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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1910)
- Jl.. 1-CIUEF CITV NEWS TIIF, BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1910. . i ( ( i ri ... t 9 S I . 5 1 I V 4 1 i f - 'i Ukr rrtH I. kadolpa r. w4a a . A. : k Chta of ftnivr Edholm, Jeweler. Alighting rtmMM,l Brt wa-Qmnden Co. Hatlctal tor Zr.aaraoo Co. 110 Charles K. Ady, General Agent. Omaha, wbmsi auxiliary of Trinity ca thedral will moot' Friday afternoon at 2:30 with Mr, M. C. Burnhara, 1570 Jone. rg Hamlin Toong Woman'l Chrls ti.A association Tharsday evening; famous tenor report brilliant season. Tloketa sell ing, 3m Boyd theater bhjldlng. Tatra ar ftTral Way of gaTlng Th Nebraska Saving! and Loan association way, and other. Our way pay per cent per annum Kt Board of Trad building. ' English Blbl fttadsat to (Hv Lesson J. Hlxon Irving of Liverpool, England, will give a aerie of Bible addresne In C3oap' hall, 2906 Fa mam street, beginning Uunday oventng at T 4S. An Invitation ha Hn extended to all Christian throughout the city and the public In general. Ho fttaaUa da Coal Constant com plaints of thefts o coal from- the yard of th Illinois Central having been reported to the office, Special Officer Dlneen and Walsh wer deputed to keep vigilant watch. The result Is that Tony d Steffen, 1113 Capitol avenue, la now Immured ninety days In the city Jan. "' " Oihaha Kallway Clnb Doing D. C. Buell. educational director of the Hani man lines, ha been elected a director of the Omaha Railway club, to aucoeed R. E. Hayward of the Burlington Route, re ' signed. Wednesday evening the room of th railway club were open to the mem bflr of the Transmtssourl Freight associa tion. A general reception was held. Warden Smith and Superintendent v Jttann! at T. K. C. A. Th Social Serv ice club ot Omaha will have a luncheon and discussion- Saturday at the Young Men s Christian association rooms. The hour for the luncheon la 12:30, and the dla el'SHlon will follow. Warden Smith of the 'Rat penitentiary and Superintendent Manuel of the Kearney Industrial School for Boy will b; the guest of the club and will make brief addresses. Judge Sutton wjll preside. T. If. O. A, aigit-of-Way Clnb The Young Men', Christian association has or ganised a RIght-of-Way club. The society (ha no connection with railroad operation, but I designed to boot th etibscrlptlon llat in "Association Men," the official monthly magazine of the association. Last year th Omaha association stood third In th subscription lists of the magazine for number of eubsorlber.''. This year it Is hoped to raise' the subscription list to 212. Th branch that has the largest subscrip tion list will secure a prise a forty volume set of encyclopedia. Business Man's Association Electa bamuol Rees was elected president of the Business Men's association at the annual meeting held Thursday noon at th Com mercial club. H. A. Daniel was elected sec rfli'V and J. A. flnn,wiQn,i vi. r.-.-miA. Luther Drake was re-elected treasurer. Be Moines Invite Army Offloere An Invitation ha been extended to the of- fleer of th Department of the Missouri by the Commercial nluh nf rn. vf.i. - ' ' Wll I I J attend the reception to bo given by that club to tho officer of the Sixth United State cavalry, recently arrived at Fort Dea Moines for permanent station. McXeen Motor on Oroat Westsrn Two McKeen motor oar hav. been ordered by th Chicago Orat Western railroad to be operated in connection with th aervlce out of 8t. Joseph, Mo. Another coach ha been ordered from the General Electrlo company In Chicago. Tl)e Union . Paolflo railroad Is consWerImt4he'aaVhabillty'of adding to Its motor car equipment between Kearney and COlumbu. Th Commercal club of Kearney has called the attention of the railroad to the heavy traffic between the twial Point and urges the addition nf . more oars. It Is a dangerous tning to take a cough medicine ' containing ' oplAtes that merely title your eouvh Instead of curing it. Foley' Honey and Tar loosens and euro th cough and expels th poiaonoue germs, thus preventing pneumonia and consumption- Refuse substitutes