THE OMAnA DAILY DEE; SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 190. 15 STUDYING ME BLACK HILLS Structure of the Great Plain Bevealed by Mountain Bangei. EXPLORATIONS OF HARVARD GEOLOGISTS Mineral and Mysteries of the) Black Hill Seenlo Wondin of the Bl Horn Moantaln v'lmf Eiperlencr. A member of the Harvard geological ex pedition, which pent the greater part of tljee month exploring me Black Hill and tho Big Horn mountain, write an inter esting account of the experience and dla covcrlea for the Boaton Transcript. He aaya the Black Hllle preaent to the stu dent of earth lore one of the moet lgnlfl cant lesson which the American continent haa to teach, and continue: A itrlklng feature observable on all sides Is the series of scale-like, overlapping strata forming revetments or "hog-back" ridges. Ihcse are crossed in regular succession on enter ing the hill country and the order Is always the same black coaly shales In the outer flat land, then a hard, brown sandstone ridge, then red clays which make a valley, then colored sugary aandntor.es and mas sive limestones, followed by brown beds, alatea and granite which seems to have been Uftd highest and to resist the wear ing of the weather mcst successfully, for It rornis mighty cutis ana pinnacles am.a 0001 glades and giant forests of birch and aspen, pin and balsam. From the granlto, north, aouth, east and west, the limestones and sandstones slope 'away under the plains, and these beds are bent up so sharply on the rim of the ellipse as to resemble the punctured point of torn paper where a pencil haa been pushed up through a thick newspaper. The V-ehaped depression be tween the "points" are Invariably occupied by stream In the Black Hills, and It is Im possible to exaggerate the vividness with which this atructure strike th casual trav eler, so conspicuous is It, and so obvious la the overlap of the successive beds. No one can live In such a country without wishing to know the meaning of It what pushed up the granite in the center? Did It actually punch a holer Wher did the outside tilted bed come from? Looking; Beneath the Surface. It I the function of earth science to find out what I beneath. For age erosion ha been eating off. the outer shell of the up lift and eating Into tho core, the brook and river washing away to the sea the worn oft rock In the form of sand and mud.' There are other rocky mountain ranges that are less worn away and some that are more worn away; the geologist maps them all and compares them, and so grows up the science which teaches what 1 beneath. The rock of the outer ridges contain oyster or at least oyster shell hence were they ocean laid. The granite breaks across the slates and is wholly mado of crystalB hence was It fire made or mol ten, or deposited from hot watera. The pebble atone or pudding stone that makes the bottom most bed of the outer series contains waterworn pebble of the granite, which were strewn on an ancient sea beach with shells hence wa the granite a hard rock before tho ocean sediments of th upper scries were laid upon It. Bo th reasoning goes on until atep by step It makes a connected history which answers most of the questions. And In the answers which the roadlng of the rock-book of the Black Hill give, there 1 an especial sig nificance, because It records the history of a very large portion of our continent the whole of th great Interior plains, made up of flat lying beds of and pld aea bottom. Only here are they pushed up from below and then planed off by erosion o that .we can tell what lies beneath. It Is for this reason that this "section" as geologist call it has been chosen for the Harvard chool, and the student are busily at work asking all the questions they can think of which would throw light on the history of the wide flat land, and trying to read the answer In the Black Hills, where the flat land Is sawed off across a hump,, so to speak, and the "grain of the wood" In side a continent is shown. Sylvan Lake, . Th expedition to Sylvan lake a email artificial pond 6,000 feet above the sea, near Harney peak revealed much of interest concerning what must lie beneath tho vast ocean of shales which extends from Canada to Mexico, over the whole of the great plain district of North America. There are several climates in the Black Hills, ac cording to the elf vat ton, and each geological one Is characterized by topographical, cli matic, floral and faunal features of Its own. The arid "bad lands" In South Dakota are waterless, deeply trenched, support a mea gre growth of cactus and sagebrush, and a population of rattlesnakes and gophers. The foothills are grassy, the climate dry, excopt for heavy thundershowers early In July and snow In winter; the mining dis trict of the northern hills Is sparsely tim bered, the gulches frequently dry, the cli mate in summer hot and close, and though there are some high peaks, the general level of the upland doe not exceed 4.600 feet. Th gulches are deep and the hills hrubby and covered with slide-rock. As the traveler goes south, however, Along the Burlington railroad, which winds In and