Till: HEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY, IT.BRUARY 10. .1011. t t t L I o A ci V l( 14 'hn: Omaha Daily Hkk, FOUNI'KM BV KHVYAHU ROBKWATLIl. VI'.TOH UOKKWATKK. Kl'ITUK. i.ntered at Omaha po-toftlre as second Jaws matter TKHMH i.r' HUKSCRII'TIUN: runday Bee, (in r IJM raturia tie, one yrar J1 j' I'ailv H-e. (without Sun. In v. nnf year. .14 I 'ally Hee anl Punday. one year I'KLI V i:iU-.l HV CAHKIKR. Lvenlng Mee i wit hunt Xunda) i. per week Kvenlns Hi iM-ith Hijnriay). per week...l"e llll. Il..n ll..l,i .... ........X nup Wk l.'lO lall'v Uee (without Sunda I, per week. ..10c Addrecs all complaints of Irregularities In delivery lo City circulation Department. OKK1CKS On. aha Th- l HuiWlmc. South Omaha-2 N. Twenty-fourth St. t ouucli r.ui.v-M .-.o.i Mn.et. IJnroln M Little Hiiildin. Chicago-l.VWi Marquette Building. Kan" I "It y Reliance Building. New Vork-24 W rt Thirty-third Street. Washington 725 Fourteenth Ktreet. N. W' CORRESPON I'KNCE. Communications relation to news and editorial matter should be addressed Omaha Be. Kdltorlal I epartment. KKMITTANClSH. Remit ly (Iran, express or postal order, payable to 1 he Hee publishing Company. Only 2-cmt stamp received n. payment ol mall accounts. Personal cheeks except on Omaha and eawtern exchange not accepted. JANUARY CIRCULATION. 45,826 Stat of Nebraska, County of Ijouglae, a. Irwtght Wllllaina. circulation manager of The Bee publishing company, being duly worn. Bay that the average daliy cir culation, lean spelled, uniiaed and returned coplea, for the month of Januaiy, 1M1. was ii,k.ti. DWiUHT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. 8utiecrlud In my presence and sworn to belom me Hi la 1st day of February , Ibeal.J ROBERT HbNlKB, Notary Public. Sabsc rllcrs leaving ko ritr teaa porarlly ahaalel have lUe Bee nailed to them. Addreaa will bo ehnaarrri as often as requested. "Now they are calling It "Arizona's crazy constitution." It U vlve JesBe James with the moving picture shows. That fire that destroyed the Mls aouri capitol seems to have missed the democratic mule. Henry James' play, "The Saloon." did not please London. Those English are a pragmatic lot. Juat to show that they take no stock In signs, the packers have hired thir teen lawyera to defend them. The Globe-Democrat refera to It as "The Honduran melee." That ia tak ing all the glory out of the war. What will happen when Dlas de cides to take those Insurgents seri ously, one shudders to contemplate. Sure, remove the Missouri capitol to St. Louis and build It on the site of old Kerry Patch and let them go to It. If Alton B. Parker should happen to land in the United States senate, who' would carry the, news-to Fair ylew? No matter whose fault 'it was. the abuses against which the railway mall clerks protested are about to be cor rected. "Money talks for fortification." No scandal; Just the senator from Missis sippi lining up on the right side of the Question. A report says the curb broker will organise. It has been the idea of some folks that they were fairly well or ganized already. And those Harrlman lines will have something to write about when they go -to invest that $1,350,000 in ad vertising the west. A. rlver-to-mountain highway would be a very nice thing, but what Ne braska most needs is, however, a farm-to-market highway. Down in Missouri some of the dee strick school trustees are fighting the plan of merging country schools. You certainly have to show those MIs . souriana. If Fred Cosgrove didn't have his fingers crossed when he made that pledge there will be a pretty little scramble for a nomination about this time next year. Speaking of two dark horses to make the race for president and vice president on the democratic ticket in 1912, how would V. J. Bryau and A. . Stevenson do? I Something ought to be done to chain I down those villages on the northeast coast. Here one Jumps up and goes clear out to sea and another one on an Ice floe la wrecked. Mr. Carnegie's astronomer, wbo - claims to have discovered sixty new ' worlds, should bear In mind, however, that Mr. Rockefeller beat him to the on In which we dwell. Senator Bartllng finally lit, and much anxiety Is thereby relieved. And haviug alighted on the wet side of the fence, the light for county option will be "continued In our next." The Nebraska legislature has re fused to go on record as opposed to the Canadian reciprocity treaty. Ne braska has been less spectacular, and more consistent, than any of the pro gressive states, and this latest move merely emphasizes the fact. That Washington newspaper man wbo got into a tilt with Congressman Macon of Arkansas is hereby duly re minded that the hair trigger la atlll working down in that atate, where the other night one society youth killed