2 THE ILLUSTRATED BEE. September 27, 1V0X The Illustrated Bee. Published Weekly by Tb Bee iMbllshlng C'omany, Bee Building. Omahi, Neb. Trice, 6c Per Copy rer Tear. COO. Entered tit thp Omaha PoalofTlce as Second Class Mail Matter. For Advertising Rate Address Publisher. Communications relating to ptiotographs of art tries for publication Miould te ad dressed. "Editor The Illustrated lie. Omaha." Pen and Picture Pointers KIM A3 11 MIN'AIIAN Ih unuthcr w I ' I one-time, Umaha man who haa I risen to a riTtnln degree of prominence since leaving here. Two years ago he won national fame by projecting u. movtnent for the abolition of treating, which ho first pre sented to the Knights of Columbus, of which society he was one of the founders. Ho maintains thut the suspension of the treating custom Is the first step toward total abstinence. This movement won con siderable headway, and lias been com mended by churchmen of all denomina tions. Mr. Mlnahan Is a lawyer by pro fession, and la well remembered In Omaha, where lie was In active practice for a long time, before removing to Columbus, O., his present home, about eight years ago. He has devoted much of his time to organized lay work In the Catholic church and on August 3 last wus elected the first presi dent of the American Federation of Catho lic Societies at Atlantic City, N. J. When Queen Kpolctna sent word from Episodes tCTfin KUUtNnM. will nav his VI postponed visit to Purls between I flitoher 12 and IB next. Great preparations arc belnK made for his coming. As he Is well known to be an enthuslmt in numismatics, fifty fine meduls will be presented to him. Some of these are of great historic value, ran ging from the days of Itlchelleu to those of Carnot, Faur and Lou bet.. A few of them rommenwrate happening In Italy, such as the restoration of Venice. A special medal will be struck In his honor. People close to William K. Corey, Charle M. Bchwsb's successor as bead of the Vnltcd States Steel corporation, actually fear he will kill himsolf working. They say he Is so wrapped up in the affairs of tho steel corporation that he Is literally "working 'himself to death." For Instance, they say that he lies awake night after night solving or attempting to solve prob lems that mme up, nnd frequently at 1 or 3 o'clock in the morning will call up his lieutenants by telephone to consult them. Ills frlcads believe that no living man can go through the a rt of thing and survive It. 4 Trlnce KlUlkoff. the cxar's minister of railroads. Is perhaps tho letist Rurlan lookiug man la Ilussku. He Is the greatest railway bulVler in the world and during the eight years he has held his present position Almost 33,000 miles have been con structedmore than one-third tho railway mileage of the Rusrlan empire. To him Is fiaptist it In 1st er in a certain vll- jf' I lage was astonished at being 4 I miltnl In to minister to a dvlnsr churchman. Having afforded what consclatlon he could to the sick man lie asked the churchman's wife: "Why didn't you send for your own clergyman?" "Oh, no, sir," she replied, "the doctor said the case was Infectious." Orover Cleveland, though a writer of fomful Kngllsh, In known among news paper men for his Involved style, s:iys tho New York World. The other evening at a New York club the ex-president told with ni patent enjoyment of the effect of his complicated diction upon a visiting reporter who hud sought him for an Interview. After dictating a statement to the youth he Inquired, kindly, "Have you got It all down?" "Yes," replied the reporter, candidly, "I have, but I will straighten out the sen tences when I write It up." S Senator Walk r told a story during a re cent debate In the upier house ef the com monwealth on the iHtlicy tf a "white Aus tralia," rcUtcs the lxindon Chronicle. A missionary in China was rudeavorlng to convert one of the natives. "8u; pose me t lirlatlan, me (a t J heaven?" remarked Ah Bin. "Tea," replied the missionary. "All right." retorted the heathen, "but what for you no let Chinamen Into Aus tralia when you let htm Into heaven!" "Ah," said the rolsiioanry with fervor, there's no labor party In heaven." ) tali oae asked Cbauncey Pepew upon bis her royal domains at Nellgh to Omaha for a pair of Omaha knights to give her escort In an automobile, she neglected to provide a guide, and as a censcquence Clarke Powell and Lowe Haynea have a story to tell of driving a whla wagon across