!3aily NEWS SECTION H WEATHER FOUECAST. ij For Xobraskn Partly cloudy. For Iowr Tardy rlomljr. tj For weather report m-p pngo 2. PAGE5 1 TO 10. VOL. XXX1X-NO. 217. OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, FKIJHUAHY 2(, 1910-NIXTKKN PAGES. N1XOLK COPY TWO CKNTS. POWER OF COURTS 0VERC0NGRESS Buit of Paper Company Eaiiei New Issue in Relation to Departments of Government. Insurgents Not forTaft Reform Railroad Bill BILLS AGAINST MEATCOMBINE New Jersey Grand Jury Indie" Six Big Corporations '' On" M-V'iVv The Omaha Bee RAISE IN HATES STIRSSllllTEKS Scheme of the Railroads to Squeeze Greater Revenue Out of Omaha Arouses Many Trades. TAKES IN VAST LINE OF GOODS Likely to Increase Cost of Living, if Carried Out. IS RANKEST DISCRIMINATION Clapp and Cummins Both Against Measure Which is Favorably Reported to Senate. SENATORS IGNORE SUMMONS all am -xxiACY vr W4 lumbers Take Ground that Their Acts Are Not Subject to Review. HOUSE MEMBERS PRESENT Their Attorney Makes Plea that Court Has No Jurisdiction. JUDGE RESERVES DECISION Paper Company's Knit to Compel Reopen In if of Award of Contract aae in of Historic Interest. WASHINGTON, Feb. 25. The groat ques tion of the authority of one branch of the government over another was argued today In the supreme court of the District of Columbia, with precedents dating from the i my of Chief Justice Marshall. Tho mere Tiiandumus proceedings of the Valley Paper company of Holyoke, Mash., against the joint congressional committee on printing evolved Into a ecu teat of authority be tween tho courts and congress and the foundations were laid In a case as historic as any In the annals of the judiciary. Whether or not the printing committee can be compelled by a court to rescind its ac tion on purchases of paper for the public printing and take Into consideration the bid of the Valley Ft per company Is the Immediate question. Whether congress and its members in their official capacities and clothed with constitutional Immunity are amenable to the law, will be the ultimate one, counsel on each side is ready to ad mit Senators I a" n ore Order. Today the senators of the printing com mittee continued in their attitude to Ig nore the summons of the court on the grounds that It was without Jurisdiction an4atere not present or represented by counsel. They are Senators Root of New York. Smoot of Utah and Fletcher of Florida. True members of the committee from the house, however, Allen F. Cooper of Pennsylvania, George C. Sturglss of West Virginia and David E. Flnley of South Carolina, occupied seats in the front row of the spectators and were repre sented collectively and Individually by a battalion of counsel. The Department of Justice, too, was represented for the first time today, to contest the Jurisdiction of the comt. Contention of Committee. The meat of the committee's plan In answer to the pnpe.r company's mandamus was that the company's bid was not the "lowest In the best Interests of the gov ernment" and that It failed to comply with certain legal technicalities. lP"n the question of Its relation to the court! however, the graver contention was made' that the members of the printing committee were clothed with the constitu tional Immunity conferred upon them by their membership in congress; that they did not act In a ministerial capacity and that the mandamus, stripped of Its primary features, was not a mandamus against the printing committee at all, but really a mandamus from the supreme court of the District of Columbia to congress Itself. The committee's plea was that as a com mittee Its members did the same work ' which congress could do upon the floor of both houses if It choee to do so. Justice Wright announced he would hand down his decision on Monday. This presents a situation entirely new In American Jurisprudence, the possibili ties of three United States senators being adjudged In contempt of court and the possibility of a supreme court Justice be ing accused of contempt of congress enter Into it. JOINT MEETING OF MINERS AND OPERATORS FAILURE 'tort to Reach Agreement on Wage Scale la Abandoned for the' Present. KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Feb. 2B.t-At a Joint convention of the coal miners and opera tors and mine owners of the southwest here today the comference committee ap pointed to consider the wage scale for the nt two years reported Inability to reach aA agreement The committee was dis charged and the Joint