will depend more or less upon the number of local jobberl and manufacturers who participate in it. The trade excursion has become part of the regular machinery of our Com mercial club for enlarging the sphere of Omaha's business activity. Nothing else has been found that so well serves the purpose of keeping our captains of commerce in close personal touch with the demands of the territory to whose patronage they cater. The result of this cultivated friend ship. is seen In our gratifying industrial statistics, indicating steadily increasing sales, and In the unprecedented growth of the jobbing business which has forced a practical reconstruction Of Omaha's wholesale district to provide the necessary accommodations. The tide of our trade expansion, however, hag not reached its height, but continues to swell, and one big factor in the movement is conceded to be the .periodic trade excursions as conducted under the auspices of the club with growing popularity both here at home and among our commercial customers. The steady increase of the trust funds in the custody of the state treas urer emphasizes again the necessity of modifying the provisions of the constitution governing the investment of these monies. The constitution limits the investment securities to United States "and state bonds and bonds of counties in this state, the .re sult being a forced purchase of bonds of far-away Btates because of Inability to get. enough county bonds and atae warrants to keep the money at home. Many of the investments of these trust funds are- maturing and before the time for reinvestment comes the authorised securities should be en larged to include properly secured municipal and school district bonds of Nebraska cities and school districts. The courts wlU .be asked to de termine In a test case whether the cleric of the district "court for Douglas county is entitled to retain the, fees paid hlnv ns head of the' insanity board or should account for-them to the county along with other fees of his office. We were under the impression that this point had been raised In an other county and settled by a court decision. How many test cases .are required to find out what the law is on this point? There Is nothing new in the an nouncement that Senator Millard is opposed to the nomination of a sen ator in convention. Senator Millard has been consistently opposed to con vention nomination from the flrat and has not disclosed his opposition to it. The republicans of tbe atate, how ever, have struck out along this line and it is doubtful t If they can be swerved from It at this stage of the game. The testimony of a Pennsylvania railroad man that rebates ceased when the "community of Interests", was es tablished la simply another way of saying, that by combination the rail roads were able to levy all the traffic would bear, Delegates to the 4 republican state convention in Iowa are fortunate In maintaining interest to the last since the candidates are not certain of the result and some delegates seem to be still in doubt as to their own rotes. Native Sons of the Golden West may not boast of the unconquerable spirit of California since San Francisco Is driven to ask congressional aid in floating bonds. Charleston and Gal veston have a prouder record. Liberty Gets a Boost. St, Louis Globe-Democrat. Something has been gained for liberty la RiiNsia. Tha newsDHDers are full of opea letters from Infuriated cltisena protesting against tha policy of the government and railing attention to ths Imbecility of tha csar. J a Old Story. Kansas City Journal. Still, tha Indorsement of Bryan by tht Missouri democracy Is not particularly sig nlflcant. Tha Missouri democrats bava been enthusiastlo for Bryan befora in years when they could deliver tha elec toral vote of tha stats to him. The rialsb at Bolton. Pittsburg Dispatch. Invention having provided battleships to crush the foe, torpedoes to blow up battle ships, destroyers to destroy tha torpedoes. submarines to wipe out the destroyers, with all the rest, and finally a machine to send the submarines to a still lower depth it gives the iaipreaslon -that the entire shooting match is predestined to destruc tion. Side Helps In Publicity. t Boston Transcript. Wendell Phillips' remark thai wt live under a government of tha daily newspap ers ought to be amended so a to Include tha novel with a causa. Upton Sinclair can now claim to have soma voice In tne government, to say not Mug