.4 A- TIIE OMAITA DAILY BEE: - THURSDAY JANUARY 17,"T.m7. ; The Omaha Daily Dee. FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROBEWATEK. VICTOR ROSEWATEHt. EDITOR. V I i i Filtered at Omaha postoffloe as second elaas matter. , TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Parly Bee (without Punday) one year... W W Bee and Sunday, one year........ sw Sunday Pee. on year f X Saturday Bee. one year l w DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Dally Pee (Including Sunday), per eek..1M Dally Mee (without Bin4ey). Vr week... 100 F.ventng pe (without Sunday). per T Kvenlng See (with flunday). per Address complaint of Irregularities In de livery to City Circulating Department. OFFICE B. ' Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha Cltv Hall Building. ; . Council Bluffe-10 Pearl Street. Chlr-a o 1640 I'nlty Building. . New York 16" Home Life Ins. RtflldlnCJ ' Washington 601 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to tiewa and edi torial matter ehould be addreeaed: Omana Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. . . Remit by draft, express or postal order, , Pyable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment or mall accounts. Peraonal checks, except on Omaha or eaatem exchanges, not accepted. ; THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. B'ate of Xebratka, Unuglae County. ss: CirU- C. Ronewater. general manager f The Bee ubHlitng company, being duly worn, uvf that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dully. Morning. Evening and ttunriay Pee rrlnted during the "unm or, yccmiwr, H'M. was aa iouuw.. j 7 39,370 M,BM ai.sio 31,710 I ai,7oo 31.590 1 , 31,880 I......... 82,080 ....'..... 30,630 10...'....; . 81,750 11 39,150 - 11 33,050 II......... 31,080 14 S1.3M II 33,170 It 31,700 It 1.T0 it 33,670 21 31,630 22.... 31,900 21 30,860 2 31,710 S. ........ 31,600 21 39,120 17 31,770 II ' 31,613 .9 31,890 It 30,300 II 31,810 II... S0,00 Total 069,380 Less unsold and returned coplea.. 0,941 Nat total ,. .. .873,144 Daily average 31,391 CHARLES C. ROSEWATER, Oeneral Manager. Subaciibed In my presence and aworn to before ma thla Hat day of December, 1906. Seal.) t M. B.. IIUNQATE, Notary Publ'o. WHEN OUT OF TOWS, akecrtbera leaving the city tem porarily ehoald have Tbe Bee malted to then. Addreaa will be ehaaaed aa oftea aa requested. Jack Frost Is doing more to wipe out the Ice trust than all the legal pro ceedings! could have accomplished. Kingston gives Great Britain an op portunity to show what it, has learned by observation at Ban Francisco and i Valparaiso. ,, Kearney's steam whistles gave Nor rls Brown a joyful hoot, .again empha sizing the utility of a steam siren as a social factor.'- Ralsoull's desire tor' pardon Is hot bo strong as to cause htm to restore the money for which be sold his dear friend. Ion Perdlcaris. . i ii . tr'' ' ' Doing sanely what Hearst' threat ened to do Insanely, Governor Hughes of New York convinces the people that the right man was elected for office. Spokane will no doubt learn that It 1 impossible to permanently render geographical advantage of no effect In the matter of transportatlftn rates. The council will find tbe citizens al most as unanimous as were Us mem bers In regard to the quality of gas being furilished foe consumption lo cally. Hallway tax cases at Washington Monday will give Senator Brown a chance to clinch the first nail driven Into the lobbyist's coffin by the present legislature. Senator-elect Guggenheim has re signed from all business associations, but his future conduct will show whether or not he had better have re al Sued the office. ". - v Now that the taxpayers are to be compelled to make good the deficit In the state treasury,' they may more ac curately understand the gravity of the offense which created it. , '. A substitute for milk has been found In the juice of the soy bean, a Japanese vegetable. With this and oleomargarine for butter the dairy may become a memory. Division of oplnloa as to method of procedure Is evidence that French bishops are affected by the .trouble which Archbishop Ireland attributed to the priesthood asd laity. " A ru'Si $. .Seniority" and .selec tion" apparently" ' combined to give Colonel Godfrey his star, army officers might strive to keep them together without injuring the service. The most serious drawback to the deepening Of the Mississippi river is thaj St. Louis Is already talking of a necessity for an appropriation for "harbor defenses'! when ships can come up the stream. The most serious charge that can be brought against Chief Donahue Is thai he obeyed the orders Issued to bln by the city's executive. As this Is part of his duty as subordinate to the mayor. It Is not at all likely that his obedience will involve blm In any very serious difficulty. Saloon men who undertook to run counter to the law have found very suddenly that the Ciyic Federation is not sleeping, and that the machinery ot the law