If? THE OMAHA DAILY KEE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1002. Tiie Omaiia Sunday Bee Ju. ROSE WATER, EDITOR. rUBLlSHED EVERT MOKNINO. TERMS OF SUUSCRIFTluN. Dally Iiee (without Hunuay), one iar..l.0i Umtly lw-e ana buiiuay, one lor liiUBirsied iee, un ltar kuniiay tlee, un iear Baluruay Bee, one Year 1 txj 'iwentipih Century f armer, One 1 ear... low DELIVERED 11 V CAKKltK. Dally hen (without Sunday), per copy.... 2c Dally liee twilhoui bumitiy), per week...lc Dally Bee (including bunuuy;, per week.. lie feunuay toi-e, per tu e evening Wee (Wlthi.ut n.alida) i, pel wee tec bvenlng Itee (Including bundsy), per week luc Complaints of Irrcgularltit s In delivery should be audresseu to cay Circulation De partment. OFF1CE8. Omaha The Dee Mulldlng. South Omaha City Hall ilulldlng. Twen-ty-lifth and M Streets. Council tiliilTs HI pearl Street. Chlrago li4u t'hlty Mulldlng. New iork 232 I'wrk Row ilulldlng. Washington Sol Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to news and edi torial matter ahould be addressed; Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. . BUSINESS LETTERS. Buslnes letters and remittances should be addressed: The Bee publishing Com pany, Omaha. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, payable) to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 3-eent stamps accepted In payment ot mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha, or eastern exchanKes, not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPAN V. STATEMENT Or CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, as: George B. Taachuck, secretary of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, ays that the actual number of full and complete copies of ' The Dally, Morning, : Evening and Hunaay nee pnniea uunn, th month ot August, Hw2 -was as follows: 1 1 38,720 S JU4.TTO 1 2tft,tj:t5 IM.dlO ' t 2IN.UUO , 7 28, TWO XH.TBO , t 2H.WJ0 10 88.TB0 1 it S8.760 i U an, 730 13 28,820 14 2M.IKIO li 28,7U0 IS... 17... 18... ... :o... 21... ..KH.UUO ..28,80 ..218( ..W,T70 . .:w,!jso ..no, tst ..2U.DOO 23. a.'. ao.Bio 24 28.7R.T a HO,HO 2 2I,84M 27 2,0 28 1HMMW 13 HO.070 8l .10,1 10 II 2u,iao Total 1MMV440 Less unsold and returned copies.... ,877 , Net total sales tw,(MI Net daily average 28,021 GEO. B. TZSCHUCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this 1st day of September, A. D., 1D02. M. B. HIJNC1ATE. (Seal.) Notary PublU. Omaha people will show their colors during the president's visit. Bryan democrats will readily credit the reports of a killing frost 1n Iowa. Revolutions seem to have no effect toward repressing ambitious aspirants for ths pre!'1enoy In Haytl. It la not for hauling democratic pros 'perlty that the railroads are ordering new locomotives by the hundred. An expert advocates Are Insurance for automobiles. Cyclone Insurance, we think, would be more appropriate. Maine went not 6nly republican but also prohibition. There Is no necessary connection, however, between the two. By all means control evil-doing trusts and combinations) but it Is not neces sary or wise to smash universal Indus try. No wonder President Roosevelt likens the trusts to the Mississippi river. He recalls the amount of water some of them contain. Iowa democracy refused to have a silver resolution on the ground that It is a dead Issue, and yet they put a Boer plank Into their platform. It Is worth noting that no sham battles are fought on the political field. In this country we have the real thing often enough to keep in practice. The Cuban legislature is going right ahead to authorise that Issue of $35, 000,000 of bonds. But the little detail of floating them may not be so easy. Wisconsin democrats In their platform pitch Into Governor La Follette just the same as If they bad not been con stantly showering bouquets upon him the last two years. The Iowa republican papers have wisely concluded to quit wrangling about the tariff at least till after a re publican congress has been elected to deal with the matter. Everybody will approve of Colonel Bryan going to Texas to hunt wildcats. That is better than the political wildcat schemes he has been exploiting in all the other states for years. If all the natural gag emitted by those West Indian volcanoes bad only been gated, to be served up for consumption as needed for winter warmth, the pros pective coal famine would not appear so aUsconifortlng. The democratic committee In the Eleventh Iowa district, after sweating over It for two weeks. Is still without a candidate for cougress, aud the legal time has nearly expired for filing nomi nations. Nobody will consent to the sacrifice. Colonel Bryan thinks Tom Johnson would be about right if he were ouly a little more staunch on the questiou of 1U to 1 free coinage. If pressed for an answer. Colonel Bryan would probably admit that he knows but one other dem ocrat who comes doner to his ideal than Tom Johnson. "Apples tnla season are of a finer quality than for several years and the price la within the range of every pock ethook," so the well known apple dealer la quoted. That offers a great big hunk of consolation for those who have been