HIE OMAHA ' DAILY ' BEE i FRIDAY, " SEPTEMBER 23, 1904. TIie Omaha Daily Bee, E. ROSE WATER,- EDITOR. PTB1JSHED EVERlT MORNINO. - TERMS OF BCB8CRIPTION'. PbIIt Hi (without Sunday). On TearHw J ily Tire and 6unday, One Tear t.M Illustrated IJoe. One Year Funds Be, one Tear m Saturday Itee. one ear 1 i0 Twentieth Crntury Farmer. One Tear.. 1.00 DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Dally Bee'rwlthout Funday). pfr ropy .... !e rallv He mithmit Sunday) per week lie Ill'y Bee (Including Sunday), per weck..l,c Sunday Bee, per enpv or Kvenlng He (without Sunday), per week. iC Jivenlnr Bee (including Sunday), per t'k B Complaint of Irregularities In delivery should he addressed City Circulation De partment. ' OFFICES. Omaha-The Bee Building. Bi uh Omaha-City Hall Building, Twen-tv-flfth nsdrM Streets C-iunrll Muffs 10 Benrl Street. f'hloairo-1;40 Cnlty Bulldlnf. New Vork-23 Pnrk Row rtulldlng. Washington n Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edl torlnl matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, puynble to The Bee Publishing Company Only li-ccnt stumps rerelved In payment of mall account Pergonal cheoss. except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not iicrepted. . THE BEE PI BI.I8HING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION State of Nebraska. Douglus County, s.; George H. Trachuck. scretnry of The Bee Publishing companv. brins duly swrrn, says trmt the nctiinl nurhber of full and complete roplen of The Pallv. Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of Auguat, 1904, waa aa follows. 1 ZtMUlO 17 20.3n t..,..., .sm.ttoo is a.4ao ZO.tlDO 1 2f,nNO ..., 2n,iKH so...... au.aon 6 21I.MVO . 21 2U.40O 82.TAO 22 2U.3O0 ? S.7. 23 2S.0RO t t.30 14 2H.OIO SU.31U - 28 , 21.2."H 10 20,020 10 2t,100 II 21I.HSO rr .HMMtO 12 ZO,4MO W 2T.I00 13 gf.140 8 20.2.VI 14....- 1CO.AOO SO 20,440 16 S0.S30 II 20,210 16 JUH Total OO4.0R0 Lest unaold and returned copies... T.239 Net total sales WT.Tll Dally average ses.020 GEORGE B. TZ8CHCCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this 31st day of August. U)t. iBeal.j , .N. B. HUNQATE, Notary Public. Part of the Connecticut tobacco crop has been 'caught, by frost. What luck for western cabbage raisers' Judge Parker lias gone to New York again. Strange that J. J. Hill and his friends cannot be Induced to visit Ropo mount Omaha Is to have a place on the wire less telegraph map so look out for vag rant electrical currents that may soon be roaming around the 'streets loose. It Is to be hoped, that the confusion In the standing of the clubs In the Vestern Base Ball ' league will be stiVilghtcned out by the opening of the next season! ' " WJ'cn Judge I'nrker sees how et.sy the cunipiilpn 1h made for his successor on the bench, who lias been nominated by both parties, he may be excused a few regrets. The district wnjrt has, decided that the resurrection of the defunct demd erotic city convention is -not necessarily" Illegal . : But that does not make It any less undemocratic. The democrats will avoid talking na tional Issues' . In Nebraska this year. Speeches nke that delivered by Secre tary 8haw to his Omaha audience sim ply cannot be answered. The desire, of . the water-marked Utesnian Is to connect wjth a pay roll. Be does not seem to care so much .whether It Is the pay roll of the city or the pay roll of the water company. New York democrats have named a man for governor who parts his name In the middle, v Walt till the "plain peepul" get a -chance' at him and he will hardly figjore as on "also ran." Ministers of the gospel are to be ad mitted free to the World's fair during the month tf November. It need not. be explained that this Is not Intended for the especlar benefit of the shows upon the Pike. It Is now said that the Russian Baltic fleet may not sal! to the east this year. This kny be bad news to California boarding house keepers, who thought they saw an opportunity for increased business. In the irrepressible aud protracted squabble over circus compllmentarles tjhe mayor and Council have the advan tage over the city clerk. They can re vise the circus ordinance and rub it in by making blni certify to It. . Nobody will be disappointed if Presi dent gtlckney does not build a pas senger depot on the Great Western res ervation, but everybody will be dlsnp- , pointed if the Great Western does not i erect one fr two grain elevators on its reservation. i-, - 1 There are a whole lot of things which Omaha would Itke to do If it bad the money at Jts command to do tbetu, the development of nearby water power be ing near the bend of the list. The thing Is to get the money first and then to spend It for what we need the most. V; In the flrnt trial of the year of a ' Mlsslsslpplan for taking part In the lynching of a negro the evidence Intro ; duced was such that the Judge In structed icqulttnl without permitting the case to go to the Jury. The prose : cuting attorney must be a candidate for re-election. . . . Adlnl Stevenson has the satisfaction of being the one man of national