to support Its position can make matters very interesting tor ths local lid lifters. Regardless of any local sentiment, the law Is very plain sought to set up aa, opposite author ed no one man or combination of j Ity. It was also a "civil war," which men caa set aside Its operations. - lis Indeed -the phrase bow comrionly MIAT0H If ORRIS BROWS It is now settled beyond a peradven turo of doubt that Hon. Norrls .Brown of, Kearney, will represent Nebraska In the United States senate. after March 4 next as the successor to Senator Mil lard. Mr. Brown has received his commission at the hands ot the legis lature, but by direct mandate ot the people expressed In their vote of pref erence at the polls. This choice comes as near being aa election by direct popular vote aa It la possible to be until the federal con stitution shall have first been amended to make the sovereign people the elec torate Instead of the legislature, as now. As ' a ' consequence Senator Brown will assume the duties of his office freer from obligations to corpor ate and; other special Interests than any senator who has heretofore been commissioned -.. by. this . state. He should be absolutely untrammelled by entangling alliances that would pre vent him from voicing truly the sentl-' ments-of the people as a whole or from bending every effort to promote the welfare of the state and nation irre spective of selfish Influences. Going Into the senate thus independent apd unfettered. Senator Brown should have every Incentive to stand up cour ageously for right and justice and to fight the battles of tbe people shoulder to shoulder with their great leader In the White House. Jhe advent of . NorrH Brown i as United States senator take) away from Omaha the privilege of furnishing one of the representatives of Nebraska in the upper branch of congress for the first time since the state was admitted Into the union. The people of Omaha naturally feet the loss keenly, but they will look to the new senator, as the;- have a right to do, to protect their interests as the state's metropolis and commercial center. They will not hesitate to call on blm as succeeding to the senatorBhip so long conceded to this city to champion their rights bo far as consonant with the material prosperity of the whole state just as earnestly and juft as energetically as if he resided among us. Senator Brown has not up to this time come Into very close contact with Omaha and its business activities, but we be lieve that he will cultivate more Inti mate relations and will disappoint those who have questioned his friend liness toward our city. Senator Brown enters the national arena almost at a single bound. It will depend upon him whether he will develop In his new position and meas ure up to what a senator should be, or be content to size with the low aver age, which, unfortunately, with two or three notable exceptions, has charac terised most of Nebraska's representa tives In the American House of Lords. THE BROWKSVILLE CASK. It was certain that the , representa tives in. congress of those interests Which were Tesolved to restrict positive- legislation at this session to the narrowest possible point would take adv'antage of every excuse to. fritter away time In ' the semblance of de bate, but it was not so easy to fore see what particular excuse they would lay hold of.. It is, however, ciear now that the Brownsville case was taken np as a time consumer, and a most Industrious use has thus been made ot It In the senate. A bona fide consideration of the Investigation resolution required no more than a day or two. but weeks have now passed in a rambling and desultory discussion covering a multi tude of Irrelevant and collateral ques tions. Nor Is there apparently any limit under the rules upon the dila tory use that can be made of the sub ject, short of the consummation of the purpose of tbe prime movers In the "debate," most of them being well known to be hostile to the adminls tratlon generally and .to Its progres sive program.. i , .. The true Interpretation therefore of the senate proceedings in the Browns ville case Is not at all what appears on the surface, but the settled pur pose to defeat any Important hew leg islation, particularly of the character. which made the previous Besslon mem orable because the obstructionists were overpowered on the main point. And the strong probability Is now that this purpose .will be successful. "THS CIVIL WAR." Congress has done well not to per- mit itself to be led Into an acrimon ious a&d prolix controversy over the designation of the war from 1861 to 1865 In the preamble of a ' pension bill. Whether that struggle be re ferred In that connection as "the civil war," "the war of the rebellion" or "the war between the states" js abso lutely immaterial to Its purpose as a service pension measure, and passion ate dispute over phrases . could only promote profitless strife. The phrase, "war of the rebellion." j having