14 HIE OMAHA DAILY UEE: SATURDAY, !rf Y 18, 1907. Tiie Omaha Daily Hee FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROBEWATER VICTOR ROBEWATER. EDITOR. Entered at Omiht postofflce aa coat' laee matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, pslly Pea (without Sunday), one year.. $4-00 .'ally Hee and Sunday one year - Sunday Hee, ona year tM Saturday Hee. ona year W CE'JVERED BT CARRIER, pally Bee (Including Sunday), per week..lto Dally H (without Sunday), per wek...l0o Evening Baa (without Sunday), par weak, to Evening Bee (with Sunday;, per wek....l0o Addrcsa complalnta of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Department. Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha City Hall Building. Council Bluffs-10 Pearl Street. Chlcayo-K) Unity Bulldlnf. New f ork 15 Home Ufa Insurance Bldg. Washlngton601 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to newa and ed itorial matter should be addressed. Omaha Bee. Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, Payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 8-cent atampa received in payment of mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Umaha or eastern exchange, not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANT. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, so. Charles C. Roaewater, general manager r The Bee Publishing Company, being ouiy sworn, save that the actual number 5J '"II and complete copies of The Dally, Morning. Evening and Sunday Bea printed during the month of April. 107. was as follows! 1 83.S70 J 88,00 34,090 II SS.090 84,110 1 S4.B40 B4.390 ID 85,010 94,330 II 83,390 34,330 II 88.090 f 31,400 II 88,300 34,880 14... 38,430 34,450 25 88,470 I 84,500 II 3o,340 11 34,410 17 35,630 l 35,730 II 34,800 II 85,580 21 35.610 1 33,400 10 . 36,660 .... 34,890 34,830 Total 1,030,410 tssa unsold and returned copies. 9,864 Nat total 1,038,648 Dally average 34,884 CHARLES C. ROSE WATER, General Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this loth day of April, 1S07. (Seal.) tt. B. HL'NQATh?. Notary Public. :. . WHEN OUT OP TOWH. Bu beer I hers leaving the elty tern, poravrlly should . have The) Dee aallad to them. Address will be changed as aftea si requested. Still good advice when inclined to take a flyer In -wheat, don't. The Omaha Elks have proved that they are old stagers at stags without staggering. An English physician has discovered the English girls wink the left eye. That la one of their rights. San Francisco now has proof that it spoiled a mighty good orchestra leader to make a mighty poor mayor. ICb a poor locality that connot break Into print these days through the aid of a green bug or a bug of some other color. The new husband of Ellen Terry may discover a little later that he is her leading man only when on the stage. Of course Mr. Bryan's money is all clean as he asserts. He has done lit tle for several years except to clean up money. Secretary Taft vouches that the Jamestown exposition will be all right when It is finished. So wll) the Pan ama canal. Senator Piatt says he is eorry he made Mr. Roosevelt president, but the rest of the country is glad Senator Piatt Is sorry. "General Kurokl saw everything worth seeing in Washington," says the Washington Herald. He did not go to the ball game, then? "'Jhewing tobacco makes a man think," says President Woodrow Wll eon. Yes, and it makes his wife do more than think. ' There is talk of a bread famine If the price of wheat continues to soar. In that oaae we may have to fall back on breakfast foods. The crowds that lined up in Ohio waiting for the Foraker presidential boom to pase a given point have evi dently gone home In disgust. Some of the Wall street magnates suspect that Mr. Harrlman juggled the letters and handed them a lemon when he had promised to cut a melon. Scalpers have been enjoined from doing business at Jamestown. The original colony at Jamestown also had trouble In settling the scalping prob s&. The country's apparent anxiety to forget the Corey-Oilman episode may be expected to spur Pittsburg up to the point of offering something equally as good. The bishop of the Protestant Epis copal diocese of Nebraska has re nounced all the pecuniary emoluments of his office. - There Is no Immediate Sanger, however, of his example be coming contagious. A 'Milwaukee dispatch tells what a, woman of that city said when she dis covered that she had exchanged her suit case with a burglar by mistake. What the burglar said will never be printed. The outgoing deputy, state oil ln ipector has turned over $49,000 of ex cess fees of his office Into the state treasury during his four years' Incum bency. His predecessors under fusion regimes did not turn In enough excess fees to warrant a separate ledger account THE TJ Birr AS AH 1F6UK. In an authorired Interview the ven erable Senator Allison of Iowa, the acknowledged leader of the United 8tates senate