0 The Omaha Dahy Bix founded dt edward rosewater victor rosewater. editor. Entered at Omtbi poelofflce as second tls manor. Asl 'any (without 6und.iv,. one year.. I4W1 iuT.rBe.. ftaturuay itee, one yeur i-w, Daily K, 8LL.R"rEwtk..iB0! Dniiy Uee (without Bundayi, fwr week...ioo i fcvenlng flee (without Sunday), par week. o Evening pee (with Sunday,, per wcek....i'o Adnress complalnta of irregularities in delivery to City Circulation Department OFFICEB. Omaha The Pee building. South Omaha City Hall Building. ' Council Bluffs 10 Pearl Btreet. Chicago 1B40 Unity Building. New rork-tmn Home Life Ineursnce Bldg. Wsshlngton 601 Fourteenth Btreet. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to newa and ed itorial matter should he addressed. Omaha feee, Editorial Department. RUMlTTAVfEa. Remit by draft, expreee or poatat order. payable to The Bee Publishing Company unly Z-eent atampa reoelved In payment or mail accounta. Peraonal checka. except on Omaha, or eastern echane. not accepted. 1 II K BEB FUBLIBIIINU COMANl. STATEME?TT OF CIRCULATION. Bute of Nebraska, Douglas County, hb. Charlea C. Roeewater, general manager f The Bee PubllKhlng Company, being duly aworn, lari that the actual number pr full and complete copies of The Dally, morning. Evenlnr renlng and Bunday Bm printed Ourlng the month of April. 1007, was as followa .. 33,70 34,090 34,110 4.,., 84,390 (.. 34,330 ( 34,330 V 31,400 1 84,180 84,480 10 34,800 11 34,410 It., 88,790 II..,.. ss,eao 14,.,,. 83,400 II. ..... 84,890 IT 88,090 It 83,090 J 34.840 20.,... 88,010 21 83,360 S2.....' 88,090 23. . . , 35,300 24 38,430 25 38,470 2 ' So,340 27 38,830 2t 34,600 H 38,810 30 88,050 II 84.8Q0 Total 1,038,410 Less unsold and returned coplea. 9,884 Net total 1,008AM Dally average 34,384 CHARLES C. ROSE WATER, General Manager. Subscribed In my presence and aworn to aerore me mis sum aay or April. isof. Seal.) M. B. HINQATG, Notary Public WHEN OUT OP TOWH. Sabserlbers leaving: the city tem porarily shoals' have The Be anallea te them. Addreaa will be changed ae often aa regaested. May shows symptoms of being an other near-Spring month. Chicago is Just now enforcing a wide Urn ordinance. Why not Omaha? John W. Qates and his son an nounce their removal from Wall street to Easy street. Russia's refusal to send warships to the Jamestown exposition must have pleased tho -North Sea fishermen. The Washington ball team lost only throe games last week. The others were postponed on account of cold weather. Mrs. William Thaw denies that she has endowed a western college. Mrs. Thaw la using her surplus Just now to endow lawyers. . Secretary Taft will not admit that be la a presidential candidate. Sena tor Knox is willing to admit that he is, but can offer no proof. Cleveland has an establishment for manicuring the claws of cats. An es tablishment for manicuring cats' voices would be more popular. - This demand for an open book cam paign in 1908 will ba succeeded a little later by the demand for the usual pocketbook campaign. . Germany has passed a law prohibit ing the throwing of mud at animals. Germany evidently objects to having animals treated like politicians. Leave it to a vote of the men who servo on the Juries and the proposi ti far a new Douglas county court EtreM would carry unanimously. Charlemagne Tower says that di plomacy should be a profession. The pubUo hat a notion that diplomacy Is f. ready too much of a profession. -'; General Kurokl's reputation as a ttrateglst does not suffer by tho fact thatch has left San Francisco off his Itinerary for his visit to America. Sir William Ramsey claims to have filscovered a method for making arti ficial copper. Montana mining pro moters have been doing that for years. " Speaking of "big broad men," Col onel Bryan welghB only thirty-five pounds less than Secretary Taft and Is blessed with good appetite and diges tion. t James J. Hill says the success of tha nation depends. '.upon the number pf worklngmen who turn farmers. Mr. Hill has millions of acres of farm lands for sale? ... Llllia Dovereaux Blake', insists that the American eagle, the brand selected for the national emblem, la of feminine gender. Male or female, it Is so molly coddle, at any rate. ; v ', . "Fast trains out t .Chicago keep pretty close to their .schedule," says the Chlca.TO Tribune. Even tho train men, apparently, are anxious tp make the fastest time possible in getting away from Chicago. The cxar'e eldest daughter Is said to be one of the moat beautiful and ac complished women In Europe and very wealthy in her own right. It la too bad she will probably have to be atl-fied with a Russian grand duke for a husband Anxvnniyo the tMxicRAtiTs. The commission appointed by the president to study the immigration problem had opportunity last week to Ett strong- light on one phase of the subject when 20,000 alien laborer landed at Kills Inland the largest nil m- bcr that ever came to America before dy- EHiB