THE OMAUA DAILY BEE: RATI HDAY. JAM'AKV 4. IPO. Tim, Omaha Daily Der tovnjjT.it nr r.nwAiin hohmwatk.fi Vi ton itoHKWATr.n. rmtor. "Met-d at mli Pnalithr ecnnd 1 tlr. Ticnvin or Ki:ns;HirTioN: 1 'Hr l (win. nut tnl v i. nn year I DO , 0 I 60 jally ite anil giindar. on r f'ih4r re, 4f ri year wxurdsy li.a. on year bKuvrjiKi) n r cAitttir.it t'SMy l (ttir ludinc Num1y, per wak li fHy ll (without Kiln.Un, pr week Ic ", I ii H" (without sjundayi, per Week hc Kvanlng liMt (with )undyL per wk...t AS'lr.a nil complaint of irr eguirtl in dllvry to city circulation ltrtmnt. nrriCK.ii. Oir.ahs.Th It llimdlng. ft'tttt f omart city 1111 nulldlns Cntlliell IUkIT ItSrVult frM. I hlrlin IliMI tlltV'Hf Uulldlng . Nw torh- Um limit 1-lf 1 niirnr aiIMIng- VVallngfoi. -7 p-mirfftcnih llrl N W. COM! KlU'r iNHr.NCK. f eninninlcatinr, tlailn( U nw and dl. lerlal tntir houtd b 4drd, Omaha We, Il)i1trll I ipHint, RiiMtiTANrjnn. fWmlt by 1 r rt , iprim nr potl older Trln to Tha fir Publishing Company inly J.rant iifit received In payment of till) aominla rnnl ilieosa. ept 'in maha or aaaUm ( hang, not ci'pld. ST ATKM KKT UF VI Bt'C I. AT l N Plat ht Nabrfc. pftngla ).'ninil)', ' (4i , rasthuck, trurer nf Th lie f-nhlloMai Company, being duly a nrn, aaya thai tha actual nuuihr tif full al.il coniplat. ropl at Th Oally. Vornlna, ftvrnlng anil siundav lie rlni1 1 ii rln a tha itmtiiK of ttacemhsr. Iti. w a foUnwai I , . , 3S.4O0 17 M0 . . . ST.1SO II W. 1 91,979 II M,M 4 . .. ....... OT.SSa tO M.SSO t 91,999 II M.3S0 M.MO It S00 t. tr.999 H ,400 . . . , B,O0 31 M.MO 99,990 II 99.900 1(1 v. . . . 7,00 I M,no II .... tt.aoa 117 MM 13 , in ,90 li tr,aao i moo 14 SS.aiO 0 M.I10 H sa.aao it m,so j as,ao - Tut I I.1SMM t.aaa unsold ami rturni coplna t,8M N.t total Ually vra IQOHIK 1.1M. TT9 a.44 II Tr.wiirfK. 'rrcaanrr Muliarrlbatl In fl rtair ami ewnrn to Vofnf ni llil il Oay of .tannmy, ln. noiiKtt T MUNri'.H, Nrtiary Piihllf. wiir.w itt or to ww. ajtekrrlnara lavlai ltr taa rrllr nl kav Tha mall tm Ih. A4Kraa will ( aa rta a rqa. 1 Vt'i ''"!! tt U tirodlrtiHl that th U' crop will b liort thla yrnr. Hoard your Ire. Rum unknown tnD threw a bomb t th4) Btork xrhnngi la Konnv Tun I.awRiiti ran prove mi alllil Tli n n id w of North I'nrk In lloaton bta bpn olnngod to SolgllHtio, which, tt la (rt be Urpmnnod, Uoatoneae for North.''. If th ot In Ohio tlac the aamu ratio tha vol In the republican lata commit too It will b two to one for Tatt. "They itre jiiayln' for Jeff tvl la ArVannm." a fe Little Hock ia par. And they are -layln' for him In Wanhnston. Mr. Cleveland now favora penelona for en-prealdenta. Ha made a record aa an antt-penelon man while In the Wolta limine. Taderewakl la (olng to quit travel ing and will aettle down to a station ary Job. It I hoped he will then find time la get Ma hair cut. "Kid" Broad, the pugtllt. that ha ha a fight acheduled tor every month of tOS. In other worda, he la eipectlng a arrappy naw year. A recent atory la to tha effect that New York City atanda on a bed of gar bate. Surface Indication point more nearly to a bed of graft. Among the noveltte acheduled for 110 are five Salurdava In February, two new moon in April and a apeech by Colonel Aryan tn July. "There w ill be no cabinet a, no klnga ' and no deacona In the naxt world." aa.va Dr. farKhurat Ltkewlte no aet and natlonl preacher rreMdent Roosevelt called mor Sparka and Spark h railed the Nevada legislature, next move will be a showdown. Oov now The n " " Ita official center Originally the edi- It ta rt'iw rumored that Hearst sad J tor of tn Zukunft made charges In Bryan few are to form an alliance ; v.Mving the morale of the German tn Naw York. Republican leader ' army and the loyalty and decency of fear the report may prow untrue. 'the Cerman court When von Moltke - - - - failed to aecur a verdict against Har- Some of th Improvement club ar i jen in the first trial. Emperor William moving to prevail on the street railway ! tV-dered a rehearing and a sealing company to put on owl car service. J investigation into the entire caae. This W thought Ike lid was ou in Omaha "Th Naw Tear's r1lnee" is tha j title of aa editorial tn the Atlanta j CoBStttuttnn. Though! the prohibition ! taw went tnio effect tn Oeorg'a o January 1. Although tt t !er year, Mlas j Democracy will ro ba compiled to make any proposal One of her old time aettor haa alreadr alated him- I elf tier steady. A good delegation from Omaha to Ihe Mdtta City Missouri Hirer Navtga- it. M.sreaa can do a arat deal to put lha Mlaaourt river In Its propee p-lae tha siatej-way map Nebraska wopullsta will bar to wak wp too if they are to take part ta the national nominating coave-atic called to meet at $t. I -out tn April to Pt wp t presidential ticket. It tha wopallsta wowU hold primary to ao- leot their delegate they Might get a eotitit of wove that -onl4 taforra tha democrat whether Ibey r amerns ta warrant nagotiaUiMtA. 