THE OMAHA DAIlA BEK: THURSDAY, MAY I, 1905. , The Omaha Daily Bee. E. ROSE WATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNINO. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION: : Pally Bee (without Sunday), one year.. $4 00 Ulutretd Bee. on year I M I belligerents Is finally successful Pat iday Hw, urnay IS Hw, one year a ... me A-MEmA-v past. Just what pnrt the United State gov ernment may feel called upon to take In the final settlement of the far east ern War will be determined by events which cannot now be foreseen. Very much will depend upon which of the It flunda: VI Twentieth Century Farmer, one year., l.w that this country Will play no unlmpor- ee, one tear., r, , ..r . a ? a role when the terms of peace are pally Pee (without Sunday), per copy.. lo I .... , . paiiy Bee (without Sunday), per week.. 12c I arranged and already It Is understood Daily wee (inriuoin Bunnay), prr wCr.xiw . . nr0.lrtpnt tnklnir n verv Kvenlna: Bob (without Sunday), per week. Jo I mat me presiaem IS taKing a very Evening Bee (Including Sunday), pe Sunday "Bee!" per copy bring 'about peace after the result of .SMnW..Kto Impending naval battle. As here- iiuuiu ti auuicncv;u . . - " I paxtment. orriCES. Omaha The Bee. Building. South Omaha City Hall building, Twenty fifth ad M streets. Council Blufta 10 Pearl street. Chicago 1640 Unity building. New VoTk-160 Home Ufa Ins. building. Washlngton-601 Fourteenth street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communlcatfons relating to news and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. . REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, tofore noted, the opinion obtains lu diplomatic circles that whatever the out come of the meeting 'of the fleets of Russia and Japan, the first real opportu nity for the successful initiation of peace negotiations since the war began will ex ist with the ending of that engagement. It is pointed out that war has cost both belligerents enormously In lives and money and defeat of Russia's last fleet, &5b,V0t I thought, give the Russian mail accounts. Personal checks, except on i jK,ace party renewed power, while even Omuha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. I Thh bee publishing company, a partial victory for the Russian fleet would have the effect of scaling Japan's bt k mrurvT rn r'tnr'TTT.ATTON state of Nebraska. Douriaa County, ss.: peace terms io wnat uussia wouia re ci..c. Reter. ecret"Ly P'.J11" iJS? gard as a reasonable basis, ays that the actual rumbw of full and I Early in SSnAli'ini iarnm declared that In the final set- montn or Apni. laws, waa as iouow.. , tiement no third rower would be con - the war the Russian gov- J 31, OHO t ,.. si.ono 1 2H.180 4 2M.10O I ...... 2A.100 2H.100 7 , a,ao ... 80,820 9 BO.JWW 10 ST,70 11 9N,lTO li 8ft,400 1J 2M.160 14 28.000 15 80,800 mm AK OAA n!!""""" 2!no suited or permitted to interfere, that is.!.! 2,070 the terms of peace would be arranged 19 I entirely by the belligerents. Then Rus- 21!!!!!!!!!!!! 2!ao e'an expectation of ultimate victory was 22 so.iffo high. That power bad experienced no I . ...... ,. 25 itn,060 l-taia 01 raeaiauon or intervention was 26 2.oo vigorously resented. The situation has S Islsoo been greatly changed and today the a 80,100 hope of Russia is wholly in the fleet 30 83,iwo 1 now I- eastern seas. Unless that ten high-salaried pension examiners for carelessness and direct violation of the law and he has given all the employes of the bureau to understand that they will be required to faithfully and dil igently perform their duties, to the end that the government shall receive ad equate service for the salaries It pays. There are 2,000 clerks? or ' more In the pension bureau and if lflxlty in the work were permitted not only would there be delay, but a wrong committed against the government. There Is no part of the public service in which there "is greater necessity for faithful and efficient work on the part of employes than In the pen sion bureau, and in enforcing this Com missioner Warner will have the com mendation of the public, though he may incur, as did his predecessor In the office, the displeasure of those under him. lines are notoriously the most profitable side graft that travels on wheels. They are bombproof against the Interstate law. They get rebates and give re bates, and are paid whether they are propelled with a full cargo or' running empty over the railroads, whether they are attached to a passenger train run ning on regular time or expedited by fast freight trains running wild. Total Bvao shall win a decisive victory the situa- Leas unsold copies 8'78a tlon for her will be hopeless. In that Net total sales 8T0.ORT I event it Is altogether probable that she Dally average ,8Ji C. C. ROSJH.WATB.rl, would welcome intervention for peace and to save her from the possible heavy demands on the part of Japan. As to Japan, there Is reason to believe that should she defeat the Russian fleet and thus be absolutely assured of com- The State Board of Equalization has mand of the Bhe WQuld not dl8. Secretary. Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me tnis 1st any or May, (Seal) ' M. B. HUNQATEJ v ' Notary Public. made a good beginning by holding open door sessions. In reporting snow in- May, the Black Hills may only be preparing to qualify aa a summer resort. The constitutionality of the biennial election law should be tested at the earliest possible moment With strike breakers striking and employers "scabbing," the Chicago strike Is presenting some-new features. . . Bow many members of the late legis lature carry Pullman passes In their pockets? Don't all speak at once. A Young Men's Christian association is to be organized In St Petersburg, but no demand for an instructor in jlu jltsu is likely or some time. If the Japanese will only continue to watch French waters close enough Ad miral Rojestvensky may be able to come upon them from the other side. posed to reject suggestions from other powers, and particularly from the United States, in regard to terms of peace. Japan knows that she tins no more sin cere friend among the nations than is .this country and that whatever advice she might get from here would be with reference to her best interests and wel fare. There is here no sympathy with the European "yellow peril" fear, but a practically universal confidence that Japan Intends, In the event of her final success, to deal fairly and Justly with all nations, doing nothing that w(ll close to the commerce of the world va by door in Asia. No western nation, with perhaps the exception of Great Britain, has a greater concern in the terms of peace that will be made between Russia and Japan than the United States. Ourposses slon of the Philippines has given ns 'a very vital interest in far eastern affairs. It is reasonable to expect, therefore, that our government will not be indif ferent, regarding the character of settle ment when the war is ended. J The coal dealers demur against Jug- handle demurrage charges, but the traf fic manager of the Burlington demurs to the' soft and hard coal impeachment. The Dps Moines Register asks if a college student is worthless. The opin ion la growing that it depends aa much upon the student aa upon the college. WISCONSlirs ANTI-QBAFT LAW. The law Just enacted in Wisconsin against graft and tipping Is certain to command a great deal of attention and if It shall result aa Its promoters believe it will doubtless the example will be fol lowed in other states. It appears that when the bill was Introduced in the leg islature the intention was simply to wipe out the petty grafting which has grown up through small commissions paid buy ing agents and employes'. to induce them totfavor some firm or corporation in tuak ing their purchases a practice by no means confined to WUconsln. It was with such a view that the bill was What a rumpus those pav!ng speclflca-1 passed by both houses, but it is con tions make, in the city council every sea- "trued to apply also to the giving of tips, son. v Cah't' somebody Improvise paving 14 provides that "Whoever corruptly specification's that would hold good for K've8 or offers any agent servant or em at least two vears in succession. P'ye any gratuity whatever, with lnten tlon to influence his actions in relation , British merchants are complaining I to bis employer's business, or any em- tnai unina is ignoring its treaty ohllga-1 pioye wno requests or accepts such a tlons. When the news reaches .Peking gift" shall be,' liable to fine and lmprls- 41. A 1 . .. 1 i. f, M . i, luc iuiLt-vii gui ei umt'ui win uuuuuesH uumcui, ask what port Great Brltajn desires this It is a good law and would be better time. I if it had been made more sneclflc in re gard to tjpplng, but whether or not it can be enforced is a question. Dotibt- KSTABLl&H THE COKSTITUTIOfiAt. STANDABD- Under the revenue laws of Nebraska all taxable property and franchises are to be assessed at their true value and re turned for taxation at one-fifth of their assessed value. From this rule the law admits of no variation, whether the as sessment Is made by the county assessor or the state board charged with the as sessment of railroads, telegraphs 'and other public carriers. In view of the fact that the State Board of Railroad Assessment, which also performs the function of a state board of equalization, is made up of state executive officers, it is In duty bound to set the example of law enforce ment In other words, it is incumbent upon the board to assess the railroad property In conformity with the letter of the law, at its true value, as near as it can be ascertained from the returns of their tangible property, the market value bf their stocks and bonds and the capitalized value of their earnings at a reasonable rate. Having established the standard for the assessment of railroad property, the board will be in position to enforce a compliance with the Jaw In the assess ment of other taxable" property for state and county purposes. If upon full in vestigation the board shall ascertain that the assessed valuation of real