In matters pertaining to finance and revenue raising measures, asserts that tariff revision will be an Important, If not the paramount Issue in the next presidential campaign. He intimates further that It may be taken up for consideration at the next ses sion of congress, In order to give the country information on the policy to be pursued by the republican party In the next administration. The sena tor admits that sentiment on the ad visability of considering tariff legisla tion at this time is dlded. some sec tions demanding a revision of schedules, while others are strongly opposing any "tariff tinkering." This makes It the duty of congress, in Sena tor Allison's opinion, to investigate the demands for revision, ascertain what the people want and where seri ous Inequalities exist so that a later congress can proceed Intelligently. This official notice that the "Iowa Idea" etlll persists will carry special significance to politicians who under stand Senator Allison's relations with the administration at Washington. The Iowa senator Is evidently speaking with the knowledge of President Roosevelt, who has always favored a reform of the tariff, but has deferred urging action on the subject for other more pressing reforms which he has urged successfully upon the national legisla ture In the last four years. Political gossip has had it that the president was compelled, four yearB ago, to agree to leave tariff alone In order to get the support of Speaker Cannon and the pronounced standpatters In con gress for the railway rate bill and a iled reform measures adopted in the last two congresses. That compact, if such there was, has been fulfilled, and with Senator Allison's declaration that' congress will now take up tariff re vision comes a report from Washing ton that the administration forces are urging Congressman Burton of Ohio to enter the race for speakership against Mr. Cannon,' to Becure a man at the head of the house organization who would not use his great power to block measures looking to tariff revision. Senator Allison insists that the tariff must be revised by republicans. He calls attention to the difference be tween tariff revision and tariff destruc tion, explaining that the republicans want to revise the tariff along protec tion lines, reducing the rates to a pro tective basis in all cases, while the democrats seek to destroy protection entirely by reduction to a strict reve nue basis. In the meantime the mere decision of 'the republican leaders to Investigate the subject of tariff re vision places the democrats at an other disadvantage. The democratic leaders, with the exception of Mr. Cleveland, whose authority is not gen erally recognized by the rank and file, have ignored the question until now, when if they decide to take up Its championship they will find themselves again Indorsing another proposal in which the republicans have taken the lead. A RGVUEKTS FOB PEACE. The International peace congress at The Hague will meet about the middle of June for the purpose of consider ing what has been accomplished In the past year that furnishes encourage ment for the fulfillment of the dream of universal disarmament and world wide peace. One document that should prove of special Interest to the delegates Is a review, just published by a naval pa per, of additions made to the war fleets of the world In 1906. This shows that 215 war vessels of all types were launched during the year, of which 41 per cent were battleships, 87 per cent armored cruisers, 12 per cent torpedo craft and gunboats and 10 per cent protected cruisers, submarines and auxiliaries. Russia led with a contri bution of 33 ships, with Great Britain, Germany, Japan, United States, France and Italy in the order named. Accord ing to the report, all the nations are abandoning the armored cruiser and the battleship of the smaller type and devoting their attention to the con struction of warships of the Dread naught type, making them bigger and more destructive than ever before. The naval budget of every world power is larger than ever before in history, ex cept in time of actual war, and there is nothing to indicate any desire or Intent of any power to curtail Its ex penditures for naval and military equipment. ; It will be Interesting to Bee if the delegates to The Hague can find any encouragement In the statistics of war ship construction. PASS ISO OF THE a RATTER. The confession of Abe Ruef, for years the political "boas" of San Francisco, la significant principally in showing the good results for civic betterment that have followed the unearthing of frauds and corrupt methods In the adminis tration of the nation, state and munici pal affairs. While attempts were made, in the early days of the anti-graft crusade, to manufacture political capi tal from the disclosures and prosecu tions, It long since developed that graft is nonpartisan and that the crook has no