T 6maha Daily Bee, FOLNT'EP BT EDWAKD ItOSEWATER. VICTOR ROSKWA'Tf, EPITOIV . ' U TT ' Entered lit OmahaY5stof flee as second class matter. , . .r lm t $ 1 in m i . " terms cF,iM;RcniPTioN. Pally flee (Including "tilinday), per weeV.loe I al)r Je (without Sunday), rr weefc.lOe Pally bee rwlthout Rutulay), one year.." VHf,JHr Snd fuiylsri One year DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Evening flee (without Runday). per w" Evenlrig Hee (with Sunda.y)f per wok.. 10c Funrtsy Bee, one year , 12 W Saturday Hee, on yesr t-M Addrees all complaint of Irregulsrltles in lellvfry to City Circulation Department. orrirE. OmaBa The flee Fnfldlng. floutri Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council Pluff-lS Scott Street. Lincoln M Utffe Hulldln. Chlearo IMS Marrpietre Pulldlng. NfW York-Ttiuma-4-W-llM No. 4 West Thirty-third Street Wasflngton-r72B Fourteenth Street N. W. 4 COItRESPON'DENCBJ. Communications relating to news and Mltorlal matter should ha addressed: Dmahn Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remtt by draft, espres or poatal order payab to The flee Publishing Company. Only 2 cent ;iMba received In payment of mall accounta. Iliersonal chectta. except on Omaha or eauHty exchange, not accepted. statement or circulation. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss.t Cleorje H. Tsaehuolc, treasurer of The TV-e Publishing Company, being duly sworn, says that trie actual number of full and complete rojitea of The Dully. Mnrnlrtr. Evening and undav Dee printed during the month of February, 110. was aa' foltews: - 1 43,140 IS 43,670 1... 43.800 It 43,680 t. ......... 43.C70 ;v-T. 43,880. 4. ..14 43,870 18 43.690 43.030 M. 43,770 41,740 20 41,80 T.,... 43,310 ......... 43,830 8..., 43,080 V ft 43,870 9.,..; 43,010 ' i. ......... 48,640 10, 43,980 ' 14... 43,610 Hi... 43,700 IS. 43,880 It....'. 43,100 it 43,440 II. ..r, 43.100. .17...,...,,. 41,700 14 48,080 If. 43,670 Total , 1,188460 Returned copies ', 8,3(0 Net total ...... 1,189,670 Dally average..,....,,.... 4a,49a GEORGE B. TZ8CHUCK. Treasurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to befors me thla 2tn day of February, 1919. XtOBEItT HUNTER, . Notary Public. abeerlkers lea-rlngr the city tern porarily should have The Be mailed to them. Address will be changed as often aa requested. As we have several time remarked, the way to clean up is to clean up. An egg-laying contest Js . being planned in Missouri, ' Here's hoping that It la an endurani. run. A German polar party has been or ganaed . to find tha South Pole. No gum drops on this -expedition. It Is more proper to judge an offi cial's salary by the clothes his wife wears, than by tho.Be.jse. wears, It Bad to come. ' Borne enterprising reporter has dubbed him Theodorus Roosevelt Afrlgander Hunterus. Having decided thU a bn Is a. bird, the goverflmeitl Ugoin&t to-.. decide what icefream ls. r Now Is the time. It may all be that;olonet Roosevelt bearded the Hons In their dens so often that he carried the beard away with him. f f v. ij f j v .. Wonder If there is now enough har mony In. the democratic party to last clear through a Jeffersonlan harmony banquet. Mr. Fairbanks has not killed a thing since he went abroad, but still he has succeeded In fjg4irng.ln the dispatches a few times. ..." The prieV ofnllvc hogs is . almost back at he top. notch reached during the civil war. Those good old times ire evidently returning! Now that the' meat eating habit costs bo much that the average man cannot afford it, it is up to-some enterprising gent to start a meat-eating cure. Our amiable - democratic - contem porary lamentalta Inability to guess "what Mr. Roosevelt will do." , That's what is making the democrats worry. Thee March winds are also doing their best to help .the cUy street clean ing department-disperse" the dust and Jlrt accumulated In the thorough tares. . . , "The British treasury has a huge deficit to face and the British ministry Is living from hand to mouth." "But there are still a number of American heiresses left. " Well, Edgar, who is the "prominent democratic lawyer0 and who Is the "well 'known republican officeholder" hired by the corporations to do the "fixing" for them 7 When they offered to give him the freedojn rf.-tAe city, could those Lon loners have been figuring on making Mr. Roosevelt a gift which he could not take home with him?. After perusing the Congressional Record for eaveral days, one sighs for. Old Colonel Jim Gordon of Mississippi. That speech of his renewed public talthiu tha Unlte4 States senate. .-President Madrls of Nicaragua says rmy $ only ambition Is to serve my 'tountify," which leads' to the thought hat he must ha.v8apeut some time to this country during a political cam- hu l.n ye," v.