Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 20, 1907, EDITORIAL SECTION, Page 10, Image 10
10 Thk Omaha Daily Bse FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR KOSEWATER. EDITOR. : Cnterrd at Omaha post office M second class matter. TERMS OP 81HSCRIPTION. tally bee (without Sunday), on year..M-W l'all lire and SJnday, one year "p Pundsy Bee, one year J- fcaturdny Hee, one year , DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Dally Be (nr hiding Sunday), per week..ftc I.ly Jlee (without Sunday!, per week . .100 Kvenlng He (without 8unda), per wn. M Evening Uee (with Sunday), per week. . ..lo Address all complaints c Irregularities In dellvety to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Onaha The Bee iiulldtng. Eouth Omaha City Hall Building. Council Bluff If. Scntt Street. fh'rago IMO Tntty Building. New York-IMS Hnir.a I.lfe lnauranca Bldf. Washington Fourteenth Street. COIiRESPONDBNCB. Communlf-atlon relating to newa and edi torial matter should he nddreaaed, Omaha Hce, EUltorlal Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, Iiyal.e to The Bee Publlahlng Company. Only 2-rent stamps received In payment of mall accounts. rernoTi.il checka. except ot Omaha or eastern exchange, not accepted. STATEMENT OP CIRCULATION. Gtate of Nebraska, Douglas county, : Charles C. l'.oeewat.r general manager of The ! Publlahlng Company, being duly sworn, says that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally, Mnrnlyg. Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of June, 1WJ. w" follows: 1 96,530 IT M.480 2 36,500 II 36,490 1 38,820 I 38,400 4 38,880 20 38,310 i 38,410 n ae.aao t 36,810 22 36.510 7 36,030 23 38,730 36,800 24 38,800 9 38,900 I 36,900 10 38,880 28 3660 11 38,930 27 36,570 12 36,830 . . 28 36,470 It 38,840 29 38,880 14 38,830 20 36,860 15 37,170 18 35,800 Total ... 1,094 J30 Less unsold and returned copies.. 10,389 Net total 1,083,831 Dally average 38,137 CHVhL.aS ROSEWATER, . General Manager. Subscribed In my presence ana sworn to before me this 1st day of July, 1907. (Seal) M. B. HUNG ATH, Notary Public. Wit Kit OUT Or TOWN. abarribers leaving; the elty tea pornrily should bar The Be mailed to theaa. Addreaa will be chanced aa often as requested. Tolstoi predicts the downfall of the United States. Tolstoi talks a llttlo like James J. Hill. Xlkola Tesla saya he can talk to Mare. Let him do It and give the earth a rest. "Georgia republlcans should not complain," says the Brooklyn Eagie. So there are two of thern now, are there? It may devalop In the end that the Ink manufacturers started the war scare between Japan and the United States. Count fionl Is making renewed over tures for a reconciliation with his American wife. The count misses his meat ticket. Since they got rid of Schmitz and Reuf San Franciscans are not so anx ious to have the Japanese come over and capture the town. Charleston, 8. C, has erected a mon ument to a negro barber of that city. He must have achieved distinction by dying a natural death. "Is oratory declining?" asks an ex change. Chautauqua managers have testimony that oratory always accepts, if the fee is satisfactory. Senator Piatt says he would act very differently If he had his life to live over again. Any different conduct on his part would be an Improvement. A Philadelphia crook has confessed to sixty robberies, which is a pretty big record, considering the fact that he had no contracts on the state cap Itol building. The builders of Omaha who ara falling by the wayside one by one at least have the satisfaction of knowing that their work was well started and will be continued. Senator Piatt received many tele grams of congratulation on his seventy-fourth birthday. He would re ceive stl'l more by responding to the request to resign from the senate. The Pittsburg Elks aent to the con vention at Philadelphia wearing tux edo suite, cpera hats and white spats. It matters little what the Tittsburg fellows wear so long as they do not act like Pittsbursers. . The late William A. Paxton began to earn his own living by the sweat of his brow at the age r-f 13. Wonder ' how far he would have gotten had our present child labor law been on the statute bor!-.. in those days? Mexico's minister ot finance savs that politics and railroads have been divorced In Mexico. If that plan is ever attempted in ttU country a lot of politicians will. make an awful fight against the railroads for alimony. A Syracuse minister proposes to In stall a soda fountain in his church and serve soft drinks free during the sum mer season. He must figure that such a scheme N easier than to try to put Cti into bl sermons In hot weather. W. L. Jones announces his candi dacy for the United States senate for the state ot Washington. Hit strong card is that he has been in congress far tan year and has never been ac cused of complicity In any Pacific coast land frauds. jcdoe LiNDtKra diatbibk. Judge Den 13. Llndsey of Denver has evidently been studying Senator Till man's methods of Increasing receipts at the box office on his