and take only th genulno - Foley' Honey and Tar In th yellow package. . Sold by all druggists. CMAHA HIGH SCHOOL HAS MANDOLIN AND BANJO CLUB rraacls Potter Take Chare of Maatctaba Thirty Members . Am ' Ka Mated. A mandolin and banjo club ha ben organised at the Omaha High school. Francis Potter ha taken charge of the club. About thirty boy Joined thus far. about twenty of - whom ar experienced players. ,Mr. Poster says b hopea to hav th club in shape to appear In publlo by th middle of March and he propose to -a .bL it..' Ill'L i. ( . n, . . . w. man ovnooi uiea club and (Tctuc a concert that , will do th. hi. hjol student honor. .Th German oclety of th Omaha High school ' held a meeting Wednesday and tf th following program , St.ng-By the society, piano solo. Eleanor StfiA VlX?1: "'' Th program olosed with play "Nein The enst of characters was Blanche Brqtherton as "Adolphinl." Bertha Sellner aA Ida. . James Vsn Avery as "Bruno" ai Stuart Gould aa "Konrad." XJruno- BACKACHE GOES AND KIDNEYS ACT - , FINE AFTER TAKING A FEW DOSES Out-of -order, Kidneyi are regelated and the most severe Bladder misery Vanishee. No man or woman here whose kidney r out-of-order, or who' suffer from bckach r bladder misery, can afford to Uav Pape' Diuretic untried,. . After taking aeveral doses, all pain in the back, sides or loin, rheumatlq lwlngst , ntrvousnuss, headache, iloep. leatn. Inflamed or awollen eyelid, dls alnaa, tired or worn-out feeling and other ymptom of vcloggd, sluggish kidney Imply Vanish. Unoontrollabl urination (especially at nlghn smarting, discolored water and all bladder misery end. - Th moment you auipect tha slightest kidney' a bladder disorder, or feel rheu matism pains, don't continue to b mis rabl or. worrlad, but gat fifty-cent treatment, Of . Pap' Dlurtlo from your A. I. 110-121 ill v - - AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA L. D. Harrison Diet of Injuries Receired in Fall. MORE -PARK BONDS ORDERED Conamlaalonrr RrgsMl Cnaarll to Mak Ins la Order to Secor Eatraare to Maodaa rark. L. D. Harrison died at th South Omaha hospital yesterday after lying unconscious sine last Saturday evening when he was struck on the head, felled to the nldewalk and suffered a sever fracture of the skull. He never 'regained consciousness. The post mortem examination showed a crack In the bone of th cranium extending from the right to th left temple around the back of th man' bead. The frontal bon alone waa not cracked. A large blood clot was found on the brain and many of th blood vessels in th brain tissu wer ruptured. An inquest will be he'.d this afternoon at tha undertaking parlor of Bernard Larkln. Harrison was a well digger and lived out side the city limit In Homestead addition. If la aaJd to hav been struck by Frank Lewis of Sarpy county. Lewis cam In and gav himself up Monday and was placed under $1,600 bonds to appear Tor trial Feb ruary IS. II said he had had no trouble with Harrison and that he gave himself up becauae under suspicion. Th police claim to hav possession of the fact in tha case and tha name of all witnesses who can glv material testimony. Dr. A. H. Koenlg had charge of the case and said he was much surprised that Har rison lived aa long aa he did. The funeral of Mr. Harrison will be held at th O. H. Brewer chapel Friday at I p. m. Request for Fwk Bonds. Tho South Omaha Board of Park com missioners met last night and came to an agreement concerning the Improvement of the South Omaha parks. Th board adopted a resolution recommending that the city council issue $15,000 bonds to be used for the permanent improvement of th parka. One of the stipulations of the request was that $6,000 of th Issue was to be used to purchaao additional land to be added to Majidan park to make It access ible. Mandan park was bought from Edward Dee during the Hoctor administration. The park has no means of entranoe with the open streets of the city 'and can only be reached through th private property of P. J. Barrett. He proposes to sell the city five acre with, a roadway for $6,000. This Is mora than the park board wishes to ex pend. Th city council la authorised