Te Illustrated Be& published Weekly by Th Bee Pabllshlng Company, iire Building. Omaha, Neb. 1'rloc, fc Per Copy Tor Year. 12.00. F.ntored at the Omaha Po;offlcc as Second Class Mail Matter. For Advertising Rates Address Publlfchsr. Commiiiili Hons relating to iitinlii;raiih of unlcles for publication ri" i) l'l be ad dressed, "Kdltor Tne Illutrated lie. Omaha. " Pen and Picture Pointers I'lVH .-.cfi.fi i'irf innniTv mm A. twenty-one years. Judai- Oliver IVrrv Hhlras of Dubuque will re tire Trciin I hi- b nch to private life i.n November 1. nrid I'nsldcnt Root'cvclt is is pectcd to kooii announce the appolntm lit f hi successor. Judge Shlras Is a oaisln of the Judge Shlras who In on the t'tlted States supreme court bench by appointment from Pennsylvania. He wan born In Pitts burg. OelobiT 21, IfCS. und rwlv.il a food education early In life. He was graduate 1 from the Ohio unlverplty at Athens and from the Vale law school, lie removed Ht once to Dubuque and tn August, 1SS. he waM admitted to the practice of law und formed the partnership of Ulsroll, Mil s & Hhiras. His law practice was Interfered with by the wiir. for lie entered tl:e Twenty-seventh Iowa volunteers as a licutenont In August, IS'. He waa assigned to duty on the staff of the late General ('"rand J. Hei ron, and in thlH capacity served In 1W2-3 In the campaigns of the Army of tlve Tennessee- in MlHKouri. Arkansas and Louisi ana. In MA In resumed practice in Lu buquo In Ihc llrnt of Shlrus K- Van Duce, which was Joined a year later by Co'or.et David it. Henderson. Judge Hhlun was highly succcrsful In the practhe for many yarn and In W2 he was appointed to be Judge of the I'nlted f?tatcs district court for the northern district of Iowa. An such he presided over courts at Dubuque, Sioux Episodes NVKNTOR EDISON get so busy a short time ago that he neglected shaving, und the result was a HI (JTJIJ bllly-Koat Btulible on his chin. He is lima or a enew or. tooacco ana wkru immeraod in thought or chemicals docs not have time to expectorate and wipe his mouth. Neither does he like to swal )ow the saliva. So as be chews the Juice of the weed sees through the corners of Ms mouth and trickles down his chin to his whiskers and down Ma whislurs to his shirt front. Ills wife has thought seriously of buying him some rubber blh Shortly after he was elected president of France M. loubet offered a huge .sum for tho castlo of Mcaene, which once belonged to Plana of I'ultlers. the favorite of Henry II. Ills offer was refused at the time, hut recently bo succeeded In getting the cha teau, which is most picturesquely situated, near Montdlmar, and has a waterfall, three ponds filled v.'lth trout and a large park with plenty of game. The price paid was 170,000 frar.es. From his tower the president can now see l.ls birthplace, Uur aannc, where his mother still lives. According to the Charleston News and Courier a fun of the lute Major Wade Hampton (llbbes of Columbia, S. C, Bays that It was his father who, as a lieutenant, fired the first gun. a signal gun, nt the ut tai k on Fort Sumter, Charleston harbor, on the morning of April 12, IStil. He writes: "At Lieutenant Olbbes' battery the signal gun was aimed to burst a shell high in the F.NRY B. F. MACFAULAND. presi dent of the Board of Commission ers of tiie District of Columbia, la a line looking man. smooth nhaven. with Iron gray hair, re ports the Saturday Evening l'ost. The first time Mr. MacFarland. In his caimclty of commissioner, ent before the appropriations committee of the house of representatives to urge some Itenf In the district supply bill, be found ' I'lide Joe" Cannon, tins chairman of Uie committee, sitting on the small of Jiia back, smoking a cigar und looking at the celling. Mr. Cannon rose, greeted Mr. MacFarbind, and then resumed bis former attitude. The argument was made. Mr. MacFarland paused for reply. Mr. Cannon puffed on his cigar for a moment. Then be said: "Young man, I've been watching that face of yours. If I hud It I'll l t 1 wouldn't be afraid to play poker with any living man." A village sexton In a Wnnsylvnnia town, In addition to being gravi-tligger. acted as a stonecutter, carpenter, and furniture mover. The local doctor, having deildid to locate In another county, employed the axton te ascist In removing bis house HI THE ILLUSTRATED BEE. City, Cedar Rapids, Fort Dodge and else where In northern Iowa. He has also sat as a member of the court of appeal!) for the Klghth circuit and baa held court in tnany other places. Judge Shiran In a modest