and personal property Is below the par value standard, the assessments on this class of property can be raised to correspond with the assessments of the railroads. In this work of equalization the board will be in position to separate the vari ous classes of property and raise or lower any class of property to corre spond as near as possible with the stand ard established for the railroads. In enforcing this principle the board will impose no unjust or unequal burden upon the railroads. On the contrary, it will place all classes of taxable property on an equal footing, so far as it may lay within its power. a SHOULD HATE BEEN DATED. The . following anecdote is going the rounds of the theatrical columns of. the press: Iew Fields, head of the "It Happened tn Nordland" company, has a young relative who is very clever in his line, and who. a few days ago, received a telegram ask ing if he would play a week's engagement In a certain city in Nebraska. "I want MOO for the week," promptly wired Mr. Fields' young relative. Twelve hours later this answer came back: "Stop kidding. I can get the governor of Nebraska to play a week for $300." ,The only trouble with this story is that it fails to disclose the date mark. It must be Intended to refer back to the lmmedl ate predecessor, of the present governor of Nebraska. Talking for His Salary. Washington Post George R. ' Peck, a railroad attorney, says It would be dangerous to give the In terstate Commerce commission power to fix railroad rates. Not If the railroads are successful, as they have been, in pre venting the commission from, getting power to enforce Its orders. With the National Society of Insur ance Commissioners at work on the Equitable case, the officials may soon be sorry that, they did not stand closer to gether. President Shouts remark that the I'Himuia canal win be built as a railroad less it will have the effect to put a stop Is built will have to be modified by ex-1 to or greatly reduce tho grafting at eluding the right-of-way agent and the which it Is distinctly aimed, but so far man who 'boosta" county bond proposl- as tipping Is concerned it will perhaps tlons. I not be very effective. Persons who. wish to tin oorters and waiters will bardlv he ? In Ueuyhig that President BIgelow's deterred by the law. which anniw onlv Bhortfue . was due to speculation In when the intention is to corruDt. some- Wheat one Milwaukee citizen seems to thing obviously very difficult to nrove. be ttioro solicitous fo the reputation of However, those who deprecate the tlp the board of trade than for that of his nina Dractice. and there are few who An friend. Pennsylvania representatives in con gress aro expected to look with greater favor .upon the bill to admit Oklahoma to statehood since the territory baa reached the dignity of a fatal mine ex plosion. ; . . The' 8tate Board of Agriculture con templates the erection of a new adminis tration building at the state fair not will find protection against It under the law and undoubtedly' will avail themselves of it. r "'' l. -I B PESSlON BUREAU REFORMS Pension Commissioner Warner is Insti tutlng reforms in his bureau from which at least two good results are expected more and better work on the part of the employes and some saving in expenses. It appears that under the admlnlstra tlon of the preceding commissioner the arounda. About the time the new hniwi. 1 1 ., .... w ----- i tana aiiu rfKuiHiinni rpiatiniv n tha an tng is completed a new administration ,i0n bureao were vrv ..n-.ti. will probably be installed. t0 the p.t ,rrlt,Hnn 4tw, " v H viiuuco ouu I Pi.mhlnatlAn. t Awtr.lAAn i m - nt-M. ..a v. i a i i I iij-iwra uu ior Borne the jcottbn fields. Perhaps brain, will a-L .-T"" htag" pretty exterminate the boll weevil, but a num- ther. ' . . VraTt aV 7 ber of people at W.shlngtou will at-JI'IVo LL" " tempt to convince congresa that a fed- di.HkJ TV. m"cn erahapproprlaUon is necessary. ... th. u' P " " v tut? uiui uiouey, It is stated that when the present coin missloner came In the employes of the bureau expected a return to the old free ana easy regime that they had been able to Inaugurate and carry on for years, in this they have been disap pointed. Commissioner Warner, nro. - - " Secretary Morton Is undoubtedly right aa to the low freight rates in America compared with . other countries; but It la not fair to the shipper to com pare rates In tbla country with those cf other countries, where the distances . c . .. I . are sooner, eddiow wa comnare in nn.. .A . , .. - - i auuiiutster toe affairs of hi Kebraska rate, with those of Massa- bureau on strietlv . .. ... u i iu. u.ira. m VBUSelta, lahmilfl ha Annm T? i . . . "".cu UH aigujigsea The State Board of Assessment seems to labor under the delusion that the Pull man Palace Car company cannot be as sessed for the value of its franchise in addition to its tangible property, be cause the legislature, for reasons unex plained, failed to insert in the revenue law a provision authorizing the assess ment of Bleeping car franchises. The constitution expressly provides that 'taxes shall be levied by valuation so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his. her or its nronertv and franchlsna." The failure of the legislature to inclttde franchises with the taxable assets of sleeping car companies should not make the constitutional provision that requires their taxation a' dead letter. 