Tni; "BEK: "omaiia; Saturday, mat 28, imn. 12 mi: omaiia Daily Bee. rOUNlJED BY EDWARD KOBE WATER. VICTOR, UOSEWAl'ER. EDITOR. Entered at Omaiia postofflce a secood Oas matter. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION- bally Be. tlncludln Hunday). per l'aiiy b (witimut 8unjy;, per wev.1VS iiiy lino ana hunday. one year vunvk.Ub.u BY cakkikil I unday. per Evening tire (with Sunday), per week llo I t: feuhuay titt, one year auruay ue, one year. lw I Addrnimail comnlmiuH of Irregularities "'llol.w , ncntillnir nf thnnn tracts and delivery to city circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee building. . . Houth Omaha Twenty-fourth and IS. Council Bluffs 15 Scott Street. , Lincoln J,IUIe Building. . Chicago 1548 Marquette Building. New York-Room ilul-llMI No. 84 West thirty-third Btreet . w . Washington TJa FourteentO oireeu CORRESPONDENCE. Communications ralatlnat to new mn(j editorial matter ahould be addreaaea. Omaha Boe, Editorial Department. DB-UITTIVI'FII Romlf h rtr.it ptnrna or DOStal Ofdcr I payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 3-cent atamps received In payment or mall acoounta. - Personal ehecks. except o- Omaha or eastern exchange, not an.ci-. STATEMENT OT CIRCULATION. u.org. a Ta.oi.urt " ".aiur.r of Th. t0 a7h.ra compiet copies of The Datiy, mo"""' .renmg and Sunday Beo printea ouximb monta of April, . ii.iv, was mm 1 49,800 , 1 4a, 910 t ...42,100 4 44,400 . .48,770 .....42.840 ,.43,690 t ..43 AM J...4a,Q iO , ....44.UC0 11 48,840 12 ... 48,660 )!.' ,.48,600 14 48,880 16..M. .....44.700 " ::;aoe ..43.360 is aa.eao 10 42BM II . ean , - 48,680 ta.. st 43,100 1 i,ou n jj) 48,830 it 48,800 aa'Tao ao" . 48.S70 Total 1J84.B40 Returned capias 10,481 Nat total ' U74.118I Vmii, ... UiOHUlfl B. T2SCUUCK. Treasurer. ' Subscribed la my presence and sworu to bclore ma tills 3d day of May. 1919. U. y. WALKER. Notary Puoiio. Sabaorlbars leaviaic turn city tern , orrllr sbaaid tira Tht Dc i kuallerf to tktaa. ' Addreaaca will k chaaiared aa eftea mm reijaeated. Piscatorially speaking, biting ought to begin to get good. More HtigaUon over the water works. Will those lawyers ever ' let go? 1 That Cuban who tacked down the lid of a dynamite box' literally drove nails in his own coffin. When a man gets oa real Intimate terms with himself he is more inclined to deal gently with others. The Chicago rriDune says me earth weighs 13,000,000,000,000,000 pounds. On Sugar trust scales? , Missouri offers 1,000 for a state song. Set one of Champ Clark's speeches to music 'and save the money. ' Perhaps If they would change the name of Bluefields, Nicaragua, tb.ose war clouds would pass over it now and then. The Brooklyn Judge who asserts tknt 'oil . inmen nrn nnt aneela" I,.,...,,, n how ha found " 1 it flUL I " I Governor Shailenbergor's Memorial ,! nrniamation is out at last. It is up to Mayor "Jim" to scatter a few not include the total exchange of busi- age rates are freely accorded to legltl flowers.' v . ness for this period of seven years, mate newspapers and to supplements If Ambassador Bryce does retire :ay his successor also be a man who asks that his country can him plain 'Mister" and not "Lord." If the weather should warm up June will hive Its hands full with the bride, for certainly April ana way have kept their hands off. trying to reiorra an tnose ex-convicts he has taken to his bosom. But, if so, he aetms to have made a sorry mess Of it. Senator Burkett has gotten his bill through the senate making an appro priation for enlarging the Lincoln postofflce. We pause to hear from Mr. Whedon once more. i Zbyszko says he will throw Gotch in straight falls; that Ootch is a very much overestimated man. That is what Hackenschmldt once profeescd think, but thinks no more. ! . '. : - j ' to . Report has it that Senator Batley of Texas wore a silk hat the other day for the first timo In his life. Having got rid of that prejudice, perhaps ho will now make further progress. A St. Louis alderman is out with an awful protest because "somebody" tried to bribe him with 5U. His Is a righteous protest. Why, $50 is less than the PlttBburg standard. According to the Kansas City Star the Brooklyn man's plan to shorten the alphabet by eliminating the letter "c" will never receive the approval of Kansas Sity or Shlkago. How about Slnslnnatl. The democrats of Custer county are preparing for a dollar dinner blowout, but for some usexplainable reason no- mnere on p.B.a,". uu w, se any- av- j one scheduled to respond to a toast on ,"Nonprtiaanshlp Automobile accidents are again be coming too frequent In Omaha. Some of ou' automobile drivers seem to havo the