got accidentally Into the bill, although It was Intended In drafting It to use "civil war," it would have been better , for southern senators to pass It over, because it would have Indi cated on their ' part the supplanting of prejudice and sectional feeling by magnanimity. But when they missed the opportunity and showed sensitive ness by raising the point , -to words It was better not to compete with them in Irritating hairsplitting, "civil war" being the form now usu ally employed In legislation anyhow. Under . universal conceptions of the national government now the war was Incontestably a "rebellion," having been, like ' the revolution ot 'J 6, an organised resistance with force of arma- tq lawful authority; which employed by standard authorities on both Sides. But mere historical and controversial terminology can safely bo left to take care of Itself, the vital Issue of the great conflict being no longer debated nor debatablo. LltllSQ CP TVH RKFURit Most significant Is the note that is struck by all the governors In their messages and the legislative proposals that are foremost In nearly two score states. With virtual unanimity, east and west, north and south, they pro nounce resolutely and Insistently for a policy of constructive reform. What la more Important la the identity ot aim which so notably characterizes the specific measures In which this policy is embodied, tor in many cases the agreed program in one state Is a mere duplication of that In another or in many others. Through all of them runs the obvious purpose to se cure honest elections with elimination of-graft in state and municipal gov ernment, a tighter grip on railroad and public utility corporations with a view to fairer charges and services, and more equitable distribution of tax burdens In short, a more enforclble responsibility ot all under equal law. If this were the result of mere spasmodic or impulsive excitement, there might be little to hope in the way of substantial betterment, for many popular movements have come and gone without permanent achieve ment, usually running to futility through extremism or that multiplic ity of schemes which sacrifices main practical points. But the constructive reforms that are being worked out now in the state Jurisdictions are the logical continuation and complement of the memorable national movement under the leadership of President Roosevelt,, which culminated a -year ago in a series of great progressive measures and, concurrently with them, In the vitallzation of executive and Judicial power for essential na tional and public ends They signally demonstrate the compelling and sub tainlng power pf a public sentiment as resolute as It is Intelligent, demanding that the laws of the states be brought up abreast of those of the nation for efficient service of the needs of the life of the people. The meaning of It all is that the people In the mass have become con sclpus of the great changes In Indus trial and civic circumstances, of which previously for decades special inter ests, largely centered In corporations, had taken selfish and immoral advan tage, and thus informed of the main defects of old law, methods and alti tudes, will not now longer brook delay in their due amendment. Since the reform movement became doml nant the hope of hostile Interests, first having failed in counter manlpula tlons,, has been In large part driven to wait for reaction, tbe last ditch of de feated enemies to progress. But the progressive movement has gone on with increasing strength, and the signs accompanying the opening of so many legislatures fresh from and under. pe culiar covenant to the peopl6 show that genuine constructive effort is now in full swing. A point the eminent members of the city council seem to have lost sight of in their wrangle over the gas com. pany's desire to Increase Its plant is that the commercial Interests ot the city are directly Involved. To a very large extent industries of Omaha de pend on gas for lighting and fuel while the domestic arrangements of the city are also closely wrapped up with the gas supply. At present the consumption of gas Is very nearly up to the dally output ot the plant as It exists. An Increase in capacity both for manufacturing and storing a sup ply Is Imperative. The fact that the city derives a very considerable benefit from the sales of gas should also have weight in determining, tbe Issue, of .the present argument. , It Is not likely that any member of the city council desires to fctand merely aa an obstruc tionist, but It Is very desirable- that they should come soon to a conclusion and no longer block the way for much needed Improvement which the gas company is not only willing, but is eagerly anxious, to make. Appropriations for the benefit of Nebraska military posts are taking the time-worn groove. While the neces-' slty of -the provision- being made for the support of these army posts Is ad mitted and the sums were practically