14 THE 0:fAIIA DAILY REE: BUftDAY, AUQUST 16, 1903. Tim Omaiia Sunday Ber E. ROBEWATEn, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNIN3. i TERM a OF SUBSCRIPTION. Fslly Be (without Sunday). On Tef..4 l!y be and Sunday. On Year........ f OA Illustrated Bn, On Tear W Cundn Be. On Year . J Saturday I?, On Tear I M Twentieth Century Farmer, On Tear.. 1. 00 DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Pf!y Pe (without Sunday), per Cory., to Illy He (without Sunday), per W-k..ltO iHUlr Bo (Including Sunday), per wee. .lie Sunday P. per Copy Evening He (without Sunday), per week to Evening fit (Including Sunday), per wewa ......10c Complaint of Irregularities In ds.lvery should ba addressed to City Circulation De partment. orricea.. Omaha Til Bee Building. South Omahi-City Hall Building, Twenty-ruth and M Street. Council Bhiffie-W pearl Street ' Chlcaso If.tO Unity Building. Hew f nrk 23T Park Row Building. Washington 61 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to newt and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaha liee. Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft xpress or postal order, payah! to The Be Publishing Company. Only 2-eent atamp accepted In payment of mall accounts. Personal check. escspt on Omaha or eestern exchanges, not accepted. TUB KS PUBLISHING CO MP ANT. STATEMENT OT CIRCULATION. Stat of Nebraska, Dmiglaa County, m.i Georso B. Txschuca secretary f The Be Publishing Company being . auly sworn, ays that th actual numoer " full and complete copies of Th Dally Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during th month of July, iaa. wf s as follow: - . 1 8A,(HX 17 t 80.830 I 80,020 J , 0O,SM II ST.SOO ..........,..81.140 4 80,080 87,848 S. ,.80,TSO t 80,330 80,R80 I. ... so.oso M 8O.TC0 II BO,7T0 U BT.OIU M ftO.OOO M SV.044 S sm.uao to.... U.... ...83,810 ...SO.IWO U 80,5 TO H ao.sim) 80.030 tt,.......w...T.140 t7 ..8O.1T0 n aojjuo n ao.aio W 80,724) SI 80,010 U.... ZOIVO , Total USUIS I a unsold And returued copies.,.. ,y Net total sales "its.wsT Wet average sales UU.70S I UifiQKQB B. TS5SCHUCK. Subscribed In my presence and swora to elore ine UUs 81st uay o( July, A. D. liWS. si. B. HbNUATtf. (Seal) Notary public. PARTIES LlfAVIKO FOU ItUHKII, Partus leaving th elty to tke saaam may kave Tk at t tkesa ralrly hy ottfylas Th B Baslaesa . (Bee, la perita or by SnalL Th address Trill be eaaaa4 . a efica aa desired. It looks Bi If Turkey would have to come off the perch. Perhapg all the caloric la being held back for our Indian summer,. . ' Wben It come to a show down TJncle Earn' present currency system will hold Its own against that of any other nation. ' 1 ., Senator Piatt of New York sees no need of tieW currency legislation. There are other 'too. vho wilt hava to be shown. ' ' Y Central Miles will find thnt President KooeeTelt has been to. the Pacific const and nailed down alt the presidential favors ahead of him. ' The American army has a new staff organization, but the fighting of the fu ture, as of the past, will be by the private In the ranks. ' ' ' By managing to survive a joint In vasion by 8nm Jones and Richmond Pearson Hobson, Nebraska agftln shows Its wonderful reculwntlve powers. . . :,' a If Oyster Bay wet only a pood live town full of western hustle It would take better advantage, of It preroga tives as the summer capital of the Uulted States. ' It turn out that It was a Burlington pass, and aa annual at that, which got sway from Henator Tillman when his pockets were picked down in Kansas. Of course the Burlington Is out of politics. On of the Missouri' boodlert Is ap pealing for. a new trial, having been convicted already only four time. Thl eminent statesman sat as if there were no other boodlers In Missouri to claim tho attention cf the courts. Colonel Bryan is evidently dlfipleasod i that the reunited populist Should have ventured at Denver to Issue a declara tion of Independence from -democratic subserviency w ithout waiting - for the Kid or consent of the sage of Falrvlew. The adjournment of Parliament will give the EritlBh law makers a rest nntll November 2, making thoJr vacation less than three months. If ' the American congress , were to alt more than nine month In th year our representatives would soon be complaining of being overworked. ' , ' . ' Tbe publicity bureau of the original New York Chautanqua deserve self congratulatlou on tbe huge amount of free advertising It has succeeded In se curing by prevailing on its lecturers to take up subjects of time!' moment, 1IW mob rule, trust tendencies and negro suppression. The only danger is that all the bis end little Clmutauqnns throughout the" country will be