7 nr. miik rr. . . Municipal authrtrlitfR In New Tork have adopfd a plan for (lirfritlatlng the iiiHinployed. In orW to prite tha (Itjr and the charitable Individual! from linpoaltlon by that farnmt clana of peraona who ara out of rniployiunnf by rhob'e, rather than from nerwialty. Inaamut h aa the problem la unn whli h farea local anthorltle everywhere. H ahoiil't b aolvrd on prattltal llnea. both that no lojuallce be done to really deaervlng peraotiN and that other com munlllc. be aafeKuardeil acnlnat lb name luipoaiora. The city In I ho natural refuge of men out of work. The ebb and flow of the demand for labor periodically leave a largo number of men without employment and theaa drift naturally to the naret large city for the winter month. Many men out of work and with lltfla money ac-ek modent. accom modation! in the cheapest lodxInK houaoa Mud alt with more or lena patleiire for aomeihlna; In the ah a pis of a Job to turn up. Other, without re aourcea, lake advaniace of the oppor tunity offered by the municipal lodg ing houaaa, the Halvatlon Army room and vartoua planea similarly provided for the unemployed. The majority of theae men are not tramp, but are out of employment becatie of the tem porary reduction or atoppitga of mill, mine, railroad ronatructlon or a aonabln Induatrlea which fuinlahed them employment during the autumcr. If unable to obtain temporary employ ment for the winter, they ahoiild be looked after In every way poaalblo by the mUalona and charitable Inatltn tlona. Tba difficulty In beatowlng thla kind of aaalatanca li complicated and tnrreaaed ty the ahrewdne of the profelonal hobo, who 1hi no time In mingling with the enforced unem ployed and aharlng the heuenta of charity beatowed upon genuine caa. To meet thla condition the New York authorities have decided to ap ply the labor teat. The more an nouncement of the plan baa wrved to clear out tho municipal lodging hquHa of a horde of tramp who have atarted for other cities whore the municipal authorities are not o hard-hearted. It la alwaya difficult to dlatlngulvh by aurface Indication the tramp from the man deaervlng of aaltance, but the work teat ha proved tln beat' aepa- rator. rnr: ckxsvs oisiprtitkia. Th Real Knlat exchange la on the right track In Ita effort to act lu mo tion all tho machinery at our com mand to bring about the moat credita ble showing tor Omaha tn tha coming cenaua of 1910. While thla la 'no more the particular duty of the Real Katate exchange than tt la of each of the other btialneaa organltatlona de voted to Omaha growth and prosper ity, aome one of them muat take tha Initiative and all f tham mint ba cu lt! ed in tho work. Irreapectlve of tt other aspecta, the decennial cenaua la from one point of view a competitive race of all large enterprising American cltle for rela tive rank In the population line-up. The decennial cenil flxea tha order of our population center In the official llal according to alie, which la con aulted for reference throughout . the ctvllUcd world. Whether Omaha la larger or amaller, ami conennently more or lea important, than St. Joseph, or Kanaa City, or St.vPaul, or MlnneaptJla, or Denver, and how "much, la decided for most people by the figure of the federal cenau enumera tor. The aya and mean to produce the best reault In tht competition 'will have to ba agreed upon when the movement Is In full swlns. In all probability vartoua different plan of drawing In new realdenta by furnish ing them aatlafactory employment, comfortable living and attractive aur - rounatng wtn nave to taken up. Thla I a public movement tn which every patriotic man. woman and child Interested In Omaha can and ahould alnk all difference and pull together. iilRM4MS .Virjil.YjII. .l.4.D4l. Back of the Harden-von Moltke libel case. Just brought to a close tn Berlin, is the atory of official putridity that threaten to shake Germany to inquiry ha- dereloped the startling fact that Princess Charlotte, a sister of the emperor, had supplied Harden with the information on which were based the published charges of gross immorality against the clique poaing as the emptor's advisers and closest friends Question haa been raised, naturally, of tha motive of the princes who has tnaJe these charrea asa;nt the court circle, fraakly admitting that she per sonal v detests the men againt whom ! hr mplatnts and th tttncllc pen I f Ms-den have been directed. With 1 J1 vehtrcenca she insist that Ike j charges are susceptible of convincing , proof Her position has the effect of jcondouisg her ivotive a-nd maklccim paraUve g verltt.