TITE OMAHA DAlL.r 31 EE: V j:iJN .KDAX , AUUUWT 5. J!03. 6 Tiie Omaiia Daily Bee. E. IIOSEWATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. DuMt no wlthnut funlay. On Year..$4 Dally Hn and Sunday, (inn Year Illustrated Bee, One Year Sunday Wee, One Year Psturrtny Bee. On Tir - Twentieth Century Farmer. On Year.. DELIVERED BY CARRIER- .0"i S.) 2 'if. l.Bil 1.00 . 2e Daily Bee (without Sunday), per ,"'k--fc Dally Ree (Including Sunday;, per week..l.c Sunday Wee, per copy "'"llw S Evening Be, (without Sunday), per week 60 Evening Bee (Including Sunday), Perin; Compls'ln's' of ' VrVeiularitiea In tjeU very should be addressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building South Omaha-City Hall Building, Twn-ty-nfth and M Streets. Council Bluffs 11 Pearl Street. Chicago 1640 Unity Building-. New York-23M Park Row W'llldlng. Washington 501 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial matter ahould be. addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal I e'' payable to The Bee Publish ng "roP"; Only 2-cent stamps accepted In payment 01 mall accounts. Personal checks except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, se.: Oeorge B. Tischuck secretary of The Bee Publishing Company being duly "worn, says that the actual number of full ana complete copies of The Dally Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during Uie month of July. was as i""""- 1 3,iho 17.... 2 3,6iiO is.... 1 31,140 19.... 4 a,o:io jo.... 6 S7.345 21.... .30,800 ...30,BNO ...87,300 ...aa.Mio ...2n,l90 ...30,2 AO BO, 7 BO 22.. 7 80,880 I SO.MNO 9 30,tft0 10 30,700 11 .'.8O,770 12 27,010 13 80,MM 14 :(0,040 15 oo.uao It 80.200 23 3O.07O 24 30,300 25. 30,020 26 27,140 27 80,170 28 30.2OO 28 3),310 0 20,720 31 80,010 Total 033,315 Less unsold and returned copies.... U.U48 Net total sales 923.O07 Net average sales 20,700 GEORGE B. TZdCHUCK, Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 31ttt any of duly, A. D. 1903. M. ii. li UNGATE, (Sea!) Notary Public. PARTIES LEAVING FOn IVMMEIt, Parties leaving; thai city tor sent to them regalarly by notifying; The Bee Business Office, la porsoa or by snail. The address will be changed as often as desired. That ponUflcal deadlock did not stand very long. Announcement of the finding of the fisherman's ring Is now about due. Old Cassius M. Clay was evidently al ways as ready to write a will as to fight a duel. At last the imaginative Rome corre spondent mny safely take a few days off for recreation. So little attraction was held forth by life In the Vatican cells that the car dinals voluntarily cut short their own Incarceration. The McKlnley club will support the republican ticket this time. The lesson of its last defection seems to have been brought home. Tho conclave of cardinals acted very much like an ordinary American petit Jury. They did not want to bring In their verdict until after breakfast Perhaps the 100-families-to-a-route rule for rural free delivery Is simply another device of the Roosevelt administration to bead off race suicide tendencies. Every Cuban who was uniformed In a shirt collar and a pair of spurs dur lug the Spanish-American war has filed his claim for back pay as a Cuban pa trlot The triple crown mny have come to Cardinal Sarto as a complete surprise, but It did not take him long to make tip his mind under what name he would wear it. The South Omaha school board pro poses to go Into court to recover ?2,000 from an architect which reminds us of the fellow who tried to squeeze blood out of a turnip. It is to be hoped that detached from bis million-dollar salary, ex-President Schwab will be able to recuperate his health whenever he pleases without In fllctlng the public with any more of his freak vagaries. The purchase of tweuty forges for the third yeor luss In manual training has been recommended by the high chool. committee. why not also recommend the purchase of a threshing machine? Harvesters are In greater de mand than blacksmiths Jnst now. It Is to be noted that Colonel Bryan never thought rt necessary to request bis hosts at a bnnquet to have It given out that not a single word of polities wonld cross his Hps. A presidential as pirant has no right to accept a Imnqut Invitation unless he Is prepared to talk politics. i Iowa railroads are assessed somewha higher this year tliun lost, but tu no proportion of Increase to the Intrcnse In railroad values of tho last few yeurs. The railroad tax bureau men lu Iowa are excelled In the tax shirking business only by the railroad tux bnreau men In Nebraska.' - ' Mexico is getting ready to substitute the gold standard for the silver 8 tan mm aua tuo European tuitions are seriously discussing the recolnogo of a liver money at the ratio of 32 to But tua Hryanlte democracy will not budge from Its demand for the free and unlimited coiuuge of silver at the sacred ratio of 19 to 1. THK ASH POX TIFF It was the unexpected that happened In the election of Cardinal (Jluseppe Horto to the pspnry. When the con cluvo of cardinals assembled he was not mentioned, at least publicly, nsa pos sible snocesHor to the late Tope I-eo nml in the early ballots there was no Indica tion thnt he