0 Tlffi OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, AUGUST lfi, 1906. The Omaha Daily Bee. E. ROSE WATER, EDITOR. Enttrfd at Omafta Posloffic claa matter. M Second TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Be (without Sunday), on year. .HO Va.ur be and Sunday, on jraar. ....... J W hunday Bee, on year f BaturUay Bee, on year " DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Daily B (Including Sunday), P' wek..l7c Dally Bee (without Sunday, per wmH..1M livening 1)n (without Sunday). V' wW o Evening (with Sunday), Pr week.. 10c Sunday bee, per cod ............... Address complaints of Irregularities In de livery to City Circulation Department. offices. Omaha Th Be Building. South Omaha City nail Building. Council .Hiuff 10 Pearl Street. Chlcago-lsee Unity Building. -,..- New York-uW Home Lue In. Building Washington 601 fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communlaatlon relating to newa and dl torlai matter ahould b addressed: umana Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, xpres or poital order payable to Th Be Publlahlng Company. Only t-cent stamp received aa payment 01 mall account. Personal check. except ou Omaha or eastern exchanges, not eccepieo, TUB BEE PUBUBIUNO COM PAN T . STATEMENT OP CIRCULATION. Stat of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss: C C. Roswatr, general manager or Th Bee Publlehtor company, being duly worn. ay that the actual "Lumber . full and complete cople of Th DeJ'y. Morning, Evening and Sunaay Be P''01? during th month of July, 10 waa aa follows: 1 80,10 I si,no I... 98,830 4.. aa.soo 1 89300 81.BS0 t sa,aao I 80300 I B1.M0 JO.. 8160 11 31,630 1Z 8330 II. ... 83,360 14 84,080 It 80,400 17 8130 II 81380 It.,. 81380 ,,... 81,880 1 89,480 S 80,800 S1.TM 4... 81.080 14.... 81,830 ,t S13T0 i 81,780 I 88,180 30380 0 31330 II 81318 14 33,900 Total ..... .88T30 Less untold cople 10,808 Ket total sal ' M?a Dally average aixs C C. ROSEWATER, General Manager. . BuUecrlbed In my prenc and sworn to befor m this Il.t aay of J-Jy..104- (beat.) M. 14. HLNUArn ' Notary Publlx when out or to-wh. Sahserlher leaving- th city tea, norarlly ahealo have T Bee nailed to them. Addreea will be ohaaaen a ottos aa reaalrea. rr : As a "trade booster" Secretary Root Is a success If the action of Brasll Is a criterion. The reported discovery of lead in Lincoln -county may - merely Indicate that an old cemetery has been dug up. South American republics should realize that the "Drsgo" doctrine will have a new aspect when their citizens begin to Jepd money, abroad. . t Minnesota will have to amend its summer resort literature when visitors from Kansas and Missouri : are pros trated by heat in Minneapolis. 'The local democratic organ la al ready calling, on. sesersj iit thencwly elected democratic councllmen to re sign. We expected this, but not so soon. "' St. Joseph reports the drouth broken, but Governor Folk can claim no Buchanan county votes on that ac count, aa the ltd continues down on 8unday. The statistics compiled by tho state labor bureau show that while Ne braska la a great corn atate and also a great wheat state. It Is fast becom ing a great fruit state, too. Texas republicans, like Nebraska democrats,' have the satisfaction of knowing they csn fight out their party differences with little Immediate effect on the public policy of the state. That Insurance company which de mands a' Jury In the trial ot a case brought by a San Francisco policy bolder evidently has aa much faith in mankind as In Its version of the law ..Chairman 8k lies' remarks at Lin coin are particularly noticeable for the fact that he did not point with pride to the record of fusion administrations on subjects now of vital Interest In the state,..- , .. - Now that .Colonel Greene claims to have 'traced the soWoa ot the Mexican mine riots to New York brokers en deavoring to depreciate the value of the stock, the Incident may be consid ered closed. Persian naivete Is refreshing. The reformers now demand a free press so tho shah can learn "nothing but the truth'4jut, perhspa the wise meuof the old empire have a plan to elimi nate yellow Journalism. for the demo- ' " - haud first 'i"i;y usually hav named iji tho Iss tnd 1-rejected in - oairvr in lit It H " In ' v , ' uuUl the le-iui: TfiJP GJM.TD JRMT AT M1X3KAPOLI9. The spectacle- of 15.000 veteran ot tho Grand Army' of the Republic tnaseed In Minneapolis for the annual parade la fall of pathetic as well at Inspiring Interest Age and infirmities cannot bat be as apparent in their ranks now aa rigor and buoyancy were when they and their comrades who no. longer anawer roll call marched forth to tare the threatened union. Forty-one yearshave passed alnce Sum ter waa Bred on, almost as long a period as that which separates the breaking oat of the war of 1812 and the civil war. With only the rarest exceptions tho veterans marshalled at Min neapolis must be beyond slit years, many of them pant three score