II TIIE OMAITA DAILY REE: SUNDAY, MARCH 20. 1904. Tiie Omaha Sunday Bee E. ROSE WATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT BIORN'INO. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. f)llr Rt (without Sunday), Ono Tr.$40n 'nlly Hps and Sunday. One Year IlliiHlralxd Be. One Year Pumlny Bm. One Year -W Saturday Be, One Year 50 Twentieth Century Fnrmer, One Year.. 1.00 DELIVEr.nD BY CARRIER. Dully Hoe twiihout Sunday), per copy,.. So DnHy Hoe (without Sunday), per week...l;o Jially Her (Including Sunday), per wek.lo Sunday Hee, per copy c KvenltiK Bee (without Sunday), per week. 6c Evening: Bee (Including: Sunday). Pr week 100 Complaints of Irregularity In delivery hould be addressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building:. South Omaha City Hall Building;, Twenty-fifth and M Streets. Council Bluffs 10 Pearl Street Chicago IMO Unity Building:. New YorV-?!) Park Row Building-. Washington tn Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating- to news and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, Only 2-cent stamps received In payment ot rtee run ikihih ,.1. . , mall accounts. p mail accounts. Personal checks, except 1 Oraaha or eastern exchanges, not ncoepted. TIIE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Stat of Nebraska. Douglas County, ss. .,Ge.or?e Tsschuck. secretary or gays that th actual number of full and im7lriA'ti!iiSi montn or ebruary. W04. was as ioiiowe. I UHtaa t a,eo 1 20.2A0 MR.OBO ( ao.oso S8.08O I IK.MIO I Z&jHfiO I... 80,000 10 38,870 II 33,100 11. 88, ISO II 1 80,040 14 21.300 n'.!!"!.'..'.''80-370 1!.!.!! 30,330 a"!"!""".''"880 n.. ai,o40 a J-Voao !!!I!!"!!.'".34!24 3i,4o 27 t 000 !"!""!!!!!!3i!o30 IS 30,260 Total BTT.tao Lets unsold and returned copies.... O,0S Net total galea 807,472 Net average sales 3D.912 GEO. B. TZSCIIUCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this 1st dny of March, A. D. ISO, id. B. H UNGATE. (Seal) Notary Public. It turns out that bulling the cotton market Is not the soft snap it was cracked up to be. It Is pretty nearly time for Russia's luck to turn if Japan is not to get al together too chesty. John X. Baldwin has endorsed Mr. Gurley for United States district at torney. That ought to fix it. We presume that ring Yang, which has Just been occupied by the Japanese, Is some sort of a cousin to ring Pong. Hours committee No. 1 evidently thinks It easier to bear a lesser evil than to undertake to settle the race question ln South Carolina. V Russia may have a chance to discover I the difference between marching to I Poklng with the Japanese forces and 1 marching to Peking without them. J Former President Cleveland has Just celebrated another Dirtnaay anniversary, Jt Is needless to say that Colonel Bryan I forgot to send a birthday present Partnership witn calamity is not uie mosi certain roaa to success, as uaniei 8uiiy- who ciaimea tne Don weevu as his partner in the cotton boom, wUI have to testify. It la to be hoped that the Abyssinian hyena sent to President Roosevelt lost his voice ln transit to America. The presidential campaign will furnish noise p " , . v k .v. iu ,;... British war corresnondents who want to retain their usefulness will hereafter say nothing derogatory to "the thin red I line ot heroes" when sent to report wars In which Great Britain Is engaged. What has become of the Gorman presl dentlal boom? It must have gone up ln moke with the Baltimore fire, for It certalnly has ceased to attract attention in public discussion of presidential politics. b General- Leonurd Wood is to be con- gratulated, but with cable tolls to the j Philippines at practically prohibitive figures most of his friends will prefer to write rather than to wire tholr good' wishes. Ihe state ot Missouri evidently does I not pay lawyers for defending pauper criminals. That is the only plausible xplunutlon of the fact that no lawyer could.be found to volunteer to defend I William Rudolph.' 11 If the New England savant, who has reached the conclusion that much crime la due to 'suggestion, would have sent long a method for repelling such sug gestion his remarks would Jmve buen . more to' the point. The action of the Sixth Nebraska dU- trlct republicans ln protecting their can- dldate for congress ahead of the other five districts Is another illustration of the proverb about the last being flrst sal th rf Kui i-.t - General Leonard Wood colckrated his confirmation as major general by de - featlng a force of 2,000 Moros, which will reconcile the people to his elva- tlon. since the American honors above 11 the man who does something. A free tip to lawmakers at Washing - ton: In the consideration of the post - office appropriation bill the surest way to kill au Item Is to charge that It U there for the benefit of one Mr. Bristow, the fourth assistant postmaster general. The Bee's prognostication that former Congressman W. K. Andrews would shy Lis castor Into the senatorial ring has proved