- It costs Uncle Sam less to feed the lack tar la the. aary-'whaa" they are tnchored off the- ceast ef China than anywhere elaeon .the globe. It we Bad tely known, that, before,' might have, captured tie. Philippines oarller, Just fto get an excuse to keep the sadiron la that neighborhood. Leit W Torf et. It will bo remembered that Mr. ftryan arncatly aupported Mr. Parker In 1!4, yH waa unfortunately unable to win all "Bryan demorrata" - to Vote for Parker. World Herald. If the World-Herald wants to be classed among "Bryan democrats" it would be discreet to refrain from referring to the glorious chapter which oarrates bow earnestly Mr. Bryan sup ported Judge Parker In 104. ' Fortu nately, or unfortunately, we still have access to the historic account of the self-sacrificing efforts which Colonel Bryan put forth to achieve democratic victory In the only campaign In six teen years that he was not its stsndard bearer. Here are the salient extracts which always make entertain ing reading: Mr. Bryan, all the winter, aprinar and fummer, had been denouncing Jurie Parker as a "dlebonent candidate,- running on a dlehoneat plntform." And then he had come home from Ft. Loula, sat down at hla desk and tha firat wordi that he wrote were: ' "I shall vote for Parker and Davis." When the conventlona were over and the campaign committee!) appointed, the fu alonlats found that it wan a difficult thing to mako a campaign In Nebranka, The chairman of the democratio atate committee, a brother-in-law to Cryan, came to Mr. Tlbblra. declaring that he repre aen'ted Mr, Bryan, and was rpeaking In Mr. Bryan's name, and made trie following proposition: If Mr. Tibbies would spend most of his time out of the state during the campaign and let- tha Independent (hla paper) sup port the fusion ticket, Mr. Bryan on his part would agree- to go to Arizona or Colorado and get sick. He would continue to keep alok until tha close of the cam paign, so s)ck that he would not be able to make any political speeches at ail. An exocptlon was made In regard to Indiana. It was said that Mr. Bryan had promised to make three speeches In Indiana In sup port of his old personal friend who was running for governor In that state, but It was further stipulated that thse. three speeches should not be political speeches, but repetitions of Mr. Bryan's lecture on "Ideals." Mr. Bryan went to Arlsona and sent home a letter saying that he was1 worse and would not be able to deliver any political speeches during the - campaign. That letter was printed' In the Lincoln dally papers and wan shown to Mr. .Tibbies as -proof that Mr. Bryan was keeping his oontract. The chairman of the democratic state committee went to New Topk, saw Parker, Sheehan, Belmont. Tom TaKgart and the reHt of the band of financial and political pirates. He came home with money for campaign expenses. Then Mr. Bryan hired a special train and started out speech making In Nebraska and other states. The surprising rapidity with which his lung healed has never been equaled In all the history of medicine. But when the votes were counted It was learned that wher ever Mr. Bryan- spoke, a tidal wave of republican votes followed him, although ha pleaded with his bearers to be "regular." Oh, yes, "Mr. Bryan earnestly sup ported Judge Parker In 1904," and it was simply bis misfortune that he was unable to win all "Bryan democrats" to vote for. Parker. , N. B. Quotation Is from Mr. Tib bies' article contributed to Tom Wat son's magaxlne shortly, after the event, when ih? details were spU fresh in his memory. ; Aeronautics in Colleges. With the .aeronautic convention in Philadelphia during the first two days of April, to -be attended by several hundred students from the United States and Canada, an additional im petus will be given the matter of aerial navigation. The purpose of this con vention is to organize a University Aeronautic club which shall affiliate with the Aero Club of America. Dur ing the sessions, lectures and addresses will be delivered by the most re nowned aviators In the world. Although- it Is doubtful whether aeroplane racing will take the place of any of the existing college sports, It Is evidently destined to be listed among college athletics in the future. But even greater than the popularity of the sport itself will be the use it may be put to for furnishing demonstrations for practical study. If . the colleges take up aeronautics we may look for an increase In the knowledge of the essentials of the machines and of their management in the air, all of which will be of great value In ascertaining commercial possibilities. In the hands of an ordinary college Doy, with the proverbial recklessness of such indi viduals, there are few feats known or possible to aeronautics which will long remain untried. That the colleges may help develop the science of avia tion and make it as practical as possi ble Is the hope of those calling the convention. The improvement of the aeroplane for safety and practicability Is, as everyone knows, the essential prerequisite to Its serviceability. Testing the Corporation Income Tax. The