and ten, snd stricken with the deen hur,t of wounds In battle and the haidshlps of camp and march and hospital. The records show how rapidly the ranks are thinning now and make sorrow fully sure 'that they must thin more rapidly henceforth. It can be only a few, s very few years, when the last public array of survivors will appear and not long till the host that sus tained Abraham Lincoln for the union will hare vanished forever from the earth. Tho nation would be untrue to It self If It failed to hold these patriots In Increasing honor as their circle nar rows. Their presence yet Is an In spiration to tho generation that has come to manhood after them, and that enjoys as its richest heritage the fruits of their sacrifices to country. It Is the supreme duty of this generation and Its successors to be Imbued with the spirit of these heroes, that it fall not when the Inspiration of their living presence shall hare passed away. UrrSiTIM SAN FRANCISCO'S Losses. After several months of fruitless effort to settle San Francisco losses with some of tho Are insurance, com panies' litigation has been Inaugurated which Is likely to prove almost inter minable. The crucial point In contro versy Is the question of fact whether loss was caused by fire or by earth quake, liability for the latter being excepted In nearly all the Insurance contracts. In many cases ke two causes are obviously, bo intermingled that it is almost impossible to deter mine which one was the true source of loss in the legal sense; while by far the greater part was due, directly or in directly, to fire which the earthquake caused. The field thus for legal con troversy Is almost Illimitable. The mere fact of serious litigation, however, practically cancels insurance to a great extent., so, far' as property owners are concerned, fad matter what the ultimate decision In the courts may be, because insurance protection depends upon prompt payment. The costs and the delays In such a case will have a paralysing- effect even though Judgment for the full amount should be finally won,, and doubtless prompt settlement tor attraction of it without litigation, if it could be got, would be more advantageous. It is fortunate that many of the com panies. Including some of the strongest ones having extensive risks, have al ready settled or agreed on a settle ment basis. But the submission of the controversy to the courts by other strong companies will naturally tend to prevent or delay settlements where they have not been yet reached. Upon the whole the hope raised by assur ances Immediately after the disaster of prompt, payment of losses on a liberal basis has not been realized, thus cre ating one of the serious obstacles in the way of rebuilding the city. ATTACK OK THE BATE LAW. The first concerted effort of the great railroad companies to minimize the effect of the amended Interstate commerce law was addressed to the commission Itself, which was put un der great pressure to suspend Indefl nltely some of the Important' require roents like the one 'relating to notice of change ot rates, - but .. that effort failed completely,' the commission re fusing to commit itself to narrowing the law's effect by so much as a hair's breadth. But that move Js only preliminary to the real , struggle, for which . the railroad companies In union are now making, preparations, and which la said to have for its purpose nothing less than the annihilation by Judicial decision ot the tmportant new powers over transportation rates and services provided for in the act passed at the late session of congress. The secret conferences now la progress in, New York of a .hundred lawyers known to represent the great carrier corpora tions, together with a large number of thO ablest railroad officials, are plausi bly believed to be tor agreeing on a plan of legal battle against the law, which Is the culmination of, a design formed, last spring as soon as It be came apparent that the law would be placed on the statute .book, and In ac cordance with which preparations have been In progress ever since. '' Indeed the basis for such attack was U!d .long before congress convened, its main legal and constitutional 'n were presented in bold outline e.ior Foraker's . great speech In to the bill at the very open ; i ' a' senate "debate. " They go to t root of the matter, Involving r y the questions of Judicial f i'Ung rates by commission, .mage responsibility, etc., : ovlsloa are essential i f the lw, but also the ;ion whether that statutory forms t've; commission. ' :reen tat Ives of i..rid railroad In- : ' i . ates are uoder :u!aiag la the strategy of the contest, so that their legal and constitutional case may be presented to the courts In the most advantageous and effective manner. The prospect, therefore, Is that any hope that the carrier corporations might submit to public authority un der the rules laid down by the national legislature will be disappointed, and that a corporation effort