l9,an1 " equipped with facilities for handling 8.000 Immigrants a .day and the one jay'g arrivals completely awamped the ' ' " Immigration officials. But one of the problems that has heretofore caused much trouble and more concern to Im migration and civic officials In New York City was wanting In the record breaklug day. The Immigrants, al most without exception, had tickets for polntaoutalde of New York and most of them Were anxious to get away from the metropolis as quickly as possible. The distribution of immigrants has been a vel problem, most of the ar rivals in the past showing a disposi tion to locate in the cltlet already over supplied with alien laborers. The im migrants now arriving have heard the roar of industry in the west and are hurrying to participate in the prosper ity that is enriching the owners of railroads, mines, mills, farms and fac tories throughout the country and of fering compensation for Investment of brawn and enersy. Under existing conditions, the record-breaking influx of alien laborers can occasion no alarm. Estimates in dicate that the number of Immigrants arriving in America this year will ex ceed 1,000,000 but a Job Is awaiting everyone of them. Farmers in the Mississippi valley region are offering as high as f 2 a day for laborers, while the scarcity of workmen in the mill districts of New England and the south amounts almost to a famine. The chief immigration problem Just now Is how to get more of them to contribute to the advancement Of the nation's in dustrial welfare. VSCLK SAM 8 CASH SCPPLT. Financial experts are persistently clamoring for some adjustment of the national laws by which the volume of currency may be Increased with- the growth of the natlqn's commercial and Industrial interests. Notwithstanding a multitude of proposed schemes con gress hesitates to tinker with the money laws, however urgent such de mands may be from the viewpoint of the -experts. The official reports of the government's fiscal operations for April show, however, that the vol ume of currency Is being increased at a steady rate and Is now greater than ever before In the history of the na tion. The government mints in April ex ecuted gold coins valued at $3,643,040 and silver coinage half-dollars, quar ters and dimes to the value of $1, 306,847, together with J630.150 in nickels, a total coinage of 15,379,037. This was supplemented by the placing of $20,200,000 In gold certificates into circulation, making the total money in circulation in the nation on May 1, 12,932,106,026, the largest in the his tory of the country. On the basis of a population estimated at 86,838,000 the circulation per capita on May 1 amounted to $34.16, or 10 cents above the highest level ever before reached. During the month of April, 46 na tional banking associations were char tered with an authorised capital stock of $5,480,000, making a total of 6,422 national banks in the country with a capital stock aggregate of $887,684, 276 and an outstanding circulation of $699,913,840. Government receipts from revenues showed an excess of $5,186,181 over expenditures for April. The national operations are all recorded on the gain side of the ledger. - . . UR. 8HAWS WAR DREAMS. It is difficult to believe ttfat Leslie Mortimer Shaw, former governor of Iowa, late secretary of the treasury and long prominent in the political and financial life of the nation, has had his mental vision warped by a brief residence in New York. Chief of many charms that distinguished his official career are a perennial optim ism, and a steadfast refusal to give up his western viewpoint, but his latest address, delivered before a banker's convention at Worcester, Mass., In dicates that he is beginning to look into the future through Wall street glasses and sees a gloomy outlook. "Aa sure as the Anglo-Saxon blood runs red," Mr. Shaw is quoted aa say ing, "there is to be an awful war. There are two great nations that can contest for the Pacific and this war will be settled at an awful cost." ! Mr. Shaw'e prediction of war was made in support of an argument in favor of the enlargement of the Amer ican merchant marine, by the ship sub sidy routo. He contended that we have nothing llko adequate protection against the possible assaults of an cnemron the Pacific and urged prompt action by the government looking to the proper equipment of a Pacific fleet of invincible strength and the fortifi cation of Pacific coast towns. In no otter way, he urged, coulo America's present and natural domination of the Pacific be protected and maintained. Promoters of an Increased navy and advocates of ship subsidy legislation will doubtless endorse the attitude of the ex-secretary, but the laymen will with difficulty reconcile the prediction of war with the recital of the causes for It. Mr. Shaw called attention to the international commerce of America and explained that our exports exceed those of any other nation by more than $100,000,000. Our exports, he said, iiiu ujiiui.i consisted largely of food products, cotton and other raw materials, of which we have a surplus and which the world can obtain In no other mar ket. The world patronises America In these lines "because they must have these supplies and can obtain them no where else." Accepting this statement as true, It does not seem reasonable that any foreign power, which must have a portion of this American sur plus, should Inaugurate a war against America, the result of which Inevitably would be to reduce the surplus of pro ducts and thus directly Increase the price of the products which the world must have. I THE QUEST IOX OF OOOD STREETS The most pressing problem Omaha has to meet Just now Is that of getting Its streets once more into first-class condition. The wretched Btate of our pavements, with few exceptions. Is thoroughly Impressed upon every one compelled to traverse them, and can not help but strike every visiting stranger unfavorably. Omaha has long boasted its finely paved streets, but to put hundreds of thousands of dollars into costly pavements and then let them stand most of the time in a condition of bad repair is not an eco nomical proposition. The promise Is made that the work Of street restoration will proceed soon without interruption to the extent that available funds permit, but that is not the only thing that Is necessary. Measures should be enforced to pre vent the further destruction of our streets by the Indiscriminate cutting of the pavements. No' new permits for street cuts should be issued to any contractor or franchlsed corporation until previous cuts made by them have been completely . restored. Some brake should also be put upon the ap propriation of the streets by building contractors who destroy their surface by mixing mortar, storing sand and other building materials upon them. Still another preventive measure would be the enactment and enforce ment of a wide tire ordinance to pre vent the wearing of the pavements by sharp wagon wheels. In other cities all of these precau tions are taken and as much care put upon the preservation of the street pavements as upon their original con struction. There is no good reason why Omaha should not have its street pavements kept in serviceable condi tion at all times at ordinary expense for repairs Just as well as any other city whose Btreets are subject to the same wear and tear of traffic. The State university regents also threaten to go into court to find out whether, under the appropriation of the "proceeds" of the special univer sity levy, they will have to wait until the money is collected into the treas ury before drawing warrants against it. As a prelude they are picturing the terrible plight in which the uni versity will be if the authorities rule against them. It is not quite so bad as that, however. The university will not have to shut down. The univer sity fund is supplied from various sources besides the special mill levy. It takes In more than $100,000 in reg istration, tuition and laboratory fees; it gets $75,000 from university lands and investments; it gets about $80, 000 from the federal government as a 'beneficiary of the Morrill and Hatch funds; it Is counting on nearly $30,000 from back taxes collected in excess of its previous estimates, and has several other little nest-eggs to draw on. The chances are good that the ghost will continue to walk regularly at the uni versity without passing the hat for do nations whether or not the regents are allowed to spend the "proceeds" of the next tax levy before there are any "proceeds." If the Kearney Normal school peo ple make their contention stick that the governor's time limit had expired before he vetoed their appropriation bill they might revive all the other ap propriations knocked out by the gov ernor's objections, among them the $30,000 for the School for the Deaf at Omaha. No one in Omaha, how ever, is going wild over the prospect. In explaining the need of another loan the treasurer of the Jamestown exposition declares, "The finances of this exposition are on a more stable basis than has been the case with other expositions." Please note an exception for the Omaha exposition of 1898, whose finances were on such a stable basis that it paid back 90 per cejt of the stockholders' money. The signal service corps Is said to be contemplating a balloon trip from Omaha to Washington some time dur ing the summer. That is not usually the best season to get passengers to Washington. The travel in that di rection is more attractive right after election. Experts differ as to tha amount of damage done by the snow and frost to fruit trees In this vicinity, but they will get together when they fix the prices of the crop later in the season. Chicago has placed a ban on 5-cent theaters and patrons are now asking if there Is any difference between a 5-cent show and a $2 show. Well, there is a $1.95 