X T I fl rr im IBIM1 i I i I ill i i V1MV B H H r - - r2r ar SMOOTH AS HIS OIL Certain of the pious youth of New York says the Journal must surely Ull remember the instructive moment -when Mr lohn D Rockefeller appear ed before them with a well thumbed memorandum book in his hands and told them of the little earnings and modest benelicence of his youth They listened spellbound while he told of his earnings of G a week a gift of 23 cents to foreign missions 10 cents to Bible societies and various sums to divers beneficiaries And when the multi millionaire trying to look as if he yearned for the days of penury again closed by saying that he held it the duty of every man to get all the money he could honestly and then give it ail away his auditors felt that there In deed was a true guid for youth through lifes thorny path When the Ohio Leg islature is not electing corruptionists and bribers to the United States Senate it is usually engaged in investigating the methods by which Mr Rockefeller gets his money honestly It was so employed recently when John Teagle an oil refiner testified before it Mr Teagle swore that the agents of John D Rockefeller tried to bribe his book keeper with an offer of 30 a week to give the Standard Oil Company Infor mation regarding his shipments prices cost of manufacture etc This book keeper pretended to be complaisant and actually received one payment for helping Mr Rockefeller to undermine his employers business It seems that the Bibles are not the only books which interest Mr Rockefeller the books of his competitors also engage his atten tion And perhaps in the memorandum of charitable disbursements now he puts down the sums benevolently paid to indigent employes of his business rivals in consideration of their treach ery to their employers At any rate Mr Rockefeller is living up to the first part of his counsel to aspiring youth He is getting all the money he can We note that the dividends paid to this emi nent churchman and philanthropist from the Standard Oil holdings in 1S97 are estimated at 7500000 and still the man who wants to make a living refin iug oil must be fought with weapons ranging all the way from corruption to explosives An Insult to Germans In the name of the Democratic party and the 0500000 voters who cast their ballot for Bryan in 189G we protest against this vicious attempt on the part of the combined Republican press of the United States to throw discredit on the German race and character by re peatedly charging that Germany is against us in the war with Spain It Is an insult to a nation that has always been our friend an insult to a class of our adopted countrymen who have al ways been loyal to our flag This base slander is uttered in the interest of the proposed Anglo - American alliance the one great object of the Repub lican party The fact that the victims of the insult on this side of the At lantic have in the past supported the Republican party seems to have little weight with the Republican press The only gratitude it knows is slander The day of reckoning is approaching The German Americans are having their eyes opened Once they believed that the Republican party was the best for this country Now they see it is nar row bigoted and anti American in its politics That will not suit the Ger mans They are coming to understand the Democratic party Events of the past few years have taught them a les son We welcome the German Amer icans to the ranks of Democracy And this is not merely because they will make victory for us certain but be cause we love the sturdy and unflinch ing characteristics of the race It was this same low contemptible bigotry that drove Irish Americans Into our ranks where they have ever found the hand of true brotherhood as well as a chance to labor earnestly for a cause that is Gods When the Republican party finds its true level it will be mainly composed of a few Angloma niacs those what-is-its that look so uncomfortable in male attire and their progenitors the trusts and newspa pers established and supported here by British capital National Democrat Down witVi the Trusts With nearly two Thousand millions of dollars invested in pools and trusts the United States is certainly menaced by a great and growing evil Recognizing this fact the Democratic State Conven tion of Illinois adopted the following us one plank of the party platform We demand the adoption of national and State laws that will abolish pools and trusts which unite in unlawful combinations corporations engaged in the same line of business for the in crease of prices and the decrease of wages thereby largely augmenting profits at the expense of both consumer and laborer Consumers arejjlaced al- most entirely at the mercy of the trusts Prices are