by the statute to issue $15,000 bonds upon the written request of the Board of Park Com missioners without submitting the issue to a popular vote. The council will prob ably act at the earliest moment In com plying with the resolution of the board, which will be laid before them at the next meeting. Frederick Mllleaer to Speak. Dr. Frederick Millener of Omaha, the electrician of the Union Pacific system, one of the keenest electricians of the west, wtll address the Methodist brotherhood this evening at the Methodist church at Twenty-third and N streets. The address Is under the ausplcea of the brotherhood and Is free. Just before the lecture the women of the church will give a dinner to which th publlo Is Invited. Dinner will also be served at noon. The evening service begin at,B:30 p. m. , u.;. Maple City OoaslpC Dr. W. N. Neal, chief ot the bureau of animal Industry, 1 reported ill. letter's Gold Top Beer delivered to anv part of city. Fred Heff linger. Tel. South 1049 B. F. Jackson of Modale, la., Is visiting with his son, B. 8. Jackson, In South Omaha. The South Omaha Commercial club will meet at luncheon today at Miller's res taurant. The funeral of E. A. Cheshire will be held at 2 p. m. today. The Eagles will meet at 1 p. m. The traveling inspectors of the bureau of animal Industry paid the South Omaha Office a visit yesterday. Frank Byrne of Nebraska City reported that he was robbed of $4 Tuesday night at Twenty-sixth and N streets. TELEPHONE So. 888 and hav a case of Jetter's Gold Top Beer delivered at your residence. HENKY J. JETTER. Court Allemanle No. $026, Independent Order of Foresters, will meet Thursday evening In regular monthly session. , Saturday of thl wek will be the last date upon which withdrawal from the primary election race can be recognized. John Sauter ha agreed to sell a atrip of land on Washington street to th city of South Omaha for the purpose of opening a street. Nicely furnished room for rent, steam heat, strictly modern, private family, i27 N, 21d St., South Omaha. Second floor. Living Is high; still we can sell you 1,000 pounds ot soft nut coal for $4.50. If money is scarce try a ton. Tel. S. . BroadwelK Roberts Co. Fannie Ulea, t months old, died yesterday at the home of the parents, 118 North Twentieth street The funeral will be to day at 2 p. m. The Swedish-Norwegian Republican club ha rented th hall at $421 N street for the campaign. All members are requested to be present February 10 at 8 p. m. to consider special business. John Sentech, 80 years old, died Tuesday night at Fortieth and H streets. The funeral will be at 9 a. m. Friday morning to 8L Francis' church. The burial la In th German Catholic cemetery. druggist and start taking aa directed, with th knowledge that ther 1 no other madloln. at any price, mad any. wher els In th world, which la so harmless or will ffct so thorough and prompt a cur.. Thl unusual preparation goes direct to th cause of trouble, dlatr(butlng It cleansing, healing and vltallsllg Influence directly upon the organ and gland af fected and completes th cur befor you realise it. A few day' treatment of Pape' Diu retic mean clean, healthy, active kidneys, bladder and urinary organs and you feel fln Tour physician, pharmacist, banker or any mercantile agancy will tall you that Pap. Thompson A Pape, of Cincinnati, ia a large and responsible medicine concern, thoroughly worthy of your confidence. Accept only Pap' Diuretic fifty-cent treatment from any drug storo-ony-wher In th world. o Engraved Stationery wUif 'nllatiMi itimaani isats Vuitimm Cmrdm A.,eoTc fama ia rarnal aocial nun mtmtw fcath bt auaw aad punctually UmrJwl Embossed Monogram Stationery " wor executed at pneaa lower thaa aauaJly P"i elaowhara. ROOT, Incorporated Ha-St. D. 104 Some Things You The National Health. If President' Taft forthcoming recom- mendatlon to congress ar followed out by that body, th United State will at last hav a great heaJth - organisation eom- menaurat with th need of th nation. Th Department of Agriculture cam snd vaoclne virus for th protection of farmer' cattle from blackleg, but only In a most indirect way can th