THE OMAHA DATI/T BEE : TUESDAY , JULY 18 , 18 . THE OMAHA DAILY BEE B. IIOSEWATEU , Editor. PUBLISHED BVEltY MOUN1NQ. TBHMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Iteo ( without Sunday ) , One Yc.ir. . 6.C Dally Bee and Sunday , One Year 8.C Hlx Months < Three Months M Sunday Bee. One Year 2.0 Saturday Uec , One Year * < ! AVookly Boo , Ono Year 6 OFFICES. Omaha : The Bee nul'.dlng. , South Omaha ; City Hall Building. Twenty fifth n .d N Streets. Council Illurrs : 10 Pearl Street. Chicago : Stock Exchaneo Building. e\v York : Temple Court. Washington : 501 fourteenth Street. COUUESPONDENCE. Communication * relating to news ami editorial matter rhoiild be addressed : Editorial Dcuarttncnt , The Omaha IJee. BUSINESS LETTERS. Htislno.ig letters and remittances should bo ndclr < m-d to The Bee Publishing Com pany , Omaha. Omaha.REMITTANCES. . Remit by draft , express or postal order payable to The UPC Publishing Company. Only 2-cert Btamp.TScceptert In payment of tno.ll accounts. Personal checks , except on Omnha or Wustern exchange , not accepted. THE UttE PUBLISHI.NCJ COMPANY. Btato 'of Nebraska , Douglas County , us. : George 13. Tzschuck , secretary of The Boo Publishing company , being duly sworn , says that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dully. Morning , Evening and Sunday Bee. printed during the month of June , 1609 , wan as follows : . . . \tryj. i > L/tc ] ii\jv. Subscribed nnd sworn to before me this 301 h day of June , 1RD3. L. B. nOYI.lv ( Seal ) Notary Public. 1'nrtlcn I.rnvliiK for HitSummer. . Parties leaving the city for the summer may have The Bee Rent to them regularly by notifying The Bee business office , In person or by malt. The address win be changed ns often as desired. TTnloss nil signs fall the work of ( lie iiitc-rnalional peace congi-oss will into history ns an iridescent fiasco. The republicans of this city have some very Important business on linnrt tills week the selection of Rood men for the district bench. If liquor Is to bo kept on tup at the county poor farm the superintendent or that Institution should be required to take out a license. The 50,000 tin plate workers who have been grunted an Increase In wages of from l. > to Ltl per cent are receiving a pretty fair dividend on their votes for McKlnley lu 1SO ( . In spile of repeated protests against the use of hit ) name as a. presidential possibility , Admiral Schley Is being groomed by Maryland democrats as the coining dark horse. The cashier of a New Jersey bank who took $1-10,000 of the bank's funds when arrested reported his total assets ns six cents. Gambling in stocks Is re sponsible for the difference. Senators Chandler and Galliuger of New Hampshire should be Induced to Keep quiet for n time at least. The trouble in the Philippines is ns union war ns Iho country cares for at one time. Statistics of live stock receipts In this market show n steady Increase over n corresponding pprlod last year , pushing Omaha , up nearly to the second place notch ns a live stock center. It Is only a matter of time- when Omaha will take the lead. Bx-Governor Ilolcomb says ho In anxious to tell the senate committee all ho knows about the ballot fraud of two years ngo. Not only , the committee but the people of the state would be pleased to have the ex-governor state nil ho knows about that transaction. There Is no doubt that new insurance Jaw If rigidly enforced would cut down the perquisites of the state auditor's office , for this result was sought for by the framers of the bill. It Is n dilllcult matter , however , to tear a popocratlc ofllccholder loose from a fat graft. The gigantic umbrella which was to ( have been one of the wonders of the Transmlsslsslppl Exposition , but faile < l to materialize because the inventor did not haVe money enough to build 11 hen coop , Is to ho erected at the Paris exposi tion next year , providing some American will come to the front with a hundred thousand dollars to foot the bill. Kvcry tlmo the city authorities find n place they think would be about right ns a location for a pest house they arc mot with nn injunction or a threat of one. The authorities might dispose of people nflllctcd with contagious diseases ns Artcmus , Ward proposed to do when landlords objected to families with children kill them off. If the federal judges arc disposed to consult public sentiment they will ap point a clerk of the circuit court as well as a clerk of iho district court In the Nebraska Jurisdiction. < .dire-seekers lu these parts object to the proposed merg ing of the two ollkes and forcing the appointee to acespt a tn'ary ' of : ? 