O'NEILL FRONTIER ‘ p. H. CRONIN_ yNEILL. NEBRA8KA Prophesying a war between this coun try and Japan in ths no distant future, the will of Charles O. Frltzsche, of Pat erson, sets aside 6,000 mo'rks as a prize |or the first American crew to capture a Japanese ship. Mr. Frltzsche, who was an engineer and Inventor of the loco motive turntable, died in Germany a year ago. The will is dated April 19, 1910. Frltzsche and his daughter went to Dresden. Germany, In 1916, to visit relatives. He found it impossible to return to this country. With the defeat of the kaiser’s armies and the end of the war he is reported to have died from excess Joy. An assistant director of the United States public health service complains that, according to figures gathered over a number of years, the progeny of 1,000 graduates from such institutions as Har vard, Yale, Princeton, Vassar and Smith will not exceed 60 in 100 years from now.” A similar investigation conducted among illiterate foreigners showed that in a like period the original thousand will be multiplied at least lot times. What Is described as one of the most elaborate and complete consolidated ■chool plants In America has Just been dedicated at Holcomb on the western Kansas prairies. Tho plant cost 6225,OOOt Seven schol districts Joined to con struct the single plant where the pupils may have the advantages of a city ■chool, including manual training, do mestic science, and scientific training of several varieties. People wno rn.ro bum living in mo manner of the stone age are found on Rennell Island In the Solomon group. Melanesia, according to a missionary, who says there are only about 600 In habitants, and because of their Isola tion, through lack of ship's anchorage, even their dialect has never been studied. Fifty architects and engineering stu dents of American universities have of fered their services to the French min ister of the liberated regions expressing their willingness to work from July to October for the restoration of the de vastated regions. M. Loucheur has gratefully accepted the offer. A new outbreak of pellagra, particu larly In the south Is alarming the pub llo health service. Officials say that the depression In the cotton market Is one of the leading causes as poorer classes of planters have been forced back to living principally on salt pork and corn bread. D’Annunzio’s private secretary gave out an fliiervlew recently, In which he said the post has now lost all Interest In Flume. As a proof, he related that d’Annunzfo has sent back the votive dagger which ^as presented to him by the citizens of the city last year. American pajamas, from Red Cross supplies, decorated with shoulder straps and braid and worn with a belt, Is the latest summer uniform for Russian of ficers, says a correspondent writing from Constantinople. Civilians also are adopting them as fast as they are dis tributed. The ravages of war, revolution, star vation and diseases have depleted the population of Russia by 12,000,000, ac cording to figures of thf central statis tical office at Moscow. The number of officials, that Is government employes, In Moscow Is now 220,000 or one-fourth of the population. Since Mr. Townley has failed to ap pear on three different consecutive oc casions when he was scheduled to de bate with William Langer, former at torney general of North Dakota, Mr. I-angrr calls the non-partisan league a "Quitter," and has cancelled all fur ther debate dates with him Governor Neff, of Texas charges that "graft and fraud exist In many depart ments of the state government, In which there are too many useless em ployes, and entirely too much bad management; and that the state lias too much machinery and too many boards, bureaus and departments. The head of the Ohio Rotarlans wires from Berlin that food 1s cheap and plentiful In Germany; that the nation appears normal and he believes the country Is far better off from an In dustrial point of view than Is generally thought. The Philadelphia Public Ledger hears that George Creel, former chief of war time publicity, 1b now serving In the capacity of closest friend and advisor to the president of Mexico. It Is said that Mr. Creel wrote the recent elo quent messages of President Obregen. An expedition Is being organised In Alberta to search for the lost gold mine of Lost river, which has long been one of the romantlo traditions of that country. But two men have ever found It; one a trapper, who la dead; and the other an Indian who has disappeared. A Pittsburgh teacher Is reported to have lost his mind as a result of nervous excitement over the Dempscy Carpcntler