mistaken notion that pedes trians have no right to use the streets except at their peril. Help to Develop the West: One of the contingencies against which our government must guard In Its system of conserving natural re sources la toe unnecessary retarding of western development. Important aa Is the conservation work, it la no . ... .v. .t, .t t iii.yuiw.uw vu i.,.. the vast unsettled areas still remain ing in many states of the west Un- Questionably there Is a manifest ten- Honrv'fnr tliA envernment bv withhold- - , ", ;., ing certain tracts uum neuicuicm , iu '" ", - " to establishing of new homes. It Is on this theory that mountain states are urging the right to throw open to set-1 tlement agricultural land contained in forest reserves. Representative Taylor of Colorado pointed out in a recent speech In the house that only 3 per cent of his state Was subject to irrigated cultivation and that nearly 50 per cent of It was Is actually withheld from settlement, No argument is required to show the injustice and harmful effects of mak- ing this condition permanent, not only Colorado, but to the entire coun- Nebraska, among other things tory is a matter of national concern, -Tmr,Ano wlth detectives has not ........ . . Wyoming ana prooaoiy otner adjoin-. ing States. mis conamon imposes a heavy burden of taxation on that part of the state suhlert to colonization. - w and on this basts Mr. Taylor asks con gross at least to raise from 25 to 35 ppnr .v.- amount of the state's share of the revenue derived from the o-overnment's sale of timber and araz- lnS lands as a means of aiding the state In meeting the costs of maintain ing its government, schools and its roads It is worth while noticing here a state- v... .. ...... v. - . I t made by the Colorado represent- ative to the effect that the. strongest I opposition to these pleas of the west comes from those eastern congressmen who know less than anyone else about conditions In the newer western states, who perhaps have never seen a forest reserve. It opens up to candid con sideration the suggestion of Speaker Cannon that in his Judgment the gov ernment could well afford to pay the expenses of every new member of con gross to make a tour of the country, so as to become acquainted with its resources and needs before taking his seat. That the country suffers ifrom the lack of practical information which might be obtained this way there can be no doubt. Trade With Panama. In 1904, which was the first year or the Panama repuDiic, the total value of exports from that country to the United . States was 4 40,7 41 and two years later it was ii,6o,8o7, while last year it had reached $f,676.994. But encouraging j.as is this increase, it is not comparable with that in the ex- ports from the United States to the young republic. . In 1904 they were 979,724; In 1906, 12,724,289, and In 1909 they had reached 116,797,530 and fipr the present fiscal year, ending June bo, tney are expectea to go to $20,000,000 and the Panama exports to this country $ 2,000,000. The building of the canal, of course, has servea to stimulate mis traae ana lt wJU continue to do so, but what its ultimate full Influence upon the com- mAHriA hnttiTACn r h A tufA AMi nrfloa nHll uici ucmccu i-"w vuuuhiico nui be no prudent man wcmld venture to estimate, inese ngures, in xaci, ao ror material ana supplies snippea oy tne unitea etaies in sucn vasi quan- I titles into the canal zone for exclusive use mere are not comprenenaea ana It is impossible now to tell what they would amount to. Hence the statis- tics cited give only an approximate idea of' the Panama-United States trade. . But it is fair to take these figures I as an Index showing how commerce properly barred from newspaper prlv between this country and Panama and lieges, not because it Is a sermon, but th other central and southern neIghbors adjacent to the' canal will b aulckened when this great water- way is completed. Just one thing will , be required to conservesthe possiblll- nor obviate the duty of the postal au 1 ties to the fullest degree and that will thorities to pass upon them fearlessly be the personnel of the Industrial and commercial leaders sent ' from this country down there, and that -will be taken care of. iieaaiag; inem Uut, , Some Doubting Thomases have pre- sumed to question the accuracy of the statement so often reiterated on the floor of the present congress by demo- cratlc members that their party is more thoroughly united today than it has ever been. If these sinister skep- tics will take the trouble to inform themselves they will see Just how far from the truth their implications are. Let them