-1 It THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TnTRSPAV. JUNE 22. 1005. The Omaha Daily Bee K. ROflEWATER. EDITOR. rUBLIPHKD EVERY MORNINO. TERMS OH" KfnPCRIITION: tally Pee (without Bumlay), one year... Tidily Hee and Sunday, one year Illustrated Ue, one year 8unrtay Bee. on year Hatiirtfay H-e, one year Twentieth Ontury Farmer, one year.... DKLIVERED BY CAKRlh.lt Dally Be (without Sunday), per copy.... 2c Dally Bee (without Sumlnyl. per week.... 1-1 Dally Bee (Including Sunday), per week.. 17c Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week. 70 Evening Uee (Including Sunday), per week c Sunday Bee, ler copy :",; Complaint of Irregulnrltles In delivery hould be addressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. MOO ti.00 260 il.M lid l.tfl VfIIIlH I II" ff- IIIillUIIIR, South Omaha city Hall building. Twenty. Omaha The Bee Building. fifth and M street. Council Bluff 10 Pearl atreat. Chicago Ifi40 Cnlty building. New York 1509 Home Life Insurance building. Waahlngton fiot Fourteenth street. CORRESPONDENCE Communications relating to news and edi torial matter (hould be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, rayahlo to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment or mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THK BEE PI BI.ISH1NO COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRO'LATION. State of Nebraska. Douglaa County as: C. C. Kosewater. secretary of The Fee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, aavs that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally. Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during tho month of May, IdOS, 1 SiS.04O 2 2H,4fl I 8H.OUO 4 2M,ir. t 2S.U40 ' I 2.ftOO 7 31.BBO ,1 2M,nto 28,450 10 2)4, 10 Jl 00,300 11 2M.04W 12 ao.jtuu U ai.nuul II 2M.7UO U... Uf.sOO . Total IHT.DOO Lsw unsold utulea lO.OKU was as follows: 17 BO.870 18 2M.MO J9 StM.8.10 20 ao,2o 21 81. TOO 12 21t,02 a 2m,b:io U. 2CMHO 26 1W.750 K 2U.040 27 so.ino 28 20,110 go Stt.HftO 0.., 33.000 U 20,020 Net totul sales D0T.HO4 Daily average 2,2t4 C. C. ROSE WATER. Secretary. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me tills 31st oay of May, lit. (Seal) M. B. HUNQATB, i Notary Public. W UIl.V UlT OK TOWH. Subscribers leaving; tha city tem porarily should hare The Bee malted to them. It Is better than a dally letter from home. Ad dress will bo ebaaaed mm often as requested. Why not nnnie United National? tho tripartite bank To the State Board of Assessment: Stop playing horse. Thut reminds us. What has become of the tax committee of the lteal Estate exchange? Perhaps the Omaha school board should put In au experimental hippo drome as a training school for teachers. THE riMKClAb lyrLCZSCE Thi'io I no doubt that a powerful flnnnclsl Influence Is belnjr exerted In the Interest of pence In the far east. As was noletl ii month or more ago, the French financiers, who have lieen the main de pendence of the Russian government, unqualifiedly refused to let that govern ment have any more money for carrying on the war. They were quite willing to lend any amount which might be re quired after peace, but they would not consider any proposition, however lib eral, for a loan Intended to continue hos tilities. The French capitalists, already carrying an enormous amount of Rus sian securities, were unwilling to loan more money to the czar In the face of what seemed to them a hopeless conflict. Nowhere else could Russia look, for money and her home resources have been practically exhausted. Such is the present situation. Rus sian credit was severely hurt by the re sult of the naval battle and the nearly universal belief that If another great bat tle Is fought the Japanese will win a de cisive victory only serves to still further wenken ralth in the ability of Russia to find money to continue hostilities, while there seems not to be a shadow of doubt s to the ability of Japan to obtain what ever money she may need to go on with the war. Not only are her home re sources, so far as It appears, far from exhausted, but her foreign credit seems to lx perfectly sound, so that she could robably effect another foreign loan, if necessary, to continue the war, on more favorable terms thnn those she has al ready negotiated. Russia would proba- ly find It very difficult, If not fmpossl- blo, to get n loan on any terms, not that er resources are exhausted, for such Is not the case, but for the reason thnt her lready enormous obligations, foreign nd domestic, Impose so great a burden upon her people that to increase It would reate an Intolerable condition and most certainly Intensify the revolutionary tendency now so apparent in nearly every portion of the empire. There Is not now a money market in Europe where a proposition for a Rur- lan loan, on whatever terms It might be offered, would receive the least consid eration if the decision of Russia should Vie to continue the war.. On the other hand, if peace were to Tie declared the Russian government would have no diffi culty in obtaining all the money it might require. There is no doubt that