as memorable and arduous as the popular movement to secure tho statute will be made to annul or at least to emasculate it through the Judiciary. Confederated corporation Interests undoubtedly hare It In their power to force the is sue if they are so unwise aa to hatard the consequences to themselres ot such an exasperating challenge ot pub lic Interest, but whaterer the court decision may be, they are powerless to prevent public control. TAKE CARS Or THE CITT HALL. The new mayor and council hav been in office now for nearly three months, but they have not yet taken the first step toward putting the city hall building in a state of decent re pair. This handsome structure, which rep resents an Investment ot more than half a million dollars, has been allowed through false economy to fall into a dilapidated condition which calls for prompt attention. If, as we have said before, the city hall building belonged to a private Individual or corporation, it would be kept up as a matter of self Interest, and if the city were a tenant Instead of the owner it would long ago have made the landlord fix It up under threat of moving put. . It should not be necessary to cite specifically in the public prints ' the different points that need Immediate repair or restoration. They are mani fest to the most casual observer and flaunt themselves upon every visitor. The city hall should be one of the pub lic buildings to which our people would take strangers to show them evidence of our public spirit and enterprise, but under present conditions it would leave bad impression rather than a good impression supon strangers. The question Is, how long must we wait for the ctty authoritiea to wake up to this situation and take the neces sary action to remedy it? Officers of the Rock Island road In sist that in their controrersy with the Omaha Commercial club their road has been doing the fair thing and Intimate that some of their trouble Is stirred up by competing roads that want to get the benefit of dlrerted business. There may be a measure of trutfi in all of this, but all the roads entering Omaha should learn the salutary lesson that our business men and shippers will stand for no adverse discrimination of any kind. Mayor Dahlman is entitled to credit for reducing the city tax rate so far as the reduction is brought about by holding down the expenses of city gov ernment, but not so far as It rests upon failure to pay accumulating bills for hydrant rentals, which are only "stood off," nor by figuring on renewal bonds to take up maturing bond obligations. South Omaha is about to get down to tho question of designs for Its pro posed new city hall building. In plan ning the structure the possibilities of the future should be kept In mind South Omaha and Omaha will be under one city government some day, no mat ter how long 'the formal consolidation may be deferred. The people of Omaha Indicated their uncompromising opposition to fifty year franchises when the gas company franchise extension was up ' and the gas company was forced to recede to a twenty-five-year term. Nothing has since happened to support the belief that public sentiment has changed on this point Colonel Wetmore declares Mr. Bryan to be broader than ever. Per haps the Missouri millionaire has con vinced the Nebraskan that the proper way to handle the trusts Is the way he adopted toward the tobacco combine sell to them at twice the cost value of the plant. That sixty-seven-year-old executor of the will of Russell Sage no doubt has hope that with the flight of time he may acquire that , soundness of Judgment for which Mr. Sage was noted, but doubtless trembles to think of the fortune entrusted to one so young. Governor Hoch of Kansas Is making a strong bid for membership in the society of practical Jokers, having named five candldatea for United States senatorship as delegates to the Des Moines conference to devise plans for the election of senators by popular vgte. The International Brotherhood of Stationary Firemen. is holding' Its an nual convention In Omaha. Visiting delegates are Invited to make them selves at home and they have Omaha's best wishes for a successful and satis factory meeting. Anticipated Tnlaara. Minneapolis Journal- . . . Iowa democrat anticipated events slightly by holding their slat convention .at Waterloo. Warta Kevalaar la Mlal. Chicago TrlbUn. It seems to have escaped th attention of a great many anxious persons that Presi dent Roosevelt has two years and a half yet to serve. Twtar frasa Common (. Cincinnati Enquirer. Secretary Bonapart says that socialism and anarchism ar divers (wigs proceed tng from a coumon root. Ideal socialism, he says, existed among th alave on south ern plantation The secretary hits th nail on Ui head so frequently and so vigorously POSITION OF EDWARD ROSEWATER Record Shows that He is the Friend and Not the Enemy of Religion and Education. Lincoln OMAHA. Neb.. Aug. II. To the Editor of th Stat Journal: You have Seen fit to 81 e extenalve publicity to th resolu tion ald to have been adopted by rr p resentatlvea of th Christian and Metlu dlat churches participating In the recent encampment of the Epworth league hold-. In th vicinity of Lincoln, stigmatising me as an enemy of education and religion and .th champion of th liquor dealers and the lawvuss classes. Incidentally these resolution also embodied an fp- peal to member of th leagu to exert their Influence for my defeat as a can- dldata for United State senator In re- tallatlon. for th course I had pursued in opposition to th prohibition amend- ment submitted to th peopl sixteen year ago.. Such resolutions, naturally, hav a tendency with those, who ar not laminar witn my career ana conduct to create a prejudice and vn hatred among many good peopl who accept a gospel what Is said by men who officiate at the pulpit, n There is as much danger from Intem perance In speech as there Is from Intem perance In eating and drinking. I have no disposition to reopen th discussion of prohibition as a sur our for th drink naoiu in issue waa discussed In open debate by th advocates of prohibition and uiga li cans ana every word uttered on behalf of both side given publicly in the columns of Th Be without charge to either party, although at the time It was asserted by the prohibition organs and leaders -that I received $100,000, to lift th mortgage from The Bee building, from th brewer and distiller. Inasmuch as not a dollar of that mortgage has been lifted. It would seem that there waa a (1) and five ciphers too many in the figures. The unsophisticated members of the Ep worth league may be surprised and shocked when I tell them that in my op position to prohibition I had the active co operation of all German Lutheran mlnls- ter In Nebraska and most of the Eplsco- pal ministers as well as prominent preach- ers of other protestant denominations, This la, however, neither here nor there encouragement frem the Ministerial ea st this Juncture, but in order to dispel soclatlon. I had a bill Introduced In the th delusion under which my charitable last legislature to effect this reform, but I Christian friends of the Epworth leagu' received no backing or encouragement from are laboring permit me to state a few the Epworth league, which seems to Drefer facts: Within six months after the defeat of the prohibition amendment Bishop John P. Newman, by all odds the brightest mind as well as the most high-minded divine th Methodist church of America has produced, tendered me the appoint ment of chairman of the executive corn- mlttee of the Methodist church In Omaha, organised for the purpoae of raising a guaranty fund of $25,000 to defray the ex- penses of the International Methodist con- rerence neia in Omaha In May, 1891. I ac- cepted the position and raised the money, contributing $250 toward the fund myself. that there Isn't much carpentering to dp when he gets through. Slleaee the Better Part. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Careful tests hav shown that British packing house products are worse than the American brand. In other words, the Eng lish pot cannot call the American kettle black. Yob rsa't .Leie Him. New Tork Sun. The Hon. Cato , Bells has re-arlsen In Iowa politics, ffet' to' "redeeming" Iowa, this Is th most' Impressive thing that could happen In it. ' The re-arising was ap propriately celebrated by two brass bands. The Hon. Cato Sells never travels with less.. Explanation In Order. Kearney Hub. How comes It that Mayor Dshlman overlooked th detnoeratlc statesman of Kesrney In appointing his Bryan reception committee to assist in the greeting to Bryan at New York August 80. We have just as good democrats In Kearney as ever pulled a cork. Explanation la In order. Wnrklnar I'n Tlaht Money Scare. Philadelphia Record. W have got the crops, and now the ques tion arises: Where is the money to come from to move 'hem? The western banks assert their ability this year to meet th strain of crop moving upon their resources, but as a large part of their surplus cash Is loaned In the east Its withdraws! will create the usual stringency. It will be well for business men to make their usual provident preparation against "tight money" conditions. A Western Railroad Bnllder. Springfield (Mass. Republican. Senator William A. Clark of Montana, the copper king, will not leave behind him a record of success In the senate, but ho will at least deserve fame as a remarknhla railroad builder and developer of new ter ritory. His railroad from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles and the seaport of San Pedro, which Is reported to have been btillt entirely on "his Income, has already been In operation some time. Now he Is building a line 226 mile long, which will run from Las Vegas In New Mexico to Tonopah In Nevada. The completion of this road will mean much to the far western mining In dustry. Senator Clark is reported as saying that he hopes