si IS TITE OMAITA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. APRIL 10, 1004. Tiie Omaha Sunday Ber E. ROBEWATER, EDITOR PUBLISHED EVERT MORNINO. TERMS OF arr.SCRIPTION. finlly (wltho.it Rini1nv). One Yrar.t . ally Hr and SurvUv, one Year .f llliistrntod Ho, (ffli. Yeiir ' ' 'Pnn.lnv Be, one Ynr '" Fit unfa jr Hee, One Yfr I ' Twentieth Century Knrnier. One Year.. l.'X) DELIVERED TV CARRIER. rnlly Roe (without Sunday), lr cpy.... Sc. Jlly Re (without Hundnyi. per week...l.n IhI1v Ree (ln hl.lln Sunday), per week..l.c Hunan y Jfre, per copv Kvenln Ree (without flundrn', iht week. 6c Evening Mee (including Bund.iy). per week Complaints of Irregularity In delivery houhl b nddreaned to City Circulation Xjepfcrtment. OFFICES. rmnha The Bee Building. South Omaha city J lull Building, Twenty-fifth and M Streets. Council UlufT 10 I'earl Ptreet. Chicago 16) Tnlty Building. ' New York 232 Park Row Building. Washington 6M Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to newa and edi torial matter should ho nddrcssed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, rnyahln to The Bee PuhllRhlng Company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment of mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. '. THB BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State 'of Nebraska, Douglas County. ss.t Qeorgs B. Tsschuck, secretary of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, ays that the actual number of full nnd complete copies of The Dally, Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of March. VJOi, was as follows: 1 80,070 IT 8O.6T0 t 80,810 IS 8O.210 1 80,8X0 19 20,870 .... 80.8MO 10 iW.tlOO 1 81,120 II 30,180 i 2T.01O K SO.IHO T SO.MMO Z3 ZO,820 81,180 14 St),M! ito.ruo 23 so.stno 10 80.T20 26 ao.HOO H 80,(1(10 27 20.HOO 11 30.8ZO zn.rio U 90,80 24 80,210 H .2o,n so ao.ono 16 BO,4ftO SI 20,020 is ao.aso Total 8:40,210 Less unsold and returned copies.... 10,323 Net total sales 818,887 Net average sales 2t,673 GEO. B. TZSCHLCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this 1st day of April, A. D. . 1904. (Seal) M. B. H UNO ATE, Notary Public. Under present conditions Corea ran be depended upon to laugh whenever Japan la tickled. Every cloud has a silver lining. The storm-driven wayfarer can seek con solation In bock beer. The Cuban congress is amusing Itself with a deadlock of its own. Anything to be thoroughly up-to-date. Bourke Oockran demonstrates that bis voice Is all right, even if be baa not succeeded In getting his opinions on straight Lent ends today In Russia. Having fasted the required forty days, General Kouropatkln may now proceed to get bis fill of Japanese. Whenever congress Is ready to sus pend publication of the Congressional Record the people will try to bow grace k fully to the Inevitable. European scandal mongers will ex perience a sad, almost Irretrievable, be reavement In the death of former Queen Isabella of Spain. , Nearly every city In the country has a Civic Improvement league under one name or another. Here la where com petition Is a good thing. Ill-health may be u blessing In dis guise for Joseph Chamberlain, for he may be compelled to take no pnrt In a fight where he has no hope for success. : If Mr. Harriman and Mr. Hill have a really genuine falling out the public may get to learn the inside facta of the great merger scheme which met a premature death. , rrincess HaUfeldt may bave regis tered as "Mrs. Roberts" at London, not because she likes to travel "Incog," but because she can no longer pay $1,000 for a dress. If Viceroy Alexleff succeeds In keep ing the Russian soldiers from liquor during the present campaign he will have demonstrated a power which will be cause for envy by General Miles, The aeronautical congress in connec tion with the St Louis exposition will not be held until October. It would hardly be safe to pull off a hot air fest until after the midsummer beat sub Bided. If Judge Tarter ever had any Idea that Colonel Bryan might finally rally to bla support the avowal of friendship for btiu by Mr. Cleveland should put that Idea out of his head. Bryan and Cleve land will not ride in the same band .wagon. ., It Is to be hoped that Norton F. Plant Will have better luck In Europe, where he goes after the Cape May and Em peror's cup, that Sir Thomas Upton has bud In trying for th America's cup. Charlie Barr will' si sailing In atrauge waters. Evidence In ths Grand Rapids boodle cases Implicated two more Michigan legislators said to have received, one of them $00, and the other $350. The scandal here la that there should be such a wide difference In the price of lawmakers. Immigration