politics. Official corruption was a natural outgrowth of civic Indifference for years most pronounced, partic ularly in the conduct of municipal af fair. The business and professional men and what is known as "the better element" have not, until recently, given attention to municipal matters, with the result that official control haa been left largely to less competent and less honest classes. The penalty haa been paid in loot. Within the last six years the elvte conscience hu been aroused. Starting with the exposures in St Louis by Bis trict Attorney Folk, now governor, the spirit of Inquiry has epread throughout the country and resulted in a general official house cleaning. City aldermen and other officials have been Indicted by the hundreds In Milwaukee, Chi cago, Boston, Cincinnati and perhaps a score of other cities. Uncovering of the land frauds, pontofflce frauds and othtr abuses under the federal govern ment followed and their perpetrators wero punished. The inquiry has ex tended to railroads and other corpora tions engaged In a quasi-public busi ness and the whole official and public life of the nation has been subjected to Investigation with resulting elimina tion of the most flagrant abuses from which the people have too patiently Buffered. The San Francisco graft cases are not different from others that have been exposed, except perhaps the partici pators In the frauds displayed more than usual zeal In taking advantage of their opportunities. Ruef'B confes sion shows that the city officials, scores of them, shared with the owners of corporations the idea that franchises and public concessions were matters of barter and sale and the officials of 'Frisco had become experts in seeing that nothing went to the lowest bid der. The confession will have Its effect in San Francisco, as similar exposures have in other cities, in putting a keener edge on civic Interest and spurring honest people, who are everywhere In the majority, to greater activity In pub lic affairs. PAROLE LAW ABUSES. The parole by Governor Cummins of Iowa "in the interest of good govern ment" of a professional burglar serv ing his fourth penitentiary sentence and admitting the commission of other burglaries here in Omaha and else where for which he has not yet been punished, suggests the question, What's the matter with the Iowa pris oner parole law? The whole theory of the parole sys tem 1b that it affords the means of giv ing convicts not yet steeped in crime an opportunity to reform by setting them free on probation with a view to helping them once more to their feet. The Nebraska prisoner parole law makes these conditions pre-requlslte. The power .vested in the governor in this state to order the release of con victs on parole is strictly limited to those "Imprisoned under a sentence other than murder In the first or sec ond degree, who may have served the minimum term provided by law for the crime for which they were convicted and who have not previously been con victed of felony and served in any penal institution within the United States of America." In a word, the Nebraska law permits paroles to first termers only and no such reckless use of the parole -power could be legally made to turn loose on the public a convict confessing to four terms in as many different state prisons and to additional offenses subjecting him to as many more prison sentences if he could be prosecuted for them. The same considerations which made the Nebraska parole law bar pro fessional criminals serving a succes sion of penitentiary sentences should prevent the liberation of such prison ers even where the letter of the law permits it as it does in Iowa. It Is certainly remarkable that anyone pro fessing to be working "In the interest of good government" should ask for the parole of a four-time penitentiary bird no matter how useful he may have been in supplying manufactured testimony for the prosecution of trumped-up charges against the chief of police of Omaha. The State Board of Assessment will hold one session for private citizens who may care to be heard on the ques tion of railroad valuation. It ought not to be necessary for private citizens to eeek a hearing before the board. The members of the board as elected public officers represent the taxpayers of Nebraska as a whole and should see to It on their own account and to the best of their ability that the rail roads get a square deal In the assess ment of their property no more and no less. Colonel Bryan now gives this an swer to most of the questions pro pounded by interviewers: I have nothing to say. I do not think I should prophesy for republicans and have no intention of prophesying for democrats. Colonel Bryan must at last have come to the conclusion that his previ ous efforts as a prophet do not justify him In setting up In the clairvoyant business. The World-Herald sayB that the democratic city prosecutor haa never had any money