7he f ran chlses of the Pullman company are its most valuable asset and the successful manipulation of succeeding legislatures by Its paid lobbyists to avoid paying taxes on its franchises should not ex empt that corporation from its equitable proportion of taxes, as contemplated by the constitution. If the state board will only nerve up to the situation, its right to assess franchises, whether the legis lature has intentionally or inadvertently omitted to include them with the tangi ble property of sloeplng car companies, can be tested In the supreme court If the court declares the tax valid the board will be vindicated in enforcing the spirit and letter of the constitution. If it declares It invalid, the next legis lature will be compelled .to correct the omission of sleeping car franchises in the revenue law. A Pointer Sorely Needed. Chicago Record-Herald. The csar kindly refrains from' offering advice to Chicago, although he has had a good deal of experience In the art of put ting down riots. Dolaa; Good with Money. Brooklyn Eagle. As an example the widow's mite Is ex cellent; but the $130,000,000 that Andrew Carnegie has given to education and pen sions represents a tangible good that one cannot help respecting. By Aecldeat In t'snal Way. V Springfield Republican. With King Edward in Paris for three days, the courting between England and France is setting ardent and lively. These things do not happen by dance, any more than did the kaiser's visit to Morocco, One of the Lucky Few. Cleveland Plain Dealer. It may be remarked that there are com paratively few newspaper men who pay 150,000 for house rent in 'a lifetime, and yet that is the sum Ambassador Whltelaw Reld Is asked to pay for a single year's occupancy of the ambassadorial home in London. True Symbols of Prosperity. Cincinnati Chronicle. Usually people who aTe filled with gloom because some stocks have declined 10 or 16 points should calm themselves. Undoubt edly we shall have periods of. business quiet and even of depression from time to time, but they will not be due tp stock market manipulation. Not the stock ticker but the mower and reaper is the symbol of national prosperity. Department of Clerkships. -Washington Post. The way to Washington is one which an Innumerable throng is willing to tread. It does seem, though, as if some one ought to tell these good people that it is better to be a porter In a country store than a r!trk in one of the departments. Portera have risen to be millionaire proprietors of large establishments. A clerk In a government department is likely to remain a clerk for- evar. On. Now, Boys, Get a Move New York Tribune. Statistics show that the messenger boy service graduates a large proportion of successful men, .Every messenger boy car- lies in his knapsack the baton of A field marshal of industry, and he. ought to feel a lively pride In his business. The roads which he trots up and down in his ap prenticeship all lead to Rome, If he did but know It, with. his Individual chance of get ting ttrere as good as anybody's. Writing. Its JOwn Aotobloarraphy. BaJMrapiit. American. . . Frenzied finance Is writing its own autobiography evn. more dramatically and graphically than ifr'.' Lawson Is describ ing it. .And a striking comment on the current situation Is the direct charge by a specker. before . a . municipal league that the business men of the country, the cap tains of industry, are more responsible even than the practical politicians for the amount of public, .corruption, made pos sible by their bribing methods. AmmiO( Assertions, Pittsburg Despatch. The general freight agent of - the Mis souri Paclflo testifies that government rate-making will never do, because It would destroy competition. The anxiety of a general freight agent to' preserve competition after twenty-eight years of railroad combinations to prevent it is very touching. But It may provoke the popular retort that this shows why the railroads are opposed to the Townsend bill, since It does not establish government rate-mal ing. Presidential Possibilities for 10O8. Leslie's Weekly. According to the present outlook, Presl dent Roosevelt will be out of the list of possibilities for 1908. This Is the biggest fact in connection with the campaign four years hence that has developed thus far. With President Roosevelt out of conald eratlon, many persons Vice President Fair banks, Secretary Shaw, Secretary Taf t and Senator Knox will suggest themselves In aonnectlon with the candidacy. Of course Secretary Hay would stand in the front rank among the; aspirants were It not for his age. He will be 70 before the election four years, hence, or more than two years older thsn William Henry Harrison, the