corrtH-t Tho prise is not to be awarded until next winter and it Is not to be expected that any one aspirant U1 Lava auoaoiiol of Uis ruunius. ILLlTKRACr AND IMMIGRATION. I From the dlsoiieqlon going on In east-1 ern pnpors It is plain tbnt another effort I la to tw made before long to moke the I Immigration laws more stringent by I prescribing an educational test In nddl-1 tlon to the present rigid physical nnd I mental requirements. The burden ofldlan policy Is Inimical to American In the argument is that while Immigration I lawg are fairly effective to keep out crime and disease they do not keep out Ignorance, and that this Ignorance is a dangerous menace to the Institutions of a country where an alien can become a voter in live years or less. Flv years, It Is sold, la too short a time for proba-lthe tlon, and yet In some states aliens are I permitted to vote after they have been residents but a year or a year and a I I. 1 ' f ...- . 1 . 1 1. n f . .... t I t 1141 II., I1IHI IIUC IHKfll IMIl lliru UIBL mi i- I unitization papers. The conclusion Is I therefore reached that oven If the term I of probation were to be ten years or fifteen years, the hopelessly Ignorant I aliens would never become, intelligent voters, and it is lietter to go to the root I or tne matter ny rornmaing me immi-1 . . . ...... ... .1 Pn.inn . initerntes nltnirether grntion or linteraxes airofcetner. The agitation against the further ad- mission of immigrants from Europe un-1 questionably lias a foothold among cer-1 tain, classes who. forget that the whole population of this country can be traced I European Immigration without going uaCk more than two or three genera- 0I1B nn such sophistry as thlB appeals I to them In spite of its lack of logic. In I 19 " juVktoP"0 flrst PIaee' ue most dangerous citl-1 eoU8 are not alwny ne most ignorant. In the second place literacy need not be "ter!lry ln tl,e English language, al- t,,ouu It might take an educated for- elgner almost as long to become occub- tomn, to ol,r InnBuage and methods of povernment as an uneducated foreigner, ve certainly cannot expect an Immt- grant to learn the English language be- foro coming to this country, and even If he did learn it he could gain at that dis tance but an Inadequate conception of our institutions. Finally, an illiterate alien is no more dangerous than an illit erate native, but on the contrary often Decomes a more desirable citizen. ine cnier weaitness or tnis wnoie ar- gument against immigration is that it confounds the question of immigration and naturalization. The mere fact that we admit aliens and give them certain rights or citizenship does not entitle them to, nor require us to grant, the ngnt to vote. Admitting that the pro- nauonary penoa is in many states ai- together too short, that is simply a valid reason for lengthening that' period, and the Banie reosons that would require an educational test for the franchise be- fore naturalization would require an educational franchise test fcr native voters as wen. aj a mutter 01 raci in Nebraska, ana, we believe, ln most of 1110 states, naturalization is not a right but a privilege, and can be withheld by the Judge presiding over the court from which final papers are procured. If in his Judgment the applicant Is not quail- fled for full citizenship. It rests, there- lore, with the authorities Issuing nat-lcini uralizatlon papers to apply the educa- tlonal test ln a reasonable manner. This wouia not Keep out any desirable Imml- gration because the right to vote is not usually the prime incentive to their com- ing, although It would bar the hope- lessly illiterate from the exercise of the franchise. All competent observers agree that 0nr present Immigration laws are work- ing satisfactorily,, along the lines they were Intended to operate, and there are no good grounds for closing the doors tighter now while the great states of thn wpat are eaa-er to welcome tha In. I 7 - , .17 , dustrlous settler willing to help develop thotr e-eaniirce. TlHrenm In th Imml. rrant ot tia7 quickly wiped out ln tt,e nex feneration and the children of Illiterate parents, thanks to our superb educatiorihl equipment are- quickly counted among our most substantial citl- ing northward to Bolivia, says the re censhlp. I port of Commissioner Pepper, and CANADIAN TOLLY Every idea that comes from Canada which Is antagonistic to the proposition of better relations between the United States and tne uominion, is oorn or some prejudice or hostility to this coun- try which is without justification. There seems to be among our northern neigh- bors an Instinctive and innate desire to And fault with everything that occurs on this side of the line affecting Cano- dlan Interests. Whether intelligently or fairly or otherwise our Canadian neigh- bors are ever prone to And fault and to raise difficulties which render more or less troublesome all the questions I and Issues between the two countries, That SDlrit Is being