lecturing tours. Judge Llndsey has the lecture habit and Is in demand at Chautauqua meet ings, where his address? on Juvenile court work and reform movements for the betterment, of the condition of the children In large cities have proved deservedly popular, but of late he has pitched his oratorical note to a shriek and Is ranting about a demand for the gallows as proper punishment for some of bis political opponents. In a recent Chautauqua address Judge Llndsey declared that Senator Guggenheim and "BIH" Evans, a political boss in Colo rado, ought to be banged and deserved hanging more than the self-confessed murderer and all roufid criminal ex pert, Harry Orchard, does. Here is LI nd sey's .reason for wanting to pans sentence of capital punishment upon Senator Guggenheim and Mr. Evans: Simon Guggenheim absolutely bought his way into the United States senate yes, bought. William O. Rvans gav him the election because Guggenheim furnlahed ihe money to make Evans political master of the political ring that has throttled the atate. Evans made a deal with Guggenheim by which Guggenheim put up the money to carry on the Peabody campaign and the last campaign and Guggenheim got his senatorshlp. Colorado has been a hotbed of Jum bled politics for a good many years. When the party lines were broken up by the free silver fight In 1896 every aspirant to political leadership went out and organized a party of his own. In one election In Denver thirty-six different tickets were In (he field and no man who succeeded in election ever felt that he owed responsibility to any political party. If the faction that had nominated him became dissatisfied with his conduct, he organized a fac tion of his own. As a result political and official corruption ran riot and in dependent responsible citizenship was for a time unable to enforce the con ditions of civilized society. With the pasRing of the silver fad political realignment was resumed and Simon Guggenheim became his party's choice for United States senator. Sen ator GuKpenhelm Is a very wealthy man, which Is still considered some thing of a crime among certain politi cal circles In Colorado. This partic ular fortune, or a large share of !t, was made In the mining and smelting business In Colorado. When elected to the United States senate Senator Guggenheim withdrew from all con nection with the smelting combine and haa announced his Intention to keep his political and business connections divorced. Another feature of the Colorado po litical situation may, however, throw a light on Judge Llndsey's hostility to Senator Guggenheim. Evidently de delved by an Idea of his immense popu larity In tha state, Llndsey was a can candidate for governor. He was nomi nated on a. Civic Federation ticket and endorsed by a number of so-called re form organizations. He made the race, but was overwhelmingly de feated In the election that resulted In sending Mr. Guggenheim to the senate. There is room for political reform In Colorado, but It will not be accom plished by mere rhetorical exaggera tion. - CHAyCE FOR A DUO FALL. Collier's Weekly has Issued an Invi tation for a dog fall by asking the question, "Which Is the dog town?" The question thus propounded Is prompted by a letter from a St. Paul man, who writes that although un familiar with the canine statistics of the country generally, he feels con vinced that his town can boast more dogs to the block than any city In the country. Collier's discusses this seasonable suggestion with dogmatic profundity and declares, that on this proud boast that St. Paul has more dogs than any other city In the coun try It would like to hear from Minne apolis. h The challenge should be carried at once to Mayor "Jim," so that he may unllmber his lariat and enter Omaha In thlsy competition. Omaha must have more dogs to the square inch per capita of population than any other rity. At any rate the Omaha dog has made more nolHe and has come In for more attention relatively to popu lation thin the dogs dwelling In any other city. If Mayor "Jim" does his duty both St. Paul and Minneapolis will have to tall up the rear. THE JK.lLOVST OF CITIES. The latest illustration of the Jeal ousy ot cities is furnished by Seattle's experience in entertaining Vice Presi dent Fairbanks at the Christian En deavor convention. Tacoma and Port land have ' been in the dumps ever since Seattle secured the convention and have let pass no opportunity to extend invitations to tha delegates to the convention to come over, after the work was done, and see a couple of real live towns. Covert intimations were offered that the delegates had best go armed and leave their val uables, barring actual expense money, with friend at somo civilized town like Portland or Tacoma. Under such circumstances, of course, it was incumbent upon Seattle to put It best foot forward for the vice pres ident. The chairman of the reception committee therefore sent a letter to each member of the committee request ing him to appear in a silk hat and frock coat, or a "Prince Albert" as