0 TITE OMjVITA DAILY BEE: THUHSDAY, JUNE 11, 1003. Tiie Omaha Daily Bee E. ROSE WAT EK, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNINO. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Bee (without Bunday). One Teor..$4.nn tiiy ana Sunday, one xear. Ilustrate1 Hre. One Year Sunday Hw, Unit Year Saturday Hee. One Year Twentieth Century Farmer, One Year., DELIVERED BY CARRIER, Fally Res (without Bundsy). per copy.. 1R' iim. fm.Khn.it Bunrlavl ner WWR. 6 00 too 2 (O 1 R 1.00 . ic 120 Lally Re (Including Hunday), per week..lc Sunday Hee. per ropy J Evening lim (without Sunday), per week. So Evening Boa (Including Bunday), Pr weed 10e Complaints of Irregularities In delivery hould be addressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee bulldlnf. South Omaha City Hail Building, Twen-ty-fllth and M Streets. Council HIiifTs 10 pearl Street, ("hlrago 164H Unity Building. New York 232 Park Row Building. Washington oOl Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial matter ihould be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft. express or postal order, payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps accepted in payment of mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THE BEhJ PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss.: George U. Tsschuck, secretary ot Tne Be Publishing Company, being duly sworn says that the actual number of full and complete copies ot Tne Dally, Morning. Evening and Sunday Bee printed during tin month of May, UM3, was as follows: 1 8MMM 17 88,480 t ao,75 u ai.oao uo.itoo i ,o,tso 4 ao,BIH 20 80,800 1 80,730 21 8O.8T0 85,670 7 80,070 1 30,810 1 80.T4O 10 17,77B 11 30,440 12 80,370 13... so.uao 14 30,730 15 SO.USO 14 80,H J2 30440 ZS.. 8O.8U0 24 28,230 36 30,830 26 80,700 27 8O.7B0 28 80,680 29 80.W00 30 81,!W0 1 27,000 WW.tMHI Less unsold and returned copies 10,348 Net total sales U4U,SBil Net average sales 80.43T OEORGE B. TZSCHUCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this Slat day of May, A. D. WO. M. B. H UNGATE. (Seal.) Notary Publlo. Joseph Chamberlain must feel like the man who picked up the hot end of tho political poker. To the other adjectives used to de scribe the Mississippi we will now hare to add the word deceitful. How accommodating of the fire fiend to wait until summer before disporting himself at the Florida winter resorts. The marriage of Governor Bailey of Kansas to a Nebraska woman may be taken as. a celebration of the Kansas Nebraska act. The county seat fight In Boyd county has been terminated without loss of life. These friendly frontier contests are not what they used to be. - (Senator Clark of Montana will pre side over the coming session of the ir rigation congress. Senator Clark's ex perience with stock watering gives him special qualifications for this position. The question who is to pay the engi neers engaged to appraise the water works property is not half so important as the question whether the city has a fair show with the appraisement board. 11 Omaha has fortunately had no serious automobile accidents as yet That Is no reason, however, why precautions should not be taken to prevent them by speed regulations and boiler inspec tion. The ' antl-macblne councllmen are standing nobly by the machine mayor while the machine councllmen are try ing to toss him over their horns. The spectacle is exhilarating as well as sug gestive. Tho city council has repeatedly turned down various propositions to supply street signs for the privilege of using them also for advertising purposes. The proposition has no more merit now than when presented the last time. Is it not Just barely possible that the friction over the ratification of the Pan ama canal treaty Is being encouraged, if not Incited, by people interested In the Nicaragua route? If the treaty goes through the Nicaragua project Is dead, while should it fall Nicaragua will have another chance. It is to be noted that according to the city comptroller's exhibit the Judgment 'fund which started out with I? fun nl five months ago has already dropped down to $1,083, with seven months of the year to hear from. Unless the new city attorney gets down to business better than he has so far, the Judg ment fund will be the chief contributor to the municipal overlap at the end of the year. The fact that the receipts from police court fines are overtopping the record does not mean that Omaha Is more dis orderly or more lawless than usual. It means that we have a police judge who has no special falling of leniency to ward petty offenders, that w have a police court clerk who Is vigilant In the collection of fine money, and also that the people arralgnid in the police court now have the wherewithal to pay the penalty. If we wll! believe President Baer, the anthracite coal roads are following in the footsteps of Jim Hill's community of Interest combines In conducting trans portation business on a philanthropic basis. Mr. Baer would have us under stand that his corporation Is making no profit whatever out of the coat business, but, on the contrary, is yielding Its right to reasonable compensation