shown at present, According to an address delivered at the recent opening of the Dominion Parliament by the Canadian premier there was no favor or concession to be asked of the United States. While confessing a desire to have closer trade relations between this country and the Dominion, the premier still declared . . . m . a M A s - A.M . M II. . lUtt 11 w ln aieruimuon vi uio Canadian government not to take any 10 Dnn" aDoul ,ucn an "n"8" nient and that U anytning was done j m tnnt d,rerl,m tne Initiative must be taken ny tne uuuea Mates. I . .. . . ... ... The rony or sucn a position as mis will be apparent to every American citl- 1 sen, whatever his views In regard to the question of reciprocity. Why should the United States take the initiative In I a movement for reciprocity with Can adu? The opportunity which that coun- try had at the last meeting of the high 1 Joint commission to secure a reciprocity 1 agreement It deliberately sacrificed and I It has now no Just claim for further consideration ln connection with thut question. I Appreciate as we nisy the expres- alons of good will and friendship on the I part of the premier of Canada, so re - I centiy enunciated, we are still unable I to forget that It Is not so very long ago that this same statesman, with his I colleagues ln th Dominion government I were uncompromisingly attacking the I American government aud doing all In thrlr now cf to create British sentiment hostile to this country. However solid ton we may l In the matter of pie- serving our trade with the Iminlnlon and it I" certainly worthy of prosprvn tlon we cannot overlook the fact that the whole temper and tendency of Cana- terestB. CO-VPtBATnK chakiti The F.ce prints on another page an article by Nov. A. W. Clark of this city Ion the subject of associated charities which states the case very plainly for co-operation of our local charitable agencies. This Is n subject on which iThe Hoc Has hammered from time to time and for which n movement should . .. A In I. i K .. r.. nn 1M-.-11 jivi IVl WU- 11"' Mr. Clark truly says that "no other city the size of Omnlm In Amerloa can be found without such an organization," and he calls attention to the fact that the lack of system In charitable work by the various philanthropic Institutions supported ny our puDiic-spiruea cuizens ... . .. . .. Is chargeable with a tremendous amount of waste and misdirected effort. People who contribute to charitable purposes have a right to ask for an assurance that the money will be spent in a way calculated to bring about the best re suits. To duplicate, through ignorance or neglect, a charity, no matter how worthy and deserving, Is to deprive some other deserving object of assist- a nee equally needed, The Idea is put forth that a scheme of charity organization be projected ; nd executed in connection with' the newly established International Christian insti- tute, nn Idea which should commend it- self to all thoughtful people interested ln the subject The co-ordination of our numerous charitable agencies is a work as essential and urgent as the conduct of those agencies themselves, SOOTH AM&HICA BT BAIL. Among the great projects that are be ing considered at this time with a view to the expansion of commerce, especially hMn - ann ti.n TTnitiwi fstnt nnri tbo ennn trleg 80Utn of U8 none l9 nioro important than that of constructing a great railway to unlta the northern and the southern continents. This is a subject which has been talked of for many years and whlch ha8 tne endorsement of some of the most practical and the wealthiest of our gt capitalists. Men who rep resent millions are ln an organization whose object is to promote the con .traction of an Inter-continental rail roa(j, connecting the northern and south- ern continents of this hemisphere by n band of steel that would contribute more than anything else to preserve ppnce between them and promote trade that would be of mutual advantage. The Idea of a panamerlcan railway, originated years ago and repeatedly talked of since by men of the highest standing ln the financial aud railway world, seems to be ln a fair way to be- come a material pronosltion. The sne commissioner appointed by Fresl- dent Roosevelt to Investigate conditions in the South American countries with reference to the construction of the pro- posed railway has made his report and tt8 facts and recommendations are such U. to lustlfr the conclusion that the proposed enterprise cannot only be suc- rssfnllv rnrrled out. but would nrovn nrofltable as an Investment That is all that American capital will need to know in order to embark in the enterprise and carry It to success. Mr. Pepper, the commissioner sent out by the president, furnishes some very intn.A.in tnnta n nrnA "c " Ulster republics to the south are very v. . i American as well as lateral railways, if they are to take the place in the world's horizon indicated by climate, resources and Droductiveness. Argentine la