10 THE 1 IiLUSTB ATED BEE. - Jane 21, 1908, I , .,. n A.;; ""riv """-v ,l,t " .. " - - n.nr -LT A,.,,.,, f I "w3" " Hi ' -t Its' . vrl i U yi kwnaa ' ' I " ' null mil -A M I I H I ' """ i ' Y rr J Frances CLASS OF 19H8, Pa via, Otnnha; Perry Socly. NEBRASKA SCHOOL FOK Lincoln; Hattle Ren, TUB DEAF. Photo D.tvld City, by Staff Artist,- , - -v! . -V , . 1 .. ; . . i, .... ,.v I . Carpenter's Letter (Continued from Paga Twelre.) nesa. lie Is more polite than the New York policeman and more gentle and kind to the people. Indeed, one mlKht go all over ltu Biu and hardly know that the police exist. I have traveled thousands of miles here at one time or another and have hud no trou ble, and that at the sitme time that other Americans Imagined they were being per secuted. One correspondent claimed that lie was expelled ftom the country, when I personally 'know that he left because ho was scared to death by the ghosts of his own Imagination. At the same time the government does not extend Its hospitality to those they be lieve ready to slander and vilify It. This Is the poult Ion that George Kennan holds In the eyes of the officials. Everyone knows how ho has attacked the Ruxxluns and many here think very unjustly. Notwith standing this he came to RiiHsIa about two years ago and took up his residence here, lie had Just gotten settled when a police man called upon him and Informed him that the government thought he could da Russia most good by leaving It. The po liceman hud an order to this effect, and at bis direction Mr. Kennan went to his room and remained there until arrangements were made for his departure. Ills meals ' were served In his rooms. He was allowed to write litters and his friends were per mitted to call upon him, but further than this he was a prisoner. He was sent away within 11 few days. The police corps of the Russian capital numl.ers about 2.0U0 men. I don't know ths number required for the Greater New York, . but 1 venture It Is double 1,000. The city Is divided tip Into forty-two police districts, each of which has Its police station and police court. A record Is kept of every citizen, and the police can tell In a moment the history and standing of every man. I am told that these records are kept on papers of different colors. Blue, (or In stance, may mean "a political suspect;" ye'iow may mean "criminally dangerous" and white "eminently respectable and a friend of the government." I don't say that these are the colors, but there is no doubt that the government keeps lints of the names of men dangerous to It, and that such lists are sent to the agents of Russia all over the world. The XOUO policemen of St. Petersburg dress In uniform, and are hence easily known. There are thousands more In the secret service who dress In cltlsens' clothes. Indeed, It Is aald that every house In the city has Its police agent, and that the Jani tors of the various flats give monthly re ports on their tenants. The landlords of the hotelH are responsible for their guests. The Hotel de Europe, where I am stopping, has a police bureau right next to the oRlce, and I had to leave my passport there upn my arrival. It will be returned to me when I depart. Every hotel takes charge of your passport the moment you come In, aud this rs the case not only with the foreigner, but with the Russian as well. Every cttison of the empire must carry a passport, and the natlv la subject to the Mm rules as tli foreigner. FRANK Q. CARPENTER. JAMES AND HIS PRIZB lCJtf CSlr-Pboto by i Stt Artist h-..' . c ,4,,...;. .cci-.' iilJ rrr EL.KIIORN VALLEY EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION, WUiv.Il a:.VT RJCENTLT AT ATKINSON, NEB. Pointed Paragraphs, The most truthful men are deaf and dumb. ' ' ' Jealousy at best Is but a chronlo case of self-love. ' A man of genius often makes a fortune for a man of talent.' During the courtship love shows up best In the dark ' Many a man mistakes his dyspeptic Ideas for moral convictions. The lawyer Beldum works with a will un til the doctor clears the way. Singers who pursue the even tenor of their way never get oft their buss. If a man trusts to lin k for his dinner he will never bo troubled with the gout. All the resjiect and veneration due to old age Is ladeled out to the wealthy grand parent. It sometimes happens that the man who Is afraid to take a chance Is beaten at his own game. Po long as the rural editor uses patent Insldes he ought to bo proof against cholera germs. The man who puts his trust in Providence and simultaneously hustles for a Job Is rea onably sure to land. Don't spend all your tlmo making prom ises. If you would retain your friends It Is up to you to give un occasional perform ance. Chicago News. Watering Lawns A remark In Country Life In America that "w.i. eiing Is an exacting labor and yet the half iff It Is usually unnecessary" was made In connection with garden plants, but Is dually upplicuble to toe watering of lawns. Not only Is there really no neces sity for the constant watering which miny -cltlsens of St Paul bestow ' upon ' their grass plats, but It Is often a positive In jury, Prof. S. B. Green Is authority for the statement that u thorough drenching once iu.a while Is far better for the grass than every-day Bprlnkllng. Again, it is better not to use a rake or "grass catcher" in connection with your lawnmower. Cut the grass often and let It lie where It falls. It manures the soil, mukes the turf thick and springy and serves us a mulch to re tain moisture. That's the way the world famous lawns of old England are createj. The short litter Is so quickly covered by a new growth that It will not lung offend the eye. St. Puul Pioneer Press. Discouraged Genius "So you have decided to give up Jour nalism?" "1 have," answered the falr-halred, blue eyed youth. '1 have done my best, but" "is the work too hard?" "Too hard? No, it's too easy. After I had gotten up some splendid articles ex plaining the precise Intentions of Russia in Manchuria and the prospects of free trade in England and the obligations of American wealth to art they made a fus.i because 1 overlooked an Item about a new sewer." Washington Star. Time of Stopping a Train At a recent convention of airbrake men an interesting report was presented show ing how the distance required for the stop ping of trains had been reduced by the new hlgh-seed brake. A train running eighty miles un hour was stopied In 2,240 - . . ... ;. - 4 MV ' Mlfcift KATE HALES, WHO WAS GRADUATED FROM TnE TILDES HIGH KOIOOI, WITH A REMARK ABLE RECORD. feet by the Mxh-speed brake at 110 pounds, where ordinal y pr ssture of seventy pounds t ik ex u tly half a mil.. ,rlng it to stand. Other train speeds and reductions In stopping distances were these: Fifty miles an hour, from to 7 feet; flfty flvo miles, l.too feet; sixty-five miles, 1.635 to l.jno feet; seventy miles. 2,010 to 1.&30 feet; seventy-tlve miles, 1.2X to l.kW fet New Yo4k World.