fight. "I lent Dempsey »3. and he never repaid It," he shouts ex citedly. During the nrst three months or last year, influenza caused the deaths ot 6,297 persons. Only 476 died from It dur ing the corresponding period of 1921. The pneumonia death late declined 60 per pent, during the same period. The price ot marriage licenses has Jumped from 51-00 to 61.60 In Philadelphia. One hundred descendants of "John and Prteo!”a," members of the Midwest chapter* of the Alden Kindred of Amer ica spent the Fourth of July together In Evanston, 111. Wage reductions effective August 1 or Belleau. the little French village on the edge of the foothills of Belleau Wood, Is to be rebuilt by Americans as a memorial to the American dead In that historic battle. A Melbourne dispatch to the London Times reports a growing sentiment of friendliness in Australia toward tha United States, "owing to our common Interests In the Pacific." The New York Times hears that Hugo Stlnness, who possesses a for tune of eight billion marks, Is exciting the Ire of socialists, who accuse him of systematic tax evasions. An airplane capable of landing without the need of a large aviation field, able to rise without a long run beforehand, able to travel more than 300 miles an hour and. If necessary, to meander along at but a few miles an hour. Is announced as the Invention ot an Italian engineer. A slump In the membership In In diana miners organizations Is shown In the report of ona district which now has but 17,732 members. In contrast to 29,763 a year ago. Washington la said to be putzllng over the delicate little question of who should l»ay the expenses of the 'lilting delega tions Invited to this couxtry by us to eonfer on the disarmament question. According to statistics gathered bff tha Institute of PubUo Service, one W. •very 16 students In 13 American col leges Is studying with a view to (bter* IV* '-aching profession. CRUSHED TO DEATH UNDER COAL SLIDE Foreman of Power Company At Omaha Is Almost In stantly Killed. Omaha, Neb., Aug. 8.—Roy Hewitt, Omaha, foreman of coal heavers at the Nebraska Power Company’s plant was killed by an avalanche of coal under which he was burled at the plant late Saturday. WAR RISK INSURANCE CLEANUP BEING MADE Grand Island, Neb., Aug. 8.—Grand Island will be a headquarters for the war risk Insurance bureau, begin ning August 15. A “clean up” squad will consist of an examining physician of the bur eau of the United States public health service and representatives from the federal board of vocational education, the American Legion and Red Cross. It will be headquarters for Thomas, Blaine, Custer, Loup, Garfield, Val ley, Greeley, Merrick, Sherman, Hall, Buffalo, Dawson and Wheeler coun ties. SOUTH DAKOTA CONCERN DON’T WANT RECEIVER Omaha, Neb., Aug. 8.—Attorneys representing the Brlcston Manufact uring Company, a South Dakota cor poratlon with headquarters here, have filed a motion In federal court asking that a petition by stockhold ers requesting a receiver and injunc tion against the concern, be set aside oharglng there Is no Jurisdiction here on the ground that the company was Incorporated In another state. Hearing on the motion was set for next Friday. In the 10 Years Law Has Op. erated Depositors Have Been Paid $2, 306,175. Lincoln, Neb., A9ug 8 (Special).— There Is now $2,299,650 In the depo sitors’ guarantee fund contributed by more than 1,000 banks. During the 10 years In which It has been In force $2,306,175 has been paid out of the funds for the payment of deposits In banks closed by the state banking board. For some years there were no bank failures. BIO GRAIN CONCERN IS TO BE REORGANIZED Omaha, Neb., Aug. 7.—The Nye Schneldcr-Fowler Company, grain dealers, with branch elevators and office* In more than 100 American cities »ttd towns, which has been In financial difficulties, will be reorgan ized at the annual meeting of stock holders being held today in Fremont, the company’s headquarters. Eastern as well as Omaha bankers are there for the meeting. Final ar rangements for reorganization were reached at a* meeting held in Fremont Saturday. E. N. Mitchell, a grain dealer, of Lincoln, will become presi dent, succeeding Frank Fowler, ad vices stated. Creditors of the company, it is re ported, refused the company furthet credit unless Fowler should retire aj directing head of the corporation. Paul Colson, Fremont, Is slated for vice president; Emil M. Hahn, sec retary, and D. B. Davies, treasurer! Harry S. Byrne, Omaha, and J. E PITelin and L. N. Perrin, will be elect ed additional directors. Agreement to this effect was signed by Ralph Van Vechten, vice president of the Con tinental and Commercial National Bank, of Chicago, heading the com pany’s directors' committee and Frank Fowler, retiring president of the com pany, Fremont advices asserted. "This arrangement contemplates active efforts on the part of the bank creditors for the early refinancing of the business,” said Van Vechten, ac cording to a Fremont dispatch. Stockholders stated that Mr. Fowl I er was offered enough proxies to In Isure his re-election, but stepped aside In order to meet the wishes of the I creditors. GOVERNOR AND REGENTS CLASH OVER EXPENSES Lincoln. Neb., Aug. 8 (Special).