build- Mexico southward to Guatemala, Nego tiations are going on for a line through Nicaragua and a similar activity is be- ginning to appear in Costa Rica. Chile iB to tunnel the Andes, thus connecting vtth the Argentine rail systems. Pern 8 nxlous to bring rails to Its deposits 0f coal and copper and Is considering Kuiys and means for the extension of lines to trade centers. It is said that the link of greatest difficulty and un certainty in the great railroad scheme u the long one through the Isthmus and ths republic of Colombia, but this Is not regarded as Impracticable to con struct. According to Commissioner Permer. I " ' only 4,800 miles of railroad are lacking. ail the war from Mexico to Areentine. to make the vast system complete and ever this distance much of the work Is going on within the different countries. The entire cost of the construction of the proioaed intercontinental rallroud Is act down at $150,000,000 and there seems to be no doubt that the Invest nient would be fairly profitable from the I i swa - x. 11 j. . ... Degmning. i uai jn mnaing togetner the countries of the northern and south j ern continents or America tne proposed railroad would De or tne greatest pos Bible benefit 1 an Indisputable propo sltlon. Tne construction- or a rauroaa i uniting tne nonnern ana soumern con tinents of this hemisphere may not be achieved ln the near future, but there lean be no doubt of Its ultimate aceom plUhmeut Representation ln the coming populist national convention is based on an an- I portlonment of delegntes according to I the votaN cast for General Weaver for I president In lr2. Inasmuch. as Colonel j Bryan admits having cast his ballot ln 1 18 for General .Weaver, ha will be represented la the pop""" convention as well as In the democratic convention. 1 It is barely possible- he would feol more at home with the populists than with I the democrat. I Five hundred Servians will fight in I the Russian army. In other words, I King Peter has not missed the oyyor- tunity of making himself solid with the csar. When Nicholas recognize the son of the BWineherder, others may follow. The people of our enlightened com monwealth should not overlook the dis graceful exhibit of backsliding from electoral reform held up to them by Kentucky, whose legislature during the pat week enacted a bill providing for the submission of an amendment to the constitution to repeal the secret ballot system of voting and to r.ntore the viva voce method which was in force In that state prior to the adoption of the present -constitution in 1SU0. The bill was passed by a strictly party vote os a democratic measure over the strenuous opposition of the republicans, and If it Is made a party issue in l!sX, when it comes before the electors, there may well be grave apprehensions that it will carry. Its champions could hardly have rraigned themselves more directly than in giving as the reason for their action the excuse that the secret ballot system is worked ogatnst the democratic party by enabling democrats who could not stomach the party nominees to vote the republican ticket under cover, when they would not have dared to do so ln the open. What to the Kentucky demo crats Is most objectionable in the secret ballot is the very thing that commends it to the friends of electoral reform- amely, that it does away with intimida tion and terrorizing and affords each voter the opportunity to cast a ballot representing his own personal convfe tions. The open ballot system, on the other hand, is an invitation to corrup tion by facilitating the delivery of the goods, and also an incentive to Intimi dation, bulldozing and violence. In a word, the secrecy of the ballot has come to be regarded as one of the essentials of free government and it Is simply mazing that a state like Kentucky should for a moment entertain a pro posal to give up this priceless privilege nd go back to the dark days of force nd fraud. Suffice it to say that no such step could ever be taken except in a state dominated by partisan-blind democrats resolved to resort to the most desperate means to keep themselves ln power. Omaha has certainly gotten the cold shoulder in the realignment, of the su preme court commission. This judicial state's population, but It has no repre- dlstrlct contains almost a sixth of the sentation whatever among the six Judges nd commissioners who constitute the supreme court. We presume, however, we will be permitted to continue to fur nish the large share of litigation for the court to pass on. Mayor Moorcs Is enlisted ln the cam paign to beautify Omaha. Energetic action by the city authorities means a great deal, but the co-operation of the Individual citizen is equally necessary, Omaha can be made beautiful only if evVry one interested in tho city does his or her part. Just Like the PoffllUts. Chicago Chronicle. . Russia and Japan, will hardly begin real business In the field until they get through addressing explanatory