cases brought to test the con stitutionality of the corporation in come tax feature of the new tariff law promises to be stubbornly fought, and the lawyers that are behind the contest suits will leave no point neglected which might be used to advantage In their favor. There is no question but that the corporation Income tax is the real innovation which the new revenue law undertakes to carry, and the argu ments pro and con as an advisable rev enue measure were thoroughly threshed out while It was pending In the senate. The objections most seri ously urged against the corporation In come tax were directed at Its imposi tion of a burdeq on corporate business not borne by competing firms or indi viduals, and the publicity requirements which would fully open up the trans actions of corporations, but not of their competitors doing similar busi ness without incorporation. i The cases In court, however, must turn, not on the question of policy, but on the question, of law. It will devolve upon those who are asking to have the law declared told to 'show that the Imposition of the tax Invades soma constitutional right entitled to THE HEE: protection of the courts. It goes with out saying that even if the corporation tax should be declared unconstitu tional, the enactment of the pending Income tax amendment would open the way for Its revival, and, on the other hand. If the corporation tax Is held to be good It will Increase the Incentive to adopt the income tax amendment In order to make possible an equal tax on returns of unincorporated business so as to remove the Inequality. . The cases brought In the supreme court, therefore, are likely only to give tem porary relief to those who are resisting the corporation Income tax. Piatt and Harrison. The publication of a statement made some years ago by the late Senator Thomas C. Pllatt of New York, to be released on his death, In which he charges President Harrison with hav ing gone back on a promise to appoint him secretary of the treasury in con sideration of the swlngiug of the New York delegation in the nominating convention of 1888 has lifted the lid off a bit of president-making and started counter-versions by surviving participants. . It Is too bad that Senator Piatt did not see fit to unburden himself before the Teath of General Harrison, so that the former president might have had an opportunity to tell his side of the controversy. A detailed explanation by Senator Elklns, through whom the only communication between General Harrison and Mr. Piatt was held, and corroborated by Senator Depew and Congressman J. Sloat Fassett, who were also more or less concerned, seems to make It clear that President Harrison was never cognizant of any agreement to make Mr. Piatt secretary of the treasury, and that Mr. Piatt had admitted that the assurance that he would be recognized In the distribu tion of patronage going to New York, could not be fairly construed into a promise of a cabinet appointment for himself. Senator Elklns insists that Secretary Wlndom had been selected for the treasury by President Harrison before Mr, Piatt's wishes were made known and that the appointment of General Tracy to be secretary of the navy was made to suit Mr. Platt through the recognition of one of his closest friends, who had likewise been helpful In the election of President Harrison. More than that, however, it. seems reasonably established that General Harrison's nomination in 1888 was not brought about through the In strumentality of Mr, Platt, no matter how much assistance he may have af forded by falling In at the crucial time, but rather through a pre-ar-rangement with Mr. Blaine by which his strength and influence was to be transferred to General Harrison as the preferred of the candidates before the convention. ' That president-making used to In volve deals' of various' klndst to which more than one president has owed his nomination and election, Is of common knowledge, although the day of such deals has practically passed and they were probably never personally en gineered or directed by the candidate. General Harrison was always regarded by his friends as the soul of honor In politics as well as out of politics, and there Is nothing in the record he made as chief executive to indicate any ques tionable negotiations either with Mr. Platt or any other political bargain hunter. The Lincoln Journal speaks of "non citlzen voters," referring to such of our foreign-born population as are per mitted to vote in Nebraska after tak ing out their first naturalization pa pers. The Journal falls to recognize the accepted . fact of citizenship of the state as distinguished from citizenship of the United States. To be a citizen of the United States a foreign-born person must complete the require ments of naturalization, while to be a citizen of Nebraska, with voting privil eges, all that Is needed is to take out the so-called "first papers." Under the