in payment of his sal ary or fees from the guaranty bond company that advertised him as Its legal representative in order to secure business from saloon keepers liable to police court prosecution. Somebody must be holding out on the innocent city prosecutor. Deputy Attorney General Martin haa come to the rescue of the state of Ne braska by advancing 1 1,800 to be ap plied on contract for the purchase of lots for the Home for the Friendless, for which the legislative appropria tion is not yet available. Why should a man who can write his check for $1,800 want the position of deputy at torney general? The best estimates on the basis of fgures at hand are that the graft en joyed by Douglas county sheriffs sub letting the county jail as a lodging house haa averaged for many years more than $1,000 a year, Thla graft should not only be stopped for the fu ture, but any money Illegally pocketed by present or previous sheriffs should be recovered back for the taxpayers. A Mast on Henry Wattersnn's bugle horn would be worth a great deal to the demo cratic party. World-Herald. And they get It nearly every day without putting up a red cent beyond the regular price of a copy of his paper. t Prof. Lowell has reached the con clusion that the mean temperature on Mars must be about 47 degrees Fah renheit. It must be May In Mara all the time. Senator pick's action rescinding the call for a political harmony meeting In Ohio shows that he haa not forgot ten how to back-pedal when he strikes a down grade. Milwaukee has a $6,000,000 estate with no heir to claim it. There is also a $5,000,000 political conspiracy es tate down at Washington that no one seems to care to own. It will now be charged that the Wis consin legislature has compromised and broken its deadlock by picking an understudy of Senator LaFollette to succeed Senator Spooner. From One Pnrse to Another. St. Paul Pioneer-Press. Don't get excited over those fortunes won In wheat. Every one of them came out of somebody else's pocketbook. Industrial Perplexity. New Tork Commercial. If we only knew for sure whether he meant It we would know whether or not to keep on manufacturing those teddy bears. Playing; In Great I.nck. Washington Herald. The Taft boom to be thoroughly Im pregnated with genuine "Roosevelt luck." Former Senator J. Ralph Burton has de livered a broadside against It Honors Are Even. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Honors are about even In Ohio. Mr Foraker does not want the Indorsement of Secretary Taft for senator, and Secretary Taft will try and worry along without Senator Foraker's Indorsement for presi dent. Definitely Located. Washington Post. The Omaha Bee comments on the fact that Bryan's Commoner gives thirteen reasons why democrats should support their party's position. By the way, what Is the democratic party's position aside from one of supplication at the pla counter? Value of Industrial Education. New Orleans Picayune. The really able and uppermost foot in the public services of Booker Washington Is that ha recognized at once the supreme Importance of educating the negroes in In dustrial arts rather than In literature, philosophy and professional courses. Lead ing negroes everywhere else are demanding the so-called higher education for their Tel lows, while Washington, almost alone, realizes the value of practical every-day industrialism for them. This Is real wisdom and he Is the wisest man of his race. But Industrial education Is good not only for the negroes but for people of every color and race and as time goes on the fact will be generally recognized. Question of Inferior Rails. Springfield Republican. Quite a hue and cry has been started by the railroads against the Steel trust on ac count of the unusual breakage in rails which Is being experienced. The question was up at last week's meeting of the Union Pacific board and the fault was laid at the door of the United States Steel cor poration. Officials, of that concern reply warmly that better rails were never made than the heavy ones It has been turning out, whereupon the manager of an east ern railroad system says that Its records show that the eighty and elghty-flve-pound rails laid five or six years ago stand the wear and tear of present heavy traffic bet ter than the heavier rails more recontly laid. So much testimony of this kind la coming forward that the steel men have concluded to confer with experts from the railroads regarding the matter. THROWING PHYSICS TO THE DOGS Grim Trnths Hurled sit an Audience of Doctors. Cleveland Leader. Dr. William uuu' ceiiaiuly has th courage ot las couviciloiis. Ad a mailer Oi fact, ue utu lue courage ot convictions that are not his but are forced upon him, for when the public put a falie Interpreta tion upon his suucinent as to the initiative of the man of forty, ho took his medicine without a murmur. lie knew If he talked and denied the people would think he