of Ida Tar bell, wheae book, not In the furui of ac tion, doubtless hastened the Standard Oil ln eatigation. , EDWARD SOIKWATKR fOR SENATOR .lew C'aaattlaatlaa Seeded. Schuyler Free, Inre (Ind.). And now Charles J. Greene Has pulled out of the senatorial race at Omaha and left the field to Rosewater. aa Millard Is out of It by forre of necessity. Unless some combination is made to down The Bee editor, he will have Douglas county be hind him and have a big chance of land ing that senatorial prlre in the state con vention. ' With Roosevelt Prlarlples. Stanton Picket (rep). The announcement of Edward Rosewater as a cai.didate for t'nlted States senator has met Willi favorable comment by the pr.ss of the state. In our opinion Mr. Roewater is the ablest man so far an nounced aa a candidate. We are not par ticularly Interested In any one candidate, but hope the convention will sea nt to nominate a man with Roosevelt principles and enough nerve and brain to make them known. . How. to Be Wise. . Kulleiton New Journal (dem.). It Is Rosewater against the field and wise ones are placing their money on Rosey. Fight arrorlng Down. Nemaha Advertiser (rep.). The fight for- the- United States senator ship In tha republican party seems to have narrowed down to Attorney General Nor rlsBown and Rdawrd Rosewater, editor of The Omaha Bee, both representing the antl-rallroad sentiment. Rrpabllran'a Ablest Representative. Weeping Water Itrrald (rep.). The friends of Attorney General Norris Brown are making every effort to secure for him the support of republicans for United States senator and It would appear that Mr. Brown has a very good follow ing, ami Is considered In every way worthy the office. The Herald could not say a word ngnlnrt such a selection, but our choice would be E. Rosewater, for the Reason that we believe Mm to b the ablest man In Nebraska, and representing the great principles of republicanism. How It Looks from Afar. Blue Springs Sentinel (rep.). It looks now as though the Douglas county delegation In the next legislature would be a unit In supporting Kditor Rose water for the United States senate. quotes Opinion from Omaha. Beatrice Sun (ind.). The opinion from Oma'ha appears to be that in the Douglas county contest with Crounse, Rosewater will, to use a very comprehensive expression of a venerable Gage county statesman, "cat-hliri-up-raw." C'lrarlna; (he Track. . Utlca Sun (rep.). John li. Webster of Omaha, who has been a candidate for United States aenator, has withdrawn from the race and says that hf will not be a candidate at this time. He, like Charles Greene and G. W. Wattles probably saw thnt his efforts In getting the coveted prlKe would be futile as long as K. Rosewater of the Omaha Bee was making such a good showing for tha place. (limb Into the Bandwaaron. Plamvlew Republican (rep.). Of th 275 republican newspapers pub lished in Nebraska 1) are outspoken In favor of Edward Rosewater for United Btates senator, fifteen for Millard, five tor Webster and thirty for Norris Brown. The remainder are waiting for the band wagon. It tpoka like Rosewater against the field. Factor in fie Reckoned With. Norfolk Presa (rep.). John L. Webster ' has "withdrawn from the senatorial race, leaving the Douglas county field clear to Edward Rosewater. It Is hardly possible that the opposition to Tklr. 'Rosewater can bring out a candidate who can make any headway against the current now running so strongly In his favor. It Is therefore a certainty that the Rosewater candidacy Is . a decided factor to b reckoned with, and that the choice of the republican state convention will lie between him and Norris Brown. POLITICAL DRIFT. New Tork makes little effort to conceal Its amusement over the eiposura of Hearst's petition factory. Meanwhile the fellows who confessed to forging 1. 