convention ad journed. It Is said that an amicable adjustment of the controversy is possible at a subsequent Joint convention. The present wage scale expires April 1. The conference' committee had been In wsslon fines Tuesday night. The representatives of the miners In sisted the new wage scale should Include an Increase of 10 cents a ton and a pro portlonate Increase In the wages of miners paid by the day. but the representatives of the operators refused to make this conces sion which was demanded by the United Mine Workers of America at their recent convention. The miners will continue to consider routine matters today and .tomorrow. LITTLE GIRL BURNED TO DEATH PARENTS ABSENT Kl ve-Yenr-Old Irtlni Wa Muffins; Paper Into the Kitchen Stove. MAnSHALLTOWN. Ia., Feb. K. (Spe cial Telegram.) Lucile Harrison, uged 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Homer Harrison, living fivs miles from here, was burned to death last night whlie stuffing paper In the, Kitchen stove. The parents were ab sent from the house at the time. Returning to the house, they found their daughter dead on the floor. EDDY IS FOUND NOT GUILTY 7(lry in Metle Plain Martler Cms Frees Detective ftuaperteal of Old Crime. VINTON. Ia., Feb. 25 -The Jury in the eae of George Eddy, indlctrd with Fran 1 Guthrie for the alleged murder of ilrs. Gulhg-. at Belle Plain, trn years ago, returned verdict this morning 0f not guilty. WASHINGTON, Feb. ..-Consideration of the administration bill to crente a court of commerce and amend the Inter state commerce laws was concluded today by the senate committee on Interstate commerce and .It was ordered reported. The vote was t to 4. The majority report will recommend the pa-sago of the bill In form practically as It was revised by Attorney General Wlck ersham. Tho minority also will report. Thero were three absentees when the committee met. They were Tillman of South Carolina, Foster of Louisiana and Taylor of Tennesie-!. With these democrats absent the result wns a foregone conclu sion, resulting as follows: For the administration bill Senator Kl klns (VV. Vs.), Cullom (111.), Aldrlch (II. I ), Kean (N. J ). Crane (Mass.), and Nixon (Nev). Against Clapp (Minn.), Cummins (Iowa). Newlands (Nev.), and Hughes (Colo.). The bill, which was reported to the sen- ! ate by Mr. Klklns. soon afier that body convened, Is tho same as was Introduced on January 11 In the senate by Senator Klkins and In the house by Representative Townsend of Michigan, with amendments suggested by Attorney General Wlcker sham on February 24 and by Messrs. 131 klns and Townsend re-introduced. Gamble Gets Cash for Sioux Falls South Dakota Senator Succeeds in Getting Favorable Report on Appropriation Bill. (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.-(Speclal Tele gram.) Senator Gamble today secured a favorable report on his bill increasing the limit of cost for Improvement and exten sion of the federal building at Sioux Falls from $100,000 to $190,000. The president sent to the senate today nominations of the following postmasters: Nebraska Albion, George W. Williams; Elmwood. William K. Sargent. Iowa Clinton, E. L. Martlndale; Keota, Lauren E. Hulse; Monroe, Henry A. Per rin; Sioux Ranids, Lucy B. Smith; Wil liamsburg. Harry E. Hull. South Dakota Flandreau, E. C. Akam; Leola, Frank D. Lowry. Rural carriers have been appointed as follows: Nebraska Havelock, route J, Joseph L. Wood, carrier; no substitute; Rulo, route 1, Fred Jondrow, Carrier; no substitute. Iowa Fort Dodge, route 1, Stephen E. Hartnett, carrier; no substitute; Hender son, route 1, K. P. Duysen, carrier; J. H. Parker, substitute; Keystone, route 1, Julius Klapphols, carrier; Emma Klapp holi, substitute; St. Charles, route 1, Henry R. Hurlbut, carrier; Ernest E. Hurlbut, substitute. South Dakota Wagner, route 2, Will W. Townsend. Jr., carrier; W. W. Townsend, sr., substitute. Postmasters appointed are as follows: Nebraska Minatare, Scott's Bluff county, W. B. Swindell, vice O. O. Piernont. re moved. Iowa Hoprlg. Emmet county, Charles Blair, vice O. L. Puugh, resigned; Prole, Warren county, Ernest M. Burkhead, vice W. J. Slinker, resigned. South Dakota Sheffield, Beadle county, John A. York, vice C. C. Ersted, declined. Libel Decision to Be Appealed Cabinet Takes Action in Case Against New York World Recently Dismissed. WASHINGTON, Feb. 25. As a result of the cabinet meeting, Attorney General Wlckersham today telegraphed to District Attorney Wise at