TnE OMATTA DAITA BEE: MONDAY, MAY 30, 1904. Tim Omaiia DailyTBee E. ROSE WATER. EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNINQ. TKRM3 OP SUBSCRIPTION. pally po (without Sunday), One Year..$.A0 rTally !! and Sunday. One leaf 6 W lllltistrated Bee. On Year 1 00 Monday Bee, One Year M raturoay nee, orus rear i wenuetn century Farmer, una ear.. l.w DELIVERED BY CARRIER. ally Pea (without Sunday), per ropy.... Je ally He (without Sunday), per weeK....jzc 4)ailr Kr ilnrluriina Sunday). Ir week. .170 jHuniiay Bee, per ropy &3 I Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week 6c I Evening llee (Including Sunday), per week 10c Complaints of Irregularity in delivery should te addressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaiia The Be Building. South Omaha City Hall Building, Twen-ty-nfth and M Street. Council Bluffs 10 Pearl Street. Chicago!) t nlty Building. New York 2328 Park How Building. Washington 601 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to news end edi torial matter ahould be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit hy draft, express or postal order, payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 1-cent stamps received In payment of mall accounts. Personal check, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THE BEE. 'PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OP CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss. : George B. Txschuek, secretary of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, says that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally, Morning. Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of April, 1904, was as follows: 1 99.1MO , is BO,a0 I 80.100 it ao.eoo I M,K u ao.it ... , 8U.1SO U S9,IM0 . I SCMtOO ....'. JW.SSO S. 8O.ST0 U SO,OSU f 80300 8O.2O0 80,000 B 80,000 90,180 M 10 ST.lOO ao,40 U SO.UOO M OT.SV40 U v 80,030 7 SO.340 IS SJMMO U 29.0H0 14 SO.IHO 2 HO,ISO U.m 0,8T0 W VltVttO Total StHMMO Law unsold and rsiomed copies.... Net total salmi 8(M,l4 Net average sale - Stt,B3 GEO. B. TZHCH1TCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to tore me this 2d day of May. A. D. 1901 r'.Seal) M. B. HUNQATE, L Notary Public. The Siege of Port Arthur will be the title of the war drama now on the t boards. It was about time for the lion. P. Crowe to resurrect himself for another bunch of free advertising. The rules of the Rosebud game have , been promulgated. Anyone who can raise th ante can sit in for a thanco at the lackpot. Year by year the ranks of the veterans of 3 SOI are becoming thinner. But the nation's grateful recognition of their patriotism will never diminish. The weather man will have to be kinder to the summer garden resorts this year than he was last year if the latter are to enjoy a successful season. Note the superiority of The Bee's war news service beside other, papers pub lished In this city and state. Make the comparison for yourself and be con vinced. All things come to him who waits. With several mammoth grain elevators In sight Omaha should not have to wait much longer for flouring mills, cereal mills and tanneries. : Every visitor from abroad remarks upon the visible signs of growth In Omaha and carries the tale back home with him. This is the sort of advertis ing that brings results. If there is to be any more hair-splitting over asphalt paving specifications would It not be better for the Board of Public Works to give the benefit of the doubt to the taxpayers rather than to the con tractors 1 Omaha's new fire engine has stood the test and is pronounced a valuable addi tion to our flre-flghtlng facilities. The rush of the insurance underwriters, however, to scale down fire rates is not yet visible. The blue and the gray are both slowly but surely answering taps. No custom could be more' beautiful than that cf the survivors paying yearly tribute to th' memory of those who Lave gone before.' Some of our democratic friends waat to try it again this year with the only democratic governor who ever occupied the executive office since Nebraska at tained to statehood. But where would the populist allies come in? ranaroa natives want an American to be In .charge as' Tips d health officer In the canal ports. The Panama people must have heard of the sanitary revo lution worked In Havana under direction of American experts and be heeding the Cuban objttt lesson.' For .acrobatic agility in taking all ends of the question, the tax agents of the Nebraska railroads are entitled to the prize, ' The only wonder is that tbey do not get the value of their respective roads down low enough that they rau buy them in for themselves with their pwn pin 4noney. The Methodist giTjeral conference has completed its quadrennial sexslon at I os Angeles. The weather man out there long ago guve up trying to mutch the dally shower reception that tho