TTTE ILLUSTRATED TiEE. September 18, 1904. TB IliAJSTRATED BEE. Published Weekly by The Tleo Pul.llBhlrtJ Comiany, Bee Building, Omaha, N'b. Trlco, t Per Cony Per Yrar, $2.00. Entered nt the Omaha 1'uslortico as Second Clasa Mail Matter. For Advertising Union Addrs Publisher. Communications relating tr photographs or articles lor publication rheuid b- ad dressed, ' Editor The Illustrated Bea, Omaha." Pen and Picture Pointers f t i')llN I KKNNKDY was chosen .';lj T by the republican voters of tho Second Nebraska congressional v? d!s,,',,-t by (1irf"'"1 v1e to K' t,lf'ir .'.-TfSsl candidate, and tin; convention r;ili li 1 that decision by making Mr. Ken ic(ly'M nominal inn unanimous alter tnH'ii; lln; ballot prescribed by the rule. This Choice of the people at tin- primal ii-s wilt undoubtedly be ratified at tho pedis try a handsome majority. Mr. Kennedy is not H "jiopiilar" man in the customary use of tin? term, but be Is a mun of th- people in the best sense, lie has luid his own way to make In the world, and has hail to work liard to achieve what he has. This work lias kept bint pretty busy n tl'-ndiinj to his own affairs, and baa left l.im but little time to follow the pursuit ol the niijwr." lint be has proved himself capable of mak ing friends, firm mid fast, by his frnnlc and mnnly ways, and his chan record In busire-Hs and nolitlca Is the best of recom mendations to the voters of the district. Kbur years ago he was nn the republican ticket as one of the McKinloy eh clora, and lisriisted In registering the r tale's choice for president tliat year. Oilier than this lie has never held cifllce, but lie has always been active In Jiolitics and ha", always Uin Interested In achieving republican success. Never having been Identified with ( :ther of the factions into which the party has been divided at times, his nomination at present Is looked upon as in the Interest of har mony, and the unanimity with which the leaders have aligned thcmsi Ives b: hind his cand.'d.ioy nugurj well lor a triumph by the united party. Mr. Kennedy can never be president of the I'nitod States, owing to a mistake he timclc In selecting his blrthplat lie chose to be born hi Ayrshire, Si 'otland, a fact that murt natives of tlK county consider lionor Hiitficient. The son of a farmer, lie learned H hard work Is. and has held enough l ,e Kturdy Scotch character to Btiek to that method always, not seeking success by any short cut., lie was Kit en a common Hchuol education in Sc otland, and lit the itge of 19 came to America. Ilo found employment on a farm In I.a Salio county, Illinois, and there earned money to pay hid way through Knox college, ut CJalcsburg. AUer taking the course ut Knox he uttended the law school at tho state university of Iowa, ami w. s k ra du al ed from that school in lf2. in December Of that jcar lie came to Omaha, ami formed a lav partnership under the llrm name of Kennedy & Martin. This llriu continued for Fix years. In IsXN the picscut lirm of Ken nedy Learned was furuicd. .Mr. Ken nedy's practice has not been of a si i t that would bring hlui jnucli Into pu' lie notice, for ho has steadfastly declined to take cases of a character that xe he comment, preferring the more intricate and quieter business of the law. He I. as won a high place at the bar, both of the coioity and the Htalc, and 1 held in gnat c.-Ucc m by Ills fellow-praclllluiiers. Pel son ally he is a genial, companionable man, and caw who is warmly admired by all who know hlui. Phelps county, Nebraska, made a record in the matter of county fairs this year by turning the usual program out of doom and Klvln;; society a real show. The women of llolclrcge arranged for a floral carnival and par.ole that surpassed anything of the sort ever wen Jn that scctli'ii, and which made a distinct hit as a feature of the fad. The decorated carriages were driven about tho track and were loudly applauded, the nrtls tie beauty of design and the taste i xUihlted In the execution beln;; of the highest. Tho Judges awarded the tlrst prii.e for single rigs to Mrs. Palmer, who had hi r c-.rrl.ino di com tod In yellow roses. Mr. Titus and Mrs. lo Hart drove a sin:;le rig decorated in chrysanthemums vf varied hues, and were awarded iccond prire. The Boe has not boem apprised of the name of the win ner of first prize in double rips, btit Mrs. lluulln aad Kron iust wife Riven uciiind. Their carriage was decorated in pink and white, and was drawn by a Hum of white horses. His Discreet Preference "Don't you think you would have greater Influence with tho masses If you made mors speeches?" "NeC an rmud Sowatur ftorgJium. "I t tteve In giving anything I lutve tn may to the prema. When you make a ofiech you have to 4csmsmI on ywur om-n enwnir, Tut when you lure your remarks prided you have m. auEsaber cf people to Ftralshten it oat far jr." Waahinglna Star. John Buirs National Campaign (fopyrlht. by Wlilam Thorp.) r't' 18 dilllcult to compare a p::rlia- mpntnry Boneral e'e' ip n In Great I'.riinln to a presidnitijii carn la'ffn In t lie I'll. ted H l'e.