agreed upon, members of the house delegation ' have .considerately held back that the senators might. have the credit for "saving the interests.? Annexation sentiment .grows, stead ily as the days go by. Opposition to the union ot the two' OmahAs has its foundation In such obvious selfishness that it Is losing Its force, and by the time the matter is submitted for ap proval of the people It Is not unlikely that the sentiment will be nearly unan imous. The two cities are ' one in everything but name now. The Colorado legislature is to In vestigate the causes of recent bank failures in Denver with a possible view proving that they were not due to "wild cat" mine Investments unless those lnvestmenta were made in Ne vada. Former Governor Mickey aays. it the Lord w fll forgive blm for what he has done, he will not again enter politics. If Mr. Mickey will stick to this resolu tion he will probably In time win the forgiveness of his fellow men. . A pool of railroads controlling more j Pl straw color WAtch turns gray anly than 404.000 freight cars Is'iaJd tol""' ,at ,nIllfe' ruddy f'1"-"" ' . ... i gives an additions! touch of youthfulneaa have been formed at Chicago with the i M .... (b, ,.... ., Mr. Moody (.object of. .using cars , oav fcsjt ol th pooled lines indiscriminately. If this does not permit managers to create nd dissolve traffic 'congestion at will jme other plan may be tried. Tho proposed extension by the Omaha Street Railway company will bring Into use several extensive areas that have hitherto been neglected on account of inaccessibility. The steady growth of the city Is gradually filling up the huge garment cut for Omaha many years ago. r A Dark Florae Play. Minneapolis Journal. The whlnney and kick of Mr. Foraker In the senate Indicates that the Ohloan la doing- a little dark horse play. . The Hammer la Actloa. -Washington Poat. At a recent' aesalon of the American Aaeoclatlon for the Advancement of Sci ence paper waa read on "The Significance af Grasping- Antennae of the Male Har pactlcold Copepcd." That'a an awful name to call our captains of Industry. Mixed Pllie for Kaeckera. St. Louie Globe-Democrat, finarlora at the pension system nay the bill paised by the senate to make age additionally a claim will Increase the cost of pensions $15,000,000 a year. If they bear In mind that the veterans are dying at the rate of 100 a day they will feel happier. I'pllft of lUewale Jockey. Chicago Record-Herald. William Alden Smith, who has been elected to succeed Senator Alger of Michi gan, began business aa a newsboy, and Charles Curtis, who will go to the senate from Kansas, was a Jockey In his yount?or days. Evidently It is no longer necessary for our .great men to have begun their careers as farm hands. Troubles of the Hleh. Boston Transcript. Poor Mrs. Sage! Her late husband by leaving her all hla money prepared more trouble for her than a woman of her years should be forced to arry. Beggars, as the story goea, haunt her night and day seeking to enter her house by front door or back door, or . even by the windows If by such means they can gain her ear and her sympathies. She can neither walk nor drive without being mobbed by them and the few yeara that are left to her threaten to become a. nightmare. The ex perience must be sufficiently unpleasant to make her wish a good many times she had not a dollar In the world. Railroads Built Last Year. Railroad Gazette. Official returns from most of the rail. road companies In the country, supple mented by our own records and figures furnished by the state railroad commis sions, show that approximately 6,628 miles of new railroad lines have been built In the United Statea daring the calendar year 190. These figures Include fifty-seven miles of new main track relocated, but do not Include aeeond, third or fourth track, eld Ing or electric lines. The Increase In the total over last year la 1,240 miles, about 28 per cent. This large Increase reflects. In part, the preliminary work carried out last year, when active construction was resumed, following the retrenchment policy generally observed In' H04. It also shows the new movement toward the Pacific coast and the noteworthy prosperity of the present year.- .'