-ation or ditnroval i The emperor's poltfc is the one hrtght and redeeming feature tn this eihtbltlok of kilter court tntngse He haa dean Aided and is e forcing a -i oroa and complete Ittqatrr of aUl tbe carfrea. C1ea.a-m1r.ded klmself, s haa bee a alow to bUve the tharfw of j laid oa the weakness f the f re depart taint and deoeptloa amc&g the. t i oier.t. Of coarse. South Omaha will karw aaaa hi advisers and friend. 1 always be able ta appeal ta Omaha for Ilia ponltlcin. however, may be taken a gnarAhty that complete Jutlre will tnnrk hi Judgment when all the fact are known and that all tha guilty In tho affair, even If aome of them get a Hcotclt verdict of "not proven." will finally renp their deaert. iASADAH ( OMM&ftr 7.4 I, ftlAtF. Trannportatlon circle have been given aomethlng of a shock by two re port made public recently concerning plana of tho Canadian railway for a commercial Invasion of .tho United HUUa. The drat of theae report waa to the effect that tho Canadian Pacific waa dickering fur a control of the Hoaton AY Main railway, with which tt ha had a traffic agreement for y'eara. The consummation of thla plan would give Canada what It ha Ions Bought an outlet to an open aeaport and would place the Canadian Pacific In position to becomo a very active competitor with American rallroada for IratiHcon tltiental traffic. In the opinion of rail way expert the American government could do nothing to prevent' thla trans fer, although tho deal might have a startling effect upon all our trans portation Interest. The second report la that the same Canadian road Ih negotiating for con trol of the 'Chicago Oreat Western, thus giving the Canadian road new arm reaching to Chicago, Omaha and Kaunas City, tapping the very heart of tho grain belt of the nation, with an unoliHlructcd connection with both oceans commanded by no American railway sytem. The Canadian road ha been practically controlled by the Canadian government. The road and the Kovomment back of It have heretofore been content to run feeders Into American territory and compete for local trade on a line parallel to the border. This has not aerloualy Interfered with the operation of American rallroada. but the ru mored plann would chance our en tire railroad map. Foreign control of ii corporation operating In the United Statea would offer many oppor tunities for commercial, political and diplomatic quarreling, to say nothing aa to whether It would bo to our ad vantage or detriment. In the mean time search fall to reveal any legal ground which the American govern ment could Interpose. Kveii if nothing tangible result from thee rumors, thoy will perhapa serve to call attention of congress and our federal authorities that we have- a very enterprising neighbor on the north whose commercial relations with the United States have never been properly cultivated or appreciated In thla country. Conservative democrats In Ohio will make an 'effort to send a delegation to the democratic convention In structed for Judson Harmon for tho presidential nomination. They under stand, of course, that Mr. ifarmon haa no ghost of a chance of tho nomina tion, but they Also understand that the Instruction of a delegation for him would be a body blow to Tom Johu on, who thinks he own the demo cratic party In Ohio. ., The World-Herald gives a great rep utation to th political sagacity of its Washington correspondent' when he writes tor the Sioux City Tribune. For Its own readers, however. It depends for political pabuluut upon the special commissioner of the Commoner, who is on the spot In Waahlngton under In structions to patnt dttunal slooni for th republican-! and roseate hope for the democrat. The bia volume of the bank clear ings reported by the Omaha clearing house t very gratifying, but tt muat be remembered that the South Omaha , bjnv have ion,ha onjy been clearing through since the late financial crisis. This I all Omaha business. but people should understand the Change, made by the admission of the ; South omaha banks to the Clearing ji0llf(l association. IVputy Food Commissioner John i son's nevt Md for applause la to be J made by going after the "eye water" .which b passed over drug atore 'counters. The food commissioner's ; office met have consumed a lot of ! "eye water" to see all the buckram ; bogy men It has been so valiantly ' fighting. i Colouel Rryan'a appearance at the , Pahlman Democracy dinner will be matched by hi attendance on the corn ing Jacksor.ian feast It would be dangerous to the peace of the political family had Mr. Bryan favored one of ' theee organltatlona of the unterrified and not the other. Alabama and Soeth Carolina each have laws prohibiting tJfe carrying of pistols that are lest than twenty-four Inches long The law is really unnec essary,' a no fighting gentlemen of those states would be disgraced by carrying anytr.tng smaller than a thre-fool gun Governor Sheldon indicates that he wiM try to officiate