the "boundless perarles" after night that has almost as mm h of adventure in It as any Ned IJuntllnc ever regaled his readTS -with. Inquiry along the road brought them in formation from a farmer, whose disinter estedness they are now Inclined to question. By following his advice they proceeded bout sixteen miles at right angles to the direction they should have traveled. Then another farmer set them right and told them of a short cut, by which they could save time. They followed the short cut, and found themselves overtaken by night In a stretch of country where the road was overgrown by grass, and the mercury get ting down to the freezing point. For hours Powell hung over the front end of the ma chine, nosing out the road, and telling llaynes how to steer. You know you can't do as you used to with an automobile; it has no hoofs to guide you by the difference In sound between the road and the grass. But the auto was finally wheeled into Nellgh, and during the days of the carnival the queen and her maid of honor were given the delight of being wheeled from place to pluce In a magnificent touring; ma chine, and with a speed and comfort they had never before known. The carnival was a great success, and not the least interest ing feature of It was the entourage of the queen. And It finally came to pass that Jupiter Pluvlus took his eye off the Omaha grocers and butchers for u day and tbey held their and Incidents due the Blberlan railway construction and the fact that Rustda Is far more formidable In the far east than ever before. A privy councillor, a member of the ministry, and a strong man. Prince Khllkoff has great weight in the councils at St. Petersburg. 8 Endless stories of Charles H. Hunt chief of police of Portland, Me., are told by his admirers, and among them is one that illustrates the ready humor of the old man. At a dinner given by prominent cltlsens of that place, the chief was the principal guest, and In the course of the feast be was called upon to respond to the toast, "The Polioe." Amid applause, Mr. Hunt arose In the full dignity of his gorgeous uniform and In a silence Indicative of the affection felt for him, said with a co-nlcU wink: "Here's to the poltce; first tn war, first in peace, first in the pockets of the countryman." "Admiral, what were your sensations Just preceding the fleet's entrance Into the bay of Manila?" asked a Washington lady of George Dewey. "It seems to me," responded the admiral, "that I was thinking of 10.000 American newsboys, anxiously waiting to shout one of two sentenoea, 'Dewey's great feat, or "Dewey's great defeat. I love the newsboy, and determined to lessen his task by giv ing him an opportunity to shout the shorter sentence." Robert H. MoCarter, the well-known New Jersey lawyer, who has been appearing as Gleanings From the return from Europe if champagne is really the best thing one can drink to avoid sea sick ness. "Well," replied the senator, with his never-falling ha-ha, "I like it very well my self, but most people prefer lemonade. It tastes ubout the same going both ways." A British clergyman who wss totally de void of knowledge of seamanship once preached in a congregation of sailors. Thinking to Impress bis lesson upon his hearers more distinctly, he pictured a ship trylnjj to enter a harbor against a "head wind. Unfortunately for the success of his metaphor, his Ignorance of seamanship placed the Bhlp In several singular posi tions. "What nhall we do next?" he cried. "Come down off the bridge," cried an old tar In disgust, "an' lemme take command or ye'U 'ave us all on the rocks In another arf a second." At a suburban auction of household goods, relates the Philadelphia Ledger, an active and successful bidder was a Montgomery county farmer. His purchases were piled high In one corner of the room, and he waa still eager when a thermom eter was offered. There was no bidding from any quarter, and the auctioneer, reaching It out to the farmer, said: "Here, give me a quarter for it and lake It along!" "No! Not for me!" said the farmer, backing away. "Why, that's dirt cheap!" exclaimed the auctioneer. "Don't you want a thermom terr' "Nasi" was tho decided reply. "I had picnic while the old boy wasn't looking. And It was a screamer when It did come off. Time after time had the date been fixed and every time did the rain god pick that day to overturn bin can. But be couldn't keep It up, so the men and