a railroad will eventually be built to Alaska, but whether he con templates providing such a thing hlmsotf la not stated. SAD CASK OK ROIND BALE JIM. Trnst Baater from Arkansas TimMta from Hla Perch. New Tork Sun. Round Bale Jim of Arkansas, la a a hor rible example for the youth of the nation. Ten year ago he waa aa pure a truat buster, as could be found Jn a day' walk. Today he has sunk so low that he has no sham In advocating th wicked aohemes of th very head and giant of all th corpora tions In th land. Like many another, Jim Jonea has fallen by degrees to th state In which he now la. Hla first excursion from th narrow path was short. Had h reformed then he might hav been saved. But the fruit of trans gression wer sweet. Jim liked their taste. Further and further aSeld he wandered until ' th ' round cotton bale truat caught him. Front that moment Jim Jonea waa loat. Trust busting knew hl.a no more. He cut himself off from his old friends. H associated with the, enslaver of a nation. He began to be proud of bis growing bank account. He put th dollar abov the man. Thua in tlma he am within th Influ ence of tho Btandard Oil company. H did not seek to repulse Its advances. II yielded gladly to Ha summons. H enlisted as Ita attorney. He agreed to fight It battle against th downtrodden and oppressed hi whose behalf so short a time ago he labored valoroualy. Sad beyond word la th sfory of Round Bala Jim' apostasy. His ca Menu to b hopeless. H himself doea not realise his degradation.- He has offered to com east and supervise in person the reception to be given to William Jcnninga Bryan. Per haps he hope In this way ta preserve hi standing as an anti-monopolist, but even Bill tb Taint Killer will deapalr of sav ing a man so far goo to Iniquity. Journal. Within the period of my residence In Omaha I have contributed thousands and thousand of dollars to various protectant religions, philanthropic and educational In stitutions In Omaha and Nebraska, and have several hundred dollars of those uberlptlon yet to pay. I contributed 1250 to the Toung Women's Christian association building and another tZM to the Toung Men's Christian assocla- tlon building now under construction in Omaha. I have subscribed 1300 to the Swedish hos- pttal. I gave 1100 to the First Mathodlst church building and 1100 more to lift the mortgage from that structure. I have contributed from IS to 1100 toward the erection of nearly every other Prot estant church In Omaha, and hundreds of dollars to charitable Institutions at Omaha, Strange as It may seem I hold a receipt for 150 to lift the mortgage on the Cottier university at Lincoln, And these contributions In money made In th face of the fact that I am a heavy borrower and par Interest on every dollar I hav given, are comparatively Inslmlfl- cant, when measured by th ralue of the space devoted by The Bee to the dlsseml nation of religious doctrines embodied In the sermons of Protestant ministers en abled thus to reach tens of thousands through that medium where they would not reach hundreds from their own Bulolts While being stigmatised as th enemy of education let me recall that I framed the law of th Board of Education of the city of Omaha and put it through the legiela ture when I was a member, and at the same session I also secured the first legislative appropriation for the erection of the State Deaf and Dumb Institute, designed solely for the education of that unfortunate clsss. As to my championship of the vicious classes, let me call attention to the fact that I have repeatedly urged Governor Mickey to requisition his Omaha police commission to close the saloons In the so called proscribed district operated In con- Junction with dens of social vice, but found no resnonslve chord In hla ma1run anil nn calamity to relief. One thing I cannot comprehend Is how advocates of prohibition and champions of strict temperance can advocate county local option while denouncing the liquor traffic as sinful and criminal. If the sale of liquor In any form, except for medicinal purposes. Is sinful. Is It less sinful to license It un der county option than under city and town option? If the people of the town cannot make the traffic In liquor right, the people of the county cannot do It, nor for that matter the people of the whole state, e rosfwatfr BIO WATERWAY PROJECTS. Improvement of Western Rivers to Be Poshed at Xest Congress. New Tork Tribune. There will come up before the next con gress the question of appropriating one of the largest sums In the history of the country for river and harbor Improvement. The National Rivers and Harbors congress will press for passage a bill providing for the appropriation annually of $50,000,000 or more for this purpose. The leader of th movement assert that in aaking this they are demanding for, the whole commercial and agricultural Interests of. th country, from which all the wealth. of the nation Is derived, less than 7 per cent of the total