Methodists enjoyed while they were Itolding their general conference in Omaha twelve years ago. Two njtwsHful chairmen of the re publican nutlonul committee have died within a few mouths Ilanna aud Quay -two men of almost contradictory per sonal characterises who yet achieved political victory in much the same way". It was not strange that they should stive had such marked antipathy to (at another. lit MORI At DAT. There are many more graves of union soldiers to be decorated today than there were a year ago. Thousands of the de fenders of the union have within tht past twelvemonth gone to their eternal rest Rapidly the ranks of the veterans are being reduced and we sorrowfully realize that not many years hence all will bare passed away, but the memory of their deeds will remain and be for ever cherished by a grateful people. Time has not impaired the significance cf Memorial day or weakened the senti ment which It inspires. We think as affectionately and as gratefully now as ever of the patriotic men who gave their lives for the preservation of tho government and we hold in honor and esteem the veterans who survived that mighty struggle and are yet among in. The sacrifices they made and tbt 'tardshlps and sufferings they endured will never be forgotten. The nation has never shown Ingrati tude to its defenders. The American people, more than any other, have al ways honored the soldiers who upheld the flag. They do so still and those who have given their lives In a far distant land to maintain the national authority and the men who are faithfully per forming their duty under a tropic sky will share in the homage and respect that arc today paid to the dead and the living soldiers of the republic. Bo long as our people cherish the memory of the men who fought to preserve the union and annually recall their heroic fortitude and valorous deeds, the insti tutions they battled to maintain will be secure. So long as the example of their great patriotism Is impressed upon our people the republic will not lack de fenders prepared to emulato that ex ample. It has beeu urged that Memorial day should not bo regarded as a mere holi day for recreation. It has a higher purposo and meaning. It ought to be an inspiration to the worthiest senti ments, particularly such as tend to strengthen loyalty to the government, patriotism and a right sense of our duty as citizens of the greatest of republics. H KB BASRA'S SEMI-CBNTK1TXIAL. On May 25, 1854, congress passed the bill providing a territorial government for Nebraska, embracing all of what Is now Kansas and Nebraska, rive days after, on May 30, tho bill was signed by President Tierce. Illstory records that so far as Nebraska was concerned, no excitement of any kind marked the initiation of her territorial existence. "The persons .who emigrated there seemed to regard the pursuits of busi ness as of more Interest than the dis cussion of slavery." It was different with Kansas, whose territory became at once the battlefield of a fierce political conflict between the advocates of slav ery and the free soil men from tho north who went there to visit the es tablishment of that institution in the territory. Thus the name of Kansas was for some years synonymous with all that Is lawless and anarchical. The enactment of the Kansas-Nebraska bill was an ejpoch-maklng event. The controversy that preceded it pro duced a division of the whig party in the north and resulted in the creation of the republican party. This legislation inaugurated the conflict between slavery and freedom .. which culminated In the greatest war of modern times and es tablished more firmly and securely the foundations of the union. One of the most interesting chapters of American history Is that which tells of the at tempt to force slavery upon Kansas ter ritory and tho intrepid light against it of the friends of freedom. It was a struggle the far-reaching consequences of which few men of that time could foresee. Today is the fiftieth anniversary of the approval by President Pierce of the Kansas-Nebraska bill and that most im portant event will be celebrated through out Nebraska on June 10, the Kansas celebration taking place this week. WCLtLLAN A POSSlBtLnr. According to the New York cor respondent of the Philadelphia Press, there is a movement for Mayor George B. McClellan which may assume large proportions before the meeting of the democratic national convention.' He states that some of the shrewdest po litical observers in New York are of the opinion that McClellan will be heard of at St. Louis, among these being sotoe prominent republicans who were until within the past two weeks convinced that the democracy would make Judge Tarker the candidate. "Whatever re publican leaders may. say elsewhere,' writes the Tress correspondent, "it is well known here that while republican politicians