constitution of Nebraska everyone entitled to vote has the same rights and privileges of every other voter, and "Equality Before the Law" is the state's motto. The legislative reference library, which has heretofore been an offshoot of the State Historical society, has been cut loose bo await the tender mer cies of the legislature, which will be asked to make appropriations for it on a separate footing. The legislative reference library should be part of the state library to avoid duplication and to secure economic administration In fact, a merger of the historical library, the legislative reference library and the state library would ba decidedly for the benefit of the taxpayers. The appropriation to provide em bassy houses for American diplomatists In foreign capitals has failed la the house and will have to try again. It is to be hoped that the amiable pro moters who have helped work up pub lic sentiment for this bill throughout the country by inviting us and other leading citizens to dine with them at their expense will not be discouraged. Is not the time to vote improvement bonds in the fall rather than In the spring? It takes at best several months after bonds are voted to dis pose of them end effect the prelimina ries for the work, and work thus started late In the season is too often caught unfinished by the advent of cold weather. Congressman Macon of Arkansas has -the most suspicious ' mind to be found in the halls of congress. A lit tle while ago ho Intimated that some MARCH of the money voted for expenses of the tmmlgratio commission was con sumed In exploring the catacombs, and now he Intimates that Commander Peary is not entitled to even thanks for exploring the pole. Some bold ad venturer should organise an expedition to explore the wilds of Arkansas which constitute Mr. Macon's district. State Auditor Barton is trying to find out why Nebraska fire Insurance companies do not all charge the same rate on the same risk. Most owners of insurable property wonder why the rates quoted by fire insurance com panies should be exactly alike unless there is a combine or a "gentleman's" agreement. The Anti-Saloon league Is very mod est in its demands. It wants all the party platforms promulgated In Ne braska this year to declare for county prohibition, and If the democrats and republicans will only respond to this request, the antl-saloonists will con tinue to vote the prohibition ticket. vMr. Hearst la callllng In capital let ters for the construction of new battle ships and the enactment of some kind of a subsidy bill to revive our mer chant marine. Mr. Hearst was once vouched for by Mr. Bryan as a presi dential candidate who would be satis factory to him. The total of deposits in Nebraska state banks is larger than ever before. The aggregate wealth of the people of Nebraska was never so large as it is today, and the bank deposits are only one of the straws that testify to the fact. Who says modern education Is not progressive and up-to-date? The latest object lesson to teach our High school pupils the value of punctuality consists In making the teachers ring up on a time clock. Senator Burkett is sending out copies of his speech on postal savings. If he would send Senator Rayner's answer along with it he would make more certain of having them both read. I "It a herring and a half cost a cent and a half," sings the Washington Post. What is our esteemed friend, the Post, thinking about? "Cent and a, half?" It must mean dollar and a half. Worth Reuemberlasr. Chicago News. While figuring how much higher hogs are now than they Were during- the civil war it Is worth remembering that then they were quoted In paper money. I Raises .a 8asplolon. Pittsburg Dispatch. Statistics showing that there la $34.87 of money for each man, woman and child In the country Improesea a portion of them, particularly the -women and children, with a suspicion tfcMHthe r has not bees a square distribution, . . " I "I' Newj,yorli World. The Boston bank cleric who, on a SIS sal ary, gave champagne suppers, carried a "roll" of $15,000 and displayed other symp toms of budding financial genius, has had his career blighted by the failure of the bank to stand tha strain. Something has been lost to society by the untimely extinc tion of this promising youth. Actloaa Belle Prof cm tons. ' Sioux City Journal. i Tha democratic national platform de clared for postal savings banks in the, event of failure to adopt a national hank deposit guaranty law. Only one democrat voted for tha postal bank bill that passed tha senate tha other day. And yet the democrats will have a good deal to say about republican disregard of party pledges. Walt for tha 91 Show. Philadelphia Record. Ex-Vlea President Fairbanks Is an aglng one way and another to make his homeward tour through Europe a boister ous buttermilk progress, mildly exolting in spots. But wait. Tha real thing Is mov ing northward along the smooth