out of pure soft-heartedness for the poor coal con sumer. The .question is, has Mr. Baer really pursuaded himself to believe his own story or does he think the public la more gullible than he is! DOMMATUta THt TACIITIC, The Interest crested abroad by the statement of President Roosevelt that the United States Is destined to domi nate the rnclfle ocean, meaning thereby that this country would ultimately have commercial pre-eminence In .that great sea, has been regnrded even In this country, as well as In Europe, as a somewhat extravagant assumption. Yet a little thoughtful attention to the con ditions can hardly fall to bring con viction that there are excellent reasons In support of the president's view. In deed, It would seem to be Inevitable that In time this nation, unless Its people should become utterly indifferent to their great opportunity, must attain and hold a pre-emlnenence In the commerce of the Taclflc which will give It prac tical domination there. This does not mean that any other nation is to be excluded from the trade of the Pacific, for that Is not the policy of this country, but simply that the United States is to enjoy in that ocean a larger measure of commercial Interest and power than any other country. A Pacific coast paper very well ex plains the situation In saying that the United States is the dominant power In the Western hemisphere, being su perior in strength, in Influence and in authority to all other American states. This indisputable fact does not involve the idea that this nation claims to ex ercise any dominion or direct authority over any of the other American states. It does not exclude from consideration the fact that there are other powers having interests on the Pacific which they are expected to care for and pro tect Great Britain, Russia and other powers have Interests in the Pacific which they .will care for and endeavor to promote. But all these are inferior to the interests of this country, if we properly measure what should be ours In the vast possibilities of Pacific com merce which the future holds. It Is this which Mr. Roosevelt had in mind when he spoke of the dominance of the United States in the Pacific ocean. He had no idea of the exercise of an au thority not entirely peaceful and having a due regard for the rights and privi leges of every other nation. He had no thought of any such impossible thing as a domination of the Pacific to the exclusion of any other country. What he obviously meant was that by reason of the position of the United States in relation to the Pacific it is inevitable that this country must secure and main tain a pre-eminence upon that great ocean. It is impossible to doubt that this will come, though the time of its attain ment may be somewhat remote. Ameri can enterprise, however, Is already being directed toward Its achievement and this Is of a nature that promises success. There is being, shown a belief in the possibilities of Asiatic commerce which is of a very practical character and there is good reason to expect tliat this will be more strongly manifested from year to year, as the opportunities in connection with this trade become more fully appreciated. Meanwhile there can be no doubt that the forecast of Mr. Roosevelt in regard to our com mercial dominance in the Pacific was made wisely and with a substantial basis. CUTTING OUT POLITICS. It is said to be the determination of President Roosevelt and the postmaster general that hereafter the Postofflce de partment is to be rnn independent of politics. A Washington dispatch to an eastern paper says that the future pol icy will be to abandon the policy of notifying congressmen of prospective changes la their postofflces. The de partment will go right ahead .and ar range Its own affairs to suit the judg ment of the responsible officials. All necessary information will promptly be furnished senators and representatives when requested, but an effort will be made to eliminate the postal service as a factor in local politics throughout the country. This proposition Is stated to have orig inated with Postmaster General Payne and to have received the hearty ap proval of the president Doubtless such a change from the method thnt has been pursued would be found bene ficial, if it be practicable, but it Is safe to say that it would encounter a very strong opposition from congressmen generally, with whom the naming of postmasters Is a prerogative that most of them will be very unwilling to sur render. There is of course no valid rea son why the department cannot select J e"e meM without the intervention of senators and representatives, or that If this were done the selections would not be quite as satisfactory as under the present method, but the course that is pursued has prevailed so long that the proposed departure, assuming the report to be well founded, will not be readily accepted by members of congress gen erally, however strongly approved by popular opinion.