promi nence In the democratic party who stands in with ltoth factions. Having been a candidate on tickets with both Cleyelan.d and Bryan, he may be sold to represent the real spirit of present day democracy of all complexions a desire for office. LETTER OF BKXATOR FAIRBANKS. The republican party has In Its candl date for vice president a roan thoroughly experienced In public affairs and fully in sympathy with the progressive spirit of the American people. Trie letter of ae crptauce of Senator Fairbanks Is a most worthy supplement to the very nble and 'omprebenslve letter of tresldent Roose velt, presenting some points In the re publican argument which were not dwelt iion by the president and which will be of mnterlnl -assistnnce to republicans In the campaign. It Is a great merit of this letter that It presents the whole republican case con cisely and forcibly. Every question be fore the people Is considered and loglc nlly discussed, the reasons for the repub lican position lelng given with a clear ness and convincing directness which leaves nothing to be desired. The argu ment for the maintenance of the policy of protection, for example, is cTjgent and appeals to the common sense of the reader. "A revision of duties." says Mr. Fairbanks, "should be made only when conditions have so changed that the pub lic Interest domnnds their alteration, and they should be so revised as to preserve and not destroy the protective principle." That Is In accord with very general pop ular sentiment, as shown In the last two national campaigns. The letter of acceptance of Senator Fairbanks Is a campaign contribution of the highest merit and republicans es pecially should give It a careful reading. CAUPAIOX PERSOyALITIEH. The democrats are citing the letter of Judge Parker to the chief of the literary department of the democratic national committee as evidence of the desire of the candidate that there shall be no per sonalities in the campaign. It Is alleged that the republicans have already made a personal attack upon the democratic candidate In connection with the gold s ta mln nl message and the letter of Judge Parker Is referred to as showing the difference between the parties as to manners. Judge Parker did well In warning the editor of the democratic text book not to indulge In personalities. Nothing is to be gained by personal abuso of candi dates and the part7 which doe.i this makes a great mistake. The republican party has not done so. It has criticised the gold standard dispatch of Judge Parker as having been sent under con ditions that Justified a suspicion as to the sincerity of the sende:- and this was a legitimate criticism. It Is a matter of fact that Judge Parker voteJ twlca for the free and unlimited coinage of sil ver, as demandel by the platform! of 1890 and 1000. Was he outraged by the assumption that his declaration for the gold standard, after he hud been nomi nated at St. Louis and there was no pos sible chance of his being deprived of the nomination, was made for political effect? He did not say In his speech of acceptance that he regretted his vote In the last two national campaigns. The country does not know today whether or not Judge Parker believes that the declarations of the Chicago and the Kansas City platforms were sound He has said that he regards thi gold stand ard as irrevocably established, but If a democratic congress should legislate for the restoration of free sliver there Is no assurance that Judge Parker, If elected to the presidency, would veto such action. As to personalities In the campaign, who have been most guilty of them? Read the democratic speeches at St. Louis in denunciation of President Roosevelt. Read the utterances ' of David B. Hill and Senator Biilley of Texas criticising and abusing Theodore Roosevelt. Nearly every democratic spellbinder In the present campaign has employed to the fullest extent against the republican standard bearer the lan guage of vituperation. They have ap plied to him the coarsest epithets and sought to make him not only ridiculous and contemptible, but also to Impress upon the people the Idea thf t he is an unsafe and dangerous man, who cannot be trusted to administer the government wisely and securely. No one questions the high personal character of the dem ocratic candidate for the presidency. His political associates, however, the men upon whom he relies and to whom he Is under the greatest political obliga tions, are by no means above reproach. Hill and Sheehan and Belmont are not rneB In whom the country pan have con fidence and the intimate connection of Judge Parker with these democratic leaders justifies the criticism to which he Is subjected, nowever excellent the personal . character of the democratic candidate he cannot expect to escape the blame entailed by his association with corrupt and unscrupulous politicians. THB Cfrt'"f ("iDrviVCB. The taxpayers and business men of Omaha are not in the least concerned as to who issues the permits to circuses, meuat'erles .and other perambulating shows, but they