7 , . " > 00 a year. Few men would 'erlne ! a tender of an ofllco paying half iJiat salary , Some people claim to bo able to prove that corporations control the selection of Judges In nearly every district of Ne braska. If the claim be true it Is largely because the citizens generally are so in different to the matter and cannot bo induced to attend the primaries. Should every voter go to the primaries ami volco his preference for Judges the cor porations could have very little part In the selection. JAPAN AMOXO TllR NATIOfiS. The new treaty relations which .Tnpni has Just entered Into with the Unltei States ntul most of the European pow ers give that country a standing nmoii | the nations which it has not hlthcrti bad. As stated by the -Inpanesc mln Ister 1o this country , the going Inti effect of the new treaties marks a turn Ing point In the diplomatic history no only of Japan , but of the oriental coun tries In general. It Is a recognition ol equality , In respect to International re hit Ions , of the Japanese empire , whirl : rannot fall to have Important results for that country , politically and other wise. That In connection with this change Japan should feel particularly friendly to the United States Is quite natural In view of the Interest which this country has always taken In the oriental eui' plre. More than forty-live years ago an American squadron under command of Commodore Perry anchored lu the bay of Yeilo and live years later a treaty was concluded which became the basis vf. Japan's conventional relations with western nations. When Perry planned his expedition Japan had been closed to the world for more than two centuries. Restricted commercial re lations were tolerated with one Euro pean nation , but on terms most rigorous and humiliating. The empire was seemingly Impervious to advances from without Commodore Perry perceived , as < IId few of his contemporaries , that Japan's condition was the result of ex traordinary and not of natural causes. He saw In the civilization then existing and lu the development of the arts , in dustries and agriculture , promise of progress under more favorable circum stances. It was fortunate for Japan , says a writer on the relation of Japan to other nations , that such a man should have undertaken the task of bringing her into touch with , the western world. The treaty subsequently negotiated with Japan has been characleri/.ed as a model of moderation and set an example which the envoys of other countries had perforce to Imitate. Thus It was that the United States was Instrumental in bringing Japan to the attention and serious consideration of Uic western na tions and tlie effect was to arouse in tlie empire impulses and aspirations thitherto undisclosed. Ever since then the relations between the United States and Japan have been uniformly friendly and the treaty which went into effect yesterday is added assurance of the maintenance of these relations. The Japanese minister at Washington has expressed the hope and belief that the United States government and people , having taken such a friendly Interest under the old system , will take a most friendly Interest In , the carrying out of the new treaty. There can be no doubt as to this. The United States has as great concern as perhaps uny other country In the growth of Japan ami. never 'was It more Important than now that we should be on friendly terms with Unit progressive oriental power. The industrial and commercial devel opment of Japan has already been ot great benefit to the trade of this coun try and there is good reason to expect greater benefit In the future. Then the new position this country has assumed in the far east renders more valuable and Important than ever before the friendship of Japan. THE SOUND MUXKY LEAGUE. It is proposed by the National Sound Money league to bold a national con vention to consider the currency ques tion , probably with a view to exerting Influence upon congress. The date for the convention , which Is to be held in Ulchmond , Va. , is yet to be fixed , but it will be some time lu October , and there Is said already to be promise of a large attendance. No doubt such a conven tion would have good results. One ef fect to be expected from It is a more thorough awakening of sound money men to tlie duty of promoting that cause and keeping It alive in public attention. While all conditions are adverse to the advocates of currency debasement , while events have swept away the free silver fallacies , it Is nevertheless a fact that the free coinage of silver will again be an Issue In the presidential campaign next year. ' There are democrats who liope to subordinate this question , but the leader of the party has explicitly de clared that this shall not be done and there is now no reason to doubt that his influence in the national convention will be predominant. Such being the case the country must IKS prepared for another "battle of the standards" and sound money men must not permit the free silvcrites to be more active and aggressive than they. Zeal in support of the cause of sound money is still Important and tlie league con vention should be productive of this , while It may also bo useful in Its Influ ence upon congress , where It seems probable that there will be some repub lican obstruction to legislation 'fixing the gold standard. I'llOTESr AdAlNST OENSOttSHW. The protest of the newspaper corre spondents at Manila against the ex treme censorship exercised by order of General Otis will bo approved by the American public , which has long been convinced that the reports from Manila do not fully and faithfully represent the condition of affairs. In their statement to Otis tlie corresixnulents assert that the official dispatches have not given a correct Impression of the situation in the Philippines , but present un ultra- optimistic view not shared by the gen eral otlicors In the Held. It Is jmlnted out that in several Important inspects the otllclal dispatches have been mis leading and the correspondents have been compelled through the censorship to participate In the misrepresentations. The allegations of the newt-paper representatives are certainly