-. Tin S l.lt of the content, the attitude peofil..-, the niaihinery emidoycl by the (onlendinK parties, the vi ry ob.'ect ftiiven for, are all larRtly, if not cn'.lre'y, different. The rank and file of the prliHh elec torate has nothlnis' to do with the choice of the prime minister, who occupk s much the yame executive position as the presi dent, nlthouKh pos essiiiK It puWr. 11a is w lected by the monar-li, uurlly tijiryn the advice of the leader or I'juuuis of the rival political party. If Mr. lUifour were to be defeated on an i'nporlai.t question in the liou of Commons tomorrow l.t- uouitl have to choose one of two alternatives, lie could K" to the Uiiitf with the re.-lgtmtions of himself and his cabinet inin sier.-. Pi whic h case he would advise the kim,' to (,e:id fur Sir Henry C'ampbcll-Iiunnerrnun, or some other lilxral leader, and re pic;. I him to form a ministry; or he could UUsjivc Par liament and appp.nl to the country to de cide the political issue by means of a gen eral election. When there exist two sliarply dofin.'d panic, each with an acknowledseil. un challenged leader, it is easy for the de feated premier to advise the king whom to send for to replace himself. In the old das, when Salisbury and Gij-.d.-: one led the conservative and liberal parlies, no body drcanil of anybody rifle for premier; but when Mr. Gladstone retired from p ibMc life in with Ida party still in power, ju n Victoria must have rtei-n pu;z' d as to which of his lieutenants pile should a:k to reconstruct and lead the ministry. There were three of them at that time with prac tically equal reputation end jxiwer in the parly Ixjrd Roseliery, Sir Williim Vernon llarcourt and John Motley. Morley wua out of it from the start, beet- are he manifested a strong disinclina tion to become premier. Mr. Uladetone at flrfct advisc-d the queen, as sjlmequent reve lations have shown, to send for Sir Wil liam liurcouit. This advice was resented by her majesty, who objected to Sir Wil liam 1-c-cnuue he had taken a lending part in opiwisiiit? financial grants to the ri.yal family. She wnnted to Bend for Lord Koi-e-bery. Ixtid Balisbury, a rival leader, whom she consulted, strongly ureed the choice of llarcourt, as beiiiB the more popular man; but nevertheless her majesty invited Lord Jtneliery to become head of the govern ment, and he consenctd to do no, arter putcbing up a hoiinw truce with llnrcourt. This Is not the only lntance in which Queen Victoria picked out for premier a political leader who uould not have been chosen by hi.! own parliameutary party or by the (;ei;?ral body of electors throughout . the country. An) thing more radically dif ferent from the American political spirit and political methods cannot well ho Imagined; yet this Hritish system suits Iho people and works well. Nine times out of ten the defeated premier gives the best pos sible advice as to his successor, and the ad vice Is taken. If the alternative of a general elettion Is rhoRen tho country is nut stirred up oo violently from end to end as It ie here in a presidential campaign, although the elec tioneering methods adopted ere sometimes much more violent than those to which America ns are accustomtd. Only the mem bers of the House of Commons are to bo ( hofceii by the people, and the nearest equivalent !;, therefore, the election of con gressional r prer-entatives. In some parti of Kng'.and there U hardly mnr9 th(.:i a ripple of political c vein mi nt or a general election, because of the preponderance of poner enjoyed by one or o'.her of the political parties. The county of Kett, for example. Is so overwhelmingly co;icrvMllve that the liberals do r.ot even trouble to contest most of the tets. In some parts of Scotland It Is hnp-Hirs?, even absurd, for a conservative to seek election; iu:d over a wide area of Ireland the mi-tioiihU-t member are usually returned tin-oppo.-cd. Nearly all tho Welsh nn mb.'i'S are liberals ut every elic'.ioji. None of the three great political parties tho liberals, the conservative und the iu tiGuallsts carts to apetul money iu fightinsT hop"les constituencies. Kag.lsh campaign funtls Kre oiserabtjr iratt in ooaipaihon with American, fur the simple reason that tho political issues seldom touch the busi ness interests of the country In a vllul and immediate way. Tho only cxctpliun is that the brewers nnd salootikeeiiers or "i.ul lkans," as they are called-pat up a 1 t of money for the conservative campaign, be lieving thai Um liberals wouid cio hi wer to the (onl oonumimtttea to enforce prohibi tion if they desired to do so. The rwnpalgn funds, tetnsr rmal', are naturally eonserved for Renting enntest whire there Is a chance of wlun'nj.. For lorn hopes upon the mcaiy's ktrojg l.uida re almost always led nnd pj.M f r-uy some wealthy man who wants to "butt In" to the inner circle, of his party. After he mm feMfrgfct two or three ti-pcta e'ecf ons raw o;' tii and sjxmt perhaps $30,nf0 or $50.0(0, the wire pullers of the party