Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 24, 1905, Part Two, Page 10, Image 10
10 TUK OMAHA PAHA I1EE: SATURDAY. JUNE 24. 1903. 1 l The Omaha Daily Bee 1J. KOBE WATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Daily Ho (without Sunday), one year. ..$4 Dally Bee snd Sunday, one year Illustrated Bee, one year Sunday Hoc, one year -rl Saturday Bee, oim year ; Twentieth Century Farmer, one year.... l.w DELIVERED HY CARRIER. Tally Br (without Sunday). per copy.... -C DhIIv Bo (without Sunday), per week... .1-0 Dally He (Including pundny). per week.. 170 Evening Be (without Sunday), per week. o Evening Bee (Including Sunday), per week 1"'J BunilHV Hee, ver pony 60 Complaints of Irregularities In delivery lihould h addressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaha The Ree Building. South Omaha City Hall building, Twenty fifth and M streets. Council Bluffs 10 Pearl street. Chicago IH4D I'nlty butldlmr. New York 15u9 Home Life Insurance building. Washington-Sol Fourteenth street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to news and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaha Dec, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, payable to The Ben Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment or mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or e.-istern exchanges, not accepted. .THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Douaias County, ss: C. C. Rosewater, secretary of The F.ee Publishing Company, beliig duly sworn, eavs that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally. Morning. Evening nnd Sunday Bee printed during tho month of Mav, IPOa, was na follows: 1 2S.040 17 20.STO 2 2S,40 18 28,110 J 2M.(HIO 19 2S.KBO 4 2H.1KO ao,2so t 2S,MO 21 81, TOO e ao.oBo a 20.020 7 ai.rvoo 23 2s,5o S 2,r,10 24 2H.01O 9 2N.4S0 26 S8.TBO 10 2H.1UU 26 tt,04O 11 30,300 27 80.15'- 12 2K.0-4O ft 21M10 12 3O,2:i0 29 80.85O it 3i,n:io to 83.000 15 KH.70O 1 2O.02O 1 2V.400 Total 7,OlH LeiP unsold copies 10,000 Net total saloa l07,M4 Daily average IStt.ZtH C. C. ROSEWATER. Secretary. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this 31st day ot May, lSWo. (Seal) M. B. HLNGATE, Notary Public. WUEK OVK OF TOWM. ubacrlbera leaving th city tun. porarlly should bure Too Bee mailed to tliera. It ia better than U daily letter (rout borne. Ad dress will be chunued ua often as requested. The Omaha retail grocers aud butchers helil their tenth iiitnual picnic aud the next day it ruined. In the last game of chess before the supreme court pawn took the bishop. This time it is stale mute. The decision of the supreme court oil the biennial elections law has lighted the fuel uudcr the political pot. We may expect u period of quietude now in the city hall, at least until the next batch of circus tickets Is to be distributed. With Yale aud Harvard tied in the base ball game the good feeling between President Roosevelt and Secretary Taft may continue. Norway has declared itself an Inde pendent nation, but, fortunately or un fortunately, it is not in the way of inter oceanic commerce. ... The Chicago, Burlington & Quinoy Railroad company continues to elect di rectors and officers enrh year, but Jim 1111, he does the business. Advices from Berlin sound ns if Ger many were afraid the "complications" .'eared In the Moroccan affair might not put In an appearance In time. St. Petersburg's report of the fight at fJunshu Pass ns "u rear guard action" must Indicate the direction in which Lluevlteh Is expected to move. Germany's declaration that ,lt wants no naval base In the Carribean sen Is proof conclusive that the Monroe doc trine is still considered effective at Berlin. Objection to dead men on the Equita ble pay rolls sounds hypercritical when It Is remembered that as a rule the policy holder must first die to draw out his money. The state association of county offi cials, who retained lawyers to draft that biennial election bill, should bring suit to recover the money. The goods were not delivered. HVOAR TRVST IXVKSTiaATIOy It Is announced that an Investigation of the Sugar trust Is about to be insti tuted by the bureau of corporations. According to the Washington corre spondent of the Brooklyn Eagle experts lu the sugar business have Is-cn hired nnd n list of questions to bo asked in the development of the facts the gov ernment seeks Is being framed. It Is stated that the persons to be enn vnssed for Information Include not only the heads of the trust, but the various Independent companies. It Is the Inten tion to send out special agents to ex amine persons engaged In the growing of cane nnd beet sugar In order to determine what effect the combination among tho big refineries hns had on price. The wholesale nnd retail dealers will be quizzed along the same line and Information will also be secured to In dicate whether or not the vnrlous com binations have lowered or Increased the price to consumers. The object of the Inquiry, It is said, is to furnish the presi dent with facts on which he mny base recommendations for legislation. An investigation of the methods of the Sugar trust will be of Interest to nil the people, very mnny of whom have undoubtedly wondered why It has not