of a very serious nature and should receive some attention from the Washington authori ties. Jt may bo admitted that some cen sorship Is necessary , that It would bo Injudicious to allow the correspondents unrestricted freedom in the sending of Information from the Philippines. If that were done there would be danger that MJIUO of them would mlsubo the privilege , perhaps to the detriment of the United States. But the American people are entitled to be correctly In formed as to the actual facts of tin situation , they are entitled to t j knowledge of the real conditions , am I a censorship that will not allow then to 'have such information Is to be con demned. It Is stated that General Otis has promised to modify the censorship and allow all matter to pass which may be regarded as not detrimental to tin Vnlted States. It remains to be seei : how far he Is willing to go , but he mtij rest assured that the protest of the cor respondents will have a support fron the American public which It will be wise to give heed to. The American people have lost contWence in tlie of ficial reports ; they will Insist that the press be permitted to give them correct Information. DISK ! ' 1IVK IXSl'UAXOK IXVESTMENTS. The announcement that the managers of the New York Life Insurance com pany had ( decided to market nn enor mous block of stocks held by that com pany ns nu Investment for the benefit of its policy-holders very naturally cre ated quite a sensation and Is said to have nearly precipitated a panic on the New York Stock exchange. The silnrni of the stock speculators over an appre hended slump In stocks Is , however , of comparatively small moment to people who are not directly Interested In the ups and downs of the stock market. The alarm sounded from tlie Stock ex change lias , however , roused popular ill ; quiry into the character of lnv stineuts made by the managers of standard life Insurance companies and the dancer that confronts many millions of policyholders - holders in a ixjssiblo collapse ot com panies that have always been consid ered as sound and safe as is the na tional treasury. The New York Life is by no means the only company whose officers have Invested the surplus tinder their control in stocks. It has been openly acknowledged Unit many If not most of the old line companies had de parted from the only safe policy of in vesting nil surplus funds either in first- class mortgages or national , state and municipal bonds with a fixed date of redemption and fixed Interest rate. It was not known or even suspected by policy-holders that Hie money they were paying in as premiums and held in trust for their heirs or creditors was being invested in securities which are known to be largely made up of water , and consequently subject to fluctuation and depreciation through dishonest or reckless inflation or the manipulations of stock jobbers. The Impropriety ns well as Impru dence of investing life Insurance funds in stocks must be apparent. Such in vestments would afford almost Irresist ible temptation for stock jobbing on the part of life insurance managers , who could enrich themselves by privately buying options in stocks wh sn they were at low quotations and after bulling the stocks on tips of assured purchase of large blocks by their own company could rake in the margin. The reason advanced by the officers of tlie New York Life for their decision to part with all their stock Investments is that they could not otherwise reopen their business In Germany , whose gov ernment prohibits life Insurance com panies doing business In' that country from making investments in any securi ties except bonds and mortgages. It strikes us that Itwill be Imperative for America to follow the example of Ger many by restricting life Insurance man agers from dabbling In stocks with funds held in trust for the holders of life insurance policies , Such restric tions would be in the Interest of the companies and their creditors , the policyholders - holders , who could better afford to dis pense with dividends than to be men aced with a possible liquidation of con cerns upon whoso soundness they have staked the welfare and happiness ot their families. Once ID each year the seven judges of tlie district court hold a solemn con clave to assign the dockets and estab lish rules for the court to be In force for the twelve months following. These rules are presumed to be binding on each of the seven Judges unless revoked by a majority In extraordinary cases. Thus all criminal cases arc docketed in the criminal division and the judge as signed to that division Is presumed to have exclusive jurisdiction. The equity division of the court Is charged with exclusive jurisdiction In its branch of business , which Includes Injunctions and quo warranto proceedings. The law di vision is charged with the hearing and trial of civil suits before Juries. But within the past two or three years the rules and regulations of the court have been set aside and the most unheard-of proceedings have been Instituted In defl- nnce of all law and the court rules. How much longer our citizens are to he sub jected to these periodic outbreaks of judicial anarchy wo nro at a loss to divine. The fair cash value of the street rail ways of Chicago , exclusive of the ele vated railroad , has been computed by the assessors at $ 24,000,000 , , and the assess ment for 1809 will bo at