V TIIE QMAIIA DAIT.T BEE: TtTESDAT, 80, 1003. The Omaha Daily Dee. E. ROSffiWATEIl, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERY MOnNINO. TSRM3 OF BUnflCRirTIOS. Dally Rm (without Punday). One ler..M.no C .00 2.U0 Jeiiy Hee and Biintlay, un xeir Illustrated lire, One Year Sunday Hp, On Year Ptlunlav Ilee, One Year Twentieth Century Farmer, One. Year.. DELIVERED HY CARRIER. Dally Hee (without Sundityj, P" copy.. Dally Haa (without Sunday), per week. Dally Rce (Including Hunday), per wees Mll.i.u Li-- .... - 2. no 1.S0 1.00 . J1 .12o .170 be. Kvenlng Ilea (without Sunday), per week, to livening ce (Including Sunday), Per.. Wee( ,' , " ComtlaVn'i''o'f ' Vr'reivilnritlea In delivery should b addressed to City Circulation De partment OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building, eouth Omaha t'ltv Hall Hulldlng Twin- ty-nfth and M Htreets. CounMl Bluffs li pearl Street. Chicago 164, Cnlty Building. New York 232 Perk Row Bulldlnf. Waahlngton Ml Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to new and edi torial matter should he addressed: Oman Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, payable to The Bee Publishing Company, only 2-cnt stamp accepted In payment of mail accounts. Personal cnecas, mwv Omilhi nr .tern .Txhintnl. not accepted. the RKK pnm.lflHlNU COMFAN' STATEMENT OP CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska. Douglas County, .t George B. Taaohuck, secretary o' The Bee Publlsnlng Company, being duly sworn, aaya that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally. Morniug. Evening and Bunday Bee printed during ttt montn 01 May, uws, was aa iuuuwb 1 SO,9UO 17 u ai.oao 1 80,7tl JO SO.HltO U 30,B)T0 2l 30.W40 jg 80,30 U. 28,230 26 30,8U0 M 80.T0O 27, .....30,7IM 2g 80,00 2 80.000 10. 8130 U 27rVOO t 30.H75 I 8U,liOO 4 SO.SUO I ;...,.30,T3U as,07o T UO,TO I aoio 80,740 10 2T.TTB II 00,440 U 80,370 U SO.UiMt 14 3U.7SO is ..ao.boo 14 80,00 ,003,000 . 10,34 Less unsold and returned ooplee Net toUl aalea 4,BB3 Net average aalea 80.437 QEORQE B. TZ8CIIUCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this Ust day of May, A. D. 103. it. B. HUNQATE, (Seal.) Notary Publio, Now watch the corn grow. Climb Into Ak-Sar-Ben's band wagon. Like the street car, it always has room for one more. Wonder If Mount Tele will have to stand the blame for present weather conditions, ' too. The question is, Can a nonpartisan Judiciary be produced by working politics in the bar association? According to the calendar, the Glor ious Fourth does not arrive until Sntur day. But the small boy makes a calen dar of his own. According to the Chicago Record Herald, all Colonel Bryan has to do now to get into the enemy's country is to cross a Missouri river bridge. ' Having put the automobile to use to 1 assist in the gentle art of smuggling, the success of the horseless vehicle can so longer be open to question. Another air line from South Dakota to tne uuir of Mexico has been pro jected and Incorporated, but it is one thing to project a railroad and another thing to build it. The people of Omaha are not so much Interested in which of the rival con tractors get the contract to repair the asphalt pavements as they are In hav ing the pavements repaired, Omaha gets the next annual state tournament of the Bohemian turner so cieties. Omaha may be depended on to do the right thing in the way of enter tainlng the turners when tbey come. Iowa republican clans are gathering at Des Moines. Iowa republicans never bad occasion as now to be proud of the eminent men contributed out of their ranks to the public life of the country. If Omaha transplants its vicious ele tnents from the front yard to the back yard, perhaps it will escape Its period leal advertisement by Imported profes- slonal reformers as "the wickedest city In the world." And perhaps it won't. It would appear that were it not for the untimely intervention of Circuit At torney Folk boodling in Missouri would be on a fair road to a place among the most respectable as well as the most lucrative occupations in that common wealth. ' By the way, where was the Tax payers league while the corporations were getting in their fine work with the South Omaha Board of He view? Is the league organized simply to get rn on the distribution of gov ernor appointed police boards? The Incorporation of an Omaha elec trleal company way down In Maine calculated to arouse suspicion that there Is something behind the concern that will not bear the close inspection that would have been invited if the articles had been filed nearer home. The agitation over the decision that until further notice sessions of the Ne braska legislature will le curtailed from forty, to sixty days is confined to the state capital. Lincoln hotel keepers and professional lobbyists do not relish the prospect of a short legislative ses Ion. Electric railways are going through the same stages of evolution aa did the team railroads ' In their early days. About ten are built on paper to every one that materializes la iron and steel. It will be found, however, that wher ever