another one In a church as the result of a quarrel over a cigarette. VoU Treaty Up or Down Now. The senate should not torre the prtsidrnt lo tail an extra session oi congress to swure S'tion on his Cana dian reciprocity measure. It shotila set on U without delay. The president believes public sentiment labors the proposed agreement, but this should cut no rigurc In tne prompt co-operation by the senate to bring the propo sition lo a vote. An extra session, President Taft Intimates, may lead to a general opening up of other matters, which maoy of those filibustering on the treaty plan do not want to bring to an issue now. It is possible this! consideration4 may yet servo to adjust differences. Party and factional lines,! however, have become so confused as to obscure the certainty of results. Among the opponents of the president are those who would welcome an extra session as a means of opening up a general fight on other legislation, chiefly the tariff. But an extra session will bring in the newly elected members of con gress, changing the majority In the bouse from the republican to the democratic and cutting down the re publican majority in the acnate. This Is a matter of vital consideration to re publicans and may yet have some real influence. At all events, a rational view would suggest action on the reci procity plan at this session. Let it be voted up or down and get it out of the way. Much sentiment may be found for and against it, but it is doubtful If a great deal could be found favorable to delay. The only hope in such a contingency would be that Canada might back down and thus defeat the prospect of such an agreement. The senate will make a mistake to expect the president to recede" from the posi tion he has taken for Immediate ac tion. His determination Is shown by his offer to subordinate his tariff board bill. Criticising Newspapers. Queer criticisms are made of news papers. Down In Missouri some dyed-in-the-wool democrats are taking their leading party organ, the St. Louis Re public, to task because It betrays its political trust and mentions the name of Governor Hadley, republican, too frequently. Here is a sample of the let ters that are pouring into the editor: ST. LOUIS. Feb. 6. To the Editor of the Republic: Hadley Governor. Name ap peared thirty-nine tlraea In Monday's Re public. He must have a big grip on the Republic. Please make It even fifty on Tuesday. Observations by a DISGUSTED DEMOCRAT. Evidently Governor Hadley Is a very active oiin, as, of course, h! is. Evl-j dently It is hard for a newspaper to chronicle the political news fairly and fully down in that moss-ribbed state without mentioning the name of Gov ernor Hadley. We do not know or pretend to say how thick the Republic and the governor are, but If the paper I Is doing no more than publishing the news Involving the name of the gov ernor without eliminating his name or seeking to color the facts because of It, we should say It Is doing no more than It could do to perform Its func tion as a newspaper and that, Instead of belrg a reflection upon It, these criticisms become a tribute. The case may be referred to as typical of a very erroneous conception on the part of many people of what a newspaper is. The paper that prints the news aa impartially as it can on its news pagea. reserving its com ments and criticism for its editorial pages, is the paper that comes up to its mission. It is next to Impos sible for a paper to meet its natural requirementa and seek to govern its sources or character of news. Those are conditions quite beyond Its rightful provlnse. It Is. of course, humanly Im possible for any person completely to eliminate self and personal feelings, so thst the best news story may be tinc tured with a bit of the author's indi vidualism, but the ideal news story is that which goes in for the facts and avoids the comments. The Missouri misconception ts all too common Farmers Bare a Railroad. A small Iowa rsilroad needed f 1 25, 000 to stave off financial ruin. Ths president did not go to Wall street, or to any other money center for aid, perhaps, because he knew he could not get it. He turned to a little group of farmers in section of Audubon and Cass counties, Iowa and got the help. One hundred Danish farmers raised the $125,000. That is not a great amount of money for 100 men to raise and their raising it for this purpose, probably, will promote their own Interests in the end. But Just the same the inci dent shows that all the farmers of Iowa are not losing money; are not without money or sound credit. Its equlvaleut. An agricultural expert re cently said that but for the farmer boya the average Iowa farmer would go broke paying wagea. He alao aald that conditions are so adverse that the aver age