do not themselves express the opinion that the nnme of George B. McClellan will a second time head a democratic presidential ticket, never theless they do say that they now sus pect that the commanding forces in the democratic party not already committed sincerely to any candidate are swiftly concentrating, or at least thinking of concentrating, upon George B. Mc Clellan." . There is nothing Incredible or Improb able in this, in view of the fact that Tammany Is unfriendly to Tarker, while New York's mayor Is the creature ol that political irpantzatlon. McClel lan has been doing very well as the chief executive of the metropolis. He has shown considerable administrative ability and an earnest disposition to maintain good government. It appeors that he Is fulfilling his ante-electlou pledges, moreover, and what Is very much In his favor, he has not incurred the hostility of any democratic faction and It Is thought that if his name should be presented to the national convention he would get support from both con servatives and radicals. It Is presumed that Mr. McClellan has been "regular," that he voted for the democratic ticket in the lust two presidential campaigns. It is plain, therefore, that New York's mayor la to be regarded as a possible presidential candidate and Indeed the probability of his appearing at St Louis as a "dark horse" Is very strong. L I AH IDLK TUUKAT, According to the Lincoln Journal there is serious talk at the state capltol of the proposed summary removal of llarry Reed, assessor of Douglas county, by the State Board of Equalization, which will convene during the first week of July. Lancaster county off! tlals who have returned from Omaha with figures showing values that County Assessor Reed Is said to have placed upon the real estate and personal prop city in Omaha claim that the valuation placed upon real and personal property by Mr. Reed is very much below the market value and pressure is to be brought upon the State Board of Equal Izatlon to exercise Its power of removal over assessors who prove to be derelict In the discharge of their duty, as defined by the revenue law. This is either a bold bluff or an idle threat County Assessor Reed is by ex perience and training the best equipped man In Omaha for the efficient discharge of the duties devolving on blm. There Is no other man in this city who is as familiar with the value of real estate in Douglas county, and certainly no man enjoys the confidence of all the people to a higher degree. He is conscientious and fearless. He has moreover had the benefit of the laborious and painstaking work of the city tax commissioner and two boards of review that have within the past two years made a thorough revision of Omaha real estate appraise ments at their full market value. . The complaint of Lincoln merchants, who are said to be aggrieved over the alleged under-valuatlon of the stocks of merchandise In Omaha Jobbing houses and department stores as compared with the assessment of their stocks of mer chandise hy the assessor of Lancaster county may or may not be well founded. In appraising these stocks of merchan dise the county assessor is compelled to take the sworn statements of their own ers unless fraud or deception are palpa ble. He cannot make an Inventory, or check off the merchandise on the shelf, or in the warehouses. If the returns made by the Omaha Jobbers and depart ment stores are incomplete, or false, Mr. Reed would doubtless entertain any pro test made by, taxpayers who claim to possess knowledge or have Just grounds for entering complaints. Manifestly the Lincoln merchants who threaten to institute proceedings against Mr. Reed are putting the cart before the horse. The appraisement of the county assessor is by no. means final. If there Is anything seriously wrong the Douglas County Board of Equalization, which will review the work of the county as sessor after it is completed, will have a right to correct it either by raising or lowering the figures at which any piece of real estate or personal property is returned. The threat to depose Mr. Reed affords good ground for the suspi cion that it is not made In good faith, but simply for home consumption, and Its effect upon the assessor and county board of Lancaster county. Nobody in these parts will be Bur- prised if the first big grain elevator Is erected in Omaha on grounds adjacent to the Burlington terminals. The Bur lington has always managed to scent big enterprises and projects and never fails to be at the head of the procession when it becomes satisfied that they will prove a success. It beaded off the Union Taclflc by building the first cred itable railroad depot here and it headed off all the other railroads by making the first big subscription to the Trans mlsslssippi exposition. The Eourth of July is six weeks ahead of us ytt but