it is still called In Seattle, and to be sure to have his trousers properly creased. Reasons are not furnished for the failure of the committeemen to respond to the request The fact re mains that but one man appeared In a silk hat and frock coat. Dut that saved the day, In a measure, and the man was promptly placed at the head of the receiving line. Tacoma and Portland have been rebuked. But now comes a Tacoma paper, offering to fur nish proof that the person with the tall hat wse not a member of the re ception committee at all and not even a cltlsen of Seattle, but was a plain corn doctor from Yakima hired for the occasion. It is up to Seattle to meet and refute this slander. If necessary, the vice president should be Invited to another reception If for no other purpose than to allow Seattle to prove that It Is able, on occasion, to crown Itself with the silken lid of substantlnl citizenship. ANOTHER RV1LDRR OF OMAHA. In the death of William A. Paxton another builder of Omaha is called to whom the people of this city for all time to come will always be In debt. William A. Paxton not only had faith in Omaha, but backed his faith by his works, especially in the struggling days when It took courage to have even faith. That he profited by his foresight and enterprise goes without saying, but It was to a large extent because he, like others of the pioneers, bullded better than he knew. . His contributions to the Greater Omaha will remain for several genera tions to come In the form of substan tial buildings and successful business ventures. His participation In official public life was of comparatively small moment, yet as a member of the legis lature he twice represented the busi ness interests of Omaha and Douglas county, and as one of the board of di rectors also helped to guide that great public undertaking, the Transmlssls slppl exposition. The passing of William A. Paxton lengthens the list of prominent build ers of Omaha who have ceased their labors within the last two or three years, and of all the names is by no means the least. LIFE IXSVRAXCF. Is TWO STATES. The two states of Texas and Wis consin are Just now serving as experi mental practice grounds for new ideas In life insurance regulation, from which other states will be free to draw lessons for their own guidance In the future.i Twenty-one life Insurance companies Incorporated outside, but transacting business In Texas, have withdrawn from the state on account of the meas ure passed by the recent legislature requiring all foreign stock or mutual Insurance companies to Invest and keep Invested within the state at least 75 per cent of the legal reserve belonging to policies written on the lives of citi zens of Texas. Wisconsin has passed a law similar to that adopted in Texas, but even moro stringent In some pro visions. One of the largest life Insur ance companies in the world, organized under the laws of Wisconsin and with headquarters at Milwaukee, announces that It will cease doing business in Wisconsin because In the Judgment of Its officers It cannot comply with the provisions of the new law without l great detriment to its policyholders elsewhere. The contention of the state law makers and authorities In both Texas and Wisconsin is that they have gone no further than to afford proper safe guard to policyholders, while the in surance companies Insist that to com ply with their requirements would be to sacrifice the interests of policy holders In other states for those of policyholders in these states. There Is no question but if the reserves on policies had to be In large proportion Invested In the states in which they are written the field for high finance on the part of the Insurance officers would be greatly limited, If not en tirely wiped out. It is possible that some of the new insurance laws are calculated to work a hardship upon policyholders, but that is often the way of the legislative pendulum, which may be counted on to swing back Into equilibrium If It develops that It has been carried too far. The size of the different tax levies demanded by the various local author ities will have something to do with the disposition of the taxpayers to vote bonds whose proceeds are to be spent under their direction. If the city council Increases the city levy materi ally, or If the school board falls to re duce Its levy to correspond with Its Increased revenues from other sources, requests for bond Issues for city and school district will be very closely scrutinized. Governor Hoke Smith has signed a prohibition law passed by the Georgia legislature and will now have to close up the bar In the Piedmont hotel at Atlanta, which he owns. The bar is said to b making $50,000 a year and Hoke Is not a rich man. The prohl bltlonints should waste no more time looking for a presidential candidate for next year. The railroads are advertising Ne braska as a great dairy and butter producing state and at the same time they are proposing to change the rates for transporting cream in such a way as to seriously embarra.es