the financial consideration is exerting a very power ful Influence In behalf of peace. War fare on the great scale that Ir lelng con ducted in the far east demands an enor mous outlay and there Is very good reason to believe that Russia is no longer in a position to meet this demand, This Is undoubtedly the most potent force that Is making for peace and its influence Increases from week to week. Messrs. Hydo and Alexander have shown that they are "resigned" 'to Mr, Morton's administration, hut the public will wait for the reports. With the Swedish premier and king for pence, the warriors of Sweden may save trouble by permitting their steel to remain in pruning hooks. Francis Joseph is going to run no chance of losing Hungary for refusing to appoint a cabinet even though be must select one from the minority. Now that the Twenty-fifth street boulevard ordinance passed the council it will he in order for the engineering department to find the Invisible bound try line. There should bo no unnecessary delays In starting up that city asphalt paring repair plant. The pay of the appointees In charge does not commence until the work begins. If Japan means to Inaugurate the "open door" in Manchuria by driving American business houses from Port Ar thur It may find that It has learned one lesson too well. The increase of $2,100 lu the assessed mileage valuation of the Union Pacific may be enough to send the road to the courts if not enough to satisfy Uie de mands of strict equality. Nebraska's oldest citizen has just died at the ripe old age of 102 years. Ne braska will take no back seat even for states which hare histories going back further than fifty years. That New York bank which decided dividends of 120 per cent in addition to dividends of 115 per cent quarterly will bava a hard time to prove that it is not In the "get-rlch-qulck" clnss. 1 1 ' Slnet the offenders first convicted are to be used as on object lesson for all tha stockmen who have illegally fenced public land, the others may consider themselves doubly lucky this time. Blnce receiving the reiort of the ex cellence of Roumanian crops the world will naturally look for less trouble In the Balkans. Well fed men are not us ually as turbulent as half-starved men If the democratic nominee for con frees In the First district was elected mayor of Lincoln as the railroad can dldate only two months ago, how ca he now pose as the anti-railroad candl date for congress? Now it Is up to the sultan of Morocco to show that the people will not permit reforms to be Inaugurated. The sultan of Turkey baa demonstrated tha success of this method for many yeara and it till works there to perfection. sold in the ports of European cities like articles of ordinary merchandise. Cer tificates of naturalization, bearing coun terfeit signatures and seals, have a reg ular market value nil over continental Europe. Other facts are disclosed by the investigation which show the neces sity for mdlcal changes in the imlurnll r.n (Ion laws. In his last annual message President Roosevelt said: "Fraudulent naturaliza tion, the naturalisation of improper per sons, is a curse to our government." There will be no dissent from this and the next congress will be called upon to provide n remedy for a condition which every good citizen must regard as fully justifying the opinion expressed by the president. Too great care cannot be taken to safeguard the dignity and the sanctity of American citizenship. concerns, and the agreed consolidation of three Omaha banks Is only In line with twentieth century progress. lu union there Is strength. In the performance of his arduous du ties ns high admiral of I'ncle Sam's navy at $n.miO a year, and the strenuous la bors of the rejuvenation of the Equitable I Ife. Paul Morton manages to put In some licks between meals at fl2,."00 a month. A Jolt fnr Land Crabber. Washington Tost. Two Nebraska men have been sentenced to prison for stealing public lands. Some effort is being made to destroy the Im pression In the west that It Is no crime to rob the government. A 8ALVJARY EXAMPLE- In imposing a sentence of one year lu the Sioux Falls penitentiary upon Logan Lambert, convicted of bootlegging In the neighborhood of the Winnebago reserva tion, Judge Munger has set an example that cannot fail to have a salutary effect upon parties who have trafficked In liquor and debauched the Omaha and Winnebago Indians in defiance of law. While the brutal assault made by Lambert upon Father Schell, who had been instrumental in the prosecution of the bootleggers, had no direct bearing In the trial of the offense for which Lam bert was convicted, the penalty Imposed upon Lambert by the court will serve as a warning to men of his class to de sist from further Illicit traffic In liquor around and about the Indian reservations. The declaration of District Attorney Baxter, that it is the Intention of the Department of Justice to go after these constant violators of the laws prohib iting the furnishing of liquor to the In dians, so far as they come within the pale of the federal statutes, Is a