tenant, farmer in that state ac tually loses about $300 a year. His conclusions were based upon the steady rise In land and labor prices without s corresponding advance In prices of commodities. Land prices have, to be sure, been steadily rising In Iowa for ten years; in some Instances they have doubled. One result of this la a smaller number of husbandmen and a diminished population. Young men, unable to buy this splendid, high priced lsnd, have sought cheaper soil farther weat. But, nevertheless, the man who owns his farm la Iowa la a well-to-do man. He has as good lsnd as there Is any- where, good seasons and the best .of railroad facilities and rates. It Is all but Irreconriliable, this Idea of his being unaMe on the present level of prices to come out with a margin of profit every year. The Danish farmer in Iowa, as elsewhere. Is usually a good farmer. He pursues Intensive meth ods, he Is ceaselessly energetic, frugal and long-headed and it surprises no one who is acquainted with him to know that he had tossed over to this struggling railroad enough money to rcare the wolf away from the door. He and his neighbors from the other Scan dinavian countries, who have settled so numerously upon the fertile farms of Iowa. Minnesota and Nebraska, are able to give our own. native tillers of the soil some real helpful pointers, not so much In Intensive farming, as in the essential art of economy saving and conserving the fruits of their labor. These people have been a pow erful factor In the strong upbuildlug of this western country. Lo, the Poor Plumoer. Lo, the poor plumber, who has been the butt of ribald scoffers and irrev erent Jesters for lo, these many years. He toils from early morn till dewy eve, and the sweat of his brow min gles with the grime of his bands. He entereth Into closed places, behind hot ranges and flxeth up the pipes on leaky boilers. He wt petit the joints and putteth new gaskets on defective connections. Broken unions to him are as childs' play, and the pipe-tongs and the thread-cuttera are in hla hand always. He useth Bolder as it it were more precious than gold, yea, more precious than much fine gold, and be chargeth for it on his bill as if it were used by the ton. He maketh the tink er's dam and cloggeth the waste pipe, and goeth under the sink to clean out the same. Of hla coming and going there is no end, and his helper is with him always. Yea, from the blowing of the whistle until the closing of the shop the helper is with him, and no Job is complete without one, snd he chargeth for the helper's service even as for hla own. And yet riches flee him and hla profit abideth not. Hear, then, the plaint of the plumber who finds poverty his portion, and the dull wit of Insensate clods his reward, for the verity of which the plumber, him self, vouches, and who shall say him nay. His Is. Indeed, a hapless lot, and to him much sympathy and com passion will go out from those whose pipes have burst or whose connections have given away. Behold then, the plumber, whose days are spent in doing yol good. Fruits of the Land Show. The practical results of the Omaha Land ahow, recently conducted by The Bee and The Twentieth Century Farmer management, are early being shown. One of the facta demon strated during the exposition is that Omaha is an excellent center for the marketing of farm lands. In recogni tion of this fact seven great land- dealing companies have opened head--quarters in this city and are directing aggressive campaigns from here. Ne braska real estate dealers should be guided in their action by the action of these others. Nebraska still has many acres of fertile soil unoccupied and It offera as much attraction to the settler as do the newer sections of the west. But Nebraska has not been so sys tematically and generously exploited as have these other sections. It be hooves the dealers In Nebraska land to get busy if they are going to share with the others in the tide of immigra tion during the coming months. It is Hill's Move Now. The decision of the Harrlman lines to expend $75,000,000 in double tracks within the next five years is but ope step in their aggressive fight f6r con quest of the far west, the territory which has long been the battle ground of Hill and Harrlman Interests. Now, the Question arlsea what will Mr. Hill do? The Wall Street Journal inclines to the belief that he may disregard, or seem to disregard this latest chal lenge from bis rival gladiator for the present and devote his time to recoup ing and mobilising his forees. But that James J. Hill, or those who are to suc ceed him. will ultimately answer the Harrlman challenge cannot be doubted unlesa one commits himself to the strange notion that this old Titan Is to surrender and retreat under fire. Even