14 TIIE BKE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911. Tim Omaha Daily Bee FOUNDED BT EDWARD HOSE WATER. VICTOR IlOSEWATER. EDITOR, Entered at Omaha postnfflce as iK-ond claim matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. minnay Fee. ona year.; $2 50 Saturday Kmi, on year ifio iMillr lira (without Sunday), ona year.. 4.00 Dally lira and Sunday, ona year 6.00 DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Evening 3e (with Sunday), per month.. ts Dally Bra (Including Punday). per mo.. 5c Dally Baa (without Sunday), ser mo.... 4..e Address all complalnta of Irregularities in eeuvery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha Tha Bp Building-. South Omaha 26 N. Twenty-fourth St. Council Bluffs 16 Soott St. Lincoln 2H Little Building. Chlcagd 164S Marquette Building. . Kimat City Reliance Building. , New York 34 Weat Thirty-third St. Washington 725 Fourteenth St., N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to newa and ao i tonal matter should ba addressed Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order. payable trt The B?e Publishing Company. Only I-cent stamp received In payment of mail accounts. i-ersonai cnecka except on umana ana eastern exchange not acueptea, MAY CIRCULATION, . 48,473 ' . State of Nebraska. County of Douclaa. aa. Dwlght Wllllama, circulation manager of J he liea Publishing Company, being duly worn. says that tha average dally circula tion less spoiled, unuaed and returned coplee for tha month of May, toll, waa 4,i3. DWIOHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to lerore mo thla 1st day of June, lull. tSeal.J ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Public, Subscriber leaving the) city tem porarily ahould hare Tha Be nailed to them. Address will ba ehaagred aa oftea aa requested. Those earthquake shocks seem to be giving us in Omaha the go-by. "Mystery of the Crumpled Voucher" would make a good title for a prob lem play. . t .' 'Some one demands the name ot the inventor of the aeroplane. What for, to have him arrested T The former secretary of the Sugar trust testifies like a man who had been through a rehearsal. ' Most of us still refuse to believe that the country will go to the bow wows with or without reciprocity. Colonel Bryan will not be able to devise his own paramounter until he gets all the others out of the way. Tomorrow is registration day. If you are uncertain whether your name is on the list of voters, better make sure of it. Christmas is coming in the middle of June, the Central American general of that name having landed troops at New Orleans. If congress continues in session on through the summer its appropriations for water carriers may look like watered stock. It was a hot month for the trusts, too, showing that the sun's rays 'as well as the rain drops fall on the un just and the Just alike. The British have ample evidence in history to prove that their fondness for the name "George" is not due to the fact that that was also Washing ton's name. The Atlanta Constitution puts it that "The Chinese worm has turned." Yes, and before it crawls off Mexico's back with those 26,000,000 pesos it may look like a snake. Mr. Carnegie declares he does not read what newspapers say of him. Cer tainly not. Few men of his wealth do. They hire clerks and press clipping bureaus for that purpose. J Why should Omaha people have to pay more for ice than Is exacted in Des Moines, Kansas City, Denver and St. Joseph? It must be simply be cause Omaha stands for it. Th Charleston News and Courier regards Jeff Davis of Arkansas as a severe tax on the public. Yes, some times the people are half-way justified In dodging taxes, or trying to. The Judges of our Nebraska su preme court soem to draw the line at playing base ball. They prefer to let the lawyers toss the sphere while they hand down the umpire's decisions. Former Senator W. A. Clark's pipe organ at his Fifth avenue mansion cost $110,000. Of course it requires an organ of that immensity to give full volume to a multi-millionaire's notes. Omaha barbers want a Sunday clos ing law. Of course, there Is 'nothing to prevent them from agreeing to close on Sunday now except the fact that each Is afraid the other will renege. Omaha will know pretty soon whether or not it gets the new railway mall v service division headquarters. And Omaha will get it unless someone t Washington again falls asleep at the switch. The Courier-Journal remarks that In Kentucky "emotional politics Is be ginning to yield to common sense." Congratulations, Kalntuck, and we hope all theother states may soon make the same claim. At the fast and furious rates the casualties are coming in (t evidently will not make much difference In this neck of the woods whether