— The regents of the state university and Governor McKelvie are dead locked over the inslstance of the gov ernor that there shall be a reserve surplus of 10 per cent. The board and the heud of the state govern ment has so far failed to reach an agreement. The governor wants the 10 per cent reserve to guard against possible deficiencies. The regents insist that the state constitution does not authoriie the chief executive to dictate. The regents have informed the governor that they are eager to co operate ih saving the taxpayers as much as possible out of all of the appropriations, but they do not see how they can pay salaries promised instructors if the 10 per cent. Is de ducted. Governor McKelvie has declined to Approve of the quarterly estimate filed by the regents and he has no tified the state auditor of his posi tion. A further conference between the governor and the regents has been arranged for August 15. BLOOMFIELD HER IS GIVEN FINAL HONORS Bloomfield, Neb., Aug. 8 (Special). —The body of William Crost ar rived here Friaday night from over seas and Ray Lamb post of the American Legion conducted a full military funeral Sunday forenoon. He was killed October 12. 1918, in the Argonne offensive. He was a son of William P. Groat, now living near Verdel. COUNTY ASSESSOR TAKES OWN LIFE Horatio Pope, Hangs Self to Bed After Trying Gun First Body Is Found In Home Two Days Later. Tecumseh, Neb., Aug. 8 (Special. —The body of Horatio G. Pope, as sessor of Johnson county, was found hanging by a small rope to the bed In his room yesterday. A revolver on a nearby table had been snapped, but failed to explode. The man had been dead about 48 hours, according to surgeons who examined him. No cause for the suicide is known. His health was good and he was not known to be despondent er have any troubles. His body was hanging from the bed in such a position that he could have taken his weight off his neck by the uso of his hands at any time. Pope was 65 years old and a bach elor. His only relative here is a half brother, B. F. Pope. He had lived in Johnson county for 60 years and was elected county as sessor by the republicans at the last election. Brief funeral services were held at the grave in the Tecumseh cemetery. BELIEVE IOWAN~MET FOUL PLAY IN IDAHO Ogden, Utah, Aug. 8.—George A. Blstorlous, president of the Idaho Falls Kiwanis club, and Dr. H, D. Judkin, also of Idaho Falls, who ar rived here yesterday in connection with the disappearance of Roland R. Mason, secretary of the Idaho Falls Kiwanis club, expressed the belief that Mason had met with foul play and his automobile was pushed over the embankment Into the Weber riv er to hide the crime. Mason's par ents are hsre from Council Bluffs, la., to follow a search for their son. The father announced he would pay a reward of $500 for the recov. •ry of his son’s body. BODY OF WAKEFIELD HERO ON WAY HOME Wakefield. Neb., Aug. 8.—The body of Anton Bokemper, the only soldier from Wakefield who lost his life in France In the world war, is being sent home to relatives for burial. The body, according to a telegram re ceived by relatives from the govern ment, will reach New York today and Wakefield In about a week. Funeral services will bo held in Wakefield, and will be In charge of the local American Legion post, which Is named after him. He was killed in action October 16, 1918, 26 days before the armistice. THREE INJURED WHEN OMAHA PLANE CRASHES Omaha, Neb., Aug. 8.—Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Bushman and Clarence Kast man, a mechanic, all of Omaha, were Injured yesterday when the motor of an airplane stopped and the ma chine crashed on a landing field. Mrs. Bushman, the most seriously Injured of the three, suffered a fractured skull and other injuries. Mr. Bush, man was piloting the plane. YORK HOTEL COOK HELD FOR FORGERY York, Neb., Aug. 8.—A. F. Willis, cook in a local hotel, is held by au thorities here at the request of the police of Scottsbluff. Authorities at the latter place hold a warrant for his arrest on a forgery charge. -4 SENATOR HITCHCOCK ASKED FOR MATTERS PAPERS Omaha, Neb., Aug, 8.