been undertaken sooner. It was very generally expected when the bureau of corporations was organized that this trust would be one of the first, if not the very first, to be subjected to an In vestigation, but so strong wns the popu lar resentment against the Beef trust and the Standard Oil trust that the bu reau found It expedient to give atten tion to these ns promptly as possible. It appears that In the meantime It hns not lost sight of the other combination which for years hns been plundering the public nnd is now ready to make a searching investigation ns to the meth ods of the Sugar trust. There ought to be pretty plain sailing In prosecuting this Inquiry. The government should not find any great difficulty in discovering the methods by which this trust has built up Us enormous business nnd ob tained prncttcnl control of the American mnrkct. The genernl facts as to the system pursued are nlready pretty well known. Some of these were disclosed at the hearings before the Industrial commission some years ago and others have come out since. They quite con clusively showed that the practices and methods of the Sugar trust were dis tinctly In restraint of trade and there fore In violation of the nnti-trust law. The efforts of the trust have been per sistently directed toward tho suppres sion of competition nnd It Is not less culpnble because It has not been wholly successful In this purpose. What Is to be hoped for nnd expected is thnt the government investigation will be thorough. Every household In the country hns an Interest in the matter, whether Its consumption of sugar be small or large. The very general belief Is thnt the prices made by the trust nre excessive. It is also the nearly universal opinion thnt Its methods are unlawful. The Inquiry, If properly and search Ingly mnde, will show whether or not these views nre well founded. Since the yacht of Emperor William has defeated the lot which was second In the transatlantic race It looks as If It were "up to" the roynl sportsman to make a date with Charlie Bnrr. To Judge by the latest manifesto at St. Petersburg, General Trepoff and the bureaucracy are dying hard, nnd have evidently had nn Interview with the czar since ho met the zemstvos delegates. From the conteuts of the report of In uran.ee Commissioner Hendricks of New York, "high finance" Is not the In vention of yesterday, but dates back even further than Tom Lawson had any idea it did. The report from Toklo, thnt the Japa nese nre pursuing the Russians mny wean that General Oyama is eager to convey to General Lluevlteh assurances of bis high regard under the same con '. dittoes that Togo expressed his to Rojestvensky. New York Judges have decided to take no summer vacations this year, 'but to continue in session to permit Attomey Jerome to get promptly in matters he may desire to investigate. This looks Ilka working a willing horse to death. I What about a vacation (or Jerome) In the large cities would go Into the country places, to Uie material benefit of the latter. Additional restrictions upon Immigra tion nre not needed. The existing regu lations nre ample if properly enforced. The renl question Is to effect n distribu tion of the Immigrants where labor Is In demand nnd they can be most useful. LABOR AND IMMIGRATION. At a meeting in New York a few dnjs ago of the Civic Federation the state ment was made that there is a serious scarcity of labor in all tho industrial cen ters of the country and that an imme diate solution of the problem is neces sary if our present state of general pros- j perlty Is to continue indefinitely. One of the speakers at the meeting fuvored a liberal interpretation of the immigration luws and the future euuctuieut of more liberal laws if they were found to be necessary or desirable. Statistics were presented showing the capabilities of the United States for sustaining a popula tion of two or three hundreds of millions of people without overtaxing its re sources. There was an earnest discus sion of the immigration question, with the usual variety of views, one member declaring that the nine states through which the southern railway passes will welcome about a million desirable Immi grants at once, while a letter from the governor of North Carolina snld that his state Is offering the greatest inducements to high-class immigrants, adding: "We need them in factories nnd on farms. The farmers are willing to furnish land, tools nnd stoclc and give one-hulf the crop for cultivation." Doubtless there Is a similar condition In other portions of the south. There Is a demand for labor In the west thnt Is not being met nnd desirable immigrants would be wel comed In this section. The New York Journal of Commerce points out that the principal "evil" in the Immigration of the present time Is not the number of alien arrivals, but the lnck of distribution to the parts of the country where the population Is needed. "There are places where there is no dearth of common labor nnd where there Is ah excess of population that must de pend upon that kind of labor. But there nre large sections of the country whose lands are but pnrtly occupied, whose re source nnd industries are only partially developed, and which