notice to all whom It may concern that boot legging will be made odious and boot leggers will be punished to the utmost extent of the law. Primnrily the Illicit traffic In liquor has been responsible for the debauchery of the Indians, and, secondarily, it has enabled the land speculators and graft ers to enrich themselves at the expense of the Indians by sharp practices and nefarious deals with Indians thnt were brought under the influence of liquor. Now that the Indian bureau has effec tively stamped out the Indian land lease combine and the Indian land robbers generally, the prosecution of the saloon lsts and bootleggers within the zone sur rounding the reservation will no far toward reclaiming the Indians, and eventually making them self-supporting. How tn Achieve Fame. St. Louis Olobe-Democrat. Tha impression has long obtained thnt the cost of life insurance is too high. If Mr. Morton can cut the price in half, or establish a system of rebates, he will be doing the country a substantial service. There's the Bub. Alliance Times. The Omaha Bee suggests to the Bar asso ciation of that city that the association Inaugurate a war of extermination against blackleg lawyers. The big part of the fight will be when It comes to heading off the blackleg lawyers from getting control of the association. Solution of the Itate Problem. Chicago Chronicle. So far as the passenger end of the rail road rate question Is concerned an obvious solution Is to be found In the device of getting up Modern Woodmen conventions at frequent Intervals, whereupon the pas senger agents will be fired with a spirit of rivalry highly satisfactory to the traveling public. Competition is the life of trade. EFFORTS TO AVERT A BATTLE The advices from the far east indl cate an active movement on the part of the Japanese to bring oh a general engagement It seems plain from the Information which comes from the bead- quarters of the' army of Japan that Oyama is about ready to make a general attack and that news of his having done so may be expected at any time. If the blow is delivered there is every reason to believe that the fighting will not cease until on fide wins a decisive victory, f6r upon the impending battle will depend whether there shall be peace or a con tinuance of hostilities. An overwhelm ing Japanese victory would count for peace. On the other hand a Russian triumph would give fresh vigor and in fluence to the war party at St. Peters burg and perhaps put an end to the movement for terminating hostilities. There Is represented to be earnest efforts proceeding from Washington for averting another battle. The statement to this effect comes from the Russian capital nnd represents that President Roosevelt is earnestly endeavoring to. In duce the belligerents to arrange an armistice. While this is by no means incredible, since such a course would be quite in consonance with what has been done by the president toward bringing about peace, there Is no confirmation of It from Washington. It Is undoubt edly the feeling there, however, that It would tie better for peace negotiations If another battle could be averted pending the consideration of terms by the plenlpotentarles of the belligerents. Very likely the question of an armistice will be decided by the commanders in the field, In which case it is probable that the decision will he against it. There is reason to think that the Japa nese believe they have an advantage which they are not disposed to abandon This will doubtless be determined in the next few days. According to the Lincoln Journal, the Omaha, Lincoln & Beatrice Intcrurban railroad is planning to place its line in operation from Lincoln to Bethany n suburb of that cty by the latter part of July, and work' will be hurried along the entire length of the line as soon as arrangements are completed. It Is also announced that the intcrurban has se cured every foot of Its right-of-way through Ashland and now is ready to work at that place, and the officers of the company are very hopeful that things more tangible thnn right-of-way negotiations will materialize at an early day. This sounds very agreeable, but "Soft words butter no parsnips." Build lng a suburban line four or five miles out of Lincoln and securing strips of right-of-way here and there is not all that people who bad banked on the early completion of the line between Bea trice and Omaha have been led to an ticlpate. If the project really has the necessary capital behind It, there should be no difficulty in completing the road and having it in operation before the snow flies. Manifestly all the work up to date is preliminary to negotiations yet to be concluded with capitalists who make Investments in that class of prop erty. The revenue law of Nebraska ex pressly requires real estate assessments made In 1004 to remain unchanged for four years, and under the opinion Just rendered by the attorney general no In crease or decrease of the assessments made last year is permissible, except by reason of betterments or by decrease lng In value of real estate by a destrue tlon or partial