advanced without fear of these combines for they have killed competition Hardly an article of com- mpn use can be mentioned that Is not absolutely controlled by a syndicate of manufacturers Among thfr boldest of these organizations are the Sugar Trust and the Standard Oil Trust The Steel Trust the Leather Trust the Cordage Trust will occur to the mind of the most casual thinker Aside from their power to increase prices and to lower wages these combines threaten the 11 1 HjI Orfi 0 ertiesof the people They corrupt courts j and legislatures tliey coerde employes to vote for the canditfatewhoiwill make laws favoring thecBinbinQSnd thus they perpetuate their power ltis wise and patriotic on thepart of the Demo cracy to oppose theseuniytuflons and the plank of the Illinoistatelplatforin expressing this opposition j ought to commend itself to every honest and to every patriotic man 7 f Income Tax n That the Democratic platform adopt ed at the Stato convention of Illinois is worthy of hearty approval on the part of the people needs no argument Following the silver plank comes a declaration that will appeal to the sense of justice imevery heart not hard ened by selfish vinteVest This plank reads as follows We demand the adoption of a fair and equitable tax on incomes and an amendment to the con stitution of the United States if neces sary to accomplish this purpose This is just and treasonable on its face As the Jaw now stands the burden of tax ation is placed on the shoulders of those least ajfldto pay it The man who urns aridncoine of 10000 a year may beltble to avoid taxation entirely1 but the man who earns a dollar a day must pay heavj taxation and has no chance to evade such payment By the vote of onefinan on the supreme bench it has been decided that an iuqome tax is unconstitutional Although ithis is simply the opinion of one man it is binding son long as it is- not reversed and perhaps tlie Way to re verse it isr to sWure a constitutional amendment Inthe long run justice will be secured and the Democratic party oil Illinois is pledged by its platforiiiTto aid in its securemenr not only inithisone case but in other cases which will be referred to later on Where Is Fitzhugli Iee What hasthe War Department done with Gen Fitzhugh Lee Miles went to Forto Rico Merritt has gone to Man ila Shafter lias captured Santiago and Wheeler waswitli the bir general aiid helped to bring about the big event But where is Lee Sampson was an unknown quantity forced upon the navy by political influence and from being an unknown quantity has devel oped into a palpable and too well known cipher Schley won the naval victory over Cervera and Sampson turned up just in time to claim what Schley hal won Thus it seems that politics has had sometbingvto do with securing positions of advantage and perhaps there may be more or less of politics In the suppression of Leer By right -of a full knowledge of the coun try Gen Fitzhugh Lee should have been given an opportunity at the front in Cuba but up to date haf posltibn has been denied him Is impossible that Gen Lee is too popular with the people of the United States to please the poli ticians at Washington Chicago Dis patch Several Nations Should Note It Labouchere sees in the Italian riots this lesson for EnglaiuTSom the ter rible condition of Italy wc should learn a lesson or what has befallen her will ultimately befalliis Weoulilgjve home rule to Ireland and thus put an end to the discontent there we sdiaulu reduce and not increase taxation what we do levy in taxes should spent foi the welfare of the community instead of being squandered in buccaneering and in the armaments thatiare render ed necessary for our Wdatory habits Reace economy andreforatfare scouted nowadays as not fitted for this enlight ened age We should Tfevefttftirem Public taxation in Italy has reached 7a point where of eVery dollar Taliper earns the state takes half to spend on the army the navy the officials and the aristocracy Meanwhile the un official taxation ievIed by monopoly by landlords takfep a good share of the remainingliaif ordenies opportunity to earnvanydollara all England Is not the onljr jiaJojigniay learn this Folly of the Dfngley Tariff One of the minor barbarities of the Dingley tariff as interpreted by the customs officials is illustrated In the duties Imposed upon a collection of eighteenth century miniatures imported by a residentjinew York These were Portraits of varans celebrities painted upon ivory some in metal frames and sonie setgUjicovQrs of snuff boxes and other articlestof ivory and metal The appraisers have decided that the arti cles must pay duty ranging from 35 and 45 to GO percent- as manufactures of ivory metal or jewelry This is doubt less necessary to44protect -the native manufacturers - of antiques Philadel phia Timesi u Direct Lgitftiit oil Not arfalfcaV No direct legislation is n8t a panacea for allnaftfonal ills In fact it is not a panacea at all It is merely a spoon with wnlcha tnejianncea could be ad ministered Specific legislation thfr pahaceji fgrpfitlcal Ills anddirectiegj islatioh the method that can be secured AsJck roan may need a different num ber of mediclpesJmt they can all bi adniinisteredWlth one spoon If the nurse wentitergeka spoon wlth which to administer tbeniediclneYyou would not say that sne considered tlie spoon the panacea for all the sick mans ills New Era About steenRepubUcanexchanges a day teltus thatnBryanjs n dead duckv If he is it seems to nsit is exceeding bad taste toinake so much fuss at a funeral Wasningt6n In1 Democrat- - 3JHE TERRIBLE TURK Ismail Xonsouf Giant Wrestler Miser and Glutton Who Died in the Sea Somewhere on the bottom of the At lantic sixty miles or more souEhdf Sable Island there Is lying in the tan gled wreckage of La Bourgogne the massively muscular body of a man and in a leathern belt around that mans waist are gold coins to the amount of 8500 a goodly weight The man was Ismail Yousouf Turk wrestler protege of the Sultan miser glutton The weight about his waist Nvas what did him to death When the French liner went down it was a nand ffchand fight among the passengers and crew for possession of the boats Is- THE TURK AND HIS MONET BELT mail Yousouf was a giant a wild beast for strength and he might have thrust scores aside when he made for a boat But the- belt was about him and he thought more of that than he did of the boat Or himself So he went down with It and the world has lost a unique figure from among her men of might Incidentally Scutari which smiles complacently opposite Stamboul has lostlts demi god for Yousouf was rev ersdxand feared hi Scutari whence he cainei Yousouf was on his way home to open a coffee or bazar or some such place of indolent business where he might put more gold into his belt and stuff more food under his belt For Yousouf was a gormand of the most in satiable sort The Terrible Turk had never really been beaten until the belt gripped him this last time Men won from him on fouls but not by strength It was his invariable rule until William A Brady began to manage him to go into a bout with the belt around him But Brady at once changed this order of things by compelling the Turk to di vest himself of the cinch for Yousouf wore it tight before entering the ring There was 2S00 In gold In the belt at that time which made the Turk over weight And from the moment the belt was off -until the bout was over You souf was in agony He -was like a Sam son shorn of his strength ALTAR MADE OF ICE Remarkable Outdoor Religious Scrvica Held in Russia Accompanying illustration shows an outdoor Russian church service the al tarbreing made of ice These services are common all over the dominions ruled by the Czar and particularly so at this time of the year They begin at the season of Whitsuntide and are held at intervals during the months that follow The altar of ice is supposed to be typ ical of Whit or White Sunday and the services are held by the priests of the Russian church to induce people to give up their evil batfits and live a pure and holy life The sight of one of these gatherings with the priests and choir arrayed in spotless white gar ments is inded an impressive one and ftie singing and chanting which accom pany the kneeling of the congregation I before the altar are never forgotten by Ifiose who have been present Some of the altars look very beauti ful for some men are masters of the f THE AITAB OF ICE art of ice cutting and artistically mod jel the block of ice In the villages it generally consists of a rude block of ice surmounted by a cross HIS NERVE Got This Drummer a Job that Be i lonsed to Another Tbat was a strange experience ad pitted the traveling man when somo one had recalled the Incident to him IV11 tell you on the level that it con jvertgdme to the theory that there is a dw3tihy that shapes our endmnd that Ihefellow who is willing to drift is not Isuch a chump after all JAs the boys say I was on my up persf r No one questioned my ability on ithe road I could sell goods to men jwho nad no real use for them and youll admit that to be the supreme test of a drummer If I had one forte above another it was that of selling stoves I could get rid of a hard coal burner in a soft coal district and I could place a consignment of wood proves In the middle of a prairie dis trict One morning I waked up in the modern Troy of New York without a cent and without a job To most men the situation would have been as cold as a polar expedition but as Intimat ed Im a fatalist