most aged of the presidents, was at hla Inauguration, and he lived only a month after taking office. There Is a chance a very remote chance that some ot the radi cal element of .'the party Governor La FolleUe of Wisconsin, Governor Cummins of Iowa, or some of the other young and aggressive members of tha party, with ad vanced Ideas on, social and other reforms- may go to the front In the next three years. Possibly congress may develop somebody in that f,lm who will be a big figure In the convention. The unexpected does not often bap pen. The railroad tax commissioners an nounce their intention to appeal to the State Board of Railroad Assessment for a reduction for their respective railroads from the assessment of last year. The railroad tax agent must earn bis salary, and the only time he can earn it is in the months of May, June and July, when the equalization boards are wrestling with the railroad assessments. After that they are privileged to take annual vacations for the balance of the year. The State Board of F.quallzatlon is wrestling with the question whether pri vate car companies should be .assessed separately or thrown Into the railroad dump and distributed like the Omaha terminals. Why should not the eleva tors, coal yards and lumber yards that have trackage along the railroads be thrown into the dump. The private car NEXT UEITKNAXT UEXERAL. Changes to Follow the Retirement of General Chaffee. Army and Navy Journal. From the highest authority we learn and are permitted to announce that Major Qen eral John C. Bates has been selected to sue ceed Lieutenant General A. R. Chaffee when the latter retires tor age on April 14, 190S, aa lieutenant general and chief of start. General Bates wtli serve In this ca paclty until hla statutory retirement, Au gust 26, 1906, and will then be succeeded by Major General Henry C. Corbin, who will serve as lieutenant general and chief ot staff until his retirement, September 15, 1906. It is the present purpose to appoln Major General Arthur MacArthur as lieu tenant general and chief of staff when Gen eral Corbin retires. General MacArthur will not retire until June t, 1909. As we have ..already announced. Major General Bates will cotne to Washington aa assistant chief of staff upon the retirement on June It of Major Qeneral George L. Gillespie and the consequent promotion of Brigadier Gn eral George M. Randall. The northern dl Vision will probably be placed under tha command of General Randall. It may be aa well to state that the above is the first official . intimation that has been given of tha propoa4; promotion in turn of Gen era la Bates,; Corbin and MacArthur to be Chief of staff. The following general Offl cera retire for age subsequent to the retire ment of General MacArthur and at the dates named)- Grant, May SO. 1914; Carter, November 19, iriftt Bliss, December SI, 191T Mills, May 7, 191S; Barry. October It. 1919 Bell, January . 1930; Wood, October 1924; Funstoa November t. ' ROISD ABOtT NEW YORK. hippies on the rnrrnt Of I.lfe la the Metropolis. The greateat wonder in the show line in New Tork City Is the Hippodrome, built and managed by Skip Dundy of Omaha and his partner, Thompson. The building la Immense In proportions and Its success Is correspondingly Immense. It Is located on Sixth avenue, and runs from the corner of Forty-third street to that of Forty fourth. It stands where the car barns of the Sixth Avenue Street Railroad company once stood. The range of amusement to be provided ran be understood from the following state ment of fact: On the opening night the spectators witnessed a comlo opera, a cir cus, a spectacular drama and a ballet of wonderful beauty. There are 40,000 electric lights required to illuminate the building. The back cur tain Is 85x200 feet in slse. The proscenium arch Is the largest ever built in a theater, and has a total width of ninety-six feet and a clear height of forty feet. From the extreme front to the back, wall the depth of the stage Is 110 feet. The stage weight is 460,000 pounds without nythlng on it. It can be flooded, raised, lowered and divided with the utmost ease. It will easily hold 600 people and 150 horses. Some of the pieces of scenery weigh ten tons each. In the rigging galleries, on both sides of the stage, there are a series of electric ally operated winding drums for lowering or raising the scenery, the asbestos cur tain and other curtains. Each of these drums has a lifting power of one ton eighty feet per minute, and can be operated in either direction. There are thirty-five new spring lambs in the Central park flock, and their very white wool makes them conspicuous these bright, warm days as they romp over the pasture alloted to them. Artists In plenty go out there to sketch and children find delight In watching the little lambs at play. "Wouldn't It Be fine to be Mary and have one of them to take to school!" said a little girl to her grandfather, with whom she was strolling. "Yes," replied the old gentleman, "but one of them, would go better with French peas." The