was likely to be the choice of the conclave. It is probable that he had no expectation or even hope of such a result. In the dispatches from Home of Monday it was stated that when Cardinal Sarto received the good wishes of his friends he Teplled, "Oh, no. I purchased a return ticket when I left Venice." The new pontiff, who has taken the title of Tlus X, has been considered among the moro liberal members of the Italian episcopate and sacred college. Created a cardinal by the late pope ten years ago, he has been since that time patriarch of Venice and also bishop of Mantua. He enjoyed great popularity in bis diocese, being honored by all for his purity, for the strict uprightness of his life and for,, his liberal Ideas. He Is described as a modest: and agreeable man, highly cultivated, kind hearted, still strong and robust at 08 years of age. He has never taken great part In the political and public life of the' chru-ch, but divided his time between study and good works, though not neg lecting such administrative duties as fell to him. Although most faithful to the Holy See he has never been unfriendly to the Italian government and his action immediately following the election, in blessing the populace, is Interpreted to mean that he will not regard himself, as did his predecessor, as being a pris oner In the Vatican. From what Is sold of the characteris tics of Tlus X his election was evidently a victory for the liberal element and therefore gives promise of continued progress for the church. It is an as surance of better relations between the aticon and the Qulrlnal, which It is the earnest desire of the Italian govern ment to cultivate. It means also that the Judicious and tactful policy of Leo In respect to foreign governments with which the Vatican has relations will continue to be observed. Tbis appears to be the view of the leading governments. hlch are said to be well pleased with the result of the conclave. It Is a very great responsibility that rests upon the head of the Roman Cath olic church, nis Influence extends to 'AOOO.OOO people throughout the world who unreservedly acknowledge his au thority in all spiritual affairs, while In Catholic countries he may, if disposed, exert a potent influence In political af fairs. There was undoubtedly appre hension on the part of some of the Euro pean governments that a cardinal with strong political tendencies would be chosen and it Is more than probable that there was outside Influence brought to bear upon the cardinals before the meeting of the conclave. However, the result appears to be generally satlsfac- tory and while' the new pontiff may' not equal the great record made by Leo XIII, there is good reason to expect that the church will find In him a wise nd faithful guide. OORMAS'S PRESIDENTIAL BOOU. Senator Gorman of Maryland returned from Europe last Saturday to find that a boom has got.under way tot him for tho democratic nomination for the pres- idency, though doubtless he was not wholly unaware of this before his ar rival. In an Interview Mr. Gorman would say nothing about the movement in his behalf not even so much as to express gratitude to the friends who started It He remarked that the wel fare of the democratic party Is more Important than the aspirations of any man in the party and he bad not been thinking of his nomination for the pros idency or of the nomination of anybody else. Asked if he thought the demo cratic party la 'in good shape for the struggle, the astute Maryland politician said that it seemed "to be getting away from a number of false ideas that the party has been chasing around after in the past few years" an indefinite state ment quite characteristic of its author and which cannot easily be used to the Injury of his boom. It Is a fact that there is a consider able and apparently grdwlng feeling particularly In the south, favorable to Senator Gorman for the presidential nomination by the democratic national convention next year. Representative Rankhead of Alabama said a few days ngo that his state is for Gorman and thnt it is the belief In the south that be can be elected If nominated. As yet there has been no marked development of Cleveland sentiment In the southern states and Judge Parker of New York seems to have put an end to his chances as a possible candidate, so far as the south Is concerned, when he delivered an address in Atlanta a short time ago, Mr. Gorman's frleuds are claiming that he will have the support In the national convention of. ten or eleven southern states and while it Is somewhat prema ture to make such a claim, it may prove to be well founded. They are also ex pecting, of course, some uorthern sup port, though Just where they are look ing for this Is not disclosed. There are Gorman admirers, doubtless, in a num ber of the states of the north, but they are at present in a very small minority. The New York Herald remarks that there will be strong opposition to the nomination of Senator Gorman from dif ferent quarters of the party. "The Cleve land worshipers will never forgive him for his qunrrel with the 'YVhlte House during the manipulation of the Wilson lilll by the democrats under Gorman's