and controversial notes to the powers. Modesty Forbids. Detroit Free Press (dem.) In classifying the democrats aa regulars and reorganlzera Mr. Bryan said nothing about t"he disorganizes. Possibly, how, ver, this was due to modesty. s No Cbana-o ia Stylo. , Washington Post A fashion note says that gold will be used extensively In spring millinery. It will be difficult to convince the husband and father that there Is any change from former styles ln that announcement Bplellac Over tho Wall. Brooklyn Eagle. China's great wall has a use In these later days. It marks a place that. In the opinion of the nations, Russia Is not to pass. Russia's warning to China to stay behind It or consider herself In trouble, Is amusing, considering that Russia Is walking away from It as fast as con venient bow Stacked oa Mooatalaa. Portland Oregonlan. Tho past winter has been ono of heavy snows In the Rocky mountain states. In portions of Yellowstone park, for example, snow Is now twenty-five feet deep, with at least six weeks of winter to come. If the waters of this mass of snow could be stored and distributed, It would mean summer or smiling verdure throughout a vast expanse that by the middle of August will be dry and withered. OTerhaallns; tho Hod Cross. Philadelphia Press. The steps taken ln Washington by Sena tor Proctor, Representative William Alden Smith and General Atnsworth, comprising the committee appointed by ex-Secretary Olney to make a complete Investigation of tho affairs of the American Red Cross, promise satisfactory results. Mr. Olney named the committee ln- accordance with Instructions given at the last annual meet Ing of the Red Cross, when the charges of mismanagement and unbusinesslike meth ods were under consideration. A thorough examination of the books La to be made by accountants and both sides are to file their statements. It will be fortunate for the Red Cross organisation when these charges have been thoroughly sifted, and any nec essary changes made to remove any feeling against the soclaty. Beads I Mia Tails Tea Lose." Minneapolis Journal. An Interesting illustration of the beautiful principle of "Heads I win, tails you lose' has come out of a case recently dismissed by the supreme court of the United States for want of jurisdiction. A negro named Giles was refused the right of registration as a voter In Alabama. He appealed to ths stats courts, and. losing there, to ths United States supreme court The stat courts decided adversely to the negro on th ground that If tho state constitutional pro, vision as to the qualifies Hons of a voter, under which he wss excluded by the regis trars, Is null and void under the federal constitution, then the board of registration la without authority and virtually non existent, and, being , cannot be required to register him or anybody else. On the other hand. If the state constitutional pro. vision Is valid, then by that very provision the board of reristrsrs Isonipowere' to act as It did. Isn't that UauUXur -Yce of legal wisdom f FINB TUKORY SHATTERED. Aet.al Property Valajartd, bat Crooked Schemes Spoiled. Detroit Kree Press. Nothing could have better dpmonstrated the utter arilttelallty of the modern method ot Industrial exploitation than the decision of the supreme court of the I'nlted States ln the Northern Securities case. The an nouncement of the decision made hardly ripple In the. stork market. Even the stock of the Northern Securities company Itself closed half a point 'higher for the day. Twenty-four hours after the decision was rendered the market betrayed no evi dence of the slightest knowledse of a Northern Securities company or a supreme court of the United States. This could not hove been the ense if the organization of holding companies was really necessary to the advancement of American Industry. it could not have been the case If .Tuslire TVhlte were rlpht In his contention that the majority opinion involved principles "destructive of this gov ernment, destructive of human liberty and estructlve of every principle upon which organized society depends." If the court had actually enunciated principles of the destructive nature described by Justice White, the country would already be pay- ng the penalty. But as a niattfr of fact. there is nobody who supposes that a dol- ar s worth of real property In the country Is worth less today than It was Monday morning- as a consequence of this decision. Even James J. Hill concedes that nothing as been destroyed. The railroads are there as they were before the Northern Securities compnny was organized. Their equipment has not been crippled. They are hauling freight and carrying passeng-ors and performing all the functions of a common carrier Just as they were when the court destroyed the holding company. The decision haa not cost the railroads a pound of freight, or added a penny to the cost of operation. And neither has It exercised a malevolent Influence upon the value of properties