contemplating the sky acrsper figures to which too many artl cleg- of food have been marked up. Alt A VVF.A L lit BRKAtt WISKER. The pressure which the allied railroad corporations are bringing to lear upon wage workers, who are carried on their payroll, aud the Influence they are ex erting upon heavy shlpiers to bring pressure upon their employes in support of the renomination of f'niigrassiunn Mercer warrants an apcui to republican bread winners. When a man hires out for so much a day or so much a month his employer receives full value for his wages in mus cle and brain power. In other words, the toller who works for wages barters away his time and labor, but he does not barter away his soul. The greatest Insult that can be offered to the bread winner by the employer Is a command to do violence to his own conscience In the exercise of the elective franchise. In the dark ages when the tollers were the vassals of the landlord they were frequently asked the question, "Whose man are you," but no American citizen will allow such a question to be asked without feeling Just resentment. Omaha wage workers, whether they toll In the factory, packing house, machine shop or at headquarters are by rights entitled to. exercise an untr.immeled elective franchise in the Interest of the state and In the Interest of the musses of which they are an Integral part. The man who would allow himself to be coerced Into voting against bis own conscientious convictions is no better than a slave. No greater calamity could befall the republic than the enslavement of the tollers by their taskmasters. The most precious heritage of American trtcintn is the right to participate on equal terms with the richest man In the choice of public servants from constable to congressman, and from assessor to governor. r We feel sure that Omaha worklngmen will not ullow themselves to be driven by corporate slave drivers Into voting Into ofiice men who have nothing in common with the common people. . The crucial lest of the courage and patri otism of Omaha wage workers will come next Frlduy, when they are com manded to fall into line for the renoml natlou of David II. Mercer, who has rendered Invaluable service to the cor porations und may be depended upon to represent them In the future as lu the past regardless of the interests of the bread winners. NATURAL LAW AS A TRUST REMEDY. Harper's Weekly, which Is Justly re garded as an exponent of monopolistic theories, joins issue with President Roosevelt's notable pronouncement on trusts. The essence of the president's views, which he has pressed upon pub lic attention with such cogency aud vigor In recent speeches In New Eng land and elsewhere, is the need of .na tional supervision of overgrown and transgressing trade combinations, by act of congress, if that may lie suffi cient, or by amendment of the consti tution If necessary. And he therein em phasizes with great lmpresslveness the duty to coerce, by national power and authority, such trusts and combinations as violate the rights of individuals or contravene the public good. For this Harper's Weekly stigmatizes the president as advocating "state -Interference 'with 'the laws of nature, state opposition to a natural economic development," and as endeavoring "to Interfere with the laws of production and distribution." It la always some other kind of a law than the law of the land that has charms for the champion of lawless monopoly and the unre strained power of wealth. Laws of na ture are Invoked. What natural law warrants or breathes life Into a cor poration? For it is out of corporations or combinations of corporations that arise the evils which the president Is bravely and seriously challenging effort to rem edy. A corporation Is a purely artifi cial body, the creature of legislation, every faculty and power of which origi nates In explicit grant from the state- that is to say. In this country, at least, from the sovereign people. What kind of philosophy teaches that natural persons, every Individual citizen, shall be hedged about and rigorously subjected to the rule of the state wherever his action infringes the rights of his fellows, but which would make a big corporation or that more refined artificiality known as the trust superior to or free from law ful control, or, to use the language of Harper's Weekly, -relegate it to "the laws of nature?" The argument is neither consistent nor honest. It is not by natural law, but by a specially conferred right of emi nent domain, that a railway corporation Is clothed with the power of taking the property of citizens for right of way on the plea that public interest requires it. Why should not the public interest be supreme over the same railway eotiora tlou eltlier by itself or in combination with other like corporations, if It puts Itself iu position to abolish competition and arbitrarily tax the whole commu nity through the rate making power? That point, Indeed, has. been settled, although la the teeth of Identically the same argument to which Harper's J Weekly now resorts against President Roosevelt. The hard. Indisputable fact that looms up and cannot be