in person, accom panied by his staff, at the presentation of th silver service to the battleship NebraUa Tnts Is notice to a lot of i colonels to r1h an tfce button on their r.cw uniforms and get is prsrtice to w-ear them for the flrt time South Omaha come In for a pretty p.ior rating tn the report of tha Na tional Board of I'aderwrlter on the fre hatard ta that city, emphatda ooteg aslRtsnca In ta of sonflsgratlon, but It would have had a right to the bene fit of a metropolitan fire department had the two cities been consolidated. "Clearing house certificates will soon become curios worth preserving," ays the Philadelphia Inquirer. Mighty few of us care to remember the clear ing house certificate or the conditions that gave It birth. The 30,000 families on the East Hide In New York who are objecting to paying the rents demanded have a long Hat of reasons for their position. The first of these is that they haven't got the money. Southerners will entertain a mighty poor opinion of Governor Sparks of Nevada, who had to be prodded up by the president before he realized the existence of such a thing as state's rights. K.ial Any Taak. Ilnltlmore American. Aftr all, Mr. Taft utterance proved tht hr wa ut the mn Mr. Honvrlt aiiplioai'd til in to be. Marking a. IHaeovery. liiilnvUla Cciurlr-Jourtial. Andrew Carnegie ha Hcovred Klr hury, Nrb.. and commemorated the UUcov ery by planting a He.OiX) library thire. Favorite Son Oa trlaaaed. New York World. With a Vermont father, a Boston mother, two Worceter grandmother, an Ohio loj -hood, a Yale rolleglatn comae and a round-the-world record aeldom surpassed. Mr. Taft h nil Ihn other "favorite ons" beaten to a palpitating pulp. Jockeying fur Poalllon. Cincinnati Knuulrer. 1'rfHldcntlal election this year. Seemed a long way off. yesterday, but now It's here. Step up. gentlemen, and make your rlinlre. Nice Hat. Sound almost like a sememe. Listen! Cannon Hughe Kor aker, Taft Knox Fairbanks. Change them around to ault your fancy. Where (he Jolt Waa Kelt. Kansas City Blar. The absolute strength and clarity of Sec rotary Taft' exposition of the rotten busi ness methods contributing' to the recent Wall street trouble are definitely Indi cated by the petulance and the censure which his Uoaton address has drawn forth from the plungers and grfter who really caused the panic. Let U ; at Thla. lOiilvtllt Courier-Journal. Anyhow, for weal or woe, here Is 1908. May It bring grist to every man' mill. At tho end of It may ech of u be able to repet the prayer of the pious old darky, who, whenever he got happy at camp meetlng. used to crack, his heeels in the air and flap hi arm llko rooster' wing and crow, "Bless the liord. I Is glttln' fatter an' fatter." , Mighty Tell of Aerlaent. Nw York Tribline. , The total number of killed and injured In the principal accidents during the csl ndar year 107 reached enormous propor tion. The dsth list for the yer In the accident chronicled mount to th amas Ing total of SI.Cl The column of the er lously Injured foot up to E.7. Combined tha figure Is 67.1?. Alde from earth quake and similar upheavals of nature, practically all of thrie accident were in the United Sttes. Sixty per cent of tha killed were victim of earthquake, land slide or tidal wave. Mln disasters and explosion of vaxlou kind stand second In the total for the year. Moreover, the killed in the month of December through this agency aggregate mora than one-quarter of the total for the entire year. Close scrutiny into the cause of these disaster tend to plce the responsibility In great measure on th contributory negligence of employe. Investigation In ome cases has revealed almost criminal carelessness In the carrying of lighted lamps In the danger son, despite the mot stringent regula tions prepared by the officials. LtNU CASKS APPEAI.F.D. Kallaar f Ike Ueivrr Jadc Take Htgker rr. Pittsburg Diapatch. Judge Iwia In Denver ruled that the use ef stool pigeons In the filing of land claims is not Illegal, thereby releasing all of the person Indicted by the government for timber, coal and land grabbing. But Judre lewi ha not the final word. It la announced by the Department ot Justice t Waahlngton that Immediate appeal will be taken from the Denver decision In every Case before that court. Other court hve decided differently on the same question and cnnvlctlona have been had upon the aame testimony. The Denver ruling, therefore, comes ss a sur prise. Rven to the layman it sppsar rldleulou thl n act prohibited by the land law of the T'nttax! State should be held to be legal. If urt a decision should be allowed to stand It would become a ertou problem to deride In what In stance the law ahould be obeyed and In what other it might be Ignored with im punity. POLITICAL DRIFT. There are aome drawback to b:ng gov ernor of New York. The