THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, NOVEMHKK 2f. 1P0fl The omaiia Daily Bee: FOUNDED BY EDWAIID ROBE WATS R. VICTOR ROSE WATER. EDITOR. Entered at Omaha postofftre as seeond class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Pally nee (without Sunday), one year-M Dally Bee and Kun.lay. one year 00 DELIVERED RT CARRIER. Tally Bee (including Sunday), per wekk.ISc Ially Bee (without Sunday), per week..lOe Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week 6c. Evening Hee (with Sunday), per week.. inc. Kundav Bee, one year $2 50 Saturday Bee. one year l.Se Aodress all complaint of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council Bluff l!i Scott Street Lincoln MS Little RulMlng. Chicago 16M Marquette Building. New York Rooms 1101-1102 No. It West Thirty-third Street. Washington 72S Fourteenth Street. N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to newi and edi torial matter should he addressed: Omaha Bee. Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order rayable, tr The Bee Publishing Company. Only 2-rent stamps received In ravment of mall accounts. Ptrsonal checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, rot accepted. STATEMENT OF CI III Tl ATI ON. Btata of Nebraska, Douclas County, sa,: George R. T-wchuek. trennirer of The Bee Publishing Comnany. helng dv.t iwnrn. ssys that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally. Morning Evening and Hiinrtny Re printed during tha month of October, fx- vms a folln-vs-. 1 42,300 II 49 340 2t 41,790 ..43,080 . .40,000 . .43,640 . .43,510 . .43,450 II.. St.. 20.. n.. .43,160 .41.340 .43,330 .43,360 .40.300 .43,480 .43,050 .43.350 .43,050 tt . 24.. !. . 26.. 27.. 28.. 29.. 30.. II.. , .43.490 . .40,390 . .41,990 .41,990 , .43,330 , .43,310 .43,000 .43,070 . .40,500 7.... 48,670 I. ...43.810 , I.... 43,680 10.... 10.300 11 43,710 Total Returned copies .1,303,040 3,670 Net total 1,393 ,370 Dally average 41,731 UKORGK B. TZSCHUCK, Treasurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before, ma thla lat day of Novomber, 190. (Seal.) M. P. WALKER, Notary publlo. labacrlbera leavta tke city tern, rarity abeuld kart Tho lie mailed to them. Addreea will be - chaagti aa often aa requested. One more week before pounds at Washington. the gavel Tennesueeang are only asking the oil of executive clemency to save their Shipp. When the sugar trust gets what Is coming to It, It will , not be sugar coated. Newest Polar Puzzle Locate the man who claims to have first located the pole. Mr. Taft Is a ponderous man and may be expected to produce a ponder ous message. From the player's viewpoint, to cut the ham out of foot ball might also eliminate the charm. , Never mine, the coal man and the weather man' will be close chums be fore the winter is over. Now approaches the year when Oberammergau grows long hair to draw the tourists' long green. Speaker Cannon refuses to realize , the possibility that a Cannonade may do most of Its damage at the breach. Now that Mr. Taft has forsaken golf for equestrianism, congress will have to reckon with a president In the sad dle. The government's warning of a skate pest that preys on lobsters Is, of course, a specific recognition of a gen eral condition. Those pay-as-you-enter cars are likely to be most unpopular with pas sengers who have a habit of getting off without paying. The Alabama voter, casting his bal lot on the question of permanent pro hibition, will doubtless reflect that never is a long time. Garden county, tho newest addition to the circle of Nebraska county sub divisions, is to have a special election. And now its trouble begins. It is to be observed that by dint of great struggle Ig Dunn has so far re strained his Irresistible Impulse to square himself by apologizing. When the coming Corn show at Omaha appeals to the railroads strong enough to Induce them to put on a special excursion rate everyone may know that It Is a good thing. San Francisco will find the nation still nervous whenever It relapses Into rllence. Unlike a good child, San Francisco should maintain public as surance by being heard if not seen. Dr. Parkhum's warning to the mil itant suffragette that woman cannot get more than half what she wants If she fights for It as though she were a man, may be Interpreted to mean that if she Is real womanly she can have anything she sets her heart on. In a little bit of autobiography Mr. Bryan confesses that he expected to win out when he was running for United States senator from Nebraska In 1894. Our political history does not reveal anyone chronically more hopeful In the face of certain defeat .than Mr. Bryan. The Japanese Imitation of the Amer ican sugar scandal must be a great ad vance over the original, so far as ras cality ran be considered an advance. Some of the accused Nippon ringlead ers held cabinet positions, which goes to show that the lower down a fraud Is the higher up It can reach, Mexico Its Assailants and Defender Simultaneous attacks on Mexico in books and magasins are bringing Out, as was naturally to have been ex pected, various rejoinders defending the government and people of Mexico flfialnst charges of being Inhuman and barbarous. The numerous stories about Mexican peonage and slavery, resort to abuse and violence upon help lens unfortunates and rigid suppres sion of political opposition go Into such details as to