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TilE WASHINGTON HERALD SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2 1007 i iii i lI j C ± THE WASHINGTON HERALD PutJ hKj Every Morning in the Yetr by THE WASHINGTON HERALD COMPANY PttUkation Office 4 FIFTEENTH STREET NORTHWEST Entered as secondclass matter October P 1 06 at the postofllce at Washington D C under aot of Congress of MSroh 3 1S7S SCOTT C BONE Editor Erncit H Merrick Treuorir tad Businm Minafe- rQtrtace C Advertiilnf Manger J Harry Cunningham Auditor Charles C Thompson Mechaniczl Superintendent Telephone Main 3800 Private Branch Eichacfe The Washington Herald is delivered by carrier in the District of Columbia and at Alexandria Va at 36 cents per month dally and Sunday or at 28 coots por month without the Sunday issue Subscription Rates by Mail Ufl i d Sw4 J6 cants per racath hilly ami SMMtar luily without Sunday X cent par moatk- IMily without Soadar per year No attention will be paid to anonymous contributions and no communications to the editor will be printed except over the name of the writer Manuscripts offered publication will be returned if unavailable but stamps should be sent with the manuscript for that purpose All communications intended for this newspaper whether for the daily or the Sunday issue should be addressed to THE WASHINGTON HERALD New York OAoa Nwav Betta UM LaOtot Maxwell Mampers- CttcBge MaHinette Bide Lad Max- well M SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2 Ififf Secretary Shaws Newest Idea Secretary Shaw is nothing If not con- structive Within two days his brain has contributed to the thought of the nation plans for the extension ef foreign trade 11 nd for the Improvement of the currency system Neither we suppose te to be ttken too seriously Certainly not the miaole Secretarys proposal for a series of bonded ports along the coast wherein may be located manufacturing plants for tie production of goods to be sold at low prices abroad and high prices at home What a beautiful object lesson such ports be in the advantages of tarifCnr- otcted monopoly When ia the last session of Congress John Sharp Williams asserted that Amer lan manufactures were being sold abroad at lower prices than in the home market he was greeted with a chorus of Bering denials from the high tariff ad- vocates Nothing of the sort was being none they said and even if It wee the practice kept our mills going and our workmen employed But here comes cheerfully admitting that it is all true proposing that the system be given a permanent place in our domestic economy and trying to convince us that we ought to pay high prices for the sake of maintaining the standpat policy We trust Mr Shaw will continue in his jcular manner to hammer away at IsIs bonded ports idea It may do some good la the cause of tariff revision Richard Mansfield objects to being called a star says the Indianapolis Sun Naturally He Is a constellation Our Relations with Japan One of the inevitable Incidents of a mili- tarist policy is that every movement of troops or ships or every proposal to in- crease armaments is bound to be Inter- preted as preparation for war with some specific enemy and those responsible for the conduct of government are constantly explaining that their actions are guided only by the most pacific Intentions Not lng ago Germany was the especial ob- ject of solicitude on the part of those who keep a weather eye out for Ute next war Japan Is put forward as our coming Antagonist The inference is not un natural that OUt vast war preparations iictual and projected must have some ob- ject in view that the expenditure of mil- lions for national defense eon be justified nly on the theory that an attack upon ns from some quarter or other is within iie bounds of possibility Nevertheless it is unfortunate that every opportunity should be sought by sensationalists to create a war scare particularly when diplomatic negotiations of a delicate na- ture are afoot tending to eliminate the ery friction out of which the vision of hostilities arises The trick is an old one Arc J pot year or OdD uld Mr- S t tw < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ in journalism and it is not indigenous to this country but it is on every ground reprehensible and in the particular in- stance wholly unjustifiable We think the country may be congratu- lated upon the progress made by the President and Secretary of State in the negotiations with the Tokyo govern- ment looking to the amicable and volun tary exclusion of Japanese immigrants of the lower class from the United States and her dependencies in return for the recognition by the Pacific States of the equal rights of Nipponese children to edu- cation In the public schools The willing- ness of the Japanese government to meet the United States more than half way in this matter is an emphatic token of the friendly disposition of the Mikados minis Our failure to come to an understand- ing with the Japanese government would lv an egregious blunder Nothing stands in the way of such an understanding but the legislation of a single State perhaps- it would be more accurate to say noth- ing but the order of a single board of education in one city based on what may prove to be an entirely erroneous inter- pretation of the California statute provid ing for the segregation of Mongolians in schools of their own When this order went Into effect there were ninetythree Nipponese children attending the public schools of San Francisco distributed tmong twentythree buildings They were right cleanly and well behaved and for most part under seventeen years of gc It will strike a disinterested ob- server that the presence of less than MO pupils of so capable a race as the Japa- nese scattered about the schools of a great tty can hardly be seriously considered as menacing to racial Integrity or public 1 rals It is in any event entirely a matter to be permitted to affect Injuriously the rotations of two great na- tions hitherto bound by close ties of amity It seems improbable that the San Fran- cisco school authorities will insist on their interpretation of the California segrega- tion statute In view of the larger object- to be gained Uy a concession on the school question That larger object is the ex- clusion of Japanese immigrants to which we understand the Japanese gov- ernment te willing to assent by the terms a new treaty Even should the Mikados government hesitate to go thus far it would oensent as a matter of domestic policy to prohibiting the emigration of its subjects to American territory as these emigrants are needed elsewhere in pursu- ance of the alms of Japanese expansion in the t he too- t nall or rs ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ the Orient In either case the Pacific Slope would be protected from the grow- ing Invasion of Japanese coolies who are regarded as an undesirable and unas- simihlble addition to the population of the far West L Tho present situation of the negotiations is one calling for sweet reasonableness and calm consideration Inflammatory Utterance and the ragh attitude of the ir- reconcilable are equally out of place and equally to bo deprecated Senator Hale threatens to move for night sessions unless the Senate talks and works more In other words the gas is shut off it will be turned on Gen Harries nnd Congress Washington Herald Is moved to make a few remarks about Its very wood friend Gen George H HarrIos It Ifkas him It wishes him and his enterprises well He is a gentlemen of push and ambition and action just the sort of gentleman that contributes to the ma- terial uplift of any community The best of us make slips now and would not be human if we did not but a slip made by Gen Harries at the District Committee hearing on Thurs day was especially unhappy and It was all but unpardonable In deed because It recorded a statement so widely at variance with Gen Harries In a moment of heat we arc sure asserted that a railway fran- chise in Washington was rendered value lees or words to that effect because It was constantly subject to attack Think of it Such franchises are worth mil- lions and everybody knows Congress Is not composed of a lot of Populists There has been no tearing down of prop erty rights say vested rights if you pre- fer and there is going to be no suck thing There is ito place on the face of the earth where such rights are more se- cure where they are less harried or less oppressed Here there has been no op- pression at all TIM street railway inter e tsnd we say it to the credit of Con- gress have scrupulously been conserved Congress uniformly has dealt in a con- servative way with District corporations though by way of digression it may be add d that It has erred sadly in not put- ting the gas company on the same honest basis with the other utilities corporations Such a statement as that to which Gen Harries gave utterance was wholly un- worthy of him It was unjust to Con- gress He shoukl not have said it Con gress lots a perfect right to look Into operation of the public utilities It would be remiss if it neglected that duty Gen Harries sensible gentlemen that he Is does not challenge that right The part of wisdom is to invite such hearings and Inquiries The street railway which Gen Harries so ably and usually so diplomatically and tactfully represents has not been hurt is not going to be hurt Congress hi not in the business of destroying prop cities or striking down capital There Is something the matter with the Washington Street Railway however Gen Harries Is confronted with It every- day His system is magniacent hut his schedules are disgracefully awry Thats whats the matter with the company that and nothing else Congress nor Mr Madden has had a blessed thing to do with the public feeling on the subject And the sooner our good and genial friend Gen George H Harries the right point of view the better it will be for his part of the best street railway ysemas a wholeln the United States Let reformers proceed says the Salt Lake Tribune They are proeeedtaf Indiana legislature which seeks to make I horse traders mUfest A Victim of Circumstances A prominent organization of Chicago club women protests against Shakes peares Seven Ages of Man upon the ground that it completely Ignores the ex- istence of woman and makes no refer- ence directly or indirectly to her as a component factor in the proper exempli- fication of the story The criticism Is captious unfair and totally lacking in merit and humane con- sideration for Shakespeare With truly feminine contrariness the ladles abso- lutely ignore the embarrassing limitations under which Shakespeare labored and the peculiar environments by which he was held in check It is not at all probable that Shakespeare meant any harm or was lacking in that quality of chivalry latest in nearly all manly breasts He was simply a creature of circumstance so far as his writings wont and he was compelled whether unwillingly or no to observe a rigid and fixed rule some things less The thenwe unfor- tunate it tIM Cer- tainly reaches They have had a bill ill tM In unless fart Introduced ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ The Chicago protestants should that the discussion eC a age te a serious piece of business under any and all circumstances especially alter she has passed her seventeenth summer To