evaded Is this: That gigantic corporations and combinations, whose management Is centralized in the hands of a few men. have actually got Into position In uiuuy cases to control arbitrarily trans portation, natural resources and even whole groups of Industries beyond relief either by competition or by ordinary process of law. It Is such combinations and trusts as are themselves suspend ing "the laws of production and distri bution" that President Roosevelt pro poses to subject to efficient restraint and supervision under national author ity as the only power big enough to deal with them. The power of taxatlou is a power as dangerous as It Is Imperial. We do not permit the agents of the government it self to exercise that sovereign power, save under most drastic constitutional and legislative- limitations, enforcing upon them supervision anil publicity and always keeping them directly resonl ble at short intervals to the coplc. The very point and pith of the trust questiou is the practical power of gigantic com binations and trusts to put rough hauds down into the pockets of the people a thousand times more deeply than the government Itself Is permitted to do. To say that such combinations, repre senting hundreds of millions or a billion of capital, whose operations cover per haps a dozen states, or even reach out Into the International field, shall be left to "natural law" Is to make them supreme over all law. No one, not eveu Harper's Weekly, pretends that they are free from wrongs of grave and far reaching effect, and Its contention, In final analysis, is simply that they should be left to right themselves without other protection or remedy. This Is not the American view. Presi dent Roosevelt expresses the growing national conviction when he declares that "the first thing Is to give the na tional government the power" to tna&e big coiporatlous, as well as small ones, obey the law. !' MkUUHlAM. One year ago today the nation mourned In deepest sorrow the death of William McKlnley. On this first anniversary of that great bereavement the American people render affectionate tribute to the memory of the martyr president From thousands of pulpits will be delivered eulogies upon his Illus trious life and character. From myriad choirs will be chanted the solemnly im pressive music of his favorite hymns. Again the thoughts of the people will be directed to the contemplation of the great career, the splendid service to his country, the beautiful domestic devo tion, the blameless life aud the calm Christian resignation in the face of death of William McKlnley. A people who cherish and honor the memory of those who have given an example of true citizenship, of lofty Ideals, of fidelity to duty, of a constant aim to elevate ther fellow men and of patriotic self-sacrifice such a people cannot wander far from their duty and their obligations to their country and to mankind. The American people more than any other cherish and honor the memory of their Illustrious countrymen. Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Lin coln, (Jurfleld, Urant are revered by the nation and their example as citizens and statesmen and patriots is constantly cited for the guidance of their country men. The name of William McKlnley is associated with those whose memory the people most honor and in whose lives they find the highest inspiration lo dutiful citizenship, to earnest patriotism and to upright conduct In all the rela tions and affairs, of life. The character of McKlnley merits the highest admira tion. His career can be commended to the youth of America as worthy of emulation. lie was true and loyal In every relation. He was faithful to every trust, public and private. lie had faith in the people and he never be trayed the confidence they reposed in him. His highest purpose as a public man was to increase the power and pro mote the welfare of bis country and how well he succeeded in this our posi tion among the nations of the earth at tests. Of kindly and gentle nature and never Intolerant, he was yet a man of strong and earnest convictions, foj which he contended firmly and per sistently. Ills amiable and sincere way of dealing with men won him the re spect and esteem of political opponents aud the affection and confidence of po litical associates. The Christian side of William McKinley's character was fully shown In his last recorded words: "It is God's way; His will, not ours, be done." The career of William McKlnley Is in Imperishable part of American history. His service to the country as a states man was unsurpassed. To his wisdom and foresight Is very largely due the commanding position of the United States among the powers of the earth. It Is well, therefore, to pay loving tribute to the memory of this Illustrious man, to point to' his character as a Christian and a citizen and to Invoke his example for the emulation of Ameri can youth. AMERICAN ifiYASIOX OF CANADA. Nearly 20,000 persona went from the United States to Manitoba and other northwestern Canadian territory In the year ending with last June and this American invasion of the Dominion still coutiuues. A correspondent