snnual appropriation. On the other hand, the expenditure for war purposes, army, navy and pensions, have taken annually more than 10 per cent of the entire revenue. Heretofore less than I per cent of the en tire annual appropriation has gone to th national and economic highways, the rivers and harbors. The wonderful growth of the country's commerce Is adding to the pressure for Increased waterway transportation facill tiea. The projects of this kind that are likely to be pressed for favorable consid eration next winter are estimated outlays of JfiO.OOO.flOO for nine feet of water from Pittsburg to Cairo on the Onto; $100,000,000 for fourteen feet of water from Chicago to the gulf; $50,000,000 for eight feet of water on the Missouri from Omaha to St. Loula; $40,000,000 fori eight feet from St. Louis to St. Paul on the Mississippi; $4,000,000 or $5,000,000 each for the Tennessee, the Ar kansss and the Ouachita and the Red river; $26,000,000 for the lower Mississippi in all $300,000,000 for the Mississippi and Its tribu taries alone. The present crusade was begun at the second convention of the National Rivers and Harbors congress In Washington latt winter. There were represented by 00 dele, gates st this convention 110 commercial or ganisations and waterways associations and thirty-four states of the union. An executive committee of fifteen member was appointed to prosecute actively the work of obtaining regular and Increased annual appropriations for river snd harbor im provements, to the end that "agricultural, mercantile, manufacturing and mining In terests of the nation vitally concerned In cheap carriage of their output to home and foreign market should have Just and due recognition by congress." PERSONAL NOTES. Hamburg' Joan cf Are has gone to prison, while Ireland's has been divorced. Joining, aa a business, seem to hav drawbacks. ' Secretary Hitchcock of the Interior de partment la rusticating In New Hampshire and has left the management of his office to Assistant Secretary Ryan. General Parades, who Intend to over throw Castro, Is a most discreet plotter or he would not hav chosen New York aa the scene of hla activities. Ex-Senator Cockrell la th only member of th Interstate Commerce commission now In Washington. H work all th time, doesn't want a vacation and eat two apples for lunch every day. At laat the servant girl has met her match. Out In Walla Walla on of them did not do ah wa told and a military order waa issued expelling her from th reservation. This Is probably Undo Sam's most notable victory. Ignace Paderewskl has msd with his managers th condition that he shall not travel in a private car the next time he return to this country. He will trust to th ordinary train in going from plae to place for the first tlm since he cam her to play. Many railroad officials maintain private cars of their own, but Charles H. Schlacka, vie president of the Denver A Rio .Grande railroad, ha th distinction of being ooa of th five men In th world who own pri vate train, th other ' four being Csar Nicholas of Russia. Kaiser Wilhelra of Car many, King Edward of England and Pres ident lMis of Mexico. Tbs private train, which has just been completed at th Den ver at Rio Grande ahops In Pueblo, Is com posed of three cars, a commissary car, a aleeplng car an! an observation and dining rr or washijoto lifr. Minor Seen ana Incident Shetrhed on the Spot. There are Indication that th govern ment will uncover In California a land scandal rivaling that of Oregon. Announce ment Is mad that the Interior department wilt probe a deal by which large area of timber land In Plumas and Butt counties, California, have been sequestered by means of placer mining locations. As a conse quence Interested circles ar much agitated and disposed to subscribe to th declaration "the government la too blanked Inquisi tive." The placer- location wer made by H. It. Yard, A. B. Walker, "Collins. Holbrook and others, and th manner In which th loca tion were made, as well as the legality of the locations, will be investigated by a com mission composed of geotaglsts, forestry experts, surveyor and a representative of the attorney general's office. , Stat Mlnerologist Aubury of California, who has looked Into the deal, says th deal ers will clean up and divide million on th timber alone. Yard and those working for htm have made l.rrt locations. Th timber on this land, supposing It to average $20 an acre, I worth $6,100,000. Timber land run In valu in Plumas county now from $10 to $30 an acre. Bom of th Tard acquisitions are worth $30 an acre for timber. Some is worth les per acre. Probably $20 would be an aver age. Th coat of location hav not ex ceeded $26,500. This leave th Isnd standing In a profit of $6,173,500 for Yard and his as sociates and a similar amount for th other person, or a clean-up of more than $10,0u0, 000 In a period of Just about four years. dating back to 1902. To state the case a little more plainly, the Aubury