turn, for instance, to Mr. h,vn', rnmmnnpr and tr.Am wnri tholthe steamer." as if that were turning leading editorial, which under the sen- tentlous caption, "To Governor Har mon," takes the governor to task for falling to follow out the Bryanlc die tation in the recent Ohio primaries and concluding with this ultimatum If you falter prepare to stand aside. The democratic party is In no mood to be trifled with, It ha suffered so much from the secret manipulation of the predatory Interests that It demands daylight methods and honest politics. It is up to you, gov ernor, Or, if this deliverance does not con vlnrn him nf the solidarity of hla nartv. ,et hlm scan Norman E. Mack's Na i - tional Monthly for June, where, in the course' ut a long editorial, the chair- man of the national democratic com mittee and director of the last Bryan campaign -says: It is Idle to think of Mr. Bryan as ever again . bulng th party candidate for the Ipreaiaency. Party unity, harmony, peace hail could be more conclusive? Here we have Bryan, the self-appointed dicta tor and thrice-chosen leader of his party, reading out of It the democratic governor of Ohio, who is his most con spicuous rival for the presidential nomination, and at the same time Mr. Bryan being read out of the running by Chairman Mack. Now the question arises, who will make Harmon "stand aside if he 'falters" and who Is the "democratic party that is In no mood to be trifled with?" If, as Mack says, "It is Idle ' ... think of Bryan as ever again Deing the party candidate for the presi dency," is it not also idle to suppose that Mr. Bryan will allow any one else to run without his certificate of char acter. Post Mortem Advice. It is a trite saying that "hindsight far better than foresight," and this evidently applies to some of the mis- guided zealots wno nave woraea incur selves Into a frenzy of uplift in thes these parts. Last week's issue of the ofH- cial organ of the Anti-Saloon league says: .,,.. , v,. Vnrt re from many IocaUticl tnat gpeak 0, success, even the best men have acted in such a way as to make us skeptical regard the wisdom of this office even naming men for detective service. And in another place It reinforces this sad lesson with the declaration: Sooner or later detectives demonstrate tnelP helplessness, or worse; in-advtsed law enforcement work and clumsy detective service are calculated to hinder our move ment. We think bo, too. But here in Omaha the advice comes a trifle tardy. Our professional reformers have had fivnnrlpnra vlth detectives, not OnlT umjatlBfact0lx but renecting decidedly upon their own honesty and good faith. Why should any decent man with a laudable purpose have taken up with a desperado like Shercliffe with his prison record? How could real reformers have gone Into, the penitentiary to purchase the assistance of a professional thief like Burrier 'with a promise of pardon? What good could be accomplished by paying money collected in churches over, to a scalawag like Wetmore? How can the cause of reform be ad vanced by setting at large a notorious criminal like Erdman, and inspiring him with the idea that he Is divinely commissioned to commit murder in its most dastardly form? Would such witnesses hesitate to swear anyone into Jail for a price? , YeB experience with detectives nas not been uatisfactory," but It Is hecaua of the kind of detectives with wv,lch we have . been afflicted. It is because of the apparent preference of joiir 80-called reformers for penlten tlary blrda ani their reckless disre Kar(j or tne- consequences of going go0d for hardened rogues ready to do anything in the category of crime. The Nebraska editors In their reso hutions censure the postofflce authori- ties for exacting full postage for trans- mission through the mails of a county option sermon delivered by a preacher at Pender disguised as a newspaper BUpplement in order to get free deltv ery within the county and secondVlass I i p Ob la KG roltJo wiuiuui. o uu UUl I a ... I W .. T J m A know the particulars in this instance, but we do know that second-class post that are a legitimate part of such newspapers without question; but are invarlablydenled to pamphlets, tracts and other printea matter wnicn should properly pay higher rates. In all these cases it comessdown to a ques tion of purpose and intent as evidenced by the circumstances. A . sermon printed as a newspaper supplement to get under the postofflce rules might be because it is no Dart of the neWsuaner, All the spasms of resolution and all the naroxvsms of indication will not change the facts in any specific case and impartially, Why are ba,se ball cranks' called