out through the heart of the hill, th forests become more extensive and bet ter watered; granite ledges are more fre quent, there are extensive bright green meadows or park with many flowers and th scrubby pines and aspens of the north ern hills give place to tall, straight con ifers and white birches, with .the denser undergrowth which reminds on of the New England woodland. The mountain tor rent become more frequent, and are clear, plashing streams which suggest trout and trout are there, too. Sylvan Lake In the Black Hills la un known to eastern folk. But It la nor.s the Iesa one of the garden spots of earth. The hotel Is perfect, small, clean to a fault, good table and pleasant company. It nest le at the foot of rock walls, with weird rocky pinnacle and lumps and heupa and knob outlined against the sky all about, relieved by the deep green of the pines ami of the water. There are trails and climbs without number, and one of the moat pic- turcsiiue features of tho plnce I tho herd of tiny burro with their tinkling bells and speaking ears ready to transport the Inev itable tourist to the summit of Harney Peak. Viewing an Old Sea Bottom. The view from that summit to the men of the Harvard school wa an' epitome of all that they had examined in detail, and something more It I a aurvey at once of the wide old cretaceous sea bottom loft high end dry to make the plains, and of th cross-section of the bids laid down on that ocean's floor. The observer sits on a granite knoll and seas in th foreground forest and granite needle, domes, pinna cles. Beyond to' the west Is the plateau where the mantle of heavy white lime stones lie flat above the arched uplift th edge of the "Limestone," for such is the local came for that wide forested tract marked by a succession of high level-topped cliffs extending sway to the north, neurly to the limits of the hills. North' Is the rugaxd country of the mines, conical hills and V-ahsprd gulches. All around the astern side and far to the south are seen the InUclug hogback of upturned sand stone of many colors, crescentlo In shape and falling away lower and lower out on the hot plain, where the harder strata be come flatter and their outcropping edge farther and farther apart. The structure la like the Imbricating plates on a turtle's back. Far out acrom the plains occa sional dim "buttes" turret forms left by erosion of harder beds. To the scientific Imagination there Is an Impressive and almost romantic quality In such a view, for w are looking at th monumental record of 1,000,000 year, and are seated not on an old aea bottom merely, but on the bottom that underlies th old American Mediterranean' bottom th bot tom of all th sediment which were de posited in that ocean. Each period In sue slon from Cambrian to Tertiary Is within our view each ledge has its fossils, shell fish, crustaceans, reptiles, flsh, mammals and the granite foreground 1 merely a chance locality wher erosion has discov ered for us the underlying crust. In Im agination we can see the same succession from the surface of the plains downward anywhere from New Mexico to Montana, and can picture that undiscovered land of granite and slate that He from 5.000 to 10,000 feet down, with It untouched mineral wealth. Already deep well are tapping It for water at depths of J.000 feet or more, for each stratum of the plains has its defi nite water bearing character; not the least remarkable fact about this wide arid area of flat atrata la that It la everywhere un derlaid by an ocean of fresh water which would make a vast lake of considerable depth were it spread out on the present surface of the land. Such places as the Black Hills keep the underground water surfaces supplied; where the gulches of the hills are said to "run dry" In the foot hills, the waters really follow certain po rous strata down thHr slope underground, and thus the artesian wells are kept active, for the hill country and mountain ranges are places rf abundant rainfall. Wyoming; Wonders. From the Black . Hill to Sheridan, In northern Wyoming, wa a Journey by rail. Maco Tepee, or th Devil' Tower, I th moat striking scenic feature of that ride, but it la far away on the northwestern flunk of the Black Hills range. It Is a mass of isolated porphyry columns, 300 feet across the base and COO feet high, one of those remnants of erosion; that make con spicuous "buttes." It has a grandeur all Its own by reason of the fact that it stands alone in a lonely land. Tourists rarely visit It, for It Is very difficult of access. It Is thirty miles from the railroad, but plainly visible in clear weather, carried the party to the east foot of the Big Horn mountains, where canip was made on Big Goose creek, a rushing mountain river. Tho camp Is just at the entrance to a su perb rocky gorge, hemmed In by great tri angular Blab of rock which rest against the flanks of the rango like huge shields 1,000 feot high, piled against the wall at un angle of 46 degrees.. These are our old friends the hogbacks, but on an enormously greater scale and tilted up at a higher angle. The Big Horns are like the Black