wonderful growth of Greater New Tork is Indicated by a conservative esti mate that the census of. this year will show that the city has 4,000,000 persons living within Its borders. This is one-half of the total population of the state. London, with Its immense territory and population, la not keping pace with the American metropolis. It Is estimated that in five years New York's population will rar exceed e.ooo.ow, and that In nrteen years it Is likely to reach a grand total Of nearly 8,000,000. One of the professors of the New York university makes the forecast that in seventy-five years there will be 40,000.000 persons In the metropolitan district. There was a lively fight late Saturday afternoon between a cat and a mad dog In the building at Thirtieth street and Second avenue, which resulted In a vic tory for the cat, whlch'drove the dog to the Are escape and forced it to jump three stories to the street. The dog was afterward shot by a policeman. The dog was first noticed in Thirtieth street, barking and frothing at the mouth. He dashed Into a four-story tenement house on the corner of Second avenue and ran to the top floor, which Is occupied by Mrs. Mary Albert. The door was open and the dog ran through the rooms. Mrs. Al bert Anally managed to drive It into the hall, and then her large black cat "Nigger" appeared. I r 1 Nigger" immediately jumped on the dog's back. Down the stairs they went and into the rooms of Mrs. Theodore Brucker. The dog jumped on the dining room table and nearly every dish was thrown to the floor. The cat pursued him and more dishes were smashed. The chase continued through the rooms to the fire escape, where the dog jumped to the street, landing on its back. The cat remained on the railing, glaring at its opponent. The dog then ran through Thirtieth street, where a grocery clerk threw a bag over Its head. A maritime exposition at New York two years hence In celebration - of the first steamboat, Robert Fulton's Clermont, which made the first trip to Albany on August 11, 1807, has been proposed to Mayor McClellan by the maritime affairs commit tee ofj the Board of Trade and Transportation. The committee proposed to assemble on the Hudson vessels of every type, from the most ancient craft to the modern ocean liners and battleships. It is proposed to invite the governments of the world to send representatives from their navies to participate. , ' An official in the comptroller's office is authority for the statement that the jan itors of the public buildings in the city en. joy a large slice of the public pie. They are paid according to the floor space of the buildings placed in their charge, and their annual bills, with extras for annexes and night schools, sometimes amount to 110,000. In other departments janitors who do the same class of work are palrt 13 a day. Ot course the school janitors are compelled to pay something out of their own pockets for help, but it Is safe to say that they always manage to retain the larger part of what they receive. There are scores of Janitors in the five boroughs of Greater New York whose sal aries range from 12,000 to K000, and a num ber of others who get more than 95,000. Fred Meyer, janitor of the Wadlelgh High school, receives 7,000 a year, and his ex tras amount to considerably more. . Mrs. Catherine Hlgglna, janitresa of the Board of Education building, receives $4,930. Daniel RIordan, janitor of the High School of Commerce, draws $6,256 from the city treasury, and William Murphy, who keeps public school 179 clean, get $5,000. Nearly the same amount la paid to William Mur phy, Janitor of pubrTc school 177. John Dowling, ruler of the dust brushes and ash pans of tho girls' high school in Brooklyn, la paid $5,028, and there Is a long Hat of others who enjoy similar liberality from the Board of Education. One of the cleverest advertisements that New York hs seen for some time and one that Is attracting an unusual amount of attention, Is a huge sign painted on the side of a building on Broadway next to a vacant lot. The sign is an enormous pic ture of a parrot, and over its head are the words: "What will the parrot sayr" Presumably the parrot will say "Polly wants a cracker," ana of course the pic ture la meant to advertise a well known brand of crackers. Pedestrians who pass the picture dally look at It frequently to ee If the answer has appeared. "If people would eat plenty of rice they would not need drugs to make them sleep, said a New York drug clerk, pausing for a moment In putting up a sleeping potion for a woman. "There Is much said Just now about rice as a strengthening food, but few Americans know that It has so porlfle powers. If properly cooked It has, Rice should be washed many times, until the water no longer appears milky. It should then be soaked a few hours, salted and boiled rapidly about thirty minutes, When cooked In this way It can be eaten each day with relish, and the person who eats it lis and dreams not at all." HO Lim TEMHR FOR JIDGKSw Objections' o the Present System la the Federal