trying to Imitate tbe p.ireut oignnlzatlon next year. One of the editors who was put through the mill by King Ak-Sttr-Ben when be was visiting us for the editor ial convention pay a glowing tribute to the kn!ghts In his pot-morlnn eulogy of hi trip, emldrlng the de claration that -Jui10iug froii our lim ited knowledge of such uiottcvs.' for gorgeous, elnbomte and s'.upen-lou nonsenstt and tomfoolery of the ftp He some variety, Omaha la fur and away ahead of every other city on the con tinent That editor can coin again. ' a tvmviVAL or rue rirtT. Senator Chauncey Depew, who Is now rusticating In London, has given out an Interview for publication concerning th cans of the recent depression in Amer ican railway and industrial securities and the consequent contraction of credits In the American metropolis. Dr. Df pew has diagnosed the case as a natural sequence "of the struggle between tbe good and tbe bad among our corporato Investments with the survival of the fittest" This may be a correct version, but the great imedlclne man of the Vender bilt tribe appears to have no apprecia tion of the tremendous strain tbe finan cial fabric is undergoing in tbe effort to survive, nor does he venture, to pro scribe any remedy. An eminent writer on American finance declare that "the prevailing condition In this country are analogous to those which led to the de pression abroad and especially in Ger many three or four years ago. Great Industrial enterprise on a fictitious capitalization were created. Prominent banks were Influenced to give these their countenance and support. When the crash came financial Institutions found themselves loaded with undi gested and Indigestible securities. Money was not to be had the public was not eager to buy and the hardest kind of hard time in Germany ensued." IIow much money ha been sunk in the recent strain for the survival of the fittest 1 Incalculable. Tbs shrinkage In United States Steel and kindred indus trial securities foot up Into an appalling aggregate, and the water wrung out of railway stocks approximate many hun dreds of millions. How far the contrac tion in over valued securities will nltl- mntety affect trust companies and tar ing Institutions which bold several bil lion of these depreciated stocks and bonda as collateral for loans and Invest ments of depositors is problematic. That these tremendous losses could have been averted no well Informed person can truthfully gainsay. Everybody convers ant with the methods of trust promotion and the capitalization of these gigantic corporate combinations. must bar real ized thnt however prosperous the coun try might be, there must sooner or later come a time when tbe securities floated by these concerns would become a men ace to financial stability and tend to precipitate ruinous money panics, bring ing to a crisis tbs Inevitable struggle for the survival of tbe fittest. If the disastrous consequences of periodic financial disturbances caused by over-capitalization were confined ; to trust magnates, trust promoters and speculators In capitalized wind th coun try could look on the Agonizing struggle for Survival , with equanimity, but the victims of speculative over-confidence and credulity are not confined to Wall street or New York City. Thalr natural tendency Is to Create distrust And shake confidence in all parts of the country and the forced liquidation caused by the rnpld contraction of stock -and bond aloes wottl.4 doubtless have caused general business depression had It not been for the extraordinary commercial and industrial activity and the vast reservoir of wealth In the shape of crops that keep the channel! of trade in con stant motion. ' The present struggle, for the survival of the financially fittest- forcibly em phasizes the imperative necessity for publicity and supervision of corporations engaged In Interstate commerce and more especially the enormous aggrega tions of capital Invested In corporate form classed as trusts. When these con cerns come under the supervision of the Department of Commerce, Just aa the national banks of this country are under the supervision of the Treasury depart ment, and when fictitious capitalization nnd fraudulent manipulation of these corporations are made criminal offences punishable In the same manner as are criminal manipulations of national banks, and when a violation of the trust regulation laws will subject corpora tions to forfeiture of their charters and franchises, the struggle for the survival of the fittest will not be so fierce and deadly. A LA BOtt LtADKH'B CdCXStl,, In his annual report President Lynch of the International Typographical union expressed regret nt