Hills, but bigger, steeper and simpler. It Ih all granite inside the outer wall, and the granite peaks are anowclud and roach 13,000 feet. The outer wall is a perfect revetment, and the red valley again makes the moat. The wall rises 4,000 feet almost sheer straight from the plains, and as one stands at the outer foot of It, it Is seen to be continuous series of steep down-sloping scales of strata overlapping at high angles as far as the eye can reach. The many outflowing stream mak wonderful V por tal In the outsloplng hard beds. The whole series of strata Is crossed in a half a mile of the canyon of Goon creek, nnd there within ts the granite, its surface under the bottomest sandstone sloping down with the rest, and showing a sweeping down-flexing curve. Farther In among the high peak are fine cirques, amphitheaters formerly occupied by mountain glaciers, and their moralnal heap mak dreary straight rldgea covered with burnt timber, and separated by swamps and small ponds. Examples of Western Varmlnar. The Big Horn ranches are typical exam ple of western farming. Near the Har. vard camp was the great stock farm be longing to the Messrs. Forbes of Boston; on all sides ditches lie, straight as railways. following the spur down the creeks, and appearing to run up hill, so rapid and yet Inconspicuous Is the fall of the stream beds beneath them. These ditches carry water from the canon many miles down tho open valley, and they are tapped at regular Interval by the farmer to keep fields moist in a rainless land by the elaborute art of irrigation. A fine art it Is, too, to distribute the water evenly. Here and there a badly irrigated field show green growth In patches and barren, dry soil else. where. Tho principal crops ore hay and oats, but near Sheridan truck patches are common, and nearly everything can be made to grow with the Judicious appllca tlon of the magic fluid. This science of artificial rainfall is tho great problem of the west today, and the government, rail ruuu corporations ana individuals are spending fabulous sum to store the water uruer. ureai reservoirs are using con' strueted by the federal government near Belle Fourche, in South Dakota; near Cody, in the Big Horn basin, and again in Ari zona. Elaborate measurement have been made of thousands of streams, and the records of their discharge published in re ports of the United States geological sur vcy for ten -years or more. At the samo time the underground waters have not es caped the attention of, men of science, nnd we are every year learning more of the vast wealth of water which the forests, If preserved, will hold back ns natural reser voirs, and which the rocks. If measured with care, will give up for the use of men living in the so-called "desert." Kot Guilty. "W propose to how, gentlemen of the jury," laid counsel for the defenae, "that It la impossible 'for the defendant to have committed this crime. "In the first place, w'Wlll prove that the defendant was nowhere near the scene of the crlm at the time the crime was com mitted. . "Next, we will offer the Indisputable testimony of person who aw defendant on th spot, and who did not see the de fendant commit the crime. , "We will show that no poison wa found In th body of the deceased. "Not only that, but we will prov that It wa put there by the prosecution In this esse. "We will furthermore how that th de ceased committed suicide. "And last, but not least, we will prove, beyond th shadow of a doubt, that the deceased I not dead. "In vlsw of all of which corroborative facts, gentlemen of the Jury, we 'respect fully ask for an acquittal." Chicago Reo-ord-Herald. , Cosily Drags for Dogs. "Must b money in dug mt jl lne," ald a druggist.' "Her' a little box of sulphur tablet for dog;). Cost you id cent. Yet you can get enough sulphur tablet lor yourself to last a week for IS cents. Di gestive pills fur little Flda are half a dol lar, but If you ask over two bit for a vial of pepsin pallet fur little Mary th cus tomer will think he I being robbed. Folk dun't kiyk when they buy dog dope. We'vo ovor even brand of, dug soap. Mostly 20 caAl a bar. W have an English dog oap that retail at Hi cents. I suppos th cracker people will be putting puppy cake in an airtight box next and tying It with pale blue ribbon. They could gut a good piioe If Uiejr did, Nw Turk Bun. EVIL TENDENCIES CUT OUT Surgery as t Cure for Crime Come In for t Boost, BAD TEMPERS YAMS.i UNDER THE KNIFE Trifles That Brlnic On ' World of Trouble May Be Remedied by tho Deft Hand sad Genlns of the Surgeon. Medical science ha tightened Its belt pre paratory to entering a new field of achieve ment. A scalpel rampant heralds the dawn of an era when the disease of crime, like the useless vermiform appendix, will be snatched bald-headed and cut from suffer lng mankind. The coalition of surgery and science as a cure for crime received quite a boot th other day at Indianapolis when an incor rigible boy with an ungovernable temper was transformed Into a sweet-tempered youngster by a surgical operation on his skull. Some years ago be sustained an Injury to his Bkull. This