After jollying the i bartender for a patriotic cocktail and I Vi 1 n cimvp T went to the kuu uai uci iVA - w - nearest stove factory The clock struck 12 just as I entered the place Before the handsome young man at the desk could say a word I had told him that I was on time I think the re mark was the inspiration of an ex tremity Well not stop to discuss terms at this time he said You have an hour in which to catch a train Heres your expense money It is a new route but It will serve to try you out I was knocked daffy but I took the money caught the train and sold stoves right and left In a week I had a letter from the house asking who in the world I was and where I came from The other fellow for whom I was mis taken had shown up and claimed the job But they told me to fire away and they raised my salary Im with em yet DetroR Free Press NEW FIGURE FOR WOMEN Athletics Have Revolutionized the Ideal Feminine Form Athletics have revolutionized wom ans figure Thejr have increased the measurements of the ideal feminine figure several inches The absence of corsets has had something to do with the matter also but not to the extent of athletics The accompanying figure of the present type of athletic Ameri can woman was drawn by a New York woman artist It shows an increase of girth all around The measurements in fact are almost heroic and do not greatty differ from those of the Venus of MIlo which heretofore has had no modern prototypes If the Venus of Milo were reduced to life size she would measure Height 5 feet 8 inches Weight If a living woman 173 pounds Neck 13 inches Bust 38 inches Waist 31 inches The artists model is not a profes sional She is a young woman of the leisure class who is devoted to SBm TV f 6 r I4W s fMr XT s Ml vi ft oini r mss3 w n a oil MLMrCZs f wKm NEW MEASUREMENTS ics swimming and bicycling being the two branches of sport in which she is most interested Her measurements ari Height 5 feet 7 inches Weight 1G0 pounds Neck 14 inches Bust 3S inches lS Waist 27 Inches Arm 13 Inches See how these measurements com pare to the Milo and differ from the fashionable wasp waisted figure of five years ago Then the average woman prided herself on wearing a 12 inch collar and a 20 inch corset The modern woman must be a crea ture of iron nerves She must even be able to stand without flinching the su preme test of seeing a mouse run across the floor And as for fainting that piece de resistance of the heroine of twnty fiye years ago would be abso lutely fatal to the modern tactics of feminine warfare With the advent of the new figure a more healthy tone is creeping into the feminin mind T7 girls who go in for all sorts of exercise are not afraid to acknowledge good healthy appetites and normal senti ments Who could be otherwise than healthy minded who proudly owns to a good appetite and a 27 inch waist Figurative Speech As an example of the error of talking figuratively to those who do not appre ciate and who are apt to take every thing literally this story is worth read ing The respected superintendent of a Sunday school had told his boys that they should endeavor to bring theii neighbors to the school saying that they should be like a train the scholar being the engine and his converts the cars v Judge of his surprise when next Sun day the door opened during lessons and a little boy making a noise like an engine ran in followed by half a doz en others In single file at his back He came to a halt before the superintend ent who asked the meaning of It alL Tlrtfcnaive reply was Please sir Im the engine and thems the cars Germany on the Pingree Idea The German government proposes to try to grow potatoes In Africa First Theosophlst This settles It I resign from the society Second The osophlst the matter First Theosophlst Why one of my tenants has gone off without paying his rent and left a note saying he would try to square up with me in some future existence Puck Trouble seldom visits a man who Isnt looking for It HEROES WHO FIGHT FIRE Their Risks Increase in the Ratio of Our ProRreSB Jacob A Rils author of How the Other Half Lives and other studies of tenement house life contributes to the Century in the series of Heroes of Peace an article on Heroes who Fight Fire Mr Riis says of the fire man His life is too full of real peril for him to expose it recklessly that is to say needlessly From the time when he leaves his quarters in answer to an alarm until he returns he takes a risk that may at any moment set him face to face with death in its most cruel form He needs nothing so much as a clear head and nothing is prized so highly nothing puts him so surely in the line of promotion for as he ad vances in rank and responsibility the lives of others as well as his own come to depend on his