difference, anyway. Down in Lincoln the Park beard is asking for individual contributions to help beautify a new park. Up in Omaha the Park board la using park funds to save individuals the cost of paving streets abutting their property by calling the streets boulevards for a day. Delng duly warned in advance of the coming of the Omaha Commercial club's trade excursion, the people of the Puget Sound country will have nothing to do but to surrender. Don't Crowd the Limit. Qlnclnnntl Enquirer. Paul Morton thlnka ani'ther period of national depression will never come to thla eountr;-. There arc no Indications of ca lamity now, but with a people as restless and adventurous we are there cannot be high flying without Interruption. The Retort Courteous. Philadelphia Preea. Colonel Bryan'a opinion that ex-President Cleveland has belittled himself by his re lntlor.j with tho life insurance companies lr r.ot sound. It Is aa necessary for ex Presldenu to earn a living us It Is for thoae who have only run for the offle. The Man Who Dnea Thing. Bt. Louis Olobe-Pemocrnt. Having brought about the regulation of railways and the reduction of paatenger farce to 2 cent. a mile, President Roose velt will shortly undertake to dispose of the problem of car shortage. The country Is fortunate In having a man at the helm who can do things. Cncle Bam'a Growing Surplus. Springfield Republican. The government treasury last month added tO.O0O.00O more to lta large surplus revenue accumulation for the current fiscal year. It now amounts to above $56,000,000, compared with only $4,000,000 for the corre sponding period of last fiscal year. , This reflects continued business prosperity and unprecedented Importations of dutiable goods. Publicity In Campaigns. Baltimore American. The proposed national publicity law, re quiring the publication of campaign con tributions, la In line with the Idea of the day that publicity la the cure for many pressing national ills. Questionable meth ods will always be used while there Is probability of their being kept secret, but It Is when they are forced Into the lime light that their danger becomes too great for their transaction. Deeds that must be done In the open, with full public knowl edge, arid consequently subject to the all powerful Influence of public opinion, must conform more to law and Justice than those protected by the darkness of public Ignor ance. It Is the "knowledge which the mass of the people now possess which has led the way to the correction of so many pub lic abuses and forced reforms beyond the power of the strongest politicians to op pose. EnrnnrnitlnK the Young Poet. Emporia (Kan.) Gaiette. Every man, woman and child should write poetry. It Is like bolls, It prevents worse sickness. If there were more poets there would be fewer criminals. Poetry Is In every man's blood. If he doesn't write it at some time or another during his' life watch out for him. His wild oats are unsown; they will rot In his system and sour his nature. Write poetry, there fore, so long as there Is a jingle In your soul. The man who would advise corking up poetry unwritten In a human heart would soon have all the world full of brain-storms and the devil to pay. It's a great business, this poetry business. And the man who hasn't had his fling with love' and dove and spring and wing and klea and eyes and Hps and sips and honey dips (Inspected and guaranteed absolutely pure) Is like the man who died aged 72 years without being hungry he missed a lot of fun filling up. AN AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL. NOTE. Colonel Bryan Delicately Admits lie Has Cake. New York Bun. This autobiographical passage In a recent speech of Mr. Bryan's is Instructive: My living Is as secure as that of tnv millionaire in tne lana. Conflagration may wipe out the wealth of a millionaire, but no conflagration can rob me of the political asset which has been given me oy tna assent of ,600,0uo people. ah i nave to ao is wnat I want to do. No one can withhold from me the means of earning a living. For nearly eleven years Mr. Bryan has had not only bread and butter but cake. As a writer, a lecturer, an editor and a newspaper proprietor, he makes a good living. Nobody grudges It to him; may he live long to enjoy It; but It is entirely prob able that he would be still an obscure at torney if a bit of twudry rhetoric had not hypnotized an hysterical national conven tion. The "asset" which he speaks of is financial aa well as political. His paths drop fatness. His prosperity Is the most evident which he preached so long, the gospel of Ocala and populism. Now, rich and Independent, he is properly grateful: I have nothing to ask of the American people. All I asx is a chance to pay back tho debt I owe to them. Is the debt not paid already? Govern ment railroads and the Initiative and ref erendum; surely the American people will not ask Mr. Bryan for anything more. PERSONAL, NOTES. E. H. Harrlman, the