New York to note an appeal from the decision of Judge Hough, dismissing, for want of Jurisdiction, the Indictment against the Press Publishing company (New York World) on the charge of libel In connection with the Panama canal case NEW YORK, Feb. 26. District Attorney Wise will at once begin preparation of the appeal In the Panama libel case to the United States supreme court. The defend ants have recently asked that an appeal be taken that the question of whether the Indictment was authorized or not by the statute should be finally determined by the court of last resort. MRS. FLAGLER KILLED BY CARS Widow of General In Automobile struck by Rxprea Two Others Hurt. NIAGARA FALLS. N. Y.. Feb. 23.-Mrs. Benjamin Flagler, widow of General Flag ler, was killed, Mrs. George F. Nye was fatally Injured and her daughter, Miss Nye, was seriously hurt today when a New York Central express train struck the auto mobile In which they were riding. All were residents of Nelagara Falls. Kids' Saturnalia Expense Preparing for a high old time at the ex pense of the stepfather of one of them, was what three boys and two girls were doing when Officers Maloncy, Van Deusen and Murphy walked Into a room at 401 North Sixteenth street. There was champagne and cigars and plenty to eat. while the room was furnished with a quantity of nlcknacks evidently the result of a despoiling expedition inio some person's drawing room. A rifle a alto part o- the bJoty. Where It came from the officers proceeded to lnvevtlgaie, and on tha way to ths station one of the chil dren confessed. "It came from the house of my step father," said Jay Wyman. lnvestlstlon proved the truth of this, and ths discovery of the further 'act that Acts Limiting; Supply of Meats and Poultry Alleged. BIG MEN ARE ON LIST Armour, Swift, Morris and Hammond Companies Named. OFFENSE IS EXTRADITABLE Pnxei'Btor finven Says if Men In dicted Do Not Appear for Trial He Will Secure lleqnlal. tlona for Their Arrest. NEW YORK, Feb. 25. "The Rerf trust." of the United States, embracing six great pai.klng companies and twi nty-one p.ickei s. S'-veral of them multi-millionaires, socially and Industrially prominent, wire Indicted by a gland tlll'V in Hudson pnlintv. New Jersey, today, charged with conspiracy in limiting the supply of meat and poultry. The indictment Is drawn under the law of New Jersey, which provides upon con viction a maximum penalty of three years In the penitentiary oi a fl.000 fine or both. The offense Is extraditable, which means practically that tho meat barons must either successfully resist extradition, or come to Jersey City for trial. Pierre Onrven, the public prosecutor of Hudson county anoiinced tonight that he would forthwith notify the defendants of their Indictment, and would be ready to force extradition In each case where the individual concerned Is not willing to face trial voluntarily. List of Defendants. The defendants as named are as follows: Corporations: The National Packing company. Armour & Co. Swift utid company. Morris A- Co. a Hammond Packing c'mpany. G. H. Hammond & Co. Individuals. L. A.J. Ottden Armui Thomas J. Conners. ... i oibuii ii I luur, p. A hntv pr I.olHs I Swift L. H. Ilevman. Edward F. Swift. Charles 1 1. Swift. Edward MorrlB. Ira N. Morris. Arthur Meeker. Edward Tilden. L. A. Carton. Thomas E. Wilson. J. 15. Bathgate, Jr. George J. Edwards. Frederick B. Cooper. I. E. Hart well. Henry B. Darlington. A. A. Fuller. Lemuel C. Patterson. The Indictment, Which hrlstlps In Itu arraignment of the men named, also refers 10 divers others" as being responsible. These latter, however, are not specified. Hexiilt of Price .Probe. The list of names, it will be seen, repre sents the backbone of the great packing industry of this country, containing as it does two Armours, three Swifts and two Morrises, most of them residents of Chi cago, together with less important figures In the packing world. Their indictment brings to a climax the first concerted effort In the east to fix responsibility tor the pre vailing abnormally high price of com modities. Jersey. City Is a cold storage center where tjic packing companies of the west main tain vast warehouses in which countless thousands of pounds of meat and poultry are stored proved a fruitful source of In vestigation. More than a month ago the inquiry by the grand Jury was started, cold storago plants were Inspected, witnesses were examined arid today the indictment was handed up (n the