leadership In the senate. The low tar iff democrats will not forget that it was Senator Gorman who injected a large element of protection into the Wilson bill. Hill will hang on Gorman's flank and do his l?st to defeat blm. W. J. Bryan is almost as much opposed to Gorman as he is to Hill or Cleveland, notwithstanding the fact that it was Gorman who raised htm the money with which he began bis campaign In All this opposition Is a " very serious handicap." So it Is, but it Is quite pos sible that foine of It can be overcome If the Maryland senator shall be able to show such strength In the south as Is claimed for blin and also to secure some northern support. At all events, Mr. (Jornian appears to have as good n chance for the democratic nomination for the presidency as any one who Is being talked of. UKACTIoyART REFORMERS. Three years ago there was a general uprising among the frleuds of th pub lic schools and tnxpaying citizens by reason of the scandals that had devel oped In the Board of Education and the reckless disregard of business methods In the disbursement of the school funds. The criminal prosecution of members of the board who were charged with crook edness was followed by a tidal wave that swept the old school board combine from power and place. The people of Omaha confidently looked forward to an era of reform and retrenchment In the government of the public schools and the management of Its affairs, but their expectations have been sadly dlsoppolnted. At tho outset the reform school board attempted to pursue a policy that would, If It had been carried out have materially In creased the efficiency of the public schools and afforded relief to the tax payers. But the reform broom has long since been worn out and the wasteful ness and reckless partiality that charac terized the old boards are again coming into full swing. Retrenchment is no longer thought of and political pulls and individual pulls seem once more to be more potential than merit and faithful service. Three years ago the reform board applied the axe to the head of Its secretary because he had exerted undue influence 'to have his salary raised by several hundred dollars. At the Inst meeting of the board the salary of his successor. Sec retary Burgess, was raised from $1,800 to $2,100 a year without presenting a single reason. Three years ago an attempt was made by the reform board to dispense with fads and frills, yet now we have more of them than ever. While there has been no material increase in school at tendance, and although a new high school building has been erected at n cost of more than half a million dollars, the members of the board are impressed with the idea that we need additional school building accommodations not only for the ordinary grades, but for the high school pupils. With $30,000 of Interest-bearing war rants already outstanding and a pros pective issue of at least $150,000 of school warrants In anticipation of next year's income from licenses, fines and state ' apportionment, the board shows no disposition to put down brakes, vbut rushes headlong with expenditures sure to "well the overlap, What the reactionary board would do If It were confronted with the with drawal of the license fund cannot be prognosticated. The chances are It would blindly keep up its present course until It reached the edge of the cataract, The Omaha Street Railway company has let the contracts for the construc tion of its new power house. The con tract for the structural Iron work was let to a Minneapolis firm. The- award to build the boilers was given to a nttsburg firm, the generators to a Schenectady firm, the engines to a St. Louis ' firm, the condensers to a New Jersey firm and the furnaces to a Pitts burg firm, while an Omaha firm will do the brick laying on the walls. The nat ural Inference Is that Omaha firms have been unable to compete with foreign firms, or were not in a positron to sup ply the requisite machinery or mate rials. In either case the letting of these contracts to foreign mills and factories Is suggestive of Omaha's need of more mills and factories, and also of the drawback that Omaha suffers by renson of the failure of capitalists and busi ness men to give preference to home industry even at a sucriflce In order to build up and 'maintain concerns that must chiefly depend upon the liberal home patronage. And now it transpires thnt there Is not room enough In tho new high school building and in the old high school building to accommodate all of the high school pupils owing to the opening of new departments. Why not lop off some of the frills and furls and put a stop to tho ambitious plan of con verting the high school into a univer sity. With the news telegraphed all over the country thnt n check for $100 bear ing tho president's slgnuture has been presented to a Pennsylvania Itaby chrls tened Theodore Roosevelt, the crop of little Theodore Roosevelt may be ex pected to show speedy signs of a tre inendous spurt. Now thnt we have a kindergarten supervisor and a primary supervisor and the high school segregated under its principal, all that is needed Is u grammar grade supervisor and Superin tendent Pearse