do have an interest in maintaining the rates charged under the existing ordinance, A charge of $300 for a circus permit and from $10 to $r.rt more for side shows and other priv ileges is not excessive. A charge of $JHX) would not be too much for all the privileges of a circus of the first magni tude. Every circus that exhibits In Omaha carries away from $10,000 to $20,000 and the bulk of this money comes from the wae workers. Taking in $300 and paying out from $10,000 to $20,000 Is not an unmixed blessiug. The old style cir cus traveling on wagon wheels disbursed a' large proportion of Its gate receipts In the purchase of feed and other supplies for man and beast In the community where it exhibited; but the modern cir cus that, travels iu special railroad trains carries with it a full commissary and pays out little for anything except ad vertising and license fees. While the newspapers get their full share of patronage from the circus, the retail merchant, the grocer, the butcher, the baker, the tailor, the shoemaker and the local amusement places are all more or less Injuriously affected by the withdrawal of from flO.OoO to $20,0(10 of the circulating medium. If there Is to be any change in the circus license fees, we feel sure the business men of Omaha would favor an Increase instead of a decrease in the rate. . THB SEW TORK DEMOCRATS David B. Hill Is still the leader of the democracy of the Empire state. Al though be has announced his Intention to retire from politics at the close of the present year, he continues to be the guid ing hand of the party in his state and unquestionably this fact Is well under stood by the national standard bearer, who owes his political prominence en tirely to Hill. He Is distinctly the War wick of Judge Tarker and In the event of the letter's election It is not to be doubted that Hill could have any posi tion In the administration which he might desire. Hill dominated the state convention and the man he named for governor was nominated unanimously. So were all the others whose nomination he desired. It Is reasonable to assume that the ticket was submitted In advance of the con ventlon to Judge Parker and had his ap proval. The candidate for governor. Judge Herrlck. Is not much known to the people. He does not possess the popu larity of Edward M. Shepard and several other democratic leaders. He stands well as a Jurist, but the Judicial standard is being somewhat overworked in the Empire state this year. As between Herrick, the Jurist, and lllgglns, the business man, we are Inclined to think that a majority of voters will prefer the hitter. The republican candidate has been for some time In politics. He Is known to the people and everything that is known of him Is creditable. The Hill candidates. It seems safe to predict, will be defeated. The state of New York will elect a republican governor and re publican presidential electors. For years the brand of David B. Hill has proved fatal to the New York democracy. THE PROBLEM OF FTRE PROTECTION. At the annual convention of the Inter national Association of Fire Engineers, held last week In Chattanooga, Tenn., the problems of fire protection were thoroughly discussed and recommenda tions based upon recent experiences were formulated. The consensus of opinion among Are engineer experts was that tin standard of workmanship In twentieth century buildings Is very low, often crim inally so. In the craze for llgbtnes and cheapness the modern Are resisting buildings have been reduced to a degree of fllmslness that makes them if any thing less safe than the ordinary struc tures with pine Joists and wooden par titions. Attention was called to the building code of the city of New York, which re quires every building more than two stories In heightabove the ground level, except dwelling houses, to have doors, blltlds or shutters made 'of Iron, or of wood covered with tin. at every exterior window opening above the first story, except on the front of buildings fronting on streets which are more than thirty feet in width. The following summary of the modern method of fire protection commend themselves for serloiiB consid eration to owners of buildings and archi tects in every American city: 1. Stone of all kinds, wherever exposed to heat, either on the Inside or outside of buildings, fails at comparatively low tem peratures. Baked clay and Portland cement concrete, on the contrary, are proof against almost any fire besides withstanding ex cellently the application of water on their heated surfaces. 2. Iron and steel structural building mem bers lose their strength rapidly under the Influence of even moderate heat, therefore should be thoroughly Insulated. Portland cement concrete and hollow tile, not less than two Inches in thickness at any point, are moat efficient against the attack of both fire and water. 