give the Impression that they are based upon some foundation of truth, although doubtless either highly colorej and exaggerated or em phasising the exceptional rather than the customary practices. No doubt some Mexican could, If he wished, devote a few months to visit ing different parts of this country and by picking up here and there examples of lawlessness, cruelty and outrage, make an equally heart-rending show ing about "barbarous United States," but that still would not be a correct picture of the life and habits of our people. Much depends, therefore, upon the attitude and the purpose of a critic, whether aiming to remedy evils and redress grievances or seeking merely to attract attention by sensa tional statements. Mexico without question appears barbarous to us In many of Its aspects and has a long way yet to travel to reach the level of the most advanced and civilized countries. Gross Iniqui ties are frequently perpetrated there and the common people stand for much oppression which would not be tamely tolerated here. But Mexico has also made tremendous progress in the last twenty-five or thirty years and, despotio as the Diaz government may be denounced, it Is universally ad mitted to be a great improvement over what went before.' Mexloo is Just now enlisting the activities of American energy and American capital in the development of its natural resources and In many branches of industry, and this leaven will surely In a short time exert a potent Influence against the barbarous customs that still linger. Defining State Lines. The proposal to enact legislation In congress this winter to define the limits of state from national authority Is apt to prove one of the most diffi cult as well as most interesting efforts of the session. So frequent have the discussions been of late concerning the overlapping of state rights by federal authority that some such movement Is not to be regarded as unusual. Although the broad safeguarding of state powers Is provided . for in the constitution, some specific subjects ieem to call for illumination. The question Of the extent of the obligation of governmental treaties with foreign nations is still a possible source of con flict, as witness the recent case .when the national administration had to seek an adjustment of local legislation with San Francisco governing" the Japanese in the schools. In this con nection it Is suggested that' rmt or municipal authorities Bhoultitt-. iield to account as offenders against 5 the United States if they enact regulations Infringing upon treaty rights or obliga tions. With the existence of such wide lo cal variations of sentiment. It would be well to have it finally understood how far school or other laws may go affecting racial feeling, for lit would be unfortunate to have another such dilemma arise as that In California. The treaty powers of the nation are well defined, and no state need have any real fear that Its commonwealth, rights will be infringed, yet any pro posed law to punish city or state au thorities for violating treaty obliga tions will surely be combatted by those fearing a restriction of commonwealth authority. Certain state prerogatives will be vigorously asserted, such as water power rights, whose conservation each statt will continue to regard as largely local, and the very thought of federal encroachment on states rights will elicit hostility from many quar ters. The fact, however, that Senator Root, who is supposed to be fathering the proposed legislation, has already recorded himself firmly for no sur render of state rights, should have a reassuring effect. Probably all that will be sought In this attempt to define a line of cleavage between states and federal government will be a mutually . satisfactory understanding which shall serve to prevent unnecessary friction from overlapping state and federal- In terests. A Man of Mystery. The mysterious vanishing of Dr. Cook, quondam explorer of peaks and poles, affords a theatrical revival of Interest In a personality that of late had become , somewhat submerged. There would be nothing strange In the fact that the Peary controversialist had sought sanctuary with the knowl edge of his intimates, but when those who have been bis most loyal sustaln ers show that they are nettled by his conduct, the doctor can hardly blame the still skeptical public from making cynical comment. After the campaign he had under gone Dr. Cook was undoubtedly en titled to quiet and rest, and even his doubters would haveleft him undis turbed if he had calmly confided his plans to his Intimates and gone Into seclusion. His strange manner of dis appearance, however, must be regarded as unfortunate, even though charge able to the fact that he Is unstrung by his harrassments or else to the etcen-J trickles of genius. In thla latest episode Dr. Cook, has reminded the public how much of a man of mystery be Is. Ills Mount Mc Klnley and North pole claims followed disappearances which continue to strike many as decidedly queer, and the dubious ones will be ready to hall his new departure as putting not only himself, but also bis endorsers, In an equivocal position, since his proofs are still under official Investigation and as the chief witness In his own cause he ought not to remove himself from the jurisdiction of his court. Where Improvement is Possible. Strangers can sometimes see