., fOMMOX SEXSK AXf THE LAW. Ill yl-i A Mlourl Jadae 'Ovale Techalcall- tie m fta ri Knock. anftjrrCltJ' 'Star. " 3i "Overruled, overruled: let me have the facts In this case. Dqp'J try to tell me the dance hall ordinance Is not good. I'm going to hold it good, whether it Is or not. It's leveled at an evil; 'The'rttr council and the mayor did a mighty good thing when they passed It. Let, me have the facts In the case." . ' I If you were not told so you would never guess It In the world that this statement was made aa the Judgment of a court In thla age of technicalities. Let Kansas City take off Its hat to Judge Wofford, and' the state of Missouri msjee the same obeisance, and the nation, too, with Its federal judica turea. Does any layman or Judge doubt that this ruling was good law by the stand ard that "the law Is common sense?" And never let It be doubted that this la the sort of construction of law that the courta of this country must 'finally come to. Maybe there will have, to be much legislation to bring if about. Perhaps new codes will have to be formulated and Jurists relieved of restrictive statutes. . But the change la irresistibly in progress and Judges like Wofford are going to help Its progress. "The council and mayor knew what they were doing when they parsed that ordl nance, and they were Influenced by good motives, excellent' mbtlves," declared Judge Wofford In further disregard of the technl cal protestation of lawyer. Therein wrs a consideration bo often overlooked-:that the intent of a law and Its makers should be the controlling guide to Ita Interpreta tion. To brush away the "creative criti cism" of qulbblera and to comprehend tha meaning and purpose of a law as plain mortals comprehend them, this Is Indeed to unite tha Judiciary to the popular cur rents of thought and feeling. The case may be relatively unimportant, but who shall say that In Its bearing on broad principles of Jurisprudence the dic tum of Judge Wofford may not mark an era as the Judgments of mora renowned Jurists have reflected honor on earner epochs? 1 PERSONAL NOTES. Mrs. Btuyvesant Fish, n the interests of economy, advises women uiai u mey are careful they can dress on S6.000 a year. Stewart Edward White, the author, has left his bungalow In California, where he haa lived for the last two yeara, and has Joined the authors' colony In New York. Thorn aa A. Edison haa remembered his native town ot Milan, Conn., by presenting It with a set of apparatus for the physical laboratory of the village high school aa a New Tear gift. Tha Inventor made tha apparatus hlnwlf. Prof. Brander M Uthaws of Cclumt la un Iverslty. haa received the decorations of tha Legion of Honor from the French gov ernment In recognition of his services to literature in connection with ths atudy of the French drama. The late shah of Perala had his bed cham ber overlaid with coatly Jewela, paintings and brle-a-brao, but It la aaid that his mala delight was a cheap print copy of grotesque picture uaaa In advertunag certain brand of English soap. Charles F. Shaw. tf he bureau of eoil of the United Statea Department of Agrl culture, haa been appointed Instructor la agronomy at tha Pennsylvania State col lege. Mr. Shaw waa student assistant in aot'.s at Cornell university, where ha waa graduated in 1905. He la now with a soil party In Texaa. All tha Juatlces of the T'nited States supreme court except William H. Moody, the youngest member, are grajf-haired. Mr, j Moody la a blonds and Ms hair Is of that ,nd other atewbu-s 4 the court is auiaing. . , HOtXD ABOVT RKW YORK., Ripples oa the C'arreat af Llfa la the Metropolis. Official reports, and statistics of the part year preeenl the great city In a variety of Imposing figures.' In his annual report Mayor McClellan shows the net . funded debt of the city to be 474.3,ir.12. Of this I73,71S,000 waa added In 1906 and lfr. The temporary debt, revenue bonds Issued In anticipation of taxes. Is $.v,nT. The cltys' borrowing capacity $73,000,000. The number of children on part time In schools. says the mayor, haa Increased upward of 11,000 to 66,000 In im. The number of schools In use during 190$ waa 610, and they housed 66s,130 scholars. A fraction over one killing and one sui cide for every day In the year was New York's record of criminal violence In 190. This red page does not Include deaths from accidents, which raise the total to 1190. Surface cars killed persons; elevated trains, 14; tunnel trains, 17, and automo biles, U. In Manhattan last year 6.S90 deaths were certified to the coroners' offices. This was a little more than 7 per cent of the number of deaths In New York City. A etrlklng feature of the coroners' report la the num ber of tunnel casualties. Sixty-eight men were killed In the various underground channels through which Manhattan seeks new direct connections with Long Island and New Jersey. Here's New York City's record of mar riages and births for 1906: Marriages tK.are Birth .. in.772 nunles married Hirh dv 1S2 Number babies born each day 36 Increase of marrlagns over 1906 6.700 Increase of births over 1906 6.0"0 Deaths during the year . 