reaches of the Upper Nile. The Bully Boy will presently strike the. Mediterranean levels and stalk across Europa Ilka a Saharan tornado. Walt. Alaa, Poor Jeff I Springfield Republican. After two years of blistering excoriation of the Rockefellers and Morgana by the senator from Arkansas,' It Is most distress ing to find him writing In tha colls of an unguarded admission that If a certain bill can ba passed through congress concerning some swamp lands In his state, "there Is a "good fee In It" for tha honorable excorla tor of tha people's oppressors. Senator Jeff Davis himself ought to sea the drollery of his situation, yet be only blusters the more when compelled to explain. A "corpora tion lawyer," is he, after all. Tha fee's the thing. Alack! Poor Jeffl i ' l Sheer Misrepresentation, Philadelphia Bulletin. President Taft's explicit denial that he ordered Wada H. Ellis to proceed to Ohio and take the chairmanship of tha repub lican executive committee, with his equally emphatlo declaration that ha does not pro pose and has not proposed to direct tha republican campaign In tha state, should put an end to tha sensational reports which have been printed . on tha subject Mr. Taft shows clearly that tha assertions pic turing him as a meddlesome party dictator In tha Buckeye commonwealth are sheer misrepresentations to use the politest term that can be applied to -them. 1 Our Birthday Book March 11. 1810. William L. Yetter, president of the Tetter-Davidson Wail Paper company, was born March 11, 1WT7, at St. Joseph, Mo. He had a retail wall paper and paint business In Hastings up to 1909, when he removed to Omaha and has since branched out to Kansas City and Denver aa well, Mr. Yetter Is one of the governors of Ak-Sar-Ben. John Steel, until very reoently general agent of the Northwestern Mutual Life In surance company, from which he has Just retired, was born in Sweden, March 11, IMi. Ha has been In the life Insurance business since 1IWS. Mr. Steel was a mem ber of the city council for one term In lt2 and 1894 OMAHA, FRIDAY, 11, 1910. Pasiing of a Boss XMverse Befleetlona ea the Po litical Career and Characteris tic of rormer Sfenatot Platt. A Vaalahlna- Type. Washington Herald. Tha rise and fall of Platt illustrates strikingly tha wholesome change In po litical conditions In this country. The last great figure of his type, bosslsm, as ha exercised It, la of the past It had Its day, and an evil day It was. May Its like never come agalnl Little to Stir Pride. Philadelphia Ledger. There Is really little In his career that even his own state need reoall with any particular gratitude. That he has been succeeded In the senate by Ellhu Root Is the most striking illustration we need ask of the wide advance In all our political conditions since Platt came Into public life half a century ago. Present Day Leadership. Cleveland Plain Dealer. There has been a revolution In public sen timent upon political matters since the day when Mr. Platt could dictate legisla tion and candidates to the assembly of his state, could make and unmake governors and change political history by the Inflec tion of a tone. Now we look to a new type of leader, who wins by methods less crude. who compels results by means lees sugges tive of slave driving. Pabllo Too Tolerant. New York World. WHhout severity toward the dead and with regard chiefly for public men who are to come, It must be remarked that bosses In any stage of their careers are not to be envied. They would not be bosses at all If Americans were not for a season too toler ant of their pretensions. They could not last an hour If legislators and executives and people were not indulgent. They are encouraged to their own destruction. When their inevitable fall takes place there Is none so poor as to do them reverence. Hlarber Standards Demanded. Washington Times, Senator Platt was a machine politician of the old order. He was a graduate of the Thurlow Weed school of politics. He was a boss, not a statesman. He did noth ing to elevate politics, save as he perceived that It was necessary to get votes and retain power. Fortunately, the publio to day Is demanding higher standards of Its party leaders, and the party boss Is grow ing lees and less in evidence as a higher in telllgence spreads among the voters. But for all this there was much to admire in the atrong will, the Incisive mind, the cool nerve, and the capacity for mastery of men which belonged to Thomas Collier Platt. Coning of Better Methods. Baltimore American. Political leaders like Platt are one after another passing away, and are not likely to have Immediate successors. The voters no longer stand ready to do the bidding of such leaders, loyal though they may be to their party. This is an era when the peo ple ' demand to know the why and the wherefore, and though the success and the sturdy republicanism of such men as Platt cannot be - galnsayed, yet their methods were sometimes