000 names In certal quarters are esteemed martyrs In the cause of reform. Republican politicians of New Tork state are discussing the availability of Governor Higg ns, Charles B. Hughes, Senator Brack ed nd Senator Stevens for the nomina tion for governor this fall. The democrats are mulling over D. Cady Herrlck, Justice William J. Gaynor, William R. Hearst and Mayor Adam of Buffalo. Tha average age of the nine justices of the supreme court of the United States is a fraction over 66V4 years, two being 73, one 70, one 6, one 68, one 68, one 03, one 61 and the junior 67. Justice Brown retires at 70. If Taft succeeds him at 49 the average age Will be somewhat reduced, but It will be made up In avoirdupois. f Jersey justice crooks the hinges of the knee occasionally. Thirteen freeholders and former freeholders of Ocean county have been lectured and fined $100 and costs each for malfeasance in cffflce. The judge who imposed this light penalty explained that the thirteen were men of high stand ing and had already suffered the penalty of indictment. , " A New Tork republican went to Wash ington to see about the transaction of a piece of publto business. As he once Hved In Ohio be called on Senator Dick and asked his assistance. "But why do you come to me?" asked Dick. "Why not en list the services of the senators from New York?" "We have no senators from New York," was the solemn answer. Oliver Hazard Perry Belmont, traction magnate of New York; Moses Wetmore and Senator Stone, Mlsaourians, have un dertaken to provide a tlO.OuO welooine for Colon&l Bryan when he lands in New York. The old-time "dollar dinner" has been cut out o! the program, the managers assum ing that a mar. of Mr. Bryan's conserve tivu tendencies deiervts something near Iti swell standard. 1 Concerning th junior senator from Massachusetts a correspondent writes: "Cin Blips st.Untly about with his julet smile. inv'tHKng down difficulties and rubbing the iur on the animals the right way. His motto is, 'Blessed are the peace makers,' and hia patron saint Is Henry Clay, who was well known In his day as "tha compromiser.' What Crane really ought to be Is chief Justice of an inter national court of arbitration. There would be no more war." The New York an says: "Horace B.ilcs, for years familiarly known aa "I'ncle Hod," democratic governor of Iowa for two terms, from HjQ In UM, Is now, at T. living on his farm at Waterloo, serene and com fortable as you please. Mr. Boles received sixty-seven votes for president on the Prst ballot in the national convention which in 1M4 nominated Mr. Bryan. Mr. Boies was 1 formerly a republican, but left that party because of his opposition to Its tariff policy. The last office for which Mr. Boies was a candidate was for congressman. Third dis trict of Iowa, In Mux, and be was defsattd. OTHER LANDS THAN OIR9. One of eeveral reasons' advanced In ex plaining the growing discontent of edu cated people of India against alien govern ment Is that tha prevailing system of edu cation, necessarily English. Inculates prin ciples of nationhood. An Etiglish professor in an Indian college accounts for it In this way: "The answer which almost all Indians give to the' question, "Whst has the English literature taught you?' is that it has taught them liberty to think for themselves; it has freed them from slavery to authority. This, perhaps, is not the lesson which a German or a Spaniard would extract from English literature, for the value and sug gest I veness of any new Idea depends largely upon the previously existing stock to which it is conjoined; but the Intellectual ante cedents of the Indians were suclv that this Idea more than any other appeared to him novel and suggestive. The characteristic of all Indian teaching In the past, whether Hindu or Mohamedan, has been reverence for nuthority. The young scholar has been taught to Justify his view by citing a great pandit or maulvi. and when he' had elected to follow a certain school of thought, It was sheer blasphemy to question the teach ing of any of Its great masters. With such antecedents It I not surprising that the moat wonderful and illuminating Idea In English literature should have been the freedom and Independence to which then, they found themselves suddenly Introduced Into a world In which Independent private Judgment was a duty, and the conscious ex ercise of It a virtue." It Is said that the new Russian minister of foreign affairs, M." Ivolsky, was among those who did their best to avert the dis astrous war between Russia and Japan, The Paris correspondent of the Iondon Times relates an Incident, for the truth of which he vouches, which occurred when M. Ivolsky represented Russia In jHpan before his transfer to Copenhagen and dur ing M. Wltte's tour of inspection of the Manchurlan railway. M. Wltte was at Dalny when SI. Ivolsky, In agreement With, the Japanese statesman. Count Ito, sounded him as to whether he would not also visit Japan. Th mikado and his govern ment were prepared, if he would do 0, to place at his disposal thi residence cus tomarily used only for