76,2o Increase of deaths over 19C6 2.4!2 zxumDer or deaths each day 209 "Life and death both are strenuous In New York," said an undertaker, quoted by the Sun. "We get orders sometlmea that shock us. "Not long ago we' had a call from a family who asked us to make a hurry up Job for the reason that they had arranged to sail for Europe two days later and they didn't want to postpone the voyage. "What would you think of a woman who asked to have her husband burled as quickly aa possible on the ground that a few days before his death they had agreed to a separation and that she would like to put away the deceased before the news papers heard of their martial troubles? That la exactly what happened. ' Then there Is this case: An elderly aunt, who had been an Invalid more than a year, paased away. We were asked to arrange for her funeral on the day of her death, and when wa demurred unlesa there was some Important reason we were In formed by a nephew that they were anx- loua to know what was In her will, as the matrimonial chances of a niece depended upon what she was to get. Only yesterday a man came Into our office and said that his mother-in-law had Just died and that he would like to send her body south as soon as possible because his wife wanted to attend some sort of function three days later. In the good old days in some parts of the country It used to be the custom for friends of tha family In which a death oc curred to alt up with the corpse. In a case given to us a few months ago we were asked to send a couple of genteel appearing employei to the house to keep the vigil. We did It, but I confess to you It aeemed to me rather heartless." The drivers of department store delivery wagons gather up statistics now and then that might be "highly valued by students of sociology. They learn, for example. how many families which live In small apartments shut up thu house the llve'oe; day because every member of the house hold goes out to work. "We found that out," said one driver, "through the requests to- have- goods de livered at office buildings. We' wondered for a long time why so much stuff belong ing to flat dwellers should be sent down town. Finally it came out that there would be nobody at home to receive the goods If sent to the flat The woman mem ber of the family took off a few minutes extra at lunch time to do her shopping, and Instead of carrying her purchases her self she ordered them sent to her hus band's office, so he could cart them home at night Henry McAleenan has a pawnshop, a modest little one, on Sixth avenue, in a building he owns. Tha site Is small, eigh teen feet wide and fifty-two feet deep. The man who owns the rest of the Sixth avenue front wanted the pawnbroker's little corner. He made several tempting offers In vain. Finally he said: , "1 11 give you 1650.000 for that little plot." "Not enough," said the modest pawn broker. "Why, man., that la litl.t square foot!" "I can't help it." aaid Mr. McAleenan. "My business there cleaned me 1250.000 last year, and I couldn't duplicate the site." : There is a Harlem man who dlxllkea children, but who la passionately fond of cats. He Is the possessor of tabbies and Thomases galore, and they represent every type of whlners, from the itinerant "Hooli gan" pussy to the aristocratic Angora. One night he went home loaded to the hur ricane deck with essence of foolishness and fitted up a Christmas tree for his felines. Besides all the usual Christmas gewgaws he strung lines of sardines and mice, that leaped and frolicked from the strings attached to the evergreen. . After the candlea had been lit a dozen cats were turned loose to see what Banta Claus had brought them. It took the cats about a minute to And the mice. With bounds they went after them, and for a time cats, candles, mice, tree and flame made an ex citing and spectacular scene In the houae. Tha neighbors helped put out the Are, and then the owner ot ths cats gave the patrol wagon a run. The cocaine habit is Increasing to an alarming extent In New York. Hospital records disclose a steady Increase In the number of cocaine patients, and private sanitariums near ths city harbor a larger number of them than at any time afn the use of tbe drug began. Insane asylums are rapidly filling with men and women whose minds have been wrecked by the drug. There are certain drug stores In the ' Tenderloin, the police say, where the druggists will - actually take old clothing and shoes, to say nothing of jewelry, in return for a few grains of the powder so dear to the heart of the victim. A gang of professional burglars, equipped with chloroform and armed with pistols, la carrying terror Into tha fashionable colonics on the nearby south shore of Long Island. They are operating with all of the, fine tools known to the cracksman's art, and art having "easy picking" among the country homes of rich New Yorkers. Nothing Is too large for the gang to get away with brass beds, silverware, chests. rugs, ' lurniture, ciumiug aiuiu.i every thing but the landscape. The New York City building department reports a falling off from 1 of fully S0,0uu.0uO la new construction thereabouts. The year etartcd off with plans maturing for a far heavier Investment In new build ings at the metropolis than the previous year had seen, but the appearance of per sistent stringency in the money market compelled a decided contraction lit opera, tlona. BUll It t noted that nn ' than fifteen skyscraper are now In coarse of construction la the downtuaa district of