open to question, and with the coming of better methods will come party leaders who will win and hold the confidence of the people in a better way. Redaclna; Evils of QoosUm, ' .Brooklyn Eagle, :. Politics, the most interesting of sciences ; parties, the most Interesting of forces', gov ernment, the most Important of duties, af fected by a relation to human beings, can not be said to have been better, because Platt lived. To a degree they were worse because he lived and he was worse because they were bad. All of them are improving. The race of Americans are learning the Im port of bosaium and the art of reducing Its evils. They are learning how to make con ventions representative, how to make bal lots less in sheer bulk, how to base appoint ments on trained fitness and how to make them a reasonable assurance of character and competency. The bosses are going. The good time is coming. The better time Is nearlng. Duty aa well as opportunity is at the door. A MEMORY OF INGERSOLL. Transition from the Spectacular to the Practical Lawyer. Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Interesting from various angles is a de cision rendered by Judge Hammond of the Massachusetts supreme court, awarding (170,000 to Mrs, Robert O. Ingersoll for legal services rendered by her husband to An drew J, Davis, a Montana copper magnate, also deceased. Ingersoll died eleven years ago, therefore the case affords a striking example of the law's delay. As It will be appeal to the United States supreme court the delay Is by no means terminated. Along with this aspect of the case there Is also an illuminative glimpse of the fat ness of legal fees, when stellar talent Is desired, for Ingersoll was one of the most perKuaslva and most expensive lawyers of his day. The chief Interest of the case, however, lies in the memories It evokes and the mutations of time which It emphasises There have been few more ptcturesquo figures in American law practice than Robert G. Ingersoll, who dabbled In the ology aa a aide Una, defied Shakespeare and Beethoven, denounced the mistakes of Moses, and constituted himself a vol unteer fire company to extinguish the flames of sheol. Militant agnostic that hs was, vindictively bitter In his denunciations of what most men hold sacred, Ingersull was in his family life as gentle as a child and among his friends a very prince In generous Impulses. But his predominant trait was his power of painting landscapes a 1th mere words. Whoever has heard the peroration of one of Ingersoll's lectures can never forget how ho wove sunset glow enj gleams of dawn, the silver sheen of stars and the rainbow's Jeweled scarf, Into the flamboyant tapestry of his magic eloquence. Poems, symphonies, plcluros were fused In his sonorous periods few orators have ever wielded such a sensuous spell. Judge Hammor.d's decision also will bring home to many who reirimbtr Ingersoll's burning oratory the fact that this type of lawyer Is fast pasting away. The man who can move a Jury to tears by his pica Is no longer as highly valued as the one who knows the pigeon-holes of the law and cm draw up an air-tight document We have turnod from the spectacular to the practical, frqm pyrotechnics to. business, and the transition has been accomplished almost entirely during these eleven years sinoa Ingersoll passed away. It la, Indeed, rare that any Judicial de cision is' handed down which. In Itself of but narrow scope, starts so many trains of thought and memory as this one In the Ingersoll-Davls case. I . .. 1 rata It Vm te Coaareaa. Baltimore American. A western crank threatens to blow con gress up unless the high cost of living Is brought down. This is oertalnly the most diastio way yet of voicing the explosive wrath of tha country, PEKSONAX NOTES. Mr. Rockefeller's last benefaction lenrm lo have stunned the critics of taint id money. Mr. Woltrnst the pugilist. Is to get what he says Is "a prinoely sum" for appearing In vaudeville. In his case It soems to ray to knock. The fact that an Indian chief, visiting Washington, blew out the gas, does not comport with the theories concerning the red man's Intellectual uplift. An attempt to have women In a Brook lyn church remove their hats failed when tho authorities realised that enforcement would Involve the removal of the women also. "The forbidden fruit Of the Garden of Eden was the banana, and not tho apple, o an investigator concludes. This may account In a measure for Adam and Eve's i ri fortunate sllp-up. ,ihe fact that a hatpin penetrated the ear of a Chicago alderman is the argument offered for the passage of an ordinance banishing the deadly weapon. Aldermen who persist In breaking Into good millinery company should carefully fold, the lobes over their domes. The united German slngtnir societies sans- uoa eave Ireland" at the Emmet celebra tion in Carnegie hall, New York. This fine product comes from the American treatment of German Invasion. A