nre In need of la bor of every grnde. There Is nothing alarming in ,the arrival of a million im migrants in a year If only they can be placed where they will become useful producers nnd will be enpnhle of becom ing good American citizens." Ia It prac ticable to effect such a distribution of Immigrants ns is manifestly desirable! The commlsslc.ner of Immigration hns suggested a plan which very many be lieve would have good results nnd it ought to receive the cnreful consideration of congress. It is simply to provide for giving trustworthy information to lmm grants ns to where there Is a demand for labor and where the most favorable op portunities for settlement nre to be found. Such Information could be sup plied br the government without very much expense, as the states would un doubtedly supply a great deal of It. That It would prove of very great value is not to be doubted. TTavlng anch Infor matloa thousand! who sow congregate MVKICII'AL KVULVTIOS. Among the murvels of the last half of the nineteenth century aud the first decade of the twentieth century is the phenomenal growth of cities all the. world over. The consensus of opinion among practical observers is that the abnormal growth of cities is duo chieily to industrial revolution caused by the appliance of steam nnd electricity to lnbor-snvlng machinery nnd the estab lishment of commercial distribution cen ters by the construction of railroads. There is, however, another potential force that constitutes a factor of attrac tion to the large cities. Take, for ex ample, the city of New York, that has recently become, next to London, the largest city in tho world. New York, In addition to its vnrlous municipal branches of public service, maintains n vast system of public instruction, which Includes, besides the common schools nnd normal schools, a college nnd estab lishments for the care, education nnd en tertuinment of the deaf, dumb and blind, zoological gardens, botanical gardens, museums of art and natural history, public libraries, public baths, recreation pjers and museum features in the parks. These special educational and amuse ment features involve an outlay of $1C,(XX,000 a yenr, nnd the cost of police nnd fire protection, pnvements, sewerage, wnter supply, public lighting and ser vice incidental to the various branches of municipal government will aggregate during the, present yenr about $8tJ,(Mi, 000. All In nil, therefore, Greater New York taxes itself $110,000,000 n year to meet the expenses of inunlclpnl govern ment nnd interest on the public debt. The magnet that draws hundreds of thousands of people to G renter New York Is undoubtedly its capacity to in struct and entertain the multitudes nt the least cost, while nt the snme time the city presents unequaled opportunities for brainy men nnd women who nre nmbltious to secure remunerative posi tions in the highest walks of life. With New York setting the pace for all Amer ican cities, the natural bout everywhere Is to emulate its example lu every direc tion, even when the public purse is strained to Its utmost. It goes without saying thnt the more progressive, enterprising, public-spirited any community is the nearer it comes to attracting population to itself, but it Is one thing to attract nnd nnother to retain population Just the snme ns it is one thing to make money and nnother to keep It. A city enn only retain tho population it can profitably employ, in struct and amuse. Few cities in Amer ica can subsist on their climate nlono. since comparatively few people In this country can afford to remnln nnywhere for nny length of time unless they have a fixed Income or remunerative employ ment. Fewer cities still can depend wholly for their growth upon natural re sources. God made the country; mnn makes the city. And It takes men of pluck, push and superior Intelligence to build up large cities even when they have capital to back them. This will npply to Omahn ns well ns nny other Amerlcnn city. Its substantial growth In the past has come through persistent effort nnd Indomltnble pluck nnd perseverance. Its upbuildinat in the future must come through the factors thnt have built up nil other grent cities. The topics under discussion before the Coal Dealers' association of Nebraska and Iowa, which is now in session In Omaha, nre rather Interesting, not merely to insiders, but to outsiders, ns, for example, the questions of demurrage, reciprocity nnd terrltorlnl rights. Tho obverse would also be interesting, nnmely, terrltorlnl wrongs, rebates nnd reciprocity with the consumer's coal bin when there Is n decline in the price of blnck diamonds nt the coal mine. The Lincoln Journal tries to mnke out that the proposed bank consolidation In Omaha is a reflex of the period of hard times, when the facts nre quite the re verse. Every one of the three banks to be merged Is in better condition than ever before and the merger Is to be effected at high tide Instead of nt low tide. The consolidation Is tho direct re sult of good times and expanding busi ness. Peoria is slated for the next annual encampment of the Woodmen. From Milwaukee to Peoria there is but one leap. Milwaukee has the largest brew eries and Peoria the largest