man, polite and cultured, popular with the r"Ple and with the lawyers, and bis retirement from the bench is a source of grat reirret in the entire district where be had presided so loop. He was always regarded as an eminently fair and ImpartliU Judge, and no suggestion of either wcakn or wrongdoing ever attached to him or his court. His name was frequently consid ered for an appointment to the supreme bench and his friends always fell that ho would have been udder strength to that bofl y. As a member of the court "f appeals for the F.ighlh fniteil States circuit Judge Shiras heard the famous ease against the Tiansmlssourl Freight association. Involving- the question whether the Sherman anti trust act applied to railway companies, and. If so, whether combinations between railroad companies for the purpose of main taining certain freight rates were lawful und- r the p rovislona of that net. The two other members of the court, one of them Judge Thaver, who recently wrote the opinion In the Northern Securities case, held that the written contract entered Into by the railway companies wns not unlaw ful, because the rites fixed in it were not shown to be unreasonable. Judge Shlras, dissenting, held that the Sherman art did apply to railway companies, and that It for bade their entering into any arrangement for the purpose of avoiding competition among them. The supreme court supported him nrid reversed the judgment, though the judge's own brother voted in ttie mi nority against his view. No federal Judge, in the west has so wide an experience In trying cases In which In dians were Interested as Judge Shlras. In a celebrated case, in which a Sioux chief, having killed an officer a few days before a peace treaty was made with his tribe by General Miles, waa subsequently arrested ami tried for murder, the Judge made the Jury acquit the Indian, holding that the and Incidents air: another gun was carefully aimed at tho fort, and the wires were laid reedy to ex plode a mine under an old h use in the way. As nearly as possible these things were done simultaneously. Now which of the three shots fired at the fort from the three separate mortar batteries by Captain James, Mr. HuTin or Liuctenant Olhbes' battery was the second shot no man may certainly say." Justice Hawkins, the distinguished Kng lish lxirrlster and Jurist, says that hU first brief was to defend one of two men charged with coining, and when they were placed In the dock he overheard a brief colloquy be tween them. Coiner No. 1 told his comrade that he was to be defended by a very good man. Coiner No. 2 said he also was de fended. Ho did not know the gentleman's name, "but" Indicating Mr. Hawkins ho added, admiringly, "he's a smart 'tin Vhen I banded over the fee he put the thick un" I. e., sovereign "between his teeth and bit it. He's the chap for my money." The battleship Texas, now berthed in the Brooklyn navy yard, has been equipped with a fine bath for the officers. Mr. Qulmby. executive officer of the ship, took one of the blue jackets to instruct him how to operate the new acquisition. After n thorough explanation Mr. Qulmby stepped under he shower and moved both faucets not knowing that the water connection had been made. He was soaked to the skin in a moment. The sailor remarked, gravely: "I think I can work it now. fir." Mr. Qulmby looked at him sharply, but the man Gleanings From the hold goods. All went well until it came to settlement, when the doctor d-ducted an old account due by the sexton. He wrote nt the same time objecting to the cluigD made for removing bis furniture, ui-lng these words: "If this was steady it would pay much better than gravedigijing." In a few days back came this reply: "In deed, 1 would be glad of a steudy Job; gravediggiug is very slack sine you left th countv." Congressman George H. McClellan relates this adventure, which might have h id a more serious ending bad It happened in New York Instead of Washington: "One night when 1 was walking down Pennsylvania avenue," sild Mr. McClellan, quoted by the New York Times, "I saw a big policeman standing on the comer, acting in a ?uspiclous manner. Ho held one hand behind his back, as if he were concealing something. Just for the fun of the thing. I approached and asked him: "What have you there?" "For an Instant he looked startled, and then, quickly bringing his arm around in front of him, said: " 'It's au apple; have a bit?' "'No, sir, I sold sternly. 