German wife gives a New York Irishman plenty of noma rule and good music Judge Alton B. Parker has sailed for Hamburg by the Hamburg-American liner Kalserln Auguste Victoria for a vacation of two months. He will go to Berlin from Hamburg and will travel thenoe through Russia, Turkey and Italy. He Is accom panied by his wife, his grandson and Mis. Danlol Manning. Howard C. Holllster, Just appointed fed eral district Judge at Cincinnati, went to school with him. went through the Cin cinnati Law school with him. and took the vr examination wun mm, A common pleas Judge for some years past, he has been an active and fearless republican rebel against Cincinnati's Boss Cox. beven members of the present United States senate ware born outside the United States. Lorlmer of Illinois, Wetmore of Rhode Island and Sutherland of Utah were born In England, Stephenson of Wisconsin and Galllnger of New Hampshire are na tives of Canada, Nelson of Minnesota Is a native of Norway and Oliver of Pennsyl vania was born In Ireland, while his par ents were visiUng that country. FREIGHT 11 ATM K JCTOHTIOX. ' Call for I'nlon of Mlaaoarl Hirer States and Cities. Bloux City Tribune. The aggressive action of the Omaha Com mercial club looking toward the prosecu tion of the railroad officials as violators of the Sherman anti-trust law In the raising of the dressed meat rate suggests a new and important phase to the railroad ques tion. When powerful business organisations Ilka thesa large commercial clubs enlist their energies In the battle against railroad rate extortion It means Greek meeting Greek. A commercial club Is, of oourse, a selfish organisation. It wants advantages, or at least equal privileges for Its own locality. So long as each commercial club gets what It wants In the way of rates for Its own city It will leave the rest of the country to struggle with the freight rate question as best It can. Up to this time the commercial clubs have dove-tailed In with the railroad plans, leaving the farmers and the small town merchants without sympathy and without practical assistance. But when great food Shipplng centers like Omaha, Sioux City, Bt. Joe and Kansas City are hard hit, as they are In this advanced meat rate and In the advanced grain rate, they can well afford to oomblna for mutual defense. If tha commercial clubs of these Mis souri river cities will now invoke the power of their several state governments, state railroad commissions, and move for lower state rates on live stock and grains, they can make the transportation companies feel the power. The governors of these states could call the attention of their state railroad commissions to the over-high rates that live stock and grain must pay to reach these markets. They could do this In such a way as to arouse the sleepy com missions Into action. By united action they could wake up the Interstate Com merce commission, that ought to Interfere with and prevent the proposed advance In the dressed meat rate. There Is a great opening for the gov ernors and state commissioners In Ne braska, Kansas, Missouri and IoWa to move, not only against the advanoe In In terstate rates, but for a general lowering of state rates that ought to have been low ered years ago. What are these state governments for if Without is but the light in the east that leads to mater nity. Love of husband is he stepping-stone t love of child. . Tbere are thousands of women wbo live well into middle-Ufa without knowing the bliss of first-born's caress, but who are happy mothers to-day and heap blessings on DrJ -Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Many thousands of women have testified to the merits of this marvelous remedy. The "Favorite Prescription" quicken he life-giving organism of women. It makes a woman strong -,id healthy where she most needs vigor and vitality. It cures all weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organs. It elimi nates the discomforts on the way to maternity and makes baby' coming easy and nearly painless. Found at all medicine stores. It's an insult to your intelligence when a druggis; urges upon you a SECRET nostrum as a substitute for this proven remedy OF known COMPOSITION simply that he may make a little larger profit. Phy sicians prescribe ' Favorite Prescription" because it' every ingredi ent is printed upon its outside wrapper making It an ethical rem edy for them to prescribe. There's no secrecy, no deceptionit's . a good, honest, square-deal medicine, made of native medicinal roots without alcohol or habit-forming drugs in its make up. Ask Your Neighbors. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and strengthen Stomach, Liver and Bowels. One to three tiny sugar-coated "Pellets' for dose. Easy to take as candy. World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce. M. D.. President, Buffalo, N. Y. GUCKERT & McDONALD, Tailors W are now displaying a most complete line of foreign novel ties for spring and summer wear. Your early inspection is invited, as it will afford an opportunity of choosing from a large number of exclusive styles. We Import in "single suLt lengths," and a suit cannot be dupli cated. An order placed now may be delivered at your convenience. 