supreme court before Pustlces Blair and Carey. CANE STRIKERS PILLAGING 1 FARMS AND KILLING ANIMALS Forrlun Consnltes In Guadalonpe Are Guarded by Police and Cruisers on Way. POINT-A-PETRE, Guadeloupe, Feb. 25. Forces of police have gone to St. Francois to protect the natives there, several of whom have been killed during the disturb ances arising from the strike of sugar cane cutters. The strikers have gathered in large, numbers at St. Francois and are pillaging the surrounding country and killing domestic animals for food. Tho foreign consulates are guarded by the police. Several sugar grinding factories have been burned. Governor Gautret today announced the arrival of reinforcements of troops from Martinique and that the French armored cruisers Victor Hugo was on the way here to aid In preserving order. I NAGEL WANTS FUNDS TO HELP STAMP OUT WHITE SLAVERY Secretary Telia Committee aii)O,OO0 a Year Would He Well Spent In Campaign. WASHINGTON, Feb. 2i.-The expendi ture of $100.0)0 a year in stamping out the "white Blave" traffic would be money well spent, said Secretary Nagel in submitting" to the houne a recommendation that the total estimate for regulating Immigration be Increased from $2,400,000 to $2,501.01)0. Mr. .Nagel says tht enforcement of the "white slave" traffic bill, now In confer ence between tho two houses and expected to become a law In a few days, will cost $109,000 and that the work will have to be prosecuted differently than the ordinary Immigration law enforcement. at Dad's Nipped in Budj no one was ln tho house when the raid was made. Wyman, when not elsewhere, claims the residence as his home, and thither, about 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon, according to the police story, he took Wilber Cuyne k North Twenty-third street, who helped him to carry away the spoils. The other youth arrested U Floyd Bolster, 1(24 Cass street, but ha says he Just dropped Into the room on his way home from work. The two girls, Marie Sears and Maud Mlley, are from Council Bluffs. All are charged with entering the Saun ders home at 1822 Maplt street, Floyd Bolster was discharged at the Fri day session of police court. The other members of the Joyous party will be given a hearing on Monday. lII fliiii isSBSl s&zi "l ' lip 41 In the Newspaper Composing Blocks the Way." " SEED CORN PULPIT THEME Holden Appeals to Iowa Min isters to Preach It. NEBRASKA NOW ALIVE TO DANGER Prof, to Montgomery to Make Appeul Lincoln Commercial Club Today Farmers Am tVaklng VI). (From a Staff Correspondent.) DES MOINES, la.. Feb. 25.-(Special Tel egram.) Ministers of Iowa have been for mally asked by Prof. Holden, the state corn expert, to preach sermons on the sub ject of seed corn and the Immense Im portance of taking care to plant good seed that the crop may be good. He suggests a number of appropriate texts which would tend to stir up the people to the immi nent danger of famine from a crop failure In Iowa. This with the work being done by commercial and farm organizations, It Is believed, will have good effect. LINCOLN TO HEM IN COHN TEST Commercial Club There Co-operates with Omaha In the Crusade. The Lincoln Commercial club, in co-operation with the Omaha Commercial club, has decided to take up the matter of pub licity to Induce the farmers of the state to use great care in the selection of their seed corn, especially for this year, when It has been demonstrated that but 27M per cent of the corn will grow. E. G. Mont- gomery, head of the agromony experi mental department of the University of Nebraska, will address the Commercial club of Lincoln Saturday. He has already reported to the Omaha Commercial club that there Is cause for alarm. By one of the most interesting tests ever made the publicity bureau of the Com mercial club has demonstrated that corn containing from 21 to 2S per cent moisture, after freezing, or being exposed to low tem peratures, will not germinate. This test is intended to show that even the corn left In the fields had better be tested before It Is planted, for If It con tained an excessive amount of moisture It will not grow. Some corn that tested 89 per cent before It was soaked and made to contain 22 per cent moisture tested but 28 per cent after It had been exposed for seventy-six hours to temperature below 20 degrees Fahren heit. Another ear testing 91 per cent be fore the moisture was added and the cold applied, fell to 4G per cent when it was pttt In the