tegislatur meet every year and lt Wr.g as tt feel like. Former Governor Benjamin B. Odell. Jr., of New York haa during his Illness of sev eral moathe fallen in weight from T.l pounds to ISA pounds Tfce Brooklyn Eagle tell th democratic party that It must declare positively In favor of retaining and ruling the Philippine er loe th support of a great many demo crat a. Farmer organisaxnr in Kentucky ar beginning to go bak tn Governor Beck hare for the senatorship, doubtless with an eye on Farmer Henry Wtteron of lxmtrv'.r. fr the place. After Representative Tawneya w arcing that national expenditure were likely to exceed th revenue the firt act cf th Vsuee of represent a t Ire was ta pus ji appropriation of gioW for the free attribu tion of seed Governor H-ghe favor a new lw in New York changing legislative session from annual to bier.nial. Nearly all the states have adopted r-.r.nial ea1ona. and in rone have the people found Cat their Interest suffer ty I'.rr.trtng the regular meeting of the legislature to a few wk once In two year Th new ia,ntm It wr.kh gave to the exx tiM of a lew er sleeping cr berth the rigl.t to .y w aether ar. tnv-ic-ptc4 vpfie-r berth should b opened or closed ha bec-n pronounced uncoci;:;i.ral by the tat suprem court. The git of the cpin taa Is that the law tr.terterea u warrant? with tli tiw r.gT.i of dominion ever r.t rrojxrtv. tad w a crafted on he.!.i:f of prtvat rsJhec t ban public liiiei: a4 beoc fell et.lsae th rUlir power at th :!, HlllHK JIHTUK FAILS. Almn Impnaalhle to Punlah An)nilr for Railroad laaiktrr. New York Time. What I the explanation of the difficulty about convicting anybody for misconduct In connection with railway aerdlenla In the t'nlted State? The other day the New York Central railway general manager es caped conviction, seemingly berau he waa general manager, that l, nm too fr re moved from direct connection with tli Wood lawn wreck and killing of twenty four persons to bo he'id criminally. Only shortly before that an Indictment was quashed, following disagreement of th Jury, tn the ca of the engineer who over looked hi algnal at Ninety-sixth street with futal results. It waa explained that the precautions trken by the company were ao Inadequato that 'the engineer w not to Illume but the company not substi tuted a defendant. Thl wrik w pub lished an account of the acquittal of tha entire crew of the train which ran by red light at Terra Cotta, killing forty-three person. It I a reproach that person ahould be kliled by sores and hundred, for cause so pnvontabbi as defective discipline. Yet thin I the greatest slnglo cause of railway disaster In th t'nlted (Mate, The re cently published report of tho Interstate Commerce commission group tho ten wont accident for the last year, and not one of them 1 due to mechanical failure of ap paratus. Only In on wa apparatus even Indirectly responsible. Three rase remain unexplained and In all tho rest there wa I levent.ilile blrfina on some part ! of the railway staff. The reason assigned by th commission .aie, for examples: "Confusion of order." "disregard of rlile," "neglect of whistle algnal," "failure to deliver or der." "enghiemn'a neglect of order." and so on. New York ami New Jersey and the District of Columbia are about the must open tn reproach In thla connection, which Is the it or remarkable bocausa tlmy might have been looked for rather on the newer, single-trac k road of western state. Of the 410 passenger killed last year 291 perished In the above ten case, wher act of Ood or mere misadventure cannot b pleaded. Yet so far a we know nobody ha suffered snythltig more then Incon venience. They msnage these things bet ter even In Canada. They make accident fewer Ir. th Dominion, for no other reon apparently than that they mako It more disagreeable for thoso who, with or without excuse, are connected with such regrettable Incidents. When a Michigan Central train exploded dynamite In Canada the Judg declared thai, tho negligence of the railway In not iperlally Instructing the employe regarding such freight made hi blood run colli. Under euch a charge the Jury saw It way to a conviction, under which a fine of ta.ono wa Imposed. The same judge In nother cse refused even to consider tho employe's plea that he was over worked. He said he would take measures to punish the company for overworking it nlaff, but he would punish the ataff for al lowing ltolf to be overworked, at tha cost of human life. In a third caso the same Jud(je took similar exemplary meaeurej. These case rals tho question whether the judge cannot discipline railway staffs, If general managers cannot, and whether the riding public at Urge cannot promote such a result by lesa humbly acquiescing In mis carriage of Justice. ANOTHKH HASS1.KSS STATU. Kanaa OtRclala (Sire I'd tbe Treas