enunciate the first and second ages of woman in song or story no matter how beautiful and poetic the language em- ployed would be as much as any man of careful thought could be induced to undertake Those who essayed to do moro would do so at the peril of their reputation for veracity and their charac- ter for saneness To add to the perplexities of Shakes ponies undertaking his work passed constantly under the eagle eye of that somewhat uncertain find erratic Queen of the time in England Elizabeth was notoriously vain and haughty at the height of Shakespeares tame and renown she had begun to grow old and faded To elaborate upon the subject of a ladys age in her august and royal presence was perhaps as much as ones head was worth Shakespeares head was at that time one of the worlds great est lIterary assets and he was right to take no chances with his regal mistress his head much more comfortably placed upon his shoulders than beside the block at Newgate or the Tower Therefore all in all the latHes should not be too hard on poor William He did the best he could by theta we have no doubt as the light was given him to see in those days It was dire necessity a not unnatural love for his head that caused him to tell the story of the Seven Ages of Man withou reference- to the women Instead condemning him he should ba commended for mak lag so wise a use of his opportunities TIM Atlanta Journal says that 258 newspaper are reporting the Thaw trial What has the Journal against newspaper men that It so severely indicts them My dear boy said Senator Beveridge to Senator Carmack Aw quit your kid- ding Senator What does the Philadelphia Record mean by coilIng it the restless We fan to note anything restless about it On the contrary It is about the most selfsatisfied and calm thing we know of Things are In a pretty mesa out at Mc- Alester lad T There aro two daily papers In the Republican the other Democratic The Democratic organ is edited by a rank Republican while the Republican organ is edited by an oldline remem- ber lady More- over wa end o men cit one tariff T ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Democrat and the result Is a row during the progress of which all of the political skeletons of both parties seem likely to get out of the closets The new Shah of Persia has ordered a few more rebellious heads chopped oft He seems to have quite an elegant little block system of his own The London Globe thinks Swettonham not wholly to blame No indeed Nature just made him that way The Now York legislature is consider- ing a bill to help lawyers Will no one come to the rescue of tho clients The Russian government manages to hold together but one by one the minis- ters and officials go to places And now the musicians demand that the copyright laws be amended to meet their point of view Considering the re- venge they may take In case of non- compliance we should advise Congraga by all means to give them what they want Mme Melba says that stage folks should sat plenty Of fruit and vegetables Tint audience is not requested to contribute them however- It is said that the New York street cars will double their currying capacity This probably meant that the passengers will now be allowed to climb on top tho cars and ride Mr Hall CalM says ho pays no atten- tion to the critics And souse of the fool things h says would seem to hoar out jQM idea that he certainly does not Little Neck Island wants to change its name Having in mind the clams that come from that locality we should suggest Rubber Neck The expedition sent to Africa by the Field Columbian Museum of Chicago has secured a live specimen of the Dlkdlk Beat the tomtom and raise Harry Henry James declares that American women cannot talk Evidently he never tried to convince one oc thorn that It was really an important session of the lodge that kept Isbn down town so late A New York man died of swollen head- a few days ago As rule this trouble ta not fatal to the sufferer but the neigh- bors are frequently bored to death as a result of it The Birmingham News says Use King stan earthquake Tightened the people so much that chUte ran up and down tapir backs A sort of chills and fever stke With an Oliver and a Cromwell both mixed up in the Panama Canal we tear there Is to be no rest for Senator Morgan All this bother about a Thaw jury is a plate waste of time Several New York newspapers are trying the case just s fast as they can An antirachur law would be worse than an earthquake a cyclone and eon Alteration say a writer in a Hot Springs Ark paper Evidently the race problem has its terrors for Hot Springs also In looking over the list of late fiction the Birmingham AgeHerald expresses regret that much of it was not too late for publication It also makes one foci like going out and tending a helping hand to the pallbearers- A German statistician has discovered that a great majority of the hello girls over there suffer with nervous prostra- tion The prostration of a hello girls nerve must be something startling A Kentucky minister preached three hours on the topic Hell te here and now He doubtless thoroughly con- vinced We congregation The tllstres 1nn news te given out that Alfred Austin Is writing a poem on the Jamaican earthquake Are all the freak Bngltehmea to take a hand ia that boil The lion Jeffrie Davis the Sen- ate shall not Muff him into silence as it did TlUman However when Mr Davis gets ready to call the Semites bta he will be wise to watch out for tin lit- tle Joker Swettenbam fa a type notes a con- temporary it weak be mom nearly correct to call hint a pled JIM The announcement is made that the recent earthquake will not curtail the output of Jamaica rum Certainly not had the earthquake had any hostile in- tentions toward this particular rum out put it wou2 not have wasted time fooling around Jamaica Two of our versatile highwaymen held up a musician and ordered him to march says the St Louis Republic lie doubtless did a quickstep instantly Mr H H Rogers jr is organizing a company but as it te only a mHitia oom Long a 1 IC a aeon says Peibapa ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ pony no manifest- A few more such victories and Fmperor William will come to be known ns the George B Corteiyou of European cam paign conductors Notwithstanding Mr Rockefeller a decla- ration that he has seen much of the good in the world but little ef the evil It must be confessed that the Interstate Commerce Commission shows a remark- able willingness to enlighten him as to much of the No one should be surprised to learn that Miss Ida Tarbell writes dialect Since tIM exploitation of Miss Gertrude Ather tons second best CaJIferniaasa nothing the lady writers may write or say is calculated to shock sevtroly It appears that Carter Harrison is to run for mayor of Chicago again The mystery Is how that office has managed to wabble along without Carter Har- rison to hold it for the past year or so anyhow Dryden or nobody is the cry of the compact Dryden forces in New Jersey New York ought to be ablo to toll Jersey bow it feels to be represented by no- body With the people of Tennessee for the jury I will risk my fate any time and for all time before them says Senator elect Bob Taylor The jury hasnt been invented that can successfully withstand the pleadings of his fiddle and his bow If Harry Thaw looks at all the sketches and rends all tho rot printed about hint In the New York yellows he may not think be Is crazy but must won- der why he Isnt A Kentucky contemporary says the bane of the State legislature Is the pot measure Lets see the pet measure of the average Kentucky legislator is prob ably about a quart Hound to Astonish Him Fret FHiRMtf BlMUcr Waiter at mountain hotel sotto voce Blase wretch He says our mountains arent high enough calls the lake a pad die and he hasnt any oyos for the ex- quisite panorama from the balcony But Im going to give him his bill now that will astonish him Also ainny Trials Front tb Cohmbk Sate A Bible student says that Job had a lead pencil It must have been a blue pencil for he wished that his adver- sary had written a boc do a dow had eviL ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ A LITTLE NONSENSE INCOMPARABLE PAIR Oh the chap with padded shoulders in the of the magazine Youve noticed those human boulders and tholr massive points I ween And isnt he quite perfection with his chest and its span In making a fair selection do you think you could match this man Then that other wellknown torture who is doing a silent stunt I to that perfect creature the girl In the sweet straight front You may talk If you think it duty till the night comes on apace But where will ydu find such beauty and where will you find such grace You will kindly save your blushes this is nothing a prude to sears I am not of the kind that gushes I would merely just declare We shall see a perfect mating till the padded chap The fellow of whom Im prating weds tho girl in the corset ad Annoying- Do you ever laugh at a real good JokeNo replied the professional humorist It makes me mad think that I didnt think of it myself TrrnM liver TItus And how do you like heftvda Find things pretty complete here sIT Stem to be But Well Wheres the complaint desk 1 Would They Dare There Mr Taft a mail of emft A person trim and natty Some call him Bill in axees shrill Do say call him F yl The Ideal A stop subsidy hey snorted good ski Farmer Frtedpie Well I guess not Some people to alter waatte autIsm fe autIsm By the wayr AIlntMlr ftlnt aw Congressman a mite slow this year with our seed A Break I committed a terrible breach of today How was that- I was Invited by a whisky to drink and mbeemrnlndedJy called aa ether brand than his Antl KcepN m Waltixiff- Bven the Venus of the boardinghouse falls Into disfavor when she putt ta two hours sad thirtyseven minutes at her Sunday morning bath NOTHING SERIOUS Vmm PUbeffeafa JfoooKsnry to Consider Theres too much deceitful tiflt a tfci world said Mrs Kandor I think If one man has anything to say about an- other be should conAn himself to the truth B tM said Mr Kandor MpotM Ulan are Indian present r Front Papa What lovely black eyes site has Yes indeed hereditary you know Ah her mother- o her father he was a pugilist Tho Fight No said Mtos Pay with a deter- mined air I shall never marry that kr inevitably fixed Yon put In Miss Pepprey tot course you will eoattaue to atmejsle against the inevitable with your usual pluck That Queere Hint Ascuui Your friend Popeeys wff nod Hewitt T believe they hate me They will never forgive me because Poptey named hi first boy after me- A IJnniJnic Shame One Important thing about these ci- gars said Stfnglinan a weed to his visitor Is that they hut so Do they really asked his vMfcer holding his at arms length or nose It merely seem tone A KillJoy We corns near lynehtn the wrong spin yesterday said Cactus Cal Just ready to swing him off too But Just then you discovered the mis- take eh remarked the tourist What luck Wnxnt It though The worst I ever hear tell of SENATOR BACON FOR LEADER Hi Home Paper Proposes Him an 3Ir Bniiey Snccctsor Fran uWMMee 1Mc M h Reports from Washington Indicate that the contest for the leadership of the Democratic minority if there Is to be a the back fourfoot neer to y f r Bail eti- quette drummer fOr the Plea H Long ol her JJA fIont seem te like J1I alp aged r lest