railroad magnate, has purchased 100 acres fronting on Broad way. Scarborough-on-the-Hudson, for $80, C00. It is said he will build a big man sion. His majesty, Chinkalonghorn, king of Slam, Is about to visit London. It Is ex tremely doubtful whether Mr. Chuckalong horn can give the natives any pointers In that line. Contrary to the general belief In Kansas, D. R. Anthony will not be the tallest mem ber of congress. Anthony Is ( feet 4 Inches, but Congressman "Cy" Bullaway of New Hampshire is feet t Inches. Up to the present time the management of the Jamestown exposition shows do dis position to admit those members of the Smith family who want to giet In on the ground that they are related to the original John Smith. Samuel Douglas McEnery, Louisiana's senior senator. Is nearliig his seventieth birthday and except for defective hearing he Is hule and hearty. He was educated at the United States Naval academy, but pre ferred the life, of planter to that of a naval officer. Therdore N. Vail, who has been elected president of the Ajneiican Telephone A Telegraph company, of Boston, at a salary of tlVX), has rUen to his present position from a farmer boy. He was born in New Jersey sixty-two years ago, and in his youth worked cti a farm In Iowa. Henry Jackson, a wealthy Indian living on the Klamath reservation In Oregon, wants a suitable white husband for his daughter and has offered a large sum. sums say $50,000, for such a son-in-law aa will And favor in his sight. Above every thing the candidate must, be a foe of liq uor, tha red man's worst enemy. Jackson's own son, once a fine young man, baa fallen a victim to firewater and is now dying of consumption. The Jackson herd are plllraj fast and the old Indian wanta a aou-lo-taw capable of managing thorn. HOUin ABOIT SEW TORK Rlpplee en the Carrent ef Mr Metropolis One of PulTaln Bill s thrillers tork a run on Jt-ofirtwHy one day Inst week and mirta every mother's son on tho walks Jump f'r a Are escape. The freak was a motor "locomotive number W. Union Pacific Over- land Limited," which appears In that trt of the wild west show depicting the famous train hold-up at Rig Springs. From where It had been made, TInhoken, to Its Madison Square Onrden destination, the engine made a trnll of scared horses and astonished peo ple. By means of a special apparatus the loud puffing sound of a real loromtlve was reproduced, adding greatly to the ef fect. This substitute locomotive was designed by Miller Reese Hutchinson, president of the Universal Motor company, and was built at the plant of the Funk Engineering company, of Hoboken. The amok la rro- I duced by a sneeia! device, and In order that the machine may turn corners It Is fitted with a mechanism for raising the front bople wheel and the front driving wheel of the set on each side, so thst It becomes a four-wheeled vehicle which may be easily steered. John W. Gate's reservation of a suite of rooms in the new Plain hotel, which will cost him $42,P00, has called attention to the staggering prices paid for accommodations In the great- hotels and apartment houses of New Tork, says the Times. Fifth ave nue, of course. Is the street on which the highest rentals are charged. At the Hol land house, for Instance, there are suites consisting of nothing more than two rooms a parlor and a bath costing $15,000 a year. These are comer aultea, with a frontage on Fifth avenue. Fully thirty-five suites In this hotel are leased by persons who are practically permanent guests. No other city can show anything like such prices for hotel accommodation, nor even London during the season, when all hotel rates are raised from 30 to W per cent. At the Waldorf-Astoria there ore a num ber of permanent guests paying In th vicinity of $20,000 a year for small suites. Prices of on Impressive nature are likewise the rule among the apartment hotels in the Fifth avenue district. At the Renais sance', on the corner of Forty-third street and Fifth avenue, suites may be made up according to pleasure of the persons leas ing them at tha rate of $W to $800 for each room per month. In the apartments above the Van Nor den Trust company, on the corner of Fifth avenue and Sixtieth street, 10-room suites cost as much as $12,000 a year, unfurnished. At the Bolkenhavn, on the corner of Ffty ninth street. $9,000 a year for a furnished apartment and $7,500 for one unfurnished are by no means unusual figures. But when It Is considered that James J. Hill and other magnates frequent this region when In town, such prices begin to appear less astonishing. Apartments at Sherry's arc leased at the rate of $1,000 per room a year. The average cost of small suites In the Sherry building Is $5,000 per year. Of course, almost everybody stops to see the fire engines go by, but the one place In New York where this apparatus gets the largest audience Is on Broadway, betveerl Thirty-fourth and Forty-second streets, on a