one-llfth of Unit amount , or a fraction less than $5,000- 000. These figures go to show that the street railroad corporations of Chicago are on friendly terms with the asses sors. It is safe to assert that the mar ket value of Uieso properties will fall very little short of $100,000,000 , , as gauged by their earning capacity. Kngllsh papers of the class which have always been hostile to the United States seize on tlie Alaskan boundary dispute to exhibit their Ill-suppressed Jealousy of the growth of the United Slates In power and -wealth. The trou ble with England Is and always has hoen that It covets every foot of ground lu the world. Nothing Is too large for Its ambition and nothing too small for It to contend for and the nation which Jlsputcs Its claims Is necessarily wrong , Attorney General Ilemley of Iowa has rendered an opinion to tlie effect that the law regarding presidential electors , is revised by the last leglbluturc , pro vides for the selection of two at largo from the state and the remainder by rongrosMonal districts. Such was not the Intention of the legislature , how- ever , but the proposed change Is duo t < nn oversight in wording the law. Tin legislature which meets next winter wll undoubtedly change the law to conforn to the practice In other states. Then Is no reason why Iowa with Its G0,00 ( republican majority should run an ; chances of one or two dcmocratli electors slipping In , particularly whci democratic states adhere to the old cus torn of election at large. A new factor liaa come Into the low. senatorial fight to keep nllve the polltl cal contest which threatened to die on from bclnjr overworked. Congrcssmai Dolllvcr , not through any announce incut of his own , but through the nc tlon of conventions lu his district , ha < been projected Into the contest as ai active participant. Dolllvcr has i large personal following and should 1 enter Uio light'in earnest Iowa Is llkelj to witness ns lively a senatorial cam palgn ns any since the day of tin famous Alllsou-Wllson-lIarlan contest. That owners of the tin plate mill ! operated by a trust were not actuatet In joining the combine solely with n view to effecting greater economics Is manifest by the sudden advance ot tli plato from $3.87 to $1.87 per box of IOC pounds. While the recent advance ol 15 per cent in wages of the operatives- in tin plate mills would increase the labor cost on each box of standard plates the price of tin plate has gone up within the last six months $1.71 ! pei box , which strikingly Illustrates the insatiable greed of the trust A scientist who has been Investigat ing the "kissing bug" gives it as his opinion that it is an Importation from the Philippines brought in the baggage and goods of soldiers and others re. turning from those islands. As the bugs were not Included in the schedule of assets turned over by Spain In con sideration of the $20,000,000 they should be deported at once. No pauper bugs from the Orient can be allowed to compete with American young men. Nearly n. Million In It. \Baltlmore \ American. The man who says there's nothing In a newspaper should remember that one In Indlanaipolls , a comparatively small town , sold the other day for nearly $1,000,000. Tlie llnniii In C < iiiicr. Globe-Democrat. There Is even more of a boom In copper than in gold , Last year's production of copper In the United States was 526,375,691 pounds and the annual Increase is 10 per cent. I3xcrclMliiK < ioo < l Judgment. Chicago Times-Herald. The klnc of Sweden has appointed nn Omaha preacher to bo his chaplain. The king muEit have been impressed with the political wisdom of finding "some good west ern man. " Groaning Under a I.onil. Indianapolis Journal. The Dominion of Canada has a debt ot $260,000,000 , iwhich Is Increased every year , while Its population , less than that of Now York state , scarcely more than holds its own. Like the woman who put on airs be cause her husband ha'd ' mortgaged his house , Canada's excessive debt may be the cause of Its disagreeable Importance. Taken Illn llevr In Ponce. St. Louis Republic. From tho" way John Dull Is sending troops and rapid-fire artillery to the Cape ho Booms to Intend to lick Oem Paul first and arbitrate with him afterwards. Your Oem Is not allowing his beer appetite to Blacken , for all that. He remembers that John once before tried the same game on the Boers and had to borrow money to get homo on. Our I'lillliMiInc iFleet. Pllludelihi ! Record. Twenty-two small vessels of war , three tugs and a steam barge constitute the federal - oral fleet now available for service In the shallow bayous and Inlets of the Philip pines. Thirteen of these craft were acquired from Spain by purchase ; the others are prizes of 'war. It Is a cheap fleet and a good one , moreover. Eternal vlgllanco with such boats Is the price of supremacy in our now eastern territory. Decline In Triint StoeUa. St. Lou la Globe-Democrat. A decline of $101,255,618 has taken place since the beginning of the year in the stocks of twonty-fllx Industrial combines In the United States. It baa been remarked fre quently that the heavy capitalization of trusts Is a more serious matter for Investors than for any other class. Promoters had reached a point -where their talk was In tons and hundreds of millions. They sent forth an avalanche of stocks based on oil sorts of extravagant schemes and those who bought are $100,000,000 