there is a. real demand for the service the capital will be forthcoming lor the work of actual construction. TUB HKW DSPAHTMKIIT. Tomorrow the new Department of Commerce and Labor will nter tipon the full scope of operations for which It was created and preparations for which hare been going on for several months. The Interesting event will be ncconipllnhed quietly, without fuss or friction, all the arrangements for trans ferring bureaus from the old depart ments to the new having been perfected. Hr-sltles the bureaus already In opera tion In the State, Treasury and Interior departments, which are transferred to the new department, there are two bureaus created by the act of last Feb ruarythose of corporations and of manufactures. Of these the bureau of corporations has commanded the largest share of public . interest, since it is authorised to investigate the or ganization and business management of all corporations engagea in trane among the states or with foreign countries. The creation of this bureau was a con cession to the demand for publicity and Is n departure that is necessarily ex perimental. It Is anticipated that in the exercise of its authority it may have to run the gauntlet of the courts, for it is highly probable that some of the cor porations will resist investigation. The law provides that the information ob tained by this bureau shall be sub mitted to the president, who will de: clde whether or not it shall be made public. Thus neither the secretary of the department nor the chief of the bureau is empowered to disclose any facts relating to the organization and management of corporations, so that only such of them as are not complying with the laws need to have any fear that their affairs will be made public. The new department is expected to. do valuable work in the Interest of our manufacturing industries and our for etgn . commerce. It will doubtless . be able to obtain a greater amount of in formation from American consuls than has been done, though In regard to this it is to be said that the consular service for several years past has shown such notable zeal and efficiency as to have excited the compliments and the emula tion of other governments. It is be lieved, however, that still further Ira provement can be made and this the new department is expected to accom plish. The new bureau of manufactures will take an active interest in the Indus tries of the country and should prove a source of valuable Information to Amer- ican manufacturers. Thus we may ex pect soon to see the Department of Commerce and Labor assuming a large and highly Important place in govern mental affairs. Secretary Cortelyou, the head of the new department, Is a man of fine execu tive ability and Indefatigable Industry, who can be depended upon to secure the- highest efficiency In the work of the de partment Mr. Garfield, chief of the bureau of corporations, will faithfully discharge the duties of .'his ' position. while the chiefs of the old bureaus em braced in the department are men of experience in the public service and of proved ability. iT MAT BS JOHltSON. The Ohio democrats will not hold their state convention until the Utter part of August, but the question of a candi date for governor is being considered and the indications are that the man will be Mayor Tom L Johnson, of Cleveland. There is no doubt that he can have the nomination If he desires it, but he is quoted as ' saying that he does not want to be a candidate If he can find anyone else to run. The reser vatlon is important. There are many democrats in Ohio willing to accept a nomination for governor, so ' that the party boss need have no difficulty In finding a candidate. The natural in ference is that he does not Intend to very seriously look, for one and as Mr. Johnson will undoubtedly have absolute control of he convention it seems a pretty safe guess that he will be the candidate. , Should he, however, positively refuse to accept a nomination It would be very conclusive evidence that he does not think the democrats have any chance to win in this year's election, even with the campaign financial resources which he could supply. Mr. joiinson is a pretty shrewd politician and there is no doubt that he is thinking of the pos slbllltles of next year, when the demo cratic national convention will be cast ing about for a presidential candidate, and he will be governed with reference to this in making up his mind whether or not to be a candidate for governor of Ohio, rN jtrir RttcnuTAu. The most noteworthy fact in the final result of the German election ia the gain of twenty-three members of the Reich stag by the social democratic party. which will have eighty-one represents Uvea in the new body. Another signifi cant fact is the loss of. representatives by the agrarian league, which, shows al most as strongly as the socialist gain the reaction from the tariff demands of the agrarian element The clerical or center party has lost ground, but re mains the most numerous body in the Reichstag, though only about one-fourth of the whole. There is practically