things more clearly than folks who are con etantly on the ground, and well directed criticism from abroad may open our eyes to faults that can be cured. The following from the Lin coln Journal contains some suggestions that could be, useful to us In Omaha If we would only act upon them: Many Lincoln people visited Omaha on Thanksgiving day in the neighborly ex change of dinner civilities between the state's capital and metropolis, and ionic of these bring back appalling tales of the con dltlon of Omaha streets. Paid a lady: "The streets of Lincoln have been muddy but they are Ilk palace floors com pared with those of Omaha. I had been walking; about the streets at home without rubbers and It never occurred to me to pro vide a protection for my shoes. In conse quence we were obliged to hunt up a boot block before going to the friend's home where we were to dine, as It was imposBl ble to keep out of the thick gravy-like mud which covered all the crossings. The Omaha cara, too, made me less grouchy about those furnished to our own city. We may have happened to get seats In the oldest ones, but however that may be, we rode In thosu of the old-fashioned stylo with seats along the sides and a stove In the middle, which Lincoln began to discard ten or mors years ngo." There Is no question but that we In Omaha are often too careless about the things which are first seen by a stranger and make the Impression which the visitor carries away with him. Omaha invariably strikes the stranger forcibly as a live, bustling, growing city, and this favorable opin ion should not be marred by petty an noyances and drawbacks vthat could and should be remedied. Those Dimples on Fair Luna. Entertaining, If not convincing, is the latest official theory emanating from the naval observatory at Mare Island regarding the shadows on the face of the moon. Prof. See, the as tronomer In charge, has been appar ently living up to his name, and what his eyes have discovered he makes known to the public with that careless disregard for old-established theories characteristic of the true American spirit. It appears that that prosy old per son, Galileo, Is out of date, so far as the dimples of fair Luna are con cerned, for Galileo was unkind enough to style earth's luminary a pimply, faded beauty, and was ungallant enough to ascribe those dark spots to the scarrings of eruptions. Not so, as serts Prof. See, politely, but firmly. And he relates how the fair goddess of the night Is the victim of misplaced energy on the part of her celestial ad mirers. Every so-called crater, he in sists. Is the mark left by a huge bou quet thrown at her from the florist's shop somewhere among the great white lights of the milky way, and man on this footstool is hereafter to con sider the shadows not as defects, but as beauty spots. A local pastor appeals to his friends to contribute a brick apiece to build a new church. Some people In this vicinity remember the campaign for bricks at a dollar a throw once con ducted by the Auditorium promoters, and still others have recollections of gold bricks and of brickbats. Of course, these various kinds of bricks have no necessary relationship. Although he was elected as a repub lican and would have been beaten had the democrats had their way, County Commissioner Bruning last year tied up with the democrats and handed over to them the principal patronage of the county board. It's up to Mr. Bruning to discover where he la at. What a relief to know that the cur tain was wrung down on that Knife and Fork club banquet at Kansas City without a personal collision between Mayor "Jim" and "Uncle Joe." Rejoice and Fill Ip. Baltimore American. Who has not cause fur thanksgiving hen he reflects that the American turkey and pumpkin pie supplanted the roast beef and plum pudding of effete England? Iteurvtlnar the lserclse. Baltimore American The trust magnates may have to do some dodging again. Formerly they grew quite agile from thla exercise, and now that they sre comparatively out of training tt seems hard they have to begin all over again. Is Chivalry Memory T San Francisco Chronicle. Tho president has annulled the appoint ment of the poor widow of a lighthouse keeper on the Potomac, who waa to have had the vacancy, becauas she la too fat to squeeze through the manhole to reach tha lens. And this from Taft! It probably hasn't yet occurred to a beneficent goven nirnt that It might have enlarged the man hole. Pallia 1 Storm Shatters. Sioux Cltv Tribune. The big corporations are anticipating a federal Incorporation act that may baaa capital on value of properties. Just aa tha two local corporations are doing. Tha Adams Expresa company "cut a melon" a while ago and now Wells Fargo convert surplus earnings Into a 300 per cent stock dividend. Their weather bureau predicts an area of low barometer cora'.ng their way and they prepare for It aa beat they can. The Ureal torn Show. Charleston Newa and Courier. The National Corn exposition is to be held at Omaha. Neb., nest month, Decem ber 4-18. It will be a grand affair. At the exposition last year fifty thousand ears of corn were on exhibit, on thousand special displays of tha smaller graina and five hundred exhibits of farm Implements. Twenty-nine states were represented In the show. The exposition this year promises to be equally as large. The Union Pacific railroad Is promoting the success of the enterprise. Walt Till the End Comm. Washington Herald. Those all-too-eager enthusiasts In the matter of giving proper credit fur the dissolution of the oil octopus will do well to go slow, we think. It Is not altogether Impossible that the octopus may not dls solute. Deserves the Limit. Ft. Louis Qlob-Iemocrat. The cishler of a plut icratlc Chicago club, arrested for embezzling, says "auto mobiles and women" wrought his downfall. Th public declines to abolish either temptntion. The only practical nv.