of the New York Evening Post, writing from Winni peg, says that in point of desirability, If not Indeed In actual numbers, the United States Immigrants Into the Ca nadian west are now by far the most im portant class. There can be no doubt of this in view of the fact that they hare taken a great deal of money Into that country and most of them buy their lands outright and proceed at once to Improve them on a scale hitherto quite unknown there. The natural effect has been to materially increase the value of the land, which has more than doubled In price within the last two years, although still relatively cheap In com parison with productive land In the uorthwest of this couutry. The reasons for the Influx of settlers from the United States are said by the Post's, correspondent to be both senti mental and practical. A considerable number of those who have gone to Can ada are Freuch Canadians who came te the United States years ago and who are Influenced to a certain degree by sentimental considerations, but the prac tical fact that laud is to be had so much cheaper in northwestern Canada than In this couutry Is of course the controlling motive. What effect this America u in vasion will ultimately have in a political way is of course a question of some in terest, but there are not likely to be any very Important developments in this di rection for some years. It is naturally assumed that these American settlers lu the Domlnlou will favor closer trade relations with the United States. That would obviously lie In their Interest and they may be expected to Join those who desire that the American market shall be opened to the free admission of the natural products of Canada. It Is very Improbable, however, that this element will exert much influence UHn the reciprocity question, although they may be backed by certain Interests here which would be benefited by reciprocity. It Is Impossible to say with any de gree of certainty how long this emigra tion from the United States to the Do minion will continue. It is quite active at present, but It seems a reasonable conclusion that the movement must come to an end within a few years. As yet there is no indication that this loss of population to our northwest Is seri ously felt RAiLWAY UATt. IXTIAM. It Is an interesting fact that some of the leading railroads of the country have been Investigating rate cutting by smaller roads, with the result that tralitc ouiciuls of the Wisconsin Central aud the Ann Arbor ruilroud compuuie Im.e been indicted. It is stated that ever since a number of the most prominent roads had been enjoined from making rebates their official have kept a watch on the roads that had not been reached by the courts aud succeeded in si'cin lng enough inaterlul to have the officials of the roads accused of mukiug rebates brought before the courts. A ulspatch says that as all the lending roads are living up to their tariffs It Is the intention of the officers to make all fines, either east or west of Chicago, do the same. It is the lirst Instance of the railroads giving support to the In terstate Commerce commlsslou in this direction, the roads having done all the investigating, and it Is to be hoped there Is substantial foundation for the state ment that it is the intention of the lead lug companies to have the practice of making out falso way bills and the grant ing of rebates absolutely stopped. There Is no doubt that they can accomplish this if they earnestly desire to and It Is manifestly In their Interest, as well as in the Interest of the great majority of shippers, that they should do so. The announcement of such a policy on the part of the leading railroads will of it self go for to put a stop to the unlaw ful practices. The action of the Inter state Commerce commission against some of the most prominent roads ap pears to have bad a salutary effect aud suggests that the course pursued is the one which should have been employed from the beginning to compel obedience to the law. HERMANS AAD AMERICANS. Emperor William has treated his American military visitors with marked courtesy and cordiality. They have been given every opportunity that could properly be accorded to officers of a for eign army to witness the maneuvers of the German army and have in other respects been treated with notable con sideration. On taking leave of the em peror he expressed himself as having enjoyed their visit and spoke of his re gard for President Roosevelt whose versatility and courage the kaiser espe cially admires. It 1b not to be doubted that Emperor William has a very friendly feeling to ward the United States and this Is prob ably more generally shared at present by the German people than for many years. There has recently been criti cism of Americans in some of the Ger man newspapers, with particular refer ence to our "arrogance," but this is not to be taken as Indicating a general sen timent It must be admitted, however, that the criticism Is not wholly unwar ranted. A few American public men have talked indiscreetly regarding the possibility of a future disturbance of friendly relations between this country and