these very Industries. Hardly conHistent. Because the asbessments of Omaha business houses do not show the same rate of increase the last two years as do the asMesauients of some Lincoln business houses, tha Llncolnltes are complaining of over-valuation. That conclusion, however, does not neces sarily follow. The Lincoln assess ments may have been way below the mark two years ago. Allowing twenty-five copies ot the session laws for Douglas county, con taining approximately an eighth ot the state's population, out of an edition of 3,500 savors something of rubbing It in. As these session laws are paid for by appropriation of the state treas ury, Douglas county really pays for at least 400 of them. Colonel Watterson selects Governor Johnson ot Minnesota for the demo cratic presidential nomination, but says "he must look to Colonel Bryan to get him the nomination." If Gov ernor Johnson has any other business on hand he may go right on with It In stead of straining his eyes looking -to Mr. Bryan for the nomination. The last fatal auto accident chron icled in the dispatches la traceable di rectly to failure to carry lights. 8ome ot the autos speeding around Omaha after dark are without lights and are Inviting the same kind of catastrophe. The requirement of lights on autos after nightfall should be rigidly en forced and no excuses accepted. The railroads got permission from the Interstate Commerce commission to put In reduced Interstate passenger fares on three days' notice. A little while ago they were telling us that it would take thirty days to make a change in interstate passenger rates. That story will not go another time. Colonel Watterson admits that hta presidential , dark horse . is Governor Johnson of Minnesota, and Johnson eays his boom is not worrying him. The purpose of the boom, and Colonel Watterson'e championship of it, was not to worry Governor Johnson, but to worry Colonel Bryan. A few democrats ambitious to run for office in Douglas county this fall have dug themselves out of the slough of despond. A democrat has to take a bracer first in order to Imbibe any encouragement from the political sit uation in this county. Can Court Enforce Decreet Indianapolis News. And yet the decision of the Nebraska supreme court that the wife and not the mother-in-law is the boss of tha bouse may not simplify the situation for the embarrassed husband. What's th VseT St. Louis Republic A railroad president announces that his road is out of politics and done with lob bying. Well, really, when you come to think of it, there doesn't seem to be any thing left to fight for. A Political Omelette. St. Louts Globe-Democrat. The youngest son Of the late General Grant la a democrat and wants to be pres ident. That is what "Jeff Peters", would call "an omelette." Can't imagine a Grant with so Indiscreet and contradictory ambi tion. Home Thin as to Bora. Brooklyn Eagle. We have anthracite enough to last for seventy odd years. Away with care! We can burn wood. But the wood will all play out in thirty years! Oh, well, any old thing will do. Our millionaires have trunks full of money. Let us burn that. Back to First Principles. Boston Herald. The incidental remark of the Inter state Commerce commissioners that Is the function of the railroads to furnish transportation reads like a Joke at first sight, thought the context shows that It Is really Intended to be serious. .The com missioners aeem to be harking back to the fundamentals. Flllnnoa nt Yaie. Leslie's Weekly. One of the pleasant est features to Sec retary Taft of the Tale commencement, which he attended, was the announcement that two Filipinos whom he had sent to tho university had captured 'the leading scholarship honors of the senior class. These capable young students from our Asiatic possessions are Jose Escaler and Mariano Honrade de Joys. Their success will aid In creating a higher respect for their race among Americans. Constitutional Kinks In Oklahoma. Kansas City Times. The constitutional convention which has just ended Its second session In Oklahoma made one commendable change In the orig inal draft of the constitution. The first provision denied the right of suffrage to soldiers and sailors, and the convention has amended thla provision to grant them the right to vote. There Is really no good reason to deny the right of suffrage to an American cltixen unless h has committed some greatee offense than that of enlisting to flght for his country. XAVAL ACCIDENTS. Melancholy Record of Battleship In Pvnr Years. New York Evening Post. Sixty-one officers and men killed In flvs accidents since January IT, 10S that Is the sad story of the navy's battleships. In each case the' scene has been the turret of a battleship. Nine men were killed on the Massachusetts, flv an th Iowa, thir ty-two on the Missouri, seven on the Krar sarge and now eight or more on the Georgia. In addition the muxslea of three guns of the Iowa were blown off on two oc casions, fortunately without loss of life. This Is a sickening record, particularly by