Conrts. Chicago Tribune. Recent experiences In the United States courts have convinced many people that the life tenure of office for Judges has un desirable features. The Inflexible life tenure, without any provision for oompulsory retirement, means that Judges In many Instances will remain on the bench after their period of useful ness has expired. Their activity and health may have been Impaired and their mental faculties weakened, but It la in their power to Insist upon discharging, or attempting tJ discharge, the duties of federal judges. There have been Instances when United States supreme court Judges sheuld have been retired long before they saw fit to leave the bench. Some of them have clung to their positions when they were alto- fether Incapacitated for duty. Others have remained on the bench when they were only half fit physically to do their work, thus throwing upon their associates more than their Just proportion ot the labor of the court. The constitution of the United States makes no provision for compulsory retire ment. Congress has enacted a law under which a Judge may resign on full nav nft.r he shall have served ten years and have reached the age of 70 years, but there Is no power which can make a Judge retire whether he Is mentally . and physically fit or not to discharge his duties. Mani festly the constitution in this respect is Imperfect. Formerly we were taught that the Eng lish system of llfo tenure for judges waa admirable. Experience hn demonstrator Its defects. The "Judicial humorist'; In England In a monumental nuisance cele brated In song and story. Some of the Englioh Judges sre harsh, and arbitrary, and disregardful of the rtgnts of persons brought before them for trial. There Is no protection In England against the arbitrary Judge, and the right of appeal Is so limited as to make his harshness all the more In tolerable. There have been some cajes of manifest Injustice committed by .English Judges whose mental faculties were im paired, or seemed to be. In other cases the Justice of judicial decisions has been open to serious question. The New York system seems to be a reasonable compromise between the short term of office and life tenure. A term of fourteen years, with an ample salary, gives Judge sufficient opportunity to demon strate the stuff he is made of. If he Is a good Judge, in perfect health, and reason ably responsive to the demands of his office and of the law, he need not fear at the expiration of his term to submit his claims for re-election to the people. If he shall not be re-elected it probably will be because he does not deserve to be. There has been a revision of text books In regard to the life tenure for Judges. Formerly young men were taught In col lege that It was an altogether admirable thing. Now they are being taught In the school of experience, if not In college, that a Judicious compromise between the short term and life tenure for judges Is most expedient. ' ' his the PERSONAL NOTES. S The Emperor of Germany takes meals with his whole family, even children being allowed at the table. Bradley Pratt, a promlnenf citizen of Rutland, Vt., has Just died In that city at the age of 94. His father lived to be 102 years of age, and four surviving brothers' and sisters' ages aggregate 333 years. John Pearce, who now employs 1,500 per sons in his eighty-one London restaurants. began life on a capital cf 62 cents and started his first restaurant with a push cart, a tin urn and a little crockery. Among the reforms that Wu Tingfang. former Chinese minister to the United States, has brought about In his country, Is abolishing the punishment of slicing to death, substituting immediate decapitation. Miss Jane Germou, cousin of Joseph Jef ferson, who Uvea In Baltimore, Is the last of the old line of Jeffersons and one of the old school of actors and actresses. She made her debut when she was 7 years old as Little Albert to Edwin Forrest's Tell. Through its ambaseador in Washington the German government has notified Secre tary Taft that, at his request. It has desig nated Mr. Tlncanza as the German member of the board of consulting engineers of the Isthmian Canal commission. He Is one of the leading civil engineers of Germany. Jules Verne did not write hie memoirs and disliked having his personality brought for ward In the newspapers. When his son Was asked the other day by a visitor from Paris whether a monument w6uld be erected to the novelist he replied, with a smile: "Now that he's dead, very likely, as ha cannot prevent it or be annoyed by It." The sovereign who relgna over the smallest monarchy In the Nworld Is the king of the Cocos, a group of islands near Sumatra These islands were discovered about 300 years ago, but were comparatively little known until 1826, when Mr. Ross, an Englishman, visited them, wae struck by their beauty and took up his abode there. It la his grandson, George Reisa, who now holds sway over the Cocos. An examination of William R. Harper, president of the. Chicago university, made In New York Jaat . Monday, disclosed