CointnisHlouer Sargent Joins the popular cry about "the un desirable class of immigrants from southern Europe,'' but he falls to point out how he would apply the strainer to keep out. the iudlgestlble and let In the desirable European. In the attack by the Germans upon American art the Americans cannot be deuied the right to quote the opinion of Emperor William as to one school of Teutonic art while the crown prince's opinion ss to the other school will give thtsa, mat eaUeiactioa. - t.TIT Jiff. BVMMKRS. Williamson 8. Summers has been Miinnmrilr relieved from duty as United States attorney for the district of Ne braska. The popular Impression that Summers was removed by the president because of offensive activity in procur ing the Indictment of Senator Dietrich Is unfounded. Summers tins not been removed, but lins served fifteen months beyond his full tt nn of four yenrs. He wor.lrt hnvc been removed in disgrace two ypnrs nsro hud the Nebraska sen ators been able to agree upon a suc cessor. Williamson 8. Summers should never have been appointed United States dis trict attorney in the first instance. He win one of a score of disreputables foisted upon the federal service during the Thurston regime. He hnd estab lished an unenviable reputation as a chronic deadbeat in Beatrice and Lin coln lefore he was commissioned United States attorney, and had been notori ously affiliated with the gang of state officers Impeached by the legislature In 180.1, even before he became the inti mate companion and counsellor of the state treasury embezzler, Joseph 8. Bartley. As prosecuting attorney Summers had a sympathetic ear for crooks and skill fully played into the hands of combines that were organized to plunder and rob the government while pretending to carry out instructions of the Depart ment of Justice In the enforcement of public land laws and tho prosecution of speculators Implicated In land purchase frauds. He made the grand Jury In quisitions into these violations of law a mere farce. In his seal to prevent the indictment of the Thurston county land lease ring, that had fleeced the Winnebago Indians, he used the machin ery of the court to persecute the men who had exposed the fraud. His performances Immediately prior to and after the Indictment of Senator Die trich were a mere masquerade gotten up adroitly for diverting attention from himself and cleverly designed to extend his term Indefinitely. A most consummate hypocrite, he has posed as the fearless public prosecutor and advocate of civic virtue while he was linked with embezzlers and cheek by Jowl with, rogues. By systematlo deception and Imposture he has habit ually played upon popular sympathy and personal credulity. Those who have learned to know him . most Intimately, however, bave been amazed that a man of his stamp could so long retain any degree of popular respect In a com munity where his devious and serpen tine ways have become fairly known. The Department of Justice Is to be congratulated that It has at last gotten rid of an officer who was lacking In every element of morality and integrity. COST l)F HA RBUR IMPROVEMENT. It Is stated that there are now before the committee on rivers and harbors of the house of representatives approved projects for river and harbor improve ments calling for the enormous appropri ation of $500,000,000. The force of army engineers is large enough to superintend the expenditure of only about $20,000 000 a year on river and harbor work and the committee has placed that limit on appropriations for a single year. At that rate It would take the engineers about twenty-five years to carry, out projects that ' bave already been for mally approved, not taking into con sideration any new work whatever. In addition to the $500,000,000 worth of projects the committee has thla year been called on to authorize new enter prises Involving a very large expendi ture. The chairman of the rivers and har bors committee is Representative Burton of Ohio. He la said to be of the opinion that the time baa about arrived when the goverrirnent must insist on local authorities sharing the expense of cer tain projects for improving channels and streams. He says the proposition of dredging waterways at public expense has assumed such gigantic proportions that a pause must be made to consider a change In the old system. Mr. Burton thinks if It Is to be continued the gov ernment must call on the state, county or city authorities, or upon persons or corporations whose property Is to be benefited by water improvements, to bear a part of the burden of expense. I While this la not an unreasonable Idea, It la most