germination box. This Is Prise Corn. The corn was ohtuitud from John Aye at Blair, one of the prise winners at the Na tional Corn exposition. When It was tested lust week It was about the highest germi nating corn In the box. The ten ears were then used for tho moisture and freezing ex periment. The coir, was found to contain but 16 per cent moisture, so some had to be added. Two ears were soaked about four hours and they then contained 22.5 per cent moisture. They were taken to the refrigerating plant of a creamery and kept (Continued on Second Page.) A few days ago a man sold a sewing machine, that lie hadn't been able to give always, by advertising It once lu The Dee For Sale Columns. The machine was all right, but none of his friends or their friends could find use for it. The Bee Want Ada will sell any thing under the Sun And they will do it quickly. If you ray rent on a 'phone It will be all right to call Doug. 238 Want Ad Depart Room Murphy, et up this headline, and keen it set. "Conrn-ess 8 Pfnln HiA f Tin..! Dln 1- Oregon Roads in Merger Inquiry Vice President of Oregon Railway and Navigation Company Tells Why Lines Were Abandoned. NEW YORK, Feb. 2-.. Rival railroad enterprises In Oregon were the sublect of Inquiry trlflay at the hearing In the gov ernment's Union Pacific-Southern Pacific merger dissolution suit. I Vice President J. P. O'Brien of the Ore gan Hallway and Navigation company, one of the merged lines testified today. Asked about the branch line which thr Oregon Railway and Navigation compam began to build out of Goose Bay, - Oregon In 1907, but which was subsequently abandoned, Mr. O'Brien adml'ted that the company refused to complete this line be cause the people of Goose Boy would nut guarantee it 4 per cent on the Investment over and above th cost of maintenance and operation. "Prof. Astro" is Shot by Posse Man Who Broke Jail at Hot Springs, Ark., Recaptured After a Fight. HOT SPRINGS. ' Ark., Feb. 23.-A. C. alias H. S. Daniels, sometimes j Conlin, known as "Prof. Astro, the Handcuff King," who, with sixteen other prisoners, broke Jail here the night of February 12, was run to earth today. In attempting to escape from a pursuing posse in the mountains near Okolona, Clark county, Conlin was shot, but the degree of his Injury Is not known. Only meager de tails of his capture were received here by Sheriff Houpt by telephone and it will be impossible to bring Conlin back until to morrow. Conlin Is wanted in San Francisco to answer a charge of grand larceny. After his arrest he declared he would never' go back to face the charge and his brotlier announced that he would spend $50,000 In resisting extradition. NICK IGNORANT OF PLOT Son-ln-Lavr Snys He Knows Nothing of Hooevelt-I'oruUer Mrheme ln Ohio. WASHINGTON, Feb. 2.". Nicholas Lnng worth, representative from Ohio and s.n-in-law of Fx-Presldint Roosevelt, today deried that he had any knowledge of tho "hellish plot," as he called It, between ex I'resident Roosevelt. former Sc nat.ir Foraker and himself to carry Ohio for the republican ticket, naming himself for governor and Foraker for senator. IIoks at lllith otch. CHICAGO, Feb. 2r,.-Another slight ad vance today mark-d the upward trend of live hog prices at ih stock wards, the animals selling at $170 a hundred wclclu. Billion Dollars Uncle Sam WASHINGTON. Feb. 25. The United States leads the world as an exporter of tobacco and ls the second loading muikel of tho world for Imported tobacco, accord ing to statistics of the Department of Commerce und Labor. Last year the United States supplied $41,000,000 In a total of approximately jr,0, 000,000 worth of tobacco and tobacco manu factures which entered International mar kets. More than $1,000,000,000 worth of tobacco arid tlia manufactured u bac.co have passed through ports of the United States sine j PC", the value or the exports tn that period I United States $Y,OdO,000 worth, of which having aggregated $1,46.000.000 and tho Ira- I $."6,00j,000 worth was raw material, ports Into the United Slates $:it6,W0.OA j The tobacco crop of the United States In Thess figures are exclusive of trade pass- 1903 wua 718,000,000 pounds valued at $74, lng between llils country und 1U uon-!uuA NO BANK FAILURE IN YEAR Nebraska's Financial Institutions Are1"8"'6" Badd,lery ,lron,and "' . i and oil. The raise, therefore, would have On Sound BaSIS, j a wide, sweeping effect. The claim is made that an advance of 10 TlFPflPT fV nrrTJT7TA"?V P fWCP