it Is not too early to pro mulgate the rules that are to be enforced by the police against the promiscuous sale of dangerous explosives. Merchants should not be allowed to fall back on the excuse that they have loaded up with cannon crackers and toy pistols in the expectation ot unhampered trade, nd that they would suffer loss and hardship unless allowed to dispose ot the goods to any willing victim. , A' elanco at the names on toe dele gations selected to represent Douglas county in the two democratic state con ventions raises a doubt whether the populist end of the former allied re formers will be able to get anyone at all to serve as delegates from this county to their state convention. An almost complete suspension of press messages from Russian war cor respondents is taken at St. Petersburg to mean that Important movements are pending. It may also mean that the correspondents do not believe in paying heavy telegraph tolls on news that will not be welcome when it is received. Ready for the Battle. Philadelphia Press. The coming presidential campaign will be fought on two Issues the tariff and Roosevelt. The republican party will gladly accept the Cght on both. No tt Will Hubby Treat t Chicago Record-Herald. The Oensral Federation of Women's Clubs has gone on record in opposition to This Is a magnificent compli ment to the husbands the women now pos- Slightly Mixed. Philadelphia Record. "Aggressiveness," says Mr. Bryan, "l a quality that Is absolutely nececgary In a democrat." Therefore the Nebraska man Is opposed to Judge Parker. Mr. Bryan has confused aesresslveness with loquacity. Parker lias One Opinion. New York Tribune. Judging from the recent decision of the New York court of appeals Judge Parker has at least one opinion with which few Americana will agree namely, that the American flag may be used for advertising purposes. Party that Does Things-" Kansas C'lty Journal. Mr lib Ka V.H. n nortv." uvi Paul 1 Morton, "because It Is ths party thst stsnds for ths material interests of the country It is the party that has dona things." And millions of other sensible men Ilka It for the same reason. Their number Is consid erably larger this year than ever before. Surprise Well Put On. Philadelphia Ledger. Great surprise was caused the other day by the report that some members of the Canadian government had at one tlra hearkened to the voice of the briber In con nection with the grant of privileges to an Insurance company. By the way, why should there be great surprlne when a Canadian does these things while Amer icans accept them aa a matter of course? An F.neoaraatns; Sign. , Springfield Republican. It Is an encouraging sign that so many of the annual conventions of great religious denominations are expressing themselves strongly regarding the "consecutive polyg amy" or rapid-fire divorce evfl. There Is little use in denouncing venerable Mormon apostles so long as dlvorces-whlle-you-wait are a characteristic of our monogamous Christian civilisation In America. One good result of agitation must be a stiffening In the courts. Judges in certain states will not sanction the loose legal methods that so often have become a public scandal if they realize that publlo sentiment Is being educated against them. THE CAPTVRB OP K.I.1 CHOTJ. Significance of the Storming- ot This Fortress by the Japanese. Chicago Tribune. The Japanese have had another success. They have stormed Kin Chou. The report of their casualties Is not ret In. When It comes it will probably show that the suc cess was a bloody one. The Japanese have made up their minds to take Port Arthur. This capture would give them great sentimental, political and military satisfaction. Sentimental satisfaction because they tcok Port Arthur from the Chinese and im mediately were tricked out of It by Russia. Fundamentally the cause of the present war was this Russian trick. Ever since this achievement the thought of It has festered In the Japanese minds. The Jap regards the retaking of Port Arthur from Russia almost as a sacred duty. The sold iers Intrusted with the performance of that duty are crusaders. Political satisfaction because the fall of Port Arthur would Immensely enhance the prestige of Japan in the eyes, first of China, then of Asia and finally of the world. Military satisfaction because of the Rus sian soldiers and weapons which would fall with the citadel, and because of the sonce- quent release of the Japanese army which had been operating against It. This army once released would Join the forces In cen tral Manchuria operating against Kouro- palkln. Besides, If the Japanese take Port Arthur they could probably keep It, be cause they can replenish It from the sea. If they kept It after the war It would be of Immense strategical use to their navy, for it a safe and fortified harbor which dominates the gulf of Chi