Improbable that the change from the old system suggested will meet with general approval. Improvement of rivers and harbors by the national gov ernment Is one of Its particular func tions and It la safe to say that the people of no state in which such Im provement is called for would endorse the Burton' proposition. The general government will for a long time to come be looked to to provide the money for river and harbor Improvements and the best that can be hoped for Is that the committees of congress whose duty it Is to make provision for this work win exercise all possible care to avoid ex travagance and waste. CAN ADA s UROtriMO POPULATION. The population of Canada la being rapidly increased by immigration, which the government has for some time been encouraging by the offer of liberal In ducements. Last month 4,000 immi grants entered the Dominion by way of the port of Halifax alone, an equal or greater number undoubtedly entering at other porta. This Is of course very small In comparison with the immigra tion to the United States, yet if main tained It promises most important re sults in Canadian development, for the majority of these newcomers are homo seekers, who will go to the northwest provinces and settle In the great wheat region, where tbey can secure land at a very moderate cost It Is stated that In gaining new cltl- sena Canada la now leading the world not In quantity, but In quality. During the past year there were 32,682 home stead entries, which "Included 8.021,230 acres; the iHnd grant railroads and the Hudson Bny compony sold to settlers 4,229.011 acres more, while in 1SIM the homestead entries were, all told, less than 2.0(10. Nearly 60,000 of the 12S. 0(10 immigrants who entered the Do minion last year were well-to-do Amer ican farmers, who went to seek their fortunes anew In the wheat region of the Canadian northwest,-over 41,000, or nearly one-third of the total, were of a similar class from the British Isles, while the 37,000 from continental Europe were homeseekers and settlers far above the average of the immigrants who came to this country. It is highly probable that the Do minion will hereafter attract an Increas ing number of Immigrants from year to year, very largely of the class of people who have entered that country within the past year or two. There are op portunities In Canada for- the Indus trious and thrifty and the government is making every effort to induce such to come to the country. It seems a safe prediction that within the next twenty years the population of the Do minion will be nearly If not quite double what it is at present. Our northern neighbor is prospering and progressing and Is every year becoming a better customer of the United States, In spite of the fact that her tariff makes a con siderable discrimination in favor of British manufactures. How much longer she will continue to be so good a customer Is an Interesting question. MUNICIPAL OWNCHSIUP SENTIMENT. The most significant feature of the municipal election In Chicago last week was the overwhelming .majorities given to the propositions bearing on municipal ownership submitted on what was known as the "little ballot." The Muel ler law authorizing the city to acquire the street railway properties was rati fied by a vote of more than four to one, and the declaration Jn favor of the im mediate action under the law approved by a vote of nearly three to one. The Chicago papers bave been bpsy trying to explain bow this demonstra tion In favor of municipal ownership was brought about ftnd to read into the vote on the several propositions differ ent Interpretations that would modify the force of the demand thus voiced for fear It may aerve to strengthen the so cialistic propaganda. What has hap pened In Chicago, however, Is probably no different except possibly in degree from what would happen in almost any other large city In which the same ques tions were submitted to popular vote under the same conditions. The only explanation of the Increasing' sentiment for municipal ownership of public utility concerns In our various cities is as an upheaval against corrupt interference by the public service cor porations with the management of mu nicipal affairs. It is an evidence of the growing conviction that in no other way can these corporations be put out of politics than by a point blank refusal of the city to grant further franchise privi leges. ' " ' The fraction situation In Chicago has long offered a most flagrant example of pernicious intrusion of corporation cor ruptlonlsts into' all branches of local government. The street railways there have not only failed to give the charac