the tendency on tbe part cf trade unionist to make HgU Of organisations of tinployers and questioned whether It would not be better to ahow a tolerant spirit toward thecu In the hopo of establishing friend ship. ''Surely.' he said. Mw cannot deny to others the right which we claim the right to organize find it is not aside from tbe probabilities that through this era of organization may come the era of peace.".. Perhaps trade unionists generally will not be disposed to accept this view, -jet It certainly embodies n principle which if It should be generally recognise; could not fall to be conduct vo to Industrial peace. That 8 more toler ant spirit, on the part of both em ployers and trad unionists. Is desirable It Is presumed no one will question. When on cither side there Is Intolerance and a disposition to foster a feeling of antagonism It Is of courts useless to hope for peace or for a fair and rational consideration of differences. Tbe culti vation of a tolerant spirit, however, would enable the parties to 8 contro versy to discuss It calmlv and intelli gently, and It would rarely happeu that such discussion would fall to result In an amicable and satisfactory settlement. There can bb no question, of course, that employers have the right to organ ize, equally with those who labor. Right of organization for a legitimate purpose Is unrestricted. What employer should seek to do Is to bring about that friendly foaling between capital and labor with out which Industrial peace s impossible. In an address recently before the Em ployers' association of Loti'sTtlle a mem ber cf thnt organization said: "Let u e ti nt our workmen get fair iUj and our trouble will be lessened. Having carefully ascertained tbe facts of any question that may be properly pre sented to ns by our employe, let ns. In tbe spirit of fair play, give It careful consideration. If we find tbe request s Just and reasonable one 'let us not hesitate to grant it If it is unreason able, let ns Just ss promptly and with equal fairness say that we cannot and will not grant It If we can present our ranks as one unbroken line for fair play and similar associations through out the country ahould become Imbued with the same spirit what a power for good will and peace would 'we be and what an Inspiration It would be to all who have these disquieting questions tip for consideration. The great Ameri can people will never countenance un fairness on the part of any set of men and In this great question the side that foils to Com to tbt front with every mark of fair treatment for Its opponent cannot hope for public approval" Herein Is expressed that tolerant spirit which the president of the Inter? national Typographical union had In mind and who can doubt the wisdom of cultivating this spirit on the part of both organized employers and organized labor. MILKS 0 D13AHMAMKST. On tbe day of bis retirement General Mile said in an interview that partial disarmament of tbe nations of ,the world is possible today, practicable and most desirable. He thought the United States should take the initiative and suggest an international congress to meet at Washington at which an agree ment would be drawn up by the mili tary leaders of the world, and dnly ad hered to by each government repre sented, providing that the strength of their respective armies should be based on population, that each nation should maintain an army with a maximum strength of one to svery 1,000 of popu lation and s minimum of on to every 2,000. He said that in this way the relative power of each can be preserved, Its people relieved of an unnecessarily heavy burden of taxation, its army in creased In efficiency and its govern ment its liberties and Its institutions strengthened and. made firm. General Miles expressed the belief that this would make for the peace of the world and probably In this he was correct though there are many who hold the view that great armies and formidable navies are conducive to tbo preservation. The trouble in' regard to this matter Is that no nation Is willing to take the initiative in reducing arma ment. When the question was before the British House of Commons a short time ago Prime Mln later Balfour said that the government was not unfavor able to disarmament but felt that Great Britain should not take the initiative. Were the United' States to do so and snggest an international con gress to consider the subject and pro pose an agreement It is doubtful if there would be any practical result However desirable disarmament may bo, it Is quite certain that none, of the great powers Is yet ready for it RUSSIA't PRStAHATtOlfik Tbe report that Russia intends to largely