showing Is tliat the government gets $26,000 and the land grabbers $10,000,000. and all this be yond what untold sum possible may lie in the ground In gold and silver. To h,av placers patented by the govern ment It Is necessary to perform assessment work to the extent, of $100 a claim a year. On the basis of 1.S77 claims this calls for assessment work by Ysrd, so Aubury re marks quietly, to the extent of $188,700 a year, or something more than $033,000 In a period ot five years. What assessment work has been done on the Yard lands Au bury considers to be farcical fr i qualifica tion for holding down mines for patenting. Th new postal cards, of smaller siae, more nearly squar, printed In blue, and carrying the likeness of President Grant, are beginning to appear. The nlm of the department In Issuing them Is to make the use of this medium. If possible, a little less unfashionable, thus counteracting a ten dency which has set In strongly against the postal card In bualness and personal communications. It Is saf to say that a large proportion of the meeasges now sent In envelopes could be conveyed on postal cards if It were regarded as good form to do so, but many. If not most, business house have ceased to use them altogether. For trie government It Is profit able business to carry this form of mall, netting as they do about $1.20 a pound; these .smaller , cards will be still more profitable. Law officers of the department are pre paring suitable rules to give effect to th following provision of the postofflce ap propriation bill. "That hereafter It shall he unlawful for any person entitled under the law to the use of a frank under the law to lend said frank or permit Its use by'any committee, organisation or association, or permit Its use by any person for the benefit of any committee, organisation or association, provided that this provision shall not apply to any committee composed of rnem bera of congress." This wa framed for th benefit of certain organisations that have used the frsnk for the purpose of distributing literature with a view to Influencing legislation pend ing In congress. One such case brought to the attention of th postmaster general was held to be an illegal, or at least an Improper use of the frank, and as a re sult It waa decided to pas a general law covering the subject. It Is understood that questions have beer raised whether under the provision above quoted the congress campaign committees of political parties shall be permitted to use the frank in the distribution of publtr documents. Th point will be passed upon by the assistant attorney general for the Postofflce department and later by the attorney general, it. is understood, at the request of the poetmsster general. Members of congress were nearly fright ened to death soon after adjournment when they were Informed that there waa a possi bility under the new lew that they would be prohibited from shipping frea In the future their paper), and In some cases personal effects, In th big wooden boxes provided by the government for the pur pose. Inquiry disclosed, however, that this perquisite of the members wa not affected. A Railroad's Mlahty Poll. San Francisco Chronicle. On of th marvel of modern railroading 1 the achievement' of the Southern Pa ciflo managers In causing that system to rank second in the list of great railroads of th country In the matter of earnings. According to frequent outgivings in re sponse to kick against high freight rates and excessive fares, it is positively neces. sary lo charge them because the lines of th system traverse a scantily Inhabited region. But,' despite this drawback, the corporation manage to extract $100,000,000 annually from Ha patrons. It Is a wonder ful accomplishment when all -the circum stances are taken Into consideration. V Do Please Your Hair Don't have a falling out with your hair. It might leave you! Then what? Better please it by giving it a good hair-food Ayer's Hair Vigor. ; The , hair stops coming out, becomes soft and smooth, and all the deep, rich color of. youth comes back to gray hain The best kind of a testimonial'; " Sold for over t sixty years." ; Bta by th . O. Aw Oa., LeweU, Mae. Alw aauiMtwtttaf . ATtB'8 AISAPAKnXA rt tM M4. ATBB'S PILLS Far esastlssties. ATS 8 CMaUIX rKCTOaAL-8arss4s. ATSk'S A0U8 CUSS VOf OttlarM as4 tfl. CROPS AXD PROSPERITY. Another Year of Plenty Aaanred hyr the Harvest fields. Chlcagn New. -As an Index lo the nation's prosperity th government crop report Just Issued Is fully up to the most sanguine expectations with which M has been awaited. It holds out the promise of the largest wheat crop In the history of the country" and of an enormous yield In other grains. It la atl mated that th wheat production will ag gregate 70.i-AX buxhels, as against a total yield of .O00.00O for th year pre ceding, while the output of corrt will be In the neigh W hood Of J,56.O0O,0X bushela. Not only has the acreage devoted to wheal been greatly