ter of service which the people have a right to expect but their representatives have ridden rough shod over every at tempt at reasonable regulation. They have not only manipulated city councils, and controlled legislatures by question able means, but have been caught fixing Juries and tampering with the courts. It is no wonder that the revolt Is pro nounced and that the people look to municipal ownership as the only avail able solution of ft pressing problem. While street railway abuses in Chi cago bave been Intolerable, their coun terparts are to be found In almost every American city In which rapacious fran chlsed corporations are constantly over stepping the bounds of decency. It is to be hoped the object lesson presented by Chicago will not be- entirely lost on the public utility corporations In other cities, which in the knowledge of having a tsood thing should take beed not to invite popular revolt unnecessarily. 4 BRIUMH FAILURE. That the British government has thus far utterly failed to carry out the prom ises made regarding the development of the Transvaal Is a matter of common knowledge and there seems to be no prospect of Improvement in the colonies wrested from the Boers. Immediately following the termination of the war there was an Influx of people to the Transvaal country and a good deal of speculative activity, but the inevitable reaction has taken place and in this portion of South Africa there la reported to be great depression and Increasing dtatrcs. The great boom which was to follow British occupation has not ma terialized and retrenchment Is the order of the day. So far as the Dutch popu lation Is concerned, It is said to be behaving In the most exemplary way. The conquered people are simply mind ing their own business, building up their ruined homes and cultivating their lands as well aa their crippled circumstances will admit. The colonial government proposes to Import coolie labor to do work in the mines and this Is not likely to prove so beneficial to the country as its advocates profess to believe. The ordinance adopted by the Transvaal legislative council Is a measure providing for the Introduction of voluntary slavery Into the colony, one of Its conditions being that the transfer of an imported con tract laborer shall be made from em ployer to another without the laborer's consent This, however, the British colonial secretary refused to approve and certainly Parliament would not have acquleeced in the labor Importa tion program with this condition re tained. Unquestionably British rule In the Transvaal has up to this time been ft most lamentable failure and nothing of a really practlcnl nature Is being done to remedy the unfortunate conditions which prevail. Nearly half of the $15,000,000 appropriated for distribution as com pensation to the P.oers for their losses In war has been M asted In expenses, the officials using the money freely for their personal enjoyment. Perhaps ft better state of affairs will come In the not dis tant future, but Just now Great Britain's new Smith African colonies are In a condition projierly described as deplorable. IXFURMATllifi FUR IMMIGRANTS. The bill in the United States senate making provision for furnishing Immi grants with information that will old them in determining where they shall locate is a judicious measure and should It become law It Is riot to be doubted that much good would result from It. A very large majority of the people who come here from abroad are of course totally Ignorant of the country and have no definite Idea as to where they will settle or what opportunities they will find for earning a livelihood. The ques tion of the distribution of these people is a most Important one. At present a very large proportion of them go to the large cities, where they naturally expect to find tho chances of employment best The consequence is that thousands are annually added to the congested urban populations and the number of the In digent is steadily increased. Were the immigrants on their arriral put In "possession of such information as the bill reported by the senate commit tee on Immigration contemplates, show ing where there are opportunities to ob tain work throughout the country and other facts of interest to newcomers, undoubtedly very many who under pres ent circumstances settle in the cities would go elsewhere and thus a most de sirable distribution of Immigrants Would be had. There ought to be no opposi tion to the senate bill and its early pas sage should be assured. The municipal election at Chicago last Tuesday developed a unique and novel electioneering medium. Teter Relnberg was elected