contrast with the navy's Immunity during the war with Spain and the hostilities In the Philippine. The heavy-armored cruis ers and the monitors havs gone through their target prsetloe unscathed, and, what Is even mure striking, socldents of just this kind do nojt seem to occur on fore'gn bat tleships. We. do nor recall a similar d's aster In the German or French navies and the English service has been nearly as ex empt. All three have had their losses of life in other ways by the explosion of a magazine on the French battleship Jena, by the sinking of torpedo boats, subma rines, etc. Obviously, th new type of war ship menaces those who control its terri ble forces as well a possible enemies. But whatever the reason for the misfortunes of tiie American navy any disposition to severe criticism. If sueh there be anywhere, must yield to deep regret and sympathy for the relatives of th dead. The officers of the navy may be relied upon to do their utmost to prevent any recurrence of Such ghastly mishaps. OTHER L4Xn THAW Ot BJ. Hope springs eternal In the home rule breast. Defeat may follow defeat and dis appointment chill the warm blood of Irish men, native cheer and hope sustain tlicm In a contest that would crush the spirit of a less sanguine race. John Redmond, leader of the Irish Parliamentary, party In the House of Commons, sends a message of en couragement to friends of the cause In the United States. "Some unthinking persons Imagine, " he saya, " that we have to com mence the struggle over agin. Thla is a mistake. Ireland has the British democracy at its back today In numbers and in force of sincerity unequajrd In our time or In our generation. To maintain this friendship and to go on consolidating It will be our aim and ambition." In assuming a position of antagonism to both political parties Mr. Redmond says "we are only reverting to the fighting tactics of ParnelVs day." An Impressive demonstration of this aggressive policy was shown in the recent by-election in Durham, where the home rule vote was diverted from the liberal party, resulting In the election of th labor party candidate, practically a gain of a vote for homo rule. While the main, proposition Is shelved for a time the present ministry Is pressing for ward the work of land reform. The evicted tenants' bill recently passed by a vote of S15 to 98 Is an encouraging evidence of good will. If sanctioned by the House of Irds It will bring about the reinstatement of 2,000 evicted tenants. But the striking fea ture of the policy embodied In the bill Is the compulsory dispossession of landlords who have hitherto refused to sell. Supplement ing other reforms grudgingly dragged from Parliament, they furnish evidence of prog ress and aid substantially In paving tho way for legislative Independence In Ire land. , Under tho heading, "Truth, Not Poetry," a correspondent at Yokohama writes to a Munich paper about the Japanese: "Too bad that In the Interest of truth one must shatter the poetry with which we have sur rounded Japan and Its Inhabitants. That the country and the people are Interesting to the Europeans no one can deny. Neither can there be any doubt as to the great dif ference between their social and their busi ness methods and ours. All this fascinates for a time, but when one knows that he must remain here for years, and when in order to become better acquainted With his neighbors he studies them and finds that they are undesirable companions he soon forgets tha romance of novelty in the con templation of stern truth. This reveals the Japanese as untruthful and Insincere. While they can be affable and pleasant, I beilleve they are Incapable of real friendship toward white people; their sense of humor Is un developed and their smile Is meaningless, except that It Implies what they do not feel. In conversing with them one always feels that they say what they think will make a good Impression, regardless of their own feelings. They look upon the European as an Intruder, toward whom they ara polite for selfish reasons only." It appears that part, at least, of the In surrectionary movement that has been go ing on In India Is the work of agitators in the United States. This fact was brought out In the trial at Lahore, of a number of Hindus, charged with being concerned in the publication in the vernacular newspa per India of an article Inciting the native army to mutiny. The evidence showed that the article in question was not writ ten locally, but was received from a sedi tious organization in America. ,The article was headed "To the Native Forces In India." Another article, published In the Calcutta newspaper, Bende Mataram, con tained seditious utterances of so gross a character that, although It was read In court, the official Civil and Military Ga zette did not reproduce It. A hundred thousand copies of this article were printed and distributed. The writers of the Arya BamaJ, a society which professedly exists for the carrying out of Hindu religious re forms, and of which Lajpat Ral was one of the leading