the accomodation of foreign royalty. The plan Concelyed by M. Ivolsky and approved by the em peror of Japan and his advisers was to bring about a modus Vivendi with Rus sia whloh should avert all danger of war and crea-t! normal If not friendly relations between the two countries. . Without the extension of any formal Invitation, the Idea was communicated to M. W'itte. His answer was. a refusal couched in cool terms, leaving no doubt as to the unfavorable re ply that would be received from St. Pet ersburg If any such proposal werp officially made. This Incident, adds the corespondent, has considerable Importance In connection with M. Ivolsky's appointment as minister for foreign affairs. Two hundred and seventeen architects from almost every country In the world entered for the competition with designs for Mr. Carnegie's "Palace of Peace" at The Hague, within, the walls of which fu ture tribunals will attempt to settle Inter national disputes, suggest disarmaments, and make peace inevitable. No fewer than .038 drawings were sent In. The result of the contest, as already announced In the cable dispatches, was that the first prlie had been awarded tfo M. Cordonhler for his design, which appears to be a splendidly executed conception of the style of the cha- tcaus of northern France. By the acceptance of his design M. Cor donnler will receive 5,0. His drawing shows the main building flanked by high towers, two of which are at each end of the facade. The chief feature of the In terior will be a magVliWnt "Hall of Ar bitration." where. It Is hoped by the dis ciples of Bloch and Carnegie, the fate of nations may be tranquilly decided. M. Cordonnler Is 62 years of age and has had a most distinguished career. He de signed the Pasteur statue for Paris, the 'Hotel de Vllle at Dunkirk, and, among 170 competitors, won tha first prixe In th International contest for the Stock ex change at Amsterdam. At a recent French cabinet council, held at tha Elisee, it was decided to order a judicial inquiry into the'' circumstances of a complaint submitted to the ministry, re garding an alleged Infringement of the lib arty of Usbor. About 1,300 hands engaged In a steel foundry at Vlllerupt. in the de partment of Meurthe et Moselle, were dls missed, and a list of their names was for warded to the managers of similar works In the district. A deputation from these workmen visited the minister of Jhe In. terlor and directed his attention to the In Jury thus Inflicted upon them. They claimed to have been prevented from find lng other work, and added that eighty-two of their number who had found employ. ment elsewhere after their dismissal had been discharged by their new employers as soon as their identity had been made known. According to a semi-official an nouncsment the minister of the Interior has caused assistance to be sent to the workmen thus deprived of an opportunity of earning their living. This significant decision, together with the appointment announced in the Journal Official, of commission o draft a government bill granting to cltisena In the service of the state certain of the rights already sc corded by the law to trade unions. Is re. garded aa a pretty plain Indication of the attitude of the present French cabinet to. wards the labor problem. The British premier Is an adept t "Jol. lying" delegations that visit him In sup port of the various causes they have at heart, but there is no reason to doubt his sincerity In assuring the delegation of 40A women suffragists that he heartily ac cepted In principle the cause they advo cated, and that personally he regarded women as no less qualified to exercise the right to vote than the men. Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman', in this statement probably reflected the predominant sentl- ment of tho liberal party, which naturally finds In the woman suffrage Idea some thing theoretically In harmony with the liberal tradition. The psemler gave much dissatisfaction, however, to the delegation by declining to make this extension of the franchise a part of the government's work ing program. He would commit himself no farther than to, say that the cause would probably triumph In England before many yeara had passed. A bill for tha regulation of advertise ments which met with favor In the Eng lish House of Lords last year haa Just been Introduced Into the Commons, amended only by extension of the period of grace to live yeara. The bill la on