- That the elimination of the postal service as a factor in polk ut-B in ui-eiraoie IS SO 0DV10US OS not tO need argument. IT HA T B KPUB L ICA AS A R C S TITL C D TO. Commenting on a gratuitous remark in one of the country papers to the ef feet that the really good thing the re publican state committee did at its last meeting wss to reduce the representa tlou of Douglas county in the coming state convention, the Lincoln Star com bats the intlmstion that representation wss reduced and declares that "at any rate Douglas county will have all the representation that it Is entitled to in the state convention." The Star would go even further and have the vote on governor adopted perms neptly as the basis of representation because the candidate for governor aspires to the chief office in the state snd is entitled to the full' party rote, While this discussion is purely aca aemic so rar as tins year s conven tkn U concerned, there la bo km t fogsring the political atmosphere in which it is enveloped. There Is really no more reason why the vote on gov ernor should be the lmsts of delegate spportlonment to conventions than the vote on congressman, on treasurer, on school superintendent or on university regent As a matter of fact, with the exception of Hayward In l&W, the re publican vote on governor bus not been the basis adopted In Nebraska for ten years past After each presidential election the vote on president Is usually accepted and it has so happened in this state that on several occasions besides the last the vote on governor has not reflected the relative party strength of different sections of the state and has therefore been discarded in favor of some candidate more rep resentative. What every political party should aim at In Its conventions is to accord Its members a proportionate voice Ir respective of the particular county or subdivision In which they happen to reside. If abnormal conditions have entered Into the vote for governor the vote for some other officer Should be taken, or perhaps, the average vote cast for all the candidates on the ticket To give a county extra representation because the particular candidate hap pened to live there and to receive a per sonal vote from the opposition is just as unfair as to cut down the vote ot the home county of the opposing can didate, where the latter would natur ally run abend. The party policy above all things should be directed toward building up by attracting new recruits and not toward tearing down by driv ing away support Just to punish some county In which for local reasons a par ticular candidate for governor happened to be unpopular. MAYOR AND COUNCIL. The affairs of the municipal corpora tion known as the City of Omaha are administered by a president, under the title of mayor, and a board of nine di rectors, designated by the charter as councllmen. The mayor and council, that is, the president and board of di rectors, are, by the city charter, made jointly responsible for the appointment of all officers and employes on the city payroll, except such as are made elec tive by the people. While the mayor has the initiative of selection and appointment the council is empowered to pass judgment upon his appointees and may ratify or reject at its pleasure, or rather accordlug to its best judgment, such of the mayor's ap pointees as it may deem Incompetent, unworthy or unsatisfactory. In this re spect the council differs In no essential particular from the board of directors of any other corporation whose presi dent is required to recommend subordi nate officers for ratification or rejection. The refusal of the city council, acting In the capacity of a board of directors, to confirm appointments submitted by the mayor does not necessarily reflect upon the integrity or sound Judgment of the mayor, nor does it imply that the rejected appointee is incompetent or dis honest The refusal to confirm may, as in the present conflict between the mayor, and council, simply Indicate a lack of courtesy or discretion on one side, and an insistence upon mutual recognition and mutual co-operation on the other. In other words, the majority of the council have locked horns with the mayor over appointments because it feels slighted by the mayor's attempt to ignore its prerogatives as a co-ordinate branch of government. . Such a contention is by no means new, although deplorable for many reasons. As a general thing these conflicts be tween governing bodies occur between representatives of opposite political par ties when, for example, the mayor Is re publican and the council democratic or vice versa or, as in the controversy be tween the Board of Public Works and the council, the one body is democratic and the other republican. But there Is really no excuse for such discord where the mayor and council profess the same political creed and belong to the same political denomination or faction. In the long run such contests are like the marital debates between man and wife the woman always has the last say and so has the council, unless there Is mutual concession and conciliation. South Omaha voters are being bom barded, importuned and Instructed by working men, who do not labor, ' and taxpayers who do not pay taxes except over their nom de plume, to vote for every bond proposition