was remedied by tho surgeons and the youngster restored to his normal condition. The case is not unusual In surgical prac tlce, but la exploited by the profession in the east as an Illustration of the posslblll tie of the surgeon' knife as a curatlv agent when applied to people with criminal tendencies or habits. The New York Herald devotes much space to the subject and prints an Interview with Dr. Edward Wal lace Lee, formerly of Omaha, now a rest dent of New Tork City. Discussing crlm and Its causes and cure, Dr. Lee said: "I believe that the community In general I too much Inclined to treat crime a our ancestors usod to treat Insanity. In those day an Insane person was thought to bo bewitched, possessed of a devil, and tho manner of treatment was cruel In the ex treme. Flagellation and whipping were resorted to In order to drive out the evil spirit. "As the subject was studied scientifically however, It became evident that Insanity was a disease and It was cared for prop crly, and often cured, without resort to dungeon and chains, various forms of bar barium and often death to the victim. Mind may be defined physiologically a a general term denoting the sum total of those func tlons of tho brain which are known a thought, feeling and will. By disorder of mind Is meant disorder of those functions. "From that ctondpolnt we argue that with an anatomically defective brain you cannot get a normal mentality. Further more, the brain Is affected by disease or In- Jury not only to itself, but to remote parts of the body which are connected with It through the nervous system. Only a few years ago the New York Medical Journal published reports from Institutions of the state showing that examination of crimi nal serving term revealed injuries to their brains. "Photographs were offered clearly prov ing that these men were of the most pro nounced criminal type. Then, after thor ough examination and proper diagnosis, surgical operations were performed and other photographs were produced showing that they had been restored to normal physical and moral neutrality. Bnllet Made Preacher Vlclon. "I knew a Baptist minister once," con tinued Dr. Lee, "who was educated and ta'ented. At times he would deliver the most beautiful and learned sermons, and often before reaching the end he would fly into a passion and use the most obscene and profane language. Then he would go homo, Indulge In excessive , drink," abuse his family and really endanger the live of all who came In contact with him. These spells would pass and ho would again become normal. "I asked him once why this was so, and he told me that he had a bullet In his heart, received during his service in the civil war. Of course, I did not believe him and repeated examinations by myself and other physicians failed to detect any sign of such a condition. That wa before the day of the X-ray. "One day this man died after a fit of anger. A post-mortem examination was held and a mlnle ball was found in the muscles of his heart. . The who'.e case was published in detail at the time In the Journal of the American Modlcal asso ciation. "I have known of cases where so remote an Irritant as an ingrowing toenail has produced epileptiform fits which would be preceded and followed by a change In the temperament and character of the Indi vidual, and which were entirely relieved by surgery. I have known wax In the ar to produce suicidal and homicidal tenden cies, and many case where a buzzing In the eur, caused by catarrh,1 has resulted In suicide. "Among the lower class there Is a common condition of microcephalic chil dren thnt is, children born with small, hard heads. In ome Instances, surgery has relieved this by removing portions of the Kkull and permitting tho brain to de velop. Many euch attempts, however, havo been unsuccessful; but is It not better to risk death than to allow the child to grow up Into an Idiot or criminal? "Of course, the whole question resolve Itself Into that mysterious vital spark, of which neither science nor religion has the faintest comprehension. The physical con ditions that produce criminals may be traced to heredity In many caeca. How are they to be prevented? By atopping tho birth of criminals? To mak a model man, b om on hns said, we must begin on his great grandfather; or, aa somebody else has put It, It takes three generations te mako a gentleman. ' Education Hot n Panacea. "Th celebrated Dr. Mauds'ey says 4hat so much In human development being due to education, It Is evident that the train ing which a" person undergoes must have a great influence on tne growtn of his intellect and th formation of his char acter. What he shall he and what he shall do will be determined in great measure by what has been done to bring Into full ac tivity the capabilities of his nature. "But grcut aa Is th power of education, It la yet a clearly limited power limited by the capacity of the Individual nature and can only work within this larger or mailer circle of necessity. "Kducatlon can plainly ..act only, first. within th conditions Imposed by the species, and secondly within the conditions Imposed by th Individual organisation; cannot, for example, ever teach a man to fly like a bird, see like an eagle, or run lilt an antelope; cannot make a Socrates or a Bhakespeare of every being born Into tho world. 