—Senator G. M. Hitchcock, of Neoraska, intro duced a resolution asking the attor ney general to turn over to the Sen ate all petitions, papers, etc., on file In the department of Justice in con nection with the recent pardon of T. H. Matters, Omaha attorney, who was sentenced for violation of the national bank law. BODIES OF 71 WAR HEROES ARRIVE HOME Omaha, Neb., Aug. 8.—Bodies of 71 American soldiers who died over seas,' arrived here yesterday. Bodies 9f Nebraskans included William Steven, of York, and Fred Fruse, of Grand Island. —f WEST POINT—Arrangements have been .made for the funeral services of Arthur Mack, the first West Point man to bo killed in action in France cm Sunday, August 14. on the courthouse lawn, under the auspices of the Amer ican Legion. WEST POINT—News has reached the city of the death of Mrs. Mary Jerman of Spencer, and mother of Jos Jerman’ merchant of this city. Sl.e was over 82 years of age. Burial was here. DR. CHENEY IS HEAD OF S. D. OSTEOPATHS Sioux Falls, R. D„ Aug. 4._The South Dakota State Osteopath asso ciation has closed its 1921 conven tion. Sioux Falls was selected for the next annual convention. Ofilcers elected are: President, Dr. J. H. Che ney. Sioux Falls; vice president, Dr. H. W. Allen, Dell llaplds; secretary treasurer. Dr. Edith Shank, Mitchell; trustee for three year term Dr. Fol lette, Watertown. There were a large number of visitors from Iowa and Minnesota. SPECIAL ELECTION CARRIES IN SCHOOL DISTRICT CASE Alton, la., Aug. 5.—At a special •lection It was voted that the inde •endent school district of Boyden be inlarged to eight sections, adding four lections to the present territory. The lections to be added at Nos. 22, 23, 24 ind 27. In the incorporated town of Boyden there were 77 for and 19 igalnst; in the rural district there • ere 44 for and 31 against i BIND WEALTHY M1TBHI5 BED Nebraska Bandits Then Rob Railway Employe of Jew elry and $800—Victim Frees Himself. Grand Island, Neb., Aug. 6.—Two robbers entered the room of Frank Sanehasl, wealthy Japanese railroad employe at Chapman, Neb., near here shortly after midnight, end after binding him to his bed, robbed him of Jewelry and money amounting to $300, according to warnings sent out by the authorities of that city after Sanehasl had freed himself andi noti fied police. MOTHER AND GRANDSON DROWNED IN CLOUDBURST Chadron, Neb., Aug. 6.—The bodies of Mrs. William Bowers of Missouri Valley, Ia„ and Jack Bowers, 9, of Chadron, her grandson, are lying in one coffin in the undertaking parlor of W. S, Gillam. They were drowned in the cloudburst 20 miles west of Spearfish on the camping ground, while en route to visit Yellowstone park. TRAVELING MAN DROPS DEAD IN CRETE HOTEL Crete, Neb., Aug. 6.—John R. Mad dox, traveling salesman rjr the Car penter Paper Company of Omaha, dropped dead In his chair at the Cos mopolitan hotel. A sudden pain seemed to strike him and he threw up his hands and made a faint noise, but never regained consciousness. The remains were taken to Omaha. —♦— WANTS GRAND JURY TO PROBE FAILURES Omaha, Neb., Aug. 6.—Attorney General Clarence A. Davis has re quested A. O. Troup, presiding judge of the Douglas county district court, to call a meeting of the district judges to take up the calling of a special grand jury to investigate failure of business firms. In a letter to Judge Troup, the at torney general said that "the frauds that have been perpetrated in Ne braska are not primarily frauds in the sale of stocks to the public; they are frauds in the use of corporate money. They have been committed •from the inside.’ ” RECORD RAINFALL AT BEATRICE FOR A JULY Beatrice, Neb., Aug. 6.—Nearly an inch of rain fell in this vicinity this week. The record, according to the government weather observer, is .83 of an inch. During the month of July the total rainfall for the Beatrice vi cinity was 7.40 inches, the record for this month for many years. NEBRASKA GOVERNOR ANSWERS FEDERATION Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 4.—Gov. Sam uel R. McKelvie this morning stated, in response to criticism by the state federation of labor of his employing a New Yorw architect at $25,000 a year to build the new Capitol building, "that it would appear some one in the state federation of labor sensed an opportunity to play politics which was undoubtedly the influence that stimulated the action.” The governor further pointed out in his statement that the usual fee for an architect's services on such a building is 6 per cent., whereas the New York firm agreed to do the work for $25,000 a year. Allowing six years as the maximum time necessary to complete the building, the governor said the architect’s services would be $160,000 instead of $300,000 under the 6 per cent. plan. —♦— PARENTS LEAVE TO HUNT FOR THEIR SON Omaha, Neb., Aug. 4.