submitted for the coming special election. One of the reasons advanced to clinch the bond proposition is that South Omaha may be annexed to Omaha, and that when it becomes a part of Greater Omaha it will either be slighted or totally neg lected In the matter of public improve ments. Such calamity forecasts are not borne 'out by the experience of other towns annexed to larger cities. In every Instance of annexation, notably Chi cago, Cleveland, St. Louis and other cities whose limits have been extended and whose governments have been amalgamated the territory annexed has secured more improvements in the first year after annexation than they had prior to their absorption. Does It stand to reason that if South Omaha became a part of Omaha that Omaha would not extend its paving districts, sewerage districts and fire protection to Sou,h Omaha, not merely as a matter of pub lic necessity, but as a matter of pride? Congressman Burton, who has been looking Into river and harbor improve ments abroad, suggests that the French system of requiring the localities di rectly concerned to share in the ex penses of the improvement work is worthy of serious consideration by con gress, with a view to a-orporatlon Into the American scheme of river and har bor improvements. It is safe to say that if the state or other subdivisions wltbia which ths appropriations hava been applied had to put up BO per cent of the fund a whole lot of questionable enterprises would be struck off the list especially in the south, which has been the most voracious guest at the river and harbor appropriation table. On tho other hand, some very Important pieces of work would likewise go undone bo cause the localities especially benefited could not be Induced to shoulder the financial responsibilities. And now The Bee Is pilloried by the brass band charity organ because it has not deigned to announce that Mayor Moores has forwarded $3,000 to the Kansas sufferers. This omission Is, of course, charitably interpreted as "de priving suffering human beings from re ceiving succor and support" Inasmuch as The Bee had published the main facts and figures it was cheerfully disposed to allow the Ram's Horn organ the monop oly of self-glorification since no special announcement of the remittance of the funds was deemed necessary. Inferen tial! the World-Herald committed an unpardonable offense and proved itself a deadly enemy of all humanity when it failed to editorially commend the editor of The Bee when be mailed more than $2,000 in checks to the McKlnley Memo rial Monument association, and more than $1,000 to General Corbln for the relief of the widow of General Lawton. Lawyers for the Northern Securities company deny the Jurisdiction of Minne sota over Its operations on the ground that it is an interstate corporation sub ject to federal control, if to any control at all. When they get Into the federal courts these some lawyers will probably contend that there Is no federal Jurisdic tion because federal control would be nn invasion of state's rights. It is a cold day when the corporation lawyer does not catch them coming and going. The patrons of the World-Herald are being regaled, as usual, with cuttlefish editorials on the half shell and Salvation army exhortations with brass band and Castanet accompaniments. Not a word about the water works appraisement, not a word about the county fund de posits, county board extravagance, po liceman-slaughter, or any local Issues that concern the taxpayers and citizens of this community. It did not take the seventh son of a seventh daughter to foresee that the novel and unique plan of checks and counter checks which requires all public works employes, from street commis sioner to street sweep, to be confirmed by the council, would beget confusion and contention. But the Douglas dele gation in the late legislature had to get even with somebody. . The speaker at the commencement ex ercises of a private ' academy here in Omaha is said to haye drawn invidious comparisons with !tiie- public cchools. Tho public sctiools-tiaiy' be subject to Just criticism for abuses' or for misfits In the teaching' fofceV but the public school system needs, no defense, . To the Select Few. Baltimore American. A trustmaker said - in an address be fore a college lately that one good thing about trusts Is that they give opportunities. That appears to be the principal objection to them. They leave no opportunities for anybody else. . Oae Rare Advaatage, Chicago News. Mr. Roosevelt has one advantage not en joyed by many of his predecessors. He Is so certain of renomlnntlon that he can run the presidency as he pleases without paus ing to consider how some one or other of the factions In the party Is going to feel about It Extraordinary Extremes. Philadelphia Record. It required many days of rain to raise the great flood which has wrought suck destruction down the Kansas, Missouri and Pes Moines rivers, and which, still on Its way to the sea, Is overflowing town snd country southward from where the Mis souri joins the Mississippi. But less than one night of rain caused the flood that hat