women wtio minister to Omaha's gustatory need went to Missouri "Valley last Tuesday and some of the things they did there have been immortalized by The Hee's staff artist, who was there with his camera, Cresceus clipped a quarter of a second off his record, and the world's, for a mile on a half-mile track at the Omaha driving park, and The Bee camera raiiRht him while he was doing It. The pictures In this number were taken while the great trotter was passing tl.e same point on each round and might easily be taken for the same picture, so even did the driver and his pacemukcrs maintain their positions. In the first picture it will be noticed that Mike the Tramp, the runner, has his hind legs In the air and In the other bis fore legs are up. Both horses and the auto mobile were traveling at a 2:00 clip when these pictures were taken. One of the features of the street fair at Dewltt was the flower parade. In which a number of beautifully decorated vehicles were driven. The picture In this number shows that of Mrs. George Dunn, which waa given the first prise. s Hie death of Mrs. Kendall Young as sures to Webster City, la., the Toung for tune of $200,000 for the purpose of a library. Mr. Toung died In 1896 and In his will he bequeathed his entire fortune to in Lives of Noted People counsel for the Shipyard trust, tells this story to Illustrate how worthless the bonds of a corporation sometimes become: "When my father was a trustee of Prince ton college, the late John I. Blair of Blalrs town Informed the board of trustees that he was going to give the college many thou sands of dollars worth of the bonds of a new western railroad. There was great re joicing at Princeton. Bverybody celebrated over the gift. Then the bonds came. The -trustees discovered thut the donor had cut off the coupons for the next forty years." Prince Jocahlm Albrecht of Prussia Is, like other male members of the royal fam ily, an officer in the German army, but he Is much fonder of music than of war. He has written the music for a ballet and is engaged upon an opera. He is a regular at tendant at the theater and Is said to I en semble In character the late Prince George, who devoted much of his time to writing postry. Some surprise Is expressed at the public and democratic way In which a member of the royal family has gone among the composers, having his name "billed" like any other, and it Is considered not unlikely that the emperor may sud denly interfere. "Hist!" "Hist yourself." answered the Auditorium hotel detective. "There's a sanctimonious old guy out in the lobby who's trying to pinch another fellow's watch." This Information was given to the sleuth at S:1S o'clock, relates the Chicago Journal. With great care he sised up his prospective prey. At 1:167 he returned and Story Tellers' one a year or two ago, and fooled around it an' lost time without being able to regulate it atalL Why, I couldn't even open the darned thing!" VT. H. Bagley of Raleigh. N. C, a brother of Knalgn Worth Baglcy, who was killed in the Spanish-American war, tells of a Tarheel farmer who was inclined to look on the bright side of things. "The snan was at work on land so poor that you couldn't raise your hat on it, when a stranger passed," said Mr. Bagiey, "and asked him about the crop prospects. The farmer seemed to be depressed, and finally the stranger expressed sympathy with him and his condition. "This nettled the farmer, and he said: 'See here, stranger, I ain't so blamed bad off as you think.- I don't own this here farm. " The little English vicar of Hexton, whose objection to high church ritualism brought him recently Into conflict with Bishop Pot ter in New York, sat one day, drinking a brandy aitd soda in the cafe of the Fifth Avenue hotel, relates the Boston Post. A group of reporters surrounded him. One of the reporters said: "Why don't you try to drown ritualism, Mr. Flllingham, with sermons, rather than with violence?" The vlear smiled. "Serraona," he said, "have an effect always, but two often this effect Is the opposite one to what the aermunlser intended." "How do you mean, sir?" the reporter asked. "I'll illustrate to you wbal I mean." said the vicar. "I once had a parishioner who was a miser. For this man's benefit I the city, the legatee not to come Into pes) session of it until the death of Mrs. Toung. The will provided that on her death $25,000 should at once be expended upon a fire