—Mr. and Mrs. Allen O. Mason, of Missouri Valley, la., parents of Roland R. Mason, state agent for tha Guarantee Fund Life association In Idaho, whose aban doned car with lights burning and the emergency brake set was found near Ogden yesterday, left Omaha today for Ogden to assist in the search for their son. Mason said his son had gone from his homo in Idaho Falls to Ogden to get his car which he had left there after It had broken down on his trip from Missouri Valley where he had been to visit his par ents. -♦ MEXICAN IS KILLED AT SCOTTS BLUFF Scotts Bluff, Neb.. Aug. 4.—Yguacia Mean, a Mexican laborer died at the Bayard hospital after being shot by unknown persons who fired shots from an automobile to both sides of the road. Mean was working on a farm near Melbeta, southeast of here, and was mortally wounded while ly ing under a hedge. NORTH PLATTE.—Dr. O. R. Platt, who recently came to this city from Piattsmouth. has taken over the gen eral hospital which for a number of years lias been under the management ot several physicians. Miss Susan Mur ehle. a graduate nurse, will be super intendent. CHADRON. — County Agricultural Agent Fred Tayior reports that har vest is half finished and a number of farmers have already threshed. Most of the grain will be marketed within tli» next 30 days. Wheat will average £0 bushels, some fields 40 bushels. OMAHA OFFER WILL BE TURNED DOWN Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 4.—The offer of the Omaha Trust Company to trade the state school fund $500,000 worth of Nebraska municipal bonds for a like amount of Massachusetts state bonds will not be accepted if the board of educational lands and funds ac cepts the report of the committee. The municipal bonds bear 6 per cent, and the state bonds only 3 per cent, in terest. Walter W. Head, of the state capitol commission, is head of the trust company. Give Conscience a Chance. j A sermon by the Rev. Karl Reiland, rector of St. George’s church, New Yo*-k city. Reprinted from Commerce and Finance: *• ‘‘And they oea>d the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the • cool of the day.”—"Genesis 3:8. There is an attractive poetic suggestion here of meditative moments iiv the evening quiet, after the heedless temper of the day's misadventure; after the heated excitation of perversity the voice of conscience gets a hearing a* the fiery spirit cools, and with the stirring of the twilight breeze there ha» come the inevitable reaction to reflective thought. We have just emerged from the terrific experience of a catastrophic fall - of man. The heat of human warfare is practically ended, and no decent marv wishes to live through another such time. Fortunate will that dawn of ► tomorrow be for the races of mankind, if the nations in these calmer hour* are both wisely reflective and purposefully resolved to heed the dictates of a rational conscience, “ in the cool of the day.” If is pitiful to observe how quickly an all powerful effort for associated abolition of war has weakened, and how naturally governing bodies are dis cussing not the abandonment but the extent of military organization. There to of course some necessity for this at present, but not to the exclusion of those lately discussed ideals of world peace and international disarmament. ‘ These ought ye to have done and not left the other undone.” In spite of all exigencies, there is no excuse for honoring a statesmanship that doe* not place supreme emphasis upon keeping the peace and preparing as dili gently for international concord as we have been accustomed to prepare for international combat. A little reflection should convince us that we cannot improve thl® world by paying ignominious tribute to Mars, whose altau have been wan- *. tonly drenched in human blood, and we might try, even with hesitancy, pay ing tribute to the Prince of Peace and the brotherhood of man. Whoever . talks Mars instead of Messiah is speaking not for the brotherhood of mam and the nation’s destiny, but for the.blood of man and the nation's death. He is advocating for our youth not an indeal of national character, but the idea of a national cemetery. He is not a patriot but a parasite. Christian ity cannot be reconciled to war any more than a gentleman can be to *■ *” philosophy of brute force. i aurnu mai we nave