fans? Real fans make no noise, but accomplish something. Base ball fans are noisy and do noLhtnsr. Boston Herald. If base ball fans do nothing, who is that pays $25,000 for the release of a Bresnahan, or who is that pays the $10,000 salary of a McGraw, or- Chance? Who is that walks up to the box office in droves of thousands every day and planks down his money? Oh, the fan is doing a thing or two. The excursion boat which is to ply on the Missouri this summer adver tises that "no liquors will be sold on over a new leaf. Where were our antl-saloon sleuths last summer who make a business of nosing around teacups? . The people of Tennessee have Joined In making the anti-Patterson crusade nonpoittlcal ana repuoncans ana aem- I ocrats alike have united for the over- ,hrnw nf tho governor who nardnnnrl the man who killed his political rival. Good for tho people of Tennessee. The convention of tho National Con ference of Charities and Corrections In St. Louis has resulted in an order by the mayor for a thorough cleanlng-out - or ino "eu,c"1 - mayor has put up to mo people or t. Louis B real man's job. Mr. Bryan's Commoner prints what purports to be Mr. Bryan's Washing- ton hall speech, but It does not print what Mr. Bryan said, but only what he wrote out In advance to furnish to the newspapers. What Mr. Bryan really said, as taken down by the stenographer and printed in The Bee, varies materially by additions and In terpolations from what he Intended to say merely for publication. Omaha's returned trade boosters re port an unprecedented trip through a country bulging with signs of growth and prosperity. Our local calamity contemporary will please take notice. A Problem in Patriotism. Baltimore American. The harrowing question how suggests Itself whether if congress holds ever until the middle of July, the nation can enjoy a sane and eafa Fourth. t'anae and Effect. Philadelphia Reoord. The peace proclamation of our great paolflcator at Christtenla has already pro duced a partial result In the appropriation Of $23,000,000 for two more dreadnoughts. A l.on Time romlnst. Cleveland Plain Dealer. At last George Washington's heirs are going to get the money the government has owed them for the last 100 years or more. How pleased George would be to hear of ltl A Koreeaat. St. Paul Dispatch. Colonel Bryan declares that ha will not be a candidate for United States senator from Nebraska. The colonel must have a premonition that the next legislature of Nebraska will be republican. . Slo-ua of the Times. Chicago Record-Herald. Forty million dollars' worth of diamonds and other precious atones have been brought into New York from abroad during the past ten months. Are there any further remarks about the coot or nign living r "Mysterious Dlsappearaucea." New Tork World. Now Sugar Trust records and books, like Metropolian and Standard Oil papers in the past, have disappeared. As proof of Innocence this sort of thing la not al together convincing, though it may help to retard conviction. Ill-Tlmed Greed. Philadelphia Record. The result of the present ill-judged In crease of freight charges by the railroads Is quite likely to be an increase of the power of the Interstate Commerce commls slon to veto increases. The railroad com panles were mistaken in believing that they had got the public scared out of demand ing further restrictive legislation. Common sense would have dictated that the Increase should be deferred till congress adjourned PULLMAN WILL FIGHT. Will Not Tolerate a Redaction of the Upper Storr. ' Washington Herald. Did you fondly imagine, gentle and, per naps, unsopnisticatea reader, when you read a few weeks back that the Pullman company had been ordered to reduce its upper berth rates in certain territory that it would do It without a struggle? The odds are heavy that you did not knowing the Pullman outfit as you do and you were rlgHit. It Is going to resist the sug. gestion to the limit of its resources. Why, If the Pullman company submitted' at this crisis, by and by somebody would be ad vancing. me idea tnat it ought to pay lta porters living salaries. Instead of look ing to the public to foo them gonerously and handsomely as It travels. The Pullman company knows, as surely as the traveling public knows, that it is an outrage to charge the same fare for an upper berth that it does for a lower. And as the fare for the lower is, In nine cases out of ten, utterly unreasonable, the fare for the upper Is unspeakably so. And yet the Pullman company Is not going to tol erate tne proposal to reduce its UDDer berth fee not this side of the very ultl mate court of resort, at least. We can