LI. What Is the likelihood of the Japanese capture of Port Arthur, and how far has the taking of Kin Chou contributed to that endt Kin Chou was a strongly fortified height thirty-two miles northeast of Port Arthur. In Its own vicinity It dominates the Llao Tung, peninsula from soa to sea. If It were untaken no army could march around It It had to be taken before the armies now on the peninsula could come near enough to Port Arthur to throw a shell Into It even from their biggest guns. If there had been good landing places be tween Kin Chou and Port Arthur soldiers misfit have been disembarked In the rear of the outpost, but there were no particu larly safe landing places. While, therefore, the taking of Kin Chou was an antecedent necessary to the prose cution of the attach on Port Arthur, the fall of Port Arthur need not follow the fall of Kin Chou. Before the Japanese soldiers now stretches out an expanse of rugged terrane thirty-two miles long and from five to twelve miles wide.. They will have to fight their way over this ground before their flag files over the fortress which they covet. The ground is well fortified, the defensive positions strong, the area so limited that the chances for maneuvering will be small. It must be a case of soldiers and not of generals. The relative superiority of the Japanese soldiers over the Russian soldiers appears to be less than that of the Japanese gen erals over the Russian generals. Bo when the military proposition Is reduced to a case merely of soldiers, the Japanese suffer by the transmutation. Port Arthur contains about 80,000 troops. It must be well provisioned, for ample time has been given since the outbreak of the war to stock It with ammunition, food, clothes and medicine. It may be set down that Port Arthur will not be starved out for nine months. Yet, If the Japanese wait nine months Kouropatkin may be able to assemble a large enough force to raise ths siege. Or the Baltlo fleet might; come. The Japs have reckoned they must take the place by storm. The military logic of he situation has compelled them te Mils ghastly decision. Whether or not they succeed in their assaults they will lose many thou sands of their soldiers In their attempts. Port Arthur is more strongly fortified than was Plevna or Sevastopol. Modern weapons are better defenders than those of 1856 or 1877. That japan can storm Port Arthur seems doubtful, but during the three and one half months of the present war the Japa nese have continually exceeded the proph ecies of those who based their estimates on the accomplishments of past campaigns. If the Japanese do take Port Arthur they must be credited with the accomplishment of one of the bravest and most soldierlike feats in military history. PERSONAL JIOTES. A Wisconsin man JUBt previous to his sut cldo threw about $4,000 of his money Into the river. Wisconsin holds the palm for the meanest man until new contestants ap pear. An appropriation of $15,000 has been made by the city council of Philadelphia to pay the expenses of the trip of the Liberty bell to the St. Louis exposition. The start will be made on Friday, June 3. Some of the newspapers are still discus sing the resignation of Pension Commis sioner Ware, although, according to his family and himself, he has not resigned and does not Intend to do so. Henry Newitt, one of the guards at the St. Louis exposition, "kept, tub" on the questions asked him one day last week and found when night come that he had re ceived 1.37S requests for information. Bugler Martin,' the sole surviving trooper of Custer's Mountain Meadow massacre, has opened a little fruit stand at the en trance to Fort McHenry, Baltimore. He was retired on January 7 last, having served thirty years in I'ncle Sam's army. . It is proposed to erect a fuonument at Washington to the memory of the late Ma jor Walter Reed, V. 8. A., whose labors demonstrated that yellow fever Is trans mitted by mosquitoes, and who died In Cuba of the disease while conducting his Investigation. : The will of the late Prof. Maxwell Som mervllle of Philadelphia disposes ot an es tate of over $100,(100. Among other bequests lib set a:art a sum of money the Interest on which Is to be devoted to the giving of a banquet annually to the members of the grand Masonlo lodge of Pennsylvania and the sitting and past officers of Vaioa ludge No. m of Pbualslfbla. BITS OP WASHINGTON UM, Miner Scenes mm Incidents Sketch on the Snot. The Postofflce department la giving soma attention to fake concerns operating prin cipally In New York City, which Induce gullible people to part with their money, using the mails as a medium. The fakirs are known as "home work" companies, and the department proposes to Issue fraud orders against them. A typical case Is that of ths Majestlo Lace company, located In New York. Until a month ago It was run