judgment The act of conspicuous daring which the world applauds is oftenest to the fire man a matter of simple duty that had to be done in that way because there was no other Nor is it always or even usually the hardest duty as he sees it It came easy to him because he Is an athlete trained to do such things and because once for all it is easier to risk ones life in the open in the sight of ones fellows than to face death alone caught like a rat in a trap That is the real peril which he knows too well but of that the public hears only when he has fought his last fight and lost How literally our every day security of which Ave think if we think of it at all as a mere matter of course is built upon the supreme sacrifice of these devoted men we realize at long intervals when a disaster occurs such as the one in which Chief Bresnan and Foreman Rooney lost their lives three years ago They were crushed to death under the great water tank in a 24th street factory that was on fire Its sup ports had been burned away An ex amination that was then made of the water tanks In the city discovered eight thousand that were either wholly un supported except by the roof beams or propped on timbers and therefore a direct menace not only to the firemen when they were called there but daily to those living under them Seventeen years ago the collapse of a Broadway building during a fire con vinced the community that stone pillars were unsafe as supports The fire was in the basement and the firemen had turned the hose on When the water struck the hot granite columns they cracked and fell and the building fell with them There were upon the roof at the time a dozen men of the crew Df Truck Company No 1 chopping holes for smoke vents The majority clung to the parapet and hung there till res cued Two went down into the fur nace from which the flames shot up twenty feet when the roof broke One Fireman Thomas J Dougherty was a wearer of the Bennett medal too His foreman answers on parade day when his name is called that he died on the field of duty These at all events did not die in vain Stone columns are not now used in supports for buildings in New York So one might go on quoting the perils of the firemen a so many steps for ward for the better protection of the rest of us It was the burning of the St George Flats and more recentlj of the Manhattan Bank in which a dozen men were disabled that stamped the average fire proof construction as faulty and largely delusive One might even go further and say that the fire mans risk increases in the ratio of our progress or convenience The water tanks came with the very high build ings which in themselves offer prob lems to the fire fighters that have not yet been solved The very air shafts that were hailed as the first advance in tenement house building added enor mously to the firemans work and risk as well as to the risk of every one dwelling under their roofs by acting as so many huge chimneys that carried the fire to the onen windows opening upon them in every story More than half of all the fires in New York occur in tenement houses When the Tenement-House Commission of 1894 sat In this city considering means of making them safer an 2tUn l received the molt practical help nnu auvice rrom the firemen especially from Chief Bres nan whose death occurred only a few days after he had testified as a wit ness The recommendations upon which he insisted are now part of the general tenement house law Casan the Tartar Dwarf In the series of papers on Historic Dwarfs in St Nicholas May Shears Roberts describes the famous Casan Mrs Roberts says Casan was the name of a little Mon gol Tartar who flourished In the early part of the thirteenth century He was born in the eastern part of Asia not far from the ancient city of Karakorum His parents belonged to one of the barbarian hordes that owed allegiance to Genghis Khan and Casan became a fierce though small warrior and fought bravely under the banner of the great and mighty Mongol con quero The exact height of this little dwarf is unknown He was certainly not over three feet tall but lie was active and muscular and like all his race could endure hunger thirst iatigne and cold The Tartars were unexcelled in the management of their beautiful horses The fleetest animals were trained to stop short in full career and to face without flinching wild beast or formid able foe Casan was a born soldier and at an early age became expert in all the exercises that belonged to a Tartar education He could manage a fiery courser with great skill and could shoot an arrow or throw a lance with unerring aim in full career advancing or retreating Like many of those small In stature he was anything but puny In spirit and while yet a lad he gathered