increase her military forces in the far east although coming from an English source, is by no means incredi ble. It appears to be the most natural thing" possible for Russia to do under the circumstances and knowing . that Japan is getting ready for a conflict Which ber statesmen and people seem to regard as Inevitable. A few weeks ago it was stated In St Petersburg dispatches that while Russia bad no de sire for war yet she was preparing for tho most serious possibilities. It was apprehension of a crisis, the report stated, that caused the Russian minis ter of war to be sent to Manchuria and It is the outcome of bis Investiga tions that step are being taken to nieet the worst contingencies. These, it was declared, are purely precaution ary and not aggressive, the hope being that when Japan realized that Russia is fully prepared she will be convinced of the danger she will incur from pur suing a hostile course. Russian officials are represented a having a rather poor oplolon of Japan from a military point of view. They ore credited With saying that Japan could not put into the field more than 00,000 men, not nearly all of whom could ba spared for foreign serried, as a large force would be necessary to protect the Japanese seaboard. More over, she would need from four to six weeks to place an army in Corea, while Russia already has 110,000 troops lm mediately available for operations against Japan and could wlthlu a month double this number. In the matter of naval power Japan Is equal and per haps superior to Russia In the far east and it is quite probable that on the sea the Initial advantages would be with Japan. One thing is certain, that should war come Russia would find the task of whipping Japan by no means so easy as some of ber officials profess to think it would be. The Japanese re said to be In perfect fighting trim and to have the utmost confidence In their ability to win in 8 war with Rus sia. An American who recently re turned from the Orient and who spent some time la Japan, says; "Japan will never be content until she gets Port Arthur buck. She la willing to risk her national existence to take Port Arthur sway from the Russians. The Japan rue will fight like devils. They will have all the advantage of transport and of a well organized commissary." There Is no question aa to the fighting qualities of the Japanese. Tbey hava courage and fortitude and the army Is well dis ciplined. Of th soldiers Who were sent to Peking by the powers st the time of tbe Boxer disturbance those of Japan were commended as among the very best. On the s there 1 no doubt thnt the Japanese are able to cope with the Russians and very likely would prove superior ss naval fighters. A war between th two countries is not believed to be Imminent but If It be s fact that Russia Is making the military preparations reported and should fall to carry out the assurances she has given In regard to Manchuria, a conflict with Japan could hardly be averted. The latest report from St. Petersburg, If It should be confirmed, must have a disquieting effect and greatly Increase the seriousness of the situation. BA T CAS 6 ts. UO.Vg fVH ULSSlAPi JgPTS Although the Klshlneff massacre has passed Into history and the incident of the Jewish petition seems to be closed, people Interested in what Is known as the Jewish question are still Seeking for s more satisfactory solution and a better assurance that this race persecu tion in continental- countries will be ef fectually repressed. It is pointed on that the Klshlneff massacre and other anti-Jewish outbreaks within both Slavic and non-Slavic countries is the out growth of local conditions which must be in some manner relieved, but which are not likely to be relieved until tbe cause of the persecuted Jews' Is mada s matter of International representation. In a well written article contributed by Arnold White to the current National Review, summarizing the course of antl SemitJcism during the last century and its culmination in the recent Jewish horror, the author concludes that tbe only way ont is to be found In 8 confer ence participated in by Grcnt Britain, Russia and the United States for the purpose of agreeing on a general policy to be pursued harmoniously by all three of these great nations, which are mainly directly interested, and the recommen dation of 8 plan that will conform to the dictate of humanity. The .object of such 8 conference as defined by Mr. White would bo, primarily, an examina tion into the conditions underlying the Jewish persecutions from an Impartial standpoint rather than from a stand point In subordination to national in terests. Its first effect he believes. would