distilleries In America. But what will the Woman's Christian Temperance union sHy? legislature nnd the courts and subsidized reporters nnd newspapers thnt fabricate public clamor for a price. Absence Makes fur Fear. Philadelphia Tress. Possibly, though not certain, if tho United States senate were In session It would be horribly shocked by the presi dent's energy In bringing about peace ne gotiations between Japan and Russia. Ileedlnst the True Call. Baltimore American. Many college boys, especially In the west, it is said, are hearing "the call of the wheat." It la a loud call, and there Is less doubt about it being a true call than there Is about some other calls which ambitious college graduates sometimes think they catch the sound of. I.intenlna- to the Cluster's Voire. Cincinnati Knqulrer. , Colonel William J. Bryan Is understood to have written ft platform for a demo cratic candidate for congress in the Lin coln (Neb.) district to stand upon. It commends the policy of President Roose velt on the railroad rate question, but makes no declaration for government own ership of railroads. It is thought the col onel may be reserving this step for the next democratic state convention. Now, however, in the ripened time. 'Colonel Bryan should know that the eyes of Mayor Dunne,' Mayor Johnson, Charles P. Salen and Prof. Bemls are e'en now upon him. Good Slicn of the Times, New York Sun. The number of candidates now coming up for examination for admission to our Colleges Indicates thnt the entering classes In all our eastern colleges more especially will he unusually largo this yenr. Thou sands of students now go to the colleges with the prime motive of fitting themselves to meet the present demand for specially trained abilities In many departments of business and enterprise. Deficiency In that sort of training Is now likely to be a handicap to a young man who must make his own way In tho world. It Is note. Worthy, also, that never before was the number of young women who seek educa tion In Colleges for their especial benefit so great as it is this vear. "Sow Look Pleasant." Success Magazine. What would be the effect upon civiliza tion everybody would keep constantly in mind that suggestion of the photographer. "Look pleasant?" The most difficult part of the photographer's work is the effort to get the subject before the camera to rid himself of the cold, stiff, set expres sion of his face and to replace It by a genial, kindly look or a smile. He is not willing to reproduce the sitter until he succeeds, because he knows that the change of expression will transform the photograph. How the habit of looking pleasant would revolutionize our natures, and civilization Itself! If we could only get rid of the hard, eager, worried look habitual to many of us, not for the few seconds we stand before the camera, but for nil our lives, how bright the world would grow! SKASOAIILE ADVICE. An Ounce of Prevention Worth a Pound of I.ockjnw Care. Chicago Record-Herald. The health department In Its weekly bul letin urges that the anti-toxin treatment for Fourth of July tetanus victims be not neglected. Quoting an eastern medical Journal to the effect thut not a single blank cartridge wound trented with antl-toxln Injection has been known to develop lock jaw, the department Insists that with such a valuable remedy available every effort should be made to use It in all cases of wounds of the dangerous class on the Fourth. That Is excellent advice and It is to be hoped that parents and doctors alike will heed it. But there Is even better advice than this to be given. There is an even better antl-toxln against Fourth of July deaths than the kind the doctors use. It consists in repeated applications of strict law enforcement, both before the Fourth and upon the Fourth. Toy pistols, all kinds of blank cartridges and dynamite crackers are the most active agents In the production of lockjaw. The sale of toy pistols to minors Is absolutely forbidden. The less dangerous explosives are permitted only upon the Fourth, but not before It. If the ordinances are strictly enforced we may poss through the celebration this year without the sacrifice of a single vic tim to Fourth of July lockjaw. The next two weeks should be a period of steady ap plication of the variety of anti-toxin which the police department makes Its specialty. Two state equalizing boards have found railroad values In Nebraska equal to those on which the roads refused to pay taxes and sought Intervention of the federal courts. Thut is a pretty safe sign that the railway assessment is no where unreasonably high. A 14-year-old loy 1m suld to have opened the switch that caused the terri ble railroad accident near Mentor. But why should 14-year-old boys be em ployed for work thnt should be done by 'experienced railroad switchmen? Supreme Court Commissioner Ames, In his elatstrnte scholastic aud ecclesiastic opinion on the divergence between Father Murphy and Bishop Bonacum, has simply followed the example of Solomon In dividing the Infant Iwtween the two mothers. The only people who profited by the enactment of the biennial elections law are the lawyer, who bombarded the SEXTIMEXT OVERWHELMS LOCilC. Capital