poorer lor their ex perience since January 1 , A few trust stocks have advanced , but the not leas In Industrials In six months Is not less than $75,000,000. Business combinations involving a big In crease In capitalization are treated with de cided caution by prudent investors. ailOWJNG Uhll OF AVATKll POWEIl. Marked Inurenun In Hie Ilovclnpnieiit of l.oriil Iniluntry. Chicago Record. Ten or fifteen years ago the scientific writers wore trying 'to ' prove that the steam engine had forever superseded water power. But improved methods In the generation and transmission of electrical energy have again brought -water power to the front. A slight retardation of this tendency has been created by the advance Jn the price of copper , but In turn this is having the effect of bringing ilumlnlum Into use as a conductor , for it ap peara that aluminium is a better conductor than copper , while its lightness and greater tensile strength permit It to bo strung more easily and at small expense. It Is believed that the demand for aluminium will result In improving the devices for Its manufacture to such an extent that It win soon become a Formidable rival of copper for all electrical work -where copper Is now used. In many directions enterprises are on footle lo utilize existing water power or by canal- cutting and dam-bulldlng to create now power. At Jlassena Springs , N. Y. , 40.000- horse power Is being secured by diverting ho waters of the St. Lawrence river. Omaha expects to obtain 28,000-horBo power from Iho 1'latto river. About Rochester , N. Y. , ; o,000-horfco power is to bo got out of the Qcneseo river. At Niagara falls the water fiouer that Is now under control of the \merlcan company -will soon lapse to the Canadian government , when it will be Im- iroved by a Canadian company. Between Chicago and .Marseilles on the Illinois river 100,000-horse power will bo created by tbo .vatere . of the Chicago drainage channel. At teveral points on the river companies are irganlzlng to utilize it. Tbo effort to grab lie privileges at the foot of the drainage channel was an evidence of tbo growing alue of water power. Some idea of the , -aluo of this Illinois valley -water power nay bo had when It Is considered that it s two or three times as great as the force t Minneapolis or that which the present con- rlvauccs at Niagara falls utilize. or TUB The Bea is Indebted to Mr. A. Schlegd , deputy auditor of customs at San Juan , I * H. , for n copy of the Fourth of July edltlor of the San Juan News , published by S. K Dcllacktn. It is a warm number , lumlnoui with patriotism , colored pictures of thi flag , the bird of freedom nnd pyrotechnic ; galore. A notable feature of the publlcatlor is n slowing peroration on the Ucclaratlor of Independence , followed by the Declara tion itself. Ilcccnt critics of Uiat Immortal document should possess themselves of t copy of the News of July -1. They mlRhl gather from Its popes some of the cn > thuslnsm of new converts nnd renew nl- Icglanco to the charter of American liberty Interviews -with soldiers arriving at Sar Francisco on the transports Newport nnd Ohio show marked unanimity of oplnlor on the question of Increasing the nrmy Ir Luzon. Without exception they say that al least 60,000 additional troops are needed tc bring about peace. Brlgadlrr General Sum' mcrs said : "Agulnaldo's forces were badly dcmoralfzed when the Oregon regiment loft , twenty-nine days ago. I am of the opinion that peace will have been obtained before the end of the next dry season. Ol cotirss , a much larger force Is necessary Ir order that wo may hold the country nnd towns evacuated by the rebels. I am of thu opinion that starvation will cut a large figure In bringing Agulnaldo's forces to torma. On nccount of the war the rlco crop , on which the natives depend for food , is next to noth ing this season. "Tho general cry - whenwo left .Manila , ' snld he , "was that 100,000 more men -were necessary to bring about peace. Thcro were no prospects of such result when wo left , The voluntce.ra have -wanted to come home over Blnco pence was announced. Of thirty- two fights , the Oregon regiment took par ! in no fewer than twctity-soYen , nnd wo did not scorn to leave much of a lasting Imprcs- elon upon them. " Sergeant ' .Major iMarshall said 100,000 more men were necessary to conquer Luzon alone. "Tho war is not popular among the volun teers , " said he. "Six weeks In that climate enervate n man. A dash of 100 yards In that country prostrates a soldier. Every volunteer in Luzon who did not fall Into a soft snap was eager to como homo when peace.was arranged. The no-called great victories have been without lasting results. When wo marched out at one end of a con quered town the Filipinos quietly sneaked in at the other. " Captain iSaunders eald positively that not fewer than 100,000 men must bo sent at once to the Philippines for service nt the end of the rainy season. Captain Saunders is commander of the transport Newport nnd la thoroughly acquainted with the conditions In nnd about Manila. All the officers and men of the District ot Columbia regiment that returned , from the Santiago campaign except one man are said to have applied for pensions. Now It Is announced that F. L. Graham and J. H. Griffiths , both of whom were officers In this regiment , have been appointed as officers In the new volunteer forces being formed