controlled by corporations that are made amennblo to the Shermnn law by this decision. The entire business of the country Is running along as smoothly as It was before the "evolution of Industry" was ever dreamed of. If this proves anythirg. It proves that the prosperity of tho people and the sta bility of Industry bear no relation what ever to the trust method of exploitation. Instead of being essential to business de velopment, the Morgan theories of pro motion have no standing In the world of actual things. The "logical development" turns out to have been neither logical hor a development. LIVING IX GLASS HOI ES. A Pointed Suggestion for People Ra ataa-ed 1st Knocking; the Mormons. Chicago Tribune. While we are searching the recesses of our chaste souls for words to express our shuddering horror of simultaneous polyg amy as practiced by the Mormons, we might to our consternation find that we had been providing our enemies with words most uncomfortably applicable to consecu tive polygamy as practiced by ourselves. Father Sherman said the other day that In the United States during the last twenty years there had been 300,000 divorces. Father Sherman stands against a back ground which might well lond him an as pect of authority. Fifteen hundred years ago when turbulent barbarians settled within tho confines of the Roman empire. It was the Cathollo church that coerced the vagrant lust of tho barbarian heart and bound one woman to ono man till death did them part. Today, when the sacrament of marriage Is threatened, not so much by savage bolsterouaness of passion as by the frivolity and insincerity of men and women to whom unshaken belief has become im possible, it is the Catholic church that still refuses to make a single concession to le galised promiscuity, and that still keeps unblemished the Ideal of an indissoluble spiritual union between man and wife. If we cannot subscribe to the theology of tho Catholic church ln this matter, neither can we fall to subscribe to Its practical moral ity. The Smpot case ought to give a tre mendous Impetus to the demand for a uni form federal divorce law. The easy rout to consecutive polygamy ought to be beset with more obstacles. The voice of the whole Christian community ought to be come as clear and emphatic as the voice of the Cathollo church. . LAUlVDRYIXa TUB LUCRE. Caele.a Money a. Menace Those Who Handle It. Philadelphia Press. Congress every now and then listens to such statements aa that made this weak by the health commissioner of New York concerning the filthy character of paper money, but it does nothing to stop the evil. Dr. Darlington, the health commissioner, found 135,000 bacteria on one bill and 126.000 on another. Upon all bills were found dis ease germs of a serious nature. Some of the bills In circulation are abso lutely filthy, to say nothing of their work In distributing disease. No European na tion has such bills In circulation. Congress makes the laws under which all paper money circulates In this country and It should provide for clean money. The little extra expense Involved should not be con sidered for a moment, In view of the publlo benefit that would' fqllow the prompt re newal of the note circulation. The Bank of England never Issues the same bill a second time. There should bo some such rule In this country. No bank should be allowed to reissue a dirty bill of Its own or one Issued by another bank. But these filthy, disease-laden banknotes con tinue In circulation In many cases until they almost fall to pieces. It Is a great mistake and has a bad effect on the public. STRONG ME SEEDED, Wanted, Majority Controlled by Con. seleneo na.tb.er Tbaa Expediency. St. Louis Republic. Cardinal Gibbons, In a recent sermon, said: "Wo need men who are controlled by conscience rather than by expediency- men who are Influenced by a sense of duty and not of self-interest, who are swayed by a spirit of patriotism and not by a de sire of political preferment." Such men are needed In the world. They are needed. ln the pulpit, In the bar. In politics. In business everywhere. But It will be many years before we have S'ich men In the majority. They are In an evi dent minority now. Most men are self-centered these days. In politics the prevailing type Is working solely for bis own good; In business he Is seeking the overthrow of his competitors for his own sdvancement; In the profea slons he does not blindfold himself to the shortcomings of his Ilk because he seeks to benefit himself by these shortcomings. In tho pulpit, generally speaking, ths high salsry and carefully selected sermons are of more Importsaoe than spreading the homely gospel of Nasareth. The time may coma when we shall have only such men of whom Cardinal Gfbhona speaks, but It Is evident all around ua that tho time U far away. tin tho Wheels Torn. Detroit Free Press. After reading the decision a second time, Mr. Hill reluctantly admits that ths su tireme court has not torn up any