-thnd of discouraging theft Is to give the limit to the thief who tries to fix the blar.ie where It does not belong. " Thompson and Ills Hallrnnils. Springfield Republican. Now that David E. Thompson, United States ambassador to Mexico, has been elected president of the Pan-American railroad, his retirement from his diplo matic position Is to be promptly expected It will be remembered that Mr. Thompson recently secured a controlling Interest In the Pan-American road, which is now in operation from Gamboa, Mot., on the Tehuantcpeq National, southeast to Ma riscal, on the Mexican-Guatemala borjer, 2M miles, and It Is planned to use the road ok a link In the proposed all-rail route between the United States and South America. The propriety of combining our ambassadorship with so much outside busi ness is open to challenge. Ao Interesting- Doctrine. New York Tribune. Mr. Gompers promulgates an interesting doctrine of test cases when he says: "We protest against the lonceptlon that a law is broken until it is finally and fully de elded what Is the law." That reminds us of an eminent Judge who once said: "Of course, every man has a right to his own guess as to what the low la, but If he guesses wrong he goes to Jail." Any other aoctrlnce would leave every statute nrae tically suspended till the objection of every pettifogger had been passed unon. The nh Jector's gueR might be mere nonsense put rorward for the purpose of delav. hut Mr Gompers wouldn't let him be punished for disobeying the law pending the disposl tlon of his absurdities. That would make the law an ass Indeed! TART AMD JUDICIAL REFORM. v 1 ,i Measure Which Reflects Credit on Ills Admlalstratlon. New York Tribune. we are glad to see that Mr. Taft lives a prominent place on his program to the reiorm or Judicial procedure. He will seek to have a commission appointed to remodel the processes of the federal courts In the hop that an example may be set In them which will ba followed by the states. There Is no reform more needed, and If Mr. Taft should accomplish that and nothing else In tho course of his term of office he would deserve to rank among the greatest nrel dents because of the frultfulness of his administration. President Taft himself once said that In respect -to the enforcement of public and private rights In ths courts this country had fallen further short of Ideal conditions of government than In any other respect further short even, than in municipal ad ministration That is a grave Indictment to bring against f,he Judicial system of the nation, but It Is .brought by a Judge of wide experience ahd great ability, and we are disposed to believe that It Is in no degree-exaggerated. Justice Is slow and far frcmUr The Importance of technicalities has -.tawn emphasized at the expense of common sense. Appeals that are not neces Barjtiixo! accomplish Justice are easy and frequent;. Retrials are ordered when to the mind f an Intelligent layman no retrial Is needed.': Courts of ths first Instance have been -subordinated and need relnvigoratlon. procedure has "been complicated until it is aln.ost impossible either for pleaders or Judges to avoid making mistakes In It. Three or four years ago a case was de elded finally In the court of appeals in this state which had been before the New York courts twenty-two years. It had been tried before seven Juries and had been in the appellate courts ten times. The first time it reached the court of appeals the learned court said that even on the testimony of the plaintiff himself he had no case, but Instead of throwing it out of court It or dered a new trial. That, of course, waa a rare example of the law's delays, but ex cesslva and unnecessary appeals are the order of the day. And their effect Is, as Mr. Taft has pointed out, to give the man with the longest purse the advantage. He can wear out his poorer adversary's pa tlfnce or exhaust his substance by dilatory practices and through expensive resorts to the higher courts. ACKNOWLKDU1.1G THE CORN. Some Old Ideas Banished from Rail, road World. Cleveland Leader. Let no man say that the crusade against the railroads which have been using their power arrogantly and selfishly has failed to bring results. Read what E. P. Ripley president of the Atchison, Topcka & Santa Fe railroad, said at the first annual ban quest of the Railway Business association in New York. 'The eld Idea of 'the public be d .' said Mr. Ripley, "has passed out. In this country the people rule and In the long run that system, that method, or that personality which does not meet the appro bation of the publlo cannot succeed. We must realise, as I think we all do (after a series of very hard knocks), that the railroads are strictly private property, but subject to regulation by the publlo through Its regularly constituted authorities that the government may reduce our earnings and Increase our expenses has been suf ficiently proved. 