the same principle as the legislation in some parts of hs United Btates for the protection of parks and park entrances, but Is more comprehensive, authorising local authori ties to restrict advertisements "which might affect Injuriously the amenities of a public, park or pleasure promenade, or might disfigure tha natural beauties of a landscape." Asanstnsj Pretenders I Baltimore American. Europe Is shocked at the revelations of rottenness In American business operations. Of course, the business morality of Europe haa been of childlike purity and Innocence in 1U nature, and scandal there la ftnanolal circles la a thing unknown. RAILROAD VERMS IRRIGATION. Poller Onlllned la Recent Decision ky the President. New York Tribune. The vast Irrigation projects of t lie nat tlonal government have given rise to legal questions of some Intricacy, and the whole subject of water rights In the sparsely watered regions of the west Is one Of great Importsnce. A recent derision made by President Roosevelt in regsrd to the respective claims of the reclamation serv ice and of private enterprises Is worthy of attention as Indicating the policy to be pursued In the future. One of the most extensive and Important Items of the reclamation program has been the execution 0 the Kremmllng reservoir project. Involving the construction of a dam in Uore canyon of the Grand river, Colorado, the water thus Impounded to be used for the Irrigation of lands In Cali fornia and Arlsona, 1,200 miles away. The canyon was reserved for reclamation pur poses after the enterprise of David H. Moffatt and associates for the building of a railroad from Denver to Salt Lake City had been launched. The securing of a right-of-way through th canyon was not absolutely essential to the success of the rallrond building project, hut It wss so Important that th projectors have for four years been fighting the government's plans for reserving the canyon for recla mation purposes. 7n view of the fsct that there was no money available for the building of the Kremmllng reservoir and no likelihood of obtaining any for several years, Judge ITallett of the fnlted States circuit court decided that the Interior de partment had no good reason for with holding its consent to the construction of a railroad through the canyon. Secretary Hitchcock appealed from the decision, and after listening to the arguments of the Colorado cspltallsts who are Interested In the railroad the president ordered the appeal dismissed. His grounds for such action are that the development hy the railroad of a grest coal bearing district In Colorado IS" Of more Importance than the irrigation of territory outside of that state, especially since the Irrigation project would have to wait an Indefinite number of years for even a beginning, whereas a considerable part of the work ontb railroad has al ready been done. In these great Irriga tion projects, besides, consideration must be had for Jealousies between different states. At this distance. It seems as If the cltiaens of Colorado would hare had ground for complaint against the. reclama tion sen-Ice if the original opposition to the building of the railroad through Gore canyon had been persisted in. Good Results front Agitation. Chicago News. In the matter of carelessness regarding food supply America's record Is probably as bad aa that of any first-rate, producing nation, but the reformatory work now be gun is likely to he far-reaching. If prop erly carried on. It promises to put the busi ness of food preparation on a scientific s,nd sanitary basis, not only here, but e tiros d. If In place of our haphazard methods of manufacture and our happy-go-lucky sys tem of inapectlon we substitute a scientific system of procedure there Is likely to be a raising of standards In the matter of food supply throughout the world, with conse quent benefit to the human race every where. Browning, liing & Co uRIGINATOlS AND SOLE MAKE1S Of IaLP SIZES IN CLOTrllNO. - 1 lie erp It's always a favorite; wear it any time or anywhere, it's always right. Look out for poor serge suits there's lots of them. A - poor serge suit is an abomi nation. The serge must be right and the tailoring must be right take no risks. If you come to us for your serge suit you will be in safe hands: Suits: $15 $18, $20, $2; guaranteed Soft Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Belts and Straw Hats to go with the suits. FilteenUi and vouQias aise HC1' Broadway