for the Philippines. This presents a perplexing problem , not only for the doctors who will make the physical examination of the volun teers , but also for the pension seekers and the people who pay the pensions. Military law renders Manila safe and silent at night. A correspondent of Leslie a Weekly says : "Carriages are but little seen at night. The native driver of a public vehi cle Is not allowed out any more than a na tive pedestrian would be. Hence , there lane no carriage to bo had , unless you are the owner or lessee of a private rig , and even then you must be either official or sufficiently near so as to be privileged to pass your driver by the sentry. Moreover , every time you are halted In a carriage you must leave the carriage and advance on foot for inspection and questioning. Over in the San Nicolas district , around the port , the sentries are so thick that proceeding in a carriage Is more tiresome by far than walking. Every llttlo interval covered necessitates another halt , explanations , advance , and the same thing over again , about as fast as you can enter the carriage and alight. There Is no pleasure In a night ride through the crowded parts of Manila. "But the end justifies Iho means. There are no native uprisings and no possibility of one. No city In the world Is as safe by night ns Manila. Deserted and nearly as still as the grave It remains , under martial Saw , until broad daylight comes around again , when -windows open , shutters como down , the populace swarms out , nnd the busy life of a great city begins llko magic with the firing of the sunrise gun. " I'KHSOMAI ; AND OTHERWISE. Twenty-six industrial stocks have shrunk $101,255,618 in value since January 1. 1899. Chicago has abandoned the projected fall fete and dumped the stadium into the murky river. President Salln * of Brazil is a base ball enthusiast , and is trying to encourage tlie American game in Klo Janeiro. An Ithaca ( N. Y. ) doctor , having a large opinion of himself , put In a bill for $10- 000 for ten visits to a millionaire patient. California is going to exhibit 20,000 bottles tles of Us wlno nt Paris , just to show the Parisians that there are other vineyards than those of Franco. Eight moro deaths from lockjaw * were re ported in Now York and Its Immediate vi cinity , making a total ot twenty deaths from this causa near the metropolis since Indopendcnco day. Marcus Daly , the copper magnate , is a good shot with a rifle and spends hl vaca tions in the hunt for big game. The re sults of Wiose expeditions have filled his house with tropliles at the chase- . Taking the government crop reports an a basis of computation , the statistician of tlio New York Produce exchange figures that at present prices thp harvcsta of this coun try , already in sight , are worth $1,604,499- DOO , which gccF to show that farming Is a profitable buslnera when you can form ! > ig. The head of the English house of Paget , one of whoso members Is the son-in-law of Secretary William C. Whitney , Is the roung marquis of Anglcssey , who , following : ho example of his father , grandfather , ; reat-grandfathcr and great-great-grand- ather , has separated from his wife. Goebel , democratic candidate for governor of Kentucky , Is a remarkable man in many ways and his old "Pennsylvania Dutch" crops out in his quiet , bulldog pertinacity. Ho does not drink or smoke ; ho has killed his roan ; he Is a fritter enemy to all trusta and corporations ; he does not gamble and is responsible for the law making gambling a felony in tbo Bourbon state. W. H , IJnmslio was recently ro-elected treasurer of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad company , has been In the employ of tlio company for forty-six years , and has been treasurer blnco May , 1SC6 , When a small boy In Baltimore ho Raw the great parade that Baltimore arranged to celebrate the laying of tbo cornerstone of the Baltimore & Olilo railroad , on July 4 , 1628 , Tim IIAltll Ol' AIUCAIVSAW. Tnnrn III * llnr | > nn thrVlnit nnil Spill * Mrloilr li > - Iho Wnjxlilc. The remark attributed to a widow , \\hc had donned hnblllmcnta of woe In memory ot her fifth husband , "You never know n man until you live with him a while , " applies tc I other men nnd other conditions. You cannot - ' not judge a newspaper man's talents by his , shop work. It Is necessary to got him oul on a vacation , free from the cares nnd anxieties of toll , and watch his mental powers expand and bloom under the rare siinshlno of freedom. Then only Is he nl- tuned to the harmonies of the blessed ; thcr only does his soul respond to the prompting ; of the muse. A happy demonstration of that fact It supplied by A. J. Kcndrlck , n former Met man , nt present publisher of the Fort Smltl ( Ark. ) News-Hecoril. When Kcmlrlch hustled for the festive Item In Omaha Bonn fifteen years ngo none of his associates har bored a suspicion that ho had concealed about him the germs of ptiesy. They know that he lightened the weary hours of toll with stanzas of sacred song and oft lilt thrilling volco echoed through the dart yellow plno corridor , spilling glorious melody ! as ho finishes ! a hot scoop on his rival- - Sentimental song Iio eschewed as an un clean thing and none was over known tt profane his tlcn In his presence. Even his confidantes would not endanger his friend ship by accusing him of wooing the muse In springtime or any other