alderman to represent the Twenty-sixth word in the Chicago city council by a plurality of nearly 2,800 votes. Reinberg's campaign was fought and won by a bombardment of flowers. From the beginning to the close of the struggle which resulted in such a pro nounced personal triumph at the polls Peter kept up a shower of bouquets roses, carnations and bunches of pinks which were lavishly distributed among the voters of the ward. Last Sunday Peter sent Easter flowers to the twenty nine churches within the wurd and twenty-nine congregations were pleased with his attentions and pleased with his intentions to. represent them In the mu nicipal legislature. Asa lover of flowers and believer in a campaign beautiful he was evidently not only a nice man, but the man of the hour at least he so Impressed the taste and culture of his constituents, who, regardless of previous party affiliations, cast their votes for him. Chicago truant officers have made a report to the effect that gambling of various kinds prevails among school children to an alarming extent pro moted by slot machines, dice, etc., fur nished In nearby drug stores, candy shops and fruit stores and they charge much truancy up to the temptation of this sort of dissipation. We, should think that a vigorous application of the old birch rod remedy would be -the proper antidote. Predictions are being made already that the republican national convention will not extend over more than two days. That Is not what Chicago bar gained for. A two-day meeting is hardly worth fighting for, to say nothing of putting up the guaranty fund to de fray all the convention expenses. If there is any way of prolonging the ses sion we may be sure Chicago will be resourceful. The rumor that Willie Hearst Is ready to sell his following In the St Louis convention to Judge Parker for the promise of a seat In the cabinet of President Parker is manifestly a cam paign roorbach. In the first place the promise could not be cashed and in the next place Willie would be paying too much for the whistle even If such a deal were consummated. I mm The conclusions reached by the Ger man Meteorological society of Berlin, that forests exercise no perceptible In fluence upon climate, should not deter Americans, and especially Nebraskans, from properly celebrating Arbor day by tree planting. Whether trees draw moisture from the skies or not they are a beauty and a joy forever. The time of the democratic leaders In congress will be occupied from now until adjournment in making campaign literature. The republican majority is so large that obstruction will seldom be effective, so they must be content with posing as prophets of evil, a role In which they have never shown' marked success. Events leading up to sn outbreak In the Balkaua are progressing rapidly. Turkey and Bulgaria have signed a con vention to permit no revolutions. When this news reaches the "loyal" Albanians there will be a revolution at one end of the country or the other. Officially estimated population of the United States proper is 79,000,380, or 3.0O5.814 more than the 1900 census figures. The 1910 census will surely show upward of 85.000,000 people living In the United States, exclusive of In sular possessions. Nebraska Is to bave forty-eight dele gates In the populist national convention under the call summoning ft meeting at Bprlagfleld, ' IIL, Jul 4, to nominate ft presidential ticket a dozen more than the state's representation In republican and democratic conventions combined. With this advantage In their favor Ne braska populists will not be living up to their reputation If they do not In cubate a favorite son boom for the vice presidency, If not for the presidential place on their ticket Some tin for Bad Roads, Baltimore American. At last a use, has been found for bad roads. The terrlflo highways of Corea are proving more effective than an army corps in protecting the Russians from'the Japa nese. Bad roads have defended many a community or state against attacks of progress and prosperity. Blots on (lillliatlon's Shield. Philadelphia Record. Almost contemporaneously with the slaughter of 600 Thibetans by the English at Guru 641 Achlnese wero massacred by the Dutch soldiers In Sumatra, Thus does civ ilization vaunt Itself at the opening of the twentieth century. The methods of argu ment by which the Christian nations under take to convince the heathen whose lands they covet are as old as the Invention of gunpowder. A Safe Prediction, Chicago Tribune. Ths Japanese occupy Corea. But that does not signify that the Japanese will con tinue in possession of it after .the treaty of peace is signed. If the