only hope the courts will force It to do the right thing, in spite of Itself, We believe this Is a good time to bring the. Pullman company to- Its senses, any way. And we believe, moreover. ' that will bo brought. This is not a good day for bad trusts, and It may not be any too too good a day for good ones. It would help some to see one of the worst of the lot made to behave itself. And we Bay this without taking much stock In corporation baiting, etthor. NEW HEALTH EPIGRAM. Log-lo of Modern Experience Com prlaed In Pltar Sentences. Louisville Courier-Journal. The Chicago health department has issued a circular In which it sees proper to devote soma space to refuting some of the old time household sayings affecting human health. It is insisted that It is not dealr ablo that one should "eat a peck of dirt In tho course of a lifetime. It is denied that "the stout child is healthy;" that "people were healthier in the good old days;" that "a gont keeps a stable health ful," and that "gas works are good , for consumption." In Justifying Its edict the department says tho peck of dirt idea is capable of doing great harm, especially in the feeding of children. Referring to th alout child iB said that the child who plays u. U streets because there is no othr-x' place to play "stands the poorest chan.! of surviv Ing." The death rate in such pari of the city is said to be "friglifully high as com pared with other portions of the town Tho sayings . about gtata u'.jl. gas works "can do harm and can do no twO." In lieu of these discredited epigram.-) the health department has substituted a few of, Its own which are more in accord with modern rules of health and sanitation. These it calls "healthgrams," and their general trend may be Judged from the following specimens: 'Open windows close the door to con sumption. "Your lung, can't be washed out, but they can be aired. "On fly swatted in May Is equal to 1,000,000 swatted in July. "Mother's milk for babies; cow's milk for calves. "tnoods or sunsnino in tne home may fade the carpets, but it puts the bloom of health on your cheeks. Take your choice." Our Birthday Book May 88, 110. Louis Agassis, the famous Swiss natural ist, was born near Lake Neufchatel, May 28, 1K07. His visit to the United States In 1346 gave the tlret decided impulse to the study of natural science in this country, and he wu for many years a professor in Harvard university. He died in 1871 David Rankin, farmer and capitalist and prominent -In farmers' organisations, was born 11 ay 28, 1865. He Is a native of Indiana, and now lives at Tarkio, Mo., and owns and manages a farm of 23.000 acres, which is suppoHed to be the largest, if - not the largest worked farm In tills country. In Other Lands Bid lights oa Waat is Trans, piling Among th Wear and Far Rations of tbe Barth. The whirligig of time presents a notable spectacle In South Africa these days. Out of the storms and ravages of war but nine ear past the South African union Is ris ing. At its head at governor general stands Lord Gladstone, son of tho great English man, who was brave enough to recognise the independence of the Boar republics after the disaster to British arms- on Majuba Hill. The active leader of the new government which will be inaugurated on Tueedtly next Is General Louis Botha, prime minister, the idol of the Boers and one of the bravest leaders of . the "em battled farmers" In the last war. The war ring races of yesterday, now united for peace and progress, through their best representatives stand shoulder to shoulder at the formal launching of the union. The hanges wrought within ten years havo few parallels in history. Overwhelmed In the war for self-preservation, the depleted burghers accepted the results as graciously as possible. They returned to their homes and their farms, tilled the soli and awaited events. The multitude attracted by the mines and the enriching opportunities of r were as human chaff soon scattered by the winds of years, leaving the sturdy Boars numerical masters of the situation. By the arts of peace and sticking to the soli they have regained for all practical purposes th independence for which they fought and fell. Ills Excellency Shlel All Youssof, presl- ent of the constitutional reform league of Egypt and publisher of AlMonayaJ, a newspaper he established In Cairo twenty year ago, replies In the current North America Review to Colonel Roosevelt's crticlam of native -aspirations In his speeches at . Khartum and Cairo. Par ticular objection is mads to Colonel Roose velt's opinion that Egypt would not be fit for self-government for several genera tions. "Had Mr. Roosevelt been