no change in the conservative and national liberal parties, which together have 103 members, one more than the clericals, while the radicals are. with the excep tion of the Polish faction, the heaviest losers. While these changes have a certain significance, the Reichstag continues to be a patchwork of parties, of which it Is remarked that none can harmonize to supiort or oppose the designs of the government, or exert any great Influ ence to modify them. Terliapa the most Important matter witli'wbh-h the new RelclMitag will bare to deal is" the com merclai treaties yet te be ; negotiated and it Is lmiOAgible to foresee what Its attitude will be In regard t these, upon which the Industrial and commercial In terests of the empire so much depend. It II evident that the government will have to be exceedingly skillful In shap ing its policy In order to carry through the measures It desires, for it must ef fect combinations that will not be easily accomplished. Meanwhile the social democratic party is exultant and its leaders confidently predict the ultimate attainment of its objects. ALIOGETtttn TUU M V'.'H ISCII'LW K, The refusal of Superintendent Fearse to overrule the decision of the principal of the High school to withhold the di ploma of Graduate Sutphen because he was guilty of an Infraction of military discipline In the High school cadets' en campment has become a matter of In terest to the patrons of the public schools and especially to the students In the High school. While Mr. Sutphen mny have mode a mistake in appealing for redress to the courts before present ing his claims to the Bonrd of Education the lward cannot afford to ignore the Issue Involved or shirk the responsibility it has assumed by passively endorsing the action of the principal of the High school, which evidently also hag the sanction of the superintendent. Without venturing to discuss the legal points involved the Sutphen Incident af fords a striking example of excessive and unreasonable discipline. It should be borne in mind that the Omaha High school is not n military school and mili tary training is not the primary object of its creation and maintenance. Mili tary training for boys is desirable for its athletic exercises rather than as a course of instruction in the art of war. Intelligent young men deficient In mili tary training have at least as much right to get diplomas as intelligent girls who do not take nny military training. The only condition upon which the board would have a right to withhold a di ploma from either a boy or a girl is through deficiency in, all or part of the prescribed course of study. Would young Sutphen be entitled to a diploma if he had not been piesent at the Au burn encampment? If so, why is he not entitled to it after the encampment? Assume that the diploma Is not simply a certificate of competency in the field instruction given to High school stu dents, but also a passport for the holder to enter higher educational institutions. To withhold arbitrarily this passport from young Sutphen would be tanta- mount to robbing him of six months or more of precious time which he would otherwise be able to devote either in the beginning class of a university or other academic institution. If the board can arbitrarily despoil one student of his right and privilege to pursue academic studies under pretext that he violated military discipline after completing all the work required for graduation, It can do so with impunity under nil sorts of pretexts. It seems to us that the dig nity of the school board will not be seriously impaired nor will the disci pline of the public schools be weakened by a summary revocation of the order of Principal Waterhouse that prevents the secretary from issuing the diploma ,to young Mr. Sutphen. A very Important decision defining the obligations of common carriers has Just been rendered by the Indiana su preme court in a decision that upholds a law which requires express companies to interchange business with one an other without discrimination. The court holds that the Indiana law enacted in 1901 was designed to prevent unfair dis crimination by one express company or combination of express companies, act ing as common carriers, against any consignor or responsible company en gaged in the same business. The law is declared to be in compliance with the legitimate exercise of the police pow ers of the legislature. The principle enacted by the Indiana supreme court is doubtless In strict conformity with the rulings of the supreme court of the United States in interstate commerce cases involving specific incidents of dls crimination against shippers and locall ties by railroad companies. Lord Rosebcry in appealing for sup port for a projected British school of technology says It is scandalous that the ambitious youths of Great Britain should be compelled to go to the United States and Germany for technical train ing. It may be scandalous, but it Is none the less a fact that if they want the best technical training they will have to look to the American educa tlonal institutions to furnish