before the death of Mr. Har rlman these rival interests had shot connecting lines into each other's ter ritory, but Harrlman gained an ad vantage when he managed to book up with Seattle, Hill's erstwhile exclusive terminus, for Hill has not yet gone Into San Francisco, unless, Indeed, we have to believe the story of his alliance with Gould in extending the Western Pacific Into this Harrlman metropolis at the Golden Gate. The Great North ern and Northern Pacific are not seri ously menaced by this advance of the Union and Southern Pacific. They have expended millions in extensions and betterments and have been build ing up their tributary country, thus in creasing their aources of revenue. Dur ing the recent panic, which began In 1907, Mr. Hill built 550 miles of Northern Pacific at a cost of $8,500, 000 and each year since be baa kept up bis Improvement campaign. Of course, should this action on the part of the Harrlmau people lead to an aggressive building program by the Hills, then we may expect to see a renewal of the battle for reaching each other's terminals up and down the coast. In the meantime the west will be reaping valuable results from the battle of the glanta and contributing new sinews of war to both by multi plying resources. j One thing about the capital remoalj matter will commend Itself to the peo-j pie. If Nebraska does determine to j abandon Lincoln as headquarters It I will not need to go to much greater! trouble than did the Kentucklan w hen j he changed residence. All he had to do was to throw some water on the fire and call the dog. Former Attorney Genera! Pona parte has the Napoleon spirit of eon quest and he is steadily progressing through It. From. a practitioner at law he goes to the president's cabinet and from there to newspaper work. May he continue his logical rise. The need of Senator Burkett's Isw for the inspection of locomotive boil ers got extra illustration In a Texas railroad shop Wednesday. The mat ter of uniform and careful Inspection of locomotives is of too great Impor tance to be neglected. The worst thing that has been said of Canada for Inclining toward reci procity was said by the Toronto Even ing Telegrsm, which referred to It as a "spendthrift of inherited greatness," "the Harry Thaw among the nations." Mercy! Fifty per cent of tne possible vote would not be considered remarkably high in a country precinct, but it is being used to support a mountain of innuendo because such a condition Is found in one of Omaha's wards. Here you are: The new governor of California proposes a law that will enable governors instead of legisla tures to name the United States sen ators. He was elected on the "people rule" platform, too. The legislative mill at Lincoln Is moving by Jerks, but Its spasmodic efforts are well worth watching. Its transactions on Wednesday, for exam ple, will long be remembered In Ne braska. Troly Movlner Plctwre. Cleveland Plain Dealer. One of the most touching things In mod ern history Is the way the Steel trim Is worrying about how reciprocity Is going to Injure the American farmer. From Coal Dlna to Tanka. St. Louis Republican. Pretty eoon, if aeroplane Improvements keep on, coaling stations may be subordi nated In Importance to gasoline stations. We don't own real estate enough in some parts of the Pacific for many stations of either kind. A l.one- Star Sob. Houston Post. Uncle Sam la rushing troopa to the Mexi can border. It is a mean trick not to let Texas handle the situation. Inasmuch as we "have so much experience In dealing with affairs of this character, and enjoy the work so mucli. Amaalparlr Far-Fetched. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Mr. Lodge's contention that the popular election of United States senators would be a revolutionary Innovation la amaslngly far-fetched. But grant that It Is as he says. Have the people of the United States, after mature deliberation, the right In peace and due constitutional order to effect auch a cmtfige? Mr. Lodge in effect replies In the negative. So far as his In fluence and vote can go the people of the United iStates through thefr state legisla tures shall not be given the opportunity to effect this change. His position is vastly more revolutionary than the change pro posed. I.IXEl P IX THE 8K ATE. Party Dlvlaloaa aa Shows by Kiev tloaa to Date. Philadelphia Ledger. The membership of the next United States senate having been almost fully chosen, an examination of the party alignment Is pos sible, and It reveals fifty republicans and forty-two democrats. This Is on the as sumption that Iowa will return a republi can and that the legislatures of Colorado, Montana and New York will elect demo crats. Of the republicans at least eighteen haya shown "Insurgent" Inclinations, either