our glori ous Fourth of July celebration Is safe tad. sane or not. The Farmer in the Limelight. This Is the particular season of the year when all attention turns to the farmer. He Is, to put It real academic ally, "the cynosure of all eyes," only It Is ears and minds as well as eyes that are focused upon klm. lie bus no difficulty getting a 'hearing with anyone now. In fact, he does aot have to ask for it; the other fellow Is doing that The farmer Is the man behind the closed, cushloned-covered door. The tables are turned. Outside In the ante room are the banker, the merchant, the railroader, the manufacturer, the farm laborer and even the automobile man. All alike are Interested in the farmer's welfare, his prosperity. All are anxious for him to reap a rich and abundant harvest, to get the best prices for his products and to come out with a balance on the right side of the ledger. All are interested this way, because each is Interested In bis own selfish business interest. Just now, between the time of the ripening of the grain and the gleaning, between the rain and the sun, between this un certainty and that everybody sits watching the farmer, to see what the harvest is going to be. Why all this concern over the crops? Because, after all, we are pre-eminently an agricultural people, with all the great maze and machinery of com merce dependent in large measure upon that oldest of industries. Why does the neatly groomed man of fash ion, who perhaps never was bn a real farm, greet you the first thing in the day with, "Well, I'd like to see rain: the crops need it?" New wealth comes from the farm. A crippled crop means consequent deformity of industry and trade. This turning of the thought so exclusively to the farm, even if it does appear selfish, denotes that encourag ing fact that we are becoming more intelligent as to the source and char acter of our prosperity. Good Eoads. One feature of the good roads con vention at York that will commend It greatly to the folks interested In the movement is the temperate Jone of the proceedings. The delegates avoided the flamboyant resolutions too often adopted at ' such gatherings' and mapped out a campaign that seems practical and worthy of undertaking. The economic value of good roads Is too well established to call for illus tration. That it costs more to' irt the products of the' farm from the farm to the railroad has long been demon strated, and probably will still be true after the best of good roads have been provided. But this should not deter the effort' to better the condition of the highways as far as possible, and thus reduce the cost of the initial item In the great bill of costs the "ulti mate consumer" must pay. City people are as deeply, if not as directly," interested in rood roads as the farmer, and should give the mat ter quite as much -attention. With the people of Nebraska awakened to the need for better highways', the Im provement desired is bound to come. Wisconsin's Proposed Income Tax. The Wisconsin legislature has Just passed a bill providing for a state income tax, whose operation depends upon the approval of a majority of the voters at the general election in November, 1912. The bill proposes a tax on "all Incomes, of individuals. firms and corporations," ranging from one-half of 1 to 6 per cent and ex empts the, corporations which pay taxes directly into the state treasury, such as railroads and insurance com panies. It allows an exemption for an unmarried person of $1,000 a year, witn $200 additional for every person dependent on the taxpayer for support. It Axes the married man's exemption at $1,200, with an additional $200 for every minor child or other person de pendent on him for support. Thus Wisconsin becomes the first state to make definite headway toward the working out of this perplexing problem, agitated alike in state and federal forums. The provisions of the bill are apparently not unfairly drawn; the exemptions are much more liberal than those contained In most European laws and would not be regarded as a hardship on any, particularly if, as it must be assumed, this taxation is to take the place of some other tax now being levied. The referendum feature of the bill leaves entirely to the people tne rejection or acceptance of tha proposition and gives them more than a year in which to study the feasibility or Bucn a law. Needlessly Prolonging; the Discussion. James J. Hill calls those senators who are opposing Canadian reciprocity "ghost dancers," and compares them with the old-time medicine men who went about among the Indians in the early days, playing upon their cre dulity and superstition 1 and often "working them up Into frightful fury." Mr. Hill, however, Is not the only one with this