'Not until comparatively lately has much attention been given to the way In which criminals are produced. It was with ttu-m much as It was at one time with lunatics; to say of the former that they were wicked nnd of the latter that they were mad waa thought to render any further explanation unnecessary and any further inquiry super fluous. It I certain, however, that crim inal and lunatic ar as much manufac tured articles aa are steam engines and calico printing presaea, only th processes of the organic manufactory are so complex that we ar not abl to follow them.. All persons who hav made criminals their tudy recognii a distinct criminal class of beings who herd together In our luige cities In a thieves' quarter, giving themselves up to Intemperance, rioting in debauchery, without regard to man-lag U or th bonds of consanguinity and propa gating a criminal population of degenerate beings. It Is furthermore a matter of ob servation that this criminal cla consti tutes a degenerate or morbid variety of mankind marked by teoullar low physical and mental characteristic. "They are. It ho been said, a distinctly marked off from the honest and well bred operatives as 'black faced aheep' are from other breeds, so that an experienced de tective or prison official could pick them out from any promiscuous assembly at church or market. Their family likeness betray them a fellow.' They are oMen deformed, with Ill-shaped, angular head; stupid, sullen, sluggish, deficient In vital energy and sometime afflicted with epi lepsy. "Crime 1 a sort of outlet In which their unsound tendencies sre discharged. They woulj go mad If they were not ortmlnals, and they do cot go mad because they ar criminals. "To , return to the question of surgery, however," continued Dr. Lee; "It Is a fact that the vicious habits of children, due to physical defects, may b and have been relieved by surgical operations, whereas if these had not been performed they would havo, s ha been clearly shown, drifted Into live of depredation, cauaed by weak ened will power. "Of coure, the llttl bit of skull prey ing down upon the brain may proiuca varloua effect In varlou men, althojgh it U a mot Invariably a form of d sease Generally, It develops criminals, but Botn tlme It brings forth geniuses. Napoleon, one of the world's greatest men, was an jjleptlo. p"nce hi ccentrlolty. Dr. Johnson was a victim of scrofula, and henoe his melancholy. There are countle! Instances. "To my mind, the only effective manner In which to prevent crime la to have a system of thorough examination of the criminal classes, so far as they can be discovered; and by this I mean In every way, mentally, physically, chemically and bacterlologlcally. Surgery and medicine will do the rest. "No fear of the practical 111 consequences to society need deter us from looking on criminals as the unfortunate victims of a vicious or defective organization and a bad education. But what In this ago it would soem right that we should do Is to get rid of the angry feeling of retaliation which may be at the bottom of any Judi cial punishment, and of all penal measures that may be Inspired by such feeling. So ciety having manufactured its criminals has scarcely the right, even if it were wise for Its own Bake, to treat them in an angry spirit of vengeance." QUAINT FEATl'llKS OF LIFE. Hiram S. Downer, a Cincinnati elec trician, was truck by lightning In th shape of 11.000 volts of electric motive force and live to tell the tale, according to a damage euit he filed In the common pleas court against the General Electric com pany, a New York corporation doing busi ness in Cincinnati. In 1901 Downers was employed at a substation of the company at Schenectady, N. Y., where he came In contact with a wire, defectively insulated, he claims, that was carrying 11.000 volts. He was knocked unconscious, but revived In ten minutes. ' His right hand and left foot wore burned to a crisp, however, and he haa been permanently Injured. He .aska Jlfi.000 from the electric company. That a child ahould swallow two papers of needles seems almost unbelievable, but that supposition Is the only reasonable one advanced to account for the Intermittent appearance during the last seventeen, months of fifty-one needles from the bod of Miss Mabel Murray, a 17-year-old girl, whose home Is in Warren, O. The greater part of the needles were rem6ved by Mis Murray or her mother. A new pain meant another needle blindly seeking Its way out of the body in which It had been Impris oned and In which It had traveled about for bo many years. Though tho operation was exceedingly painful, by persistent effort Miss Murray would work the needle to th surface and then pull It out with a little pair of pincer her mother had bought for the purpose. Paralysed from neck to heel, his body spotted like that of a leopard, Thomas Winter, a negro of Philadelphia, is sinking