health aenclea take any steps to protect that farmer' children from smallpox or scarlet fever. The government stands powerless to check th ravage of tuberculosa In th human family, although It can turn back tha pread of Taxes fever among cattl by drawing a quarantine lin north of which southern cattl may not go, except under m,, mil AmflfimA MAlMtlV. lV.nlt(nm But thl. Is by no mean. th. only featur. of the existing health law of th nation which call for a radical change, Thar ar a number of bureau now In operation In the government that ar concerned principally with health matter. Th pub' lie health and marln hospital aarrlr ranks first among thee. Under th able administration of Surgeon Oeneral Walter Wyman this service ha mad Itself In valuable to th nation at large. It work la stamping out the yellow fever epldemlo In the south a few year ago. It labor In protecting San Francisco from th threat ened outbreak of pestilence after th earthquake, It efforts to bring about a standardisation of all th heroic, remediea and th purity of all vtruse tor vaootna tton nd anti-toxins, no leas than U duty of visiting every ship that com to an American port to make sura that quaran tine law ar observed, have all been don so successfully that haa been Justly styled America' flying squadron for th defense of the national health. The War department ha It medical corps, whloh ha distinguished lUelf in mar.y hand to hand conflict with disease nd death. The trlumpha of Its sanitary wcrk in Cuba, where the death rat In navana was cut in twain in a single year, represent a great victory for public health over the host of pestilence. The work of Major Walter Reed and hts colaborer In proving to th satisfaction 'of every medl- cal man th truth of the mo.qulto theory of yellow fever transmission, constitute one of the most brilliant chapter In th 1 . k . . .. ft.- lnkH . "u..... v'- me army uocior on in ismmus ot Panama, where the Reed theories wer again applied to praotica, hav borne glori ous fruitage. The navy, also haa Itk medi cal las. . t... mwA 1 , Jl.... a. uu.y.. .v. The Department of Agriculture baa It . , . . , . '... ... . . ministration of Dr. Wiley thla bureau ha effected a veritable revolution In the dia- .... , , -"" - guarantee to the people protection from ... , . . , mlsbranded and misrepresented product, ,..,., . tK1. bureau has mad itself a force that af- fect. every human being Jn the country. The census office, in the Department of n a Tj.w th.,. tt.ymnr. tallty statistic, of th "nation which reveal the state of the public health. Thua four of the department, of the government har a mnra r lea. rtlraet ealarlnn tn th. nilh. He health With each of thes agencle. ac.tlv. in Its work. It I. inevitable that ther should be great overlapping of duties, a continual repetition of labor. With no co-ordination amour them, three department at . onoo may be making Independent, Investigation of tho relation of the water supply to typhoid fever. At least three of these bureau may be studying th relation be tween milk and tuberculosis at the same time. It I Inevitable under these condi tions that much money is expended In duplication of research, money that is sorely needed on account of tha economical policy of congress at present. nriiL .11 .w i . a a under one head, with each of them worM Ing In proper co-operation with the others, the same money and th same effort now expended would yield much greater ro turns In reduced mortality and increased longevity. It was to foster the Idea of such a consolidation of health agencies that the Committee of One Hundred on Na tional Health waa created. Thl organisa tion haa been active to auch a degree that It la believed Ita recommendation, which have the approval of President Taft, will be enacted Into law before th present session of congress adjourns. Thla com mittee ha. over 8,000 names on It. mailing list, and it ha. proved a great fore In th Fifty Frightened Steers Run Amuck at Venice, 111. Cattle Are Released When Six Can of Wrecked Train Tumble Down Embankment. VENICE. 