reward him by assign ing' him to some "ea.sy si at" where the re Is sure to be a "walknvir" fT one of his political complexion. IP" usually repays the gift by a l and, ome cniiti iluitioii to the campaign fund ranging anywhere fr-'tn eVj.iMJ to JJj.UOI. Ill some cno a it Is possible for n wenlthy man t' buy a tafe seat at the outset by a hicking big gift tc the party funds, one of the liest known of the present liberal numb- rs did ho by giving the late Mr. Schnadhorst, tl:e greatest campaign man ager the party ever had, a cheek for i.o, OWi at a moment when money was sorely needed. Uut thia is unusual. The rich und ambitious man generally lues to work and wait lor yisrs. as well as put up his numey. It often happens that a comparatively poor man has far better luck, iiai.y Eng lish coni'llluenties rest'it a plutocrat, and so.jie of thtin arc conservative strongholiJs, too. I was once private secretary to a lib eral ceniliiiate in a Kentish constituency. He eirned his living as a barrister and journalist, and had very little money. The parly had to put u; nearly all the election expanses, which Is contrary to the Knglisu ciisetnm. and he could not afford to cub scribe to a hundred different local societies, from the Publican's league to the Home for Cats, as his conservative opponent did. Neverthcl.-ss. fie pulled down the conser vative nnjority from oveer S.0U1 to I'.ss than 20u, and would hive surely won by a big mirgiii nt the next election had he not brokf n down with nervous crhauetion three weeks iK-feirc. Ilia phice was taken ley a millionaire soap mal'fr eager to buy a seat in Parlia ment. He gave the Natlonel Liberal Fed eration a check for J3.tt) as the price of foisting him upon what was thought to be a Bafe constitency. He Fpent on the contest every cent he dircd spend without running up against the corrupt practlo", act; he doubled mid Inbled the conservative can didate's subscriptions to the local s3.cietles, and then thought that he surely must be elected. Put when the poll was taken he was beaten by over 4.WW votes. A candi date's pcrbonulity counts for far more than his monty. and high 8'M.ial po""'0" is bet ter than either iti some conMituencicc. The candidate who Is a good sportsman has a tremendous pull. I know of one can didate who waa elected in a sport-lovine city of Yorkshire simply because he was one of the best amateur foot ball players in F.riKland. The Hun. Philip Stanhope, who used to be called the "Prince Uupert of the lib erals," WMi n forlorn hope In a rural con stituency by the skill and daring with which ho drove a conch and eight white horses. He didn't trouble about speech making or canvassing the electors; he sim ply sat on the box ot the coach, a fine lig ure of a man. and drove his eight white horses round the sharpest corners he could find, laughing gaily as he faced death, and golHntly saluting all the girls he passed along tha road. Who cared what Phil Stanhope's piMitioal opinions were? Probably he would have been troubled if called upon to explain them. Put he could drive a coach better than any msu in the country; he was a cricketer ot national fame, and in his col lege days, not so many years before, he had thrtiched a famous prizefighter. Of course, he was elected by an overwhelming majority. Th; fact that he was the son of an earl helped him. for It Is still true that KngMvhmen "d.arly love a lord." Curieu-ly enough, the one political prin-.lp!e which he really held clearly and strongly was the desirability of abolishing the House of lrds. That appealed to the voters' sense of humor, eepeciaHy as he was every inch an arlstrxr.it in temperament. It may be gathered from what has gone before that tre general election In England Is not a great national campaign in the sen; that it Is here, but a congeries of local fights. The central organisations of the parties do not play anything like the Important part they play In this country. The candidate Is chosen by the general committee cf the local party, usually call-d the "four hundred." A well known and popular local man Is preferred, even to a statesman of national eminence, but if no such man Is available the central organisa tion sends two or three would-be candidates from London. They uddresa the "four hundred," much like ministerial candidate preaching before the elders of a vacant charrh, and the one who make the best Impression is chosen. Naturally, the man who Js willing to pay the whole or the biggest share of the election expenses is selected, other things being equal. It would arnnxe an American politician to see how much money the candidate puts up and how little the party contribute, liearlng out of account tho handful of lalor members, who are paid salaries by their party, Knif ih politics U run by a few rich men who an either anxious to take part In the great game of sUUswantfhip for IU own sake, or who yearn for 10 poclal haTI-n'.artt wT'leh they think mca.kerst.lp of the Hon o! Ommo.is bestows. That la why thero arc so few men of