the fact that the area ot cancerous growth had decreased one-half as a result ot the fluorescent treatment. It is predicted that the next examination two weeks hence will show the growth entirely banished. The fluorescent treatment which Dr. Harper Is taking, haa sometimes been described as "liquid sunshine." It consists of admin Istering Internally a certain medicine which become radlactlve when the X-rays are applied from without. RmrrmoFumxn fl ' Absolutely Puro UASL'Ql SUBSTITUTE MR. CARSEG.IE'9 EXAMPLE. Unequalled Record of Contributions to Pnbllo Inatltallon. St. Louis Republic. Generosity is not exceptional among men of enormous wealth, but Mr., uarnogie s systematic liberality Is a distinction for the time. Since his retirement from active busi ness he has contributed more than $130,000, 000 to educational, social and charitable en dowments. This act alone marks him as bring a man of self-confidence and strong character. 1 1 ' , What to do with surplus money Is not a problem with him. He has found good use for the equivalent of 12,000 fortunes, and probably perceives how to dispose well of much more money. Nor dooa he seem to suffer pangs of dread, Incertitude and par simony upon considering the partition of his wealth. Resolving to relinquish a cer tain amount he calmly announces his in tention, as calmly arranges the necessary business features, and as calmly departs to spend, his vacatlorl abroad. The donations show careful advisement. They Include $28,000,000 for libraries in the . United States and $5,000,000 for libraries In foreign countries, $7,ROO,000 for the Pittsburg Carnegie Institute, $2,000,000 for the Pitts burg Polytechnic school, $10,000,000 for the Carneglo National university, $15,000,000 for Scotch universities and $17,000,000 to email colleges. Here are about $SO,000,000 for edu cational purposes proper, to which might be added the $10,000,000 pension fund for col lege professors. Then, there are the pen sion fund of $4,000,000 for his employes, the $1,000,000 fund for tbe allied engineers' so cieties, the Dumfcrmllne endowment of $2, 600,000, the $1,000,000 fund for a temple of peace at The Hague and miscellaneous benefactions amounting to many millions. Mr. Carnegie Is criticised. But that Is unfair. The fact stands that he has divided his wealth, and In so doing has distributed It for the public welfare. No other man of wealth hns displayed such high spirit. None has acted with such wisdom, and none has been so generous. Mr. Carnegie has Justi fied a reputation for magnanimity. PASSING PLEASANTRIES. "Is there quartz In the mine in which your huNhand bought shares?" "Charley says there Is," sld young Mrs. Torkens, "but I don't believe .there are even pints." Washington Star. "Perhaps tills nickel will pass," said the tobacconist, ns the customer paid for the clgnni "but I'm not Sure." ' v v "What's the "matter with "JJtemttihi the customer, purling at tho weed. "Well, It isn't as good as It might be." "Well, neither Is this cigar." Philadelphia -edzer, , Her Husband Now, there's Mrs. Meeker. I know that she makes nil her own clothes, yet you never hear he suy a word about It. Mrs. Murter Huniphl It isn't neoessary. -Judge. ' " "Hay," growled tho first hobo, "why didn't yer go up ter dut big house an' glt a handout?" , "Why, I started ter," replied the other, "but a nilnlHter-lookln' guy gimme a tip not ter. He sez: 'Turn from yer present path; ye're goln' ter de dogs.' "Philadel phia Press. , ' Blanche Didn't Mr. Smith have an ex pensive funeral? Grace Yes: his wife probably thought the "end Justified the means. 'Princeton Tiger. Stewardess Madame Is unreasonable. I know she Is seuslcki but she wants too much she asks for impossible things. The Sufferer It's not true all I want is the earth. Cleveland Leader.. You may be reasonably sure that a man is kind-hearted if his neighbor's cat ap proaches him with her tall up when- he pRBses by the gate instead of dropping her tall and running for dear life. Somervllla Journal. First Russian Had a terrible nightmare last night. Dreamed I was attacked by a giant. , Second Russian How big was he? First Russian Big as a Jap. Brooklyn Life. ' ' THE AWAKENING. ' Shall the human voice be silent now. In all this grand awakening? To the buds and .birds and breeze soft Shall there be no Joyous answering? Shall the human heart be dumb and cold k When life apringa round us everywhere. As If we still were In winter's hold. When warmth and music are In the alrT Haa the earth grown old and dull to usT Heed we not the promise of years. The faithful return of gladsome spring. With her long-loved smiles and tears? Bhall all the charms of the living green. Of breathing fields and bubbling streams, Awaken In us no smile or ong. No thoughts of love and no happy dreams. Omaha. BERIAH F. COCHRAN. The food value of Ghirardelli's Ground Chocolate is reason enough why you and your children should drink it. But it's delicious flavor makes it the ideal refreshment for your friends. Best for cake nd ptstiy. GR-OTJT2MD uGHQCOL