by Mrs. Ida Rus sell, who represented that it would furnish work for women to do at their homes, of fered to supply materials free and indicated that $15 a week could be made. Whoever responded to the company's alluring offers Immediately received an order for 150 worth of lace medallions. It being explained, how ever, that the work must be dpne on one of the company's machines, which would cost $2. The Inspectors say that the machines so sold did not cost more then X cents to manufacture. It was found that in the four months the Majestlo company wss In existence outfits amounting to $2,500 were sold and that less than $150 was paid out for lace made on them. The price paid for medallions was t cents each and the In spectors ascertained that, working ten hours a day, not more than thirty or forty could be made by one person In a day, and that out of 1,260 persons who were Induced to purchase outfits less than a dosen sent In enough work to reimburse them for ths cost of the machines. It was discovered that Mrs. Ida Russell sold the business to E. F. Woodbury, who was running it when It was Investigated by the department A general Investigation revealed a number of companies working along the same lines as the Majestlo and selling the same kind of lacs making out fits. It was determined to Issue fraud orders against them all. The Investigation of the effect of cold storage on the healthfulness of food, which is to be undertaken by the Agricultural department by direction of congress, will probably prove of great value. The cold storage men advocated the appropriation for this purpose to meet the growing crit icism of food preserved in that way. It has grown to be a business of large pro portions, and if there Is any danger con nected with It the public cannot have the information too Soon. On the other hand, It food preserved In this way for an In definite time is entirely safe that fact should also be known. ' Dr. Wiley, chief of the bureau of chem istry, who is to conduct the Inquiry, ex presses regret that canned goods were not included in the articles to be investigated, because they become unpalatable if kept a considerable length of time. There Is, he says, even a limit for preserved goods. The purpose will be to determine the length of time different food products can be kept in cold storage without deteriorating ma terially in quality or producing ptomaines. Many articles, such as green fruits and meats are said to Improve up to a certain time when placed In cold storage. In other products the foods remain unchnnged for a good while and then deteriorate. Captain James E. McCracken of Wash ington, more than 70 years old, has recov ered from a broken back, throe fractured ribs and other internal injuries without a surgical operation, and his case Is the talk of physicians. Captain McCracken simply relied upon nature to repair the damage. On account of his advanced age his recov ery has attracted more than local atten tion. Captain McCracken met with an accident on February 15 while endeavoring to board a street car. He was caught between two cars and received Injuries so serious that physicians who examined him believed they would prove ' fatal. For many days after his removal to the Emergency hospital Cap tain McCracken's physicians held out no hope for recovery. Ills Injuries were sufficiently serious to cause death In nine cases out of ten, and the doctors Relieved the patient's advanced age would count him with the majority. For weeks his life hung by a thread and the doctors were afraid to operate because of Ms enfeebled condition. Finally he gained in strength and then it was decided to put off the operation until such a time as he should grow worse. The patient Improved so rapidly that he was removed from the hospital to his home about ten days ago. Recently the doctors discovered that the three fractured ribs had knitted together and were as strong as ever. Further ex amination dlscloved the fact that the back had grown stronger where it was broken. The decision of Secretary Shaw to have the portrait of the late Senator Marcus A. Hanna printed . on the Panama bonds Is recognised as a fitting tribute to the memory of a man who did such great service in advocating the several meas ures and the ratification of the treaty which have made the canal possible. The secretary stated that the plates for print ing the bonds had been ordered, but It was not expected that they would be noeded soon, since additional legislation Is necessary. The bonds are authorised. but there are Important details yet to be arranged regarding their interest-bearing rate and their standing as securities in relation to the consols. Colonel Thomas W. Symons, superin tendent of public buildings and grounds In the IMstlct of Columbia, has adopted a liberal policy with regard to throwing open the