destruction of Improve ments assessed last year. This definl tlon of the law will necessarily govern the County Board of Equalization. If the supreme court does not soon relieve tha suspense by handing down Its decision on tha biennial election law, the Inmates of tha county court house will be round-shouldered for Ufa from holding their tart to tht grounj REFORM IN NATVRAL1ZATI0X. The board appointed by the president to investigate the charges of fraud in connection with naturalization, and to consider and report what changes should lie made in the laws in order to prevent fraud, has been pursuing the duty as signed to it and It Is said will recom mend radical changes In the naturalisa tion laws. In his last anuuul message Mr. Roosevelt called the attention of congress to this matter and urged the necessity of some action to correct the fraudulent practices which had been dis closed. It is stated that the Investiga tions of the board confirm sll that bad been reported In regard to the unlawful Issue of naturalisation papers, by which many persons were made citizens of the United States who hsd not complied with the requirements of the law. It has been found by the board, says a Washington dispatch, that there Is absolutely no uniformity In the char acter and form of naturalization cer tificates as now issued. Each court pre pares a paper of a type to suit its own officials, without regard to the practices of other courts. One of the bad results of the varying style in the certificates la the trafficking that Is done ln them. particularly abroad. Bogus certificates, it ts said, are printed and bought and Chicago has not been materially In Jured by the Jollet cut off and half a dozen other cut offs by which railways converging at the metropolis ou Lake Michigan divert through traffic billed for the Atlantic seashore, and Omaha will not suffer materially from the Ashland cut off. Its business men will simply have to do more strenuous hustling In the territory Invaded by commercial competitors. Why can't the commercial college boys and the high school graduates emulate the example of the college men of New England and New York, who spent their vacations profitably as harvest hands on Kansas farms last summer? There Is brisk demsnd for young men with Rooseveltlan instincts for the strenuous Ufa on Nebraska farms just now. President Roosevelt has again been given the title of doctor of laws. Some day some university will discover a title which will be suitable for emlneut men In recognition of public service, but so far "Doctor of Laws" seems to be the best that can be offered. In the distribution of county offices this fall, providing that an election i ordered by the supreme court, there will be some delicate diplomatic questions to settle between Scandinavian candidates who hall from Sweden and Norway. Concentration and consolidation Is the order of tha day among banks ss well s all other commercial aud Industrial Benefits of Stable Currency. Philadelphia Ledger. As was to he expected, the adoption of the gold standard by Mexico has had an Immediate and beneficial effect on the com mercial relations of the country. With the currency fixed and the uncertainties of a fluctuating value eliminated. Importers are making lower prices and foreign business houses are again seeking business In the republic. This beneficial result is not con fined to Mexico, but la felt all along the American border, wherever there are com mercial transactions with our southern neighbor. SI N TIME OR STANDARD f Important Question Derided In m. Fire Insurance Case. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. In the cases of the National Fire Insur ance company against the Peasiee-Qullbert company and the Pacific Fire Insurance company against the Louisville Lead and Color company the court of appeals of Ken tucky has rendered a. most Important de cision, and one that will at least be persua sive of the law In all the states. The Feas-lee-Oullbert company and the Louisville Lead and Color company were Insured In the two companies," the policies expiring at noon" on April 1, 1902. On that day and at 11:46 a. m.t standard time, a fire broke out In the buildings, de stroying them and their contents. Accord ing to the facts 11:45 a, m., standard time, would be, at Ixmlsvllle, on that day 12:0314 p. m., sun time, and standard time is used In Louisville. Demand having been made for payment of Insurance, the .companies claimed that sun time, and not. standard time, governed no mention of ,elther being made in the policy and that, the fire having broken out at 12:024 p. ro sun time, the policies had expired, and payment was refused. Suit was brought and Uie trial court held that, In the absence of any stipulation In the policy to the contrary, standard time governed. The court of appeals has af firmed the Judgment. The decision will be commended. The meanings of words change with time. and oldtlme methods give way to new. When the new comes to an established recognition It would be a backward stop to Insist that the old should govern. In time it