them the opportunity. And there is no danger that Great Britain will outstrip the United States in this direction, or that the American youth who wants the best will ever again have to go to Brit ish schools or universities. It is worthy of note that when Iowa republicans meet in state convention to nominate candidates and map out party policies, all the men occupying high po sitions of honor and trust by grace of the party are on hand to lead and to direct. They help shape party action rather than wait for the party to tell them what Is wanted. This Illustrates the difference in republican leadership between Iowa and some of its neighbor ing states and explains the front place Iowa has achieved in the national coun ells of the party. President Diaz will participate In the Fourth of July celebration In the City of Mexico. The Fourth of July has a significance for Mexico as well as for the United States. Had this country remained a British colony through nil these years since 1776, iio republic of Mexico would have been' able to secure a foothold on its southern border. tuern nor ly UerM. Oh Klndl Baltimore America The act of the governor of f'ennaylvanla f'nnayl In declining an Invitation to n editor' Va nin.f mrmm m human nn. 11.1 r r, , ( .a V, t r I did not like tha idea of watchinsthe poor editors try to eat banquet fare with mus- tles on. Or he may have been afraid of a rousting In the toasting. Agitation on the Mmrarri' Renea. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The Missouri boodlers must have gained the Impression in some way that Circuit At torney Folk la conducting a revival. The mournera' bench la crowded every day. SqaeallneJ on the Hoc Washington Poat. An Interesting development In the Mis souri boodle Inquiry shows that one states man accepted a bribe to squeal on other members of the combine who had tried to hog the corruption fund. F.Ten Greeks Were Takes In. Boston Transcript. The Or?ek In this country have already established the reputation of being a useful class of citizen and of acquiring American ways with eagerness, and the fact that a number of them have been badly bitten by a get-rlch-qulck scheme bears out that reputation. How would the great specula tive centers subsist except for such folk as these? . What the Stronar Man la Not. Boston Whim. The strong man Is not the soldier on horseback with saber drawn. The strong man Is the man with folded arms who utters the truth regardless of consequences. No one can Injure a man who refuses to be hurt; you may kill him, but you cannot touch the man In him. He wields a power that he would have to give up If he stooped to physical force. Hoar and Break Away. Springfield Ylepubllcan. There haa not been any embracing or kissing yet at Kiel, but the kaiser Is mak ing the American naval officers and crews feel at home. Meanwhile the English are waiting patiently for the opportunity, when the squadron reaches British waters, to make the German reception look like SO cents. Then they will say: "See how much more we love you." It's all very delightful for Uncle Sam. Muddy and Meaningless. Louisville Courier-Journal. The Iowa democrats, while sensibly re fusing to reaffirm the Kansas City plat form, and while condemning certain points of the republican financial policy, if the republican can be said to have such a policy, are not very happy when they com to formulate a financial policy of their own. The paragraph In their platform defining that policy la as muddy and meaningless as the modern fashion of platform making could require. C'olleare Education and Wastes. Baltimore Sun. A prosperous business man sends his son to college and finds a place for him In his counting room when the son graduates, and the road to success Is open to such a one. But In the case of the graduate whose frther haa no place to offer him and who haa no capital to embark In trade there are serious difficulties. When he applies for employment he generally find as his rival the boy who was never educated be yond the grammar school, who went into the counting room at the age of 12 or 15 years at a few dollars a week. This boy has been learning the business while the college man la at his books,, and when the tatter has graduated- the livtter finds that the boy of his age has completed his ap prenticeship and la In the possession of a good position. The college man who la over 21 years of age Is not ordinarily will ing to begin with the duties and wages of the 12-year-old lad, and this Is often the only place open to' him. " PATRIOTISM AND NOISB. Plea for Limiting- the Racket on Ia. dependence Day. New Tork Independent. It Is time that all persons who have reached the years of discretion should enter protest against the celebration of Inde pendence day by unlimited and unqualified noise. We are not quite of the opinion of Carlyle that the dislike of noise Is a measure of civilization although there Is something to be said for that, too. Neither do we believe in regulating the pleasure of youth too strictly by the taste of age. All young people apparently delight