be "to show that however brutal, wicked and Indefensible is the conduct of Russia, she has a easfc the strength of which is not at present understood In th English speaking countries," while the second effect would be to show "that however difficult and com plex is the problem, its postponement Is dangerous to the peace of the world, but that Its settlement is practicable If the three nations chiefly concerned will stand together and work together on linos of humanity and Justice." The advantage of such 8 conference, Mr. White contends, would be the ad mission by Russia that the question is 8 matter of international and not local or domestic concern and the stimulation of an interest throughout the civilized worldwhich would prevent the matter being again shelved before a solution has been found. Mr. White's lwllef is that the only wfty to ameliorate the con dition of the Jews In Russia and to ar rest safely their Immigration Jnto Great Britain and1 the United States, Is by permanently Improving thftlr lot through tbs provision of more land, the exten sion of boundaries, the equipment of agricultural colonies and allotment of adequate territory within or adjacent to the dominions of the czar. Tbe trans portation of any considerable portion of the Jewish population of any coun try to Palestine or South America, or any other distant unoccupied territory, has proved to be absolutely impractica ble because the Jews do not understand colonization, are not attracted to remote homes and could not bo compelled to wholesale Immigration 'even if the nec essary funds were provided. The suggestion of an International conference on the Jewish quostion was Incorporated Into the resolutions adopted by the American B'nal B'rith out of which the Jewish-petition grew, but tbe position taken by tbe Russian government with reference to this peti tion makes it doubtful diplomacy for the United States to undertake to in itiate the proposal for such a confer ence. If It Is to materialize In the near future th Invitation will have to come from Great Britain, unless the czar shonld feel moved to Initiate It himself. It must be admitted even by those who are most hopeful for International ac tion, that the prospect although brighter than It has been, is not promising of immediate results. International action, however, is tbe direction toward which efforts must be made and there IS reason to hope that tbe goal will be reached without pratracting the Jewish miser ies many more years. And now the University of Illinois is offering courses of instruction lead ing up to training for tbe insurance business, with a view to launching some of the graduates as insurance solicitors. WU1 this not be destructive of the prevailing idea that tbe art of insurance solicitation required no pre liminary education and that every business mlsflt and dislodged office holder had the making of a successful Insurance agent in him? If tbe col leges absorb the Insurance field for their annual output of youthful prodl glea. what will be left for the ordi nary mortal who happena to find him self temporarily without a Jobt Will they have nothing to dor but work? Prospect are good that several pieces of handiwork of the late Ne braska legislature supposed to have Just gone into effect as contributions to the statute book will have to run the gauntlet of the courts before they will reach the stage of workable operation For half-baked legislation the last log lslatlve gristmill must be entitled to the prtsA. The lone woman delegate to the con vention of the International Typo graphical Union convention at Wash ington last week Is said to have at traeted unusual attention. Why should she? Is this uot ths age of Industrial freedom tot women? Or is It because she represents 8 unkia composed al - moat wholly of men? If there were a typographical union made up almost ex clusively of women, would It send it man delegate to represent it at the sessions of the International body? This last question doubtless furnishes tbe key to the wonderment the woman delegate has excited. There Is no danger that any negro accused of crime will get away from prosecution In any part of the south or thot any black criminal will escape the penalty of his crime If he Is not lynched on the spot On the contrary, the very fact that he la a negro insures convic tion and punishment if there is a scintilla of evidence against him. Tbe south ought to be tbe last plate In the country for mob violence If Its purpose 1 to prevent the law from being cheated. In arranging Its future prize fights pn xrancisco ougm to recognize ine disparity in time between its clods and those on this side of the