would then enjoy a permanent full pay vacation. Members of congress are forbidden by the statutes to le Interested directly or Indirectly in government contracts, but under Secretary Root's Interpretation they can never be indirectly interested except with willful and dellln-rate De sign to evade the statute. - Last summer Congressman I.lttauer put on his boxing gloves for Our Dave, but up to date we have not heard whether Our Dave will take off bis shirt to fight the battles of the con gressman from Gloversvllle. Oae Thins; Demonstrated. Buffalo Express. The prlnrlpnl thing demonstrated by Judge Iochren's dcclxtnn In the Northern Securities case Is that federal law Is much stronger than state law for controlling trusts. That Is to Say Paralysed. Detroit Free Press (Dem.). Ther Is no occasion to disagree with the friends of Mr. Bryan In his claim that his presidential boom Is vigorous enough to keep tfntll 1908. It will be Just as good then as It la now. . Chaaces of a Lifetime, Baltimore American. The Sultan of Sulu ,1s tired of his job and wants to settle where American at mospheres about him will not make life so strenuous. Here Is a floe chance for some enterprising American to try bis hand at sultanlzlng. Holds the Balance of Power, Brooklyn Eagle. Ireland is now ready to ask for home rule and to get It. Ireland holds the bal ance of power between the two parties which contest for the control of the em pire. And either, party will give to it home rule for Its support. Extraordinary Occurrences. Philadelphia Record. Undoubtedly the year 1903 must be set down as a year of extraordinary occur ances. Even the new Borellt comet, as It approaches the sun, has developed four tails, and Indictments for postal fraud have been found against four citizens of the Impeccable state of Ohio. Gold Brick Stew. Brooklyn Life. To four barrels of water add, agitating constantly, one gallon wild-cat stock or wlnd-puree, one able-bodied bull, one medium bear (Reading preferred), as many lambs as the market affords (first skinning carefully), one bunch long green, one handful shorts (well squeesed), a little thyme, and one bottle llfe-slxe Hoggett and Steele's extract grabbettawl. Stew rapidly, skim fat as It rises, salt plentifully, stir in a little lye, strain with great care and leave tho lambs In the soup. PACIFIC COAST Ll'JIBKH, Surplus Product Seeking; the Market of the Middle West. Minneapolis Tribune. Lumbermen of the pacific coast are in despair because they foresee an overpro duction of 1,000,000,000 feet next year. The Industry was overestimated by the heavy export demand of a few years ago. Though that has fallen off greatly, the lumbermen continue to Increase their output. During the last year 256 new saw mills were built In the Puget Bound and Columbia river country. The mills of the state of Wash ington alone are said to have a capacity of over 2,500,000,000. Local consumption and the coasting trade have not kept pace with this increase of consumption, and lumber men are asking themselves what they are going to do with the surplus. There are two things to do. Of course they can organize a trust and limit the output to the demand. That would save them from loss, and would please the people who lament the destruction of the American forests. But these people are not very noisy on the Pacific coast, where the destruction of forests has only begun, and It Is said that the fir, of the country renews itself in a 'human generation. The other recourse Is to let tfie production keep up and seek 'new markets. If these new markets can be found" at home, this will have the double advantage of keeping the mills busy and "lessening the destruction of forests in ' parts of the country where they cannot be so well spared. The lumbermen of 'the Pacific coast are coming half way to 'meet Mr. Hill's plan for a low rate that' will enable them to sell their product east of the Missouri, and perhaps even east of the Mississippi river, The union of the Burlington with the Northern Pacific and Great Northern rail roads opens an enoromus field of treeless country, reaching from Kansas to Dakota and from Illinois to. Montana to the lum bar coast. The Burlington in particular, with Its network of little feeders, pene- trates to almost every part of a great con suming country n'ow supplied either from the great lakes or from the gulf states, The coast lumbermen are asking for a rate of 40 cents a hundred, on which they say they can ship 26,000 carloads annually. Per haps this movement has some connection with the talk of the milling In transport rifje on northwestern wheat to Asia. Mr. Mil! Is always looking out for full cars both ways. . WILL PROSPERITY E.KDlHEt Productive Business I'ndlstnrbed by Specnlatlre Relapses, Chicago Inter Ocean. Midsummer finds the United States with abundant crops, an average foreign and growing domestic trade, and no halts In manufacturing activity save those caused In a few lines by differences of opinion as to prices of raw materials. Taking the country as a whole, every really productive Industry and necessary service may be said to be profitable and prosperous. On the speculative as