lights, were employed to trans late the article Into the vernacular of the Hindu peasantry. It was printed, not at the offices of India at Gujranwala (Punjab), but at those of another Journal, the Hin dustan, In Lahore, really a Joint concern, though the two newspapers are opposed to each otBer editorially. This maneuver was Intended to mislead the secret police, but detectives searched both offices and thus proved the connection. There Is apparently no set boundary to the reach of municipal ownership In Eu rope. Having bought out the principal funeral companies in Vienna and assumed the responsibility for carrying on tho un dertaking business of the whole city, the municipality haa decided to go a step fur ther by Introducing a system of burial In surance covering not only the cost of tho funeral and of the grave, but also, when desired, the erection of, a suitable monu ment In addition. All this Is to be carried out through the medium of the Emperor Francis Joseph Jubilee Life Insurance com pany, an Institution which forms yet an other department of the city's municipal activity. The Insured must be between the ages of 18 and (0. In good health and not engaged In any dangerous occupation. In the event of death occurring within six months from the date of Insurance the policy will be void and the premiums paid will be returned. By payment of a capital sum the company will agree to keep, graves In order and to decorate and Illuminate them on the feast of All Souls In every year so long as the cemetery Is In existence. Under the new British workman's com pensation act, passed by the present British government and In operation since July 1, employers are liable for accidents to r. It persons employed In manual labor, all do mestic servants and all other employes who ar not paid more than 11.260 a year. An accident that Incapacitates entitles the In jured employe to compensation amounting to one-half his weekly earnings, but not to exceed $ a week. The allowance goes on as long as the Incapacitation lasts, but may be replaced by tho purchase of an annuity amounting to 75 per cent of the annual value of the weekly payment. When death results from an accident the employer must pay compensation ranging from $700 to H.joO to dependents or heirs. If thor are any, or Jf) ror medical or funeral ex penses where there are no dependents. This set Is a practical Illustration of the riurse recommended by President Roosevelt In one of his Jamestown addresses. The Imme diate practical effect of It Is to raise wages by whatever amount represents the cost of Insurance against th losses which employ ers may Incur under the provisions of the act. In th eventual .adjustment this cost of Insurance may or. may nut be deducted from wages. There are mills and factor'.ej In this country now which Insure all their employes against accident. Some of them deduct the coat of the premiums of such Insurance from wages; some do not; that Is a mater of bargaining. Such Insurance, when voluntarily undertaken. Is an excel lent thing, whoever pays for It. but, of course, It adds to the cost of manufacture. Mlsnn of Prdaaosaes. Portland Oregonlaa. What a mess the National Educational as sociation has made out of nothing. After resolving In favor of simplified spelling. It asks the secretary when he publishes the proceedings to employ approved nineteenth century models or discredited twentieth century Improvements to suit his fast. It basn't th courage of It convictions POLITICAL DRIFT. Lieutenant Oovernor Sherman Is going about Illinois attarklng Roosevelt policies and boosting Speaker Cannon as a presi dential candidate, Oovernor Hoke Smith of Georgia has signed a prohibition bill which closes his famous Piedmont hotel bar In Atlanta. One hundred and thirty oountlea In the atate had already voted to go "dry." The state of Wisconsin Is following Mas sachusetts In the matter of preventing stock watering of public-service corpora tions to the extent of requiring permission from the State Railroad commission and forbidding sales of new stock in any case at less than par. It has fallen to the lot of Miss Kale Ber nard o Oklahoma City to be the flint woman candidate for state office In Okla homa. Miss Bernard was nominated for commissioner of charities and correction on the democratic ticket In the recent prl. marles. She lud no opposition. The Missouri milliners Invited Oovernor Folk to their convention and he failed to come, pleading that he didn't get the in vitation. When the situation became un pleasantly warm for him he laid the blame for the loss of the Invitation on his private secretary. And yet some people say he Is not training for the presidency. The pathos of neglect Is rarely shown as keenly as In the case of Senator Thomas Collier Piatt. The famous "easy boss" of New York passed his seventy fourth milestone last week, and none of the thousands who formerly served him paid him the tribute of a call, nis mind Is clear, but his form has wasted almost to a shadow of his former self. Oovernor Hughes