placid assurance that the reciprocity bill is as good as passed. Senator McCumber, the chief "ghost dancer," has admitted In a speech In the senate that "this measure will pass the senate by a vote of nearly two to one." He confessed in beginning hU last argument. "I do not expect my discussion will' change a single vote In this fight." Others opposing rec iprocity have conceded as much. Yet we are told in the dispatches from Washington that the debate will be prolonged "for weeks." If the thing is settled now, why extend the discus sion, consuming time and expense that might be devoted to other things? The opponents of the bill, it is said, will do most of the talking from now oh. If they continue long enough, they will lay themselves liable to con viction on Mr. Hill's charge of being "ghost dancers." A half-way careful examination of the Congressional Rec ord would disclose evidence tending to convince most reasonably-minded per sons that about everything that needs to be said pro and con on this sub ject can be quickly said. If it Is settled there is no need to prolong the discussion. In the Good Old Summer Time. W'hen the weather conditions are most trying, and the heat seems unen durable, try to be patient. The man alongside of you feels the heat quite as much as you do, and his nerves aft strained Just as yours are. This Is the time to exercise forbearance. Don't worry about the temperature; you can't control it, and you must en dure it some way. Stick to your task and you'll suffer less. Don't indulge too freely . in cold drinks; don't eat too much, and avoid all sorts of excesses. Thus you may enable nature to respond to the un usual strain placed upon you. ' Whatever else you do, don't fret Fretting superinduces conditions that Increase dlscqmfort. The heated term will not last for ever, and if yon will just be patient you'll minimize its effects. Why Boys Shun West Point. Difficult as it is to account for the decided falling off in the number of applicants for admission to West Point, there can be nothing in the theory that the growing sentiment of peace as a substitute for war has any thing to do with it. Whatever the reason may be, it is certainly an an omalous condition as compared with former times when senators and con gressmen were besieged by youths am bitious to get into the national mili tary training' school, and no member of either house would have thought of letting his right to name a cadet go by default. Possibly it is no longer so much the fashion to attend West Point. Possi bly ambitious youth today goes in more for freedom from restraint and less for rigid discipline In getting his athletic training. Possibly the boys of this day are not r-burtlng hard work and imagine they can get more for their time with less arduous routine than is exacted, at West Point. Pos sibly any or none of these may be the reason, or maybe each has a part to do with the situation. We are scarcely disposed to believe that the average American youth is avoiding West Point because he shuns hard knocks in getting his start. It would be a sorry come-off for this nation if that were the reason. The rugged side of West Point Is needed in the life of the American boy and man, and the only regret, is that there is not more of it. But the real reason, or reasons, will doubtless come to light in due season. The White House Party. The silver wedding anniversary of President and Mrs. Taft is to be a distinctly democratic function. More than 3,000 guests have been invited to this White House party. The number Includes people high in official life and others not in official positions at all, but friends of the chief executive and his wife in different parts of the coun try. It will be a typical American gathering, bringing into contact what we might call the high amd low. At least It will bring together many ele ments of our population, representing various ranks and occupations. Such an assemblege in such a place Is in bold contradiction to the royal event soon to transpire in London. Of course, it might not be considered quite fair to compare, socially or otherwise, the crowning of a British king with the celebration of an Ameri can president's twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. It is not possible, even if fair, for theimple reason that there is no common standard for measuring together the, amenities of royalty and democracy. It is on such occasions as this one in Washington Monday that Americans may justly regale themselves in the vaunted pride of their government and their national ideals and customs' Underneath this, however, is another thought that should not be lost to the mind, and that Is that In spite of the wide disparity of national characters and