publlo reservations of the city for use as playgrounds. Heretofore the numerous and beautiful parks have been kept strictly for observation purposes, Keep Off the Grass" signs being dis played everywhere and the warning rig Idly enforced. When Colonel Symons suc ceeded Colonel Bingham he set about over turning this custom. One of the first things he did was to establish a number of play grounds In publlo parks, whsre swings were put up, sand hills provided and other cheap and and Innocent forms of amuse ment furnished. The next step was to throw open part of the White lot directly in the rear ot the executive mansion. Two base ball diamonds were marked out there this spring, and are now used by clubs In the local Church' league. The crowds that at tend the games on the White lot exceed those that gather to watch the games of professional ball played here. Colonel Symons the other day approved a request for the use ot a portion of the Smithsonian grounds for purposes of archery, and this week he designated certain plots of ground as available for quoit pitching. A more pretentious publlo amusement feature Is the new speedway which has just been completed along the Fotomao river shore. Commissioner of Pensions Ware antici pates any possible exigencies of the com ing political campaign by Issuing the fol lowing circular, addressed to heads of divisions In his bureau! "The presidential campaign is pending and much political activity la being felt; Increasing demands are being made on the bureau, and In a short time the dan ger line will be reached. I wish each ot the co-workers in this bureau to feel that no concessions must be along the line of pressure. As much work and as good work should be done as possible so as to overtake the accumulated business of the office, but applications must be decided on oold law sad casA srldanse. The bars Fifty Yoorc mm r ii)nnvn (ciprovos tho flavor and adds to tho hoalthfulnoss of tho food. , PBIOK BAKINQ POWDIR CO- CHICAGO. must not In any way be let down, and cases are to be made special and given precedeice over others only when they come within the terms of the established law." DARK RECESSES OP NATIONS. . Diplomatic Mysteries Not as Mys terious as They Appear. Vance Thompson In Success. Every nation leads a double life. Even our own honest republic is honeycombed with dark recesses of policy and what is rightly called statecraft. Our frank presi dent Is supplemented by Mr. Hay, and, as well, by John E. Wilkle, our chief of secret service, who wears, quite properly, a dark air of mystery as he goes about the world. We have not Invented espionage, and I do not know that we have perfected It, but where other spies go our list-footed gen tlemen go also, and there Is In Washington a tolerably complete knowledge of the doings In the underworld of International politics. Brussels, however, is the capital of International espionage, whether it be political or diplomatic or military this by reason of Its central position and the neu trality of Belgium. The secret service of France has always been singularly good. as it has need to be. Of recent years, how ever, the service has been badly dislo cated. Both England and Germany have outmaneuvered it time and again. A few years ago a stranger in Paris might have seen a whole city boiling with patriotism and hissing an alien king In the. streets. What Interest had the 'Parisians In crying "A bas ie rol Uhlan!" as he of Spain passed? None In the world. The German embassy had, ' however, at that moment, an Interest In creating a "dlplomatlo in cident," and so it distributed money to the servile press of Paris, loosed Its - many agents In the streets, and the organised "manifestation." This Is a single, slight Illustration of the utility the morality Is another question of a secret service which has to do with more than smugglers and coiners and such simple folks. One can not live for many years in Europe and study what are Ironically called "publlo affairs" without cutting many of these dark trails. International espionage Is a huge and complicated system. That part which has to do with politics is by far the most Important. In France, at'all events, under the popular tumult of many a v.