was trying to Justify himself, so he walled un til common sense showed what his attitude really was. Some doctors, mora tied to their dignity than to the real- healing purposes of their profession, may And like fault with his utterance at Johns Hopkins the other day, when before an audience of physicians he said that he put his faith In hope and nux vomica. Then, as If willing to put himself1 squarely and aggressively on record, he added that he knew of only four drugs that had any curative values. This Is the kind of open-eyed and open mouthed wisdom the public tikes to hear from Its doctors. It welcomes the thought which blows sway the fogs that have sur rounded the practice of medicine, Its mysti cisms, and, If we dare to put It down In staring black and white, Its ponderosity and pomposity. There was a time when the doctor felt It a part of his duty to humbug his patients. He gave them medicine whether they needed It or not. It was the day of the bread pill and the solemn looking vials of colored water. Ha did this conscientiously and as a matter of preservation, both to hlmie'f and the man who had called him in. That Individual would have consid ered himself abominably treated If the physician had told him he nerded no drugs and he would have cut that particular phy- i etclan from his lift ot calling acquain tances. The enlightenment of the people and the wisdom of the doctors themselves have put an end to this double deception. Noth ing esoteric now swathes the ways of a doctor with his patient. He gives the sick person as little medicine as possible and there Is no complaint. When he does ad minister drugs, he Is likely to give their names frankly and their properties, thus bringing 'In the patient as a mental colla borator with him. In the main he pins his folth to good food and good air. Doctors of the Osier school, who are frnk and fair with their patients and the public, bulk high In general esteem.. The more they come into the open the bigger and ruore lmureselvs theg get . " OTHKIl LANDS THAR Ot RB. The Anglo-Japanese alliance, regarded at the outset as a triumph of British di plomacy, is not likely to prove permanently proniable for the British empire. The moral support which the alllanoe brought to Japan, supplemented with financial backing during the crucial days of war, were potential forces in the struggle with Russia. In thus contributing directly and Indirectly to the crippling of Its ancient enemy, Great Britain calculated on a long respite from Russian Influence and lntrlque on the borders of India and undivided dominance In the commercial affairs of China. But the expectations of Great Brltalp are not being realized according to calculations. Russian Influence In China and Russian lntrlque on the borders of India are destroyed for tha present. Tet Great Britain haa not profited thereby. On tha contrary tha arm which Great Britain upheld In the contest with Russia has be come tha Inspiring symbol of Oriental awakening and Oriental strength. Japan's triumphs are an Inspiration to allied races. The life currants of China have been aroused as never before and military preparations are going forward with energetto determination. The remarkable Impulse felt In China has also thrilled India and Is regarded as tha chief cause of the threatened rebellion In the Punjab. An Anglo-Indian correspondent of tha New Tork Sun. avidenUy familiar with the temper of tha people In tha disturbed dis trict, attributes tha present determined de mand for native home rule to the uplift of Japan's victories, "aver since the defeat of Russia by an Oriental power," ha says, "every newspaper conducted by natives Is full of manifest disloyalty to Great Britain and of admiration for Japan." The visible results of the past with Japan consist of the Russian black eye and a menacing ex pansion of the yellow peril. Two noted Irish Journalists, T. P. O'Con nor and Beam as McManus, offer radically different views of the operation and re sults of the land purchase act In Ireland. In a lata number of the Sunday magazine Mr. O'Connor drew a rainbow ploture of the transition from tenantcy to land ownership. One-half tha land has been transferred from former owners to present occupiers, and the other half will follow with ac celerated speed. "You see at this moment a new nation rising. The land Is the prize for which the people fought. The struggle Is at an end. The battle has been won. The land belonge again to the ancient celtle race from which It was stolen centuries ago." Mr. McManus presents a widely different view of the situation, not as regards the transfer of the land, but respecting the terms exacted by the land lords. Among other things he says: "All the landlords who have sold out under the land purchase set, wrung from the tenants an absurdly high price for the land from 26 to 83H per cent more than was Just. In addition to this, these landlords got