THE BILL ANTI-TRADING STAMPS MEASURE EFFECTIVE IN JULY. . ACT MAY GO TO THE COURTS Primary Bill Will Receive Attention When Commission Bill Is Dis posed of Farmers' Cooperation tion Bill has Close Call. Governor Aldrich has signed H. R. .107 , the anti-trading stamps and anti- Jree gift enterprise bill which was gassed by both houses of the legisla ture. The bill has no emergency clause and will become effective three nnonths after the legislature adjourns. The governor is said to doubt the legality of the bill , but he believes it ivill be better for those interested to test the hill in the courts of Nebraska than to continually maintain a lobby W. B. BANNING Union , Nebraska State Senator , Fourth District -at the legislature. The Nebraska Re- "tailers' association asked for the pass age of the bill and manufacturers of prize packages trading stamp com panies had able lawyers on the ground to combat the bill and to question its con sti tutional ity. Eager Wins Charter Fight. The troubles of the Lancaster county - ty delegation were aired at length be- iore the house in discussion over the Xaucoln charter bill , introduced by Eager. It was a case of Eager against "the rest of the delegation and he won out The chief bone of contention was over a-proposed change in the date of the spring election. Eager's bill pro vides for setting this date ahead to permit the men in the Russian colony to vote before they leave for their .summer's work in the beet fields. This lias hack of it the old "wet" and 'dry" -fight in Lincoln , the Russians being supposed to favor the "wet' policy for the city. Had Up-HUI Work. Numerous efforts were made to get Ubills advanced in the house without the Intervention of the sifting commit- -tee. ? .Iost of them were uniformly unsuccessful. Representative Quack- enbush made a hard fight to have "brought out the bill providing for a levy of a quarter of a mill for support of the state normal schools. He even liad a special meeting of the sifting committee called , but could not get : the bill through this. An effort was made to bring put the McKelvie bill appropriating $25,000 for a state pub- aicity bureau , but this failed. To Adjourn April 4. Members of the legislature awoke to the fact that they must do a prodi gious amount of work in a short time -or remain In session for a consider ably longer period than is agreeable uo most of them. This realization came with the report of the joint com- anittee on adjournment. The committee agreed to an ad journment April 4 , which will give two more weeks of work. This would 3 > robably mean actual adjournment : about April 7 or 8. The house again defeated an at tempt to kill the university medicaj school bill. Nearly an hour was spent -in controversy over parliamentary pro cedure. The dispute revolved about the question of the right of the house tto correct the Journal of yesterday to 33iake it include the -belated Ellis mo tion , seeking to reconsider the medical school bill. * Responding to the senate's invita tion to take up the subject of adjourn ment , Speaker Kuhl has appointed "Leidlgh , Fuller and Neir as members ' f the joint committee to fix the time - tfor adjournment. Another Hotel BWI by Sink. Representative Sink , author of the mine-foot bed sheet bill , has come for ward in behalf of the traveling men of the state. The hotel commission 3)ill , sought by the traveling men's associations was brought out by the sifting committee as a result of a lit- .tle perspiration expended in its behalf .by the Grand Island statesman. The bill Tvas introduced by Bulla. It pro vides for a state commission to have FIT .general supervision over the sanitary crran ementa of ho * el * . Judicial Bills Recommended. Bojth pending judicial bills were recommended to pass by the house committee of the whole. These are the Lee non-partisan , judiciary bill and the Quackenbush bill providing for election of supreme court judges by districts and for an Intermediary court of appeals. The vote on both bills was almost a straight party line up. Onthe Lee non-partisan judiciary bill the vote stood 50 to 42 with eight absent. Hardin was the only republican voting for the bill , while Busee , Fries and Shoemaker were the only democrats voting against it. On the Quackenbush bill Allen , Hardin and Hasik , republicans , voted for it , and Fries , Riha and Shoemaker voted against it. The former bill may squeeze through with just enough votes to pass it , but the latter has lit tle show of passing. It is a constitu tional amendment and requires