institutions, there is a practical Intimacy of association between the British and Americans quite sufficient to span any chasm of tradition. The Dally Mining Gazette of Hough ton, Mich., says it is unfair to assert that the great steel corporation has "ever hid its light under a bushel." In other words, it maintains that the Carnegie ijiethod, the Morgan method and the Gary method has always been "to show the public practically every thing It wants to know about the con ditions of the corporation's business affairs." Perhaps that is why In this Investigation so many men, who un doubtedly know the inner workings of the trust, contradict each other in their direct testimony. An Inquisitive Indiana congressman has introduced a bill requiring every newspaper mailed at second-class postage rates to print In a conspicuous place the name of the owner, publisher and managing editor. Not bad bill. The Bee has always advocated pub licity and would be glad to furnish the Information, which may be had right now on application by anyone who has any reason to know. Naturally, our local democratic con temporary comes to the defense of "King Caucus." "King Caucus" was an Indefensible tyrant when he was doing business on the republican side of the fence, but now that he is crack ing the whip over the democratic fold, "King Caucus" has become a benevo lent and enlightened ruler. The State Board of Educational Land and Funds Is contemplating on selling more of the bonds of other states held In the permanent school fund In order to reinvest In securities of subdivisions of our own state under authority conferred by a law enacted by the last legislature. The question whether it Is profitable for the state to sell and reinvest should be care fully figured out In each case. ' When the state bought Its present holdings It did It on a premium basis, paying the premium by detaching unmatured Interest coupons, thus deferring the receipt of an income from the Invest ment, sometimes for several years. If these bonds wore to be sold at less than what was paid for them the school fund would be that much out, and would have to make it up or. In creased returns from the investment. The new law Is intended to get the permanent school fund back into Ne braska, but It Is not Intended to do so at any material sacrifice. I Colonel C. B. Edgar, former editor of the Lincoln Star, has taken editor ial control of the Oklahoma City Times, which will give him a good neld for journalistic activity. The Bee wishes Colonel Edgar luck and unlimited prosperity in his new ven ture. An Old Favorite. Washington Post. The report of the widows and orphans among the augar trust stockholders has an old, familiar sound. Pa reels Post Maat Come. Sacramento Union. Postmaster' General Hitchcock has com pletely broken the back of the argument against a parcels post by his conversion of the traditional deficit f the Poetofflce department into a surplus. If this waa pos sible despite the excessive payments to railroads for carrying the mails, there is no use talking any more against parcels service. Coaceiitratloa of Baaklasr Capital. Springfield Republican. Chicago aeems to have taken awav from New York the financial glory of having the largest bank in the country. With th absorption of the Hibernian bank the Con tinental ana Commercial Rational of Chi cago Is abla to claim resources aggregating 126,XjO,000 and deposits of over $223,000 000. ihls goes quite a way ahead of th nt. tlonal City of New York, which has de posits ot about 116,000,000 and has hitherto been the greatest banking institution in the United States. Six formarlv . Inr. . banks have been extinguished i .ir. Chicago's big concern. We may now doubt lesa expect to hear of further bank con solidations in the New York field, which will not lightly relinquish tha claim to possession of the country. largest moneyed iiivuiuuun. MEXICO'S DILI, OP COSTS. A Taste of the Luxury of Revelation for Taxpayers. Baltimore American. The announcement by the provisional ov. ernment of Mexico to the effect that all Americans and other foreigners who bava sustained property losses or who have been otherwise Injured In the revolutionary up heaval, will be financially recompensed will undoubtedly soon produce tha visual demonstration that a revolution, measured In Its by-products of destructlveness alone, Is a very costly proposition. Already an American Mormon colony that had settled in Chihuahua has sent in a round $1,000,000 claim for damages. This is but a starter. The mining Industries and tha railroads, which have been the chief sufferers, are yet to be heard from. President de la Barra has asked the Mex ican congress to create a commission for the adjustment of war claims, and the