-tsy elec tion, ths wily work of England or Germany has been discovered. Three years ago I was told by one who was Informed that the French government knew and was watch ing the following foreign sgents 274 Ger mans, eighteen Austiiana, seventy-one Ital ians, eleven Spaniards, seventy Englishmen and thirty-three Russians and Poles, with a (air complement of Americano, "Dutch and Swedes. Through so finely a reticulated a network of observation hardly the smallest minnow of fact can escape. Nothing takes place in Europe, I believe, no statesman takes snuff, no: king sneezes, but It Is known within twenty-four hours to every state. MR. BRYAN ON IDEALS. "Pull Cargo of Excellent Sentiments for the Album. New York Sun. Colonel W. J. Bryan, the Nebraska farmer, Journalist and sociologist, was in Chicago last week. Aa an eminent visiting sociologist ho had to speak a few thoughts to tha Hull House Woman'i club. Ths subject of his discourse was "The ValuCf of Ideals." It contained some really touch ing expressions, such as must have sweet ened Its author's valedictory address at Illinois college In 18R1. There may be honest differences of opinion as to some of Mr. Bryan's financial and economic theories, but nobody can read his remarks about ii.iwinnssaaauassswn.nii.ni.iiii-' , i -tSMjtM "Italosgth-ws- ZV ... t 'M.Jnn w w WILDERNESS WAS KING ATU9ttrnimmiiComx1rj,Badrtlf'rrUk "The most powerful novel of ' PHUAtlfhtmlmm Tha love story of two high-spirited yoaoff people, worked oat against dramatic background of frontier courage aad savage cruelty, with the Fort Dearborn maasacra as a climax iirteiyf ' jSTSST. .Beautifully illustrated in full color lovs story is eoe of ths Snot ef its Orsllbookirllers.erssntaontpsiaenrscptefSi.gs klawebaverMa."-M'uiJ0fivarca ojr FOR SALE BY Grn orator ai the Standard IIS "Ideals" without being a gladder and a bettr man and laying In a full cargo of excellent rentlments for the album and ths commonplace book. For example: "An Ideal that can be overtaken Is a small Ideal." "An ideal measures the difference be tween success and failure, between a noble life and a wasted existence." "Everyone should have an ideal so high as to keep one constantly looking up." Political parties should cease to seek base, practical,' Immediate ends.,. They should strive for long distance success, "for the highest Ideals rather than for temporary victory at the polls;" and "It is better that we should raise our ideal than carry an election." How long ought a party, the democratio party, for Instance, wait for success? Hera Is Mr. Bryan's high souled answer; "Taking a period of twenty-five1 or fifty years, the party with the highest Ideal will dominate tho country." In fifty years -Mr.. Bryan may be neither tired out nor satiated by his manifold duties as lecturer, orator, author, politi cian and universal instructor, but his language seems to show that by that time he will be willing t resign the helm of things and let the democratio party win. A long time to wait, but how beautiful Is the ideal! BRIGHT AND BREEZY. "It Is snld that a western school teacher bpat a boy with a piece ot rubber hose be cause he could not sing." "And did he nlng?" "No, he yelled.'' Cleveland Plain Dealer. "This moist, muggy, sloppy weather," complained the sufferer, "Is awfully try ing." "But It's good for the corn," soothingly answered the chiropodist, proceeding to. re-' lleve the sufferer of an unusually large one. Chicago Tribune. "I have Just read your last book of poems," said the critical friend. "That Is ungrammatlcal." said the soul ful bard; "you should have said my latest book of poems." "I suppose It was wrong. But' I wss merely trying to take a hopeful view of the uliii.tlAn ' V.I CI ... ..ua..u... ,1 aBlllUHLUll Dl(U, "Parlor chairs? Yes, ma'am," said the salesman. "I suppose you want something stvllBh and yet comfortable " "Not too comfortable," replied Mrs. Schonpen. "My parlor chairs will be used ipostly by callers." Washington Post. MEMORIAL DAY. Elisabeth H. Fenn In the Independent "We nre coming, Father Abraham, ' three hundred thousand more!" A song that forty yeurs ago went up from shore to shore; And it would make n weak heart strong, or strong heart weak to see Tho hot that seemed to spring to life to follow Liberty. Husbands nnd fathers, brothers, sons rushed through the household door: "We are coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more." America's grand hills and vales re-echoed with the song; n "We are coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand strong!" The hlllR and vales today are free, the land and skies are fair, But when we hear that old-time song no echoes stir the air; The gray haired, halting, feeble band have lost that ringing tone. - Now they are miLrching, one by one, for ward to die rvlone. Sometimes, In heaven, W may believe, white tents of peace are spread, nd comrades gathering there repeat their old familiar trend; Rehearse the mysteries of the times, when, better than they knew, Freedom emerged from Bin and Death; and. In a grand review, As their old comrades come in sight, the old time ardor rings. Saluting waiting Lincoln, the army one more sings, In tones of triumph that their soul had never known before, nit "We are coming. Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more." n&d bs vDula a rwtur Amrm mt tha Cnnr navel." mtatapoilt Ttmm 4i a today concerning; the West" . t. Mctkuna a runuaaers. vaicage 1308 Farnatti St., Omaha. Neb.