destroyed, In and around Spartanburg, B. C, about as many lives snd nearly as much property as did the Kansas or Kaw river flood at Topeka. - More destructive of life than either flood was the tornado which leveled a part of Gainesville, Ga.. last week in shorter time than It takes to tell. It has already proved a year marked by extraordinary extremes In 'the manifes tations of atmospheric forces. The north eastern states, with their drouth now pass ing beyond all recorded precedent for this season of the year, are not worse afflicted than some other parts of the country are in other ways. WI1T PEOPLE PEAR THE TRISTS. Bedrock Baals of Popular Dread aa4 Snaplcloa. Saturday Evening Post. Regiments of arguments for capital trusts and labor trusts are hurled at the people of this country, but they continue to be suspicious, continue to listen atten tively to anyone who comes forward with a plausible "remedy" for what the trust advocates say Is not disease but a national development of healthy growth. What is the reason for this tenacious, not-to-be reasoned-wtth popular Instinct? The usual answer Is "popular Ignorance." But that Is as shallow as It Is easy. Analysis dis closes the truth, the bedrock basis for pop ular dread and suspicion. It Is expressed In the one word, power. The people of this democracy know that their liberty rests upon equality, that In our social scheme no man and no group of men Is permitted to have Irresponsible, un endable power The corporation has al ways been sharply watched by the people because It looked like a something pos sessed of real power. The combination, that amaslng expansion of the corporation Idea, la suspected and dreaded because It la obviously a depository of genuine power the brains and muscles and capital of thousands Intrusted to, one man who Is In no way responsible to anyone or checked fey anyone, so long as he earns dividends and Interest, no matter how. And for obvious reasons this applies equally, will presently apply as forcefully, to the labor "combine." "No other depositories of power than the people themselves." says Jefferson, "have ever yet been found which did not end In converting to their own profit the earnings of those committed to their charge." And this the people believe and can't be rea soned out of by plausibilities or philanthropies. ROV5D ABOl'T MCW YORK. Ripples the Carreat ef Life ia the Metropolis. The deadlock In the building trades In New Tork City since May t Is estimated to have cost In wages alone 114,000,000. Be tween 110,000 and 120,000 skilled mechanics are Idle. The number Includes 10,000 car penters, 7,500 bricklayers, t.000 plasterers, 4.000 helpers, 1,000 Iron workers, J.0W elec trical workers, besides boiler makers, ma chinists, marble workers, tile layers, glaslers and (0,000 unskilled laborers. The shut-down In the meantime Is esti mated to have tied up 1200,000,000 ot capital, has retarded work on the schools and made conditions under which many owners and Intending occupiers of new buildings are bound to lose money. There are 2,000 build ing contractors Involved In the present trouble whose loss of profit rents and other expenses are said to figure up be tween 17,000,000 and W, 000,000. Several millions of dollars are estimated to have been hopelessly lost by enterpris ing merchants who had hoped to occupy buildings at a given' time, so as to catch a certain class of trade. Small storekeepers whose sole custom Is that of worklngmen are beginning to lose heavily. In a great many cases they have been paid from week to week and now they are keeping their customers on credit so as to hold their custom until the shut-down ends. Many of their customers have gone to other cities for work. In which case the debts of the customers are little likely to be recovered. The strike. It Is estimated so far, has cost employers, employee and others In the neighborhood of t2S.009.000, Including the losses of persons Indlreotly affected. Of all the pubUo buildings whloh are going up and will go up In New Tork it seems as If hotels are the most numerous. It might . be objected that theaters are entitled tfo be classed ahead of hotels In the matter of numbers, but to this It may be replied that It la the custom of theater builders, as a rule, to use part of their space for hotels, so that when the per formance proves to be too dry their patrons can make their way through a convenient doorway or arcade to the place where they crack Ice and give you two for a quarter. Aside from the hotels adjoining theaters there are at least half a dosen big hotels of the old type and twice that number of "apartment" hotels In course of erec tion In this city. One of the most prom inent examples Is that which Is already towering toward the sky on the site of the old St. Cloud at Forty-second street and Broadway, while Immediately across the street the enormous Pabst, which at pres ent Is only one of the architect's blue prints, will dispute with Its neighbor the right to be recognized for three or five miles every way. There will be a great hotel where the Sturtevant used to stand and, which has nearly