Germany, growing out of designs of the latter In this hemisphere, while some of our naval officers and news papers have encouraged this sort of talk. Then it is charged, perhaps not unjustly, that some of the Americans who visit Germany talk too big and boast too much. Ai lthls is naturally offensive to a people who are Justly proud of their country, their prowess and their attain ments and it Is not surprising that they manifest a little resentment Still there is no doubt that the United States has at least as large a measure of German friendship as any other country and there is good reason to think that this will continue to be so as long as the influence of Emperor William dominates the German people. national incorporation. Mr. Roberts, director of the mint, dis cussing the question of government con trol of corporations, expressed the opin ion that if there was a national Incor poration act, under Which business en terprises could voluntarily incorporate and thus place themselves under na tional supervision, the companies that desire to place their stock on the market would probably be compelled by public sentiment to organise under it In vestors, he thought would give a de cided preference to the shares ot such corporations. "The prestige of the na tional banking system," said Mr. Rob erts, "Is due to the fact that it is under national supervision. Although every state maintains a system of supervision over banks Incorporated under its own laws, it is well known that the general public has a preference for banks on the national system." It Is the opinion of some of the ablest and most experienced corporation law yers that If there was a national cor poration law the companies that desire to place their stock on the market would avail themselves of it They would do so for self -protect Ion, as It Is quite neces sary for sound corporations to create a public distinction between themselves and those who are following In then wake and Attempting to imitate their standing and position. In the next place financial Interests would favor It Then corporations would avail themselves of the law as a protection against the varied, divers and inconsistent laws of various states. It Is urged In behalf of such a law that no corporation en gaged In Interstate commerce, no cor poration desiring to do business through out the length and breadth of the couu try, could afford to be other than a na tional organization. President Roosevelt Is understood to favor some such corporation law as that of Massachusetts, which has worked very well, though not entirely without defects. Its chief merit appears to be In the protection It gives the public against fraudulent capitalization. The question of national Incorporation Is cer tainly an Interesting one lu connection with the subject of governmental regu lation and suihtvIsIou of the corpora tions engaged lu Interstate business aud It Is quite probable that It will receive attention at the next session of couress. j The elections iu Vermont aud Maine having been held, democratic news papers are engaged lu their usual pas time of arguing (hat the returns have no slguiiii ,iuce. Why .ot Try Hobby lluramf New York World. The record of soldiers disabled by Presi dent Roosevelt's rough ride at Chicks mauga warrants the suxgisUon that future escorts be mounted oo trolley cars. ln ii Arc llurn, a I'm !!. Kansas City Star. The present season shows a record of sixty-three fatalities among Alpine cliin'u- ers. This Is not so many when one re calls the old saying that a fool is born into this world every minute. Settling an Old Score. Indianapolis Journal, mr. bryan would put all who own sbarct in manufacturing combinations In stripes. By so doing Mr. Bryan doubtless thinks he would get rid of a large number of democrats who did not vote for him. Don't Poraet Plnsj Pouit. Brooklyn Eagle. With war games In the sound, (amen of politics In all the towns, shady games In Saratoga, golf and tennis In Brooklyn and progressive euchre at the sewing circle. It must be confessed that we have become a sporting nation. l.ookK that Way. Buffalo Express. Five of the anthracite coal carrying rail roads report net earnings of $898,494 for July, as compared with 82.941,508 In July, 1901. Will the losses for the entire strike season be Bhlfted to the coal consumers In the form of higher prices for fuel In the next few years? Reversing the Invasion. Boston Transcript. Hundreds of thousands of tons of coal have been bought from English mines to be shipped to the United States. Heavy orders for steel and Iron are also be lug placed there by firms who want orders filled at once. The American "invasion" Is not without alleviations for the aggrieved Briton. Manhood and Cltlsenahlp. Philadelphia Record. President Roosevelt believes In labor or ganizations and that men should stand to gether, but he evidently thinks it more Important that each man should stand for. himself In order that there may be estab lished "a higher average of Individual citi zenship." To use his own phrase, he wants a citizenship with no yellow streaks In it. Object of Patrlotte Iaterest. Boston