Russians can shat ter the mikado's forces in Manchuria they may be able to compel his men to retrace the steps of thlr wonderful march. But one thing Is sure that the Japanese re treat through Corea would be a far bloodier affair for both sides than was the Japanese advance. Thus Rons the Tale. Pittsburg Despatch. Many years ago Charles Sumner sent to the csar some acorns from an oak which overhangs Washington's tomb. A stately tree grew from one planted near the im perial palace. Now Secretary Hitchcock will plant in the White House grounds a sapling from this oak In St. Petersburg. Isn't this a breach of neutrality, or does it show that free acorns can germinate in autocratic soli? Test of oil ne Fuel. Philadelphia Press. The steamship Nebraskan, which made the run from San Diego, CaJ., to New York by the use of oil as fuel, whereas it made the trip to Ban Diego by the use of coal, furnishes an Illustration of what may bo accomplished by the change. According to the captain of the vessel about 130,000 was saved by the use of oil. A part of this was gained by an Increase of 457 tons In cargo space. There was a saving of nine firemen in the crew. The trip was made In shorter time with oil than with coal. If oil remains plentiful at existing prices Its use may be come general by steamships. Abuse of PrlTllea-e. Detroit Free Press. The recent action of the house In expung ing from the Congressional Record an at tack made upon one of Its members by an other of the body under the extension of leave to print calls attention to the gross misuse to which that privilege is frequently put and the necessity of restricting the practice. Originally Intended to expedite matters and rive members an opportunity to Insert In the record, where they could be read later and digested, statistics and other matters appertaining to the toplo under discussion, the rule has been distorted and the privilege abused by unscrupulous per sons until it has reached a bolnt that occa sionally becomes unbearable, ' Prose Poem on Spring. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Now flow the fountains of the hills, and over the venerable rocks the torrents pour, bearing down the surplus of the snow, which yet in such a season sinks largely below to feed the earth of the summer that la to come. The buds are starting on the earliest trees ths buds that for a month have shown the pulse of life and the streams of sap are busy In other than maples, which now on the hills are fur nishing those life currents which mako the maple sirup and sugar; and yet go on to All the great trees themselves, and so give of themselves, ot their, very lives, some thing to nourish and please the ungrateful race of man. It is a season of Infinite charm and glory that Is opening let us taste of Its confluent pleasures, and delight In its promise, and be good. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. The early bud catches ths blistering frost , Amiable and gentle April Is altogether too gay for Us reputation. Diamonds, according to a London dis patch, are Increasing In price. This la a good time for newspaper men to unload. General Kouropatkln Is said to bave a gorgeoua uniform In his suit case. The Japs are disposed to give him a new base to fit it on. Cigars and tobacco valued at $300,000 were cremated at West Tampa last week. Another Instance of the unchangeable de crees of fate. Advance agents of Medicine Hat and Cal garry are needlessly Impressive In demon strating that winter's backbone oould stand a few more blows. Let history be made right at any oost John D. Sullivan declares that it was his whipping of an Englishman that gave America Its flrst boost as a world power. Kansas cannot fairly claim a monopoly of human wonders. A"all River, Mass., policeman, after fourteen years of service, resigned' because he regards It wrong to work on Sundays. The festive pass does not say much, but It gets there 'Just the same. "How oould I vote for that measure with my pockets full of passes," exclaimed a candid Chicago alderman as he registered a loud "No" on the antl-pasa ordinance. A Philadelphia belle who was caught in the street and hugged by a negro said after her escape she supposed at first that one of her friends was trying to sur prise her. Is that the way the friends of Philadelphia belles usually surprise them In the streets? An eastern banker, who had business dealings with the dethroned cotton king, testified that he loaned Sully $700,000 the first time he saw him. The wonder Is that "the talent" should waste time and energy in cracking safes and things while bankers are so dead easy. The other day In