by their votes on ship subsidy and other bills, or by their associations during the campaigns which resulted In their elections. Thetie are Messrs. Borah, Bourne, Brlstow, Brown. Burton. Clapp, Crawford, Cummins, Curtis, Dixon, Gamble, Oronna, La Toilette, McCumber, Polndexter, Smith of Michigan, Townaend and Works. With the house of representatives strongly democratic and the balance of power In the senate vested In a considerable body of Independent republi cans, it Is obvious not only that no stal wart republican legislation can pass con gress, but that the democrats need make but few Inroads upon the Independents In the senate to obtain concurrence In house measures. When a republican In the presi dency and the houses of congress thus so peculiarly constituted It ta fair Inference also that no very radical legislation can prevail. 1 People Talked About Paris cartoonists think women In the academy would be positively dangerous, as nothing could prevent their using their academic toy swords aa hatpins. Miss Kuhne Beveridge, the American sculptress, who lives In Munich, has ar ranged for an exhibition of her newest works to be held at Balreuth during this year's Wagnerian cycle. Exclusive of the latest exportation of Oould and gold. It Is calculated that Amer ican families contributed fifty daughters snd S214.000.000 to tha uplift movement among tha titled aristocracy of Europe. What an appalling waste of real money! E. A. Qlrvln. official reporter of the superior court of San Francisco, goes Into business for himself with $3u,O00 In his Jeans, the legal returns for transcribing 17.000 pagea of testimony In a will contest. The Job occupied the larger part of a year. Hiram Maxim seta no reasun why the problem of sending telepathic meenagea tu Australia should not b solved slnoe "all la vibration." The day Is coming when a shall have pocket telephones to do thl here will be no wires, and we shall see the party wa call, clothed and In his right mint), at any point on this planet we may select. At night we shall have to pull domn the shades by crawling Into a Maxim silencer. The Bee's Letter Box Contribution ea Timely SnBjecta Hot Exceeding Two Hundred Words Are iDTlted from Oar Beaters. 4 onrerlK ,Ur Service. OMAHA. Feb. -To the Editor of The He: In sn article In Wednesday evening's Issue of The Pee appears Hie statetnrnt that "fifty-two of the venire of IJO tut y nien called Wednesday were excused on one pretext or another." Also that "better Juries has long been the erv. but few seem to think the work of betterment should be taken as an Individual duty." The first statement cited would make It apiear that the presiding Judge was Ind.screet In ex cusing veniremen, snd It Is In his behalf (unsolicited) that I would like to speak. The presiding Judge probably rallnes 'he fact that the present Jury system Is really no better than the one preceding: thst a man who Is forced to serve ss a Juryman against his will Is a poor person In whom to trust the evidence of n esse which might mran much to the contestants. Therefore the presiding Judge, wise beyond the ordinary Judge In his position perhaps realise the Injustice he would force upon contestants In court by keeping men on the venire who are not free lo alve their time and attention to the evidence pre sented. And this Is not necesssrllly the fault of those veniremen, for few persons are able to control their thoughts and keep them In the channel which the occasion requires. That the preaent system of selrctlng Jurors Is no better than the old system of bringing them In haphazard lies In the fait that the county commissioner Is expected to know peraonslly every name sent In from his district. A county com missioner Is generally a politician and he Is thrown more or less In contact with the very element wl lch became obnoxious as "profeaslonal Jurors" tinder the old system, and these necessarllly. are the names he presents for Jury service under the present system, because the lsw requires him to know personally the men whose names he sends In. The Jury system, I believe, would be greatly Improved If an arrangement were had whereby substitution could be made for those not willing to serve on a Jury, to bo regulated by means which could he worked out through Investigation of the character of the person whose name la submitted for substitution, together with a reasonable compensation for Jury service. ONE OF THEM. Keeping Track of Events. OMAHA, Feb. . To the Editor of The Bee: The old adage, "Look before you leap," never loses Its force. A friend of mine Is visiting me from California. He had scarcely sat down In my home until he began to upbraid me because "Oma'.ia snd Nebraska both voted for New . Or leans Instesd of San fr'ranclsco" for the I'nnnma exposition. 