sixty votes. There are but fifty-four demo cratic members. Cordeal's Primary Bill. While the house was passing a. closed primary bill the senate was voting ing on Cordeal's primary bill , S. F. 261. The bill passed by a vote of J,7 to 12. Kohl , Placek , Reagan and Tan ner , were the four democrats who , with thirteen republicans , passed the bill. Varner , republican , and Horton and Volpp were absent and not voting. The Cordeal bill provides two ways of placing candidates , first by political committees which are selected at pri mary elections , and petition of regis tered party voters. Non-partisan Board. A final effort will be made to get through the house the Matrau nonpartisan tisan board of control bill , a measure which , it is believed , answers more specifically the platform pledges of both -democratic and republican par ties than any of the others now -pend ing. As a step toward this effort , the vote , defeating the bill , was reconsid ered and the bill was amended in com mittee of the whole to remove an ob jectionable feature. It has been again placed on the third reading calendar. Last Pay Day For Legislators. Members of the senate drew their last month's salary from the state on Tuesday. Either the $100 checks must be stretched over the remaining days that the senate is in. session or the senators will dig down into their pockets and pay for the privilege of serving the people of the state. Wed nesday is the sixtieth day , the last day of the session for which pay is pro vided. Employes of the senate are more fortunate and will continue to be paid as long as the session lasts. Funds for Secretary Smith. Buhrman of Howard called up his motion offered Friday to give Secre tary W. H. Smith $1,200 for preparing the senate journal for publication and reading proof. Tibbets of Adams of fered substitute motions to give the same amount but to give $400 each to Secretary Smith , Assistant Secretary Walrath and Assistant Secretary Per kins. The substitute was defeated by a vote of 8 to 14. The original motion was then adopted without opposition. Amended Ad Club Bill. The Ad club bill for the commission form of government has been amended by the senate so that the water board will be exempt from the operation of the commission form of government In Omaha in the event that the1 bill passes the legislature a'nd is adopted in Omaha. Will Be No District Attorneys. Placek's bill providing for seven teen district attorneys was killed by the .senate and with this action went " glimmering the hopes .of several po litical gentlemen who have attended the legislature in the hope of framing up jobs for themselves. Passed Stock Yards Bill. The house finished up with the stock yards bone of contention by passing the Ollis bill by a vote of 71 to 21 , eight being absent. The gover nor is expected to sign the bill as soon as it reaches him. Anti-Bucket Shop. The senate sifting committee placed on the general'file S. F. No. 318 by Bartos of Saline. The bill provides that any person operating or patroniz ing a bucket shop shall be deemed guilty of a felony. Governor Signs Initiative Bill. Governor Aldrich has announced that he had signed senate file No. 1 , the Skiles initiative and referendum resolution for a constitutional amend ment. A determined effort to kill the bill appropriating $100,000 for a building for the University Medical school in Omaha came near being successful and the bill squeezed through with just barely enough votes to pass it. The vote stood 51 to 41 , with S ab- t sent. c If the appropriation bill , carrying $100,000 for a new building for the . state medical college at Omaha , as r well as § 20,000 for maintenance , reaches the senate , it will be passed by that body. Before the senate can give its indorsement to the measure , however , the house must pass the bill. In explanation of his veto of the Taylor-Dolezal stock yards bill. Gov a ernor Aldrich has issued a 1,500-word statement stating that the ra'lway commission has jurisdiction only over common carriers , while this bill ral'.ed the stoek vards "public markets. " EARTH THREE- So Says Prof. Otto Klotz of Do minion Observatory. Globe Went Spinning Through Heav ens as Gigantic Tetrahedron Life Pushed Here From Some Part of Universe by Pressure. Ottawa , Ont. The earth once was the shape of a three-sided , flat-headed top and went spinning through the heavens as a gigantic tetrahedron , ac cording to Prof. Otto Klotz of the Do minion Observatory , writing in the Journal of the Royal Astronomical So ciety of Canada. The