per cent ln aU thC8G P0Juct,, would ma-llJil-ORl 01 SECRETARY R0YSE i t.rlally ndd to the cogl of llvlngi for 1 I though the advance might be small per Executive Head of State Department j pound on goods that are retailed, the ro- Snys it Would Take Cyclonic Money Disturbance to Imperil Situation. (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Feb. 23. (Special.) Secretary Royse of the State Banking Board has sent to tho printers tho copy for his annual report of the state banks for the last year. His report will show that not a single failure has occurred during the year which the report covers. The following figures show the Increases compared with the re port of a year ago: Total resources Increased $ 9,130,178.43 Number of banks Increased 84 Number of depositors increased. 8,307 Number a ... cmfw cmf cmf cmfw cm Capital Increased $ 1,122, 210. CO Deposits increased $ 7. SM. 873. 62 Loans increased $10.aOO,3bO.L'0 Average deposit ror each deposi tor in state bank S 320.24 Average per-caplta deposit in state banks $ 58. t3 Average per-caplta deposit In all banks, etato and national $ 148. 86 Average deposit to each state bank 1 110.700.35 Average deposit In all banks. state and national I 210.375.07 18,168.04 2!),967.13 1.888 1,407 Averago capital of stale banks.. $ Average capital of all banks. Pttile and national t Avtrap.e number of people to eacn state bank Average number of people to all banks, state and national Inert aso ol loan? ln all banks slate and national ' $24,28,306.37 Increase of deposits In all banks. state and national $18,404,370.47 Ration of capital to deposits ln state DanKs is 1 to 6.01 Ratio of canltnl to rinnonlts In all banks la 1 to 5.91 The report says: State flanks Are Snfe. "A careful examination of the contents of this report will show the hanks in thl. state as a rulo both prosperous and safe. The spirit and letter of the banking law ls generally complied with in a satisfactory manner and the rules and reculatlons of this department meet with very ready re sponse upon the part of the banks. "During the last year thche have been some Instances of mismanagement, but no fcerious consequences have folluwed, for tho reason thut remedial measures were promptly and efficiently applied. "Your secretary believes that It is the province of this department to prevent bank failures by such close supervision as will prevent insolvency first and loss after wards. "The records of the last year will show not a biugie aniuro under the supervision of this department, and not a dollar of loss to a depoiitur. While the department claims some credit for this showing It ls only fair to state that It Is a tribute to the high class of bank management that generally prevails In the banks of the state. Whilo tho foregoing Is certainly gratifying (Continued on Second Page.) in Tobacco; Biggest Trader .contiguous territories, which showed In VM alone cigars nnd other tobacco brought hi from Purlo Rico valued at $r,7D0,0eO and fhip.ntnts of tohacco to Alaska, Hawaii and Porto Rico valued at nearly $2 000,00. second to the United Ststes In export, tion of tobacco last year was Cuba, which shipped $Cl,ri00.O0O worth and tho Dutch Fast Indies ranked third with $23,000,000 and tho United Kingdom fourth with $7, 000.000. Germany arid the United States are the world's ieadiiig markets, the former Im- porting Itt.OOO.OuO worth last year end the Means Differential in Favor of Other Missouri River Cities. BURLNGT0N WHOLE HOG OR NONE Hill Line Now Uels More Revenne Ont of Omaha Than Any Other Tonn and Mill It De mands More. Omaha Phlppcrs are Intensely aroused by the plans of the Chleago-Omaha railroads to make n general Increase of commodity rales as set forth by The Beo. Realizing what such a move means to the commercial and Industrial life of Omaha, shippers pro pose to resist the action In sumo organised and effective manner. They see In the move nothing more than nink dlserlniinat Ion against Omaha for tho one purpose of swelling tho already gigantic revenues of the railroads. Many of the big Jobbers would not be lieve that the railroads expected to ralso the rates of som of the commodities be cause of the ample revenue they are al ready receiving. "In tho absence of any detail I don't understand how It Is possible for the rail- . roads to raise tho rate on coal," said J. A. Sunderland. "The railroads are now re ceiving as much for hauling coal and cement as they have received at any tltno