at 2ad Street KTW VyORK GET A PIANO That You'll Be Proud of That's what moat people lnund to do when they buy, but many find to their sorrow that they have been deceived. Sometimea lt'g the neceesity of our friend, the dealer, to sell only the one make of piano he represents of the one he must push because that particular factory dominates hia business. Again it'a a dealer who doesn't care for you, but carea only for the amount of money he can make and constdera It a trick well turned to charge you $100 more for the piano than he doea someone else. Or it may be that he la paying some would-be friend of your a commission to recommend a piano which he ia selling for more than it'a worth because of the commission. These are some of the un healthy thlnga in the piano trade which in the end make you dlasatla ned with the piano you buy. The Hoepe plan of one price and no commlaaiou ia a benefit and in aurea to each cuatomer the very beat and moat deairable Instrument for the money paid, and the further advantage that no piano will be mis represented. , We aeil $200 pianoa for 1141 We aell IJ50 pianoa for I10 We aell $300 pianoa for 1226 Terms, 6.00, 17.00, fl.00 a Month. A. H0SPE C0 '"VJiS'r" We Po Proof Piano Tuning, M-A4. JtLISO REMARKS. McKIbb That fellow Huskie called me a liar! Newltt Yes? ' ... McKIbb Ye. What would you do aboul ItT ... Newltt Well, If 1 were you Id make It a point alwavs to tell the truth when he s around.-Philadelphla Catholic Standard. "So vim long for the time alien the alt ship will be a commercial resllty. "Mure." answered the baggageman with some enthusiasm. "Think of dropln off a trunk vt a wav station from a height of about two mile:' Louisville Courier Juurr.sl.. Kmplover Jimmy. I let you off vesterday afternoon because you said you had '" necessary work to do, and one of my clerka says he saw you an hour or two later at the hall game." , . office buy les. sir; I was rootln fur lis home loam. Chicago Tribune. "Why. Mr. Knox." said the landlady to the new hoarder, 'you have ict a piece of butter fall In your coffe?!" "I did it on purpose. Mr. Hasher," re plied the n. b. "I bi-lloe In compelling the strong to assist the weak." Columbus Dispatch. Morglana hud Just poured oil over th forty thieve. "I suppose," she remarked, "there will next be s novelist around to say thny aten't properly canned." Herewith she calmly awaited th in evitable. New York Sun. "I, wonder," suld Burroughs, loading up to a touch for a loan, "what s the origin of thst slang word 'dough' for money.' "Some believe." replied lenders, "that It's derived from the ltln 'do.' meaning 'I give." But that s all off now. 1 don t give any more." Philadelphia Press. TlIK M4A WITH THK HAMMKR. John Kendrlck Bangs In New York Sun. Oh, what la the use of these stories of old, of deeds that were daring and hearts that were boldT Come, let us have at 'em with hammer end mace; let's rip 'cm and slash em lll never a trace Remains of their glamor, their glory anil pride: to arhes reduce them snd scat ter them wide. Ho-ho for the tale of young Mr. Revere, tale to the sehoolmarm ,and pupil so dear! Ha, ha for his horse that came clatterin by. foam-flocked from his bit to Ins nethermost thigh Rever,- couldn't ride on ' a three-leggrd stool, and 1 know for a fact that the nag was a mule! Ha, ha, for the story of Washington's sx that showed his devotion to plain, simple fax That cherry tree tale Is too silly by half and would bring a broad smile to the lips of the calf. . The tree was a sapling of -turpentine small, and Washington never went near it at all!. And Barbara Frletchle, threescore and 5 ray-haired. who bd 'Stonewall ackson to shoot If he dared. At which Jackson didn't, but passed on his nag, with never a shot nt that beautiful flag The story's th veriest, totalest bosh; the thing she hung out was old Barbara s wash ! ( And so they run on in a ne'er ending stream tales flimsy and ldln and vain as a dream. Old Tut and his hill and BUI Jonah s big whale fish stories like that have the steadiest sale; Sis Walter. Queen Bess, and the, nurtnie and cloak the garment was old and Sir Walter was broke. I'm after them all with my hammer and tongs, and I'll bring each one down Just where It belongs. I'll smash m and slash 'em, 111 cut em all down; I'll whack 'em and craca em and do them up brown: For I am the Man with the Hammer of Steel, who doesn't want much, u must have it real I J OMAHA NEB. raceerr. Caepwr