distinguished from tho productive side of business there has come a halt whose causes are apparent Attempts to anticipate future profits of Industry have been somewhat excessive. and Investors are waiting for these -an tlclpatlons to be realized before reaching out farther. However, the masses of "un digested securities" created In the last few years are being slowly but surely absorbed as productive business overtakes specula tive. All we have to do la to go on as we are now. , Yet men walk up and down the streets showing their heads and talking about "depression." They confound speculative with productive business, and think because one has been halted the other must be falling. They also forget their history and chatter about "a panic being due every ten years." In this they also confound those "money squeezes" resulting from excessive speculative activity with real industrial depressions or panics, resulting from fail ure of Judgment to profit by past expert ence. The history of the United States shows that real panics are to be expected only about every twenty years that Is, at In tervals long enough for a new genera tion to acquire a majority control of bus! ness and to come up to the time when It must learn In the school of experience The working out of this law may be ob served In the paper money panics of 1817, 1S37, and 1S73, and the tariff revolution panics of 1S67 and lh93. Between these real panics there were, as In 18S5, money squeezes caused by over-speculation. That we have fallen somewhat below the high tide of McKlnley prosperity and are waiting for the realization of the specu latlve anticipations to which it gave rise may be freely admitted. But with pro ductlve or real business everywhere pros Derous there can be no panic now. Unless theio shall be hereafter more care tha has been displayed at similar eras in the past a real panie may be looked for some where about 1911, but until then, with the exercise of ordinary common sense, our prosperity may be expected to endure. I.OCHHEN OX THIS MERGER. . Louisville Courier-Journal: The decision of Judge Lochren concludes nothing, ss an appeal Is to be prosecuted. Even without an appeal it would have no direct bearing upon the other decision. But one may as well note that It Is In the nature of a dis senting opinion from that rendered by the Judges In the other case. As such It Is very gratifying to the Interests that are seeking by new Inventions to evade the laws both of the states and the federal government. Buffalo Express: To the layman, at least, the points made in the decision of the United States circuit court of appeals are convincing. It would seem to be In evitable, that the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern cannot be operated as In dependent lines when all of their officers must necessarily be working with the single purpose of Increasing the earnings of the Northern Securities company. It would be suicidal In that concern to permit competition between the railroads which would decrease the earnings of either. The power to prevent reduction In rates In competition exists anl that, as the United States circuit court of appeals held. Im pregnates the contract with great danger. Philadelphia Record: The Securities com pany Is merely an Investor in and owner of a majority of the stock of each of the two railroads, and the transfer did not Involve the commission of any act In re straint of trade, nor did it affect trans portation or rates any more than would any other transfer of railroad stock from one person to another. This is exactly the contention of the engineers of the merger. It Is a contention which appears to be based on a too narrow construction ana a too literal interpretation of legal principles. Every act done In the further ance of the merger jnay have been lawful. taken by itself; but a number of agree ments not in themselves criminal may have the effect, when taken as a whole, of a conspiracy to restrain trade. Is the law. under such circumstances. Impotent to vindicate Itself? This Is the broader ques tion which the Judgment of the federal dis trict court at SL Paul leaves open, and undetermined. Detroit Free Press: The to roads passing to the control of the securities com pany are parallel and it Is the admission of the court that they would have no right to form any alliance tending to destroy competition. But, according to this Judicial authority, the stockholders in the two roads respectively may transfer their holdings to a company and It may operate the two lines for the benefit of both, honest and healthy competition such as Is sought by the law being out of the question: A may not violate the law; B may not violate the law; A and B acting Jointly may not violate the law, but If A and B secure the services of C to do what they cannot do Jointly or severally, C must be held In nocent. This Is not a doctrine that will stand and there Is an explanatory note running through the opinion that at times sounds apologetic, suggesting that he did not feel at all sure of himself. His In timation that Hill Is a pretty good sort of fellow, anyhow, was gratuitous, but in keeping. It Is a matter of