XUnhattaa. Lithia Strong Testimony from the University of Virginia. - IN URIC ACID DIATHESIS. GOUT RHEUMATISM. LITHAEMIA nd the like. ITS ACTION IS PROMPT AND LASTING, Ceo. Don. Johnston. M.D., LL.D., Pro. Crnfcohgy nd ali , c r.,,,..,- of Virginia. Ex-Fret. Sontkern Surgical Abdominal Surgery nivrruly of ' Medital Sonety and Jg,o T&ifwrf -ff i were asked what mineral vf.ter Memorial Hospital, huhmona, va.. i . ha. the widest range of w ulsm ftjFFALO LITlflAwftTER I would uuhesitstingly answer "T,,... . . .... . In Uric Add DlathesU, uoui, k""""' ' i"'art of r-nefiri.i effects are prompt and laatlng. . . . . Almost any case oi beneficial effects are prompt PvelltU and Cvstltla will be alleviated bid evidence of the undoubted Ulsiniesratins, - - "T""J JowerVof this water In Renal Calculus, and have known ita long conUnuel uie to permanently break up the gravel-forming habit- . "IT SHOULD BE RECOGNIZED AS AN ARTICLE Of MATERIA MEDICA." i ...... James L. Cabell. M.D., A.M., LL. ByJ" 'i ery and Surgery in the Medical Department m ,n i""""-' ' WYi'iat" 'Burnu.o iJTJiiA Water 'sUEiS! 21i the2ic resource. U should be recognid by the profeasio. tpeutic i aa aa article of Materia Medica." "NOTHING TO COMPARE WITH IT IN PREVENTING URIC ACID DEPOSITS IN THE BODY." ' V Dr. P. B. Darrlnger, Chairman of Faculty and Professor of Physi logy. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.; "After twenty years' practice I have' no hefitancy in statin that for prompt ".u'U I have tocompVrehwTth BUFFALO LlTIflA Y&TER IiU in the by. "I KNOW Or NO REMEDY COMPARABLE TO IT." Wm. B. TowleS, M. D.. late Prof, Anatomy and Materia Medica, University of Va.: "In Uric Acid DlathesU. Oout, Rheumatism, Rheumatic flout. Renal Calculi and Stone In the Bladder, I know of no pTrSuT; DUIFAL0 LlTJilA ViffTER NPonlf Voluminous medical testimony sent on request. For sale by the general drug and mineral water trade. PROPRIETOR. BUFFALO LITHIA SPRINCS, VA. TATE PRESS COMMENT. Pails City Journal: Governor Mickey went out In a bias of well, hardly glory, but it waa a blase all right. Tekamah Herald: The state of Nebraska can now breathe easier. Mickey Is down and out and Nebraska has now a real gov ernorone who will not rattle around In the office like a rat tall In a quart Jug. St. Paul Republican: If the papers which are celebrating Governor Mickey's retire ment from office with a whirlwind of criti cism had Joined the Republican two years ago In opposing hla renumtnatlon the things of which they now complain might not have happened. Hastings Tribune: News cornea all the way from Washington to the effect that Senator Millard will not be a candidate for re-election. It seems to have taken the distinguished senator more than a day or two to become aware of the fact that the people of Nebraska have long since re quested him to retire to the extreme rear and be seated. Ord Quia: Immediately after pardoning a murderess several times convicted of the murder of her sleeping husband, .Governor Mickey went to the legislative halls and delivered a message. ort the losses of the state by reason of technicalities. His mes sage may be all right but It ..would sound better from a governor who . had not out raged Justice as ha had done. Grand Island -Independent:" tn certain clr clea of Omaha there Is still an occasional lament that, for once, the metropolla has not a United States senator, and an oc casional evidence of fear that It will al- waya be thus. But It won't. Let the big sister on. the Missouri only be fair with the smaller cities of the state, aa most of her best men are showing a wise and evi dently sincere disposition to be, and It will find only a generous feeling for It out over the state. Clarkson Herald: M. P. Harrington Is a good pleader of any caae, no matter how unworthy, and It Is truly a bad cane that he can not make presentable by the use of his ready wit and smooth oratory, but we believe that even a Harrington cannot eon vert the sober, hard-headed cltlxen of Ne braska to the government ownership erase. For years Mr. Harrington, and others as sociated with him in the organisation of a government ownership league, have wanted railroad legislation, and now, when the chances of securing It are brighter than ever before, they give up the fight and go rainbow-chasing". Bchuyler Free Lance: The Nebraska Gov ernment Ownership leage waa organised In Omaha a short time ago and It was officered with good ones. M. F. Harrington, a pop ulist and an attorney of O'Neill, la preal dent, and he Is an able and clean man; Harry Erome, a republican and leading at torney of Omaha, a delegate to the last re publican national convention. Is vice presi dent; Edgar Howard, a democrat and an editor of Columbus, is secretary, and he is an able man. But the report of the meeting howed that a bunch of populists was In at tendance who are fake reformers and who disgraced their own party when in power and brought the name Into disrepute in