'Don't you convention made with his tribe by General Miles bound the government and the courts to forgive the crime. In a frequently quoted pension case he held that the state laws do not apply on the matter of pen sions, a subject wholly controlled by the acts of confess. The ft, Red States su pferno court upli. Id this view. It has been the subject of much comment that so able a Jurist remained on the district court bench. He is one of the few district Judges who occasionally sit ns a member of the circuit court of appeals, and it Is believed that bad be chosen he could have been pro moted years ago. He Is populnr, and the Dubuque liar association is preparing a demonstration in bis honor on his lctire-ment. Colonel James Hush Lincoln, who Is in command of the Fifty-fifth regiment, I. N. G., In the maneuvers with the regulars at Fort Riley, Kan., has been a military man all his life. As a boy he Joined a troop of cavalry from his native state, Maryland, and became a lieutenant in the confederate service. About twenty years ago be was elected tn be military Instructor of the cadets at the Iowa State college at Anus, and be continues in that position to thii time. On the breaking out of the war for the freedom of Cuba the four Iowa regi ments were called Into the volunteer serv ice and Iowa was accorded one brigadier genera) of volunteers. Co'onel Lincoln was nominated for this place and had the backing of the governor and entire con greiidonal delegation and was commis sioned a brigadier general. On h's return to the State college at Ames and the work of reorganisation of the Iow.i National guard was commenced, there was a unani mous call from the members of the Fifty first Iowa that CtHonel Lincoln should be come the commander of the reorganized regiment. He consented and was com missioned. 1-ater the number of the regi ment was changed and it la now the Fifty fifth to distinguish it from the regiment of volunteers which raw service in the Philip pines. Colonel Lincoln has had wonderful success as instructor at the State college, in Lives of Noted People never cracked a smile until he had re joined his messmates. Mme. Nordk-a, the operatic vocalist, who has just been awarded the Bavarian gold medal an 'honor bestowed only on those who stand at the front rank of artistic life is an American by birth, though most of her great professional triumphs have been scored In Europe. Though very fond of her native land, she has been compelled to pass much of her time abroad. The great prima donna Is gifted with a strong sense of humor and she is fond of telling the story of an adventure which befell her at a concert in Texas. Forgetting her overshoes, she asked a cowboy to fetch them for her. As he brought her first one and then the other the charming singer re gretted that he should have so much trouble, but her apologies received the pretty reply: "Don't name it, ma'am; I wish you were a centipede!" Rear Admiral Louis Kempff has been or dered to his home in Belleville, III., pre paratory to hts retirement from active serv ice next Saturday, when he will have reached the required atge. Admiral Kempff has been in the navy forty-six years, of which twenty years were spent at sea. Among the most notable acts in his carreer was one for which congress thanked him. When commander of the United States Meet in Chinese waters In 19U0 he refused to take part with the allied fleets in bombarding the forts at the mouth of the Taku river, China. He did not think the bombarding Story Tellers' know who I am? " 'Don't know you from a lamp po-'t. sir.' " 'Well, I am Congressman McClellan.' " 'la that so?' Then take half of this apple. I suppose if you were a senator I'd have to sive you the whole of It!' " 0 Dr. PurkhurRt delivered himself of a story In the course of bis sermon in the Madison Square Frenbyterian church, New York, last Sunday. This is the story: "An African chief became converted and moved to London, where he wore fashion able clothes and behaved In every way as an Irreproachable man. One day be was giving a lecture in a church on the advan tages of a peaceful, civilized life. His collar did not fit wel!, and in attempting to adjust It b tore open the buttonhole. "Tho ripping shirt band brought back all his old savagery, ami he shouted out that civilization was all a sham and he wished he was back in his old life. Whereupon he pulled off his collar, his coat and trousers, and finally stood In the garb of the un adorned savage. Then he set fire to the church and took to the woods. "If his buttonhole had been a little trongcr," added Dr. Tarkhurtit, "he would probably