Transcript. The purchase of the ancestral "home of the Washington family In England by a wealthy American is an event which should be regarded with approval by the people of both natlcns. It ought to be fitted to be come a center of patrlotlo interest for all Americans who visit England and for all Englishmen who regard with pride the achievements of the children of her sturdy civilization in other lands. , Warm Bertha la Reserve. Baltimore American. In that land of shadows where men are supposed to repent the wrong deeds done In this life some obscure corner will doubt less be reserved for those who have been worse than sinners In that they were blun derers. There will meet the trolley man who did not notice, the boy who left the door of tte elevator open, the man who rocked the boat and the Individual who did not know It was loaded. Doubtless, too, this will be one of the most unhappy groups among the multitudes. Swell Fronts Oat of Fashion. Chicago Record-Herald. The announcement that stomachs will not ha in vogue In the smart circles this fall and winter will be distressing news to those ladles who have been carelessly permitting nature to take its course In the matter ot embonpoint. But this is the edict of the autocrats of fashion, and ladies who per sist In wearing stomachs cannot hop- to pass muster In the smart set. "Straight fronts or nothing" Is the decree of the Na tional Dressmakers' association. The stom ach Is no longer in style. TO DANCE OR MOT TO DANCE, Yoath Nods Assent Wall Flowers Keed the Eserelse. Boston Transcript. Is It to be a dancing winter? From various signs ot the times the natural conclusion is that things In the dance line will look up as they have not done for several seasons. There are two or three reasons which may be discovered for this if one cares to know them, but the most Interesting seems to be found In the gen eral favor that la bestowed upon all exer cises favorable to physical culture. That dancing, if Indulged la temperately, sets the blood to circulating healthfully there Is no doubt, and sines every roan, woman and child nowadays does dally perform certain stunts recommended for that pur pose, as a duty or as a pleasure, It is quite to be expected that In the list ot beneficial exercises dancing will have a place. Looking at the recreation In this way it Is easy to ses how men and women who have hesitated to Join la dancing because of a certain maturity of years and of figure will throw aside all fear of what young persons may aay of their attempts to renew their youth, and go on with the dance on the plea that they need the exer cise, and forget those troublesome re minders of the passing of time called "birthdays." This attitude, then, coming to be generally accepted, we shall expect to see all kinds of affairs ending with a dance or two. Meetings of women's clubs st which niea will be admitted will be mors frequent; Indeed, the "annual gen tleman's night" which all clubs observe may be changed to read "the fortnightly gentleman's night," and men's clubs will Institute a more generous sprinkling of ladles' nights" In order that dancing may be a frequent Joy perhaps. Oa every card that one receives then to J "LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT." President McKinley's Favorite Hymn. By Cardinal Newman. Lead, kindly Light! amid the encircling gloom. Lead thou tne on; The night Is dark, and I am far from Lome, Lead thou me on; Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see The distant scene; one step enough for me. I was not ever thus, nor prayed that thou 8houldst lead me on; I loved to choose and see my path; but now Lead thou me on; I loved the garish day, and spite of fears, Pride ruled my will Iteuieuiber not past ycai i So long thy power has blessed me sure It still Will lead me on O'er moor and feu, o'er crag and torrent, till The night is gone; And with the morn those angel faces smile Vli!ch I have loved long since, and lost awhile! a function or affair there will probably be the legend "it Is to dance." To those who would know something about the amount of exercise included In an evening, or a part of an evening, devoted to dancing It may be said that four waltzes equal Just about two miles of good brisk walking In their ability to stir the blood and clear the mind of worrying thoughts. Perhaps, if dancing Is really taken up seriously as a phase of physical culture we shall see put down on every dance card the esti mated equivalent of each dance in smart walking on a smooth road. TOO WAXY DOCTORS. And Not a Few Medical Colleses Are Worse Tli an Werthlraa. Detroit Journal. The decision of the faculty ot the Cincin nati College of Medicine not to reopen the doors of the college this fall marks the way that a great number of medical colleges will doubtless be forced to walk within the next few years. The faculty gives as the reason for its action that the attendance has fallen oft so much since the enactment of the state law requiring rigid antranoe examinations that it no longer paid to run the college. It is estimated that ,000 doctors are graduated each year in the United States. Taking