from the government a bonus of 12H per cent of the purchase price, as an In ducement to them to accept from the tenants far more than the land was worth. Our members of Parliament readily agreed to this bonus being given the landlords, and chuckled, for It was a bleeding of the government They were sorry statesmen. Indeed, who could not first ask themselves whether the government procured Its money off the thorn bushes or dipped Its hand Into the pocket of our Irish-member con stltutents to get this money. Tha befooled tenants now awoke to a realization of the fact that they first had to pay the landlord direct one and one-third times tha price of tha land, and in addition pay the landlords, through the medium of the government, a bonus of one-eighth of the Inflated prices; still worse, shop keepers and artlaans who own no land and purchase none, are now wroth to find that even their taxes are Increased to make up deficits In the great est act of the century." The reason why these writers. O'Connor lives In London and Mr. McManus lives m Ireland close to the conditions he details. Americans are familiar with many of the solutions of political and economic problems worked" out In Australia. Chief among them Is the Australian ballot sys tem. Others await Importation. w tha most Important Is compulsory arbitra tion of labor disputes, now In practical operation In New Zealand, me taw w. enacted to meet conditions such as are common In the United States, and Is cred ited with seourlng results which are eon imnosslble In this country. One recent instance Illustrates the workings of the law. About 200 butchers In the slaugh ter houses at Canterbury demanded an increase of 6 shillings for each 100 sheep slaughtered. Tha arbitration court decided that they should have an Increase of only 8 shillings. This award the employers ac cepted. The men rejected It and went on strike. Thereupon the court fined them S apiece for striking In contempt of court. They refused to pay the fines or to re sume work. Then the court Issued war rants for their arrest and Imprisonment for a considerable time unless they at once complied with Its decree. That brought them to terms. They went back to work at the 8 shillings advance decreed by the oourt and paid their fines, the court gen erously permitting some of them to do so In Installments of 1 a week. In several other places men who attempted to evade the decrees of the court were brought to wir tn the same summary fashion. In an other Instance, however, a number of men employed In a factory, dissatisfied with .nd working conditions, simply quit work and sought employment elsewhere. The law oould not reaon mem oeoause did not make a demand on the em ployers. But the workmen knew their places could not readily te nnea. tm. ployers were obliged to seek them and grant the terms asked. Thus the work men proved that the law could be evaded and Its rigorous penalties avoided. The trade union movement In France has attained its antl-cllmax In the formation of a "syndicate", of professional cripples and defectives at Marseilles, of which the Paris Temps gives the following socount: "Marseilles' blind, deaf-mute, one-armed, legless and otherwise mutilated citizens met in general assembly the other day. After a brilliant discourse pronounced by a deaf-mute and a general exchange of views. In which several congenltally blind speakers participated, a list of demands wss drawn up by the Armless and Legless Wonder, and Citizen Rosin, unljamblste, was elected president of the organization. To their great surprise the delegates failed to secure sn audience with the prefect of the department, and it Is announced that they will appeal to M. Clemenceau. It must be confessed that the members of the new union have given evidence of an admirable spirit They aspire to unite their colleagues in other cities Into a na tional federntton. but they itfuae to affil iate with the General Confederation of La bor, whose antl-mlUtarlst and anarchistic views they strongly disapprove. They sre ready to rush to tha frontiers whenever the national safety shall demand It, have no prejudice against any form of faith, and pledge themselves lu r11cul.ir to ab stain from singing antl-clerlcal songs cal culated to check the flow of alms at the emirch doors." A letter from Copenhagen to a London Journal says that the polltlee.1 relations between Germany and Denmark have been embittered suddenly by ths unexpected ex pulsion of two Danish subjects from North Bchieswlg without any reason being as- Made from pure grape cream of tartar, and 4 absolutely free from lime, alum and ammonia. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO, NEW YORK. signed. If the expulsion policy should be readopted similar to that which prevailed during Ilerr von Roller's presidency In Bchieswlg, there would almost certainly be a new wave of antl-Oerman public opinion In Denmark. The papers of all parties characterize the latest expulsions as on act of unexpected rudeness toward the Danish nation, but express the hope that they are only the result of the desire of some fanatical Prussian officials to make them selves oonsplcuous. While much satisfac tion regarding the January treaty with Germany on the North Bchieswlg "optant" question was expressed In Denmark, there was no little bitterness among the sup porters of the extreme German policy In North Bchieswlg. Some time ago the Na tional TIdende gave a warning against too great optimism, and a recent number of the Berllngske TIdende quotes various examples of Inconsiderate behavior toward Danes In Schleswlg, pointing out that even those "optants" who, according to the treaty, are entitled to get naturalization as Prussian subjects nave not yet received a reply to their pei'tlons. The radical Polltlken and the conservative Vort Land publish long articles along the same line, the latter saying that Emperor William, who announced that he would vjslt Copen hagen In tha summer, must eventually be prepared for a cool reception. POLITICAL DRIFT. Colonel Watterson's dark horse will be terest certain Folk In tho west The legions of Joseph Benson Foraker shout In chorus, "Don't give up the sena- torshlp." J. Barry Mahool has been elected mayor of Baltimore. Mahool sounds like a ver slon of the Gaelic revival. i The New York World Is persistent In asking, "What Is a Democrat?" Former Senator Hill must be speechless. In Missouri a law will soon go Into effect prohibiting any Insurance company which pays any person a salary of more than 150000 from doing business in that state. As a trust buster Ohio Is breaking the record. A brick and lumber trust there lately pleaded guilty on being prosecuted and humbly begged for mercy. Now all tha trusts In Ohio will be good trusts. What was left of the Pennsylvania treas ury surplus after tha state house contrac tors hit it will not be a source of political anxiety much longer. There won't be any surplus when the legislature gets through. Vice President Fairbanks, like Secretary Taft, was a newspaper reporter In his early days. Mr. Fairbanks represented the Associated I'reas at Pittsburg and In dianapolis before he. Ilka Secretary Taft, became a lawyer. Vanished Is the hope that the Pennsyl vania legislature would complete Its labors without scandal. Tally clerks of the house are accused of voting absentees in favor of measures In which they were interested. But absent treatment foiled. Survivors of General Grant's famous 306 in tha convention of 1880 will hold a re union at the republican national conven tion next year. Colonel A. M. Hughes of Tennessee, one of the "Immortals," esti mates there are between sixty and eighty of tha number now living. The recent supplanting by the president of Governor Hagerman with Captain Curry as governor of New Mexico gives the coun try two territorial chief executives who won renown as Rough Riders. The other one is Governor Frank Frantz of Okla homa, who, like Curry, enlisted as a pri vate In the president's regiment and won the good opinion of the lieutenant colonel of that Illustrious band of warriors. Representative Cyrus Bulloway of New Hampshire Is still .the tallest member of congress, although he has something of a competitor In "Dan" Anthony, the newly elected congressman from Kansas, who Is to fill the place left vacant by Senator Curtis. Anthony stands six feet four Inches Jn his shoes, but according to ac cepted belief Mr. Bulloway stands six feec six Inches In his soclts, and the honor of New Hampshire Is still safe. PASSING OF GREAT STRIKES. Capital and Labor Gradually Getting Together. New Tork World. According to former Labor Commissioner Carroll D. Wright the era of great strikes Is passing, a result ha attributes to the growth of conciliation. ' Certainly there have been no labor con flicts of recent years comparable in vio lence, in the numbers engaged and In the tnagniture of property louses with the railroad strikes of 1877 or 1894, or with tha Homestead disturbance of 1892, rela tively small though the number was of those participating In that bloody quarrel. The sight has not been seen In a long time, as In 1886, of an entire labor or ganization ceasing work because of the charge of a single employe, nor haa a Debs called out a great army of workmen In a sympathetic strike since the Pullman troubles of 1894. Less Is heard of armed Plnkerton deUctlves In the field or of mil itia companies waiting orders In armories. Capital and labor have each learned the j lesson of the folly or using their giants' strength ilka a giant, and the gain la grest BOTH RIGHT jry HE laggard may here. ! As.T A - l .1 . i O nna me sun dering till now is ready to wear to-day at our store. As fine a suit, by the way, as it is pos'J sible to make'-vand made in our own workshops. i S15.to $40, Spring Hats, $2.50 