mountains and exhibit some humane compassion on the patient housewife in tbe east whose slumbers are likely to be disturbed by the returning spouse who has staid up to get tbe returns from the ringside. No political capital Is to be made by the democratic organs by pointing to the fact that most of the republican state official have indulged themselves with brief summer vacations. When the state house was occupied by popu lists, the summer vacations extended over every sheet of tbe calendar. Haeedaala's Holy Tevvov. St XiOUl Republic W were wondering th other day whether It was indeed another Alexander that Macedonia has produced. It seems that th gentleman's taame Is Barafoff, but, In spite of the nam, he's a "holy terror." Second tb, Nomlaatloa. Philadelphia Ledger. As there still seems to be some uncer tainty about the meanest kind of thief, w nominate for the championship the man who stole $76,000 from th fund .established for the support of superannuated preachers In Massachusetts. Improves oa gararlca.1 Lla. Baltimore American. Some radical' changes have been made In the Snot ball rule for the eomlng season. Probably they have been made to conform with the latest discoveries In the matter of surgery and the rendering of "firat aid to the Injured." ' Growing Trade with Rassla. Philadelphia Record. If we have hot advanced during the past year to a better diplomatic understanding with the Russian government we have nevertheless succeeded in very much Im proving our commercial relations. We sold th Russians during the year ended June SO, 1903, double the value of goods sold to them two years ago and 50 per cent more than they bought of us In 1902, and there la every prospect of a continually enlarging trade. Profitable commercial Intercourse Is the best seourlty for continuous political amity. . Our Borrowed National Air. SprlDffleld Republican. Complaint Is made that the "Star Span gled Banner" is not treated 'with due re spect when playad at plaoes of amusement, and In explaining that It Is not popularly recognised as the national anthem, "Amer ica". Is decried, with the observation that "since the air is borrowed, we cannot look upon It as our own." The critics of "Amer ica" do not seem to know that the "Star Spangled Banner" is In the same case, elnce Its tune is that of the eighteenth century EnrlUh drinking song, "Anacreon in Heaven." Imaginative people have found in the music to which Francis Scott Key's verses were written the very genius of patriotism, battle, triumph and glory, but Its splendid and stirring strains were pot wrought with For McHenry In view. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. Corn growers and Icemen are a unit In favor of six more weeks of hot weather. Dakota should nail down its laurels. Ninety-four divorces were granted by four Philadelphia courts In one week In June. All the troubles we have had so far this year have been traced to their tru cause. Th figures of th year, added, mad thir teen. Nuff said. Soma queer problems are passed up to Uncle Bam. A Pittaburger wants the gov ernment to Investigate hi goat and cash a roll of $75 which the feetlve billy de voured. ' . Rather than pay th regulation saloon llcens ordered by the courts. Chicago clube are closing up th6lr bare. The looker ere being replenished, however, and no great sufTertn Is anticipated. Woman belonging to a religious sect In Manitoba mortify their proud spirits by going to meeting clothed with prayer book or hymnal. Male members' of th flock are equally fervtd In their attend ance. ' James P. Tlttemor, th 0-year ogler of Oalway, K who was pmched for 13.000 In a breach of promise case, has gone Into bankruptcy to avoid payment. If he escape th penalty assessed for hi folly h should be nt to the nursery for life. A flush of shame can be seen through the soot on the mug of Pittsburg. A coterie of city officials were caught In a little game within the sacred precincts of the city hall. It Is likely the building will be disinfected as a means of restoring pub lic confidence. Kentucky distillers are shipping 20,000 barrels of whisky to Hamburg and Bremen. Later th boose will go by water to Cali fornia, where Irrigation Is at an advanced stage. Thus the dark brown taste will travel half around the world at lea cost than th overland rat to th coast. A spotty chauffeur, mounted on a glar ing "red devil," challenged th pride of a lordly bull on th road near Coopers town, N. T, Mr, Bull lowered his horns, Uvattd his fly duster and started after th auto. Presently there was something doing. Th rhauffaur was able to walk Into town for treatment, but the auto lingers In the ditch. If "the burned child