an ordi nary man," cays his excellency, "or bad hla importance been due only to his intelli gence,' we would have said that he may be Ight or may be wrong and nothing more. But he is the ex-presldent of the United States of America and may be again its president, and Americans must share a great part of the responsibility which re sults from what he says of' us if that re public shall long Ignore his mistake. It is neither wise nor in accord with the gal lantry of Americans that they should agree that Kgypt should be Insulted in their name whilst Egypt admires them and loves their civilisation and sings their praises.' Glowing reports of the efficiency, equip ment and vastness of the new army of China are sharply discredited by a Japanese staff officer. In an interview in the J1J Bhlmpo, he Bays a long time will elapse before China has a formidable- modern army. The program calls for two divisions for every province, exclusive of Manchuria, but the viceroys, in whom the authority to raise troops ia lodged, are not usually men of initiative and method. In most of the provinces the two divisions will prob ably remain on paper for some time. The army now consists of four divisions organ tied by Yuan Shlhki, two the creation of Tuan Fang and the late Chang Chihtung, and a brigade here and there. There is no homogeneous army, and Judged by tho Japanese standard, the troops are not ef ficient. Conscription is difficult to enforce for the reason that there is no system of registration, and many provincial officers are ! opposed to compulsory enlistment. Finally, he says, "glory on the tented field does not appeal to the Chinese.". The new French Chamber, according to the official figures, will be mainly com posed of 124 radicals, 132 socialist radicals, twenty-four Independent socialists, seventy four unified socialists, seventy-four repub Ucans of the left, sixty-eight progressists, and ninety-nine members of the right. For practical working purposes on all political questions this would normally result In government majority of about 360, which was virtually the majority of the govern ment in the preceding Chamber. Even if the right and the progressists were to unite their forces with those of the unified socialists, the opposition could not muster more than 221 votes. The stability of cabl net during the next four years will de pend therefore upon the capacity of the prime minister to draw up a working pro, gram commanding the support of the radicals and socialist radicals. M. Paul Doumer, M. Lasies, M, Gauthler de Clagny and M. Francois Deloncle are the most prominent members Of the old Chamber who will be missed in the new. Men of Irish birth and descent who may Join th "home-going excursion" during the coming summer months, will see a far different Ireland than that which they left. Jeremiah McVeagh. M. M-. in signed statement In the New York Evening Post, says among other things: "The whole face of Ireland haa been changed in recent years. The land purchase acts have resulted In the abolition of landlordism over half the land of Ireland, and with owner, ship and fixity of tenure the. peasant pro prletors have developed to a surprising ex tent the virtue of self-reliance, and have raised their standard of living. Bette dwellings are springing up everywhere, and the mud hovel is almost a thing of the past. The laborers' acts have also re suited In the housing of the laborers in comfortable homesteads in lieu of the ettariiiful condition of life to which they wers .formerly condemned. Then, again the local government of the country has passed from the hands of the landlords to the hands of the people. ThlB gradual social revolution has all taken place since V'.tf foundation of the Land league by Michael Davltt In 1881, and It is a wonder ful example of the power of public a git a tlon. Parcels Poat aa a Reined r, Philadelphia Record. The true remedy for the grosser extor tlons of the express companies would be the establishment of a government puree Is post. Tho express companies have bee able to defeat action by congress for yea past. Through the bond of a common ow ership on the part of express managers and railway managers It is easy' to see what powerful pressure may be exerted to d feat regulative leglHlatlnn. Help cannot bi expected from the overburdened and over worked Interstate Commerce commlsnlon. The express companies defiantly keep up their rates; parcel out the territory of the country so that each may have its area of unrestricted ravage, and laugh their critics to scorn as they cut their melon and swim in the Juice. Eclipse of L'ncle Joe. ' Springfield