In pure unmitigated nolae, and a youth, ac cording to our friends the evolutionists. Is In a state of Inherited savagery. It Joy In squibs and crackers would seem to be a confirmation of Carlyle's decree. However, youth also has Its right and privileges. Let there be noise on the Fourth of July- savage, nerve-rending, peace-destroying noise, not without the desired accompani ment of burnt ' clothes, lacerated fingers, deoculated heads and lockjaw the last evil bringing the relief of silence at least, But we pray for a limitation In time. From on n rise to sunset I surely sufficient for the national relapse Into barbarism. And, above all things, the discharge of cracker and gun for days before, the Fourth should really be stopped. Every police man who silences this premature celebra tlon is deserving of more praise than he who captures a burglar red-handed from his crime. We celebrate a day of Inde pendence, not a week of aaturnallan license. And when you come to think of it, there 1 not very much connection be tween nolsa and patriotism. Let all things be dose decently and In order. RAILROAD INFORMERS. Load gqaeal for tha Nam of the Party Who Sqaealed. Detroit Free Press. J. C. 8tubbs, traffic director of the Harrt man system of railroads, haa taken a posi tion before the Interstate Commerce com mission which he will find It difficult to defend. Charges are being Investigated against the Union Pacific which. It 1 claimed, has been allowing rebates to cer tain grain dealers In Omaha and Kansas City. This I not done by a discount on freighta, according to the complaint, but by favors granted In the way of elevator service given by the company. Mr. Btubb claim that the accusation la brought by a high official of the Atchtaon, Topeka At Bunta Fe railroad, a competitor of tha Union Pacific. The director and the gen eral counsel of the latter want the charges put in writing and the man making them brought before the commission for cross examination. Chairman Knapp summarily disposed of this objection by announcing that the commission would take the part of complainant and ordering the Inquiry to proceed. If the commission exposed all of Its sources of Information It would soon have few of them to rely upon. Its Investiga tions are much in the nature of those con ducted by a grand Jury where the greatest possible secrecy Is observed In1 order that witnesses may feel themaelves protected, and the widest knowledge of facts obtained. There Is no hardship visited upon the Union Pacific because of this silence on the part of the commission. If the com pany be guilty It has violated the law and unfairly Injured a rival that suffers by conforming to the law. If the accused cor poration be Innocent, .It haa only to make It showing; for Mr. Btubb said to the commission: "We have all the Informa tion you desire and are prepared to give It." When the commission Is (-atlsfled that there la reason for Invextlgatlon Its business and dJty Is to go ahead, and every reason la against betraying it Informant unlea he be needed as a witness. BRYAN'S 1ST BACK IX IOWA. Bt. Louis Globe-Democrat: Col. Bryan' favorite plank was completely Ignored by the Iowa democratic convention. A more unnelghborly or unchrlatlan-llke act could hardly hav been conceived. Baltimore American: When Mr. Bryan was informed that the Iowa democrat had turned down the free-llver proposition he aid nothing. Which was one of the most apt remark Mr. Bryan ever made In hi Ufa. Minneapolis Time: The platform of the Iowa democrat may not amount to much In Iowa, but It I regarded by politicians generally as a pretty fair statement of average democratic opinion throughout the Union. Free silver la not going to figure very eitenslvely fn the next national campaign but there will be a good deal aid about the tariff. Indianapolis Newa: The meeting of the Iowa democrats reminds one that no one has recently mentioned the Hon. Hod Boles for the presidency. Of course, Iowa has been distressingly republican In recent years, but still at the same time there are some more or les friendly disagreements among the dominant aa to certain foreign trade policies and the right of the Iowa democrats to have a favorite son who can at leant promise much Is not yet forfeited. Philadelphia Ledger: The democratic demoralization that resulted from the two Bryar campaign haa been a misfortune for the whole country. In some states, a In Pennsylvania, the party haa been prac tically destroyed, so that honest political dlaaent has no effective means of expres sion. The rehabilitation of the minority party upon lines of patriotic conviction I thus of universal Importance, not for one election, but for the general welfare, being based upon common sense and experience, and the Iowa democrats may prove the leaders In a growing cause. Washington Post: While the convention failed to rise to It opportunity to sound a keynote for the democrat of the nation Its result are signified nt a Indicating the real lack of support that Bryan has In his own country. He haa managed to keep hi views before the