ure of Former Year. Let not reformers shake their whitened lock Vor ob for Kansas now. The last obstacle to tha growth of angelic wings has been removed, and the populace will begin the ascension as soon as Missouri and Okla homa are surgically severed from the former "bleeding commonwealth." The rea sons Tor the change, written In firnereal levity, are thus explained: At a special session of the Kansas state executive council Tuesday afternoon, a resolution was adopted upon motion of Auditor Nation, that the annual railroad passes of each stste officer be collected and placed In the 8tate Historical society as "relics of the glorious past." Secretary of State Denton was delegated to gather in the cardboards. He promptly pulled a bunch from his own pocket of all ort and denominations. He threw down a book of telephone franks In the middle of th table. Tl.e rest of the cards he spread out fan-like. Auditor Nation also took a handful from his pocket. Denton offered to bet his telephone book against Nation's Young Men's Christian association card. At midnight th "pass passed." They all pay fare. Then New Year's day the meeting sdopted another resolution to tho effect that Nation must write a letter to one railroad, re turning a pass and telling that road how he no longer will be "controlled." Nation wrte this to W. R. Smith, general solici tor of the Sante Fe: "I beg to acknowledge the receipt of your communication of January 1, 1907, inclosing annual pass No. B over your road. I am returning the pass herewith for the reason that I cannot conscientiously keep It. I have taken considerable time to think over this step, during which time I csr- ( fully concealed the possession of th pass I from the unsuspecting public, exhibiting It to but a few people, most of them trusted employes of your road. "1 might have, come to this conclusion at a much earlier date, but moat of my time during the past summer has been consumed tn a search for facts to warrant me tn voting to rslse your sssessment over lOOo, O. I thought for a., time that this action on my part might convince th public that I was not Influenced by tho posse salon of the pass. But I wss mistaken. Aa long as I continue a public official I propose to pay fare, unless the legislature takea aome ac tion to throw further light on thi perplex ing problem." RAILRUAU UKATH HOI.L. Fareefal Presentation af Traale Stale af Traaspartattea. W. J. Wood, railway commissioner of Indiana, In Lsiifcs: If I wer to tell you that sn earthtjuaJte bad ahaken down Ban Franclaoo and killed Hf peiaona. If I wr to real a telegram that yellow fever ha becon.e epiderr.le In all southern cities, if I should announce that war bad bten declared betweon Fpsln and th Veiled States, ard 1 men killed tn battle, your attention would b in stantly attracted. But I am not ur of penoadlr.g yaur practical inter-eat wt.en I present to you tLa solerr.n. dlsaraceul fsct ! cf tt.e railway death roil, tnjrtng tr. e;gM ! year from lsVJ to 1SSX. lBd'oaiv. there was a steady Increase in th number of casual- tics- The total lumber of lulled during that ; period wa tH If a community a large as SJt Lak Ctry had been wiped out j by a udon and terribi catastrophe whi ! wer tsjui-ed as UT every man. j woman and cniid In Fiit'alo td been , trainea or etVrr at burt. If -Jtie ' continue i lucre at tt s.n. rate fir ! eight swrordir.g year from IS le 1:;. tcere will ba lli S kulad Ja l.S k3 in I Jured That la. at this rat there ar up i ward of 1 ' people in the Vmicd Aat I under sentence cf deaJti. t be executed I on ti rj!war before th clcta of 111. and a larger buto are d.wnod i be mam.ed or otiM-rwiae injured than the entire TT"1- ! no of the T'lstm-t of Oolurtb.a. IM-Uwar.. ilemana. Anson Wvnmtr.g Nevada. ; Lukk Idahe and the Hswa'.'.an lnni fllllr.lt 1.4 M I f I HI The kllempt t'i ri th hoii'.r nd err.'.l i. menl of a lulllah d ikedorn from fight ful owner provd great, a boa th testimony on which t wmm baaed t'tt weak it American fiewpet bve had .ltf nd ehe-Tm explaining th ealld "Itrure Mystery" nd rtllllng Us prgre through Ih courts. Igal proeilng l.v been In progre for ten yer by 'Jentga llallamhry Iiruie tn provo that Iferlwrt Iruce, the dead duke'a 'm. rOftnnlltet per jury In sweating that hi father died In and further that Ttioma '. Drue wa In reality th fifth (Ink of T.rt la nil Were that established (leorg lUllamley Ilruee, a nephew and senior dependent, would Inherit th dukedom. American In terest waa aroused In tho eso by the testi mony of Hobert C. faldwell of Nw York, who wore that the tnwn funeral In lt-il wa a "mock funeral." and that the coffin conlHlned lead Instead of human remains, Ream of legal red tape bad to b nnwnund before th duke grv could be optned, ml when It wa opened the tiul asort tnent of human bone were found, thu