old , tlmc. Hut times have changed nnd Kcndrlck with them , Since pitching his tent in the vibrant wlldf of Arkansaw , .by the banks ot the Pok-au ho has ibecn n diligent suitor of the musc. in secret , but with characteristic ( throw dnocF muzzled his poetic gifts nt homo. Not until ho journeyed westward toward "Where Rolls the Oregon" did ho unhitch Pegasus and ride for a record. Thus mounted and breathing the ozone of the eternal hills he gave tin editorial excursionists series of poetical cocktails , refreshing nnd enlivening to a de cree , n veritable oasis in a desert of drearj prose. It may bo noted , "more In sorrow than In anger , " .that the bard of Arkansaw has for saken the heavenly lyre for more carthlj melodies. This .might . bo doubted were 11 not vouched for by the veracious Portland Oregnnlan. The first effort of the noted bard tells of the fate of a Mississippi scribe who tried the tunnel act on nn Iowa girl : Tlio editor sat on the Wapnor deck , Whcnoo all but him hmi lied. Hrslile him 5 < miKKled n maiden rare , With d'linnsk ' cheek M > < rd They stood anil g-azed t 1he passing slights , Of thnt wonderful Oroimn trip , This damsel rare , this maiden fair , And the man from from.Mlsslsslpp. . She was a lass with most ivondrous eye ? , So limpid , clear and blue. She gazed at 'him ' In her siillelcss way Suiinoso It had been you ? Your fate were the same ns this poor wight's 'Tls certuln make no slip ; Oh ! pity this lad he's not so bad , I * thisman man manfrom from fromMlsslsslpp. . The. more he gazed , the deeper he fell Into thu deaths of love- He swore by the rolling Oregon , And skies ? o blue abox'e , He'd taste the nectar of t U sweet mouth Of that transcendent Up ; She'd made a mash , and settled the hash Ofthe the theman man manfrom from from.Mlsslsslpp. . The train rolled on. Its thundering beats Timed well Ms pulsing blooU That wildly throbbed In passion's floods Beneath his rhinestone stud- But suddenly fell on awful gloom , As though a pall did slip , On that maiden fair , so sweet , so rare , Andthe the theroaji roaji roajifrom Ah. ha , ! a tunnel full deep and long , That train WOB passingthrough. . His chance had come and he grasped It well , Ho know a thingor two ; Ami with tiper bound he leaped to her , And then he clasped her NIT. And Klyslan bliss ! He snatched a kiss- Did the manfrom from fromMlsslsslpp. . Oh ! for the touch of a vanished hand ! That kss ! on , a vanished cheek ! Oh ! for the maid who stepped aside , So nwilsli. yet so meek ! When the Wagner rolled In daylight broad H'o he'd In loving grip , A chap with whiskers three feet long- Didthat that thatCUSH CUSH CUSHfrom fromJtlsstsslpp. . 'An Iowa editor boarded the train with a bottle of cocktail's In his pocket , chuckling to himself over the good time in prospect. Before the train had gene ten miles , the editor sot down with tbo proverbial dull , sickening thud upon the aforesaid bottle. It smashed to pieces , and Its contents Immersed a wide section of the editorial trousers , to say nothing of a wide area of a palace car plush seat. The poet laureate has em balmed this incident In verse , ns follows : Iowa Is a KooA old state , 'Tls always. In the van , With fields of corn and fields of grain 'Itejoddng ' heart of mun. But Its clvlefest claim to BJory Is on editor who by chance Once took his morning cocktail By absorption through his pants. iHero Is another poetical etching roveallnB the tribulations of a Nebraska molder of public opinion : Only a harmless editor , only a roguish dame ; Only a pair o f Illy whlto hands that grasped 'him ' aa ho came ; Dnly a pair of sturdy knees , only a coat of Only-1 dustod. the - n , leather slipper that editor man , Only a pair of struggling limbs , only across those kntes , Dnly a quaven In the ) air , "Oh , let mo RO. now , please ! " Dnly a pair of feminine paws , put to lively Dnly a BtriJBKllnfT editor , to paddle nnd wallop and bruise. Dnly some moments of terror , only a piteous wall , , Dnly a lively rub-a-dub-duK that rattleu down llk.3 ihall , . . . Dnly some shattered dignity , only a lot of Dnly n. battered editor and the hellish deed was done ! A OiilvnnUeil If-KCiuI. Chlcaco NOWB. Another pretty little story has been spoiled and another tale of marvelous fortune laid away on the same shelf as tbo legends of unlimited gold finds in the Klondike. A young man who paid $4 for an old coot at a south side ouctlon , and who found $3,000 In bonds in the Inside pocket , has learned that his bonds are worthless and hi * profit of $2,990 has vanished utterly. It is just as well. That story would have been quoted at every gathering of unlucky men for thirty years to como and would have shared honors with the narrative of the farmer whose plow turned up an old brass kettle containing $43S97 In Spanish gold and a chart locating the rest of Captain Kldd's buried treasures. BAKING POWDER Makes the food more delicious and wholesome . , . norm , * KiNa > o t < CO. tw voiu. A IllSHOP'S 9TII.