to $6 Browning, King $k Co R. S. WILCOX. Managsr TERRORISTS MAKE BIG HAUL Four Persons Killed and JMne Injured In Robbery that Netted Five Thousand. Dollars. WARSAW. Russian Poland, May 17. A band of terrorists held up the city office of the Vistula railroad on Dluga street at' U o'clock this morning and got away with JS.OOO after a severe fight, In which four persons were killed and nine wounded. The office was full of people at the time and soldiers were guarding the approaches, but the terrorists attacked them with re volvers. killing two and (Muring four of the guards before they reached the place where the money was kept. Then, snatch Ing up a bag containing 15,000, the men ran out of the office. The soldiers Bred a volley' at the fleeing terrorists, but only succeeded In hitting some bystanders, two of whom were killed and five wounded. MOSCOW, May n.-Belenzoff, tha man who carried out the .great Moscow bank robbery March 20, 1908, when a band of terrorists seized 127,600, and who escaped from a train while being extradited from Switzerland, died In the prison hospital here yesterday of consumption. The gen eral belief has been that tha ' police al lowed Belenzoff to get away on condition that he betray his accomplices and oth ers, and that he has been living here under police protection ever since his "escape" was announced. Belenzoff was possessed of the dementia tliat several terrorists were trying to kill blm for be traying his comrades. SM1LI.MG LI.U9. "Is young Softy going a fast pace!" 'Is he? iou Just ougnt to see nlra run up a bill." Baltimore American. Teacher What Is meant by tha wave of popularity 7 jane The Marcel wave, ain't It, teacher! Cleveland 1'iuin Dealer. "Buttrln has been a good deal In tha pub lic eye, hasn't he?" "Yea, in the sense that he gets himself blown into It once in awhile." Chicago Tribune. "What do you consider the chief danger J of weaith7" asked the solemn man. "That the other fellow will have 1t," re sponded a hearer Inclined to flippancy. Philadelphia Ledger. ' "Tou reckon these fault-finding brethren go to heaven?" t "Some of 'em will have to. The other place la too full of 'em." Atlanta Consti tution. Mrs. Kntcker Has she clothes for all oil- j males i Mrs. Bocker Tea, exoept tha one her hus band mentions when he gets the bill. New' York Sun. "Now here," said the enthusiastic real -estate agent to the prominent politician, "Is one of the most desirable houses In tha capital. It has exposure all ar ' A1 " "Good heavens!" cried the , prominent politician, with a start of dismay, "that's Just what I'm trying to get away from!" Philadelphia Press. Late Arrival Who Is that man over there, Mrs. tlpmore, that everybody ap pears to be so eager to meetT Hostess Is It possible you don't knowt . That Is Mr. Perenltum, the man who wrote a short story foi a magazine without putting an automobile In It Chicago Tri bune. "Papa, are we all worms of tha duet as the preacher said?" "Well, son, perhaps we're all worms, but some of us nre shy on the dust." Phila delphia Ledger. Floorwalker I'd be ashamed to let my trousers bag as yours do. You ought to have them creased once In a while. Bookkeeper If my shins were as sharp as yours I wouldn't have any more trouble In keeping my trousers creased than you do. Chicago Tribune. JL'ST OHDIN ART. 3. M. Lewis In Houston Post. He never scaled no summits, nor stood out Uon the brink, And his name was never blazoned on no page In printers' Ink, Ana no ono In the next county never knowed he whs on earth. And a mighty Utile money would have bought all he wns worth. But his horses neighed a welcome when he comes Into the barn, . . For he gentled 'em an' loved 'em, an' he never grunted "Darn!" Ner used any other swear Word, ner laid on 'em with a goad. When th' pullln was too heavy; ha JaM lightened up their load. And his babies run to meet him when the work In' day was done, And he hollered soon's he saw 'em, and he helped 'em romp an' run, And the harder the day's work was and the wearier the mile. The smoother growed his wrinkles an' tha broader growed his smile, And his wife was never worried fear he'd come home out o' sorts, For he never lost his temper and he never made retorts That would hurt a body's feelln's, he was always Just the same. Though no one In the next county aver knowed him nor his name. i So, although he scaled no summits an' was quite unknown to fame, Tet I think the hosts o' heaven flew to meet him Jurt th same, An' they bore htm on their pinions to be side the crystal sea. Where the lovln'est and gladdest and tha gentlest spirits he. And although the world kept rollln' when he smiled an' said goodbye, An' there ain't no big mausoleum to show t where he does He. " Tet he world's a whole lot better fer his llvln' Just bekuz ( His children are proud of htm 'cuusa ha waa Just like he was. AND READY make up for lost time At -a i t . rr inar. ne nas put on or' 4