have remained an Irreproachable October 18, 1903. and his work is regarded of great value to the young people of Iowa. He Is much con sulted with reference to matters In the national guard and ia a member of prac-tic-ally every military examining board called. He has four sons who are follow ing the profession of arms all In the regu lar army a captain, a first lieutenant, a second lieutenant and a private. In the passing of Tom Murray one of Omaha's most unique llgures faded from the scene of activity. For he was an ac tive man all bis life In Omaha, and. though ho never took a very largo part In the af fairs of the cjty, he was Identified to a much greater degree than Is generally known with the development of Omaha. He came here among the earliest, and for many years was a more or less prominent factor In business life. His retiring ways and eccentric methods to a large degree Isolated him from social Intercourse, but by those with whom he came In business contact he was esteemed ss an honorable and upright man, Just In his dealings, el ecting every farthing of his due, but paying every farthing of his debts. His faith In Omaha never wavered, even after the un fortunate wave of depression had swept away every vestige of the very consider able fortune he had amassed. His downfall financially was due to his confidence In the city where he had made his home and done his life's work, and where he finally died. As an outcome of his eccentricity no photograph or other portrait of the man was ever made, and the only pictorial rec ord left by blm Is n stereoscopic view of the Grand Central hotel, taken a abort time before its destruction by fire In 1X78. It shows the building which Tom Murray made bis home, on the lot where the Mur ray hotel now stands. One of the many amateur base ball teams of Nebraska Is the Fowlers of Fremont. This team gained much local celebrity dur ing the last summer by the general excel lence of Its work, and won a warm place In the hearts of its supporters by the quality of ball presented. was justifiable or expedient and congress took the same view. Admiral Kempff a perhaps the only American officer to be officlully thanked for refusing to tight. The magnanimity of General Robert R. Lee, relates Youth's Companion, Is well known, but the dally manifestations of it are not yet all told. One notable case has, It is believed, never before appeared in print. General I.ee was sitting on the veranda of his Ix-xlngton home one afternoon, en gaged In conversation with some friends, when a man, ill clothed ami covered with dust, appeared at the gate and timidly leek oned to the general. Apologising to his friends. Lee rose at once und wetit to the gate. Very Boon bis purse appeared and he wns Been to give the man some money. His friends, knowing tho extent of his charity in any case of suffering, real or ap parent, looked on with some impatience, for they knew bow sb nder his means were then, and how many calls of the same kind came to him. "General, who was that?" one of them ventured, when he bad returned to his place. "One of our boys in trouble," was the half-smiling answer, for the general knew the remonstrance which his friend was longing to make. "What regiment nnd company did be lie long to?" persisted IiIm friend, anxious if posKible to unearth the suspected fraud. "Oh, he he fought on the other 8ldo,, was General Ijee's calm p.nswer. Pack man the rest of his life. That's the way with much of our civilization and virtue. A very small thing will reveal the real conditions." James R. Mack, a Philadelphia attorney, tells this reminiscence of his law practice In Ohio: "One Sam Johnson, a negro, was indicted in Cincinnati, charged with tho theft of a ham. Johnson was stiff-necked, for the only witness against blm was a man of hta own color, and 'one nigger's word is as gool as nuther's,' said Sam. 'He ll swar I did, an' I'll swar I didn't." The case came up for trial and the Indictment was read: 'The State of Ohio aguinst Samuel Johnson, defendant,' etc. "As he listened, Johnson grew nervous, nnd at the demand of a plea, rofe to hta ftet. ignoring the counsel assigned to him. " 'Youah honah," suld Johnson, Tee not been treated right, nohow. I fought dar wix only one nigger "gainst me, an' hearTa de whole state ob Ohio. I wu not 'feared ob dat nigger wat seen me hook de ham, but I'se got no show now. De whole blame state "gainst me's too much. Yesslr, I took de ham. I pleads guilty. Rut I d like to know whar all de watchers wui hidln', I suttenly would,'