completely demolishing lh lleaed "mys tery." Caldwell hiked for America Boon after giving hi testimony and wa arrested on reaching New York on a warrant charg ing him with perjury. Ilesldes the duke dom an ette yielding r.OOO.'WO a year passe beyond the reach of the conspirators. Th Japnnesn re showing the world thst they are a quick, enetgotlc. and thorough In nnval building aa In other warlike en terprise. Thl waa forcibly exhibited re cently In th launching of the first-class armored cruiser Ibiikl from I lie govern ment shipbuilding yard at Kure within six months sfter th laying down of th keel. Not only do Iho Jupsnesn bellevo that they hava beaten oil previous records for speed in the construction of war ves sel of thl class, but the Ihukl nlso 1 unliiie because of the fact that irom keel to fighting top It wa built entirely of materlala forged and put together In Japa nese government yard. The cruiser Ihukl, which wa launched by Prlnco lllgashl Fuslilml on November 21, is a sister ship to tha Kursma, recently launched at the Tokosuka yards. Ita length I 4M feet, beam 75.S feet and displacement 14,(VO ton. Fitted with the'Mlyabara boiler, the In vention of a Japanese naval officer, and th Curtis turbine, tho Ibukl Is expected to develop 22.&OI) horsepower. Hoth the Ibukl and It sister ship, the Kuramii, wer designed by Japanese naval engineers, as all of the battleships recently built in Japsn have been. The keel was laid at Kurn in May, 197, and Immediately a double fore of men was put at work. The Naval office denle that any special effort wan mado to rush the cruiser through to completion, but the Japanese papers say that th bureau was not averse to a dem onstration of Just how quickly a fighting machine could be turned out by It arti sans. Every ounce of steel used In the con struction of the new cruiser came from either the Kure steel foundry, which Is a psrt of the great naval plant at that port, or the tVakamatsu Iron work, an Inde pendent concern subsidized by the govern ment. Knglish newspapers are taking notice of the disposition of Japan, ns made manifest in a recent speech by Count Okuma. before the Kobe Chamber of Commerce. He said: "Oppressed W Europeans, the 300,000.000 pcoplo of India are looking for Japanese protection. Why should the Japanese not stretch out their hands toward that country now that its people are looking to the Jap anese?. Any place where tho Japanese flag files may ba regarded aa Japan. The Janancsa dominion extends to the Pacific, the Chinese waters, the Indian ocean." This would indeed seem to be enough to make English statesmen take notice. Of Okuma the London Chronicle says: "He 1 one of the most famous, as he Is tho most eloquent of living Japanese statesmen. He was long the popular leader of the progres sive party. When such a man speaks of the oppression of the people In India by th allied of his own country his words bear a sinister omen." Clesrly o. It ia asserted, moreover, that India la being stirred by the firebrand cry of "Aia for the Asiatic:" to which may be added this comment from the New York World: "Meredith Townsend, editor and essayist, lived In India tar a forty-two-year period, which Included the time of th Sepoy ris ing. In papers published before the out break of the war over Manchuria Mr. Townsend proclaimed his inability to be lieve that the present effort of Europe to dominate Asia, the fourth within the his toric period, will ba permanently successful. "After nearly a century of element govern ment," he writes, "tber are not 10,0t0 native in India who, unpaid and un coerced, would die in defence of British overelgnty." The fight against the sleeping sickness in the Lake Victoria region in I'ganda prom ises to be long and costly. One of the medi cal experts who has recently returned to England from South Africa estimates that an expenditure of fco.OOO a year will be nec rsssry. The population of the affected area Is now lOO.toO. It used to be .', but 'O.00u have actually died of the disease. There are about 30.000 people suffering from the disesse tody. snd It is proposed thst these shall be taken Into egregatlon camp to undergo the Atoxyl treatment, which con sists of the administration of a compound I of arsenic and one of benxine dye. It has the power of driving the parasite j from the circulation; it 1 hoped also to kill them by this means, but this, in a propor- tion of Instances. It has fsiled to da. The ' cure of th X.t0 afflicted native is. therefor an open question. Tt problem of ; dealing with the remsinlng Sfl.Ot healthy native, who ar to be moved Inland from the shores of th lake, 1 not a formidable a task aa it may appear at first sigi.t. It 1 only necessary, it spptars. to move the 1 paopl two miles In'.and. Th taet f'y breed witnin fifteen or twenty yard of 1 the edge of the water, and will only fallow tlrtin'.s for ajme hundred of isids up t a mile ar bo. beyond which limit the fly fre area la to be found There w t be a complete clearance .f gelation from a.1 me landing tagea alung the Victoria Ky ansa, and forda. ferries and water hole are to b irr.ilar:y treated, because th Tie can only live w tier there is thick I-l,sK Shade i essential to thtr ex.stenoe. TNe landing tage w be cleared rf bru, t th extreme l:m;t neceakanr te insure tn m unity from tJ f.a. nd the r a treated will be planted with a. n )ewg-re-:ng j.ant that will tM surMy shade. tut will inure the ru!t:-li.