of his track or destroyed any bridges, and that both railroads are aUU hauling freight and passengers. SERMOJS BOILED DOW. Doing cures doubting. A pu ft Is a poor prop. All power Involves privilege. Convictions create character. Fatst living Is but faster dying. Right motives make good manners. Only a fool's tomorrow ruins today. Blessings are hidden In he bluws of pain. It Is the opportunity we make that makes us. Better a deluded enthusiasm than a dead heart. Flick Hps are not accepted for flilnlng lights. v We do not enrich the present by ridiculing the past. We do mil earn heaven by pining for paradise. We shall be measured by what we mlsht havo een. Men are known by their fruits, and not bv their feelings. Dogmatists are sound because tbey nro tiothlng but sound. The goliicn rule looks nell as a motto, but It works belter as a law. Our chnme is not so much In our sin as In our belnn ratlsfU-d with It. Being up-to-date alone will not keep a man from going down to defeat. Tby who will not walk to do good have small prospect of doing It on wings. Chi cago Tribune. SKCtl.AR SHOTS AT THF. Pfl.PIT. Chicago' Post: There Is a strike of choir boys In the New Tork Church of Heavenly Rest. What's ln a name, after allt ' Chicago Record-Herald: Dr. rnrkhurst soys Moses was too strenuous and hot headed. It Is unfortunate tliat the doctor is unable to give Moses his support, but perhaps Moses won't care, seeing that he got there anyhow. Memphis Appeal: The Rov. Mr. Conwell of Boston guys tho only reason a young man goes to church nowadays Is he-cause his best girl Is there. Ths church that "gits thar fust" with the most girls wilt therefore have the congregation. Minneapolis Journal: Booker Washing ton calls attention to the fact that so called Christian communities in this coun try, which give money to send mlsslortarlcs to the heathen, are burning negro men and women at tho stake In broad daylight and almost ot the very doors of Christian churches. Mr. Washington's reference to this fact Is embnrrasslng. Chicago Inter Ocean: To many laymen church-going seems to have declined chiefly because modern preaching, with Its tend ency to appeal to welfare In this life alone, offers no sufficient motive for taking tho trouble to go. By dropping the argument of fear of the consequences of sin after death it takes away the strongest motive of the averago man to seek salvation in the ordinances of rejlglon. Chicago Chronicle: Rev. Thomas 15. Sherman In his lecture before tho Knights of Columbus at the Auditorium Wednesday night expressed the opinion that polygamy was no worse than repeated marriages by aid of repeated divorces. In saying this Father Sherman told the exact truth. Ths man wh i maltreats and divorces a suc cession of wives Is infinitely worse than the man who marries the same number all at once and cares for them and their chil dren aa long aa they live. Both are crim inal and detestable, but let ua "tote fair." Indianapolis News: A Catholic priest at Fort Wayne ordered an undertaker to re move a flag from the coffin of a Spanish war veteran and there was great excite ment thereat. The priest explained that by a rule of the church neither flags nor flowers should rest on a coffin In the church: and a very good rule it Is. There Is a sanctity and dignity belonging to a church that ought to bo protected by proper regulations ana tnis , provision strikes us as seemly. But If It were un seemly, any and every church has a right to make such regulations as It pleases for Its services, and these are to be respected. Tho Fort Wayne folk who got excited over the episode should calm themselves. There Is nothing about It to warrant ex citement. PERSONAL AMD OTHERWISE. - i The first faint tremor of the vernal equinox is due today. If you cannot feel it search an almanac. The English for Vladivostok Is "I con quer the east." The definition Is yot to be approved by tho Nipponese. A person struggling with a load of Jersey lightning Is Judicially declared to be "on the quiver." The burden bearer is lucky if he gets off that easily. When a thoroughbred -railroad builder comes upon a dangerous obstruction, ne builds around It. James J. Hill Is an ex perienced railroad builder. A decided downhill movement toward ths valley smiling below Is reported ln Butte, Mont. It's a rare, day In the copper opolls when there's nothing doing. Boston Is again threatened with a fish- ball famine. While these periodical scares are unchecked, the perpetuity of American Institutions remains a debatable propo sition. General Kouropatkln Intimate that when be gets to the front there wtll be some thing doing. A famous British general said something similar on a like occasion. He found hts Tugels. A man of Vt strode Into a New Tork taa department and cheerily waved aside ths sympathy four-soore-and-ten evoked, "It's mighty good to "be here," ho murmured, "and It's worth paying for." Any lingering doubt of tho sincerity of Uncle Sam's