may come to pass that another standard of time than that in use today will be adopted, and when the reason for the' use of standard time no longer ex ists neither should standard time exist. It is so with sun time. "Noon" today means the noon of the arbitrary fashion of standard time, and not the venerable time recorded by the sun dial nor used In villages or nonprogressive cities Detroit, for instance which still clings to sun up and to sun down as the standard of measurement of the hours. AN ERA OP STRANGE THINGS. Tom Lawson In tho Role of Turning State's Evidence. Chicago Chronicle. Certainly this Is an era of reaching out after strange things. It is stated seriously and presumably truthfully that the governors of Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska and Kansas have In vited Thomas W. Lawson to visit their re spective states during the month of July and deliver public addresses under official auspices. Mr. Lawson has accepted the Invitation and It is declared that his tour will be "a most picturesque and stirring campaign against the crimes of predatory wealth." It certainly ought to be picturesque. It should likewise be Interesting. Just how Instructive It will prove Is a matter for conjecture. Different people will view it in different ways. At any rate, the appearance of Mr. law son on the platform is certain to attract attention. This is because he has become a public character through methods which testify to his astuteness and originality. If his lot in life had been that of a theatri cal manager Instead of a speculator, Mr. Lawson would have been the most suc cessful lmpressarlo of his time. A notorious stock gambler, he has at tained extensive notoriety through his de nunciations of stock gambling. Confess ing to complicity In a gigantic scheme to rob Investors, he has won celebrity and a certain amount of popular admiration as an exposer of the methods through which the Investors were robbed. Inspired by a desire to "get even" with his accomplices. he has posed with success as a virtuous repudiator and foe of crooked methods In high finance. The whole thing has been a triumph of paradox and of colossal effront ery. That It has been a triumph Is shown In the fact that Mr. Lawson Is taken at his own estimate by the governors of half a dosen states and that he is to speak In those states as the guest of the governors. It is a singular and by no means reassur ing phenomenon.. We have had In this country many popu lar prophets who were altogether wrong, but they have been men of honest purpose and of some reputation for consistency. The populist apostles and the free silver proponents, for Instance, were charged with fanaticism, but never with being ac complices before and after the fact of the men whom they opposed. We have now, it seems, come upon times In which the easy way to attain public confidence la to turn state's evidence against one's former confederates and lo recite one's past criminal performances as an evidence of present sanctiflcatlon. Such a situation, it may be repeated. Is Strang and ominous. ROIAD ABOIT NEW YORK. nipples on the Current of I. Ife In the Metropolis. The Indiscreet haste of the New York cer.sus takers In making thrlr report la a source f f acute grief to the boosters of the metropolis. For weeks past the boosters let go occasional whoops of Joy over what to them was a (inch on a population of ov.r l.nnn.on). It s not difficult to Imagine their grief when the footing of the count showed only 3.!R7,:.12, Just 12.74S short of the hnpod for totnl. What makes the Indiscretion of the census men smack of disloyalty Is the fact that one or two more shiploads of Im migrants In the harbor might have been counted, but were not. Hence these tears. The city, however, has quite a bunch f people. It Is twice as large ns Taris, three times as large as Berlin and at least twice as large as Chicago. Since the first census of New York was taken. In 17Sft, there has been a constant Increase except In 17!W, isns, 1R13 and 1823. In these years there Is shown a slight falling off from the previous years. In 1824 New York had 25,000 registered per sons In the directory and from that day to the present the number has been steadily growing, until today It reaches the enor mous tojal of 3.987.0X1. Lately the Oernians and the Irish have been falling off and the southern Europeans have been coming to the front. There are in New York at pres ent about 70,000 negroes. When the new Hamburg-American liner Amcrika makes Its first trip to New York In the late summer something new In the way of ocean steamships will be seen. This ship Is equipped with electric elevators, Turkish baths a,nd a hundred little conveni ences heretofore unknown In ocean travel. The Amorlka is about twenty feet shorter than the Cedrlc, the Celtic and the Arabic, but it Is a trifle wider than any of them. It will make the trip across In six days. Some of the details of the new ship not In corporated In the other great mnrine hotels are restaurants a-la-carte, nursery for chil dren, dining room on promenade