Punishment for Women a Dead Letter Low. Chicago Tribune. There ha been a loud outcry in all parts of the United States in behalf of Mrs. Mary M. Rogera of Bennington, Vt who is undor Bentence of death for the murder of her husband three years .ago. The evidence In Mrs. Rogers' case has been thoroughly sifted. She had a fair trial before a Jury. The governor granted her a reprieve to enable her attorneys to present to the supreme court evidence which they claimed entitled her to a new trial. Each hearing has only served to exhibit more clearly the helnousness of her guilt. She and her paramour lured her husband to a retired place and bound him with ropes, and sho chloroformed him. It was an atro cious crime, committed In a treacherous manner, for the lowest purpose and unat tended by a single extenuating circumstance. Those who oppose Mrs. Rogers' execution generally admit this. They contend she ought not to be put to death, not because he la guiltless, but because she la a woman. The same reasoning Is advanced in defense of every woman whose crimes bring her In the shadow of the gallows. People are used to the hanging of men, and if a man should murder hla wife aa Mrs. Rogers murdered her husband few voices would be raised to save him. But the thought of hanging a woman Is to many extremely shocking and revolting. The deliberate and malicious killing of a master by his servant, of a superior by an Inferior ecclesiastic, and of a husband by hla wife were denominated petit treason by the common law. They were deemed more aggravated forma of homicide than murder because of the breach of confidence and duty and the treachery they were coneld ered to Involve, and were punished with great severity, the sentence of a wife In uch a case being to be drawn and burned A great change haa come about In public. sentiment, and the husband who kills hla wife Is esteemed a worse criminal than the wife who slays her husband. The persona who plead for the total aboli tion of capital punluhment are consistent. Those who are willing to have men hanged but protest against the execution of 1 woman under any ' circumstance are gov erned by sentiment rather than by logic Theoretically both sexes ought to be equal before the law In criminal and in civil courts. But when there Is a conflict be tween sentiment and logic, the latter al most Invariably gets the worst of It. The feeling that It la wrong for the state to take the life of a woman, no matter how blood stained her hands may be, a feeling almost unknown .a century a no. Is powerful now. Because of It few murderesses go to the gallows, and fewer sllll will o there la the future. OTHER LAfDS THA OIH9. Bps In has mnde considerable progress since the war with America In the di rection of economic and administrative reconstruction, but the budget state ment of the premier Is not so favorable as the annually recurring surplus woul.1 seem to indicate. A surplus last year of more than $5,sro.0CO and estimates for the current year which are within the revenues by a margin of $4,000,000 certainly do look as though the Spanish finance had been Carefully husbanded. The states men of the country so regard the sub ject, for they are now talking seriously of the rehabilitation of the navy, which we left so pitifully crippled after the affairs at Manila nnd Santiago do Cuha, An examination of the details of the Spanish revenue shows, however, that while the aggregate has been Increased, tho sources which reveal decreases are precisely those which would show In creases were there any real Improvement In the fundamental situation. For In stance, the revenue returns for 19A4 In dicate a falling off In tho receipts from Industry and commerce, from landed prop erty, farms and live stock, mines, trans portation taxes and tobacco taxes. These decreases are emphasized by corresponding Increases in the taxes collected from In comes, excise charges of various sorts, lotteries and exemptions from military service. Chancellor von Bulow did not accept tho title of prince until it was offered to him for the third time. The first occasion was after he had succeeded in passing the tar iff bill against the obstruction of the so cial democrats, and the second so It is reported was when -the Reichstag ratified the new commercial treaties. His rise haa been a rapid one. He Is still less than 67 years of age, and it was only in Oc tober, UJ7. that, after having succes sively served during the previous decade as minister at Bucharest nnd as ambassa dor at Rome, he was appointed to the of fice of Ocrman foreign secretary. Owing to the great age of the then chancellor, Prince Hohenlohe, the foreign secretary ship acquired unusual Importance and pro-nlnence, and when. In 199, he had suc ceeded In securing the Caroline islands by purchase from Spain after Its defeat .by America, he was raised to the rank of count. On October 17, 1900, he succeeded Prince Hohenlohe as imperial chancellor. Since then his parliamentary successes have been many and brilliant. The gen eral disposition Is to attribute his pro motion to his more or less successful In tervention In the affairs - of Morocco, though the final outcome of that experi ment Is still uncertain. One