111., Feb. 10. Fireman Q. R. Williams of Bloomington, 111., was crushed to death; Engineer J. A. Rsihmond of St. Louia, sustained a broken leg, and twenty or more spectator wer knocked down and trampled by atampeding cattle, as the re sult of a head-on collision between two Chicago and Alton freight trains In th railroad yards In this city tonight. Williams Jumped, but waa caught be neath the engine, which rolled down an embankment upon him. Six cars, loaded with steers, also rolled down th bank, killing a score or mor of th animals and turning loos more than fifty others. Crased with fright, tha animals stampeded tn every direction through a crowd . of several hundred persons! many of them women and children, which had collected about the wreck, knocking down scores In their flight. A riot call waa turned in and th police and fir department, assisted by th sheriff force, fought oft the cattle, killing many ot them with aledge and cowing th other with streams of water from fir fbosa. DIPHTHERIA SCARE AT CHERRY Kara Stricken vrlta Dl.eaa After She Had Dealt Oat Fre. Milk to Two Hsaara P.raoaa. CHERRY, III.. Fb. 10-Wlth not a doctor or a panicle of antitoxin In town, every widow and orphan of th St. Paul min fir I. exposed to diphtheria through th professional nurse that sr. caring for th alck. Shortly after dealing out fre milk to nearly $00 women and children last night. Mis Franca Wheeler of Chicago, on of the four nurses q Qhrry, waa stricken with diphtheria tn th nurses' home. - A Barala Sham Is not to have Bucklen's Arnica Snlv to cure burns, sores, piles, cuts, wounds and ulcers. 2&c. . For sal by Beaton Drug Co. Th Key to th Situation Be Want Ad. Want to Kn iw education of public sentiment In favor of proper health measures. One scarcely realises how much I done and how much I expended In th Interest of public health. Th National Association for the Study and Prevention- of Tubercu- i0,, nu gathered th financial and edu- rational statistics of the nation-wide cru sade against the white plague, and finds that dur,n the yr of 1908 th vartou. (21 H In the campaign. Over 10,000,000 pieces of literature wer circulated, and 117. 31J patients were treated for tubercu losis, Blxty-on thousand of tha patient wer treated at dispensaries. New Tork takes first rank In th effort to wipe out thl disease. Pennsylvania sscond, Maasa chusset third and Illinois, Maryland, New Jer''' California, Colorado. Connecticut and Ohio In their order. Recent studies of the death rate from various ailments reveal startling condi tions. They show that Americana ar pay ing a terrible penalty for overwork. While th death rat from contagloua diseases ha dropped it per cent since 1880, that from disease of the -kidney, heart and brain ha Increased 8$ per cent In the same period. These figure tell of th tax of hard work and high living. Kidney dls- eases, springing from Intemperate eating and drinking and from hard work, now how a death rate hat haa Increased 131 per cent sine 1880. Ther ar 84 par cent mor fatalltlea from apoplexy today than there war thirty year ago and 57 per cent more death from heart disease. Mean while all contagious diseases are ahowlng rapidly diminishing death rat. It cannot b argued that thl Increasing mortality In th disease of overwork and overlndulgenoe Is due to unprvntabl cause. It Is estimated that la the United State mor than WO.OOO live are annually ,Mrtflod on th altar of Indifference to known law of health. More than $.000,000 peopl ar constantly seriously III, half of tnem ,utfering from dlaeaaea of a preven- tabl nature Onc It waa supposed that the lawa of health were Inexorable; that the death rat could not be increased nor diminished. But statistics shew that thers are no Iron laws for mortaty. Th span of human Ufa In Europe has doubled in less than four cen turles. During tha seventeenth and lgh- teenth centuries the average life waa lengthened at th rat of four year per century, and during th first three-quarters ot the nineteenth century the average life UnvtRaneA at tha rata nf aln. CI m- - - - - f . 