handing inn ¬ ¬ contest will be between Senators Bacon land CuRwrson Lone before his experience ta the Senate began Senator Bacon wop his spurs as a parliamentarian having served several terms as speaker of the Georgia house of representatives For years he has been regarded as an authority on parliamen- tary law Tactful and able as a debater he will prove a worthy foeman of the best talent on the Republican side More than this In these days of radi- calism run mad In both political parties Senator Bacon would be Justly conspicu- ous as a minority leader for his conserv- atism He is one of the few left who stand hard and fast by the best traditions of the old Democratic party and by the principles enunciated in the beginning by the fathers of the republic Hip steady hand is against the extremer phases of Roosevelttsm on the one hand sail Popu- lism ac accentuated by Watson And Hearst on the other His many friends and admirers in Georgia would be pleased to see him put forward as the minority leader by his Democratic colleagues Secretary Hitchcock VorlcK- KMI tin New York Sue From Senator Carters point of Mr Hitchcocks relentless pursuit grafters land grabbers conspirators and looters of the public domain is an un- just and indefensible reflection upon the character of fifteen millions of people Inhabiting fourteen States and three Ter- ritories We dont set the matter in any such lIght and we doubt very much whether say one else will look upon that way Salary Grabbing Fran nw PUMttpbfc r Ufc Larfger The bookkeeper timidly approached It you please he said I would like a raise of pay You too fairly moaned the capitalist Say do you want to sink to the moral level of a Congressman I wont be a party to your downfall Troubled Digestion FMM INmtntid Btu While CoatOb I had the most herr We dream last night about being by lions tiger and elephants Papa Goat If I catch you eating any- more of those circus posters Ill butt well Tender Prom the Levhrfve O mfcr JammL What s legal tender asks the Herald Well for instance th vote of a New jersey legislator pursu Legal I Wash- ington ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > CAPITOL GOSSIP An Extra SeaMlonf About this time every two years look out for talk of an extra session of Con gross Washington is used to it and Washington for reasons that need not be explained is always in favor of an ex- tra session But Washington pays little heed to the usual rumors because an ex- tra session is a rare occurrence while talk that usually takes the form of pos- itive prediction is confidently expected near the close of every short sesston In view of the fact however that pri- vate secretaries of Senators and Bepre- sentativas and Congressional clerks ga- lore are now eagerly seeking direct In formation on this biennial speculation it may be well to give something more than ordinary heed to the rumor of an extra session Newspaper men at the Capitol yesterday were besieged by pri- vate secretaries clerks and other Con grossional employee for information on the subject Obviously the inquirers have received hints of the possibility of the new Congress being called here by the President at an early date after the 4th of March Senators and Repre- sentatives deny all knowledge of any such purpose on the part of the Presi- dent but sometimes Senators and Repre- sentatives assume an attitude of utter ignorance and Indifference when it is known that in doing so they are only playing the part or statesmanship Prob ably the rumor of an extra session is as groundless as It nearly always is but the fact that Congressional employes are anxiously inquiring about It is possibly significant Colorados Senatcralect Use Hon Simon Guggenheim was escorted to Ute chamber of his future activities cud mayhap glory by Senator Patterson yesterday It so happened that the ilrsuoonscript father to whom he was Introduced was Mr Money of Mississippi who in defiance of the original relationship between nomencla- ture and its bearer recently embraced an opportunity In a Senate debate to declare the belief that he is the poorest member of the body Colorados Senatorelect smfliogiy informed Money that he had beard of hint before said was Mr Simon P Cuggealtelni ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ with his record The next Senator to whom the Senator elect was presented was Mr Tillinao who had heard of him before la his min- strel speech Mr TUhnaa spoke of the sons of Smiling Tom Patterson of Colorado the State recently bought at auction by one Guggenheim Mr Patterson evidently raaUxtng the perienced hastened to convoy Us succes- sor over to the Republican side of the chamber to show them what they had got as he afterward remarked- It was when Mr Guggenheim got wedged in between the portly Mr Udns of West Virginia and the ponderous Mr Ktttrodge of South Dakota that the df- mtatttehess of his stature was em pfeasfaed He then appeared to weigh about a hundred pounds and to be proba- bly as tall as five feet His height seems to be Just about that of Mr Alice of Del- aware of whom President Pro Tempore Frye once declared that when the Dela ware statesman addressed the chair he couldnt tell whether be was standing up oc sitting down Mulkcy CommitteelcHH Owing to the invariable fonT of William Alden Smith the Hon Fred- erick W Mulkey whp ta to serve the State of Oregon in the Senate for about 4 will have no eonuntttee chairmanship Senator Hale in the performance of a grave public duty arose from his seat yesterday soon after the Senate had met and reading from a slip of paper an- nounced that it was the wish and pleasure of the Senate that Oregons shortterm Senator be made chairman of the Com- mittee to Examine and Dispose of Useless Public Documents which had been held by the Senators Democratic prede- cessor Mr Geartn The statesman from Maine had scarcely resumed his seat be- fore he rose again and with the same gravity asked that the name of Mr Mul key be not entered upon the enduring rolls of the Senate as chairman of the Committee to Examine and Dispose of Useless Public Documents thereby creat- ing a situation which excited great con cern in the vigilant press gallery Investigation revealed an interesting concatenation of circumstances Mr Gearins retirement to give place to Mr Mulkey had left the only vacant chair- manship among the Senate committees The only other vacancy that had existed was that of the great Committee on Ventilation and Acoustics which was quickly fluid when Mr Du Pont of Delaware was invested with the toga A Senator without a chairmanship te almost as bad oft as a statesmen out of a Job and the Senate has seen to It that this could not occur by creating Just as many committees as there are Senators After Mr Hale had made the announcement which was intended to provide the Ore- gonian with a chairmanship and a com mitteeroom he learned that Hon Wil- liam Alden Smith Senatorelect and Sin atorexpectant before he left Washington to attend the funeral of the late Gen Alger whom he has been elected to uc- ceed for the regular term bad asked that the chairmanship of the Com- mittee to Examine and Dispose of Useless Public Documents be reserved for him as he expected that the Michigan legislature now in session would elect him to nil out the unexpired part of lea AlgerV term Congress hears n Humor In the cloakrooms of both the Senate and House an interesting rumor pertain ing to the selection of Prof Watootfs successor as Chief of the Geological Sur vey is being quietly whispered about Prof Watoott recently was appointed to succeed the late S P Langley as head of the Smithsonian Institution In the direct line of succession to him as Chief of the Geological Survey are two or three scien- tists who count on promotion But Congress understands that none of these Is to be chosen by the appointing power but that the place is to go to J Stanley Brown soninlaw of the late President and of course brotherinlaw of the popular Ohio statesman who soon will succeed the veteran Ethan Allen Hitch cock as Secretary of the Interior of which department the Geological Survey is a de- tached bureau In evidence of J Stanley Browns quali- fications for this important post it Is pointed out that he was a stenographer in the Geological Survey when a young man and before he became the husband of a Presidents daughter that he also after ward studied geology in Germany and that for some time and until a compara- tively recent date he was employed in an important confidential capacity by Ed ward H Harriman the great railroad giant Champ Clark on Mud Champ Clark created indignation in the New England House delegation in gen- eral yesterday send that of Massachusetts ta particular by solemnly asseverating ttUs Enough mud is carried from their banks annually by the Missouri and Mis- sissippi rivers to make a State of the Union bigger than Massachusetts and maybe a better one too itony of the two already ax f11 Ove weeks ot Iu Jry i to March pew Garfield 1 Swan encounters ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ SUBSIDIES TO SHIPPING Some Adverse Press Comment on the Pending Llttauer Bill Vnm the Ohio St te Journal It is a real disappointment to very many that the President should give the weight of his great Influence in behalf of the sub sidy bill now before the House While the purpose which he has in view may in his opinion be in line with the material ad vantage we look upon the scheme as un expense that might bo avoided if the Dingley law was shorn of Us oppressive exactions and MeKinleys doctrine of reciprocity was introduced as the policy of the nation It was to be hoped that Pres- ident Roosevelt would have maintained his former view In relation to revision and pressed that instead of a subvention to recover and maintain the South American and Asiatic trades It is quite certain that subsidy will fail and that revision will be the recourse to which this nation will have to come at last From the Nor York WwW It is a significant coincidence that the shipsubsidy bill now pending in the House effectually reserves to the Harri- man steamship lines all subsidies provided for lines running to the Orient and South America from points south of Caps Men dodno in California The Harriman steamsHips are already in operation to Ja- pan and China and those now running to Panama will only need to call at South American ports farther south With ab- solute control of the railroad traffic on land the Harriman interests should be equally secure on the Pacific against com- petition for both ocean trafflo and govern- ment subsidies Finn the 8fxfa M IlnmbHca President Roosevelt Is a man at least of good sense and good common under stahding Yet he violates both in his mes- sage on ship subsidies Common sense is mocked by the contention for example that we should maintain tariff taxes against trade with South America and then use the tax revenue for subsidies to aid ia overcoming the effects of the taxes It ta desirable to maintain a fast and reg- ular man service with leading South American ports but even this degree of subsidy should be preceded or accom- plished by the liberalization of our tax taws upon foreign trade ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Fraa UM New York Bmihrc Poet It can scarcely help the subsidy bill to have Congress know that two of the ships to which a