'To meet this situation we must endeavor to get in touch with public opinion. We must avoid action seriously counter to pub llo opinion except for compelling reasons. We must have the deposition to explain those reasons through officers and em ployes of all gtades. We must Improve service In many cases without hope of re ward and for the deliberate purpose of win ning publlo approval, such as better sta tions. Improved heating and lighting de vices, better equipment, better terminal facilities, separation of grades, etc. all with due regard to the rights of those whose money we are spending." There Is the lesson which Is being forced home on the railroads. Not all great rail road operators have yet recognised the de termination of the people aa clearly as Mr. Itipley and some who do have not accepted tt In the cordial spirit he mani fests. But Mr. Ripley's statement of the situation la absolutely correct. He was not merely "throwing bouquets" to the publlo to disarm resentment and leave the way clear for the old order of thlnga. He was talking to other railroad men and he and they know that "the government may re duce their earnings and Increase their expenses. The day when the railways will, in return for the privileges the , people give them, act In accordance with the rights of the people seeing to be at band Around New York tipples oa the Current of Life as Bean la the Great American Metropolis from Bay to Day. The Judicial llklnr for the technicalities of the law is strikingly shown In an Issue pending before the Board of Estimate of Greater New York. A constitutional amend ment Increasing the salaries of Judges of the slate supreme courts by $4,000 a year was approved by the voters at the last election. The Increase Is from fl.000 to $10. COO a year, and goes Into effect on the first of the year. The amendment Is not ns specific as It might be In limiting the Increase to the low-salaried upstate Judges, but prohibits Increases in salaries "now" greater than HO.opo a year. The Judges of the supreme court of Grester New York. whose salaries amount to $17,MK a year, fori sadly In need of a raise, and are espe cially anxious to get It before the constitu tional amendment goea Into effect. The Beard of Estimate provides the difference between the upstate salaries and the $17,- C00, To reach the prise, therefore, the Judges petitioned the board to increase their salaries $4,000, stating their belief that they were entitled to It. and that provision for it must be made "now" or before the 1st of January. The quoted word Is taken to m r 1 before the time when the amendment goes Into effect. The board was willing, but the action of the Judges has raised such criticism that the board will meet again today to reconsider Its action. Prompted by a desire to be "aceommo- datln an" obllgln' to a fallow beln' In distress," Arthur Edwards, a farmer of Water Mill, L. I., got out of bed about mid- nlpht and. golr g cut Into the highway. helped a thief to steal his own favorite mare and his own family carriage. It was the noise made by a horse prano lng outside his window that aroused Farmer Edwards, and as he peered out he saw a stranger struggling with a horse that had apparently kicked Itself out of the harness. Slipping on his trousers, he quietly slid downstairs and out Into the highway to help the surprised intruder, who was on the point of taking to the woods. He was reassured by Edwards, who said he could manage the horse, which suddenly be came quiet at the sound of the farmer's voice. When the harness waa adjusted the intruder got into the rig and drove away, without as much as a thank you. Edwards did not discover until In the morning that It was his own horse and rig that he atdd the thief In stealing. While he was getting together a posse of farmers to run down the thief his horse was spied coming down the road, bent for home, with the remnants of the rig drag ging behind. It was evident that the ani mal had got away from the thief. "Well," ejaculated Farmer Edwards, as he saw the horse coming toward him, '1 always did say that that critter knew more than I do." The death of an old comrade, with whom he had been associated In the State Volun teer Firemen's association for twenty years, so affected William McCabe, 65 years old, that he fell dead from apoplexy in St. Bartholomew's church in Elmhurst, L. L, as the pallbearers were entering the church with his friend's coffin. McCabe, who lived at 143 Ludlow avenue, Elmhurst, was dazed by grief when he learned of tha death of Edward F. Kelly, his closest friend, on Friday morning lasL Kelly waa superintendent of public buildings In Queens, and for several term president of the Firemen's association, of which Mc Cabe had been a member. Tears coursing down his ' cheeks, Mc Cabe arrived at the church. For about an hour he knelt In a pew, praying continually. At the sound of the arrival of the funeral cortege he gave a cry, half rose to his feat, and fell In the center aisle senseless. Sev eral men carried him outside the church and attempted to revive him. Just as the pallbearers passed him with the coffin containing Kelly's body on their shoulders, McCabe opened his eyes, sighed deeply, and quietly passed away. A minute before prlpst summoned from the church had administered the last rites