Republican. Eleven of the newly-nominated republican congressmen of Ohio have pledged them selves, If elected, to vot against th re election of Mr. JC'annon to the speakership. They are reuttiriably certain of election, as their districts have been strongly repub lican. Nine other nominees are non-committal on the speakership question, and they are In less strongly republican dis tricts. Only General J. Warren Kelfer is openly In favor of continuing the Can non regime. It looks darker and darker for th speaker. The report made to the comptroller nnder date of March 29, 1910, shows that this bank has Time Certificates of Deposit 3Va Interest paid on certificates running tor twelve months. M''-'IWl8lnalidMi.aWh atUsa' SiJiSl.n SaTssJI ai'l'.llil Willi SalaHi Bsi . POLITICAL DRIFT. The only doubt lnsurglng through the gray matter of Speaker Cannon is whether his future halo will be muslin or asbestos. By the latest count sixty-nine American ties have adopted or voted to adopt the commission form of government. Twelve States have enacted permissive laws en- bllng municipalities to make the experi ment. Rev. John 1L Booth, not yet 30 years old, is entering with such test into the contest for the democratlo nomination for congress In the Eighth Iowa district that the old politicians are sitting up and tak ing notice. If there is any political sympathy un- asslgned a large share should be passed up ,to Tammany Hall, which has been an Involuntary spectator to th operation of cutting out $21,000,000 worth of pure pie In Now York City. Congressman Havens of New York con tinues to vote with regulars, Insurgents or democrats, as the humor takes him: but e still Bits on the democratic side and aeks no questions. Party fealty nowadays has a long string to it. Senator Tillman continues unfit for par- tlcpatlon in the activities of statesman ship. The fire works go on just the same. Mr. Bryan's famous salutation to the vacant chair in Omaha was characterized, according to an artistic observer, "by de lightful Insouciance and exquisite savotr falre." The" democratlo primary in Florida for the nomination of a candidate for United States senator resulted in a draw be tween Senator Taliaferro and his chief opponent, ex-Governor Broward. The for mer got 21,045 votes and the latter 21,018. third candidate received 4,660 votes, bo second contest between Mr. Taliaferro and Mr. Broward will be necessary. BELLE V1I13 A t'EMEN ARI1N. Omaha's Elderly Nelarhbor Cominsc Into the Llnkellsat. Washington Post. It is an interesting bit of information that Nebraska contains a town of white settlement so old that the celebration of the centennial anniversary of its founding is at hand. The first white outpost in the region that Is now a commonwealth was fur-trading station named Bellevue, es tablished by John Jacob Astor, who was led into the enterprise that so vastly in creased the foundation of his fortune through the reports pf Lewis and Clarke, following their now historic expedition across the country, and whose priority of discovery added vastly to the continental territory of the United States. He founded also for the same purpose what Is now the town of Aitorla. Ore., which he in tended to make the Easts of a direct trade in furs, silk and tea with China. It was one of his expeditions, voyaging up the Missouri river to the present site of Omaha, that camped at the present site of Bellevue In 1810. The town has re mained. It was, Indeed, tlie first capital of Nebraska. It continued to be a trading post during twenty-five years, until the failure of the Astoria venture through the desertion of agents and the hostility of Indians. Its history goes back to the time when what is now Nebraska, was a part of the Missouri territory. The occasion would seem to invite the attendance of some of the descendants of the original Astor in the United States. The nameVf the town hap pily commemorates his foresight, and Is borne by one of the modern hostelrles that have added to the cosmopolitan' luxuries of the east. The anniversary will cole brate another landmark for the subsequent ana vaster transcontinental progress of American civilization. Lanndrylna; Paper Honey. New York Tribune. Secretary MacVeagh has approved a plan for sending the country's paper money to the laundry and reissuing It clean and fresh. It Is estimated that laundering soiled bills Instead of macerating them and re placing them with new ones will save the treasury about $1,000,000 a year. Thus is the saving grace of the washtub once more signally vindicated. Sooner or Later, Piano. Why Delay the Purchase? There is one in the home of every one of your