people, accompanied by hint of dire result If any attempt were made to Ignore him, but the Iowans have made it very plain that he la reckoning without hi host. The democrats of the country will doubtless be encouraged by the action of their Iowa representative to proceed with the work of reorganizing the party on a basis that will command the return of former adherent and open the way for new and needed results. Springfield Republican: The Iowa con vention also has It lesson for Mr. Bryan. He Is fighting a losing battle In behalf of silver. Personally he la tronger than that particular issue, In all probability, throughout the western democracy. Many Iowa democrats responded to his personal appeals, but he tied them to a dead weight In the convention. Meanwhile, the new radicalism, which ha a future, was already In sight In the person of Judge Van Wagenen who advocated government ownership of railroad and secured 200 votes In favor of the policy. Can there be much doubt of sane opportunism, by dropping the stiver Issue, and Identifying - himself with the living radicalism of the twentieth century, he would be a greater power than he can now hope to be In the democracy of Iowa and the nation? Philadelphia Press: The ending of this fusion between the democrats and popu list In Iowa may deprive the republi can of a few gold democratic votes, but for every vote lost to the republicans In that way the democrat will lose five popu list votes. Mr. Bryan has many more fol lowers In Iowa than the old greenback party had. It I not an exaggeration to calculate hi personal strength at one- third of the 209,406 votes he received In 1900. He has toured the state on more than one occasion and demonstrated hi personal popularity. The rejection of his Kansas City platform by the democratic state con vention may Influence him to show hi power again. But It Is not a matter of moment to the republican whether he doe or not, aa the attitude of Iowa and the weat In thl and next year' campaign la already placed beyond all doubt. PERSONAL NOTES. Dr. James Chalmers of Elgin, Til., has accepted the position of president of the agricultural college of South Dakota. Mr. Marshall P. Wilder I certainly a courageous woman. It needs courage to be married to a professional humorist. , Richard Strauss, who Is by many authori ties regarded as the greatest of living Ger man composers, completed hi thirty-ninth birthday last week. The king of England recently appeared with a swallow-tall coat and a red necktie. A king may wear a plug hat with a sack coat and yellow shoe if he want to. Colonel Elijah Walker of Somervllle, Masc, haa the distinction of being the only surviving field officer of the Army of the Potomac. He 1 one of the oldeat veteran also. "Dave" Pratt of Dalton, Mass , the driver of the president's carriage when Craig the Secret Service man, was killed, ha written a four-act play, which will be pro duced next fall. Citizen of Tioga, Pa., hav erected I monument to the memory of John Schaef- fer, a railroad watchman who was killed recently while attempting to save the life of a woman who was crossing the Reading track. For the first time In the history of Spain a worklngman haa been elected a member of the cortea. Hla name I Jaime Angles He Is a cooper by trade and he represent Barcelona, that hotbed of disturbance, anarchistic and otherwlae. Major Edward Carpenter of the army has presented to President Roosevelt the head and skin of a mountain sheep which waa killed by the major' son In Utah. The president will add thl trophy to hi collec tion In the White House. When Rear Admiral Melville, chief of the bureau of steam engineering, goes on the retired list in August the last of the mem ber of the naval board of construction who acquired their knowledge of the building of war ships from practical experience will have disappeared. General Fltzhugh Lee has accepted the invitation of the Daughters of the Revolu tion of Jersey City to deliver an oration at the unveiling of the Paulus Hook battle monument, Jeraey City, on October 24. General Lee Is a descendant of Light Horse Harry Iee, who commanded the American In the Paulus Hook fight, July 19. 1T79. When Henry Irving wa rehearsing for hi production of "Faust" he experienced much difficulty In restraining the exuher ance of the super, who persisted In being light-hearted even In hade. Sir Henry Is proverbially long-suffering about uch mat ter, but hla patience finally gave out and he thundered: "Kindly remember that you are supposed to be In hell, not picnicking at Hamstead heath." Lata of Work for Idle Hands. New Tork Tribune. Loud and urgent are the calls from west ern farm and orchard for scores of thou sands of wage earnera for the harvesting of the crops and the garnering of the fruits. But too many Idlers, tramps and beggura In our cktes, and In the country regions also, turn Ot-sf ears to such appeals and refuse tempting opportunities to earn hon est and comfortable livings. The vagrant spirit, the "deadbeat" desire to get along without working, ia too conspicuous everywhere. BtTi or