deals a sharp crack at Superintendent Kelsey of the New Tork Insurance department by vetoing the Item appropriating $15,000 to pay the three law yers that Kelsey hired when the governor made his charges to the legislature as to the commissioner's Incompetence. Kelsey needed no lawyers. To ask the state to pay their bills Is a new sort of Impudence that the governor sttnglngly rebukes. INTERSTATE TWO-C'E.T RATK. Increased Business Banish In a the Ghost of Losses. Bt. Louis Republic. While the 2-cent passenger rates are un der test It Is Interesting to note that the Interstate Commerce commission haa been Informed by the western roads that 2 cents will be the rate for Interstate trips In Mis souri, Illinois, Iowa and Minnesota after July 16, and that the rate will he 21 cents for Interstate trips In some other parts of the west after July 20. It Is "only by thus extending the tow rate to travel between neighboring states that ljs merits or demerits can be fully ascer tained. The states mentioned are divided by natural or Imaginary lines for purposes of government only. The ties of kinship and friendship between them are many and strong. The occasions for travel from one to another are numerous. The Inducement of the low rate Is likely to Increase thj number of short Interstate trips to an ex tent that will be gratifying to the passenger agents. It is at least well worth while for the roads to make the experiment. The farmers and townspeople of the west, though prosperous, have not money to burn. Though addicted to the "travel habit" which pervades all parts of this country, their appreciation of the neces sity for economy In travel Is shown by their waiting In the past, for the excur ston rates of one arid a third fares for the round trip, this amounting to f cents a mile for the round trip, when th regular rate Is 3 cents a mile. With a flat 2-cent rate In effect, people who cannot take advantage of the special I mminn ran travel cheanlr when and where they want to. And there are some Indications which the Republic has found around the St. 4,ou1s Union station, that the travel will be so Increased the road will ho well satisfied to accept 2 cents a mile and say no more about it. KXPA1VSION OF THK CORX CROP. Increase In Son thern Aereasre a Warn ing to the West. Wall Street Journal. t Our corn crop now covers the largest area planted In any single farm product In any one country of which there Is any record, not even excepting Russia. We have now under corn less than 2.000,000 acre short of 100,000,000 acres. The Increase of corn acreage by 1,361,000 acres over last year is confined almost wholly to the surplus corn states of the west and to the southern or southwestern states. Iowa, which stood first last year in the size of the crop, Inrreaaed her acreage 1 per cent, Nebraska 2 per cent, Missouri 1 per ceht, Kansas 4 per cent and Arkansas 4 per cent. Indian territory extends her acre age 6 per cent over last year, Oklahoma 20 per cent and Texas 7 per cent. In the older southern slates Georgia added 2 per cent. South Carolina 2 per cent, Louisiana i per cent, while Alabama and Mississippi as well as Virginia lost ene point In the area under cultivation. These percentages show clearly enough that under more or less unfavorable condl tlona of starting the crop the chances are In favor of the states where corn Is a spe cialty on the One hand and among states which have the advantage of an earlier season on the other. t Nothing could be more gratifying than to see the south and the southwest put a larger acreage Into corn. There Is no better market for corn than the southern states, where consumption for human food and animal feeding la Increasing year by year with the growth In population and the greater Importance attached to live stock. Furthermore, the lands of the south are eminently adapted to a considerable en largement of acreage In corn without trenching on ether crops. Finally, the In crease of corn scresge there wsrns tho west that It must, prepare Itself for keener competition In disposing of Its surplus In southern markets. NONE BETTER EST where there perhaps to use an invidious superlutive. Hut surely, we may say there is no better clothing ready to wear than that made by drowning, King & Co. And, now, when you can buy this kind of clothing at the big reduction of 20 per cent, it will pay you to buy a suit it will be just as good next spring. We have some broken lines of wash vesta that are slightly soiled, which we are closing out at $1,50 thebe formerly sold fo- $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50. From 8 to 9 o'clock Saturday evening we will sell any of our $1.00 neckties at 50o. WE CLOSE AT 9 O'CLOCK SATURDAY Browning, King & Co R. S. WILCOX, Manager. BRIXO Cl'BA CI.ORIl. Railroad Esteasloa Pat lalan Wlthla Few Hoara Ride. Chicago Trlbuna, The skipper who sailed In a fog V'i Wlnstanley and his men building the fl' Edilystone lighthouse asked on reaching port. "What manner of wen are thesi that build upon the sea?" The fisherman far out