present ta proposed are the personal property of B H Harriman This fact was brought out yesterday at the heating in San Prandseo It was known of course that Harriman through the Southern Pacific controlled the Pa- cific Mall but it was not known that he personally owned the Mongolia and Man- churia and charged the company ttlf9 a month for their use Perhaps be would charge less If be got Isle subsidy The whole question to a very simpletons Debate it as we may It all comes to this hi the end shH we remove the cause which has hampered American shipping or shall we try to overcome the effect by taxing Use whole nation for the benefit of a few men The talk about naval re- serve aad man subventions is apart from the real issue These are but subterfuges to hide a new raid upon the Treasury The President ta badly advised ia lending him- self to such a ackennt- ana the CUnse Oannlili Subsidy Is not necessary Beuldoc it has a bad same There have beset sean dais connected with it whenever we have tried it and scandals are liable to be con- nected with it again It is Justly unpop- ular VICTIM OF CIRCUMSTANCES The Senate Necessarily Conwervntlvc nnd So Object of Prejudice the 1iutMM JoaraaL Circumstances have placed the Senate in the light of the obedient instrument- of the money power the stronghold o the trusts the rich mans club the oligarchy which would overthrow real democratic government Applied to in dividual Senators such charges may be plainly absurd There are conscientious conservatives among them convinced radicals as well poor men end rich and doubtless the standardrof personal hon- esty ta as high in tjte Senate as in any similar body of legislators The trouble to that what may be the patriotic re- luctance of the Senate as a whole to t to legislation that it really deems dangerous ta so intermingled with the dislike of some Senators ft r anything savoring of attack upon great commercial interests with which they are intimately allied that an undiscriminating public quick to impute sordid motives All around And every time a rich capital- ist practically buys a seat in the Senate the charge that the upper house is the champion of unjust privilege is more and more widely accepted as true Even were this charge baseless even were the motives of every Senator be- yond suspiciqn there would still be some ground for the prejudice which manifests itself at every turn An ideal Senate would still have to risk unpopularity while it performed its obvious duty of checking the first impulse of resentment against abuses An upper house is neces- sarily A conservative body and It must often insist on a calmer investigation of conditions then irritated and impetuous public sentiment wishes to admit That is perhaps the principal reason why the Senate should stand so high In the gen- eral esteem that even resentment will never turn to distrust Popular as the President is it may be fairly assumed that he could not win so easily over the Senate on every occasion were the mo- tives of Senators less open to suspicion Uw Yew York WOrM The captive trembled ostentatiously Ha sneered tho tyrant My very glance makes thiS quail It does indeed sire replied the hap knight And I only to remind your majesty that by the wise laws which your majesty hath deigned to de- cree for tho governance of this most fortunate realm it Is now the dosed season for quail For the brave Sir Lancelot though first and foremost a warrior did not scruple in an emergency to employ his nlmblo wit Where the Pins Go the New York Mill Three thousand microbes can occupy the space An a single pin point according to the Washington Herald This answers the old What becomes of all the pins question The microbes eat em up- I Havent Got This Fnr Ute XaiNfflU oMIt The Washington Herald declares that there are not enough heiresses to go round now Well they are going as fast as thoy MIn aint they JURD ONES Sfag a IOn cf nrthograp Letters go contrary f- liu flaen re lost at wa- I a dictionary- offunielor with MSB advice TO it hear b eflted or- MSfirFsanlheiMSB a flower Birmingham Ac Hcraii I the 7 F Qunll loss have Fran every I Pins IraNsarnJOpimL Is Fran Fran need ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < AT THE HOTELS interesting guest of the Jfew Wfflard- is Mr J O McCormick editor of the Xonia Ohio Gazette who has been con- nected with that famous old newspaper for thirty years Mr McCormick who is a gentleman of tho old school and an accomplished man was born and grew up in the town of Lawroneeburj Ind and he anti Senator Spooner were schoolmates and playfellows In that village in their early youth Just across the fig Miami River only a couple of miles away but oa the Ohio aide lived young Harrison anI he often canto to Lawrenceburg to Join the Spooner and McCormick lads at mar- bles and ball The same village was like- wise the home of exGov Albert G Por- ter and oxGov DurWn m their young daysWhen Xenla was merely a little ham- let said Mr McCormick and I think without a name tradition says that a wandering Englishman passing through it fell sick and would have died but for some of the kindhearted settlers who gave him shelter and nursing On recov- ering he told his good friends that he would like to name their little place Xenla from the Greek word meaning hospitality and it has been celled since It has produced some men who have achieved national fame Before my newspaper career began Whtteiaw Reid and Preston B Plumb later a Kan sas Senator were associates in a paper called the News The News was ab- sorbed by the Torchlight which was edited by the versatile Conies KInney who wrote that nevertobeforgotten poem Rain on the Roof Another Xenia man who afterward became famous as the most brilliant paragmaher tot tfie United States was Harry Merrick who died In Washington a few years la- mented by thousands I have been rather agreeably sur- prised said Mr Wffllam H Hanson who tejjseociated with a Mg tailoring es- tablishment of New York to find so many Washington men who dine te even- ing dress In fact the swallowtail coat seems quite as much in evidence at the Capital after C p as in New York in proportion to population Now in Cleveland cincinnati and even Pittsburg very few men seem to the trouble to don the regulation I- An Iu h- over J IlL news- paper Ben i ago take ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < in tb Mg hotels of those and other Western towns a ma- jority of them sit down to dinner ta th sack or frock coat that they have beers wearing during business hours I will say however that the ladies of the above named places are not so careless and the beautiful and appropriate evening cos- tumes they appear in are rebuke to slovenly dress of their husbands brothers and sweethearts The Western women are according to my observation quit as punctilious In the matter of correct clothes as their sisters In the East and It te to b hoped that sooner or later the will get their men folks to pay a little more attention to the conventionalities Three prominent citizens of Loudoun County Va Hon Henry Fairfax E B White and F S Lutz were seen In the New Wlllard last evening Mr Fairfax is one of the best known tonal in the Old Dominion and on his beautiful stock farm near Leesburg be breeds a class of horses that never fan to bring topnotch prices in New York City He was formerly in the State senate and not long since was a member of the corporation commis- sion Mr White ig president of the Peo- ples National Bank and a young man of highest social and business standing Mr Lutz who has a pretty home in the suburbs of Leesburg is a native Wash ingtooian who in love wIth the rural life of old Loudoun which he declares Is immensely superior to existence In any big city mont in refusing to issue patents to set tlens on the public lands saM MA Thorpe a cattleman of Loak Wyo at the New WUlard This policy It maintained I fear greatly retard the settlement of th a Western country and it will do my own State of Wyoming serious injury When liomerteaders taU to get their patents not through any fault of their own they became discouraged and many of them leave never to return One of the reasons of the great emigration from the United States to the Canadian Northwest is the liberality of the Dominion land laws In stead of discouraging settlers the Cana- dians hold out every inducement to get people and they are building up their country at our expense Being In the business of breeding cat tie I might from a selfish standpoint applaud the action of the government for the abandonment of their holdings by tie farmers extends the ranges of the stock men but I want to see the State become settled wtth a large number of thrifty agriculturists since that is the only way to get a permanent population and create a prosperous Commonwealth Mesrs S H Eagle of GalttpoUa Onto H C Johnston former spoakar pro tempore of the Ohio Viegtela tare and R H Mack sloe of that town are at the New Wiltard Messrs J B Mitchell and D the latter superintendent Of the city schools of Winnipeg and the former archi- tect for the schools are at the Raleigh Winnipeg said Mr Mitchell his doubled its population the last fivr years sad has now people We art doing very well in the matter of local edu cation but areJn of some school buildings and Mr McIntyre nn1 myself were delegated to come to several of your larger cities to see the kind of buildings in which the school children are housed We are having the same tremen- dous business activity m Manitoba that prevails in the States and our railroads are just as impotent to handle the traffic as yours appear to be Former Gov John H McOVaw of the State of Washington who Is at the New Willard is elated over the recent ac- tion of the senate of his State in passing- an appropriation of 1000019 for the Alas kaYukon Pacific Exposition He lower house will follow suit and the bill will speedily become a law We have an independent telephone company in Los Angeles that proved a great success said Mr Thomas W Phillips a prominent business man of that progressive city at the Arlington When we began operations three or four years ago the old company fought us in every conceivable way People were warned against investing in the new con- cern and told that they would lose every dollar they put In In spite of this many of the solid citizens backed their judg- ment with their cash and they are now very glad of It for they have been hand- somely rewarded The independent tele- phones are now in use in Los Angeles to the number of 90000 and they do per- cent of the business One peat advan- tage they possess over the old phones is the doing away with the hello girls the independent instrument being automatic enabling the patrons to call up directly the person with whom conversation is de siredThe rates are very reasonable too 3 a month for private subscribers and 15 for hotels and efitees with individual lines for each patron and an unlimited number of calls tip Against It Sure RnocRli Fram the IMMilphk PaUfe LMfet- rOvcr In Washington consctonoslass van dais are stealing the lampposts leaving the vigilant puller nothing against whlcb to lean evening attire and a th J fell TIIe people of JII7 over the policy of nut win postmaster McIntyre In lOC need the J 11 l asostI worried the vem Rue modern P says 10 ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬

Washington Herald. (Washington, DC) 1907-02-02 [p 6]. · 2017-12-21 · TilE WASHINGTON HERALD SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2 1007 i iii i lI j C ± THE WASHINGTON HERALD PutJ hKj Every Morning

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Page 1: Washington Herald. (Washington, DC) 1907-02-02 [p 6]. · 2017-12-21 · TilE WASHINGTON HERALD SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2 1007 i iii i lI j C ± THE WASHINGTON HERALD PutJ hKj Every Morning

TilE WASHINGTON HERALD SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2 1007

i iii i lI j

C ±THE WASHINGTON HERALD

PutJ hKj Every Morning in the Yetr by

THE WASHINGTON HERALD COMPANY

PttUkation Office

4 FIFTEENTH STREET NORTHWEST

Entered as secondclass matter OctoberP 1 06 at the postofllce at WashingtonD C under aot of Congress of MSroh3 1S7S

SCOTT C BONE Editor

Erncit H Merrick Treuorir tad Businm Minafe-rQtrtace C Advertiilnf MangerJ Harry Cunningham AuditorCharles C Thompson Mechaniczl Superintendent

Telephone Main 3800 Private Branch Eichacfe

The Washington Herald is delivered bycarrier in the District of Columbia and atAlexandria Va at 36 cents per monthdally and Sunday or at 28 coots pormonth without the Sunday issue

Subscription Rates by Mail

Ufl i d Sw4 J6 cants per racathhilly ami SMMtarluily without Sunday X cent par moatk-IMily without Soadar per year

No attention will be paid to anonymouscontributions and no communications tothe editor will be printed except over thename of the writer

Manuscripts offered publication willbe returned if unavailable but stampsshould be sent with the manuscript forthat purpose

All communications intended for thisnewspaper whether for the daily or theSunday issue should be addressed toTHE WASHINGTON HERALD

New York OAoa NwavBetta UM LaOtotMaxwell Mampers-

CttcBge MaHinette Bide Lad Max-

well M

SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2 Ififf

Secretary Shaws Newest IdeaSecretary Shaw is nothing If not con-

structive Within two days his brain hascontributed to the thought of the nationplans for the extension ef foreign trade11 nd for the Improvement of the currencysystem Neither we suppose te to bettken too seriously Certainly not the

miaole Secretarys proposal for a seriesof bonded ports along the coast whereinmay be located manufacturing plants fortie production of goods to be sold at lowprices abroad and high prices at homeWhat a beautiful object lesson such ports

be in the advantages of tarifCnr-otcted monopoly

When ia the last session of CongressJohn Sharp Williams asserted that Amerlan manufactures were being soldabroad at lower prices than in the homemarket he was greeted with a chorus ofBering denials from the high tariff ad-

vocates Nothing of the sort was beingnone they said and even if It wee thepractice kept our mills going and ourworkmen employed But here comes

cheerfully admitting that it is alltrue proposing that the system be givena permanent place in our domesticeconomy and trying to convince us thatwe ought to pay high prices for the sakeof maintaining the standpat policy

We trust Mr Shaw will continue in hisjcular manner to hammer away at IsIsbonded ports idea It may do some goodla the cause of tariff revision

Richard Mansfield objects to beingcalled a star says the Indianapolis SunNaturally He Is a constellation

Our Relations with JapanOne of the inevitable Incidents of a mili-

tarist policy is that every movement oftroops or ships or every proposal to in-

crease armaments is bound to be Inter-preted as preparation for war with somespecific enemy and those responsible forthe conduct of government are constantlyexplaining that their actions are guidedonly by the most pacific Intentions Notlng ago Germany was the especial ob-

ject of solicitude on the part of those whokeep a weather eye out for Ute next war

Japan Is put forward as our comingAntagonist The inference is not unnatural that OUt vast war preparationsiictual and projected must have some ob-ject in view that the expenditure of mil-lions for national defense eon be justifiednly on the theory that an attack upon

ns from some quarter or other is withiniie bounds of possibility Neverthelessit is unfortunate that every opportunityshould be sought by sensationalists tocreate a war scare particularly whendiplomatic negotiations of a delicate na-ture are afoot tending to eliminate theery friction out of which the vision of

hostilities arises The trick is an old one

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in journalism and it is not indigenous tothis country but it is on every groundreprehensible and in the particular in-

stance wholly unjustifiableWe think the country may be congratu-

lated upon the progress made by thePresident and Secretary of State inthe negotiations with the Tokyo govern-ment looking to the amicable and voluntary exclusion of Japanese immigrants ofthe lower class from the United Statesand her dependencies in return for therecognition by the Pacific States of theequal rights of Nipponese children to edu-cation In the public schools The willing-ness of the Japanese government to meetthe United States more than half way inthis matter is an emphatic token of thefriendly disposition of the Mikados minis

Our failure to come to an understand-ing with the Japanese government wouldlv an egregious blunder Nothing standsin the way of such an understanding butthe legislation of a single State perhaps-it would be more accurate to say noth-ing but the order of a single board ofeducation in one city based on what mayprove to be an entirely erroneous inter-pretation of the California statute providing for the segregation of Mongolians inschools of their own When this orderwent Into effect there were ninetythreeNipponese children attending the publicschools of San Francisco distributedtmong twentythree buildings They wereright cleanly and well behaved and for

most part under seventeen years ofgc It will strike a disinterested ob-

server that the presence of less than MO

pupils of so capable a race as the Japa-nese scattered about the schools of a greattty can hardly be seriously considered asmenacing to racial Integrity or public1 rals It is in any event entirely

a matter to be permitted to affectInjuriously the rotations of two great na-

tions hitherto bound by close ties ofamity

It seems improbable that the San Fran-cisco school authorities will insist on theirinterpretation of the California segrega-tion statute In view of the larger object-to be gained Uy a concession on the schoolquestion That larger object is the ex-

clusion of Japanese immigrants towhich we understand the Japanese gov-

ernment te willing to assent by the termsa new treaty Even should the Mikados

government hesitate to go thus far itwould oensent as a matter of domesticpolicy to prohibiting the emigration of itssubjects to American territory as theseemigrants are needed elsewhere in pursu-ance of the alms of Japanese expansion in

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the Orient In either case the PacificSlope would be protected from the grow-ing Invasion of Japanese coolies who areregarded as an undesirable and unas-simihlble addition to the population of thefar West L

Tho present situation of the negotiationsis one calling for sweet reasonablenessand calm consideration InflammatoryUtterance and the ragh attitude of the ir-

reconcilable are equally out of place andequally to bo deprecated

Senator Hale threatens to move fornight sessions unless the Senate talksand works more In other wordsthe gas is shut off it will be turned on

Gen Harries nnd CongressWashington Herald Is moved to

make a few remarks about Its very woodfriend Gen George H HarrIos It Ifkashim It wishes him and his enterpriseswell He is a gentlemen of push andambition and action just the sort ofgentleman that contributes to the ma-terial uplift of any community

The best of us make slips now andwould not be human if we did

not but a slip made by Gen Harries atthe District Committee hearing on Thursday was especially unhappy and

It was all but unpardonable Indeed because It recorded a statement sowidely at variance with

Gen Harries In a moment of heat wearc sure asserted that a railway fran-chise in Washington was rendered valuelees or words to that effect because Itwas constantly subject to attack Thinkof it Such franchises are worth mil-

lions and everybody knows CongressIs not composed of a lot of PopulistsThere has been no tearing down of property rights say vested rights if you pre-

fer and there is going to be no suckthing There is ito place on the face ofthe earth where such rights are more se-

cure where they are less harried or lessoppressed Here there has been no op-

pression at all TIM street railway intere tsnd we say it to the credit of Con-

gress have scrupulously been conservedCongress uniformly has dealt in a con-

servative way with District corporationsthough by way of digression it may beadd d that It has erred sadly in not put-

ting the gas company on the same honestbasis with the other utilities corporations

Such a statement as that to which GenHarries gave utterance was wholly un-

worthy of him It was unjust to Con-

gress He shoukl not have said it Congress lots a perfect right to look Intooperation of the public utilities It wouldbe remiss if it neglected that duty

Gen Harries sensible gentlementhat he Is does not challenge that rightThe part of wisdom is to invite suchhearings and Inquiries

The street railway which Gen Harriesso ably and usually so diplomaticallyand tactfully represents has not beenhurt is not going to be hurt Congress hi

not in the business of destroying propcities or striking down capital

There Is something the matter withthe Washington Street Railway howeverGen Harries Is confronted with It every-

day His system is magniacent hut hisschedules are disgracefully awry Thatswhats the matter with the companythat and nothing else Congress nor MrMadden has had a blessed thing to dowith the public feeling on the subject

And the sooner our good and genial

friend Gen George H Harriesthe right point of view the better it will

be for his part of the best street railwayysemas a wholeln the United States

Let reformers proceed says the SaltLake Tribune They are proeeedtaf

Indiana legislature which seeks to makeI horse traders mUfest

A Victim of CircumstancesA prominent organization of Chicago

club women protests against Shakespeares Seven Ages of Man upon theground that it completely Ignores the ex-

istence of woman and makes no refer-

ence directly or indirectly to her as acomponent factor in the proper exempli-

fication of the storyThe criticism Is captious unfair and

totally lacking in merit and humane con-

sideration for Shakespeare With trulyfeminine contrariness the ladles abso-lutely ignore the embarrassing limitationsunder which Shakespeare labored and thepeculiar environments by which he washeld in check It is not at all probablethat Shakespeare meant any harm orwas lacking in that quality of chivalrylatest in nearly all manly breasts Hewas simply a creature of circumstanceso far as his writings wont and he wascompelled whether unwillingly or no toobserve a rigid and fixed rule somethings

less

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They have had a bill ill tM

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The Chicago protestants shouldthat the discussion eC a age te a

serious piece of business under any andall circumstances especially alter she haspassed her seventeenth summer Toenunciate the first and second ages ofwoman in song or story no matter howbeautiful and poetic the language em-ployed would be as much as any manof careful thought could be induced toundertake Those who essayed to domoro would do so at the peril of theirreputation for veracity and their charac-ter for saneness