naa to rignt, ana may nave yet to iigni, a war. But the point I make la that war should be an accident, pardonable if nec essary; but peace, and a scientific, educational, cultural preparation for peace, should be the supreme purpose. It is only common sense to say that what you train for, you are likely to triumph in, and where the preparation 1* there will the practice be. During the war a prominent man made a speech in which he argued that Christianity sanctioned and sanctified war because Jesus drove the money changers out of the temple and healed the servant of a Roman soldier. This- < is a flagrant abuse of the rational faculties. It would be as reasonable to af firm that Jesus sanctioned prostitution because he saved the woman taken ■ in adultery from death by stoning. First of all the nations must do the most difficult thing in the world. They must think. Our leaders must think honestly, fairly and generously. , There must be no more Belgium in the Congo; England in South Africa; France in Morocco; Italy in Tripoli; Japan in Shantung, nor mugt Christian. . nation of the west force opium upon a peaceful nation of the east. A sense of hrumor alone should have prevented a civilized people from sending mis sionaries both for opium commerce and orthodox Christianity through th* same open door to the clever celestials of China. We should thing these things over carefully. Character, not commerce, 1s the fundamental principal involved. England and America have a great chance to heal world wounds, and the policy of nations depends upon the in dividual character of the citizens, in the business and brotherhood of every day. You and the man you deal with; the spirit that moves him and you, now, today, constitute a mlcrocosmic instance of International relations. You two are a miniature of the larger picture of the people of the world. Think it over some evening. Give your better conscience a chance to intrude upon -''your meditative leisure. It will come like the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden of your life, in the quiet of the evening breeze, in the cool, the calm, the common sense reaction, of the day. I do not know what the forbidden fruit Tzas, nor why it was forbidden. I do not undestand the nature of the tree "in the midst of the garden” upon, which that famous fruit grew. It is all a great story, full of teaching es sentially human. Adam and his wife broke the rules, and they knew they broke them. Because they knew it they hid under the trees of the garden, and it was then that the reaction set in, and the conscience, in God-like re proach, set out on a walk through the garden of experience, with a step like a heart beat, at the time of relaxation. Most of our trouble comes from our selfish long reach. We do not keep the rules, nor respect them as we should. The fruit thus gathered quickly spoils. No ill-gotten thing ever tastes well. Whoever said “Stolen fruit is sweet” confused crookedness and character and was more hungry than truthful. He may have believed It about 11; 30 a. m., but not "in the cool of the day." Wo all hide, behind, under and in the trees, on every limb of an ex cuse, in every shadow of pretext, behind all kinds of justification, but- we know very well why we are not out in the open. Adam blamed the woman, but we blame women, parents, children, our neighbor and the "stranger with in our gates,” those within the gate and those outside. Then if we can’t blame a real person we invent an imaginary one—the devil—and blame him. We are the best white-wash mixers on earth when it comes to self-right- ___ eousness, but whitewash will not dense us nor does it deceive others “ There is something else, something deeper. It is that little sure-footed con science, that spirit of honest-to-Godness in life we cannot escape. It cornea calmly after "the burden and heat of the day’s doings” and we are face to face with facts. What is the conclusion? Whatever we do affects by ever so little the whole world. A good citizen of the world Is an honor to the citizenship of any country or the companionship of any company. True patriotism in any nation makes a man the true mstrlot of all people. “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he” and he must quiet down and relax to know himself. He must train up a good conscience and welcome its intruding, its instructive voice. It will seek out his liiding place like a god; it will walk with au thority in the grounds of his Dieart. He will hear it best and it will help him most in the rational relief and relaxation, of "the cool of the day.” The Honor Of The Senatn. The