shape was assumed just after the globe had taken on a more solid form. Under the tendency of contrac tion the stresses and strains followed the lines of least resistance. The tetrahedron is one of the regular geometrical metrical solids which has the least volume for a given surface. As a tetrahedron the planet had four cor ners , six edges and four surfaces , the edges manifesting themselves as moun tains and the surfaces as depressions , and hence oceans. "We know , " says Professor Klotz , "that the South Pole is surrounded fry land , which corresponds to an apex of the tetrahedron , while opposite to it is a surface equivalent to a depres sion , or ocean. In the tetrahedron every corner has a surface opposite it , so that for the earth this would mean that land and watei are antipodal , which is fairly well represented in the actual conditions. Another result would be that the land masses would be broad in the northern hemisphere and taper toward the south , which also agrees with our geography. "Inversely , the oceans should con tract toward 'the south , a condition fairly well borne out. The north polar sea being represented by a surface of the tetrahoidal figure and the south polar one by a corner , it would follow that the flattening of the earth in the southern hemisphere would be less than in the northern , and furthermore that the force of gravity would In crease less rapidly toward the South Pole than toward the North Pole. Both these considerations have been confirmed by geodetic and pendulum observations. " Answering the question as to how life first got on earth. Professor Klotz asserts it probably was pushed here from some other part of the universe by light pressure. "A force , though very small in mag nitude , has been discovered In light , known as light pressure , which oper ates in opposition to gravity , " he says. "When particles of a spherical form are reduced to a diameter of a sixth of a micron , which is equivalent to 1-150- 000 of an inch , light pressure will push such a particle into space. ' The spores WINS SOCIAL SUCCESS IN LONDON Jaffray is an excellent example of that type of American girl who , MISS while socially popular at home , enjoys an equally enviable vogue abroad. The beauty , tact and wit of the young woman are explanatory of all this. Her mother is the widow of the late William P. Jaffray , son of Edward S. Jaffray ? the merchant prince who In 1809 , founded in New York the historic dry goods house of E. S. Jaffray & Co. , as a branch of the famous London establishment. The American connection continued in existence until fifteen years ago. Among the friends of Miss Jaffray Is the Viscountess of Maldstone. The fair were schoolmates and the intimacy thua begun has continued ever since. Very recently they have been much In evidence In London's social affairs. of some bacteria are of this order of minuteness. "Could such Infinitesimal particles 'pass through the frozen depths of the etheral solitude without losing vital ity ? This has been experimentally shown possible. Micro-organisms have been kept for six months at a tem perature of 200 degrees below zero , centigrade. Spores of bacteria have been kept at a temperature of 252 degrees below zero , centigrade , with out destroying their vitality. "So we cannot avoid the momen tous conclusion * hat it Is possible for TO RESTORE BATHS Italy Purchases Halls Built by Diocletian. Unique Edifice Dating Back to A. D. 305 to Assume Its Original Mag nificence Many Antiquities on Exhibition. Rome. A pleasant surprise now awaits the visitor on his arrival in Rome. Even those who never have ben here know by report the baths of Diocletian , that huge monument of antiquity which originally covered a "space of a mile square and accommo dated 3,000 bathers. The'baths ' were built-by the Emperor Diocletian , and his co-regent Maximilian , in A. D. 305. There stand on the site several churches , including th magnificent one of Santa Maria degl Angeli , into Thich the sudatorium and terpirarium cf the baths were converted by Michel- fingelo. It was here that the mar riage of the present king was cele brated. Since the baths fell into de cay after the Gothic invasion of A. D. 410 the vast halls which remain have been divided into comparatively small rooms , and built into the corners of the great building were little wine shops , stables and fifth-rate inns. Strange as it may appear , after passIng - Ing through the hands of many pro prietors the largest part of the baths belonged until last year to Sgr. Tit- toni , the ex-minister of foreign af fairs , who was for some time ambas sador in London , and is now in Paris. The governmen had to purchase > h ° land and building from him , and the : eviotrd these who desecrated this sacred spot. This noble monument has uow been restored to its orig inal magnificence. In this unique edifice will be held an exhibition of antiquities and copies of antique objects and monuments sent from all part of the ancient Roman empire. For instance , Hispania L.usi- tania , among many other interesting objects , have sent an almost complete series of their municipal laws en graved on bronze tablets. Gallia has provided models of the best-known monuments of Provence , casts of the most famous sculptures , and a collec tion of war eng-'nes which illustrates the celebrated siege of Alesia. Germania sends the Garlovingian group of bronzes of Aquisgarana , the Wolf Mater Romanorum , the Pinetree. model of the Castle of Saalburg and the Treasury of Hildesheim. From Pannonia-Illyria ( Austria ) comes a splendid series of manuscripts and models of the frontier towns of tha Danube ; from Maesia ( Roumania ) , 271 works ; from Greece , a ship load of records ; from Africa , a portrait In mo saic of Virgil , and the bronzes found in a gallery which was wrecked while transporting these treasures from the sack of Corinth to Rome. Egypt , Asia Minor , Persia and even India will contribute their quota to this unique exhibition , which also contains the Laurentlne antiqui ties discovered by Queen Elena at the king's hunting lodge of Castle Poziano , on the spot where the ancient Laurentium stood. TO RECLAIM GERMAN MOORS Kaiser Foresees Importance of flak ing His Country Independent of Importing Meats. Berlin. Berliners are discussing the lectures delivered" by the kaiser at a meeting of the German Agricul tural Council in the sessions chamber of the Prussian upper house. Profes- "Man-Shy" Birds More Difficult to Keep Alive Than Any Other Kinds Other Problems. London. Problems that have to be faced in keeping alive the animals at the Zoological society's gardens formed the subject cf a most interesting - ing address given at the Royal institu- 'ion by Dr. P. S. Mitchell , secretary of .Ic societj' . Two great-dangers that confronted wild animals in freedom , he said , did not exist at the zoo death at the hands cf other wild animals and star vation. A curious feature was the heavy mortality among British birds in cap tivity. It was heavier than that of birds from distant lands. Explorers in those lands described the complete absenceof _ shyness in birds and animals. It'was not so with English birds and animals , for in in habited countries the only chance a wild animal had of life was to be "man-shy. " English birds and animals had there fore acquired this "intolerance of man. " That was why they took so long to get used to keepers and visit ors , and why the mortality was so heavy. Another difficulty was the change of diet. Take the gorilla , for instance. They had until lately giren high prices for gorillas , so the hunters caught life to be transported from one planet to another. Hence a world inIts be ginning , such as ours passed through , probably received its first germ of life from some other world. We , in turn , may contribute for the beginning of life on some world unknown to us. Such a particle , leaving the earth un der the most favorable conditions , would cross the orbit of Mars , under light pressure , in twenty days , that of Jupiter in eighty days , that of Nep tune In fourteen months , and would reach the nearest star Alpha Cen taur ! In 9,000 years. " ser Tacke opened the proceedings with an address on "German Moors and Their Economic Importance , " stating that these moors were capable of supplying the market with 18,000- 000 pounds of meat annually and of supporting 80,000 peasant families. His remarks were supplemented by those of the emperor. His majesty , appearing In a new role , quite captivated his audience , and his voice and rhetoric were at their best. He told how he turned the waste lands of Cadimen to prac tical use , and advised those present to follow his example and so make Ger many independent of foreign meat markets. When he bought Cadimen In 1899 the land had for years been a v/aste , filled with willows , rushes and marsh grass. Aged 90 , Admitted to Bar , . - Clinton , ArJcA-When the Van Bufen county circuit court convened here for the eighty-eighth consecutive term A. Callen , 90 years old , made applica tion fo radmission to the bar. Mr. Cal