To add to the perplexities of Shakesponies undertaking his work passedconstantly under the eagle eye of thatsomewhat uncertain find erratic Queen ofthe time in England Elizabeth wasnotoriously vain and haughty

at the height of Shakespeares tameand renown she had begun to grow old andfaded To elaborate upon the subject ofa ladys age in her august and royalpresence was perhaps as much as oneshead was worth Shakespeares headwas at that time one of the worlds greatest lIterary assets and he was right totake no chances with his regal mistresshis head much more comfortablyplaced upon his shoulders than besidethe block at Newgate or the Tower

Therefore all in all the latHes shouldnot be too hard on poor William Hedid the best he could by theta we haveno doubt as the light was given him tosee in those days It was dire necessity

a not unnatural love for his headthat caused him to tell the story of theSeven Ages of Man withou reference-

to the women Instead condemninghim he should ba commended for maklag so wise a use of his opportunities

TIM Atlanta Journal says that 258newspaper are reporting the Thawtrial What has the Journal againstnewspaper men that It so severelyindicts them

My dear boy said Senator Beveridgeto Senator Carmack Aw quit your kid-ding Senator

What does the Philadelphia Recordmean by coilIng it the restlessWe fan to note anything restless aboutit On the contrary It is about the mostselfsatisfied and calm thing we know of

Things are In a pretty mesa out at Mc-Alester lad T There aro two dailypapers In the Republican theother Democratic The Democratic organis edited by a rank Republican while theRepublican organ is edited by an oldline

remem-ber lady

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Democrat and the result Is a row duringthe progress of which all of the politicalskeletons of both parties seem likely toget out of the closets

The new Shah of Persia has ordered afew more rebellious heads chopped oftHe seems to have quite an elegant littleblock system of his own

The London Globe thinks Swettonhamnot wholly to blame No indeedNature just made him that way

The Now York legislature is consider-ing a bill to help lawyers Will no onecome to the rescue of tho clients

The Russian government manages tohold together but one by one the minis-

ters and officials go to places

And now the musicians demand thatthe copyright laws be amended to meettheir point of view Considering the re-

venge they may take In case of non-compliance we should advise Congragaby all means to give them what theywant

Mme Melba says that stage folks shouldsat plenty Of fruit and vegetables Tint

audience is not requested to contributethem however-

It is said that the New York street carswill double their currying capacity Thisprobably meant that the passengers willnow be allowed to climb on top tho carsand ride

Mr Hall CalM says ho pays no atten-tion to the critics And souse of the foolthings h says would seem to hoar out

jQM idea that he certainly does not

Little Neck Island wants tochange its name Having in mind theclams that come from that locality weshould suggest Rubber Neck

The expedition sent to Africa by theField Columbian Museum of Chicago hassecured a live specimen of the DlkdlkBeat the tomtom and raise Harry

Henry James declares that Americanwomen cannot talk Evidently he nevertried to convince one oc thorn that It wasreally an important session of the lodgethat kept Isbn down town so late

A New York man died of swollen head-a few days ago As rule this troubleta not fatal to the sufferer but the neigh-bors are frequently bored to death as aresult of it

The Birmingham News says Use Kingstan earthquake Tightened the people somuch that chUte ran up and down tapirbacks A sort of chills and fever stke

With an Oliver and a Cromwell bothmixed up in the Panama Canal we tearthere Is to be no rest for Senator Morgan

All this bother about a Thaw jury is aplate waste of time Several New Yorknewspapers are trying the case just sfast as they can

An antirachur law would be worsethan an earthquake a cyclone and eonAlteration say a writer in a Hot SpringsArk paper Evidently the race problem

has its terrors for Hot Springs also

In looking over the list of late fictionthe Birmingham AgeHerald expressesregret that much of it was not too latefor publication It also makes one focilike going out and tending a helping handto the pallbearers-

A German statistician has discoveredthat a great majority of the hello girlsover there suffer with nervous prostra-tion The prostration of a hello girlsnerve must be something startling

A Kentucky minister preached threehours on the topic Hell te here andnow He doubtless thoroughly con-

vinced We congregation

The tllstres 1nn news te given out thatAlfred Austin Is writing a poem on theJamaican earthquake Are all the freakBngltehmea to take a hand ia that boil

The lion Jeffrie Davis the Sen-ate shall not Muff him into silence asit did TlUman However when MrDavis gets ready to call the Semites btahe will be wise to watch out for tin lit-

tle Joker

Swettenbam fa a type notes a con-

temporary it weak be momnearly correct to call hint a pled JIM

The announcement is made that therecent earthquake will not curtail theoutput of Jamaica rum Certainly nothad the earthquake had any hostile in-

tentions toward this particular rum output it wou2 not have wasted time foolingaround Jamaica

Two of our versatile highwaymen heldup a musician and ordered him tomarch says the St Louis Republic liedoubtless did a quickstep instantly

Mr H H Rogers jr is organizing acompany but as it te only a mHitia oom

Long

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pony nomanifest-

A few more such victories and FmperorWilliam will come to be known ns theGeorge B Corteiyou of European campaign conductors

Notwithstanding Mr Rockefeller a decla-ration that he has seen much of the goodin the world but little ef the evil Itmust be confessed that the InterstateCommerce Commission shows a remark-able willingness to enlighten him as tomuch of the

No one should be surprised to learn thatMiss Ida Tarbell writes dialect SincetIM exploitation of Miss Gertrude Athertons second best CaJIferniaasa nothingthe lady writers may write or sayis calculated to shock sevtroly

It appears that Carter Harrison is torun for mayor of Chicago again Themystery Is how that office has managedto wabble along without Carter Har-rison to hold it for the past yearor so anyhow

Dryden or nobody is the cry of thecompact Dryden forces in New JerseyNew York ought to be ablo to toll Jerseybow it feels to be represented by no-body

With the people of Tennessee for thejury I will risk my fate any time andfor all time before them says Senatorelect Bob Taylor The jury hasnt beeninvented that can successfully withstandthe pleadings of his fiddle and his bow

If Harry Thaw looks at all thesketches and rends all tho rot printed

about hint In the New York yellows hemay not think be Is crazy but must won-der why he Isnt

A Kentucky contemporary says thebane of the State legislature Is the potmeasure Lets see the pet measure ofthe average Kentucky legislator is probably about a quart

Hound to Astonish HimFret FHiRMtf BlMUcr

Waiter at mountain hotel sotto voceBlase wretch He says our mountainsarent high enough calls the lake a paddie and he hasnt any oyos for the ex-

quisite panorama from the balcony ButIm going to give him his bill now thatwill astonish him

Also ainny TrialsFront tb Cohmbk Sate

A Bible student says that Job had alead pencil It must have been a bluepencil for he wished that his adver-sary had written a boc

do

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A LITTLE NONSENSE

INCOMPARABLE PAIROh the chap with padded shoulders

in the of the magazineYouve noticed those human boulders and

tholr massive points I weenAnd isnt he quite perfection with his

chest and its spanIn making a fair selection do you think

you could match this man

Then that other wellknown torture whois doing a silent stunt

I to that perfect creature the girlIn the sweet straight front

You may talk If you think it duty tillthe night comes on apace

But where will ydu find such beauty andwhere will you find such grace

You will kindly save your blushes this isnothing a prude to sears

I am not of the kind that gushes I wouldmerely just declare

We shall see a perfect mating tillthe padded chap

The fellow of whom Im prating weds thogirl in the corset ad

Annoying-Do you ever laugh at a real good

JokeNoreplied the professional humorist

It makes me mad think that I didntthink of it myself

TrrnM liver TItusAnd how do you like heftvda Find

things pretty complete here sITStem to be ButWellWheres the complaint desk1 Would They DareThere Mr Taft a mail of emft

A person trim and nattySome call him Bill in axees shrill

Do say call him F ylThe Ideal

A stop subsidy hey snorted good skiFarmer Frtedpie Well I guess notSome people to alter waatte autIsm feautIsm By the wayr AIlntMlr ftlnt awCongressman a mite slow this yearwith our seed

A BreakI committed a terrible breach of

todayHow was that-I was Invited by a whisky to

drink and mbeemrnlndedJy called aaether brand than his

Antl KcepN m Waltixiff-Bven the Venus of the boardinghouse

falls Into disfavor when she putt ta twohours sad thirtyseven minutes at herSunday morning bath

NOTHING SERIOUS

Vmm PUbeffeafaJfoooKsnry to Consider

Theres too much deceitful tiflt a tfciworld said Mrs Kandor I think Ifone man has anything to say about an-

other be should conAn himself to thetruth

B tM said Mr Kandor MpotM Ulanare Indian present r

Front PapaWhat lovely black eyes site has

Yes indeed hereditary you knowAh her mother-

o her father he was a pugilistTho Fight

No said Mtos Pay with a deter-mined air I shall never marry that krinevitably fixed

Yon put In Miss Pepprey totcourse you will eoattaue to atmejsleagainst the inevitable with your usualpluck

That Queere HintAscuui Your friend Popeeys wff nod

Hewitt T believe they hate me Theywill never forgive me because Popteynamed hi first boy after me-

A IJnniJnic ShameOne Important thing about these ci-

gars said Stfnglinan aweed to his visitor Is that they hut so

Do they really asked his vMfcerholding his at arms length or nose Itmerely seem tone

A KillJoyWe corns near lynehtn the wrong spin

yesterday said Cactus Cal Just readyto swing him off too

But Just then you discovered the mis-take eh remarked the tourist Whatluck

Wnxnt It though The worst I everhear tell of

SENATOR BACON FOR LEADER

Hi Home Paper Proposes Him an3Ir Bniiey Snccctsor

Fran uWMMee 1Mc M hReports from Washington Indicate that

the contest for the leadership of theDemocratic minority if there Is to be a

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contest will be between Senators Baconland CuRwrson