3. targe unbroken floor areas assist the spread of fire and serve to augment Its severity. Buildings of considerable area and having large quantities of combustible contents should be subdivided by substan tial brick fire walls sufficient to form a positive barrier to the spread of fire. 4. A large portion of fuel for combustion In buildings having brick walls Is supplied by the trim, floors, etc., as well as by such furnishings as are necessary for occupancy. Much of this can be avoided by the use of substitutes for wood or of metal-clad cov ered wood and metal furniture. 6. Vertical openings throughout buildings, as for stairs and elevators, rapidly com municate fire between stories. With build ings of considerable height or combustible contents this Is likely to result In fire con ditions beyond flre'department control. All such floor openings should be enclosed In brick walled shafts crowned by a thin glass skylight and extending through roof and with fire doors at openings to stories. All vertical light openings In such shafts should be glased with wire glass. . Nearly one-third of the total fire loss Is caused by the contribution of flame from one building to nnother through window openings. All windows subject to exposure should be thoroughly protected against the attack of heat. Wire glass In noncombust lble frames has proven most efficient for the purpose, as It is always In position and la not subject to deterioration. 7. Every aid1 to the fireman In the shape of fixed equipment to the building adds so much to his capacity. Fire alarms and thermostats, standplpes. stationary nozila and sprinklers all mean more prompt and efficient application of water and should be most generously and generally encouraged. "55! China is said to desire the restoration of Manchuria free from conditions. The ruler of that unwieldy realm apparently does not realize that he is holding all of his provinces only on the condition that he submits to the combined de mands of all foreign countries and to the separate demands of none. The spokesman at Washington for the democratic national congressional committee professes to hnve hopes of carrying two or three Nebraska districts at the coming election. It Is to be noted, however, from a careful perusal of his figures that he has given the Second district up. Responsible business men are said to b reluctant to taul for places on the school . board, although they are the first to complain of extravagance In the management of the public schools. If no responsible people csn b persuaded to take control there will be small ex euse for them to complain in the future, no matter how heavy the load may be piled up. Minister Lesssr Is again getting Into the game at Peking with a protest against the treaty betwean Thibet and Great Britain. The Russian mlulster Is credited with having more influence than nny other foreign representative a the Chinese capita), but It may be found that that Influence has waned since the events at the Yalu river and Llao Yag. Perhap? Colonel Tibbies would, after all, Just as soon occupy a seat on the floor of fhe senate as to guide Its dellb eratlons from the presiding officer's chair. That may explain why he Insists that populists shall send no one to the legislature who will vote for a Tarker supporter for senator. The new democratic campaign book proves that, In spite of Candidate Davis, the New York Times and the southern delegation In congress, the tariff Is the real Issue In the present campaign. No wonder democrats fall to create enthu siasm. New Implement of War. New York Tribune. Japanese soldiers are equipped with fans This probably accounts for the fact that there are no files on them. Great Opening; for a Plonste. Chicago Post Geographers say there Is a hole In the Pacific ocean 28,000 feet deep. What a fine dive that will make for Judge Parker No. vember nex. Forget Itf "Washington Post. The Parke.- Constitution club hss re solved that the president's pension . order was unlawful. It la none of our business If the club wants to thus Invite one of Commissioner Ware's explanatory poems. Delicate Matter Well Handled. New York Tribune. The Washington government has acted so discreetly In the delicate matter of the Russian cruiser Lena as to preserve the friendship and confidence of both belliger ents. The situation was one that might easily have provoked bad feelings or worse, and the settlement of the case Is anothe.' proof that the present administration makes for peace and international good wIlL Is It a Gumshoe ConvasjT Baltimore American. There is a lesson for the republicans In the old story of ths mother who became uneasy becauss her youthful son was so quiet, and went and found him engaged In the rankest sort of mischief. The derro cratle party is keeping suspiciously still just now, and a search Into the secret of its quietness will probably discloss the naughty urchin with both hands In the jam Jar. List to the Ban! of Antnn-. Albany Argus. "Autumn 19 a gracious presence whose gorgeous "beauty no touch of frost has marred. It wears1 raiment fit for thrones and palaces.1 'arid though It bears no gar lands It comes bringing rrult for the sym bol of Its harvest time. Its hills and woods and fields wear cloth