WAsrriHOTO liffj. Minor Scenes and Incidents Sketched en the Spot. Secretary Moody of the Navy depart ment Is rarely able to complete hi dally round of duty within tha legal limit of eight hour. Ofter he Is tied down to his desk until 7 p. m., and frequently lug home a bundle of documents over which h bum the mffinlght oil. Of course he does not expect his department clerks to follow hi Industrious example, but he be lieves eight hours to be a moderate return for the liberal hunches of new crisp bill which Uncle Sam hands out on certain day to hla employes. Some clerks think eight hours too much, and have put up a game of soldiering calculated to rile the temper of the department chief. The other morning on the way to hi office Mr. Moody opened the door of the room in which the clerical work of the bureau of navigation la done. He was surprised to find that not one man was at hi desk. The hands of the clock on the wall pointed to . Mr. Moody asked Rear Admiral Taylor, chief of the bureau of navigation, to Inquire whether the clerks had made any change In their tioura. The chief clerk reported that the clock waa ten minute fast and that at 9 o'clock every man In the bureau was at work. "A clock that Is good enough to quit by Is good enough to go to work by," retorted Mr. Moody. Mr. Moody also found that officers In charge of bureaus and division were In the habit of getting to work late or staying away from the department on slight pre texts, and that when they were not there the subordinates had nothing to do. Mr. Moody said that he did not wish to tie tha officers to their desks, a moat of them work after : and at night, but that some arrangement must be made so that the work should not be Interrupted when they reached the office late or not at all. He ordered that officer must have some good reason for not being at work. Work In every bureau of the Navy de partment now begin exactly at o'clock, or a few minutes before. It does not stop until 4, and Mr. Moody's weather eye is wide open. The seventeen-foot bronze statue of Lib erty surmounting the dome of the capltol I not to be painted white, at least not at present. Senator Cockrell has Ideas of hi own, and It was a protest on his part that stopped the painting. When congress adjourned preparations were made to give Liberty a coat of white lead to remove the weather stains. I Scaf folding was built and workmen, who knew nothing of art, except as applied with a whitewash brush, began the Job. Senator Cockrell goes to the capltol most every day, and. noticing the scaffold, he asked: "What are they doing up there?" "Painting the statue," was the laconic answer of a policeman. 'Painting Liberty?" shouted the senator. "That beautiful bronse statue! What color?" "White," answered the policeman. "Some body said it looked dirty." Senator Cockrell was angry. He walked out and, shading hi eyes with his hand and looking up at the white blur, boiled with rage. ''Stop it!" he cried; but the workmen so high up paid no heed to him. The senator went in and saw the representative of the sergeant-at-arms of the senate, and de manded that the work be stopped. 'It's a shame to ruin that statue with white paint," he declared. "If it. is not stopped Immediately I'll make somebody suffer for It when congress meet again." Order were at once; Issued for the work to stop. Don't let these fellows whitewash tne grass or paint the tree white while I'm gone, either," Senator Cockrell cautioned as he left the capltol. 'Age stains sometimes are good thing for our publio building." Senator Cockrell bellevea, and It look as though somebody will have to ellmb up and use a barrel or two of turpentine removing the white paint from Liberty. A postal card written in Amsterdam, Holland, and mailed to a person In Apple ton, Wis., at a coet of 6 cents, wa stopped at that point recently by a cablegram coat ing over J5. The card was written by a man In Amsterdam, Holland, to a friend in Appleton, but after It wa mailed the writer for some unexplained reason decided he did not want it delivered at lta destination. It wa too late to top it In the mall In Holland, ao he cabled the Poatofflce depart ment at Washington. Aa the complete ad dress of the card, something of It content. date of mailing, etc., had to be cabled and the description made complete, the cable gram was necessarily a long one, and the rate is SO cent a word. The cablegram did Ha work, however, and a telegram from the Postofflce department at Waahlngton topped the postal card Just In time to pre vent It delivery. The Washington correspondent of the Chi cago Tribune reports that "extravagant and outrageous rental are being paid by the government , for pneumatic tube service without corresponding benefit to the public, there being , little or no avlng of time In the transportation of mall. Expert who have made a thorough Investigation all agree that the rate are excessive, espe cially when It Is taken into consideration the small amount of time gained aa be tween the pneumatic and the wagon aervice. "That these ratea are beyond all reason 