Brooklyn, after the pas tor had delivered the customary pathetlo eulogy and turned the services to the un dertaker, the latter posted himself at the head of the coffin and In tear-eompelling tones called out "Now the friends will please step forward and say 'good-afternoon' to the corpse.' If Admiral Togo succeeds In bottling up Port Arthur he will have earned the right to dine on strawberries three times a day. No greater reward oould heroism wave for. The attempt of a Kansas City man, dur ing a fight to bite a pleoe off the cheek of a Kansas City woman cost him several sound teeth and $10 and trimmings In court. Some people cannot appreciate a hard prvfiwsUlOB until they i siiuwo. SERMOS9 BOILED DtV Regret cannot uproot wrong. Labor Is the salt of our lives, Doubts mako a poor refuge from duty. It takes more than a fence to make a garden. A shallow man usually has his soul In Ms skin. Present character la a prophecy of future condition. Man s noblest right Is that of giving up his rights. Rrst Is religion's opportunity for reln vlgcratlon. There Is no clear thinking apart from clean living. Respectability may be quite different from righteousness. He who loses no love for others loses all life for himself. Nothing blinds the soul quicker than winking at sin. Platitudes against sin are ss harmful as applause for sin. In the divine scales a dime often weighs more than a dollar. The worst blasphemy Is that of profes sion without practice. God cannot blot out our past, but he can prevent Its blight on the future. Chlcngo Tribune. EXIXAFI SHOTS AT THB TtXPIT. Baltimore American: A minister In New York opposed to -the remarrlsge of divorced persons has changed his list of questions to parties applying to be married, so that now a woman cannot evade the main point by saying her husband Is dead, with the mental reservation that he Is dead to her. This minister will Insist on dead husbands being decently burled before their widows seek the altar again, and will allow pros pective brides with former spouses only an underground route to happiness. Philadelphia Press: An Easter offering of 9n.0OO. the amount collected at Grace Protestant Episcopal church In Rrooklyn. does not look much like hard times. The rector has asked for fciO.COO to apply on th4 endowment fiin1 nf tt. .v,,-v, -a v. J was delighted to receive JTO.OOO more than he expected. This church Is located In a part of Brooklyn where residences are pivlng place to business hryjges, ftnd the plan Is to raise a sufficient endowment to keep the church golnflr when the rich mem bers have removed to some other part of the city. As $128,000 has already been raised the plan will evidently succeed. Chicago Chronicle: At Jersey City a young man recently committed suicide be cause a Protestant minister refused to perform the marriage ceremony which would have united him with a divorced woman. The alternative was civil mar riage, to which the young man would not concent. He was a devout Christian, who regarded marriage as a sacred Institution, a spiritual union which could not be under taken upon a civil contract. The attitude of his church not only forbade him from entering upon the married state with the woman he loved, but the refusal of the minister to perform the rites carried with It on Implied rebuke which his highly sen sitive nature could not withstand, and he found escape from an Intolerable position by taking his own life. This. It may be repeated, was an extreme case, but It serves as well as an ordinary Instance to Illustrate the Influence of the church upon the divorce evil, which, unfortunately, Is not always exerted. It Is a common charge from Infidels and scoffers that the power of the church Is waning. If there Is an apparent lack of ecclesiastical power, es pecially In relation to moral rather than religious questions, Is It not possible that the Impression Is due to a failure on the part of the church to exercise Us powers In this respect T Persistency tha.t is what wins -you wrote my first policy. Now fifteen years after you settle. Not here to day and (one tomorrow. "I am heartily satisfied." "My large holdings affords me a feeling of real security." Read this letter from a most successful banker and jner chant he is a f riend of " The Strongest in the World1 A U BRANDBIS. rrast. H. H. BRANDBIS, VlM-Prrst. A. n. K. Omaha, Nob., April 7, 1804. EL H. Neely, Manager, Omaha, Nebraska. - Dear Blr: Am just In receipt of your letter stating options on one ot my largo policies. I sleet to accept the cash option, and in doing so wish to tell 70a that I am heartily satisfied. filnce you wrote this, $ny flrst policy of life assur