pleasant Sunday night. Aa a rule that thoroughfare la less crowded with vehicles and street cars on a Sunday evening than at any other time In the waking hours of New Yorkers, and this gives the drivers the best chance in the world to let their horses out to the full speed. Aa the engines or hook-and-ladder trucks go tearing up or down town every passerby on the pave ments on both sides of the street flock to the curb, and not only waits until the fly ing apparatus passes by, but stands watch ing it until It Is out of sight. To stand on the rear platform of a Broadway car and watch this spectacle of arrested humanity Is to get a fresh impression of the warm Interest the average New Yorker takes In the working of the Are department. There Is a movement on foot to have the salaries of the supreme court justices of Manhattan Increased from the present stipend of $17,500 a year to $2S,000. The prime cause of the move Is to prevent the high-standard Incumbents of the bench from being weaned away by corporations able to pay $25,000 or more a year for the brains they need. Among the men who have left the supreme court bench of re cent years are Morgan J. O'Brien and Jus tices Hatch. Russell and Keneflck. Justice O'Brien was guaranteed $25,000 a year when he left his place on the supreme bench. Reports for the year 1900. disclose that New York City had the most startling and stupendous growth and real estate activity the world ever saw In one city. Rapid transit improvements at New York, together with the tremendous growth of population, were responsible for a total rise of land values In Greater New York and Its suburbs last year amounting to $000,000,000. And TTTe activity of New York realty In general Is shown by the fact that the total recorded real estate operations during 1906 Involved $2,2UG,195.90. The record breaking activities include the continuous growth of New York In wealth and population, the construction of rapid transit routes subways and bridges -which will total In value $1,000,000,000, a stupendous figure. Present values in most of the suburbs are rising under the Influence of steady buying. Every month pr two adds from 10 to X per cent to values In many of the more desirable sections. The work of the city's appraisers was closed before current high price levels had been at tained. It Is believed they will show even greater increases for the next year. Half of the $600,000,000 increase on the assessment books waa due to building operations, leaving a net increase In land values of $300,000,000. The total assessed value of real estate tn all the boroughs of the greater city was $5,738,i87,24fi for 1906. Abbreviated bathing suits, top and bot tom, are a source of great concern to the residents of Rockaway Beach. The scan dalous disregard of modesty and tha shocking suits, or lack of them, Is endan gering the morals of the children, engen dering discord In families and causing un told jealousy among the fair sex lacking In the proportions to wear scanty adorn ment. So flagrant Is the abuse of the bathing privilege, combined with the unadvertlsed living pictures, that a committee of the Rockaway Beach Taxpayers' association' called upon Deputy Police Commissioner O'Keefe and requested him to take some action toward the regulation of the sire of the suits. The deputy commissioner doubted his jurisdiction in the matter. He endeavored to bury the Issue for the time being on the excuse that he is a married man, and, therefore. Incapable of being an impartial Judge In such affairs. "You know, gentlemen," said Mr. O'Keefe, I am a married man and cannot very well accept any job which would Involve the censorship of bathing suits. Some one might object" Reciprocal Change. Indianapolis News. Fortunately (or the business of the coun try, an agreement has been reached be tween Germany and the United States so that they can go right aheag paying each ether tariff dutlea, rnntKKi rnnn commit. Vtlca Sun: Apprehensive people are atsIjnMle ftrnslnar l.snrls for Herds ready beginning to worry over the trouble Nebraska democrats are bound to encounter In finding an Issue for the mxt state cam paign. Every pledge that party and Its populist allies ever made has been crrle I out by the republicans. And still the dem ocrats are not harry. Primrose Reeotd: One of the many good features of the new primary law Is that It will shorten the campaign. True, there will be quiet work through the summer on the part of politicians to procure places on the ticket for their favorites, but there will be no more June conventions and the annual hair-pulling proper will be cm- fined to the months of September and Oc tober. Fremont Tribune: Don C Despatn has j been appointed labor commissioner until December, when It Is expected that Sen- I ator Norrls Brown will -And him a position In the national service. Mr. fcesnatn Is a live and capable young man and the mem- bers of the legislature who