Lone before his experience ta the Senatebegan Senator Bacon wop his spurs as aparliamentarian having served severalterms as speaker of the Georgia house ofrepresentatives For years he has beenregarded as an authority on parliamen-tary law Tactful and able as a debaterhe will prove a worthy foeman of thebest talent on the Republican side

More than this In these days of radi-calism run mad In both political partiesSenator Bacon would be Justly conspicu-ous as a minority leader for his conserv-atism He is one of the few left whostand hard and fast by the best traditionsof the old Democratic party and by theprinciples enunciated in the beginning bythe fathers of the republic Hip steadyhand is against the extremer phases ofRoosevelttsm on the one hand sail Popu-lism ac accentuated by Watson AndHearst on the other

His many friends and admirers inGeorgia would be pleased to see him putforward as the minority leader by hisDemocratic colleagues

Secretary Hitchcock VorlcK-KMI tin New York Sue

From Senator Carters point ofMr Hitchcocks relentless pursuitgrafters land grabbers conspiratorsand looters of the public domain is an un-just and indefensible reflection upon thecharacter of fifteen millions of peopleInhabiting fourteen States and three Ter-ritories We dont set the matter in anysuch lIght and we doubt very muchwhether say one else will look uponthat way

Salary GrabbingFran nw PUMttpbfc r Ufc Larfger

The bookkeeper timidly approachedIt you please he said I would like

a raise of payYou too fairly moaned the capitalistSay do you want to sink to the moral

level of a Congressman I wont be aparty to your downfall

Troubled DigestionFMM INmtntid Btu

While CoatOb I had the most herrWe dream last night about beingby lions tiger and elephants

Papa Goat If I catch you eating any-more of those circus posters Ill buttwell

TenderProm the Levhrfve O mfcr JammL

What s legal tender asks theHerald Well for instance th

vote of a New jersey legislator

pursu

Legal

I Wash-ington

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CAPITOL GOSSIPAn Extra SeaMlonf

About this time every two years lookout for talk of an extra session of Congross Washington is used to it andWashington for reasons that need not beexplained is always in favor of an ex-

tra session But Washington pays littleheed to the usual rumors because an ex-

tra session is a rare occurrence whiletalk that usually takes the form of pos-

itive prediction is confidently expectednear the close of every short sesstonIn view of the fact however that pri-

vate secretaries of Senators and Bepre-

sentativas and Congressional clerks ga-

lore are now eagerly seeking direct Information on this biennial speculationit may be well to give something morethan ordinary heed to the rumor of anextra session Newspaper men at theCapitol yesterday were besieged by pri-

vate secretaries clerks and other Congrossional employee for information onthe subject Obviously the inquirershave received hints of the possibility ofthe new Congress being called here bythe President at an early date after the4th of March Senators and Repre-sentatives deny all knowledge of anysuch purpose on the part of the Presi-dent but sometimes Senators and Repre-sentatives assume an attitude of utterignorance and Indifference when it isknown that in doing so they are onlyplaying the part or statesmanship Probably the rumor of an extra session is asgroundless as It nearly always is but thefact that Congressional employes areanxiously inquiring about It is possiblysignificant

Colorados Senatcralect Use Hon SimonGuggenheim was escorted to Ute chamberof his future activities cud mayhap gloryby Senator Patterson yesterday It sohappened that the ilrsuoonscript father towhom he was Introduced was Mr Moneyof Mississippi who in defiance of theoriginal relationship between nomencla-ture and its bearer recently embraced anopportunity In a Senate debate to declarethe belief that he is the poorest memberof the body Colorados Senatorelectsmfliogiy informed Money that he hadbeard of hint before said was

Mr Simon

P

Cuggealtelni

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with his recordThe next Senator to whom the Senator

elect was presented was Mr Tillinao whohad heard of him before la his min-strel speech Mr TUhnaa spoke of the

sons of Smiling Tom Patterson ofColorado the State recently bought atauction by one Guggenheim

Mr Patterson evidently raaUxtng the

perienced hastened to convoy Us succes-sor over to the Republican side of thechamber to show them what they hadgot as he afterward remarked-

It was when Mr Guggenheim gotwedged in between the portly Mr Udnsof West Virginia and the ponderous MrKtttrodge of South Dakota that the df-

mtatttehess of his stature was empfeasfaed He then appeared to weighabout a hundred pounds and to be proba-bly as tall as five feet His height seemsto be Just about that of Mr Alice of Del-aware of whom President Pro TemporeFrye once declared that when the Delaware statesman addressed the chair hecouldnt tell whether be was standing upoc sitting down

Mulkcy CommitteelcHHOwing to the invariable fonT

of William Alden Smith the Hon Fred-erick W Mulkey whp ta to serve theState of Oregon in the Senate for about

4 will have no eonuntttee chairmanshipSenator Hale in the performance of agrave public duty arose from his seat

yesterday soon after the Senate had metand reading from a slip of paper an-nounced that it was the wish and pleasureof the Senate that Oregons shorttermSenator be made chairman of the Com-

mittee to Examine and Dispose of UselessPublic Documents which had been heldby the Senators Democratic prede-cessor Mr Geartn The statesman fromMaine had scarcely resumed his seat be-

fore he rose again and with the samegravity asked that the name of Mr Mulkey be not entered upon the enduringrolls of the Senate as chairman of theCommittee to Examine and Dispose ofUseless Public Documents thereby creat-ing a situation which excited great concern in the vigilant press gallery

Investigation revealed an interestingconcatenation of circumstances MrGearins retirement to give place to MrMulkey had left the only vacant chair-manship among the Senate committeesThe only other vacancy that had existedwas that of the great Committee onVentilation and Acoustics which wasquickly fluid when Mr Du Pont ofDelaware was invested with the toga ASenator without a chairmanship te almostas bad oft as a statesmen out of a Joband the Senate has seen to It that thiscould not occur by creating Just as manycommittees as there are Senators AfterMr Hale had made the announcementwhich was intended to provide the Ore-gonian with a chairmanship and a committeeroom he learned that Hon Wil-liam Alden Smith Senatorelect and Sinatorexpectant before he left Washingtonto attend the funeral of the late GenAlger whom he has been elected to uc-ceed for the regular term bad askedthat the chairmanship of the Com-

mittee to Examine and Dispose of UselessPublic Documents be reserved for him ashe expected that the Michigan legislaturenow in session would elect him to nil outthe unexpired part of lea AlgerV term

Congress hears n HumorIn the cloakrooms of both the Senate

and House an interesting rumor pertaining to the selection of Prof Watootfssuccessor as Chief of the Geological Survey is being quietly whispered aboutProf Watoott recently was appointed tosucceed the late S P Langley as head ofthe Smithsonian Institution In the directline of succession to him as Chief of theGeological Survey are two or three scien-tists who count on promotion ButCongress understands that none of theseIs to be chosen by the appointing powerbut that the place is to go to J StanleyBrown soninlaw of the late President

and of course brotherinlaw ofthe popular Ohio statesman who soon willsucceed the veteran Ethan Allen Hitchcock as Secretary of the Interior of whichdepartment the Geological Survey is a de-tached bureau

In evidence of J Stanley Browns quali-fications for this important post it Ispointed out that he was a stenographer inthe Geological Survey when a young manand before he became the husband of aPresidents daughter that he also afterward studied geology in Germany andthat for some time and until a compara-tively recent date he was employed in animportant confidential capacity by Edward H Harriman the great railroadgiant

Champ Clark on MudChamp Clark created indignation in the

New England House delegation in gen-

eral yesterday send that of Massachusettsta particular by solemnly asseveratingttUs

Enough mud is carried from theirbanks annually by the Missouri and Mis-sissippi rivers to make a State of theUnion bigger than Massachusetts andmaybe a better one too

itony of the two already ax

f11

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pew

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SUBSIDIES TO SHIPPING

Some Adverse Press Comment on thePending Llttauer Bill

Vnm the Ohio St te JournalIt is a real disappointment to very many

that the President should give the weightof his great Influence in behalf of the subsidy bill now before the House While thepurpose which he has in view may in hisopinion be in line with the material advantage we look upon the scheme as unexpense that might bo avoided if theDingley law was shorn of Us oppressiveexactions and MeKinleys doctrine ofreciprocity was introduced as the policy ofthe nation It was to be hoped that Pres-

ident Roosevelt would have maintained hisformer view In relation to revision andpressed that instead of a subvention torecover and maintain the South Americanand Asiatic trades It is quite certain thatsubsidy will fail and that revision will bethe recourse to which this nation willhave to come at last

From the Nor York WwW

It is a significant coincidence that theshipsubsidy bill now pending in theHouse effectually reserves to the Harri-man steamship lines all subsidies providedfor lines running to the Orient and SouthAmerica from points south of Caps Mendodno in California The HarrimansteamsHips are already in operation to Ja-pan and China and those now running toPanama will only need to call at SouthAmerican ports farther south With ab-

solute control of the railroad traffic onland the Harriman interests should beequally secure on the Pacific against com-

petition for both ocean trafflo and govern-

ment subsidies

Finn the 8fxfa M IlnmbHcaPresident Roosevelt Is a man at least

of good sense and good common understahding Yet he violates both in his mes-sage on ship subsidies Common sense ismocked by the contention for examplethat we should maintain tariff taxesagainst trade with South America andthen use the tax revenue for subsidies toaid ia overcoming the effects of the taxesIt ta desirable to maintain a fast and reg-

ular man service with leading SouthAmerican ports but even this degree ofsubsidy should be preceded or accom-plished by the liberalization of our taxtaws upon foreign trade