Increase, but there has been an Increase In the average yield to the acre. ' While the huge crops and the prospeel of market conditions which Should bring good prices for them promise a continuance' of our great prosperity, indications of a flourishing business life sr to be, found In other bronchea t.f industry. As a result of. present conditions and In anticipation of still further Improvement there nas been a period of tremendous Industrial activity all along the line. Iron and steel mills are unable lo meet the market demand. Which Is stilt strengthening, with promises ot a further advance In prlcca and no apparent Immediate danger of overproduction. Tha fall buying season Is opening briskly and there ta a notable Increase In railway earn In rs over last year. The report that the western states are so liberally supplied with money as not to require any large withdrawal of funds from the east for crop moving purposes Is a , typical f eatur of general condition In which price are high, business Is brisk "and money abundant. For 'another year at leaat the, nation seems to be safe from disastrous reversea. While we are enjoying the prospect we shall be unwise If we do not reoognlse that these conditions cannot endure forever and that they involve problems peculiarly dif ficult and delicate. Overproduction, epeco latlon and general extraraganc are very real diingers which frequently follow In the train of such periods of opulence as we now enjoy. In proportion, as -we adopt safeguards ngalnst them we shall escape the worst of the evils of adversity which are to be expected when th nation enters upon a period of lean years. ... BRIGHT AaD BREEZY. "I thought Allacada waa going 4o build a new house." "He had some notion of doing it, but he found he could spend more money by fixing up his old one. Chicago Tribune. "Those Newrltch people don't know how to treat Inferlois." "Well, you couldn't expect them to. You see they haven't had any. inferiors very long." Cleveland Leader. "Do you think there ia much graft la politics?" asked the auspicious voter. "No." answered Senator Sorghum. "Some of the private financiers have brought the art of raking off to such a point that political graft Isn't worth noticing." Washington Star. Stella What waa her bathing suit llkef Bella It was heard but not seen. New York Sun. "I accepted Harry last night." "Then he didn't keep his promise to roe. "What promlseT" "When 1 rejected him night befor taat he promised he wouldn't do anything des. perate." Houstan Post. ' "Do you believe In hypnotism ?" asked K Si, STv-litt 1, Vu- a rv m r mhi , . . ...w ...... j . . . . Mvn.ua. t ,,v . . .C, I l between meals. - "Sure I do," replied the old bachelor at the foot of the mahogany. "Otherwise I couian t explain to my own satisfaction why men get married." Chicago News. "Is he a clever marksman?" ' "I should say he is. He's the fellow that marks the dollar shirts a dollar forty nine and draws the crowd." Cleveland Plain Dealer. 1( .......... '"That man Is a 'good poWfcienY rhs"got a great deal of aplomb, hasn't he?" "I should say so, mister. He's got the biggest plum on the hull tree." Baltimore American. "When you're making up your foot ball team for the season, don't let that fellow Bllllklns get on it. He Is a chronia kicker." . "My dear fellow, that Is just th sort we are looking for.M-PhlJadelphla Press. Mrs. Hlghmus Going to the seaside, are you? Got your trunks ready? Mrs. Gaswel! (properly Indignant)-. Trunks, Indeed! I expect to take along the best bathing suit that money can buy! Chicago Tribune. The Romantic One How poetically beau tiful la the evening dew. The Practical One Yes. you ' might call It th sweat on the brow of the bill. New York Sun. , MOTHER'S UNEHRlNa EYE. J. W. Foley Jn" New York Times. 8iimtlmes ure muther tf-ls unot to go In swlmmen, hut u think sheel neavur na and so ure offle temted ann u sltt beside th crick ann ut u think uv It u tsik ure shoux ann tockens off an then ure shurt ann panco ann utther cjoase ann w inn . . v . uv got urn off ann heer the boys awl say how worm ann Im th wotrer I tooday ' u ktnnt rexlsst altho It Is a slnn to ptommls hur u wosnt ann than go in. ann then u dive heddfurat nn aea hew far thst u kan swim snunder ann U ar ha IT way acrost be f oar u aho ur hedd ' ann bring sum mudd up Jusst to sho ta redd ,- ., t . too praov u reeched th bottom arm u sha um how to flot uppon ur hack uno ann neavur hardly moova ur arm at awl snn thenn Uatplosh ann malk a wotterfawl bl alappen on the wotter snn befoar u no.itts lime to go back hoera wuna moar. ann'wen a get back ho am a bring In wood ann do th choars ann tri to be so good ure muther geits sussplshus ann she feals ur hare ann If Itsa damp a .ur meele a stannden up for kwit a wlW an redd sedd wuns he got his shurt on rong ann sedd he trlde to tel hi muther 'how It kam ' to be oa rong but got llckt Jusst the swim ann hennry beamu sedd it gos to sho ur sin wil alwu find u owt uno. -