ance, It haa been my pleasure to have you write me sev eral other policies in the Kqultablo Life Assurance Society of the United States, and I believe today I am one of your largest policy-holders In Omaha. My large holdings in this great corporation with Its mountain of surplus affords me a fooling of real se curity. Your truly, ART 11 UK D. BItANDEIS, THE STRONURST IN THE WORLD" THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED 5TATES HENRY B. HYDE, Founder 120 BROADWAY. NEW YORK. JAMES W. ALEXANDER, Pre. JAMBS H, HYDE, Vlco Prss- II. D. NEELY, Mr. for Nebraska. Msrchanta National Bank Building. Wa HENRY BROWN, Cashier. & R. ELSON sad E. 5. STREETER, Oeaeral Agts,, Omaha, tt H. LOUOHRIDOB. Osnoral Agt., Uncol n. JOB KLEIN, Ooneral Agt., FUttsmoutb, Neb. ED B. JONES. Ooneral Agt., Hastings, Nob. d R. HOOVER, Ooneral Agt, Wayne, Neb. DOMESTIC PI.RASAJITRIE9. "If your wife treats you so shamefully." said Henperk's fri ml, "why don't you get a divorce from her7" "I did want to." replied Henpeck, "but she said 'no,' and of course that settled It." Philadelphia Press. "Put why did the bride s mother weep" "Oh, when It was too late, she discovered that she had overlooked a chance to ret an English son-in-law with a llttl better title at approximately the same piiec."--Chicngo Record-Herald. Miss Vane (tome one told me today that I whs the hitmlnonu-st girl In our street. Miss Spelts O! that's not Incurable. Miss vane What do you meanT Miss Spelts Your habit ot talking to yourself. Philadelphia Cathoilo Standard. "Of course, the more children a couple have the larger their doctor bill becomes." "Not at all. The more children tliey have the less likely the parents are to be come alarmed at every little thing." Cleve land Plain Dealer. "She Is very nice," observed the flrst guest at the Florida hotel, "bue very ostentatious." 1 ... "I hadn't noticed it." said the second '"'Veil, she Is," continued the flrst guest. "T notice that she Is registered at the office as 'Mrs. OoWrocka and eook. "-Cincinnati Star. Mr. Roxley Ridiculous, sir! Before you think of marrying my daughter you should be making at least t&.Ouo a yenr. Mr. Nervey Well. If you can mako a po. sltlon for me In your office at that sal ary I'll take It Philadelphia Press. SOLOMON AND THE ANT. Sir Edwin Arnold. day Ar-Raheen! call him "Compassionate," For He Is pitiful to small and great. 'Tia written that the serving annuls sisml Beside Uod's throne, ten myriads on each hand. Waiting, with wings outstretohed and watchful eyes, To do their Master's heavenly embassies. Quicker thun thought His high commstwui they read, Swifter than light to execute them speed; bearing the wurd of power from star to star. Some hither and some thither, near and fur. And unto these naught Is too high or low. Too mean or mighty, If He wills It so) Neither is any creature, great or small, Heyond His pity, which embraceth all, Because His eye beholdeth all which are. Sees without search and counteth without care. Nor lies the babe nearer the nsrelng plire Than Allah's smallest child to Allah s grace ; Nor any ocean rolls So vast that He Forgets one wave of all that restless aea. Thus it is written and moreover told How Gabriel, watching by the gates ot Gold. Heard from the Voice Ineffable this TPSrd Of two-fold mandate uttered by the Lard: "Go earthward! pass where Solomon aeMh made His pleasure house, and sltteth there ar rayed. Goodly and splendid whom I crowned the king. For at this hour my servant doth a tiling VnrltHng: out of Nislbls there came A thousand steeds with nostrils all aflame And limbs of swiftness, prises of the fight; I.o! these are led, for Solomon's delight. Before the palace, where he gasetli now, Filling his heart with the pride at that brave show; So taken with the snorting and the tramp Of his war horses, that Our stiver is nip Of eve Is swung in vain. Our warning 8uu Will sink before his sunset prayer's begun; So shull the people say, ''The king, our Lord, Loves more the long-mail ed trophies of his sword Than the remembrance of his God!" Go In! Save thou my faithful servant from such sin. "Also, upon the slope of Arafat. Beneath a lote tree which is fallen flat, Toileth a yellow ant who carrleth home Food for her nest but so tar hath she come Her worn feet fall, and she will perish, caught In the falling rain; but thou, make the way naught, And help her to her people In the cleft Of the black rock." Silently Gabriel left The Presence, and prevented the king's sin, And holp the little ant at entering In, O Thou whose love Is wide and great. We praise Thee, "The Compassionate." BRANIIEIS. SM'r. BRANDEIS. Trraa.