dreads the fir," likewise do elders fear repetition of a calamity. Popl of Galveston wer much wrought up over reports of a hurricane In th gulf end arrangement wer mad for flight should tb storm approach th city. Similarly th fear of a tornado la deep-rooted In St. Louis and It doesn't take much of a gal to chi.ne thm into cellars. Bill Barlow's Budget, which flutters weekly on th outer walls of Douglas, Wyo., report trout 1 In a family In that town. A lonaly, loving wlf found Strang strands of hair on her husband' coat col lar. Bh did not upbraid him with scorch ing words or run for a rlub. Too gentlo tor that. Bh merely reached for hi hair and found It. Now she baa bar bands 1 full of bai skcixar shots at tub pixpit. Nw York World: Th meanest thief of th year is not th on who "stol th pinnywelght oft hi dead' grandmother' yea." H la th pious fraud who embes sled the funds of th New England Preach ers' Aid society to get money to gamble with. Philadelphia Presst The new pope Is a man of the people In more ways than one. He Is said to wear a nickel watch with a silk guard and to have frequently pawned a ring In Venice to raise money for char itable purpose. Such a man would nat urally rebel against unnecessary formality, and thlc may be th foundation for the report that he will abolish much of the formality heretofore prominent at the Vati can. Springfield Republican: Methodism In England last year gained In membership only 1 per cent and the church leaders are somewhat worried. Some fear that whist I largely responsible for th small Increase. However that may be. It Is no slight thing for so Important 8 religious body aa the British Methodists to hold their own. Nowadays only the Christian Scient ists seem able to Increase 100 per cent 8 year. Chicago Inter Ocean: The name of Ber. George Malrs Vanderllp, who died In Brooklyn on Sunday, Is not found In "Who's Who" or any of the biographical dictionaries or encyolopedlaa, and yet Mr. Vanderllp, In 1851, at the age of 19, organ ised tbe first Toung Men'a Christian asso ciation In the United States, and thus be gan the movement that has brought to gether In the United States and Canada S2S.0O0 Christian men In one society. Minneapolis Times! The regretful pathoe in th following words of the new pope somewhat dim the das sling eplandor on the pontifical honor t "My first pleasure) when I can spare tbe time, will be to explore the gardens which now confine my little world. Helgho, how shall I get on without my long country . tramps T How I shall mis them and my Sea." After all, to know the pains of power, we must go to those who have It; the pains of power are real. Its pleasures are Imaginary. Nothing can recompense) a man for the loss of his per sonal liberty. Kansas City Times! It la Interesting to note that several good old prophecies re garding the papal election hava failed to come true. There waa the witch, for In stance, who predicted that the bishop of Santa Ruflna would be the next pope. But Cardinal Vannutelll, who bold that blshoprlo, is still a plain cardinal. A long series of predictions, onoe supposed to have been made by St Malachl In the eleventh century, but now believed to have been pat forth only a hundred years ago, hava been highly ' regarded by many persona The pseudo-Malaohl foretold the reign of Leo Xlfl m lumen In eoelo "ll&ht in heaven" and It Is pointed out that Leo' coat of arms Included a star. For Leo's sucoessor the motto Is Ignis ardens a "flaming fir." The flames In Cardinal Oottl'e coat of arm made him a favorite with one party, whereas another applied the forecast to Cardinal Svampa, since vampa Is the Ital ian word for flame. It may be supposed, however; that no difficulty will be encoun tered In discovering that Cardinal Sarto is the true Ignis ardens. , "It I Always that Way. Chicago Chronicle, - Of course the . retirement of General Miles, like every other episode of more than passing moment,' has brought to the front the ubiquitous notoriety-seeking ass. In this ease It. is a Georgia official who cele brated . Mile' retirement by a display of confederate relics and flags. It goes with out saying that this fervid partisan of the "lost cause" wasn't bora when tb .War began. It Is always that way, . -, -.. Mta the Kattek. Semervllle Journal . .. , When the office seeks the man It gen esally finds him out on the front door steps, or even coming down the street. J. An Age of Precaution History has taught us that the early devel opment of a race has invariably been marked by the establishment of the homo, and by the cultivation and preservation of family tiea. The second step in the development' seems to be an awakening