deck, trained nurses for seasick passengers, sil verware used by the German emperor, Tzigane band for dinners, two-story first cabin smoking rooms, twenty Italian mar ble mantels and old stone hearths, gymna sium, etc. English, French and German will be spoken by all stewards and officers of the ship. Corporal punishment may bo Inflicted on disobedient pupils in public schools of New York under certain circumstances. That decision was given by Justice Olmsted In the children's court, when Jacob Saro wltx, 11 years old, and Harry Gordon, 10 years old, were arraigned on complaint of their teachers. Barowitz was charged by his principal with playing truant from school and Gor don was accused of stealing a gold ring from his teacher. Both boys admitted they were guilty. Justice Olmsted, after reprimanding them, decided they should be punished more se verely, but he did not want to send them to at Institution, owing to the pleadings of their parents. He finally decided to act un der a new form of commitment, by which they or any other pupil who was disobedi ent or committed a small crime could be taken In hand and punished accordingly by teachers or principals In the schools. This new form of commitment means corporal punishment and according to Justice Olm sted It Is lawful. Children brought before him, he declares, can be punished by teachers Just the same as they would by their parents. He basis this opinion on section 713 of the penal cod's. Under this section Justice Olmsted de cided to place Sarowltx under the guardian ship of Miss Conway, the principal of pub lic school No. 130. for a year. Miss Regna Cregln, rhe principal of school No. 42, will have the same control over young Gordon. One of the hot afternoons last week a man on WeBt Twentieth street did a thriv ing business with a peripatetic merry-go-round. Placed tn the center of a wagon was a large circular seat, which was kept whirling round and round. It. held, per haps, ten or twelve small children. A hand organ, formed the driver's set, and from it pealed forth the familiar street tunes. The price for a very short ride a minute or two was 1 cent. Soon after the wagon had driven up to the curb a hundred children gathered eagerly awaiting their turn. The man did such a rushing business that he stayed in one spot for an hour with his wagon, which was painted bright red and looked remarkably Inviting. Somebody standing on the back platform of the car dropped the bundle. The woman saw It and picked It up. She was an honest woman, nevertheless she opened the pack age. It contained a waist pattern of very pretty silk. When the woman saw that she thanked her guardian angel that she had been created honest. "If I had not been," she told her husband, "I should keep this silk as sure as any thing, and make It up for myself." "But since you have been," said the man. "what are you going to do with It?" "Oh," said the woman, "I shall take It back to the lost and found department of the store where It was bought. The pur chaser will probably Inquire for It there." And that was tho last heard of the silk for seversl days. One evening, about two Weeks later, the woman appeared at dinner In a new waist. The man looked at it ad miringly. "Hello," he said. "Seems to me I have seen that before. Isn't that something like the piece of silk you found?" "It is Just like It," sighed the woman. "It Is the same piece. I took it to the lost and found department, but I I couldn't stand It. I went again the next day and asked for it myself." The latest beer enterprise sanctioned by Bishop Potter, the St. Nicholas Garden, was opened last week with much eclat. Tha crowds were there and there was a good, pld-fashloned time. Pure beer was to be had In plenty. A dozen prominent minis ters had sanctioned the enterprise, but not one of them was present at the opening. Curious laymen were there In number enough to keep the merry tune of the cash register working, and the opening may be called a success. SENATOR AM.ISOV9 VOYAGE. Iowa's Grand Old Man Pals Aside the Cares of State. Washington Post. William B. Allison, the grnnd old man of the senate, the Nestor of the republican pirty, the safest political counselor that party has had In fortv years safe, sane, practical, politic has taken a vacation, and will refresh himself on the other side of the seas. He will not get out of a trio to England what that other grand old man of the senate, lately departed from the haunts of men. found in corner and cranny, In town and In country. In castle and In cottage wherever history and tra dition, romance and poetry, could lodge In all the grand old Isle, but he will see a great many things that he will be the wiser for having seen, and he will fetch back a deal of experience that will do this country service. His has been a wonderful political career. He entered congress simulta neously with James G. Blslne. Samuel ,T. Randall and James A. Garfield, and with an hiatus of two years, his parliamentary career has covered a period of forty-three years In all forty-one years, doubtless the longest In our history. But