disappeared now, while up town, above Longacre square, there are so many new hotels building, built or planned, that the mind cannot comprehend them. The Increasing height of the New Tork skyscraper presents some nice problems In elevator accommodations. The demand on the . elevators Increases rapidly with the added height and construction of both ele vators and buildings has to be modified accordingly. Some remarkable develop ments along this line occur In the Park Row buildings, whose elevators frequently carry 15,000 people In twelve hours. This building Is the largest and tallest office building in the world. It Is located in Park row, opposite the postofflce. It measures 383 feet to the tops of the two towers and 309 feet to the main roof. - It has twenty- nine stories, which contain 1,125 - offices. Six-thousand persons spend the day In the building. Eighteen thousand letters are delivered In It dally, their distribution requiring the services of three special carriers. There Is now in New Tork one place, at least, where women, as well as men, can have their shoes mended while they wait. They don't have long to wait, for here, by the aid of modern machinery, women's shoes are soled and heeled In from twenty minutes to half hour, while their owners alt In comforable chairs In the shop's wait ing room. This place Is in the shopping district. and women employed in the stores round about are among Its customers. They take advantage of the luncheon hour to have their shoes mended while they wait. Another somewhat novel feature of the work done at this place consists In the repairing of shoes left by women shopping who, their shopping over, stop here again and get the shoes to carry home, repaired. The whole business of repairing shoes while you wait Is comparatively new. It has all sprung up within twenty years. The first shop of the kind In New Tork was In the Bowery, with a man at work In the window while others were seen busy In side. Chairs and newspapers were pro vided for the waiting customers, whose shoes the busy shoemakers were at work on. This shop, as a novelty, was described In the newspapers. Now there are In this, and In other cities, too, - many shops In which men's shoes are repaired while you wait, quite as a matter of course; what was once a novelty having now become regular feature of the business. The repairing ' of women's shoes In this manner Is something still comparatively novel here. The concern In this city that mends women's shoes while you wnlt has a branch In Buffalo and another in Rochester. At Its Rochester branch It has been mend ing women's shoes In this way for years. It is possible to overdo a good thing. An enthusiastic supporter of the crusade against mashers was pulled Into court re cently charged with assault. .Replying to the questions of the Judge the would-be gallant said: "Tes, I struck him, Judge; any gentle man would have done the same thing. He was making 'goo goo' eyes at a woman passenger, and I did not propose to let a man Insult a woman who happened to be without a male escort." "I didn't Insult any lady. This fellow struck me without a word of warning. We had no dispute whatever. He Just stood up and landed a blow on my face," re sponded the victim. "I saw him ogling a woman who sat In a cross seat some distance away. He chirped to her to attract her attention and acted like one of those mashers you hear about," went on the assailant. "It was my wife who sat In. the cross seat and I was trying to call her attention to one of the pictures In the car," the vic tim explained. "I don't believe she Is your wife," the as sailant responded. "Here she Is," rejoined the victim, as he beckoned to a woman who stepped upon the bridge and said she was his wife. "Well, I only wanted to act the part of a chivalrous gentleman and protect women from Insult," the assailant declared. An apology satisfied the court and the victim. Room for Expanaloa. Indianapolis News. . When we read that the Department of Commerce and lbor will occupy the whole of an eight-story building of 104 rooms, and still have a number of Its overflow bureaus accommodated elsewhere. It makes us won der where and how all this work was done before the Department of Comma. 'os and Labor went Into business. I IS IT COOD LKnAL At'THORITTt Report of the Coal Strike, Canasalssloa mad the Omaha Courts. Ixvulsvllle Courier-Journal. Judge Dickinson of Omaha, In granting an Injunction against picketing, said that the chief authority by which he wss moved to grunt the temporary order was the re port of the Anthracite Coal Strike com mission, which was made by a number of persons from different walks of life. In cluding members of labor organisations. It Is an extraordinary thing that the report of the strike commission should be cited as authority for the action ot a Judge on the bench In a matter where the letter of the law was the sole guide upon which he was entitled to reply. The coal strike commission had no legal authority what ever back of It. In no sense wss It a legal tribunal. Its members may be regarded as arbitrators, but they had no authority