findings of this commission will ba likely to affect the balance sheet of national finance in a very changeable way. The na tional debt of Mexico at the beginning of the revolution was small In proportion to tha annual revenues. At the beginning of the present year the total debt was $280, 965,860 'and the revenues for the last fiscal year were $96,031,000. It Is, not likely that the revolutionary cost will Increase tha debt by as much aa $100,000,000, but even such an Increase could be easily carried. Mexico bas vaat resources, and if the revo lution la succeeded by a period of com plete Industrial activity, there will surely be evolved a greater Mexico. During a pe riod of more than thirty years, and until the outbreak of the Maderoa revolution, Mexico had been devoting mora attention to business than to war. Hence the abound ing prosperity. People Talked About HEiW Always an actor, Mr. Miller la the real matinee Idol of New York. Mrs. Catt. re-elected president of tha Suffrage Alliance, disclaims responsiDiuty for her rams. Says she "got it from her husband." Parker I Walker of Salem. Mass.. has served continuously as a church organist about fifty-four -yeara and, considering his age. Is said to have filled the position longer than any other organist In tha coun try. Jamea Chains and Z. E. Jackson of Atchison, Kan., are going hunting In the wilds of British Columbia, armed only with bowl and arrows. They expect to go after mountain Hons and gristly bears If the opportunity should arise. The valedictorian of the graduating class ot Williams 'college la to be Jamea Oar field, son of President Harry Garfield and grandson of Jamea A. Garfield, twentieth president of tha United States. Grand father, father and sua are graduates- of a WllU In Other Lands Ida Light ea What la Transpiring- Among tha Wear and "a BTattoaa at tha Earth tlon of tha peace of Europe Is housed In the Moroccan magailn at Fes, around - -nil 'uwucr iu biow un a mm m-. wnicn tne aoldlcrs of Franca ara stationed France took the first step to enforce order in tne disturbed section, exercising police power rights conceded by the Algeclras convention or 1909. 6 pain proposes to break Into the fracas, despite the disastrous ex perience at Melllla a year ago, by dis patching troops to occupy the towns of letuan and Larache on the west coast. ranee insists that Spain's action la un called for and unfriendly, while Germany ",rn ranee against attemotlna- In Morocco the British scheme of squatter sovereignty- ao effectively exploited in Egypt How long a time will be required to establish order In Fes and vicinity la as uncertain as a weather prophecy In midsummer. As fast as ona section Is rid of Insurgent Mussulman a row starts at some other point, so that the policing sol diera may be kept busy Indefinitely. Late reports Indicate that Raisull, the notorious brigand, la out for blood and Indemnity. A Spanish protege was recently captured and beheaded by him as a warning to. both Spanish and French peacemakers. Mean while the yellow press of Franoe. Spain and Germany are thundering as loudly and aheddlng larger quantities of warlike Ink than did tha yellows of tha United States when Insurrection popped up on the Moxlcan side of the Rio Grande. The el feet of the former, however, should not be gauged by the futility of the latter. Abroad, the screams of the yellows are taken seriously, while In this country they provide pity and a kick Into the gutter, A sinister feature of tha Balkan war cloud set In motion by the Insurgent Al banians Is the mobilisation by Turkey of the picturesque cut-throats known aa the Bashi Baxouks. Whenever a Turkish row becomes ugly and menacing the Basouks are called to th work of merciless slaugh ter. In dealing wtlh the Albanians, how ever, they go against foemen who ara born huntsmen. lodged in mountain defiles, af fording unequalod opportunities for marks men to work terrible execution on an at' tacking force. During the Macedonian re volt of 1R03," writes a Vienna correspond ent, "a certain restraint was observed In the employment of the Irregulars, due to the pressure of European publlo opinion. But since the Turkish revolution the pow ers have relaxed all vigilance and public opinion has dozed. While there is no ques tion of the tight of the Turkish authorities. vigorously to suppress revolt in Albtna, as in Arabia and other parts of the empire, none but the most shortsighted friends of the Young Turka could condone the need less employment of the methods Invariably associated with the name of Bashl Ba louk." The prevalence of insurrection In the northern and southern borders of the Otto man empire Albania and Arabia' afford ground for current reports of active an tagonism to the present