abouf him a troop of wild young Tartar boys as reckless and daring as himself o whom by common consent he became leader He commanded his lawless young comrades with a strange mix- ture of dignity and energy and they obeyed his orders with zeal and will ingness Sometimes they would go on long hunting expeditions seldom fail Ing to lay waste any lonely habitation they happened on Experiments to discover the best fire resisting material for the construction of doors are said to have proved that wood covered with tin is better than solid Iron A new process of rendering silk non inflammable consists In substituting for the nitrated cellulose heretofore used a solution of purified cellulose sulpho phosphoric acid A plate glass switchboard is one of the novelties of the New York electri cal exposition Slate or marble Is in variably used for this purpose and the wonder is why no one ever thought of plate glass before The richest deposit of aluminum In the world has just been discovered near Bowling Green Ky An analysis of the clay by the government assayist at St Louis Mo showed the propor j tion of aluminum contained therein to be 50 per cent The human system can edure heat of 212 degrees the boiling point of water because the skin is a bad conductor and on account of the perspiration cool ing the body Men have withstood with out injury a heat of 300 degrees for several minutes A nineteen story steel cage construc tion oflice building in San Francisco recently underwent a severe test in be ing shaken by the most violent earth quake which has been experienced there for many years The building is said to have swayed like a tree but suffered no material damage In Rochester it is proposed to intro duce a drinking fountain whose water supply will be delivered as a short ver tical jet or fountain The person using it places the mouth over the jet and drinks without touching anything but the water itself This avoids contam ination from other users of the foun tain S The new 12G ton gun intended to be placed on Romer Shoal in New York harbor and now receiving Its finishing touches at Watervliet is the largest cannon in existence six tons heavier and five feet longer than the greatest Krupp gun Its length is 49 feet 2 inches and the diameter of its bore sixteen inches Its projectile will weigh 2300 pounds and the firing charge of powder will be nearly 1000 pounds The extreme range is calculated at six teen miles The total cost of this gun and its mounting will be about 300000 An interesting device for the prompt delivery of letters to the tenants of the upper floors in lofty houses is employed in Geneva On the ground floor is a letter-box for each of the floors above When a letter is dropped into one of the boxes it makes an electric contact which not only sets a bell ringing on the floor for which the letter is intend- ed but also opens the valve of a water tank on that floor by means of which a cylinder connected with the letter box by cords and pulleys is filled with wa ter When full the cylinder descends and pulls up the letter box The latter on reaching its destination automati cally dumps its contents while at the same instant the cylinder discharges Its water The box now outweighs the cylinder and accordingly descends lift ing the latter to its original position Needed His Right Hand I have heard and read many pathet ic stories said Senator Hoar recent ly but none of them ever awoke so much sad sympathy as one which j nointofi The profgsi sor has a favorite pupil a little deaf mute boy exceptionally bright Mr Gallaudet asked him if he knew the story of George Washington and the cherry tree With his nimble fingers the little one said he did and then he proceeded to repeat It The noiseless gesticulations continued until the boy had informed the professor of the elder Washingtons discovery of the muti lated tree and of his quest for the muti lator When Georges father asked him who hacked his favorite cherry tree signaled the voiceless child George put his hatchet in his left hand Stop interrupted the professor Where do you get your authority for saying he took the hatchet in his left hand Why responded the boy he need ed his right hand to tell his father that he cut the tree The Largest Coneregation The largest congregation In America is tha of Str Stanislaas Kostkain Chi cago which has 30000 communicants The numb of attendants at the sev eral Sunday services frequently ex ceeds 15000 Where They Aliased It I am very much surprised to hear that they aro married I thought he was merely flirting with her - He thought so too Colliers Week ly We have noticed that every man with a big mustache is very fond of soup The turtle may be slow but he usu ally gets there in time for the soup V n M 1 m h n i