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Fraa UM New York Bmihrc PoetIt can scarcely help the subsidy bill to

have Congress know that two of the shipsto which a present ta proposed are thepersonal property of B H HarrimanThis fact was brought out yesterday atthe heating in San Prandseo It wasknown of course that Harriman throughthe Southern Pacific controlled the Pa-cific Mall but it was not known that hepersonally owned the Mongolia and Man-churia and charged the company ttlf9 amonth for their use Perhaps be wouldcharge less If be got Isle subsidy

The whole question to a very simpletonsDebate it as we may It all comes to thishi the end shH we remove the causewhich has hampered American shippingor shall we try to overcome the effect bytaxing Use whole nation for the benefit ofa few men The talk about naval re-

serve aad man subventions is apart fromthe real issue These are but subterfugesto hide a new raid upon the Treasury ThePresident ta badly advised ia lending him-self to such a ackennt-

ana the CUnse OannliliSubsidy Is not necessary Beuldoc it

has a bad same There have beset seandais connected with it whenever we havetried it and scandals are liable to be con-nected with it again It is Justly unpop-ular

VICTIM OF CIRCUMSTANCES

The Senate Necessarily Conwervntlvcnnd So Object of Prejudicethe 1iutMM JoaraaL

Circumstances have placed the Senatein the light of the obedient instrument-of the money power the strongholdo the trusts the rich mans club theoligarchy which would overthrow realdemocratic government Applied to individual Senators such charges may beplainly absurd There are conscientiousconservatives among them convincedradicals as well poor men end rich anddoubtless the standardrof personal hon-

esty ta as high in tjte Senate as in anysimilar body of legislators The troubleto that what may be the patriotic re-

luctance of the Senate as a whole tot to legislation that it really deems

dangerous ta so intermingled with thedislike of some Senators ft r anythingsavoring of attack upon great commercialinterests with which they are intimatelyallied that an undiscriminating public

quick to impute sordid motives Allaround And every time a rich capital-ist practically buys a seat in the Senatethe charge that the upper house is thechampion of unjust privilege is more andmore widely accepted as true

Even were this charge baseless evenwere the motives of every Senator be-

yond suspiciqn there would still be someground for the prejudice which manifestsitself at every turn An ideal Senatewould still have to risk unpopularitywhile it performed its obvious duty ofchecking the first impulse of resentmentagainst abuses An upper house is neces-sarily A conservative body and It mustoften insist on a calmer investigation ofconditions then irritated and impetuouspublic sentiment wishes to admit Thatis perhaps the principal reason why theSenate should stand so high In the gen-

eral esteem that even resentment willnever turn to distrust Popular as thePresident is it may be fairly assumedthat he could not win so easily over theSenate on every occasion were the mo-

tives of Senators less open to suspicion

Uw Yew York WOrM

The captive trembled ostentatiouslyHa sneered tho tyrant My very

glance makes thiS quailIt does indeed sire replied the hap

knight And I only to remindyour majesty that by the wise lawswhich your majesty hath deigned to de-cree for tho governance of this mostfortunate realm it Is now the dosedseason for quail

For the brave Sir Lancelot though firstand foremost a warrior did not scruplein an emergency to employ his nlmblowit

Where the Pins Gothe New York Mill

Three thousand microbes can occupy thespace An a single pin point according tothe Washington Herald This answers theold What becomes of all the pinsquestion The microbes eat em up-

I Havent Got This FnrUte XaiNfflU oMIt

The Washington Herald declares thatthere are not enough heiresses to go

round now Well they are going as fastas thoy MIn aint they

JURD ONES

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AT THE HOTELSinteresting guest of the Jfew Wfflard-

is Mr J O McCormick editor of theXonia Ohio Gazette who has been con-

nected with that famous old newspaperfor thirty years

Mr McCormick who is a gentleman oftho old school and an accomplished

man was born and grew up in thetown of Lawroneeburj Ind and he antiSenator Spooner were schoolmates andplayfellows In that village in their earlyyouth Just across the fig Miami Riveronly a couple of miles away but oa theOhio aide lived young Harrison anIhe often canto to Lawrenceburg to Jointhe Spooner and McCormick lads at mar-bles and ball The same village was like-

wise the home of exGov Albert G Por-ter and oxGov DurWn m their young

daysWhenXenla was merely a little ham-

let said Mr McCormick and I thinkwithout a name tradition says that awandering Englishman passing throughit fell sick and would have died but forsome of the kindhearted settlers whogave him shelter and nursing On recov-ering he told his good friends that hewould like to name their little placeXenla from the Greek word meaninghospitality and it has been celled

since It has produced some menwho have achieved national fame Beforemy newspaper career began WhtteiawReid and Preston B Plumb later a Kansas Senator were associates in a papercalled the News The News was ab-sorbed by the Torchlight which wasedited by the versatile Conies KInneywho wrote that nevertobeforgottenpoem Rain on the Roof Another Xeniaman who afterward became famous asthe most brilliant paragmaher tot tfieUnited States was Harry Merrick whodied In Washington a few years la-

mented by thousands

I have been rather agreeably sur-prised said Mr Wffllam H Hansonwho tejjseociated with a Mg tailoring es-

tablishment of New York to find somany Washington men who dine te even-ing dress In fact the swallowtail coatseems quite as much in evidence at theCapital after C p as in New York inproportion to population

Now in Cleveland cincinnati andeven Pittsburg very few men seem to

the trouble to don the regulation

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in tb Mg hotels ofthose and other Western towns a ma-jority of them sit down to dinner ta thsack or frock coat that they have beerswearing during business hours I willsay however that the ladies of the abovenamed places are not so careless and thebeautiful and appropriate evening cos-tumes they appear in are rebuke toslovenly dress of their husbands brothersand sweethearts The Western womenare according to my observation quitas punctilious In the matter of correctclothes as their sisters In the East andIt te to b hoped that sooner or later thewill get their men folks to pay a littlemore attention to the conventionalities

Three prominent citizens of LoudounCounty Va Hon Henry Fairfax E BWhite and F S Lutz were seen In theNew Wlllard last evening Mr Fairfaxis one of the best known tonal in the OldDominion and on his beautiful stock farmnear Leesburg be breeds a class of horsesthat never fan to bring topnotch pricesin New York City He was formerly inthe State senate and not long since wasa member of the corporation commis-sion Mr White ig president of the Peo-ples National Bank and a young man ofhighest social and business standing MrLutz who has a pretty home in thesuburbs of Leesburg is a native Washingtooian who in love wIth the rurallife of old Loudoun which he declares Isimmensely superior to existence In anybig city

mont in refusing to issue patents to settlens on the public lands saM MA

Thorpe a cattleman of Loak Wyoat the New WUlard

This policy It maintained I feargreatly retard the settlement of th a

Western country and it will do my ownState of Wyoming serious injury Whenliomerteaders taU to get their patentsnot through any fault of their own theybecame discouraged and many of themleave never to return One of the reasonsof the great emigration from the UnitedStates to the Canadian Northwest is theliberality of the Dominion land laws Instead of discouraging settlers the Cana-dians hold out every inducement to getpeople and they are building up theircountry at our expense

Being In the business of breeding cattie I might from a selfish standpointapplaud the action of the government forthe abandonment of their holdings by tiefarmers extends the ranges of the stockmen but I want to see the State becomesettled wtth a large number of thriftyagriculturists since that is the only wayto get a permanent population and createa prosperous Commonwealth

Mesrs S H Eagle ofGalttpoUa Onto H C Johnston formerspoakar pro tempore of the Ohio Viegtelatare and R H Mack sloe of that townare at the New Wiltard

Messrs J B Mitchell and D

the latter superintendent Of the cityschools of Winnipeg and the former archi-tect for the schools are at the Raleigh

Winnipeg said Mr Mitchell hisdoubled its population the last fivryears sad has now people We artdoing very well in the matter of local education but areJn of someschool buildings and Mr McIntyre nn1myself were delegated to come to severalof your larger cities to see the kind ofbuildings in which the school children arehoused We are having the same tremen-dous business activity m Manitoba thatprevails in the States and our railroadsare just as impotent to handle the trafficas yours appear to be

Former Gov John H McOVaw ofthe State of Washington who Is at theNew Willard is elated over the recent ac-

tion of the senate of his State in passing-an appropriation of 1000019 for the AlaskaYukon Pacific Exposition Helower house will follow suit and the billwill speedily become a law

We have an independent telephonecompany in Los Angeles that proved agreat success said Mr Thomas WPhillips a prominent business man ofthat progressive city at the Arlington

When we began operations three orfour years ago the old company foughtus in every conceivable way People werewarned against investing in the new con-cern and told that they would lose everydollar they put In In spite of this manyof the solid citizens backed their judg-ment with their cash and they are nowvery glad of It for they have been hand-somely rewarded The independent tele-phones are now in use in Los Angeles tothe number of 90000 and they do per-cent of the business One peat advan-tage they possess over the old phones isthe doing away with the hello girls theindependent instrument being automaticenabling the patrons to call up directlythe person with whom conversation is de

siredThe rates are very reasonable too 3

a month for private subscribers and 15

for hotels and efitees with individual linesfor each patron and an unlimited numberof calls

tip Against It Sure RnocRliFram the IMMilphk PaUfe LMfet-

rOvcr In Washington consctonoslass vandais are stealing the lampposts leavingthe vigilant puller nothing against whlcbto lean

evening attire and

a th

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