congratulation to Minnesota and the country at large that the decision does not in any way In terfere with the case of the United States against the merger, under the Sherman act. PERSONAL NOTES. Sir Thomas Lipton Is making a tour of the eastern states.' His prudence In timing his trip in advance of the yacht race Is to be commended. Grant Allshouse, the tallest man In Indi ana, who by Bertlllon measurment stands 8 feet V4 Inches tall, has applied to Chief of Police KJely for a position as a St. Louis policeman. It Is reported that Count Soderinl. whose position at the Vatican Is that of Bearer of the Golden Rose, was Intrusted by Pope Leo with the task of writing the history of nis pontincate. Charles Dumas, who has been honored by tne society or . Men of Letters of Paris with the Sully-Prudhomme prise, which Is equivalent to being made a poet laureate of France, Is a young man Just out of his teens. . . Dr. John A. Trembly, the eccentric sci entist, has Just died at his home in Ham llton, O. This home is unique, the owner having designed the various rooms in geo metrical figures, some octagonal, others circular, others "'elliptical, and specimens of every known wood were procured from all parts of the world and used in the structure. Ex-Sheriff "Tom" Dunn of New York has long since won a reputation as a wit. In consequence a number of alleged witticisms are tacked to his name that were never perpetrated by htm. "Dunn," said a friend to him the other day, "what Is the clever est thing you ever said?" "I don't know," said the ex-sherlff, "but it was probably said by somebody else. It is being seriously suggested In England that King Edward, breaking through all tradition, should pay a visit to America next year, beginning his tour with a stay In Canada, as he did many years ago. It is pointed out that nowadays a transatlan tic Journey Is really a small mattter, and one writer expresses the opinion that there fore the visit of a European sovereign to the United States Is but a matter of time. PARLOL'S TIMES FOR CAPTAINS. Expert Promoters Tronbled With Common Hainan Ills. Kansas City Star. It may be said that the great captains of finance are hardly as well as usual. Mr. Rockefeller continues to suffer with indi gestion, which la no trifling matter, good neas knows. Mr. Schwab appears to be the victim of some obstinate disorder tli.it Inter feres sadly with his usefulness and his power of enjoyment. Mr. Morgan, with shrinkage of $500,000,000 In the stocks of the schemes which he has promoted, feels scarcely ss robust as he did before the re cent shaking up In Wall street. John W. Gates Is also reported as being In a very critical condition, with little prospect of recovery. It Is not to he supposed that there are many persons who will cherish any feeling of satisfaction over the sorry plight of these opulent Invalids. A man must hate another with fierce Intensity, Indeed, to wish him to suffer physical disability. The blessing of health seems, somehow, to be a heritage to which all persons, good as well as bad, are entitled. It Is like the rain which falls with gracious impartiality on the Just and unjust. A vengeful person might wish to slav his dearest foe, without going to the malignant limit of desiring to see htm stricken with disease. Thus, the disabled captains may not lack the sympathy In their weakness and dls comfort which would be freely extended to humbler persons deprived of the precious boon of sleep and the normal enjoyment and assimilation of food. But it ts not pos slble for any man, whatever may be the sum of his worldly sagacity, to escape the logical ultimatum that whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap. The man who devotes himself to the impossible tssk of possessing himself of ths earth mus not be surprised when he discovers that such an acquisition can be obtained only a the sacrifice of most of the things that would make such an achievement desirable, There are fixed metes and bounds to the power and the rights of humanity In this world, and when It passes beyond them it must pay tha penalty for its rash temerity, A Ao politk which will Uathir U SHINOLA Shines Instantly; iMm lath) Wtek. It gives a brilliant black lntter to men's, mmii'i hlldrsn's sheet fills all cracks and preserves the leather. h makst ! sheet leek Vka new. SKlnola has no competi tors and stands in a class by itself. Accept no substitute. fx Everywhere or by mall (or price. Get it to-day. SantOLA Co., So It Mammaetmrtrt Rochester, N. Y. BITS OF WASHINGTON LJFB. Minor Scenes and Incidents Sketched on the Spot. There are spielers and spielers, good, bad and indifferent. The man with the megaphone voice, the exponent of street slang, and the buffoons of high and low degree have seriously Jarred the repute of a noble profession and trailed its lame in the gutters. A brighter day is dawning for the profession and there is reason to believe that the highest aspirations of ambitious members will be realised ere long. Much credit for the hopeful outlook Is due to the management of tha trolley line between Washington and Mount Vernon, which sets a spieling example worthy of general emulation. Each