1 shown iconcluslvely In New York, where the system" has been in operation for a number of years An enormous rental of I414.14S a year la "being paid by the government In New Terk. and the saving of time Is only "Phew" It's Hot. Everybody we met yesterday made Home such exclama tion. Our first warm day at that. What will become of those, poople when it gets good and hot. There is all kinds ," e, of advice coming from all kinds of places about the good ness of their particular lines of merchandise, and the wise man will investigate before deciding, and if he investigates we feel reasonably sure of his patronage. As makers of every stitch of the clothing we sell we are amply able to make better clothes, give better styles and values than the ordinary stores, and our suits are homespun, wool crash, serge and other light weights at $10 and up certainly cannot be beat. NO CLOTHING R. S. Wilcox. Manaftr. Ayers Hair Vigor Turning gray? Why not have the early, dark, rich color re stored? It's easily done with Ayer's Hair Vigor. A splendid dressing, too. J. C. lt C... I.W.U. Mai, thirty-five minute under most favorable circumstances, while the ordinary saving ranges from ten to twenty minutes as com pared with the trip from the postoffice and railroad station by wagon or electric car and the transmission of mall by the tube service. For thl small saving the govern ment ta paying nearly t&O.aw. and, accord ing to the testimony of some of the official of the New Tork office, the time saved Is so small It I hardly worth consideration." SMILING REMARKS. '"Weary, dey want 10,000 farm hand In Iowa." "Llmpy, I've already cut de state out of me Itinerary." Cleveland Tlain Dealer. Barnes When I was young my mother always used to sing me to sleep. Shedd Tes, women sre good at that sort of thing; but It takes the father's voice to wake a fellow up in the morning." Boston Transcript. "What kind of furniture Is a weather bureau?" asked the young man with wide ears. And the sad-eyed boarder answered. "I should Infer that It Is a sort of refrig erator." Waahlngton Star. Will She take a very small shoe, doesn't she? Nell Oh, ye. Will What size? Nell Two lzes smaller than her foot. Philadelphia Ledger. "I reached the turning point In my ca reer seven years ago." "Well?" "Well, I neglected to turn when I reached It, and that's what made all the trouble," Chicago Pot. "Here, take thl rifle!" cried the excited showman. "The leopard has escaped. If you find him, shoot him on the spot." "Which e-spot, sir?" gasped the green tent boy. Chicago News. Agent Tes, sir, I will guarantee that this Is the most concentrated food you ever ate. Consumer But I don't want that kind I want the kind that spreads all over my system. Brooklyn Life. Miss Doveye We girls are Just wild about Victor Pretty. Mrs. Blnthalr Now, I simply can't endure him. I like strong, stern-browed men of Indomitable will. "Qracloua! What for?" "They are so easy to manage." Philadel phia Press. "I am a self-made man," said the proud Individual. "Well, you are all right except as to your head," commented the other part of the conversation. "How'a that?" "The part you talk with is out of propor tion to the part you think with." San Francisco Wasp. "Well. uh," said Brother Dickey, "I frald Br'er Jlnklns will never git along in de worl'I" "Why what de matter wld him?" "Only dls: He akeered er thunder en he can't dodge llghtln' I" Atlanta Constitution. "And now, yours man," said the old parson, solemnly, "let your dally motto be: rOn high!' " "No, that's my nightly motto," chuckled the sporty youth In the Panama. "I spend my evening ort the roof garden." Chicago News. Jane I blush sometime to think my great-grandfather waa a plain old pioneer. John Well, the score I even; If he was here he would, no doubt, be aahamed of you. Detroit Free Presa. "Don't you think you're working too hard?" "Well, there' a lot of unfinished work before me, and I've got to cover the ground In a very ahor.'. time." "Better low down a bit or the ground will cover yea In a very short time." Philadelphia Press. JUT WIFE IS A BUN1NBBS MAX. Leavenworth Times. My wife she Is a business man She deals In real estate; She wakea and talk Of cinder walk. And keep it up till late; She also talk of taxea till She frets and fumes and grleve She Interview the city hall. And tell them they are thieves. My wife she Is a business man; She hath a business head; She sits and thinks. And frowns and blinks, And doesn't go to bed; She say a plumber's devious way Would bring a seraph low; And name her tenants variously Because they grieve her so. My wife she Is a business man; She cottagea erecta; ' Bhe aleepa and dream Of board and beam And bricks and architects; She takes her houses by the roots. And holat them up on high. And roam on risky scaffoldings, Between the earth and sky. I think my wife I wonderful; No woman I so wise; And yet I tremble when she stands Between the earth and sklea; And brick are hard and hearties thing When dropped upon one' pate. I often wish some billionaire Would buy her real estate. FITS LIKE OURS.