1 assured him they did not; that we were first and last for the Pacific coast; that all our Interests lay In that direction. To this he promptly agreed and said that was why Callfor nlans wondered at our adverse action. Then I told him how our Omaha Commer cial club and our Nebraska house of representatives did get off on the wrong foot, but that they were both pulled back by more deliberate Judgment. But the pulling back did not happen to reach him and a lot of others and we stood In their eyes convicted of folly. It might be a good lesson for these august bodies In the fu ture to look long if they would Jump far.. ROGER L. JOHNSTONE. Salary Grab, OMAHA, Feb. .-To the Editor of The Bee: What occasioned this sudden demand for an Increase In the pay of our county commissioners? Was It the Impossibility of getting men to run for the office? Was It a public appeal In the Interest of better government? Or wes It Just a whisper In a roundabout way from the worthy com missioners that they would like to have more money? Let's don't do It. TAXPAYER. On Knterlnn Street Cars. OMAHA. Feb. 9-To the Editor of The Bee: I think as a rule the Omaha street railway has as courteous a lot of con ductors ss the average city, but still It has some whi sre not quite thoughtful enough, or, perhaps. I should say, reason able enough. For example, when one of our pay-as-you-enter cars is Jammed so that It seems next to Impossible for an other person to board it and a woman, who falls to squeete through the mass of men standing, necessarily, In the entrance way, tries to crowd through the exit pas sage and Is told by some upstart of a youth In blue uniform, "Enter the other way, please; this Is for exit" I say when such a thing as this happens, one Is In clined to think It would be well to trade a little courtesy for some common-sense. It does the passenger no good for the conductor to say that "them Is the rules." Of course, they Is, but like other rules, they may be set slde when emergency demands It. This Is a situation that often arises and I thought It might by this gentle means be called to the attention of our patient, public-serving corporation. (MRS.) KNOCK A. LITTLB. ROSS OF ALL TRUSTS. Hard Coal Boaeh Moat Despotic la the United States. Chicago Inter Ocean. For ten yeara individuals, companies, congressmen and communities demanded in vain that the IVpartment of Justice Insti tute proceedings under the anti-trust law against the railroads composing what Is called by everybody "the hard coal trust." When finally one ault was brought and In time reached the supreme court a decision was rendered, upholding the constitutional ity of the "commodities clause" of the Interatate commerce law, but declaring that one corporation has no "legal" Interest In a subsidiary company. The railroads Im mediately acted on that decision and organised cominles to own and operate the mines practically only changing their mcney from one pocket to another. Later the government brought a suit against the same railroads for violating the anti-trust law, but the federal circuit court at Philadelphia decided last fall that the government had failed to prove its allegations. The government took an ap peal to the supreme court, which has not acted yet on the case. Meanwhile the retail price of hard coal has been raised In every market In this country by some supreme power In the anthracite mining Industry. There Is no such thing as competition In the wagea paid miners. In railway freight rates, in prices to retail dealers or to consumers. There are those who say that the strong est, best organised and most deapotlo trust in tha United States is the hard coal trust. Haadleat Thla am Wheels. Philadelphia Press. Texana living along the Rio Orande cross the livers In automobiles to sec the fights between the federals and Inaurrectos In Mexico. There Isn't much of anything you can't do with a good automobile these daya; It la altogether about the handiest thing In use. Jolts for Omaha Tender Republic: Omaha pokes a great deal of fun at Lincoln and oVIlshts In tail ing It the "Holy City." We have often wondered w liv Lincoln does not come back at limaha by csIImik It "Nebraska's red light district." Surely it Is not because It 'would be untrue to the facts In the case. Judging fioin the general reputation of the place. j Ida Wroe da.) Pioneer: In an advertise nient In the lnd show supplement to The lOtiiHliu lice the nmnnypr of their one-horse . street tailway swells up like a poisoned pup land prints some advice to visitors Irom the ; country not to get on or off the street jcars while In motion, and not to stick their legs under the car wheels. The man who j wrote that ad. was the hlxtfcst rube in Umaha during tho 1-and