for the dying. The leader of a gang of youni cut throats in Brooklyn waa convicted of manslaughter. The Judge before whom he was tried waa threatened in several anonymous letters that unless he was lenient In bis sentence, he would be killed by the remaining members of the gang. A Bcore of them had been in con stant attendance on the trial, and a more villainous appearing collection of young toughs could never be found outside of New York. For answer the Judge went Into court and gave the prisoner nineteen years at hard labor. He gasped and tottered as he heard it. The listening "gang" were paralysed. "This Is the limit of the law," said the Judge sternly. "I only regret that I can not make It for life." The Judge has no fear of harm. The threats made against him will never be carried out. The thugs who made them will not run the risk of the chair or a like sentence in behalf of a leader who Is lost to them forever. In the supreme court In Brooklyn Mrs. Jennie Caulfleld was .trying to convince Justice Marean that she ought to have a separation from her husband, John, be cause he was a drunkard and sometimes drank as much aa a pint of whisky be fore breakfast. Justice Marean looked searchlngly at a florid, full faced man sitting at the right of the defendant's counsel. Having com pleted the scrutiny he turned to the law yer and said sharply: It seems reasonable. It looks as though he waa capable of It" A queer expression crossed the law yers race ana prose into arm. "That isn't my client," he said. '"He Isn't In court. We understood that this case would be tried In the afternoon." I hope your honor Is not referring to me, said tne man wno nia Deen luiten for a horrible example and ta a member of the bar. Explanations were lost In a burst of laughter, in which the Justice and the victim of mistaken Identity Joined. Mrs. Caulfleld got her decree. ' Tread of Court Deelsloaa. Philadelphia Press. The present trend of the decisions of the United States courts is clearly against the trusts. The apparent failure of some of the earlier decisions to secure any Immediate and Important benefit to the public does not doter the Judges from frowning on the different forms of combinations In restraint of ' trade. Congress has given them the legislation and the courts are not employ ing thlr ingenuity to defeat that legisla tion, but are in a most commendable spirit giving effect to It whenever they can. Wonders ot the Tlsae. Cincinnati Leader, hen the wireless operator at Tampa, was trvlntf to ffft nem-s of Colonel W Fla Aitnr'i vacht his calls, flunr out Into space, with especial reference to San Juan, 1'orto ruco, weie picsra up aisnnciiy in the vicinity ot rvew torn, oniy an age or iders could acct-pt such facts so lightly. won PASI1 lF THE lliWRDY, I'lctnrrsqee Flan re .4 1 most Poshed Off the Map. Clevelsnd leader. Si-lonce Is like poverty. When It steps In, romance peps out, though there are a lot of writers trying to do the Impossible and make us glow, symbolically speaking, over the love of the germ for the microbe or the thrilling adventures of the pro fessor seeking the buttermilk fountain of eternal youth. Here we have been walling over the de parture of the cowboy and, while deep sighs shook our sturdy frames, decrying the civilization which takes so much of the picturesque out of life. And all the time It was plain matter-of-fact, exceed ingly materialistic science that was on the Job. The cowboy has been one of the big pictorial figures In American life. He has been the one who has brought the pioneer spirit, untrammeled, romantic snd color ful. Into the drab days of the present. He has made "chaps" as symbolical as the coonskln cap and he will go down to history pedestaled with the trapper. Remington has pictured him: Wlster has set him, alive and kicking and lovable, In the preservative amber of fiction; and, best of all. Buffalo Bill and all his fol lowers In buckskin and flowing hair have brought him right to our doors In all his dash and deviltry and boyishness. So w cannot lose him altogether, for which we should be accordingly grateful. But It Isn't the march of civilization, the onrush of people, the swinging of popula tion from one coast to the other that has conspired to wipe him from the national map, except Indirectly. It has come about because science has whispered In the ranch er's ear and he has listened and acted. The old-time long-horned Texas steer was In the picture with the cowboy. He lent his savagery to the spirit of the composi tion; he stampeded to give It vigor; his widespread horns furnished curves of beauty and tested the skill of the lassolst. But there was too much bravura about him and too little beef. He pleased the eye, but he didn't fill the stomach. He was an expensive luxury. So science was called In and It has bred a new animal; squat, fat, short of horn, placid, almost Inert. With it has gone the life and the hues of cowooy life. No longer do we hear of mad. Insane rushes, of the frenzy of the stampede, of the dramatic and dare-devil roundups, and of the cowboys riding their circles about the herds and singing lullabies to them. The new brand of cattle Is docile and bo vine. It la ruminant rather than riotous. Romance has vanished. There Is little need for the cowboy and he will vanish, too. MAIMED WORKMEN. Needed Reforms In Law of Compen sation for lnjnrles. New