that la not all, nor the best of It his political career has been tranquil. Whatever hon ors have come to him were the reward of modest merit. When John Sherman first got the senatorshlp. doubtless, a majority of his party In Ohio believed the distinc tion should have gone to Robert C. Schenck. and It is certain that most of the democrats thought the senntorship should have gone to Vallandlgharn, In stead of Thurman In 1S6H. But Allison's career has been unham pered by friction. He has been supreme In Iowa for thirty years. He has never had a battle on his hands, except against democrats, since he took his seat In the senate in 1873. He made the first free trade speech In congress, after the war, but got bravely over that, as did John Sherman. His name Is to a measure that added to the full legal tender coin of the country some 1400.000,000 silver, yet he is as sound on the money question as his party, and, perhaps, he and his party both have some unpleasant memories when meditating on finance. Senator Allison, al ways a republican, has operated on lines where least resistance was met. Certainly, it Is the easiest road to travel. Maybe It Is the best road to travel. Let us wish the old statesman a pleas ant and prosperous voyage, and a safe and Joyous return. It will be well for him and for the G. O. P., If that mass of political dynamite that Is lying round all too loose In Iowa does not explodo In his absence. There are too many great men out there. Harmon and Lentz. In Ohio, are not much further ' apart than Hepburn and Cummins In Iowa. But as long as the old man lives he may be able to keep the lid on. PERSONAL NOTKS. The late Guy Boothby, author of many novels, called himself a mechanical author.' He worked with the phonograph and rarely wrote a line with pen or typewriter. lAfayette's tomb Is sadly neglected In Paris and a committee of American women have bunded themselves together to have It kept decently by the provision of a small annual sum for watching It and providing flowers. Chancellor von Buelow has had showered upon him princely rank by the kaiser and bequests from admirers and other unex pected honors, among them the printing over his nama of the picture of Hans von Buelow, the pianist, in American newspa pers. , At a hearing in the Hargls-Marcum feud case, at Jackson, Ky., the court required those In attendance to disarm. If this keeps up It will be Incompatible, suh, with tli' honah of a Kentucky genieman to at tend sessions of co'ht, suh. Count von Belx, a member of the German nobility, has accepted a position as fore man of the Michigan Central machine shops In Michigan City, Ind. He Is trying to se cure a thorough and practical knowledge of American methods of railroading, and on his return home he will become the he&d f a lars railroad system. A WHOLESOME LESSON. The Successful Revolt Against Polit ical Corruption In Philadelphia. New York Tribune. Philadelphia is teaching the country not a few wholesome lessons. Its successful re volt against the corrupt political machine which dominated its local legislature has demonstrated the enormous power In city politics of an aroused and united public sentiment. The ease with which the Qua ker City freed Itself from the clutch of its overconfident and overgreedy oppressors has set other municipalities to thinking that they, too, are capable of working out a similar emancipation. Mayor Weaver has promised to give Philadelphia for the next two years a model administration an ad ministration divorced from politics and de voted simply and solely to the public In terest. In the measures ha haa'taken since the fight to kill the gas steal opened he has shown abundant energy, capacity and courage. Some of his moves have been original and startling, and by the time his term of office ends he will possibly have done many things destined not only to leave their mark locally, but to Influence ma terially our general municipal development. One of the mayor's most striking Innova tions has been his appointment of an advisory staff of fourteen members, all of them men prominent in Philadelphia life and representing broadly its varied intel lectual, commercial, social and business Interests. This advisory staff Is to serve during the remainder of the mayor's term, and its opinion is to aid and guide him in carrying through the refbrms he contem plates in municipal administration. ' A mere reading of the names on the com mittee list guarantees its high personal and public, character. It Is a nonpartisan body, chosen with the single aim of securing men of proved capacity and public spirit, to whom the regeneration of Philadelphia will appeal as a patriotic; obligation and a labor of love. With their co-operation the' city will be governed not for the benefit of placeholders, contractors, speculators and political bosses, but for the benefit of the workers and taxpayers, on whom these predatory idlers have hitherto fed. The Idea that a political middle class, with its special interests and appetites, must In tervene between the voters and the officials who conduct