friends and every time you call upon them, you have seen how much pleasure each family got out of theirs. Don't you know that music Is a positive influence in bringing domestic happiness and contentment into the family circle? Can't you see that your children must have a knowledge of musio as a parfof their education, and as a means of giving them the refine ment you want them to have? Decide today; then come in and see for bow little you can buy a1 good piano at HOSPE'S. If you think yon cannot afford to invest in a brand new Instru ment, come in and seeVhat we have in slightly used instruments. We have some good ones at $65, $75, ..... I'all or write, catalogues on Application. ' A. HOSPE CO.. 1513 Douglas Sif fl Ifil OPPOSING HATK INCREASE. Shippers of the (oonlrr Contesting Nerr Freight Rate. Pittsburg Dispatch. The manufacturers of this country may not be absolutely sur about the rallron.O' business, but they have a keen perceptlo" that their own business Is not In a condi tion to weloome an addition of 15 or 20 per cent In the cost of transportation. There fore, they are proceeding to appeal to the Interstate Commerce commission against the Increases in railroad rates made or con templated by the railroads throughout the country. The subject Is one that requires thorough investigation. Tho railroads are entitled to rates that will yield a fair return on th bona fide Investment or legitimate cost of reproduction. But how Is it to be known what rates wilt yield such a return without that physical valuation to which the rail- , road world Is eo bitterly opposed? On that 1 point we need no more expert authority 7 than that of Mr. H. V. Poor, who aaoerted ' concerning railroad earnings In 1883 which were muoh less satisfactory than at present that "if the fictitious element could eliminated from their (the railroads') i counts their success as Investments would have no parallel." Leaving this and the vast range of othe? subjeots involved In this question to be fought out before the commission, on sug gestion purely in the railroad Interest . ia pertinent. Suppose that they should suc ceed In Increasing their rates, eay 20 per cent, and as a consequence the volume of their traffic should decrease, say 30 per cent, where would the railroads come outT Yet it ia the history of the subject that the vast multiplication of railroad traffic for the last half century has been secured by the steady reduction of rates, and it is the economio experience of the world that the reversal of that process by Increases of costs means the dwindling of business. PASSING PLEASANTRIES. "Did you offer tho man an apology fo4 rui'ning over him?" No, replied the young laay. who had learned to drive an automobile, "I wanted to. but, you see, we never had been intro duced." Philadelphia Ledger. Anxious Customer Are vou sure that vou have that medicine mixed right? Druggist No, I am not: but I've srot it mixed the way the doctor ordered it. Judge. "If you look about you," said the omi . nous acquaintance, "you will see the handr writing on the wall." The handwriting on the wall doesn't I worry mo." replied Senator Sorghum, "so ' long aa they dtn't go rummaging Into my rrlunta mnmnyanAa 1X'antilnlnn Com ...M.w ,,,,.,,,v,u,.u,K ., aaiiiu,vvll , What do you think of the way the teams are playing ball?" i don t near much about tnem this year. "Not hear much about them! Where do you keen yourself?" "I'm shaving myself this year." Houston Post. "What kind of bricks will you us in your new suburban house?" ; m "I don't know," replied Mr. Bllder. "Co'fj, I fancy, if the architect haa his way. Indianapolis News. "Why should the spirit of mortal proud?" quoted the imnassioned orator. ba Then he paused a moment to let It tak effect. "Well," spoke up a half inebriated man In the audienoe, "I'll be the goat. Why should it?" Chicago Tribune. TRUE AND UNTRUE. i Chicago Advance. He was a dog, But ho stayed at home And guarded the family night and day. He was a dog That didn't roam. He lay on the porch and chased yh stray ... ' The tramps, the burglar, the hen, away. For a dog's true heart for that household beat At morning and evening, in cold and heat Ha was a dog. , He was a man, And didn't stay To cherish his wife and children fair, He was a man, And every day His heart grew ' callous, Its love beats rare, He thought of himself at the close of th day And, cigar In his fingers, hurried away To the club, the lodge, the store, th show. But he had a right to go, you know H was a man. You Must Have a This is the New Diddle Piano $175 $5.00 Monthly We Always Have Bar gains in Used Pianos $89, f 98, $115, etc., etc. f. . A c v