show and did not know It. Hi and Island Independent: If, ss alleged, the cant ass of the vote In one district In Omaha shows three times as many votes cast In that district as the census report shows reside therein, why should Omaha I be so perturbed about it? If the governor is so radically wrong in concluding that the voting may not have been done ex actly In accordance with Hoyle, Cobbey and other authorities, are there not good grounds for Omaha to claim a much larger population than given In the census; Let the committee Investigate. Central City Nonpareil: We would sug gest to Omaha that if It Is really in earn est about its reputation that It cease abus ing Governor Aldrich and set about cor recting the things of which he complains. For Its newspapers and Its public men to declare that there Is no corruption in the city at election time Is about as effective as to argue that black Is white. Unverno. Aldrlch did not slander the city when he called attcttion to the conditions there. The conditions themselves sre what Injure the town's good name, and If they are corrected Omaha orators will not have to spend so much time In boated effusions in behalf of the city's reputation. Oakland Independent: Governor Aldrlch's message on the rotten election practices In Omaha must have atruck the quick, Judging by the way the exposure has Mlrred up things down that way. And the World- Herald gives aa an excuse that there are election abuses in every city In the country, too. The World-Herald oould do a servloa by assisting to bring about cleaner elections Instead of howling about the governor's bold and true statement. Dahlman, tha World-Herald's csndldate, got more than nine-tenths of the votes in the bloody Third ward In Omaha, so, perhaps, the paper Isn't Interested in the subject, ex cept to have it hushed. Hastings Republican: Usually governors ore elected because they stand for Soma definite policies that the people desire and demand. According to the "Idee" of some In Omaha Governor Aldrich was elected to fill the executive chair more for an ornament than anything else. The governor seems to have a different view. At any rate his excellency Keems Inclined to a policy of a general airing of election meth ods In the big city. It there la nothing wrong in Omaha, the politicians and news papers of that city have nothing to fear. If something is radically wrong if gross frauds have been perpetrated a thorough Investigation should proceed, for often In the past the majority vote In Omaha and Douglas1 county have decided a state elec tion. In case this majority has been at tained through fraudulent votes, then the people of the state at large through Gov ernor Aldrich have a right to exact honest voting In Omaha. - ' York News: Tha Omaha Merchants and Manufacturers' association Is still busy, It seems. In Issuing Interesting reading mat ter dealing chiefly with the many phases of the much disputed liquor question. In order that Nebraska legislators might not be left In Ignorance on this important mat ter they sent a nice bunch of specially pre pared matter to members of the house. In seeking to prove that prohibition does not prohibit York county was cited as on which though virtually dry Is yet obliged to Bpend $860 a year for grand Juries to Investigate violations of the liquor laws. The house was promptly Informed of the error In the figures In this "proof" by Rep resentative Colton, who registered a pub lic protest and stated the facts In the case In plain language. It Is a good thing to represent a community that Is worth stand ing up for and It is also a good thing for a community to have a representative who will show his loyalty. Mel. Prelates Kirhaage Ureetlwsa. Philadelphia Record. The Interchange of congratulations on some Improvement In their respective con ditions between Archbishop Ryan and Bishop Whltaker Is an exceedingly Inter esting Incident, and the public congratulates both prelates and hopes for still better news from their sick rooms. I --"u """" 131 ! 1 3 UZ Liberal Free Sample r.specally valusble in aural affections of children mild. pure, hi sanitary tubes. Especial!) recommended by physicians for children with cold In the head, which otten brings on chronic ful drum KoM r.nl i- - . T . recommended by over 85,000 II yours han t Kondon's. a 26c or 60c tube will be sent you postpaid on receipt of nrlce. or hili.i. r li u Kondon Miff. ComDanV. Mlnneannll. Minn. sLsBBaasall ThE OLDEST NATIONAL BANK IN NEBRASKA M years of continuous management; S4 years of steady growth In assets; (4 years ot Increasing ability to properly safeguard the Increasing funds of depositors; therefore a good place for YOUR account and especially your SAVINGS, 31 Interest on Time Deposits r T Tir Fill TnZ .1- H hVll IT 11L Bankof l -A A A A Talrtseath aa LyvH. - EDITORIAL SNAPSHOTS New York World: Hut rei Repi rsei.i a the Mm on of Arkaii iis ought not to tie come a dully nuisance. Om e In a whlU enoush. Wpshlnaton Tost: When a woman f.n ' a poKer hip In her husband a poi ket r I a sign she thinks she wa cut out f.