neutrality policy should be banished. "Fighting Bob" Evan la at liberty to leave Chinese waters and corns home by any route he chooses. Ono of tho latest Iowa ideas Is to boost tho egg monopoly. A resident of Ackley la said to have sucked sixty-one eggs at one sitting of twenty minutes. That fellow I haa an Interior department strong enough to digest tne Kansas City platform. Tho Saddle Creek Debating society re cently took a fall out of the question "Is the backbone of winter straight or curved?" As soon as the Judges recover from ths frostbites gathered on the way homo a decision on th momentous question will be rendered. An uncommonly large Jackpot In a club house In Pittsburg caused ssch a degree of excitement that one side of tho building collapsed, leaving th male "witches" ex posed to the rude gase and Jeers of a mul titude of merry people. They saved the pot Signs of spring are to be seen In London. On In a tailor shop reads: "Dandy kirk el e with rorty buttons and an artful fake ment down th aides, cut saucy over ths trotters alf a monarch." 'Ow Is that for 'IghT Look out for tho Vernal Equinox when the sun crosses the line March 21st. Sheridan Coal Is what vou want at that cold, blustery time. Nut. cc nn AM ranllHn hard coal lor heaters, furnaces and grates. VICTOR WHITE COAL CO., Telephone 127 , 1605 Fninnm HOMKSTIC ri.KASANTIUKS. So Mrs. Nsghy married a nobleman. What Is his title?" "He hasn't anv. Ills nobility consists in tiie fact that he married her." Detroit Kree Press. Nell-Kate tells mo that your engage ment with ltalph la broken off. .... HelloWell. no. not exactly thnt. but It IS pretty badly lu nt. fsomervlllo Journal. Harris-Was thnt your sister I saw with you yisternay afternoon? Harlow She wasn't when you saw lis. It was Inter lit the evening when she became my sister- Huston Transcript. "Their engagement was very short wasn't It?" "Yes: she Insisted upon mtrrylntf him at once, because she didn't like to have him nbou the hi use." t'hliago 1'ost. "Why do women always cry at a wed- ril"g?" asked one of the pe'tatnrs. "It's to make tho bridegroom feci that any woman would be throwing herself away by marrying him," responded the confirmed old Ivichelor. "The object Is ti take some of the starch out of him." Chi cago Tribune. "Boskln's wife Is much older than he is, Isn't she." "Twenty-four venrs." "fho Is kind to him. isn't she?" "She means to be. 81ie knits his socks and cuts his hair." Cleveland, Plain Dealer. Mrs. Catternn Mrs. Wllter Is ft woman with n groit deal of prtde. Isn't she? Mrs. Hatterson Intense. She told ma she had ordered ns manv clothes this sea son as she would If her husband hadn't been In debt. Brooklyn Life. "1 don't see any way out of It senstor," said his Intlmatn friend. "You'll have to take the vice presldcney. Voo are tho logical candidate." "Old fellowl," responded the eminent senator, deeply grieved, "you aro the last man I should nave ever suspected of want Ing my Job:" Chicago Tribune. Miss Passny Mr. Oldbow wants me to have my photograph taken, and I really must Miss Cutts Oh. yon ought to go to Kam nrrer. Hp mado grandma's latest picture. It's Just wonderful the way he touches up his pictures ami eliminates the wrinkles and all that. Philadelphia Cathollo Stand ard. "A KIG noria PAST." New Tork Tribune. "Ho!" said the child, "how line tho horses go. With nodding plumes, with measured step and slow. Who rides within this coach, Is he not great? Some king. I think, for soo, ho rides In state." I ttt-red, and saw a little coffin lie Half hid In flowers as the sloW steeds bv. So i all a woman's arms might hold It pressed As eomo rare Jcwel-cnskct to her breast "Ho!" said tho child, "how the prctid. horses shake Their silver harness till they music make. Who drlvee abroad with all this majesty? Is It om prlnco who fain his world would see?" And as I looked I saw through the dim glass Of one nnd coach that all so slow did pass A woman's face a mother's eves ablaro Seise i n the child In fleroe and famished fae. "Dnth drlvos," I said and drew him ln alarm Within tho shelter of my circling arm. So In niv heart cried out a thousand fears. "A king goes past." He wondered at my tears. 1904 Models. Columbias, $50 to $90 Ramblers, $40 to $75 Gendrons, $35 These are standard lines Look them over before buying. In order to close out a rumber of Inst year's modols that are shop worn and slightly used, we make the following prices: $IW Rsmbler. (chalnlpss). . $30 i ?00 Columbia (ehnlnless, clianjrr-n- blo Bear, spring fork, CAC ' good ns new) 00 Columbia (indies' CTfl moduli ft 40 F.lrtrldge (ladles' model, good condition) $10 0 Gcndron (ladies' model nrw but shop worn) $20 $30 $0 Wolf American. On dies' model) Other wheels of well known makes, both ladles' and men's models from S5 to $10 Nebraska. Cycle Co. Geo. E. Mickel, Mgr. 16th and Uarney Streets. Phone 1H!3. 834 Broadway, Council Bluffs. C12 N. 24th St., South Omaha. I.uttitv Sfi.PtO frnnrl n I