Into death so slowly that physicians who are attending him regard the case a a re- j markable one. Winter was brought Into the Medico-Chlrurglcal hospital July 13. suffering from a fracture of the seventh cervical. This Is the most prominent bone of the spinal column, and Is Just above the shoulders. Its fracture usually Is followed Immediately by death. In Winters case there appear to hove been conditions which operate for partial protection of the spinal fluid and cord. Joined with this is a con stitution of unusual robustness. Physicians who have studied his case closely nay ho has no chance for recovery. When brought Into the hospital Winter was a coal black negro. He is now yeuow in paicnes ana the lighter color is spreading rapidly. A man recently took a house upon a lease in a certain crescent in London witn- out examining the terms of his agreement as closely as he should. After a time the landlord called upon him and pointed out that he was bound to do all the outside painting at certain Intervals. He protested but It was "so nominated in the bond," and there was no help for him, After n, good deal of thought he hired the painters and directed them to paint the, whole of the front of the house red, white and blue In stripes. When It was finished the neighborhood It waa rather a fahlonible part waa up In arms and the landlord was frantic. Th tenant politely explained to him that thore was nothing In th agree. ment about the color and that red, white and blue, in stripes, was hla favorite com blnatlon, but he thought he might, per haps, be better pleased with th painting of the back, which he proposed to color green, with yellow spots. The . landlord, who well knew that not another house could be let In the crescent If he carried out his throat, nsarly had a fit at the Idea, nnd within a week the tenant had a new lease. In which the landlord undertook to do all the outside painting himself. The late Senator Vest of Missouri ueert to tell a story of good luck and hard luck without n counterpart. One dayi while be was a momber of the confederate congress, he lost a month's pay somewhere on th Htrects of Richmond. JuM as the woman Irl scripture who lost a piece of silver called together her friends and neighbors and sought diligently until she found It, he called' his friend and went with them on what seemed a hopeless search through the fnow-covered, dlmly-Ilghted streets of Richmond. 'The chances were a thousand to one against suecoss. "We hadn't been out fifteen minutes when a young lieuten ant In our party stooped down and picked up my loat roll. I waa In high glee, and wanted to treat. We were piloted to a cafe, which, pending aome repairs, had n ladder rf about a dozen rung instead of rulrs. We nil climbed up, considering it a great lark, all the while tilklng about what a lucky fellow th young lioutenant was, nnd predicting great things for him A w climbed down again the young lieu, tenant fell from the laddor and broke hla neck." Mnnanleom fir Hanna Family, CLKVEI.AND. Ovt. s.-Mr. Augusta Haium, Kidowf the late Senator Hanna today con'irmed ll.e report thnt a magnifi cent ii.nusoleiun will b erected In Lke viow cemetery here, wherein th bodlea of th senator nd other member of th family will be Interred. Tho mausoleum will cost I10C.OCO and will be oompleted in about a year. ALL HINDS OF MEN ARE EASY Amateur Get-Bich-Quicien Are Eeadilj Plucked by the Professional. TAKING CHANCES AND PAYING FOR THEM Difflcaltles tho Law Officers Ksesaster In Chasing; "Sore Things" Crop of lacker Undiminished y Publicity. "If It were not that th desire to get aomethlng for nothing la so strong in people of all kinds snd classes there would be no room In the world for the get-rlch- qulck concern," said a police official. "But the gambling instinct Is so strong In man and woman that whenever the chance ap parently la offered to make money without working there are always plenty of them ready and anxious to risk their hard-earred coin In the care of get-rlch-qulck swindler and their Ilk. It matters not what kind of a proposition a man may have, whether It Is a fictitious gold mln In Alaska or a three wire sure thing at New Orleanj, If It la put before the public with the proper wording and an oak finished office to back It the dear public, from th preacher to barkeep, will come a-runnlng to help the get-rlch-qulck man lay by enough to mako Ma big getaway when the police break down the doore with evidence to convict. The aupply of the easily 'done' In the land Is unbelievable to the layman." What with the, activity and effectiveness of .the police and the publicity and nrtortety given to their machinations by the press of the country it would teem that the get-rlch-qulck swindler would hardly find vic tims enough among the publlo of a great city to warrant him exposing himself .o arrest and a subsequent term In the penitentiary- 'But, according to the detectives and policemen who have worked on the "swindling detail" In the city for the" Inst few years, the Inevitably "sucker" Is still to be found In undiminished au.intttlc throughout the