this as a basis, it is not a difficult problem In arithmetic to discover that the number of doctors is out of all proportion te the number of possible patients. The number, however, is not so great an evil as the Ill-prepared condition In which some of these young medics are turned out to practice. Many colleges take men who lack entirely the education necessary to (It them for the study of medicine. These col leges run their students through a two, three or four years' course of study and then let them loose on a long-suffering public. K !w, therefore, whirl; ptial prnvMe that men graduated from a medical college must be thoroughly qualified to practice medi cine according to the most enlightened and humane methods is a public benefaction. A summary of the expression of the opinions of many eminent doctors, as published In a current medical Journal, shows that the method most favored is that of rigid en trance requirements.. New York has led the way In establishing a uniform entrance ex amination and In that state no one can study to be a doctor without first passing such an examination. Ohio followed last year and It is in consequence of this act that the Cincinnati college has closed Its doors. Minnesota has fallen Into line and, to a certain extent, Pennsylvania, also. Illinois has passed a similar law, which will come into force next January. There Is a proposition to establish a simi lar law In Michigan. There are six medical colleges this state two in Ann Arbor, one In P Tinaw and three in Detroit. Each college as Its own standard of entrance. With the competition that 'must exist in the presence of so many unendowed colleges, since they must pay expenses, too high- a standard cannot be maintained. It Is also obviously Impossible to provide all the new and costly experimental apparatus for so many laboratories or to find first-class professors for so many positions. A common sense view ot the situation must make it clear that the day of the many medical colleges bsa set; that the day of the few choice ones has dawned. With fewer colleges sad fewer and more thoroughly prepared men studying medi cine the- profession will at once reach a higher level and will be able to exceed greatly the large measure of good which it is even now rendering to mankind. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. The Grand Island Independent sarcas tically suggests that the Omaha base ball team tackle ping pong. Oo tot As the season and the prices advance the coal question provokes considerable heat. Unfortunately, the heat cannot be utilised. A Missouri doctor pronounces a steady diet of onions and whisky a sure cure for malaria. He neglects to state what be comes of the patient Milwaukee has safely passed through a week of "Jahrmarkt."- It should be ex plained that a Jahrmarkt Is one of the things that help to make Milwaukee famous. The youngest bicycle rider In the world, an Indiana product, is dead at the advanced age of S years. Hs made a record when only I years old and at once began to grow wings. ' Tom Taggart of Indianapolis Is support ing the revised democratic platform so cor dially as to give rise to the suspicion that he has gives Bryaa the melanoholy tip, "Stop my paper." New Tork Is about to Introduce perfume concerts "to cultivate the olfactory nerves by artistic manipulation of asatketle scents." No doubt 'many New Yorkers would be Improved by copious spraying. Since the two-hat plan of assuaging a thirst has been suppressed by Secretary Shaw the tabloid high ball comes to ths re lief of treasury clerks. After all, ths up-to-date Inventor Is the genuine Johnny-on-the-spot for suffering mankind. Papers from Sheffield, England, announce that Major Church Howe, chief consul, has been given an assistant by the government and at his suggestion one Colonel Hughes, secretary of the Sheffield Chamber of Com merce, was appointed to ths new post. When ths Danish literary expedition of Greenland reached the capital of that country they found that Greenland for a year had been without a physician, where fore Dr. Berthelsea found himself ths most welcome member of the expedition. A Philadelphia man has been making a fine living by falling off street cars and collecting damages. But his presence of mind failed blm oa the last fall and the wheels gathered la two legs. As a conse quence ths unfortunate Is not In politics to kick hard. A Chicago woman who baa had only one pair of shoes In seven years, Instead of get ting her picture In the papers at ths head of a testimonial for the manufacturer, did the unromantlc thing of suing for a di vorce. Some women are as bard te please as the average man. BLASTS FROM RAM'S HORN. The bright preacher does not always make the shining church. The money-seeking church is not con cerned with man-saving. The worship of material success Is likely to work the spiritual failure of America. You may try to do many a day's worry, but you can only do one day's work at a time. Ood did not design the church to be a mere lylng-ln hospital, but a recruiting office tor God's soldiers. The Great Physician never lacks patience sad He knows