real distinction In that assembly. ns tomparej with some other parliament The average M. P. is not an iuttllectu.it prodigy. The professlin.il "spellbinder" cuts small figure In Kngland. There Is plenty of si ceeh making during a cnmpalpn I kno one candidate who made an average oi seven speeches u day for six weeks, nn'l ten a day for the last we ek but It is nearly nil done by local volunteers nnd by friendf of the candidate, who are sufficiently In. tererted in his success to spend a few- d.iya or weeks In the constitue ncy and pay tbelp own expenses. The conservative central organization, which niwnys has a great ele.il more money to spend than the liberals have, sends a few speakers where they are most ii.'eded, but a candidate consiib rs It rather a dis grace to have to call for them, as it reflect upon his own popularity. The liquor trad and other Interests allied with the con servative maintain supplementary conf of "spellbinders," hut as those men natal-ally want to speak in favor of their ow particular cause, which may be unpopulaf " with the mass of tue voter.', nio?t candl. dates would rather do without their "sup port." I remember a, tory M. I', who hail kept his Feat for many yiars in a town slr ngly In favor of "local option" prohibition b municipal vote. He was careful to avuil th3 liquor question und to dwell mainly upon the preservation of the union ai l other appealing topics. He lost hl. teat at last beeause, le:-pite his almost tearful protests, the teutral body of the IhiL,of triido's political organization insisted on tending half a dozen of its "spellbinders" to stump his territory. Their "suppo.t" ruined him with the voters. The liberals draw a large number of speakers from their two priucial lAindi.u ciuiis-the National Liberal ilub and tlx IJ.ghty i lub. Ti.csej men m ver receiv .- p y, and in most cases pay their own expenses. Tho Kigiity cluli is regarded as a tcct ot preserve frum which to draw speakers ami candidates as they are needed lor the g tod of the parly. Photographs of candidates are used to conuiderab'c extent, but they are uHvayi printed on small cards and mailed to tin olcris, usually with tho brief l.gca.d ur.dcr neath: "Your ccppoit and interest civ re quested on bthnlf of Thoina.s Snooks, tlm liberal candidate." Tho huge poster unci banner portraits, which play such an im portar.t part in American i lections, are un known In i:i. gland. Largo quantities of leallet', popularly known as "tracts," arc sent out by th cir.tral rgar.iztiticns ; but the buik of th printed appeals to the electors are locally produced. The candidate and his personal friends write a good many of them, and the editor ot the party newspaper usually gives his services for this putposa. He it much in demand, for he Is able to work ia a lot of local references that will api eal t the pe pie. The candidate often buys hc parly newa papc r when he first descends on u c n stiUienc y and uses it as his prineil nl ir e ml of reaching the electors. If not, It is gen erally io:. trolled by his leading fupp'Ticrs. Vnprofitable papers nre maintained f"r po litical reasons to an infinitely greater extent than Uiey are i?i America. Probably, taking Kre.laiui ami S'Oel ir:L but not Ireland nnd Wales, at lcatt (JO pef cent of the electorate oculists of pc.;plu. who have no political affiliations an.l can be fcwnyed from one side l-j anoll.er wit! comparative case. In some contruer:c:e tho percentage is much higher; in others, which have been carefully worked and or ganized with extraordinary care by both parties, It may net more than 10 per c; nt. More deper d.s, na a general r ile, npon the personality of ti e candidate than upon the platform and record of his party. Although a smaller portion of tlv people are political partisans and there is n .1 so much general interest in a campaign, those who are partiVanfl are apt to be much more violent than their American prototype?. A keenly fought election is extremely rough. Meetings are frequently broken up by main force, and It is a common Incident for th candidates to be pelted with flour, rotten eggs and even stories, as they drive through the streets in carriages decorated with their colors. Everybody wears pnrty favors, nnd a favorite Joke Is to decorate a donkey with the opposition's emblems. At one liberal meeting In n theater, at which I was present, a rowdy conservative in the gallery was seised by the arms ami legs and thrown neck and crop to the floor. Ills right arm und thre of his ribs were broken. Next evening tho conservatives broke up a liberal meeting, driving ths candidate gnd Ids friends from the plaW form by volleys of stoii and rotten vege tables. This vns not an unusually violent campaign. As. coon as the votes have been conn tew In the town hull or other principal bulldlnjtf of the district th1! "returning officer" steps out onto a balcony, followed b;- the candi dates, the winner first. That H the first intimation of the result to tho crowd la (Continued on Page Kiltcen-) ,