Turkish regime on the part of Russia and Great Brltian. Present conditions are favorable' to such co-operation. Both governments have every reason to oppose German Influences in Turkey. Russia is not likely soon to forget the defl of Emperor William when Austria gobbled Herzegovina, and England has a chronic case of germanophobla. Ger man officers are reorganising and drilling the Turkish army. Railroads under Ger man control penetrate to the eaatern bor ders . hitherto monopolised by England on the South, and Russia on the north. - These railroad activities aim at the Persian gulf. Russia has quartered a dlvtslslon of Its army In Northern Persia whtla England la extending Its control of the gulf waters. The internal troubles of Turkey keep the army employed at home, while the oppos ing Influences of Russia and England ex tend footholds at atrategio points and pos sibly give the needed aid and encourage ment of ammunition to the Inaurgents. The game has all the earmarks of national greed and land hunger, and its develop ment Is well worth watching. "The mo tive," writes the St. Petersburg corres pondent of the New York Bun, "for the present inflexible hostility of tha two gov ernments to the new Turkish regime Is by no means based on altruistic sympathy with oppressed Christian nationalities nor even on treaty rights. It springs from the con viction held by Russia and England that Turkey Is not to be trusted. Moreover they think that she Is not to be feared. It would seem to be abundantly proved that the new course In Turkey has failed signally to bring to the top any man of the caliber and authority needed to save the Ottoman empire from floundering." The French government la determined to put Into effect the decree defining the area In which the real champagne is produced. The former attempt to settle this delicate question brought destructive riots In the affected district In April and May. Two champagne sonea ara defined by tha decree. The first sons, comprising the de partment ot the Marne, Is to have the right to label its wines "champagne," but the second tone, comprising the depart ment of the Aube, must label Its wines, "Champagne from tha second sone." Tha wine producers ot the Aube, consequently, threaten to die in their tracks before sub mitting to such discrimination. They de clare, by resolutions, that thay will resist to the end. Doubtless tha government is prepared for any disturbances, but there Is grave danger of starting a blaze that may develop Into a conflagration in wh! h the Monls ministry will be concerned. - Sweeping changes In the suffrage of Italy is proposed by the government bill, which Is likely to ba passed without modi fication. Practically tha bill ordains man hood, sufrage In place of the present sys tem of educational and property qualifica tions. Tha charge will increase tha num hood suffrage In place of tha present system of educational and property qualifications. The change will increase the number of voters from about 3,000,000 to nearly ,000,000. able, that la, to read, but not to writs. One result of tha change will ba to make over whelmingly predominant the influence of the south Italians. For while It merely doubles tha vote in northern Italy and trebles It In central Italy. In Rome and Naples tha vote will be Increased fourfold, and In Sicily and Sardinia fivefold. ' "SpllelasT tha Mala Brace." Philadelphia Ledger. The British admiralty's determination to honor coronation day by observing the an cient custom of "splicing the main brace" which means making two portions of grog flow where ona flowed before may bava the effect of making tha Jolly tars wlah there was a new king to be crowned every once In a while. Listen for the Yell. ' Houston Poet. Brlstow says It would require extreme provocation to Induce him to take notice of Jeff Davis of Arkansaw. When a Kan sas senator has the nerve to scorn Arkan aaw'a redneck senator, it Is time far tha Oaarks to roar and yell oountry to take notice. CURTIS' CONQUEST. McCook Tribune: "Let us go after some thing else" Is tha motto sugceetrd by a Cambridge booster. "Let us go after the state board" Is the motto offered by a I Holdrege disappointed, The former for : as. Hlldreth Telescope: Holdrege Is a poor loser. The fact that the state board lo cated the new agricultural school at Cur tla has brought forth walls that are loud and long from the people of that little olty. Wa favored Holdrege and still think the school should have been located there, but there Is no occasion for'any knock Ing. Holdrege doesn't need inv aarlcul- tural school to enable her to continue to grow and prosper and be one of the best l.ttle cities In the state of Nebraska. Alma Record: Should future develop, ments