of gold, woven scarlet, russett and purple; Its skies are gorgeous with' the panoplied banners of su rises and sunsets like the dyes of the Orient. Its fleeting days that go to dusk so soon have a subtler beauty than the careless summer days that lingered long into the hours of evening with Its surfeit of sunlight and fragrant warmth. The autumn 'air braces and thrills like wine from Its purple vine yards; the autumn sunshine has the rap ture of the blessing that brighten as they wing their flight." TSKS or CORSMEAL. Abundance of Corn to Counterbalance the Wheat Shortage. ! Baltimore American. W. D. Wachburn, formerly a senator of the United States from Minnesota, and one of the great flour millers of the world, esti mates the shortage of the universal wheat crop at 300,000.000 bushels, of which shortage America's shore will be one-half. Ex-Sen-wfor Washburn has Just returned from Europe, and while abroad he not only kept himself well Informed of American condi tions, but aleo made a thorough inquiry into those of the transatlantic continent, and the vast shortage referred to Is his final Judgment. Ho says that the prolonged drouth In Europe has duplicated the injury to the wheat crop produced by rains and black rust In the American northwest. This Is an Immense shortage, but it need cause no alarm, as the American corn crop promises to be unprecedented, and corn meal In the hands of the housewife and cook can be made to take the place of flour to a great extent. No edible made from grain Is more toothsome than the corn mush, corn bread, corn pone, corn griddle cakes and corn In many other forms that "our mothers baked." Corn bread many not be susceptible of manipulation like wheat bread by the baker who has made the baking of home bread so nearly a lost art, but wherever there la a stove with an oven and a griddle and a pot, at home or hotel or restaurant, the least Ingenious may soon learn to produce a variety of bread, puddings and cakes which are now esteemed a luxury when they are set forth at hotel or boarding house. In the pleni tude of cheap flour throughout many years the utility and high nutritious qualities of cornmeal have been Thrust Into the back ground. Its delicate and epicurean possi bilities have passed almost out of the knowledge of the masa. If flour should reach an unusual price, and the dally loaf rise above the customary nickel, while at the same time decreasing In weight, corn may again come Into its own and the yel low ears resume an Importance and dignity at the private hearthstone and public table which had become largely historic. A few yfars ago this government sent agents abroad' to teach Europeans the de lights embodied In cornmeal. That people looked upon "malse" ss only fit for horses and cattle. Elaborate efforts were made to teach the cookery of cornmeal. The European ate and praised the com bread and cakes of expert American cooks, but the foreign housewife and baker seemed unable themselves to acquire the gentle art. Besides, wheat bread was cheap at that period, and the experiment was aban doned, although a considerable demand for cornmeal was created which still continues. If the shortage In Europe Is so great, with an American shortage which will lead to a large reduction of eiportatton, the leaven of that experiment may lead to an exten sive use abroad of American cornmeal, and also to a restoration of Its old reputation at tho American table. Cook and house wife may at least amuse themselves by conning all recipes for transforming corn meal Into food fit for the noil epicurean palate. i words ro Yorito mm. Thoughts mm Tratka tow the CoaeH- eratloa ( first Voters. In a speech delivered In Clevelsnd. O., October 11, 187?, Hon. James A. Garfield spoke these memorable words to first voters, and the lapse of time has not dimmed their force and eloquence: "I see In this great audience tonight a great many young men. young men who sre about to cast their first vote. I want to give you a word of suggestion and ad vice. I heard s very brilliant thing said by a boy the other day up In one of our northwestern counties. He said to me, General, 1 have a great mind to vote the democratic ticket.' That was not the bril liant thing. (Laughter.) I said to him, 'Why?' 'Why,' he said, 'my father wss a republican and my brothers are republicans and I am a republican all over, but I want to be an Independent man, and I don't want anybody to say, 'That fellow votes the republican ticket Just because his dad does, and I have half a mind to vote the democratic ticket Just to prove my Inde pendence.' I did not like the thing the boy suggested, but I did admire the spirit of the boy that wanted to have some Independence of his own. "Now I tell you young man, don't vote the republican ticket Just because your father votes it. Don't vote the democratic ticket even If he does vote It. (Laughter.) But let me give you this one word of advice as you are about to pitch your tent in one of the great political camps. Your life Is full and buoyant with hope now, and I beg you, when you pitch your tent, pitch It among the living and not among the dead. (Applause.) If you are at all inclined to pitch It among the democratic people and with that party, let me go with you for a moment while we survey the ground where I hope you will not shortly He. (Laughter.) It Is a sad place, young man, for you to put your young life Into. It Is to me far more like a graveyard than like a camp for the living. Look at It! It Is billowed all over with the graves of dead Issues, of burled opinions, of exploded theories, of disgraced doctrines. You cannot live In comfort In such a place. (Laughter.) Why look here! Here la a little double mound. I look dowtT on it and I read. 