country. How this can be in th face of the fact that each day there Is circulated In the public press accounts of arrests of bands of swindlers, and often an outline of the method of their operations Is a mystery to the public themselves, but the harsh fact remains, nevertheless. Victims from All Classes. Th victims of the get-rlch man do not come from any one class of people, nor ar they all to be counted among the weak minded and Imbecile. The country cousin does not excel the city man In number or gullibility. If a list of the names found In a recently raided Doarborn street concern were published with this article It would cause consternation among circles where the name and reputations of men are sup posed to be guarantees for sound business sense and acumen. Merchants and their clerks, street car conductors and the super intendent of the line, doctom, lawyers and even ministers of the gospel were among those who had listened to the siren song of the 200 per cent man and had contributed liberally that the financier might go to Europe In the first cabin and hide himself in Paris until the noise of the scheme's ex plosion subsided. The schemes of the get-rlch swindler and the Ingenuity and originality with which he foists them on the publlo are appar ently without end or cleverness. His mone tary capital Is money enough to rent and furnish an office, hire a stenographer and hav ' quantities of stationery printed and lithographed with thi most Imposing of Arm titles. His stock in trade ia Nerve, with a big N, and a particularly ripe knowledge of certain phases of human na ture. HI method vary a widely as do men, but the shallowness of his scheme la apparent to all when once the veneer of the "frost" is taken off y the polioe. Hi victims' contributions to hi coffer vary from the- $1 of the widow and orphan to the hundreds of the prosperous profea slonal or business man. Racing; Game Catches Many. The turf Investment scheme Is the one that gets the largest variety of victim. Everybody like to place his or her money where they know for certain that It will be returned to them In a day or two multiplied by a hundredfold. The simple, childish faith with which merchants and clerks, sinners and saints, the sophisticated and tho verdant, climb to th office of the turf Investment "bureau" with their money In their hands nnd beg th "investor" to take the Rama, should silence the carping tongue of the cynic who declare that human na ture is growing cold and suspicious. The turf specialist takes the money and pay a dividend the first week that delight th heurt of the victim, and the second week, or possibly the third, he removes his lares and penates, and the kind people's money, to another and easier sphere of activity. "Investment Company" Prospers. The "Investment company" comes after the turf scheme In tho number of dollar garnered from the public. This In conducted on a more magnificent scale than th petty get-rlch-qulck affair and yiolds a propor tionately larger rate of Income. The class of people thnt come to the net of these men ar a moro thrifty- sort than are attracted to smaller concern. The "Investment com pany" goes after th "client" who has from K0 to $300 to Invest and gets him, too. An investment In the Ragged Shirt silver properties In Nevada which is abso lutely guaranteed to net a return of over 100 per cent within six months appeals to the man who would ahun the turf invest ment as a fake, and h goes Into It with unlimited faith and an open pockethook. When some flno morning he goes to the office of the company and finds It vacant, with th police aortlng over the mail for further evldenco, he eulTera a shock that effectively seal his Hp. Few of tho In. vestment company's victims have It in their heert to disclose their names or tho amounta to which they suffered. It Is th little loser alone who squeals, and this fact render the capture and conviction of tha swindler all the harder. Th Investment company dallies also Ju stocks and market repnrls and "operate" on th Board of Trade. Thl helps to bring the wealthy agriculturist Into the reach of th swindler and furnishes a lucrative and easy source of revenue. The furmcr In. vests much more on an avers pre than do the city man and when he get nipped la even willing to bribe In orde.r to keep his nam a secret. "I wouldn't let the folk at home know of thl for a thousand," euld one. and thin is th general sentiment among the rural "aucker." Chicago Trl- bun. Chocolats for n Tramp. On of Uncle SiVi's foresters, named Glf ford Plncbot, left Va camp In the Rockies lately for a stroll. J! wandered two day and two night though the forest, and evidently waa wlthojl his gun, for h had ' during that time not king to eat except a email cake of chocolaa. , Nevertheless, when I managed to find hla way to camp at tht end of th forty. eight hour of tramphbr and of aleeplng on the ground in that aWtlslng mountain air. he waa In very fair ordltlon. thanks to tt at bit of confectioner. Ha la duubt Uss confirmed In hla oplnfcn that choco late, the "ambroala" of dii-ernlna Brian. tlat. Is as nutritious as