to enforce their award. The finding of arbitrators may often be enforced In the courts, but in the anthracite case the de cision was of such a nature that It could not be enforced by legal process. The ob ject of the appointment of the commission was the resumption of work In the mines, and both sides of the controversy agreed to be bound by the decision. The men went to work before the decision was ren dered, but there was no way to compel them to remain at work after the decision was given If they bad chosen not to do so. The president admitted that he had no shadow of authority to appoint this com mission, and did not do so until he was satisfied that a settlement would be popu lar. Even then he assumed to aot simply as an Individual. Subsequently congress undertook to pay the arbitrators, as though they had been appointed by the president In his official eapaolty, . but this did not give an authority of law to the transaction. It had no more legal validity than the de cision of a country debating society. The reasonableness of the decision of the strike commission Is, of course, another question. Insofar as the views expressed commend themselves to reason and com mon sense, to the sentiment of fair play, to a conception of right and Justice, they may well be accepted' by all concerned. But that la a very different matter from giving them authority as an adjudged case. The distinction often made between moral and positive law is that the requirements of the former are commanded because they are right, while those of the latter are right because they are commanded. This Is very nearly coincident with the legal distinction between mala In se and mala prohibits things wrong In themselves and others wrong because they are prohibited. So an authority in a legal sense Is an ad Judged case, which Is binding whether the reasoning by which It Is supported Is satis factory or not. It has the effect of posi tive law. Such an authority can only be furnished by a competent tribunal when deciding an actual controversy of which It has jurisdiction. The anthracite strike commission had no Jurisdiction of the ques tions submitted to It was In no sense a legal tribunal, and therefore Incapable of settling any question of law. That Its de cision should be gravely cited by a Judge in a case Involving only legal technicali ties Is a striking Illustration of the dangers Incident to a resort to expedients outside the law for the settlement of controversies. The strike commission was composed of eminent gentlemen, not all of them learned In the law, and It rendered a real service to the publlo that was suffering from the strike, but Its views are in no sense a guide for legal tribunals In the discharge of the duty Incumbent on them. to Inter pret the law as they find it written in the books. ; PERSONAL NOTES. A Chicago man who recently Inherited a million-dollar fortune has taken a position as a waiter. ' There lsj no curbing the greed for wealth. Alexander Williamson, who was the tutor of Abraham Lincoln's younger children, died on Tuesday at his home in Brooklyn. He was 89 years old. Henry Watterson called his trip to New Tork the other day a "purely literary mis sion." Henry has more to do with fire works than literature. Alexander Williamson, one of ths three persons who were present at the deathbed ot President Lincoln, died at his horns In Brooklyn last Wednesday. Corpulent persons In Sweden are to be taxed for excessive weight, because they eat too much. And the collectors. Just as they do in this country, will lire on the fat of the land. Hall Calne locates the scene of ths brav est deed with which he Is acquainted at the Vatican. "The hero of the Incident in question," he writes, "was that venerable nonogenarlan, Pope Leo XIII, who, on the occasion of our first Interview, actually confessed that he had never read one of my books." It Is stated that when Lord Roberts comes to America in August It will b in his official capacity. King Edward has ex pressed a wish that his trip shall be re garded as an official one In return for the recent visits of distinguished American mili tary officers to Great Britain. Six Shaffer brothers, sons of John Shaffer of Highland county, Ohio, were photo graphed In a group at 'Hillsborough, O., a few days ago. The oldest is M years of age and the youngest 74. Their united ages amount to 480 years. Their father's children number thirteen and the children of these six brothers number, respectively, eleven, elRht, nine, thirteen, twelve and five, giv ing the list In the order of the fathers' ages. Get Ready Now for Graduation. You hare time. It won't take us five minutes to fit you out to your perfect' sat isfaction. Let us show you the very fin est garments possible in black thibet and unfinished worsted, at ?15.00, f 16.50, and 118.00. Blue and black serges and cheviots, flO.OO to f 15.00. White waistcoats, and the necessary furnishings, that are appropriate for this occasion. "NO clothing: FITS LIKE OURS." groWnmg- Kin2--.