that the bitterest medicine often cures the quickest True education looks to the strengthen ing of the hull of the ship rather than to the gilding of the figurehead. When we get so selfish that we want ths earth we are not likely to give much thought to the world to come. Supposing God demanded His share of the profits arising from your use of the lite He has lent you, what would you have left? Man cannot do without a creed! He must have a backbone, but that Is only a part of him. If be la all backbone, we should call blm a post, with no backbone, a Jelly Ash. BECVLAR SHOTS AT THE PILP1T. Baltimore American: In Ohio a preacher is running for office, and his pulpit will be occupied by politicians while he is on the stump. This may make better men of the politicians, but we fear the effect upon the preacher. Brooklyn Eagle: Father Mary, one of the truly heroic souls of Martinique, is dead, a futile sacrifice. He insisted on staying at Morne Rouge to minister to a company too lazy or too foolish to walk a couple ot miles to a safe district. Chic&sO Chronicle: "Zlcn," shouts Broth, r Dowie, "will win by lovis," after which be proceeds to address the ransomed sinner as a swlae-eating leper, a tobacco-chewing hyena and a monster of iniquity who ought to be In Jail. Brother Dowie evidently be- lieves that Zlon loveth whom It chasteneth. Buffalo Express: Missionary Stone feels that the public did not grow sufficiently enthusiastic over her lecture tour. With all the respect in the world for Miss Stone, the American pointed out some months ago that she did not possess the necessary vaudeville accomplishments which would have made her lectures popular. New York Tribune: Traders' Point, a vlU lage ten miles from Indianapolis, Is greatly excited over the proposed bringing of aa organ into the church at that place, and the trouble has resulted In the destruction of property, personal encounters and various appeals to law which are destined to keep the bitterness alive and perma nently estrange many who have been life long friends. Whltecap notices have been freely distributed, and many farmers are housing their stock at night and sleeping with loaded guns within reach or are em ploying men to stand guard over thel property. Boston Transcript: Surely the. world does move and must move, but its progress sometimes makes the head swim and the tooting unsteady for honest believers In what they have always been told, accord ing to a New York telegram. Rev. Dr. R. B. MacArther, pastor of Calvary Baptist church In that city, declared that "the dropping of water on an Infant at birth was heathenism, and that the idea that Ood would forever condemn an Inno cent but unbaptized babe makes him a tyrant, a monster and a demon." Very few persons, perhaps, will disagree with Dr. MacArthur In this declaration, hut the time is not far away when Infant damna tion was a doetrlne viewed with com placency by hundreds ot thousands of ex cellent and amiable Christians, and when baptism was regarded not merely as a symbol but as a sovereign remedy tor In herlted sin. When a Baptist minister openly asserts that "baptism never saved, a human soul," the effect must be stagger Ing to the few who still cling to the tradi tions of a gloomy past, but to most persona It will be received as an evangel of a better and brighter future for Christianity. DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. . Chicago Newe: Mrs. Homer What do you think of my new sown? Mrs. WMluwir-vu, ' ' ' Only last week I bought our cook a dress of tne same piec u Boston Transcript: He Constance, can you give me any hope? WIU you ever smile upon my suit? She Will I ever smile upon it? Why. Horace, I never think of it but I'm on the broad grin. Philadelphia Press: "What la 'Platonlo friendship,' anyway?" "That's the feeling a young grass widow and her admirer experience while they're waiting for her divorce to be granted." , New Tork Weekly: Mr. Gumpss That boy will never be good for anything until he marries. Mrs. Oumpss I suppose not. Mr. Gumpss No. He's got to get over the habit of hanging around the house. Ohio State Journal: "Do you take this woman for better or for worse" began the clergyman, but before he could proceed further he was interrupted. "It's too early to tell yet," answered the groom; "you'll have to give me a few weeks' time, sir." Baltimore News: "Miss RUhly," pleaded the kneeling youth, "tell me. Is there any hope for me?" I can t say." replied the poetical girl; "you might consult an Insanity expert, however. Puck: "Dat'a it, Mame! You kin see his mother Is petlln' aud spolUn' blm, an' I s'po.e he'll go along dat way till he gits married 1" "Yes, an' den be won't hardly know what struck him!" Chicago Post: - "Do you believe that women should propose? "Well, that depends." "Impends on what?' "Depends on whether the woman in ques tion is attractive enough to make a man propose." Judge: Mother What do you want to marry hlra for? lies poorer ttuui Job's turkey! II. n.Kl., ft,, f lr..-m. 1. 1 ... all my heart and soul and'rulnd. ' - in hi. uon i von know love Ilk tht , a n ' Ma.ikiu ,, ' t t a week I " ' "YW