at sea who discovers In the d!stano a fast express train running over the watei will be even more surprised If not prepared hy previous knowledge. Yet this sight wlli not he an unusual one when the railroad from Miami to Key West Is completed. It gives an Idea of the value of th Cuban trade to consider this expenditure of millions of dollars simply to bring Ha vana a littl closer to the United States. When the railroad Is complrted It Willi b possible to enter a slerplng car In Chios.1 or New York, be hurried to Key West by rail, and then, after a ferry ride of four or five hours, step out of the car at Ha vana. Seventy-five miles of the railroad to Key West will bn over embankments or concreje arches where sheets of water now extend. Fifty miles more Is through swamps or over small Islands where before there was no thoroughfare. The expense of the undertaking Is so great that It would have been difficult to secure the sanction of a board of directors less dominated by one man than the directors of the Florida EasTl Coast railway. The returna. however, will! be amply remunerative. With Cuba only a few hours distant the bonds between the lBland and the United States will tend to grow closer. The dis tance between Havana and Key West Is not to be reckoned In miles, but In hours, and the adoption of turbine st unships will further reduce this distance. Trans portation by water 1s In general cheaper than transportation by rail, but the volumo of our trade with Cuba has become so large that tlffie Is money, and the hours saved will be worth more than the higher rate charged. For that matter, It Is not certain that the rate will not be lower. The avoidance of charges for unloading and reloading will, If the ferry scheme proves successful, result In an Important saving. It la probably true of trade be tween the United States and Cuba as It Is of trade between the United States and Europe, that on certain classes of frelnht the greater part of the cost Is Incurred In getting the goods from tho car to the boat. The Increasing commercial Intimacy be-V tween the United States and Cuba may not 1 be represented Immediately by closer polltl-V cat ties, but the flag Is certain to follow trade in this case in the due course of time. SMILUVtJ l.I.VKS. "That yacht Is flying a flag of distress." "What does It signal?" "Wants to know If we have a corkscrew aboard." Pittsburg Post. "Gracious!" exclaimed the aweltorlng tourist. "Is this ihe kind of weather you have all summer?" "Certainly not," replied the native, "why, we have half a dozen different kind! every day." Indianapolis News. "Is Mr. Bllgglns a good golf player?" "No," answered Miss Cheyenne, "I hap pened to be sufficiently near to hear his language when he made a bad stroke. He may bo an expert player, but he Is not a good one." Washington Star. "Do you think," said the Mikado to hla faithful Pooh-Bah, "that the Americana really can fight?" "If you ask; me not In view of my mani fold dignities, but 'as a plain, thinking man." answered Pooh-Bah, cautiously, "I must anv it Inrtlra Ilk it tt-in t&'nv th.v vat I the Spanish navy that sinking feeling." j Baltimore American. "Ouchl" complained the scales In the railroad station. automVi "these I at men will be the ruin of me. That last one simply put me on the bum." "Well. ' replied the chewlntr gum ma chine, "now you can He in weight for tha next one." Catholic Standard and Times, "You have no art In your country!" eg claimed the European superclllouHly. "Haven't, eh!" answered Mr. t'umrni, reaching for his check book. "Why for the last five years we have been buying old masters faster than you fellows can paint 'cm." Washington Star. "What are you working up now?" asked the Inquisitive reader. "Well," replied the special magazine writer, "I'm trying to get a line on an un known hero who deserves something hand some at President Roosevelt's hands." "Who Is he?" "The husband of the Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe." Philadelphia Press. IIE.PEt'KED. Joe Cone In Judge. A half a hundred hens one day I At least the story goes 1 Talked o'er their rights and wrongs, and then In hot rebellion rose. The rooster had been lord of all A cruel tyrant he. i They sought to take him down a pes Or two, or mayb tnree. One squawk, then at him did they fly And picked and scratched like mad. They drove him here and dragged him there. And used him very bad. The wrath of months fell on his head; The Job was very clean. He looked as though he'd filtered through A harvesting machine. And since that day the world has com To this conclusion terse: A henpecked man looks had enough, A henpecked rooster worso. HAND SAPOLIO FOR TOILET AND BATH It makes the toilet something to be en. Joyed. It removes all stains and roughness, prevents prickly heat and chafing, and leaves th skin white, soft, healthy. In the bath it brings a glow and exhilaration which no common soap ran equal. Imparting the vigor and life sensation of a mild TuriiaU tath. All GnocEr and Druogists. is so much good clothing is