chuckled when they cut out the salary of the chief clerk In the labor commissioner's office because Desnaln was drawing It have another chuckle coming. Auburn Republican: It Is being accepted as a fact that Tom Majors is paying fare when he travels on the railroad these days. He waa at Nebraska City Inst week and three private detectives, four sjwcal correspondents, a group of local reporters and one private cltlsen saw him deposit the $2 cents necesssry to purchase trans portation to the "Athens of Nebraska." The sight of Tom Majors paying railroad fare was enough to make the angels weep with joy, for it presages the millennium. The "anti-pass law" has wrought miracles, but none greater than this. Beatrice Sun: The question aa to whether the Omaha brewers furnished aid nnd com fort and financial support to the repub lican party in the campaign two years ago Is being discussed by the democratic pa pers of the western part of the state. What la the difference? If the brewers put in the money the democrats must have been the beneficiaries. It would not be necessary to buy republican voters to vote the republican ticket. If the money fur- nlshed by the brewers enabled the repub licans to supply a market for democratic votes and the democrats availed themselves of that market and sold their votes, there should be no complaint from the demo crats, j Aurora Republican: We have always been taught to believe that the railroad man agers were long headed business men. We are losing our early belief. Events of the past few months have forced the conclusion that many of thefe princes of business and finance are lacking in good business acu men. The loss In Influence and prestige to the Burlington and Union Pacific railroad companies In resisting the payment of taxes is self evident This action brought on a storm around the heads of the rail road officials and cemented as nothing elfie CoilM hava Ann th. nnnr..l.n- .W. ' ...w uyvDiuuu TT 1 1 1 k II j,rU" pie feel toward corporations which at tempt to ride rough shod over the rights of the people. The latest show of poor business sense Is the threat that tha Bur lington will oontest the legality of the 2-cent fare measure In this state. It Is conceded by those who are familiar with the workings of that law together with the anti-pass measure that there la no financial loss to the roada In passenger traffic. The institution of this suit would then appear to be nothing but a show of 111 nature and bad temper. Be It said to the credit of the under officials who reside tn the state and know the existing conditions that they advise a cheerful compliance to the laws which have been recently enacted. The railroad owners In the eaat who do not know the weight and power of public sen timent and cannot understand why the common people have to be heard andreck oned with are the fellows who are directing the opposition to the new made statutes. Firmly conrolous of the power of money and Its kindred Influences, which once pre vailed broadcast, but Is now, thanks to a slow but sure awakening of public con science, fading In many states and com munities Into history, they cannot conceive the conditions which prevail here. But they are going to learn their lesson, The people are thoroughly aroused and money and influence and political power will not stand1 In the way of public will. Had the railroads of Nebraska submitted quietly to the weight of public opinion they would not now be In the depths of disrepute. As It Is their lesson will be learned with dis astrous consequences to themselves. Concerning Stalklnar Horses. Kansas City Times. There Is an amusing side to Foraker'a charge that Secretary Taft Is only a "stalking horse" for the president. It is the Idee, that Mr. Taft could be thus used by anyone, even the president. He. is not that kind of stuff, and the country knows It. If he wanted to work for another Roosevelt nomination he would come Into the open and declare himself. There would be no reason why he should not. And If there were such a reason he would not assume a misleading attitude; he weul4 remain In the background. On the other hand, Foraker Is not a fool. He knows that he can never be president of the United States. He knowa that the best he can do for the special Interest he represents Is to make the effort to Sbntrol the Ohio 'delegation for those Interests. And that is what he proposes to do. The From New York rather than "the man from Missouri " was the on who said "show me" as to life insurance Everyone knows that the New York Legislature investigated the insurance situation but everyone may not know that the insurance laws of New York are now recognized as the best in the world. Other states will doubtless follow, but New York has led the way in laws made in the interest of the insured. The Mutual Life Insurance Company operates under these laws. Its policies have the state's approval. It is withal a mutual company