the public business Is to be abandoned, and the municipality Is to be administered hereafter on the theory that the welfare of the people is its direct and primary concern. In breaking so resolutely with the po litical middle class Msyor Weaver has set a notable example for other municipalities to follow. He has chosen as members of his advisory staff men of all shades of opinion in national politics, but united in their belief that partisan considerations should have no weight In the working out of purely municipal problems. The foolish notion that a man's views on the tariff or territorial expansion or state rights should determine his attitude on questions of local taxation and administration has been re sponsible for a vast amount of misgovern ment In American cities. The sensible voter will not hesitate to lay aside national Issues when It comes to rebuking a cor rupt municipal ring, wearing the livery of Just You Try Century oap v nr;ii xij i - I i ou Miii TTunuer Why You Didn t Do So Before "20th Century Soap" is making new friends every day. It contains no lye; is made of strietly pure vegetable oil and ia an absolutely pure soap. The pure oils of which it is made are very beneficial to the skin and keep the hands white and velvety. For cleaning metals, glass, carpets, rugs, woodwork, mirrors, windows, linoleum and hardwood floors, nothing can compare with it. Does twice the work in half the time. At all dealers. BUY IT TODAY 10 CENTS Absolutely Pur, tt Lya. V H0FFHEIMER. SOAP CO. CHICAGO. either party. He will gladly Join with neighbors of any shade of political belief In defeating the plundering schemes of politicians of any kidney who betray the public Interest. The purification of mu nicipal government can only come through a general recognition that partisanship Is out of place In municipal campaigns. that clean and honest government Is only obtainable when It is demanded ty an enlightened and courageous nonpartisan local sentiment. In recognising and acting on this fsct Mayor Weaver has gone a long way toward solving the municipal problem. MIBTHFl l, REMARKS, That's our local weather forecaster who Just passed." "You don't say? Not a very healthy look ing man. Is he?" "No; It seems the climate here doesn't agree with him." 'No? I wonder If that's why he keeps chsnglng it so much." Philadelphia Ledger I "Hey, boy, Where's your brot "In the barn, shoeln horses.' brother?" "In the back yard, almoin' chickens." "Where's your father?" "In the hammock, shooln' files." Wash ington Star. , . , , , "I notice, my dear, that the courts have decided that some western man Is only half married. I wonder which half it 1, ha, ha, ha!" "Well, I hop It Isn't the Idiot s better half." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Euclid was laying down the axiom that two parallel lines can never meet. "That doesn't matter." sniffed the finan cial magnate, "you can merge 'em." Herewith the mathematician sadly turned to the multiplication table for consolation. Puck. It is proper to lay up something for a rainy day, rut don't lay up another man's umbrella. Bomervllle Journal. The bibulous voung millionaire had Just broached a cask that had lain undisturbed in the family wine cellar for more than fifty years. , , "Spirits of my ancestors!" he exclaimed, with gratitude amounting almost to rever ence. Chicago Tribune. "I think," said the patron of the cheap restaurant. "I'll take shirred ergs." i "Aw, g'on!" cried the new waitress. "Quit kiddln' me." "What?" "Aw, you can't fool me. I used to be a seamstress, and I guess I know It ain't pos sible to make gathers or tucks in an egg." Philadelphia Standard. TUB SHEARING. Nancy B. Turner in Bt. Nicholas. The day they cut the baby's hair The house was all a fidget: Such fuss they made, you would have San He was a king the mldgetl Some wanted this, some wanted that; Some thought that It was dreadful To lay a hand upon one strand Of all that precious headful. While others said to leave his curls Would be the height of folly. Unless they put him with the girls And called him Sue or Molly. The barber's shears went snlp-a-snlp, The golden fluff was flying; Grandmother had a trembling lip, And aunt was almost crying. The men folks said, "Why, hello Boss, You're looking five years older!" But mother laid the shaven head Close, close against her shoulder. Ah. well; the nest must lose its birds. Trie cradle yield Its treasure; Time will not stay a single day For any pleader's pleasure. And when that hour's work was welghe4 The scales were even, maybe; For father gained a little man When mother lost her baby! SNOW FLAKE BREAD Is Made From Minnesota Hard Wheat Flour The best Hour money ran buy. It gives the bread the proper color. The proper dryness and texture. Snow Flako is made by experienced bakers who know what per ceut of the different ingredients (milk, lard, saJt, etc.,) to use to give it that rich delicious taste which is bo much enjoyed in the best home made bread. It is a big, wholesome, nutritious loaf for 5 cents. 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