It palatabl. THE HIT OF EnlargedNew Features Color Press Work. Illustrated Bee In Supplement With' Our Big Sunday Edition Watch for Our New Color agazine Next Sunday THE BEE has made arrangements with the Chicago Tribune to give subscribers to its Sunday issue all the latest at tractive features of the most up-to-date color newspaper maga zine that is printed in the whole United States. This stroke of enterprise will place The Bee still further to the front as the leader among western newspapers, always providing its readers with the very best of everything. Buster Broiton and All the Popular Favorites The Inimitable Buster Brown THE recognised king of all th comics, R. F. Outcast' master piece of humor that from week to week amuse young and old alike. The entertaining youngster who gets good fun out of everything and whose Jov iality has brought him in real flesh and blood before th footlights onth stage. Watch for Buster Brown In Th Bee. Topics of Interest to Women ILLUSTRATED feature stories for women and about women and often by women. Woman's world reflected In the mirror of pen and plotura. Timely article by competent writer of established reputation showing what women axe doing out of tho ordinary In the various and varied activities of social and Industrial life. " A Page of Entrancing fiction TWO or three good hort storlos each week elotd from th beat Action writer of the day. These stories art written with special view to the de mand of newspaper readers to hold their Interest and yet not tire, each tory in addition Is represented with suitable Illustrations and attractive headings, carefully drawn and repro duced by latest processes. A in Addition to The Bee's Unexcelled News Service New York Herald War News READERS of Th Be hav from day to day th New Tork Herald's special war new servlo whloh cornea by cable from It correspondent with both tho contending armies In th field, and at th capital of both th nations engaged In th world confllot la the far east. Few people realU the expense required to get thl now an expense The Be share with th Now York Herald. special Staff Correspondents THE BEE maintains a tuff corre spondents at th national capital at Washington and at th tat capi tal of Iowa and Nebraska to got all th new of special interest to our reader with particular referanco to th part played in atat and nation by western men of prominence. No other paper published In thee part maintains such a spoclal correspond eiioo aervlco. Sane Editorial Discussions THE BEE has achieved a notublo reputation for its strong editorial page on which aubjecta of current Interest are discussed In plain lan guage from the atanripctnt of common ene. The Bee' opinions are con stantly quoted more widely than tho of any other western paper th ob vious reason is that it voice cor recti j' the aentlment of progressiva western puopla. If not already a subscriber, place your order without delay with your newsdealer or with the publishers by addressing) THE BEE, Omaha) THE SEASON. Grand Galaxy of Stage Beauty A STRIKING array of loading light of drama, opera and vaudeville as they appear before the camera. Everyone llkos to look at beautiful women and everyone will be delighted with these groups of much talked about stars. Portraiture and engrav lng both don In most artlatlo atyle. Each frame of beauty will rcall om familiar face. Nesblt's Top o' the Mornln' PAGE) of picture and letter press that will tickle the funny bone bright quip on everyday topic and pointed Jabs at current fads and foible. Th best work of one of the most iklllful artists in wit 1 and humor who con tributes to America's oomlo weeklle. If vou want to laugh, to drive dull care away, Top o' th Mornln' will hel? you do It. Hints for Woman's Wear FEMININE fashions right up to date. How th well dressed woman Is attired aptly described and illus trated from photographs. As well b out of the world as out of fashion. Women who want to keej in stylt Informed of fashion's decrees as they are promulgated by society leader In th center wher fashion reigns supreme. National Campaign Politics EVERT cltlsen 'who wants to do hla full duty as a voter and do It eon sdentlously and Intelligently, must keep Informed on th progrea of th great national campaign, of th vitai Issue at stake, of th movmnta and words of th distinguished standard bearer. Read Th Be for all the Important political nw of th day.. , Fullest Market Reports THE BEE takes extra pride in It market page, which is more comprehensive and detailed than th market reports of any of It compe titors. Th Bee doe not stint spac for Us market news. Bualnesa men everywhere throughout this . section rly upon Th Boo to keep them In touch with th fluctuation of th market. Local soil Telegraphic News TUB BEE'S nw service covers all fields local, state, national and foreign unabridged Associated press report com day and rJjht over two leased wire, and Th Bee' corps of local reporter cover promptly and accurately all the happening In It special field. Alt tho new all th Urn from all parts of th In habited world. V t V ha r" taro let m- t U V