-i ; detective Minneapolis .lauinal: Miss Jane Aririams is considered the highest authority on chiM ren In this country. Mls Ids 1'arbe'l I likewise the lilsheit authority on nioihi i IHm't Mls the point. Indianapolis News: Senator llevhuin ha' cast his annual vote attains! permit to, . confederate teterans to use government tents. As the philosopher has well .-ij consistency, thou art a Jewel. Chicago Record-Herald: In Ohio there . a Judgi who holds that a woman ma in; money from her husband without p kriowletlge or consent and be guiltless stealing. This is likely to cause mm. bachelors to struggle along without nhe- Raltlmore American: The latest stunt ' aviation Is the herding of esttle with , aeroplane. Before long, possibly, we sin he raising a winged-breed of calt'e, sn .i with nanKing prairies for pasture and an n rowbo.vs the Inml will be left lo the shsti,. of finance. TOI. I. FOR INK DKAII, lMMM II.III...H.H II ... I 1 . 1 1 - Post Hill. Chicago Tribune. In ism. during tha session of the fi .i ll.OOO.non.OOli congress. Mr. John Wanamsk., the postmaster general, utteied his m- famous saying namely : "There are Just four good reasons agam-t the parcels' post, and they are the Amen can ICxpress company, the Adams Kx press company, the United states Kxpres company, and the We! Is-Fargo company Mr. Wanamaker's epigram comes of ag this yesr. It Is Just as pat today as It wa on lis first birthday, and It looks as If li had several years of active Ufa ahead of it. For the present session of ccngrfp has decided to bury the parcels post bill proposed by the president to bury l: quietly and deep. "Not a drum was heard, not a funeial note." Not one single little speech has been made openly against the bill. But It Is already In Its shroud and lis grave Is beinn dug-for four good reasons. WHITTLED TO A POINT. Ryker-ls he a chip off the old block-btryker-No; he s a Joker off the old deck Judge. Ticket Collector Wa don't stop here. sir. Montague Swank I who lias Juat given ud a ticket) rltop where? Ticket Collector At the pawnbroker's. M. A. P. "The trouble about my son la that he never knows where he Is at." "Then why not get him a Job with the weather bureau'.'" Baltimore American. Why don't you take an active part In Itlcs?" poi My wealth prevents It," replied Mr. Dustln Ktax. "I wouldn't be able to give a dollar In philanthropy without being ac cused of starting a campaign fund to prejudice publio opinion." Washington Hiar. Mrs. Uorkina-John. 1 saw a magnificent lerslan rug downtown this morning that could be bought for only 1:0. Mr. Dorklns (titarlng vacantly at the cell ing) It waa a sixty-horse-power. 1W1 pat tern, and I could have got It for n.fluo. Chicago Tribune. "The funniest thins I ever heard was a German soprano singing In Italian." Then you have never heard an Italian soprano singing in erman."-Clcveland Plain lealer. PBOPHETS OF SPRING. New York World. Wild geeae went honking in the night Above the pasture drear; Their chorus tended to excite The rustic weather-seer. ".!?. earlv Prlrg! Gh, Joyous news!" That wishbone prophet aald. And then he found he had to use More blankets on his bed. A lone mosquito "Blzs-xlxs" About a Nutmeg brow. The sage observer aaid. "This ia A sign spring's coming now. O harbinger of weather mild. Of green In field and grove!" And then he got more wood and piled It In the red-hot atove. A robin sang within a glade In Jersey or In (Conn.); at h"r earollnga he made The theme of "Spring" upon! But aa he trilled tha aky to win. His high sopranoo broke, Until his solo ended In A rasping bronchial throat. The groundhog ventured out to see If ha weuld east a ahade; Whereon ha chuckled In hla glee, For not a spot ha made. I "Henceforth the weather will be nlee." ' He barked, puffed up with pride. And then, all crusted round with Ice, That woodchuck frose and died. O prophets of the early spring, rvvru Dy simple- men I Tha same old brand of dope you bring, and I h.n M n A ,t.An m A . I, Well, then I look within my bin n aai my nara-earned roll. And speed me out and order In A fresh supply of ooal. This Free Will Cure Catarrhal Cause If suffering from Catarrhal deafness write us for Free Sample of "Kondon's" Mrniflnant mmt n .1 . i i kuu apeetiy cure aromatic, soothing, pleasant, healino-. - - e - niulrii.rri. i ' , i o iiarm- "Ti ronvtnient tunes and druetlsta In -Jbr anrf ftAe ih.. TVT J. 1 OnnilSllinEl ft a tiHittitittilaa, raraam Streets 1 IL-f l VJ