Washington press correspondents have “tipped” Senator Lodge as a mem ber of the home delegation In the com ing International conference. Tills Is taken by many as only a due recognition of the dignity and constitutional prerog atives dr the Senate, as a part of the treaty-making power. A quite different view of the matter, however, has had eminent republican support in the past. Before the administration ot Presi dent McKinley, the appointment of senators on such commissions was un known; with President McKinley it be came a practice, but the practice was soon resented by some of the most prominent senators of his own party. This opposition was expressed with es pecial force by Senator Hoar, who was at that time chairman of the Senate committee on Judiciary. There was a question whether such appointments were not essentially In violation of the constitutional prohibition against hold ing any federal office simultaneously with membership In either house of congress. The Senate referred the matter to the Judiciary committee for an opinion, and that committee found itself Immediately embarrassed by the fact that three of its own members were at the time holding such positions by appointment >f President McKinley. Disliking to render a report that would seem to con temn their own fellow members for ac reptlng these appointments, the com mittee asked Senator Hoar to go to the president privately and request that the practice be not continued. He did so. and tells us In his autobiography that President McKinley admitted that he had come to feel very strongly the force Of the objections, and gave him to understand, though indirectly, that no further appointments of the kind would be made. The strongeest objection of Senator Hoar and those who agreed with him, however, was not the point of techni cal unconstitutionality, but that at which he believed the constitutional prohibition to be aimed—the tendency of such appointments to break down the real dignity and independence of the Senate and make it subservent to the president's will. Didn’t Talk Natural, They were watching a procession of the unemployed. Said the American: “You don’t see these things where I come from.” Scot Interposed: “And whur may that be?” “In God's own country," returned the American. “Mon!" cried the Scot, "whur's ye Scotch accent? Ha' ye lost it?" There is at lea3l one advantage in not being an industrial king. You don't have to go to court after the divorce to see who gets the Pekin gese PUP orooKea turner. When 1 pass Crooked Corner, I hardly make a sound. Because I know the fairies Have there a dancing ground; And I've been shown the pixy throne On which their queen Is crowned. And once by Crooked Corner I saw' a russet cloak J'jet slipping through the hedgerow Beside the haunted oak; Nursu told me then it was a wren-* I’m sure it was ‘the folk.’ Someday by Crooked Corner, If 1 am very good, Maybe I’ll see the gobbling Come trooping from the wood; I may myself become an elf— I wonder if I could? —London Punch. His Lucky Year. ***” From Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph. Myron T. Herrick, the new ambassa dor to France, knows his Paris better than the average Frenchman. “The Seine’s most picturesque fea ture.” Mr. Herrick said at a dinner in Toledo, “is the multitude of fishermen who sit day after day, year after year, fishing on its banks. During all the revolutions, during the dally bombard ments of ‘Big Bertha,,’ the^e fishermen continued to fish away. “Of course you know, there are no fish in the Seine. ~I paused and talked with an aged fisherman near Notre Dame one day. “ ‘Have you fished here long?’ I asked him. “ ‘Well, sir,’ he answered, ‘I have been fishing here for 37 years.” “ ‘Any luck?’ I asked. “The old fellow brightened up won derfully. “ ‘Back in 1892,’ he chuckled, ‘I had a magnificent bite!’ ” Getting On. From the Washington Star. “How are you getting on with your new production?” “We’re all through with the most Im portant part,” replied the musical man ager, “we have found a title that sug gests all sorts of shocking possibilities.*' TIT FOR’ TAT. We’re getting real proud of Char lie Chaplin. For he repulsed—in a gentlemanly way—a remark that was just a trifle impertinent. Anyway, w*e have it that Charlie and Elinor Glyn met at a recent motion picture ball on the coast. “Deah, Mr. Chaplin,” the woman ^ writer is reported to have said, “I’m deliciously delighted to meet you. Why, you’re just like other people and not at all the sort of freak I’d have Imagined you.” “I can say the same of you, Madame Glyn,” responded Chaplin. Attg boy I