'Sacred to the memory of squatter sovereignty and the Dred Scott decision." A million and a half of democrats voted for that, but It has been dead fifteen years died by the hand of Abraham Lincoln, and here It lies. (Applause.) Young man, that Is not the place for you. But look a little further. Here Is an other monument, a black tomb, and beside It, as our distinguished friend said, there towers to the sky a monument of 4,C0i)i00 pairs of human fetters taken from the armj of slaves, and I read on Its little headstont this: 'Sacred to the memory of human slavery.' For forty years of Its In famous life the democratic party taught that It waa divine God's institution. They defended It, they stood around It, they fol lowed It to Its grave a mourner. But here It lies, dead by the hand of Abraham Lincoln. (Applause.) Dead by the power of the republican party. (Applause.) Dead by the Justice of Almighty God. (Great applause and cheers.) Don't camp there, young man. "But here Is another. A little brimstone tomb (laughter), and I read across Its yel low facs In lurid, bloody lines these words: 'Sacred to the memory of state sovereignty and secession.' Twelve million democrats mustered around it In arms to keep it alive; but here It lies, shot to death by the million guns of the republic. (Applause.) Here it lies. Its shrine burnel to ashes under the blazing rafters of the burning Confederacy. (Applause.) It is dead. I would not have you stay there a minute, even in thU balmy night air. to look at such a place. (Laughter.) "But Juse before I leave It I discover a new made grave a little mound, short The grass has hardly sprouted over It, and all around I see torn pieces of paper with the word 'flat' on them (laughter), and I look down In curlosty, wondering what the little grave Is, and I read on it. "Sacred to the memory of the Rag Baby (laughter). nursed In the brain of all the fanaticism of the world (laughter), rocked by Thomas Ewlng, George H. Pendleton. Samuel Cary and a few others throughout the land.' But It died on January 1, 1878, aad the $140,000,000 of gold that God made, and not flat power. Ho upon Its little carcass to keep it down forever. (Prolonged applaute.) Oh, young man, come out of that! (Laughter.) That Is no place In which tu put your young life. Come out, and come over Into the camp of liberty, of law, of order, of JuBtlce, of freedom (Amen!), of all that Is glorious under these night stars. Is there any death here In our camp? Yes! Yes! Three hundred and fifty thou sand soldiers, the noblest band that ever trod the earth, died to make this camp of glory and of liberty forever. (Tremendous applause.) "But there are no dead Issues h ere. There are no dead ideas here. Hang out our banner from under the blue sky this night until it shall sweep the green turf from under younr feet! It hangs over our camp. Read away under the stars the in scription we havs written on It. lo! theue twenty-five years. "TwentyeXve years aao the renuhllean party was married to liberty, and thin la our silver wedding, fellow cltlsens. (Great tpplause.) A worthily married nalr inva each other better on the day of their silver wedding than on the day of 'heir first espousals, and we are truer to liberty today and dearer to God than we were when we Bpoke our first word of liberty. Read away up under the skv a or asm mir starry banner that first word we uttered tweniy-nve years ago. What was ItT 'Slavery shall never extend over another foot of the territories of the great west.' (Applauee.) Is that dead or alive? Alive, thank God, forever more. (Applause.) And truer tonight than It waa the hour It was written. (Applause.) Then It was a hope, a promise, a purpose. Tonlarht It la equal with the stars Immortal history and Immortal truth. (Applause.) "Come down the glorious atrot of our banner. Every great record we have made we have vindicated with our blood and with our truth. It sweeps the ground and It touches the stars. Come there, young man, and put In your young life where all Is living and where nothing Is dead but the heroes that defended It. (Applause.) I think these young men will do that, for course they will.'