York World. John Mitchell is probably right In tell ing the Civic Federation conference that not one man In 10.000,000 would cut off his hand to collect damages. He Is right as to many factories In saying that a man must run risks or lose his Job. Yet for years humane Judges have been obliged to rule that a man's own careless ness Is at fault if he Is maimed by dan gerous machinery when he knew of the danger, since he waa free to leave if the work was not safe. They have been ob liged to rule that even the carelessness of a fe'.low-workman was a valid defense against the damage suit of an injured employe. In reforming the law of compensation for injuries, carelessness, whether that of the injured man or of another, may be left out of consideration. The carelessness of employers who fall to provide proper safeguards for dangerous machinery re quires more attention. Lawsuits in dam age cases should be unnecessary. It Is outrageous that a maimed workman should wait for years while his damage case Is fought from court to court, and that he should then perhaps have it sent back for retrial because of error. The costly time of courts and Juries should not be so wasted. A maimed workman Is as much entitled to assistance from the community he has served as a maimed soldier. Hhe should need no lawyer to secure It for him. He should get it without delay. In proportion to the gravity of his Injury. There would be fewer accidents if Industrial damage awards were certain and prompt PUBLICITY FOR TRUSTS. Standard Oil's Mistaken Policy of Secrecy. Philadelphia Press. Apart from all legal phases of the ques tion, one rock upon which Standard Oil has broken is Its long policy of persistent secrecy. Here is a monstrously big cor poration doing a business all over the world and yet It never makes public any statement of Its earnings whatsoever. Standard Oil has been earning net $80, 000,000 or more every year, but no one, not even Its own stockholders except a few high officials, knows how. A defiance of public sentiment for many years brought around the Standard antagonisms such as other and even larger concerns, like the United States steel, do not suffer. meet s managers saw the vital mistake made by oil's manager in their policy of extreme secrocy and went the limit the other way. Publicity has been a charac teristic feature of United States steel, and Its quarterly reports go into the fullest details. The people like to see and know what is going on. They may not read annual re ports, but they want the opportunity to do so. Standard Oil would never let even Wall street look into its books sufficiently to have the nhares listed on the stock ex change. We believe that trust managers will some day learn, what others know already, that publicity Is their safety and uot a peril. SIUGKSTIONS FHOM DISASTER. 0 One Means of Saving; Life In Mines. New York Post. The Cherry mine disaster has suggested to many people the question whether food supplies should not be carried In every mine for Just such emergencies. Canned meats and vegetables stored away In cer tain places, together with drinking water, and renewed from time to time, might save a life here or there. The Idea is surelv worth considering, even though the chances or reaching the supplies in a moment of disaster might be slight. It might often happen that the place of refuge was pre cisely where no supplies could be kept. But there have been so many cases In the last few yeara In which men have ben rescued after hope was absndoned and after horrible Buffering for lack of food and water, that it seema as if the experi ment were worth trying. When the rail roads In this state mere first compelled to carry tools on each car the companies submitted reluctantly, saying that In every serious wreck the tools would be broken up, and tha passengers would be unable to use Uiem. But they have saved many a life since then, and we believe If the law were now repealed, the eompanles would Ulll continue to equip their cars with them. rEKSONAL NOTES. Senator Aldrlch's tictful ecnfirmatlnr) ( the deth of Andy Jaclisou Is -yenffod si In the back counties. What dues Mr. tt.x kefeller cnie a'.-i ,t dissolution? tie his never ben partlcr larly dissolute, and ln t B.lnK to hci.l i now. The governor of Kentucky ha- declrc.l an open season frr jilght rlii-v. TM ought to attract hunters who like .-i ! v 1th a spice of danger In It. The Philadelphia girl now In a Lond-n Jail for smashing windows Is said to pr .. test audibly, greatly to the distress , f the sympathetic, against taking fond fr .-n a machine operated by pneumatic p-. sure. However, It Is Impossible to f-.nt.t that she does not have to take It tM way. In Missouri this year more thnn : vr the counties tare without licensed sal.. . but, according to a report Just filed vn, Governor Hadley by the state beer I -spector, the collections under the h- t stamp law are nearly $1.000 prenter '-. year than last, when the area of "wet ' territory was much 'srger. An aeroplane embracing In its cunstn tlon some Ideas different from those in any other that has yet been built in und.