-in rev-esa-arj e ki p doww the Jjnle " To commemorate t:e .i:ir:t vr of in r.aa of Francis Josrpfc the poij auihort tka of Austr.a tued rn i a-r u" J a new sot of poetvre stan-p. ifMeen la Mimlvr and only tin i.l be K..I4 . the gvt-e-n roent tn th year 10. The sian.ra -.rv s'.lTM-d b FroT Kvi,i 4ooi an fe. ' ruled in :e0 plate t K Sikn a The lower ornomtwatioi.a hrar the fw.tr iia of tbe six rv.er who trw4r4 b veneri I ii.hjvi r.a.: Karl XI. Vitna JoTh. 11 lr.Md H -rv aA IVmi naad All t ir f, be'' ew IV m-. a ,lrol nt ii.-.o t .r.xa ot l it J,f TV An l.-i, stamp ha s portrait at the en.(w.ir e. sppoareA tn 1MV when a a votoh o( etK r,r. . nsfMn tli r iI.wwm. e hKivr atan.s shew ! in rv-v tl.trtf ?-e!- e.t i- .. : ,val V...e j Starrs I 1 oe At Silnwam tK , 4aawawxjgwn; awwaMaajTaJai I .'Nam ON 1VKV PIICI' 1 Chocolate Bonbons! Always Delicious Pure :' I Wholesome Digestible ' 5 One Box will make I A Happy Hornet i Every Seated Package guaranteed Fresh and Full Weight fancy But Bmtkttt la xcusvo dtttgatfor Oifta THE WALTER M. LOWNEY CO. Makers of Coco and Chocolate . BOSTON, MASS. B This carries the dates lX-l9rs, and bear? a striking lifellko portrnlt nf tlu cmpernr a he appears now. HI V. It It V JIVtil.KS. "Senator," said the correspondent, "yoi. are quoted as ailvocul lux the aholllliiii of capital punishment. How .about that?" "Well," Hsketl Henalor LuiHintinn, with a grin, "don't you think e.iplliil Iihs been punished about enough?" Chicago Tribune. Captain Medico What was that manemei Just now, MiiHter Navigator? Navigator i'lcase, sir, they broke out hi r spinnaker. Cuptain Medlcn--How careless of them! It the splnniiker bo put In splints Imme diately. Baltimore American. Jaggles He's very proud of that young ster of his. Waggles Yes. ' He thinks he' a me chanical genius because rue other day th" boy took his watch to pieces. St. Louis Times. "Say, Horroughs,i said Markley. "how about that fin you've owed me since lant year?" "O: come, old man," said Rorrnughs. "why can't you let bygones be. bygones? '--Philadelphia Press. , "Debonair Is one of those genial phil osophers whom nothing seems able tT dis turb. He takes even trouble with ti..a-' nlmlty." "Yes, to see his manners when he In lali! up sick in hid, you can say of him ln erally that he Is perfectly natural and ill at ease at the name time." lntiianHpuln News. "Have you made any good resolutions yet?" "Yes, one." "What is It?" "Not to make any." Baltimore Ameii can. Pope Gregory was reconstructing the calendar. "Some of my predecessors," he said, "have taken so many days off that I've got to make lip the time so;iwliow." Thereupon h made an miK'-menl bv Which every fourth year became a leap year, being secure hy reason of his ol'l up front the operation of the prerogative th a goes with it. Chicago Tribune. The agitator appeared at the meeting "f employes and requested a hearing. 'Ion't you men know that you have a grievance?" he asked, having taken t he floor. "We do." responded Ihe chairman. "We havo a number, and you are lli worst In the lot." After a husky committee had tossed t egitator down stairs business -proceeded. Philadelphia ledger. TH K PKSSIMIST. Pen King. Nothing to do hut work. Nothing to cat but food. Nothing to wear but clothes To ktcp one from going nu-3e. Nothing to brent he but air. Quick as a flash 'tis gone; Nowhere to fall but off. Nowhere to stand but on. Nothing to comb hut hair. Nowhere to sleep hut In bed; Nothing to wfep but tears. Nothing to bjry hut dead. Nothing to sing but song. Ah. well, alas! alack! Nowhere to j;o but out. Nowhere to -ome but bai k Nothing to see but sights. Nothing to ouer. h but thirst. Nothing to have but what weve g. Thu thro' life we are curt-d Nothing to strike but a rait: Everything no e that g.e Nothing at all but eon.rnon fc Can er withstand these wr.c SPECIM For Saturday $1.00 and $1.50 Shirts 85 c $1.00 Neckwear & 5 c Browning King iVCO. R. S WtLCOV. Mar. HAND SAPOLIO fWR VtMiET ANO BA.TN PHttrra row v hewo4 y weexlVrw-orV rN-h v-e. '! rd l.ok borle:t linv. Hun4 SapeHa rnicm rot onlv the tirt, I tit l (he !ooeneo,. in:d ltuh-le, srd Cr POT'S tht ffnf ' r tuttnrml rVsofv. l ftils .vft tativiTt