len showed a license signed by the su preme court of Kansas , dated 1884 , and he was admitted without examina tion. Puzzle For Animal Keepers thera , got a small stock of native food and rushed them to England. Here the native food was exhausted and the change of diet had bad results. This was the reason that the zoo de cided not to be in the market for gor illas until they had been in captivity j I ' for some time and grown used to "civ ilised food. " The food question with lions and tigers was not difficult. They had been able to get fresh food for them easily , but since the motor car had dis placed the horse it was becoming dif ficult. He supposed they would have to teach them to feed on punctured motor tires. ' / Zoo fleas were mentioned. The British flea , according to Charles Rothchild , a great authority on fleas , drove off from the animals their own fleas and took their places , so that Mr. Rothschild , as a collector of fleas , found that the gardens furnished him with no new species. Missouri Holds Its Lead. Jefferson City , Mo. Again Missouri rises to claim the world's champion ship for corncob pipe production. The annual report of Labor Commlsloner Haller shows that during the last year 25,455,684 "Missouri meerschaums" were manufactured In the state. Seven factories are operating in Misouri. The pipes wholesale at about five-ninths of a cent taeh. IS EPILEPSY CONQUERED * . ' New York Physicians/ Have Many Cures to Their Credit. New York , April 4. Advicea from every direction fully confirm previous reports that the remarkable treatment for epilepsy being administered by the : onsulting physicians of the Dr. Water man Institute is achieving wonderful' results. Old and stubborn cases hav been greatly benefited and many pa tients claim to have been entirely cured. Persons suffering from epilepsy should write at once to Dr. Waterman Institute , 122 East 25th at , Branch 63 , New York , for a supply of the remedy , which Is being distributed gratuitously. PA'S ANSWER. "What Is an Indeterminate sentence pa ? " "Matrimony , my son. " SCALES ALL OVER HER BODY "About three years ago I was af fected by white scales on my knees and elbows. I consulted a doctor -who treated me for ringworm. I saw no change and consulted a specialist and he claimed I had psoriasis. I contin ued treatments under him for about six months until I saw scales break ing out all over my body save my face. My scalp was affected , and my hair began , to fall. I then changed doctors to no avail. I went to two hospitals and each wanted to make a study of the case and seemed unable to cure It or assure me of a cure. I tried several patent medicines and was finally advised by a friend who has used Cutlcura on her children since their birth , to purchase the Guticura Remedies. I purchased a cake of Soap , the Ointment and the Resolvent. After the first application the Itching was allayed.- "I am still using the Soap and Oint ment and now feel that none other Is good enough for my skin. The psor iasis has disappeared and I every where feel better. My hands were so disfigured before using the Cuticura Remedies that I had to wear gloves all the time. Now my body and hands are looking fine. " ( Signed ) Miss Sara. Burnett , 2135 Fitzwater St , Philadel phia , Pa , , Sept. 30 , 1910. Cuticura Soap (25c ) and Cutlcura Ointment (50c ) are sold throughoutv- the world. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp. , sole props. , 135 Colum bus Ave. , Boston , for free book on af fections of the skin and scalp. His Interest "You are going to interest yourself In this reform enterprise ? " "Certainly , " replied Senator Ser ghum. "But I thought it was unfavorable to your friends. " "It is. And I'm going to interest myself in It far enough to let m offer suggestions that will render it impractical. " Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA , a safe and sure remedy for infants and children , and see that it Bears the Signature In Use For Over 3O Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Rightly employed , the reason Is not a check to piety , but is Its regulator. It chastens and refines the flames of devotion In the human heart , but does not put It out. C. W. Wendte. Constipation causes and seriously aggra vates many diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pelleta. Tiny sugar-coated granules. Every church preaches louder by its. square dealing than "by Its high. shouting. _ To Get Its Beneficial Effects , Always Buy the Genuine $ YRUP-fl < iS Soid by all leading Druggists * ' * '