-r construction at Fort Barrancas, near Pen- sacola. Fin., Lieutenant A. L. Rhodes an 1 t)r. Grossman being the Inventor at.d con structors. One of tho distinguishing f. 11 tures will bo certain appendaiies nt tho end of each plHne or wing similar in action to the tips of the buzznid's wing. The antl-suffraglsta of New York are going to study the condition of women In all parts of the globe. Mrs .1tln1r M. Dodge, chairman of the executive com mittee, has started on a two years' trip around the world to awumul.tte material for their enlightenment. Miss Id;: N. Tar- belV Mrs. Richard Watson Gilder nn.l Mrs. Helen I-'.llhu Root are conspicuous among the workers of the association. AX IDF. WOlt'l ll WHII.r. Why Not Western tlmiigrmrit for Western Railrondftt Denver Republican. Unquestionably It would be a good tiling for the railroads and especially for tin? public if the control nf western railroads were divorced from Wall street and placed In the hands of western men. But so long s the roads are owned In the east, their rontrol will be eastern, whatever device for concealing that fact may be adopted. It would be an easy matter to fill the official places of nominal responsibility with western men and even to elect as directors men who make their homes In western states. But there would bo no assurance that the policies of the manage ment would be western. The eastern own ers would still Bland behind the board of directors, and neither the latter nor the officials they might choose would be inde pendent. Tho stigma of Wall street attached to the railroads has hurt them, and probably It has had something to do with the ad verse sentiment which has found expression In western legislation. On this account the eastern owners may think It prud-nt to keep themselves and their designs as far in the background as possible. But that they will surrender ultimate control Is not to be believed for a moment. SMILING LINES. 'Talking of continual prudence, I know of at least one place where men arc alwavs guarded In their conduct." "What place Is that?" "The penitentiary." Baltimore American. "Hello. Tholty-nlne!" Kald the first me, senger boy to the ott..r. who was just starting out with a message, "how tur have yer got ter go?" "Oh, replied "Thoity-n'ne," pulliiu; out his book, "on'y about six chapters. I'm Just where Handsome Harrv gits on tho villain's trail." Catholic Stan. lard and Times. He (facetiously) Ah, thin, Honoiia, 'tis a long Journey for wan little drop to go to me fut! Honoria Sure, an' It is! But, Judgln' from your dlHgrashful condition lant evenln' it's not lonesome It'll be. Harper s Weekly. Patience They say she got all lier fur niture on the Installment plan? Patrice She did. tjho haa had four hus bands, and she got a little furniture v. 1 111 each one. Yonkers Statesman. Young Donal Here, MacGregor guld ness, here's a Chinaman! The Chinaman Hoots awa', ye young deevlls, or I'll be clootin the heeds off o' ye! Bystander. "She said I was good enough to eat; don't you think that whs a compliment?'' "Oh, 1 don't know; lots of people al lobsters." Houston Post, "Did you have any assistance when you made your appearance as a singer?'1 "Yes," answered the amateur soloist. "There was. a policeman keeping order In the gallery.' Washington Star. "I have two proposals of marriage," said the practical New York woman. "I don't know which to accept." "I should beuln," ivplled Mrs. Worldli wlse. "by marrying the one who can afford to pay the larger allmoiiv." Chicago Rec ord-Herald. Doctor Did you give the patient the med icine I ordered for insomnia? Amateur Nurse Yes, sir; I was vary par ticular about It. I woke him up every hour to take It. Baltimore American. "Did her father kick when you asked for her hand?" "He did." I'You must have felt all broken up." 'Rather. He was the champion punter of' his day -leveland Plain Dealer. Helen The friends of the bride-elect are going to give her a linen shower. Harold What's a linen shower? Helen It's a shower In which the ran comes down In sheets. Chicago Newn. "Well, you have heard my voice." said the aspiring cantatrine. "Can you recom mend It as good security for a' loan to he repaid In a year or two?" "For the most part, yes, madnniV an swered the cautious manager; "but I reallv could not endorse your high notes." Chi cago Tribune. Mrs. Pyne Mrs. Blank certainly posses ses "tact." Mrs. Hyne What Is your definition of tact? Mrs. Pyne Tact Is a woman's ability to make her hushnnd believe he is having his own way. Llpplncott's Magazine. TO THE EABLY SHOPPES. Los Angeles Express. v Do your Chrlstmss shopping early; do It ' early, mother dear. Do it ere the crowds are rushing and the bargalna dlsapier. Just at present clerks sre gracious, and will gladly wait on you; In a month you'll find stores crowded so you tan naroiy get through. I would rise ere dawn Is breaking, and I'd snatch a hasty bite. Then I d seek the shone and stay there till they'd all closed for the nlirht. And I wouldn't say, No. thank you, I'm Just looking for a friend." But I'd "blow myaelf" as long aa there was something left to spend. Do not wait three weeks or longer; do your ahopplng right away; You'll be saved a lot of worry if you'll start right In today. There are baits Ins simply waiting for , your cash to pick them up. All the way from gloves and s ippers to a dainty poodle pup. So, arise while It Is early, while 'tis early, mother dear; Snatch a bite and then start storewsrd ere the hararalns disappear. Io your shopping with a fervor that Is h something oulte, intense. I Until pane's roll Is melted till It looks like thirty cents! f t