(- R. S. WILCOX, Manager. A 49RBAT V1CTORT. avfasj of auilfoaa rstl Rorentio at Last Assured. Philadelphia rress. The most Important news from the Tost fnce department In many a day Is not any development of the pending Investigation, but the Judicial decision Just rendered completely sustaining the department In Its movement for the reform of the colossal abuses In second-class mall matter. The news Is most succinctly told In the following personal dispatch from a high officer to the editor of the rress: J "WASHINGTON, June S.-The court of appeals (of the District of Columbia) handed down decision today in Riverside Literature Series and Master In Muslo rases. Lower court reversed In both cases. Department wins at all points. Decision Is sweeping, and assures ultimate success of the reform. Department hands now completely untied. The court Is unanimous, and It la a great victory." It Is, Indeed, a great victory for a vital publlo reform snd for a regenerated and self-sustaining postal service. The mon strous abuses which have flooded the mails with books, advertising circulars, house organs, and so forth, under the pretext of being periodicals, at the pound rate have gone on for years, growing month by month. Two year ago the orders were Issued which turned the faoe of the de partment in the opposite direction snd resolutely set out to stop ths wrongs. For a time the reform moved steadily and surely forward, but some of tho eases were taken Into court and decision pronounced against the government. This Inconsiderate Judgment practically paralysed the department for ths time being, so far as the prosecution of the re form was concerned. But the department appealed; ft called the giant, John O. John son of this city. Into the case; and now It Is vindicated In a decision of the higher court which completely sustains the posi tion of the department and re-enforces Its purpose. The reform will be taken up afresh and carried on with renewed Vigor. The development of wrongdoing In the department, so far as disclosures up to the present time Indicate, lamentable as It Is, Involves a loss measured by thousands. This reform Involves a saving measured by millions. There Is a bright side as well as a dark side. We cordially congratulate Postmaster General Payne and Third Assistant Post master General Madden, who have stood to their guns so manfully, and we espe cially congratulate the American 'people who want the moot efficient and progres sive postal service possible. LAUGHING REMARKS. "He's forever complaining of his hard luck. I wonder what's hla Idea of hard luck, anyway." "It's merely the inability to fall Into a soft snap." Chicago Tribune. Winkers Why Is it that women always dislike a prominent man who is an old bachelor? . Blnkers Because they can't say thai he would never have amounted to anything If It had not been for his wife. New ork Weekly. "Are you going to take a vacation this summer?" "I suppose I'll have to," answered Mr. Cumrox, "although I must say I'd like to put In one summer simply attending to business and resting up." Washington Star. "Are you .going to take a vacation trip of any sort this summer?" "We expect to." i - 5. "Where are you going?" "Can't say yet, tut we're expecting a tornado to come along and take us some where." Chicago Post. Belshassar beheld the wrltlns on ths wall. "Maybe it's only the' name or a new breakfast food," he faltered, trying to be brave. ,. Later interpretations, however, Justified his worst fears. New Tork Sun. "You have only twenty-five boys at your school, I'm told, professor." "Tes, ordinarily, but they were doubled last week." "Tou don't say." "Yes. They raided a neighboring truck 1 Pitch and stole a lot of cucumbers' hiladelphla Press. "Tou do not Inject enough contempt, spite and venom Into that word." "I can do no better." "Nonsense! Speak It Just as you say plush' when you meet a rival In a seal skin sacque." Brooklyn Life. "I'm sorry I brought you to the shore at all," exolalmed her mother. "The Idea of four being engaged to two young men. t's shameful!" "Oh, I don't know, ma," protested the summer girl. "Give me time: I've only been here three days." Philadelphia Pres. "That political rival of yours went so far as to Intimate that you would sell your In fluence for money." "Professional jealousy, my friend," re joined Senator Sorghum, soothingly. "He's cross because he hasn't any Influence to sell." Washington Star. IF FOLKS WERE ALWAYS GOOD. Somervllle Journal. This world would be a pleasant place If folks were always good. And all the people, young and old. Did always as they should; But what would the policemen do. If nobody did wrong? They'd surely have to go to work. For they are well and strong. And all the judges in the courts. They'd lose their places, sure. And all the ministers would And Their jobs would not endure; For all their preaching would be thought Unnecessary, quite, If no one In the world did wrong, And everyone did right'. And countless other people, too, Would find thnt they must change Their dally occupations, and Their new lives would be strange. The lawyers, wiitrhmen, locksmiths yes. And hosts of others would Most certainly be out of date, If folks were alw ays good I