317 South Fifteenth Street ESTABLISHED 1887, not to take action In such Important mat tets as this? The state commissions sre doing prac j tleally nothing toward the purpose foi which they exist. They were crested as a protection against rate extortion more than for any other purpose. Hut the rate extor tion goer on from year to year, while tlJf)' commissions bury themselves with petty matters of no general Importance to th producing and business public. A little station or sliletrnck Is put In here or there A little redress to some individual shipper who files his complaint on some small shlp tortlon affecting the whole puntlo to the amount of millions annually goes onx un touched and unhindered by the state gov ernments. Somebody could start a move now that would arouse the whole Missouri valley country If there was somebody with cour age and force enough to do It. POINTED PLEASANTRIES. The English sparrow was building a nesi at the top of a clock tower. "This thing of working over time," chirped the abandoned bird, "is no fun, let me tell you." Chicago Tribune. "Does she seem to take kindly to society ways now that her husband has made such a pile?" "Oh, yes, Indeed. She was the loudest tfllker In the house at grand opera the other night." Cleveland Plain Dealer. 'Automobiles have run Into' a threat many people," said the cautious cltlreu. 'Yes." replied. Mr. i.nuctnne: --out it an worka around. A lot of the money you (nd for gasoline goes to found hospitals." Washington Star. Interviewer Well. Dfcmenee, have you found an honest man In these times? Diokeneo Sure I have. interviewer (Incredulously) Where? Diogenes In the poorhouss. Baltlmors American. "Johnny, do you know why I am going to whip yout" "Why?" "Because you struck a boy smaller than yoursel f." "I thought maybe It was because I am smaller than you are." Houston Post. "I'll have to get another typewriter,", said the bustling man. "This one Is cmi-A Bluntly ntopiing my dictation to ask UowT Borne word Is spelled." "That's a great loss of time." "I don't mind the time, but It inter feres with discipline ' for me to have to keep saying I don't know." Chicago Pott "Why do you insist on having the bans drum and oymbals away out in front of the orohestra?" "The arrangement Is an idea of my own," replied the opera manager. It helps to keep the audience awake." Washington Star, Brlggs I have Just purchased a Cham bers' encyclopedia, a Century dictionary, and a British museum catalogue. Griggs Do you really need themf Brlggs Not precisely: but I thought I should like to check off my Information. Llpplncott's Magazine. "Bill, what share did you get of your grandfather's estate?" "I got what was left after every other fellow had been provided for." "Then you are tho residuary legatee." "I ain't nothln' of the sort, blame ye! I'm an honest, hard workln' coppersmith?" Chicago Tribune, "Surely," began the private secretary, "it won't pay to give to both parties t ' "My dear fellow," refilled the astute president, "you are forgetting that In a year or two one of them will be offering me a rebate not to support the other." Puck. THE SOUTH WIND. W. D. NeSblt In Chloago Post. De south wind come en wlilBper at il roses on de way; t It laugh about da bllssard dat 'us blowln' yistudday. It brings a tas'e o' springtime, en It tell us not to fret, De green grass fer de medder will be sho'ly comln' yet. It loaf beside de winder desa fer long enouirh ter aav De lilaos Is been oiidered cn de roses on da -WV. -. De south wind come a-laughln' lak dey neveh been no snow, En day de mawnln glory gwlne ter climb up soon, fer sho': It coax me tar de winder en, it tease ma ( wld puffume Dat make me think de o'cha'd is already white wld bloom: It ax wah Is do vt'lets dat it fotch us way las May, En say dey's mo' a-comlp'j en de roses on de way. I blame ef It don't trasa twell I go en take a look To see how Is mah fishpolo en mah linen line en hook: It chuckle 'bout de rlveh, en mah fishln' place, en all. Twell I git down de bait box dat Z put away las' fnlj. En den It flick de bushes wld a touch dat's moughty gay En whisper dat de roses Is been Btuhted on de way. i Da south wind sho'ly soothln' when It Mows It bes' move on, En say dey mo' eprlngs oomln' dess de same as dem dat's gone. I stan' dun at de winder en It bresh me In de face En Mow dat or Man Winteh's at de finish o' Ms race. I ax do south wind please, ma'am, won't yo' come right in en stay? It lautfhs dat it mus' hustle all de roses on de way. Love is Life love this world would be a good place to emigrate from. Without it the hu man race would die and be elad of it. Love s I 7 .1 f T t I