proof building and that the remainder ot the fortune should remain In a perpetual trust and that only the Income from it, or as much of It as is necessary, shall be used for library purposes. After the death of her husband Mrs. Toung maintained a library in the old Young home out of the annual allowance she received from the estate. It waa small compared to what the city will now have, though. It is expected that with this estate, much of which la In Iowa real estate, the city will be enabled to have one of the finest library buildings and complete fittings In the state. The building will be built upon the beautiful Toung residence lots, where the old home now stands. Work upon this structure will be begun Immediately. Major Jerauld A. Olmstead, U. S. A., (retired) has been apppolnted to represent the Cnltcd States army in the matter of lnr Btructlon in military matters for the Iowa , National Guard. The position is one which he desired and he was recommended for the position by Governor Cummins and Congressman Hull. The new military law provides for this form of supervision cf the work in the National Guard of the states that conform to the law, and it was expected that retired officers will be de tailed to represent the war board. Majoc Olmstead is a fine military instructor and a thorough military man. He was inspector of the Iowa National Guard for two years and the past year has been in charge of military instruction at the state normal school. remarked: "Oh, pshaw!" Charley Fines, who has charge of the cabstand at the hotel, had noticed a middle-aged man talk ing earnestly with another man. At the same time he was dallying with the other fellow's watch chain. "You're a lobster," said the house detective. "That is Secre tary Shaw." Admiral John O. Walker, president of the Isthmian Canal commission, wears long Dundreary whiskers which give htm a fa miliar nickname In the navy, Bays the New York Tribune. One day a young ensign en tered his office and In a cheerful tone ad dressed the colored messenger: "Hello, Bonce, Where's Old Whiskers?" Btforc the conversation could proceed any further the admiral stepped out from behind the screen, drying his hands upon a towel, and re marked quietly to the young offioer: "Take a seat; I'll be with you in one moment." As the floor did not open to swallow him up the ensign sank into 4he nearest chair with a heavy and remorsrful heart He had come te ask a favor of Che man who assigned all officers to duly and bad the power to send him to either a pleasant or a painful fcerth as he pleased. When the admiral reappeared and took his seat at the desk the young officer, with shaking limbs . and flushed face, began to explain that he did not intend to be impertinent. "For you must know, admiral," he stammered, "that the boys often call you 'Old Whiskers.' I hope you don't mind It" "Oh, no," an swered the admiral," "I don't mind It, but if it's just the same tp you I'd rather you'4 call me John." Pack preached one Sunday a strong sermon on the necessity of charity, of philanthropy a sermon on the .duty and the joy of giv ing. The miser, at whom I gased often, Seemed impressed. "Next day I met him on the street. " "Well, John,' I said, 'what do you think of yerterduy's sermon?' " 'It moved me deeply, sir," lie ansvered. 'It brought home to me so Ktrongly the necessity of giving alms that, honestly, sir, I've a great mind to turn beggar.' " There Is a young clergyman near Hag erstown, Md., says the Baltimoro Sun, who might be excused for siying ' the gullelcssness of some rural gentry paHeth all understanding." He would probably deny saying It should you ask him, but he -would not deny the following story, told by a relative: A young couple with matrimonial intent, fresh from the green fields of their Moral homes, went recently to the parsonage of the clergyman in question. Tho nu; tl.U knot was tiod. In the pause which fol lowed the newly-made bene Ilct lookel even more embarrassed than before, lie flaked about in hla trousers' pocket as if looking fur something. "What's the price?'' .he anally blurted out "The slate allows me $1," said the cler gyman, "but " and paused. Borne pauses are more eloquent than words. Rvi dently this was net "Well," finally remarked the gro-m as he handed the astonished divine a quarter, "if the state allows you a dollar, take this and the Job will ait tod sou a 4oi leg end a quarter. Good day."