\\GI3 VII'.W. Tlio < i < ni > ol of Wnr Sulxllltilcil for ( ha < ! o | iol of l'ont'0. iDetrolt l-'reo 1'reM. \ Bishop J. .M. Thobiirn , a missionary of the cross , who has spent forty years among the benighted people of India , preaching the ] gospel of prace and the OoMrlnos of the eer- , mon on the mount. U evidently as rank an Imperialist as the country contains. HP has 1 recently returned from ho Philippines , | whore ho was nu Interested observer of I events for a season. Ho thinks that the ' course of affairs lu the Philippines made It Inevitable thnt thu United Stnti-s should ns- i sort Ha authority there , as the only altorna- { live of anarchy nnd assassination. Hut with reference to the means which the United States should tnko to assert Its authority the worthy bishop has a theory that may be considered qulto remarkable for a clergyman to eiiteitnln or nt least It would be romnrk- nblo If he wore not an Imperialist. The only trouble lies In the island of Luzon. All the other Islnndn nro peaceful. It Is hop Thoburn , therefore , suggests thnt It would bo a wise plan to enlist the men of the other Islumls who nre the nnturnl enemies of the inhabitants of Uuon , to flpht Agulnnldo's army. The bishop It confident that they could quickly dispose of the men under the Klllplno chieftain If oflicered by American ! ) . Thus this m.in of pence who has spent forty years among the dark-sllnnpd pcoplo of the orient , teaching thorn how the whlto man's religion Is based upon love nnd good will even to enemies , would have the- United Stales government set the natives of the Philippines to killing each oilier off. To the Iny mind this proposition ot the bishop's la Ikcly to Rcem rather cold-bloodi-d. Nor Is It probable that Mr. .McKlnley \ \ III act upon the ougRestlon by ordering a few regiments of Sulu pirates to ho rcernlted nnd turned loose In the interior of Luzon. The bishop als.o holds the advnneH Im perialistic ground that the United St.itcs should tnko part in thu partition of poop old. helpless China , "In the Interest of mo rality and Christianity. " of course , This 13 what the old world powers are using MS nn excuse for their spoliation of the Celestial kingdom. It Is to belane "In the Interest of momlltv nutl Christianity. " The United Slates should have Its portion with the rest of the robbers , thinks this peed nnd gcntlo bishop. And ho finds It hard to understand why the American republic should "shrink ; from giving up her exclusive policy and hcsl- tate to take her place nmong the nations. " The most charitable way to explain Ulshop Tlioburn's uii-Amcrlenn views upon the Chinese problem IB to attribute them to an absence from his own country so long that ho hns forgotten the traditional policy which ims heretofore kept us from entering Into entangling alliances nnd baved us fiom tin \ national crimes ot Europe. C1IKI3IIY Chicago Xews : "nilly , have you over fol- lowpd SL wild mountain .trail ? " "No. but 1'vo sone all through a modern department store. " Detroit Journal : Microbes are now under stood to be nttesKury to human life. It Is our 'tendency ' , we bc-llovc , to regard ns ne cessities today what were nieiely convene Icnces yesterday. Chicago Post : "Fortunately we don't hnvo such a thing aa lose mnjtr > to In thin coun try , " said tlio bachelor. "Oh , 1 don't know , " replied the benedict. " \ly wife seems to regard any comment on her cooklns us somewhat in that line. " Philadelphia Record : Lawyer What la your eise , madam ? Pair Witness I am er that 1s cr Lawyer ( sarcastically ) Kindly remember , madam , that every moment you gain now will not be to your advantage. IndlannpollH Journal : "Lot's send some ice cream over to Jlr ? . Hopkins. " "Whv , Claia , her husband Is in the lea business. " , "Well , llmL's It ; she never sets enough Ice to make Ice cream. " Chicago Record1 : "Wo ought to hear from , those arctic explorers. " "Oh , I don't know. Jf they have found the north pole this Isn't the tlmo of year for them to ba giving it away. " Chicago News : "Young man , " said tlio fatherly Individual , if you continue nt thl pnca you will shorten your days. " "Would that 1 eou'.d , " responded the youth , who deiils out ribbons ten hours out of twenty-four. "If 1 thought I could shorten my working days I'd try a. mllc a-mlnuto Dace. " Detroit Journal : After the high church ! wadding the fashionable brldo and groom shook luoiiula. "Shall wo meet ngaln ? " nhc nsked > trying N to seem Interested. "Yes. there's ladles' tiny at the club , you know , " ho answered , Hnilllng , for It would be Im&oUte lo act bored. TllK HASYtiOI.VU'MAV. ' . Detroit l'"reo Press. Ho never has a single care , There's naught can glvo .him worry ; No matter what the tlmo may be. Ho never has a hurry. Ho rises when It pleases Jilm ; V Does not retire till late ; Tlio latest Htyles don't trouble him , Hut still he's up-to-date , Hn does not bother over wheat , J The prlco of pork or stocks ; Ho never fears lila business will Some ilny land on the rocku. His face la always boamlng bright , Ho very rarely kick ? ; Tlie reuson 1io'5 so happy Is Because he's only six. JULY CLEARING SALE We have finished our inven tory and have taken all broken lines and odds and ends of zlothing placed them on a sep arate table , and if your size is here , it's yours for just half srice , All kinds of materials md styles are represented. .ong Pants Linen Crash Suits For Boys of 13 to 19 Years of Age , These are dressy and cool , wash nicely , and are the proper dress for torrid weather. We have cut the price of $3,50 $ Suits tO.$2.50 $4,50 $ Suits to.$3.50 $5 $ and $6 $ Suits to. . . $4.oo And there are many reductions on Straw and Crash Hats as well , Drop in and look over our values , ( We close , remember , at 6j ) . m. Saturday. )