disclose the fact that Lincoln's in fluence together with other Interests dominated the action of the board in lo cating the agricultural school at Curtis, an Inaccessible point, ao that it would not be a competitor with the Lincoln Institu tion, the capltol removal proposition, which Is still unsettled, will po doubt becomo a live issue and be settled in such a way that the capltol city will forever regret having tried to dictate the policies and politics of the state. Bridgeport News-Blada: Curtis, down In Frontier county, has been selected as the site for the new state agricultural school. ui wnai aa vantages Curtis possesses over North Platte, Broken Bow, Holdrege, Alma and the other towns which were as pirants for the school, we do not know. but. Just the same, when the members of the State Board ot Public Lands and Build ings recall the "big feeds" which were spread In helr honor by the people of the now aisappointed towns, their consciences will reproach them for years to come. Elwood Bulletin: We congratulate the people of Curtis In securing the new agri cultural school. We have no fault to find with Curtis whatever. We also extend to the taxpayers who have to pay the $100,- 000 our sympathy for having the school located In so isolated a section of south western Nebraska that the attendance and general use of tha school will never be what it would have been had It been lo cated In a more densely settled section or one where it would have been mora con veniently reached by rail, of the eleven towns asking for the location of the agri cultural school. The Board of Public Lands and Building might have dons bet ter. They could not have done more. St. Paul Republican: Being acquainted 1th the town of Curtis and country sur rounding It, we cannot agree with some of our contemporaries that the Board of Pub llo Lands and Buildings made a mistake In the location ot the new agricultural school. Not only is the scenery around the town delightful but It has soma very fine table and valley land, and that part of the country gets as much rainfall aa any part of the state, and has Just as many advan tages as any of the other towns men tioned. In fact it has a beautiful lake and some very nice natural timber along the Little Medicine river from the north. ' The only argument that can be set up is, that the town does not have as large a popula tion aa , some of the other towns men tloned. Curtis Is situated In a very pic turesque spot, encircled on the north by hills of gradual slope which are easy 'of acoeas and pleasing to the, eye. In years to come we believe that, the wisdom of the board will be approved. MR., BRYAN. AND THE SOUTH. Soma Remarks Stronsr Eiouk Reach Falrvlew. Houston (Tex.) Post (dem.). We find this paragraph In the Knoxvin Sentinel: "Representative Robert Lee Henrv nf lexas appreciates Mr. Bryan's treat In. fluence. "If Bryan should declare against any aemocratlo candidate for nomination or election he said, 'that candidate could naraiy carry the state of Texas.' Mr. Henry did not believe a candidate could carry Texaa over Mr. Bryan's opposition and he says that would be true not only In Texaa, but In nearly every southern state." Mr. Henry Is, no doubt, an earnest ad. mlrer of Mr. Bryan, but It Is difficult to h- lleve that he made any auch statement as the above, because be Is bound to know it Is not true. Furthermore, it is a great re flection upon the Intelligence and Indepen dence of tha people of Texaa. Mr. Bryan bitterly opposed the nomina tion of Judge Parker In 1904. as did some of the Influential democrata of Texaa. Tin Texas was overwhelmingly for Judge Par-J iter ror tna nomination, as were most of the southern states. Undeed, it was the south that nominated Parker. In spite of the most bitter opposition Mr. Bryan oould offer. Mr. Bryan is not as influential In Texas or In any other southern state as he was at that time, and there is no doubt ha ha lost much prestige lately because of his attitude toward tha democrata In congress on tne question of free wool. When tha campaign opens next year, the democrats of tha southern states are going to make their choice without regard to Mr. Bryan's views. They ara going to please them selvea. Just as Mr. Bryan pleases himself, In tha matter of selecting tha candidate. and they are not going to undertake to please anybody else. When the nomination Is made they will support the nominee. Just aa they always do, regardleaa of Mr. Bryan's course. There Is no reason to believe that Mr Bryan will not be equally faithful, but If he should bolt the nominee of the conven tlon ha would not carry with him enough votea from any southern state to affect the result. Where Quickness Saves Expena. Sioux City Journal. The Omaha Board