Ne braska. That outllt took a prominent part in the proceedings and will be In the move ment to ttt discredit. The league will not flourish with such a bunch In it and the people of Nebraaka will view H with sus picion. Bancroft Blade: Is there not a acrew loose somewhere? When, after a fair and Impartial by a Jury of upright cltlsens, a person Is found guilty of a most heinous crime a homicide heartrending in its character, and' the penalty inflicted by an able Judge a punishment of life in - the penitentiary and then, after but two years of service of such sentence, without any additional evidence but tha pleas of a few friends, the governor of a state will take It upon himself to say tha judge. Jury and all concerned were wrong, and this In the face of the fact that 96 per oent. of the publlo where the crime was committed say the contrary. We refer to the Llllle case and Mickey's pardon, w hen we see such things, can we wonder much when mobi A FTER pneumonia the convalescent r needs nourishing food to build up the disease-racked body. But err eat care must be exercised so as not to over tax the feeble digestion. . Scott Emulsion has cod liver oil to make blood and healthy flesh, and hypophosphites to strengthen nerves.. ' It is pre-digested. The best food in the world for a - convalescent. A AU-DSUCCUTSi SOa. AKDflio.' Water by it. ana many r. i n. do now and then take the law Into their own hands and mete out punishment. Give us men for great and responsible positions that have at least a little of the Roosevelt Justice. Tekamah Herald: For municipal taxes we believe that all railroad property within every town and city In the state should assessed for town and City purposes Jus the same as any other species of property because ' no property Interests within the corporate limits receives greater benefit from fire and po"ce protection and from all kinds of Improvements In the way of lights, sidewalks, improved streets, etc., than does the railroads. It protects their property, facilitates their business and enhances the value of their Investments. Then why should they not pay the same proportion of taxea on the dollar valuation as any other property In a town or cltyT , FLASHES OF FI JI. "Young Mrs. Oldrox seemed to be In rather a pensive mood today.'? I don't wonder. The doctor , says her husband's daye are numbered. "Really? Ah! I suppose she was think ing how soon he would leave her." 'Klther that or 'how much.' Phlladul phla Press. , .. TJoea a merger tend to stifle competi tion?" No. sir." . "How do you explain that? r tends to kill it quick, and not by any old-faehioned process." y -.n -. Naturally, at this point, his lawyers gave him a new cue. Philadelphia Ledger. - - - "What will you do when you have dia-' covered the way to the north pole?" "The next step," answered the explorer, "will be to turn around and discover the way back home." Washington Star. Mercury took Vulcan aside confidentially. "Tell me," he whispered with a Sher lock Holmes glance around, "are Jupiter's thunderbolts the real thing?" "Not a bit of it," sneered Vulcan. Don t ydu know he forged them?" Baltimore American. . , , "Do you know that, champagne poured Into a dump glass will lose its sparkle at ohce?" .. "It won't If I can reach it first." Cleve land Plain Dealer. "My wife Is a woman who can practice gret self-restraint." "Yes. She came over to see our new bahv the other day, and didn't say 'Ain't he cunning?' "Chicago Record-Herald. "Is that woman's book a success?" "I'm afaird not." answered Mlsa Cayenne. "I haven't seen anybody who has founl anything shocking in It." Washington Star. "That painting la worth WO. 000." -vvnat, that little tnlngT ' "Yes." "Well, If ever T ret $).fo I'll do my own painting." Philadelphia Ledger. . "Ton don't keep any money in banks '" said the passenger with the skull cap. "Per haps you are like some other persons I know, and keep your money tied up In a yarn sock." "You've guessed It nearly right." re sponded the passenger with the bulging forehead. "All the money I have Is tied up In a woolen mill." Chicago Tribune. OX THE ICE. Chicago News. I clamped the skates upon my feet, I stepped upon the Ice. I smiled to hear my friends repeat Their quite well-meant advloe. I skated when I was a boy; I skated quit a lot. The paatlme I could stlU enjoy, I knew I'd not forget. I glided out a yard or so. My stroke waa pretty fair. Vkhnn, Just aa I began to go. My heels flew In the air. I aaw old Saturn and his rings. And Venus, shining bright: A comet and some other things Burst then upon my sight. Orion snd the Milky Wsy, Mercury and Mars I saw, though it was bright noonday, A perfect blase of stars, They showed me later where I fell They said It waa the place; I know It wasn't, very well, Because. I'd left no traoe. ,-. ' . -.1 I knew that thla was Just a Joke' Rome foolish monkey trick. - Tbe Ice they showed me wasn't broke. Though scarce twelve inches thick. KM I ( t 4