.') Maeh Room for Improrement. New York Tribune. Health officials In various nlaees mak ing e (Torts to bring about more thorough methods of nleanlna and disinfecting n. senger ears on railroad lines. No doubt, as a rule, the most celebrated and most popu lar of the great companies take consider able pains to lessen the chance that their patrons may become Infected by disease while traveling In tnelr care, but sanita rians are Inclined to believe that there Is a great deal of room for improvement in such matters on many railways. Where the Difference Comes In. Brooklyn Engle. Mr. Marden of Suocess says that "many journalists give only per cent of thnlr energy to their work and N per cent to dissipation and Idleness." Journalists may glv energy to Idleness, but newspaper men realise that they cannot hold their jobs oa those terms. l5 Imparts that peculiar lightness sweetness and flavor noticed in the finest cake, biscuit, rolls, crusts, etc., which expert pastry cooks declare is unobtainable by the use of any other leavening agent Made from Pore, Grape Cream of Tartar. ROVAI. BAKINO POWDER CO, 100 WILLIAM 8T NEW YORK. lit- APHORISMS OF ROOSEVTLT. A good navy Is not a provocative of war. It is the surest guaranty of peace. A man to be a good American must be straight, and he must also be strong. We can as little afford to tolerate a dis honest man in the public service as a coward In the army. If we fall to do all that In us lies to stamp out corruption we cannot escape our share of responsibility for the guilt. It should be the policy of the United States to leave no ploce on earth where a corrupt man fleeing from this country can rest in peace. Every man who has made wealth or used It In developing great legitimate business enterprises, has been of benefit, and not harm, to the country at large. Fifty years of Europe are very much longer than a cycle of Cathay; and the period grows longer still when you take It across Into the western hemisphere. Each man must work for himself and unless he so works no outpide help ran avail him: but each man muat remember also that he Is, indeed, his brother's keeper. The line of demarcation we draw must always be on conduct, not upon wealth; our objection to any given corporation must be, not that It Is big, but that It behaves badly. The wageworker Is well off only when the rest of the country is well off; and he can best contribute to this general well being by showing sanity and a firm pur pose to do justice to others. The captains of Industry who have driven the railway systems across the continent, who have built up our commerce, who have developed our manufactures, have on the whole done great good to our people. The consistent policy of the national gov ernment, so far as It has the power, is to hold in check the unscrupulous man, whether employer or employe; but to refuse to weaken individual Initiative or to ham per the Industrial development of the country. PER SOX A I, XOTKS. A former Pullman car conductor has been made a pres'dentlal usher. He IS the third of his occupation to reach that posi tion. 'The fortune of the house of Bismarck. Sch6enhausen passes to a 7-year-old boy. He bears the Iron chancellor's name of Otto. John T. Trowbridge, author and poet, celebrated the seventy-seventh anniversary of his birth on Bunday at his home In Ar lington, Mass. The Bankers' association drew no color line on the successful colored banker. All money looks alike In financial circles, no matter who baa it. "Financial guerilla." "votary of rotten finance" and "wholesale debaucher," are some of the pet names bestowed on Ad dicks of Delaware by Thomas W. Lawson. It Is so cold in L'hassa that the British expedition Is glad to move on before It gets frosen to the ground. There can he no complaint, however, that the natives didn't do their best to make it warm for their visitors when they arrived. A committee has been formed In Paris to erect a monument to Miguel Cervantes, author of "Don Quixote." The monument will be on the Champs Elysees. and Its cost will be defrayed by the Spanish people residing In the French capital. Free passes to the Boston theaters hav ing been withheld from the members of the board of aldermen, the theaters are asked to show cause why their licenses should not be raised. The managers hold tho pass and the pans Is the key to the situation. Some Chicago people are getting mighty particular. One of them exposss his ruffled pride by suing a tailor for $2,000 damages because his pants did not fit. Paragraphers are requested to refrain from suggesting in this connection that Chicago pants for fame. AWAKBX1NG OF VEIXOW RACES. Terming Millions of Asia Influenced by the Japanese I'pllft. Chicago News. The most momentous of the developments of the prerrnt war is that for the first time a white nation finds Itself not on!y checked In Its onward march by a nation of yellow men, but beaten by that nation on land and sea. It Is too early to say that this situa tion may not be reversed before the war Is ended, but there are not lacking signs that the races of which the Japanese are the foremost exemplars have been wakened already; to a sense of their latent power. China anil. India have been stirred by the deeds of Jhe Japanese. Not only the peo ples' of these great countries but many others of mixed Mongol, Hindoo and Malay descent are wondering why they, too, may not adopt the arms and implements of occidental civilisation and deal with the white races on an equal footing. Some of the ultimate possibilities of this vast stirring of the yellow rsces may be gathered from the fact that of the l.f.00,000, 000 or 1,000,000,000 people In the world Asia alone has 862,884,000, of whom more than 420,000.000 are In the Chinese empire, 56,000, 000 are Japanese and Koreans, 204.860.OiiO are Hindoos, 80,000,000 Malaysians and 18,000,000 Indo-Chinese. To group an the Aslatlo people by religions, there are about 775,000. 