1 1 . uuiw tnen 0,vU,zed oountrl.s bave made man kind, longer-lived at th rate of seventeen year a century. In Prussia, which I the hem of preventive medicine, the span of ... . . ... ' ,w Ufa la lengthening at the rat of twenty- even year a century. Whether this In orealng .pan will ultimately bring men . , " ,. ' " back to th rip old age of Methuselah . . . . " "IM Adra Noah ho on can afely 9tt cD''h 'ma6 0"c "P4 the that " Tn ret"rnel to th p" " r'ally ,a,Jthey haa travelfd rom " thy wu' eventually live to '. tho" who nd ln th t . . U hown mortality table, that death MmM ,M Blrt frequently ' among the DOOr tnan ,mon the r,cn- rnsurunc figure of l,n,1""trla mPanl 'montrat that the death rate among the poor"! from 66 to per cent greater than among the well-to- do. In tha unsanitary distrfet ef Glasgow and Paris th death rat'la"Aub)e that-of th better sections, Th leftecr1 of a ckm palgn of education on a"oHVs mortality la shown by tha fact that' since New Tork undertook th Improvement' of 'conditions In health matters, It haa reduced it death rat to the lowest point on record, Th committee of on hundred on national health 1 seeking to hav all life Insurance companies Join In a campaign In favor of disease prevention. Dr. Irving Fisher of Tate, president of, this committee, declares on the poueje, carried in an educa tional propaganda .will so lengthen the average life as to make It commercially Drafltable to th Insurance eomnanlti them. aelve. to ay nothing of th vast good that will accrue to th nation at large. H think that by a proper co-ordination of all the health Interest of - th nation, headed' with a magnificent,, consolidated national health bureau, such. an onslaught can be made upon the strongholds of dis ease as to glv th average American a new lease on life equivalent to one-third of hi present allotted years. T FBEDZKIO J. HABKZsT. Tomorrow Modal Zlons X.agn. Publicity Will . Improve Status of Corporations Commissioner Smith Discusses Fro posed Law . in His Annual Report ' WASHINGTON, FVb. 10.-That great In terstate Industries may be brought Under a permanent federal, supervision through a sstem ot regular reports to a federal agency, In a rational, effective way, which will Involve no drastlo action.1 but on the contrary will forestall It, Is the conclusion drawn In th annual report of Herbert Knox Smith, commissioner of corporations, to the secretary of commerce and labor, made publlo today. "Publicity wilt Improv the standing-of our corporation sacurltWa. both at home and abroad," Mr. Smith declares, "and will help to glv to our busmemaxhlnry that foundation of fairness and openness and publlo confidence which it must hav If it 1 to be a permanent factor In ur national advanc. "It will bring together th government and the corporate manager In conference and co-operation, which alon can aarve- to adjust continuously th complex and chang Ing relationship between our business force and th publlo welfare." . Mr. Smith contends that already under publlo condemnation, road possible by facta plainly stated, great corporate abuaea uav been abandoned. He assert that a gigantic system of railroad rat discrlml natlona haa bean wiped away and numerous forms of commercial oppression diminished. Corporal manager, themselves, declares A beautiful Face It U What All Woman b.alr -iss uora Hansen, 1910 8at Street, Raoln. WU.. writes that " aeautiri.i ... la what all woman delr, but what woman an b beautiful with har fao cov.rad with plmplea and blotches T Tu ask 'what can w d to prevent th pimple and blotch appearing on our fao.' Tak Hood's Sar aapartlla. It will sooa glv you( a clear, oft akin. Jay mother and brother hav taken Hood'a Sareaparilla' for Impure blood nd cannot apeak too highly of If Oat H today in usual liquid form ar thocolated tablet called Saraataba. l hat Postmaster-General Hitchcock reports that the Post-Office Department loses $64,000,000 a year in the business of carrying second-class mail (magazines and, periodicals). There is not a deficit of $17,000,000, , as the department alleges, but actually a surplus of more than $10,000,006, when the specific loss on free rural delivery is taken into consideration, and the de partment's figures of $64,000,000 loss on secpnd-class