beloriginu to its policy holders and they must therefore participate in the vast savings and economies which have been put into effect by the new management Things are bound to be good for the Mutual Life policy noiaer. The Time to Act is NOW. For the new forms of policies consult our nearest agtnt, or write direct to The Mutual Life Insurance Company i new Tork, N.Y. t'ci.K 8M'! rATtnfti: n1 Flocks. Wall Street Journal. Uncle Bum, unlike Job the rich man of the east, does not own many cattle and horses, or sheep and goats, but he fur nishes an enormous Amount of graslnf land for those who' do have herds and flocks. The total number of grown stock allowed to arase uoon national forest lands I nurnK the season of 1907 Included l.SSS.OoJ catlp ,, norso, and 4,sX sh.-ep and goats. Although Uncle Sam Is a peaceful Ian.' lord, his shepherds and cowboys are not always nt peace with one another. Out In the mountain reeions where pastures ' are rather scarce, people who own cattle "lr " l" 7 "" - Tno .arrels " the ciytlomen and sheep- "re "ol Dnm on pounn" "l '"r""n,u antipathy as a rule. A flock of sheep 1 moves along In a dense body, cropping the I raM " closely as almost to destroy tha 1 chances of another year's growth. Cattle Km ring Is much less harmful" to the turf because it leaves grass In condition to do something next year. WHAT 19 A DEMOCHAT t Question riaeatel by Remarks of Nehrnakan In the Fnst. Philadelphia Record (dcm.). Dr. Miller of Omaha, who has been a wheel-horse of the western democracy fop forty years, has been talking entertain ingly in New York. In his opinion Bryan Is a populist masquerading as a democrat, and Is the cause of all the democratic de feats In the last dosen years. Still, ha doesn't see thnt there Is anything for the democrats to do but to nominate Bryan once more and go down to another defeat. "Brian has talked of many things," ha said, "but he has always avoided the turlff. That Is the issue which should be made." As It looks to him. Bryan and Roosevelt are running a foot race to see which can be the more radical. The bitter's popular ity he thinks Is now at Its highest point nd there la certain to be a reaction. Dr. j Mlller is an unreconstructed Tllden and Cleveland demotrnt, and while the democ racy has not yet slouched off populism ha still hopes It will do so by 1912. As Pupa says. "Man never Is, but always to- be, blest." SMILING LINKS. "I suppose you feel safer since the pure) food laws' have been passed." "No. The only difference Is that In order to enjoy my dinner I have to be careful to avoid reading the labels." Washington Star. "Sweet Molly O!" warbled the tenor. "What was her last name?" wondered the soprano. "Coddle." growled the basso. Washing ton Herald. Doctor (to his patient, who Is 111 with ty phoid fever) This Is proliably caused by some water you have drunk. When did yoa last take some? Patient About three years ago, I think.- Puck. "You're not so strict with that youngster of yours aa you used to be," said 1'opley'a friend. "No; for economy's sake I'm not," replied) Popley. "Every month I used to have ta buy myself a new pair of slippers and him a new pair of pants." I"hlladelphla lYess. "That young doctor Vinj't been located) In our town very ' . but he's very friendly." "Yes, he believes In reciprocity. He makes acquaintances In the hope that hie acquaintances will make him." Detroit Free Press. Stern EJmployer Come here, boy. How many grandmothers have you got? Surprised Office Boy Two, sir. Just like other folks. S. E. All right. Now, remember, I have you on record, and twv are your limit for Hue season. Baltimore American. "Are you getting acquainted In your new neighborhood?" "Well, some. The postman and the Ice man seem to be, quite cordial, but I haven't met the ashman yet." Philadelphia Ledger. " TUB LEGEND OF EVIL. f- Rudyard Kipling. This is the sorrowful story Told when the twilight fails. And the monkeys walk together, Holding each other's tails, "Our fathers lived In the forest; Foolish people were they: They went down to tho coinlnnd To teach the farmers to play. "Our fathers' frisked In the millet, pur fathers skipped In tho wheat. Our fathers hung In the branchew, Our fathers danced In the street. "Then came the terrible farmers; Nothing of play they knew, Only they caught our fathers, And set them to lubor, too! "Set them to work In the cornland With plows and slrkles and flails. Put them In mud-walled prisons. And cut off their beautiful tails. "Now. we can watch our fathers, Sullen and bowed and old, Stooping over the millet, Sharing the silly mould. "Driving a foolish furrow, , Mending a muddy yoke, Sleeping In mud-walled prisons. Steeping their food In smoke. "We may not speak to our fathers. For If the farmers knew. They would come up to tho forest And set us to lubor, too." This Is the horrible storv Told as the twilight fails. And the monkeys walk together. Holding each other's talis. Man