In the last twenty years. Their earning.! on these commodities must be greatly In excess of what they were formerly when the maximum carload was twenty tons. Now It Is fifty tons and the trains are several times as long." Goods In Commodity Class. These goods Rre carried under the com modity classification: Coal, soap, cement, sewer pipe, agricultural Implements, wa gons, engines, asphalt, bags and bagging, brick, hollow building tile, beer, butter and eggs, poultry, pitch and tar, cooperage. taller would have to pay more and ho would advance the price to the consumer. Grain men and lumber dealers are now engaged In tangles with tha railroads over rates, and, If the meat fight Is but a starter for the general raise contemplated by the railroads, the transportation companies will soon be mixing with many lirvs of Industry. Some of the Jobbers soy they think It Is up to the railroads to protect Omaha aganst any differentials which may exist In favor of Kansas City or any other city. The Burlington receives more money from Omaha than from any other city on Its entire line, and last year nearly one seventh of tho revenues of the company were paid Into the coffers at Omaha and yet this Is one of the lines that Is starting the trouble by Insisting on its right to g t tho long haul on the live stock from the west instead of letting It stop at Omilia I and then have to take a chance with the other Omaha-Chicago lines. lliy.h Beef Hate Curtain Hnlsrr. . The question of rates from Omaha to Chicago on dressed beef Is taking on a more Interesting phase. It now appears that this Is but tho curtain raiser to the main performance which Is soon to be gin. For many months the railroads have been talking of a general revision of rates, and now, so well-Informed traffic men assert, the show Is about to open. The announcemrnt from Chicago in the tele gram published ln The Bee on Thursday that the railroads there centering wre looking at other rates with the Intention of raising them is Interpreted to mean that ja general boost on commodity rates of all I kinds Is at hand. This will not be confined I ' racking house products, but to every . ,hlnK tnttt ls nauled between the Missouri ' Chicago on dressed beef Is taking on a more Interesting phase. It now appears that this Is but the curiam raiser to tho main performance which Is soon to be river and the lakes Tho ral'roads have determined to get greater revenue from me traffic. That ls all. Discrimination Is Open. In the present case of the packing house late, little complaint would be heard from tho packers and live stock men If It weie one that rested equally on all Hut It is established so far as Omaha and Sioux City are concerned, but It Is not operative so far as St. Joseph am Kansas City am Involved. With the Chicago & Alton and the Wabash holding out, the new rate amounts to a B-cent differential In favor of tho packing towns down the river. It amounts to more than that In realltv. fur ithe Wabash can haul the packing houso products as far as Buffalo, thus giving that line a claim on the freight for 1,0'K) Instead of 500 mllps, and a consequently larger proportional of tho rate to the mar kets of the east, where the Omaha nifac must be sent for sale In competition wltii the meats dressed In Chlcugo. Omaha j dressed meat does not figure on the mjr- j ket at Chicago, but east of there It dors. So tho present discrimination not only irivis Kansas City and St. Joseph an ad vantage, but also favors Chicago- In (ho saint amount, or even more for the ul .tlniaie market Jles beyond the Windy I -ity. I Action of Iloatls a I'axcle Local traffic men who have bi en In Chi cago since the rate was announced by The Bee last wfek have come tiuU Uh the. firm conviction that the Chicago-Omaha lines are goiin afttr the hl;;her late in I earnest, renordle of IM effect on local i business. They are at a loss to account fr the action of the Illinois Central, tin Milwaukee and the Great Westrrn, roadi that terminate in Omaha, In entering on the crusade. Some power above the rste Making authorities In Chicago must hav taken an active Intcrert In the matter ia order to brlntf about so clear and com pelling an understanding as appear. id exist. '1 he course of the Great Western Is partly accounted for by the situation already explained lu The lb. In otd?r to bring this disturber ol rates to a real ization of Its position, the other Chicago roads turned over to It a lot of unroulaJ