sensibility to the need of protection against the dangers of the future, and not simply an animal-like instinct to pro vide for present wants. The great heed given by the American people today to provide against contingencies of the future may be taken as sure evidence of their progrefs and development. For example, consider the widely diver sified forms of insurance extant. ' To begin with, there is life and fire insurance. Then there is marine, accident, health, burglary, plate-glass, lightning and windstorm insur ance; titles to property and mortgages on real estate may also be insured. With but one exception, however, nil ex isting methods of protection are simply safe guard against possible dangers. The excep tion is life insurance, which provides for the inevitable. A house may burn, or a ship may sink, but every person -must die. While life assurance cannot prevent death, it can miti gate the loss usually resulting from the death of the breadwinner. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. H. D. Neely, Mgr., 404-405 Merchant's Nat l Bank Bldg. OflAHA. DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. Chs rile Toung Btrt-ttey seems t think, the girls sre rrasy after hltn. , Kli Well, tli ones who are after him certainly must I craiy. New fjrk Pre. Blngs Tea, a singular thing happened to me on my wed.llnn lay. 1 ao iiJenialW swallowed a silver dime. Hangs Well, I've always wondered whnt your wife cmilil have seen la you. Cleve land Plain dealer. "So you like me a little" she said, coquotlshly. "I would like you a Uttle," be replied, and the matter waa aa good a settled, for Little was hi name. Chicago Post. "See here, you. sir," crVd tho irste father, "didn't I tell you never to call upon my daughter again T 'No, sir, you, didn't," replied the vouih. "Toti said not to "cross your threshold,' so I climbed la U window." Philadelphia Press. Tom I had ' my fortune told the other day, and my ftanoee broke off the engaue- ment, Jaok Why, la she a believer in such non sense T Tom Nonsonse nothlngt It wsa told her by a mercantile agency. Chicago New. H Is very devoted to M wife. He al ways goes with her when she has to have "Tea: he told tne be admired a man hi eould atop any woman talking for halt an nour. uncinnau xriouue. To yon remember, dear, how 1 nrnA to serenade you during those) moonlit summor nights?" ,Tra, I remember. Now yon only snore." Cleveland Plain Dealer. . Toung Atterfeet Millie, I don't see how I ran live without you I Ilnlre who knew nlrat -Probably have to go to work, will youT-Chlcg3 Tribune. "Well,' he said, after being rejected, "you certainly are the most Inconsistent girl." "Why sof demanded th haughty beauty, "Yon declare you will marry whom you please, and yet you won't marry me when you know you please mi more thnn ar.y other girl I know." PhUinolphla Press. THO ARROW HEAD. Youth's Companion. Peep crsdled In the forest clay, Long toet. It snugly slept away While winter, summer, passed It o'er Through twice a hundred years or more; Whll nplliigs Into oaks upreared: While rood by rood th land waa cleared; Till glancing from the paleface plow It waked to meet the world of Now. And on my study desk it lies, A derelict, in mute surprise. Where vanished Is the em'wlfl shade? The aisles of the primeval glade? The deer's shrill snort, the turkey's 011? The Indian's measured guttural? The moocasln, tbe copper face. The war whoop and the, striped grimace? Perchance, could but thy tale be told. Some wrinkled arrow maker, Old, Another Minnehaha's sire, Close crouching by his wigwam flra with patient labor, chin by chip Slow wrought thee barb and edge and tip; And striding over trunk and brook A Hiawatha came and took. . , The mind may nalnt but cannot give The breath to make Its figures live. Gone are the hands that shaped tnee so; Oon is the warrior and his bow: Gone Is the quarry and the oak: Gone are the wild red forest folk Like their own bolts forever sped: Gone all ,thy world, cm arrowneaa. SCHOOLS. BROWNELL HALL, OMAHA. , Social atmosphere home-like and hsppy. General and sollege preparatory courses. Exceptional advantages In mualc, art and literary Interpretation. Prepares for any college open to women. Vassar, Weltetley, Mt' Ifolyoke, Western Reserve university, Unlvesslty , of Nebraska and University of Chicago, admit, pupils wltnom examination Ori.tbB certificates oC,the principal end faculty. Thoroughness insisted upon as es sential to character Duuaing. r-nyio training under a professional .director. Well equipped gymnasium, ampl provi sion for out door sports. Including private skating grounds. Send for Illustrated cata logue. Mlse Maorae. Principal. 1 I