train Is equipped with a spieler in natty uniform, young, ambitious, intellectual, and self possessed. Their enunciation rivals the canned article of Boston and their delib eration and poise would make a fortune for a sculptor. They recount the history of the country from the capltol to Wash ington's home how the famous Long bridge shook with the tramp of thousands of soldiers during the civil war, the road they trudged over, - the various military camps In the vicinity, including historic Arlington. All these descriptive pictures are the prelude to the peroration which comes at a point midway on the run. "On the left," the spieler remarks with eloquent deliberation, "are Braddock heights where Jn 1765 General Braddock organized his ex pedition against the hostile Indians In the Ohio valley an expedition which was saved from annihilation by the Incomparable genius of Braddock's ald-de-camp, Colonel Oeorge Washington." After a suitable pause the spieler finished: "The story forms a delightful chapter In the guide book which I take pleasure In showing you." This Is a sample of what can be done to boast spieling to its proper Intellectual level. It also shows that congressional spieler's exert a favorable Influence on minor mem bers of the family. . Union railway stations, so called, are to be found in many of our cities, but a union railway station like that now building in Washington is a departure from all prece dent and certainly in the right direction. We do not refer to what are to be its un- equaled slse and magnificence, says the New York Times, but to the fact that Its facilities are not to be monopolised by the particular railway companies for the pres ent convenience and profit of which the station is designed. On the contrary, the federal and municipal governments having contributed to its cost, have ordained that, as their recompense, any road desiring to enter the national capital shall be free to do so on equal terms with the roads already there. This Is a most Judicious and far-sighted provision. It recognises the essentially public nature of the service rendered by railways, and of the obliga tions Incurred by them, and It protects Washington from abuses and restrictions, due to the Impossibility of competition, which New York long has suffered, with partial relief only now in sight. One pas senger station is enough for any city under this new plan, and it would save travelers from a vast amount of Inconvenience In making transfers, not tq mention the vast amounts they have to pay. In cities where several roads have entrance, for the con struction and maintenance of seperate sta tions for each road or group of roads. The Postofflce department Is constantly In receipt of requests for the issue of a mourning stamp for use on black-edged stationery. Persons In all grades of life assert that there Is no harmony or ap propriateness In an envelope with a black edge and a red stamp In the corner, and they beg the department to issue a black stamp. The department nas given mucn consideration to the subject, but has been unable to comply with the requests on ac count of the rules of the Universal Postal Union, which prescribe that our lowest value stamp shall be green; that the stamp used for domestic use shall be red, and the stamp carrying foreign mall 6-cent shall be blue. In view of these restrictions It has not appeared possible to meet the requirements for a mourning stamp, as the department does not deem It advisable to print a stamp in red and also In black. However, the suggestion has been made that the 3-cent stamp now printed in purple, might, be Issued In black, so that persons desiring to use a black stamp upon their mourning envelope might do so by paying the additional cent. The depart ment may take up this suggestion later and act upon it. The resourceful Germans have discovered a new scheme for keeping eggs fresh for a long period of time. Consul General Guen ther, at Frankfort, reports to the State de partment that German chemists say that by Immersing eggs In a 10 per cent solution or silicate of soda, commonly called liquid glass, they can be kept fresh for any length of time. This produces the formation of a coating which renders the eggs perfectly air tight and retains for many months their fresh taste. The best proof of the efficacy of this treatment has been furnished by the fact that such eggs, after having been kept for a whole year, were hatched and the chickens were strong and healthy. The pre serving solution is best prepared by dis solving one pound of liquid glass in four auarts of cold water. The eggs are then Immersed In this solution, which should be keDt in a glased earthenware vessel, and the eggs are kept In the solution for a short time. If one of these preserved eggs Is to be boiled the shell must first be perforated In order to prevent cracking. Squatters are occupying large sections of land In and about Washington that are now claimed to be government property. These "squatters" range from a negro family In a shantv to big manufacturing establish ments. Proceedings taken by the govern ment have utterly failed, so far, to secure noasesslon of the territory. Recently the dlscSvery was made that several large re llglous Institutions were also "squatters.' Bethany chapel, controlled by the New A potltlvlf not tnjarm SHINOLA This Shoe Look New York Avenue Presbyterian church, has held for eighteen years a site which la now claimed to belong to tha United States. The Central Union mission has another plot consisting of 18,0f0 square feet. SL Ann's Orphan asylum, a Catholic Institution, has 1,760 square feet covered with buildings In another section of the city. Forcible eelsura of such property seems quite out of tha question. How such a problem is to be solved puzzles ths officials of the Depart ment of Justice. SIGNIFICANT FIGIRES. Half as Century of Growth t'ader tho Itepnbllcan Party. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. In the last fifty years a republican tariff has been in force most of the time. The republican party is the champion of a tariff that protects the exceptionally good wages of American workmen and develops Indus tries upon our own soil. If the protective policy were wrong, figures would show It. A brief comparison of the Industrial situation In 1900 with that in 1850 Is instructive. The number of factories in the United States In that half-century period Increased from 122,025 to 512,339; the number of wage-earners from 967.009 to 6,316,802, and the yearly prod uct from 1, 019.000,000 to $13,011000,000. The product grew thlrteenfold, the number of wage-earne:s sixfold and the number of factories fourfold. The production of coal in the same time Increased seventyfold, of petroleum more than a hundredfold, of pig Iron twenty-fourfold and of copper thirty fivefold. In 1S50 the yield of cotton was 333,718 bales, and In 1900 9, -130, 41 6 bales. Our railway mileage grew from ,021 miles In 1860 to 194,321 In 1900. In 1 the tonnage at the Boo canal was 403.657; In 1900 It was 22,315.834. Exports of manufactured articles have grown from 17.S80,000 In 1860 to $433,851,000 In 1900. The gain In exports of manufactures has been from $228,000,000 In 1898 to over $400,000,000 In 190J. In the light of these figures. It Is useless to deny the results of republican tariffs. They are Un paralleled In the history of the world. Our workmen are the most productive, as well as the best paid. Their handiwork ad vances constantly In the estimation of for eign consumers. The Industrial and com mercial expansion that has come under re publican tariffs speaks for Itself, and Indis putably. . SMILING REMARKS. "It drtn't nar mmlA lTn Ia vtu.- s. " iv-o fjucii. to tUiua bung out foh a dead sure thing. De man dat won t plow, groun' tell he sees de 'sur fntonatar'n bUn' l et lef'-"-vv"h- Mrs. Unoerten I hiLrf all h i ' out of me yesterday. . ""lc" h "laor-indeed! And where did they find room tn nut all nf News. ' " Lowlck Ynu av TlhT- ..j happens to you. eh? ""'"3U uover tnffitfCtly' IV tten B0 ul vrll V..1 aiwvs ePe It now.-Detrolt "The Persian authorltlna t, scatter their enemies." "How?" "They blow 'em all AVdif PaMa A Dealer. f """on'-Cleveiand Plain leSUCUd W" PrPundlnS knotty prob- "Yes," agreed his wife, "that's fine- but would you lust ikn hi. Ti "-"..VVl fo,rdPoddunkVh0n th8 9'kVK tO? ..'"J1 cry of baffled rage be dashed from the house. New York Sun. "Don't you somntimea ih ..... JSrs11l,sn?"ra Uma l meTr "d u, saia aenator Sorghum. "I could 1 could" lei" .r ""KkwuSS i could learn to write or tiaJnt i .... years. "Washington Star. bW&tr?13 WSmS!f danMir i..klep,,ea lne landlady's little yehyou"..Uo1i,0t,uV'OUr8eU - Jew.btdoVac,oau'mTub:y fferln t0 Wa h" nut, asked the great navigator "why j!?hSS fi1 "m on tha ind Touched to the quirk by this gallant re. THB LADY'S VES. Elizabeth Barrett Browning. "Yes, I..a,nwo", yu h"t night: "No, Will not look the same by day. When the viols played their best. Lamps above, and laughs below. Love ma sounded like a Jest, Kit for yes or ttt for no. Call me false, or call me free: Vow, whatever lljtht may shine. No man on your fate shall see Any grief for chajige on mlaa. Yet the sin Is on us both; Time to dance Is not to woo; Wooing light makes fickle troth, Scoru of me recoils on you. Learn to win a lady's faith Nobly, as the thing is high. Bravely, as for life and doaUi, With a loyal gravity. Lead her from the festive boards. Point her to the starry skies. Guard her by your truthful word. Pure from courtship's flatteries. By your truth she shall be true Ever true, as wives of yore; And her yes. once said to you. Shall be yes for evermoTe. BROWHELL HALL, OMAHA. Soclal atmosphere home-like and happy. General and college preparatory courses. Exceptional advantages In music, art and literary Interpretation. , Prepares for any college open to women. Voasar, Wellesley, Mt Holyoke. Western Reserve University! University of Nebraska and University of Chicago, admit pupils without examination on the certificates of the principal and faculty. Thoroughness insisted upon as es sential to character building. Physical training under a professional director. Well equipped gymnasium, ample provi sion for out door sports. Including private skating grounds. Snd for Illustrated cata logue. Mis Macrae, Principal. V 14 i 1