of Education pulled off a superlntendency without benefiting to any appreciable extent the postal revenues or the passenger receipts of the railroads. Tha compensating circumstance Is that Omaha waa denied the time to get Itself by tha ears. -DAWN O'HARA ought to be a mighty popular young woman this summer, and even after, wherever the printed pages of romance can reach. She is pretty, fresh, charm ing, piquant, of the American Irish, possessed of an unfailing sense of humor, yet with enough pathos in her story to afford an interest wholly human and uncloyed." N. Y. World THE GIRL WHO LAUGHED A Novel by EDNA FERBER r 1.25 ntt HAS UO SUBSTITUTE V. 3 Absolutely Puro Tho only baking powdor mado from Royal Grstpo Croam of Tartar K3ALU:U:3U?.!EFi::SFHATE SENATORS BYDIRECT VOTE. St. Louts Republic: Direct nomination ot senatora is not a very good substitute ror popular election of senators, but after lot of men had got Into the senate through the direct nomination route approval of a popular election amendment to the con stltutlon followed as a matter of course. Cleveland Plain 'Dealer: The senate has always appeared unwilling to take any action looking toward a change In tha method of electing Its members. Possibly some of those who supported tha Brlstow amendment took that stand In the hope of thereby msklng lmtosslhle an agreement between senate and house. Houston (Tex.) Post: So far at the south Is concerned, the direct election of senators already prevails In a substantial form. The senators are nominated In direct pri maries. The direct primary system prevails In many other states, So very little would ba lost In delaying the change of system until a fairer proposition can be sub mitted. Washington Star: Still, while a law .pro viding for a direct vote for senatora is not absolutely necessary to the Improvement ot senatorial elections, such a law should be passed. Deadlocked legislatures, with eenatorshlps in . contest, produce alt sorts of scandal, a, poor quality of laws, and, not Infrequently, a very doubtful quality of senators. .( Chicago Inter Ocean: Had this resolution been opposed, pot with a mer lawyer's public would have been spared a staggering biow. GRINS AND GROANS. "Are you going to tha automobile races tnie arternoon ' "No. I prefer the ball game." Pshaw! Come on. be a snort. It aln'tJ likely that anybody will be killed at thoj ban game. Chicago liecord-Herald. "Oh. for a lodge In some vast wilderness, sighed the man who quotes poetry. 'What's the use ot 'talking nonsense!' rejoined the matter-of-fact friend. "If you naa a inage in a wilderness it wouidn t b two weeks befare you Wero clamorln foi a railroad ami a real estate boom." Wash lngton Star. t A German went to a friend and laldr "Tomorrow I owe you $J0,0ti0. I am ruined. I cannot pay It, and I cannot shleep a vlnk." The creditor said: "Vy didn't you valt to dell me tomorrow? Now nelder can I shleep a vink." Uonton Trans cript. ' Us Come right In, old man, and see our new baby! There Isn't he great? He Oh, yes! Fine! Well, they say homely babies grow up to be handsome- that is, you can be thankful or well, how much he looks like his mother, I mean! Toledo Blade. Wagg That thunder and lightning scenu in your act won't go In a retined show. I Tagg Why not? I Wagg Because the thunder Is too loud and the lightning U apt to bo too striking. , Baltimore American. t Visitor Was old man Jonea well fixed, do you know? J Native 'You bet! He left prlxe-eontextf coupons good for $45 on a thoufand-dollarf Piano; a credit on a .sewing machine, an other one for first payment of $3 In a seil.a of seventy-five payments on a Iong Inland lot, and a mlSHlng word coupon good for $7 worth of groceries in a Chicago house If you bought a hundred dollars worth. first. Puck. A WHOLESOME REMEDY. New York Times. Miss Mary Elizabeth Madeline Fayles, A sMrl ahntif aeven ni nlrht Had cherished the habit of biting her nails. Ana pracucea it early ana late. ! From auch an absurd and ridiculous trick It was not a long time before Each delicate flnger-tlp down to tha qulok waa puiniuiiy tenaer ana sore. Elisabeth's father declared 'twas a sin fiuch beautiful flnirers to sftnll! rAnd big brother said, with a comical grin, let s smear them with capsicum .oil. So capsicum, aloes, and pitch were applied, Ana vile thlnge too many to name: But Mary Elisabeth silently cried And nibbled her nails Just the same. Then Mrs. Faylea said, with delight in her voice, 'I've thought of a cure sure as fate!" She tried it at once and had cause to re-' joice; The nail biting ceased from that data. H'hut potent device did this fond mother use . curing the trlrk of her pet? vaa simply an artifice, stratagem, ruse bought her a munlcura set. Publish by STOKES