000 Buddhists, Confucians, Shlntolsts and Mohammedans, as against about 12,500,040 Christiana. That these people aroused to s sense of their racial and religious solidarity and ! equipped with the tools of western clvlll ation, may bring new probleme Into exist ence In the world's economy Is clear. Will the -two races live side by side, vlelng with each.- other in advancement toward higher civilisation and benefiting by the mutual rivalry or wW one strive to exploit the other? A eentury or more may elapse be fore the result Is known, so farreachlng may be the consequences Of the present great struggl Tk. .1 1 1 J I . . , . V. . vsh r 10 tne creau oi me nine cisrevncn delphla Ledger. "What's the good of all this?" groHnrd the tired, sleepy militiaman, at the clo-e of the third day's mimic battle. "To show eyou what durned fools men are that enlist in real war," grunted the other exhausted militiaman. Chicago Tri bune. "Dangsey just got his life Insured. I wonder wnat he's worrying about." "About bow he's going to ralwe the price of his premium. He tiled to borrow It from me." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Stranger And did the old farmer over there really starve his summer board ers? Postmaster Did he? Why, by the end of the season they were no tliln the mosqui toes broke their bills trying to bite them. Chicago News. "Isn't it ridiculous to say half the world doesn't know what the othc-r half's doing? "Why so?" "Because half , the world must live next door to the other half." Atlanta Herald Mrs. Goodart (slumming) -See here, little boy, if I give you a dime will you promise me not to buy clgaretets with It? Little Itoy Sure, ma'am. Yer don't t'lnk I'd waste de price of a kittle o' beer on cigurettea, do yer? Philadelphia Ledger. "My score began well," said the dis gusted golfer, "but Jt turned out very badly." "Well," replied the spectator, "If It heaid the language you've been using I don't wonder It turned out badly." Philadelphia Prert. "These typesetting machines." srtld the great Englishman, sadly, "are doing a great Injury to modern humor." w-v "In what way?" "They don't provide Italics to show pre cisely where the joke cornea in." Washing ton Star. "What Is your occupation, may I ask?" Inquired the passenger with the skull cap. "Mapmaker," said the passenger in UiS long linen ulster. "Publisher, eh?" "No. Soldier." Chicago Tribune. SONNETS OP AN IMI'IBE. W. F. Kirk In Milwaukee Sentinel. Oh, yes, I know I called him out at third. And I was right the runner told me so. His team mutes didn't die so tamely, though; Thoy called me almost every doubtful word That any hardened rounder ever heard And made my eyes as bluck as Old Black Joe. ' What else could I decide? A perfect throw That nailed him by six feet; It was a bird. I told them I was strictly on the square, But Rowdy Robert slapped me on the cheek And Hasty Harry pulled my wavy hair And Grouchy Gustave flattened out my beak Oh, that I were a flower or a cow Or anything except what l,&m now! Today I nearly died of heart disease: Two men were out, the game stood five to four, The bases full, s pass would tis tBS) score. The batter took three balls, cool as you please, And thtri threo strikes, the last across his knees. I shouted, "Batter out!" and not a roar Came from that gentleman; If he was sore He didn't show It didn't even wheese! He simply walked away without a kick I was so startled I could only gasp! If, In the world to come. I meet thai MIcK, I mean to give his hand a friendly clasp And tell him. "Partner, shake! You're out of sight- m The only man that ever used me right! HUTESON'S'S,! EYEGLASSES They nang on with bull log tenacity, but their rip is velvet, and their ppearance particularly jlegtvnt. The f as te st alling eyeglasses in the vorld. See them. Iluteson Optical Co. 1 213 S. irtth Bt. B PAXTON BIX1CK. H Factory on Premises. Esta Dllshed 1894 k GLASS All kinds unnd sizes. I.-.WE DO GLAZING.'- Telephone us If you hnve any broken windows to lie rejislretl iinrt vour order will receive D windows to he repaired your order will receive 2 it anil raw-fill attention. nd Glass and Paint Co., 1 Phones TBI ! T.H. 1 IWtH-Vi Ilaraey St. 4 SJ prompt ! Midland IMINHIMNtHN Y. M. C. A. Night School Twcntv-s.x SubjttcU Tauirht. Matt to l.utHiintnsa T .Aur T? a t if Titltldf . Full Particular Upon Application-