matter are wrong by more than $60,000,000. THE EVE. for February' 12th devotes its editorial page to this subject, showing the injustice of the recommendation to raise the rate on all magazines and periodicals but not on daily papers or the country weeklies. - One fact: In the year ended June 30th, 1908, the weight of second-class matter compared to 1907 decreased 18, 000,000 pounds. The postal expenditures creased $18,000,000. There is some thing in it besides second-class matter. Look for a dozen more facts in this week's (date of February 1 2th) number of The Saturday Evening Post. V Paid circulation this week is Mr. Smith ar frankly advocating a mor open accounting. Federal Expert Bakes Bread Chemist Employed by Government Furnishes Exhibit in Bleached Floor Case! NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 10,-Loavea of bread baked in th laboratory of th United Ptates Puro Food department in th New Orleans custom house wer of fered a exhibit from the federal court her today In th so-called "bleached flour case.'' T. bread waa baked by Miss E. Weasllng, a chemlat, employed by the gov ernment. Th case marks the first prosecution by the United atate under the claua of the pur food atatutes relative to bleached flour, and I directed aa-alnat th Aetna Mill and levator company of Wellington, Kan. A number of prominent official of th United Btfitea Department of Agrlcultu ar in New Orleans to attend the trial, among them being W. D. Blgelow, assistant chief of th pur food bureau, and Walter O. Campball. chief food and drug inspector. Dr. H. W. WUy. chief of th pur food J bureau, was detained In Washington. rosflal Pelfiat NINO POST 1,575,000 copies The Curtis Publishing'Company Philadelphia Pennsylvania Vcssey Forces Issue on Expense Sayi He Will Ak for Honey to Wipe Oat State Debt of South Dakota. PIERRE, 8. D., Feb. 10.-(Speolat.) Gov ernor Veewey today gave out hi first statement as to. his candidacy for renom Inatlon. He took the position that th coming campaign In th primaries will be upon the Issue at state expenditure and said: "I am ready to go upon th plat form upon thAt issue and compare th work of the legislative session of 1MB, when Mr. Elrod waa governor, and that of 1B00. I can ahow that th appropriation for state expenses which wer mad by th 190 session could be met with a levy for state expenses which was made for th two year of tho Elrod administration 4 mills for on year andJ mill for th other. While auch a levy would mft tha expense, ! am not In favor of reducing tha levy this year to t mills, but will ask for i mills, not only to meet th stat ex penses, but to wlp out th debt which haa been Incurred In the four year prior to IS. A 4-mlll levy for this year will do thl and leave th stat to tak oar of current xpnse and not be hampered by debt of the pas admlnlatcMlons. n fact, I will, aa I did two year ago, stand for a sufficient tax levy to meet th grow. .1, 'LB------Ul-LLIi-J .1.' . . m'fmm ing' needs of th vartou Institution of th stat. managed In careful and economical manner. That will my po sition In th campaign and I am ready ta tak up th Issue along such line." TRAIN ROBBING! PROVES TO BE POOR PROFESSION Tw Jh m . Ml art I!' Wat feaadlta Las Thaa Tan H4 Ihsllara. ' aaBSBBB BT. LOUIB. FebriOVrraln robbery ( oa of th poorest paying' professions, accord ing ta th announcement tonight of on Of th official of th Missouri Pacific, twa of whoa train hav been hald tap re cently. ( Th four men who fobbed on of th company's train In spectacular fashion near Eureka, Mo., January 21, netted fine In rifling th mall sacks, aaoordlng to th announcement. Instead of $10,090, th or iginal Mtltnau of th railroad and postal Official. . f . Th three or four man who rob bad tha paesengara on Mleaport Paolflo train near Pittsburg, Kan., on February I. left the train 1181 richer, say th official. A reward of $7,fc)0 I offered for th ar rest of th man who roobd th train near' Eureka. A reward of MQ aach for tha men who participated In tha robbary nar Pittsburg was announced tonight by th railroad company. Praiatnt Advertising ta ih read ta Big Return. , . , , f