Important German Journal remarks: "The honor conferred upon the Imperial chancellor may not be solely due to the development of German policy in Morocco, but it would not have been regarded as opportune If Germany had at this moment sustained a diplomatic defeat In that country." ... A comnnnv has lust been organized in Russia, under direct imperial authority, to construct the lone-talked-of Baltic nnd Black sea ship canal, nnd It is declared that the necessary capital, :00,000,0x, will be raised without difficulty by Dutch, French and American capitalists. The strategic Importance of such a canal. If it should ever come into existence, would be Immense. For one thing the Dardanelles would cease to be a source of controversy. Commercially the canal would enable the Donets coal, which Is found In an extent of territory as large as all England, to drive British coal from the Russian market, ine Russian Baltic ports now consume every year about 4,500,000 tons of British coal, for which they pay more than $25,000,000. It would reduce the rail haul of export grain from an averntrc of about 1.0CO miles to 300 or 400 miles and enable Russian wheat and rye to compete on extremely advant ageous terms with foreign Imports. It would bring South Russian Iron to the St. Petersburg works and stimulate trade of all kinds. It la estimated, besides, that a large percentage of the transit trade from the Mediterranean to northern Europe n-nnld be diverted to the new route. The calculations of the engineer, which, of course, are exceedingly sanguine, point to a total traffic of 20.000,000 tons, wnicn ne rerlnees to 15.0i0.000. which at $1.50 per ton would yield $22,500,0(10. I'pon these figures he builds expectations of pronts or w per cent upon the investment. ... The nnoeul which Field Marshal Lord Rnherts has made to tho BrltlBh nation to ermtrthute funds for the organization and maintenance of rifle clubs throughout the country, to avoid a resort to conscription in thA event of war. is practically a re vival of the volunteer movement to which Louis Napoleon's suspected plana ror tne Invasion of England gave birth. The situ ation in Great Britain now is almost Identi cal wtth that in the time of Napoleon III, only that it Is the fear of Germany and nnt nt France which possesses the British people. The kaiser's ambitious naval plans have excited the strongest suspicions vi iiter designs on the British Isles. The first of the measures adopted to counteract them was the reorganization of tne uruisn navy and the establishment of new naval bnses along the eastern coast to command the North sea. The-creation of rifle clubs will be the means of training the young men of the country 1n the use of the long range weapons of tho present day. It will build up a strong and effective army which can be mobilized at short notice for home defense. It looks as If the efforts of the Lads' Drill association, an organization in Eng land headed by the earl of Meath, an ac tive promoter of physical culture, whose object It Is to convert all the large schools Into recruiting grounds for the army, are likely to be rewarded with a considerable measure of success. At all events, the headmaster of Harrow, one of the most famous of the large publlo schools, has be come a convert to the views of the asso ciation. Every boy under his tuition has to learn how to handle a rifle and pass a standard in shooting aa a part of his reg ular course. The' boys of each "house" use the rifle range In turn, out of school hours, and are compelled to be regular until they have attained a certain measure of pro ficiency. At first there was some grumbling on the score that the rifle drill would In terfere with cricket, but as this has not been found to be the case, the boys have taken to the new accomplishment with en thusiasm, and have organized a number of school contests, which are exciting keen rivalry. The headmaster. Rev. Dr. Wood, explatns the new departure by announcln his conviction that In the England of the future there can be no other alternative for conscription except the rltle club. Astronomers will soon be making their way from all parts of Europe and America to Spain, in order to witness the solar eclipse of August 30, which will be total in parts of that country. The conditions are peculiarly favorable, the region being easily accessible, and the phenomenon Is likely to le of greater scientific interest than usual, on account of the duration of the totality and the prevalence of sun spots of rare dimensions. There will not be so good a chance for European observers for many years to come. ' The center of the shadow track will strike the Spanish coast near Cape Ortegal, and the shadow, some 120 miles wide, will cross the peninsula In a COMMEnCIAI.ITIXQ IDEAL. A Deplorable Trndenrr Fonnd In All Walks of Life. O. 8. Marden In Success. This money craxe, or tendency to com mercialize the Ideal, Is found In nil walks of life. Never bt'fore were so many cler gymen, especially young clergymen, leav ing the pulpit to go Into business. The great commercial prizes are so tempting that their own pitiful salaries look con temptible In comparison. There are cler gymen In tho American pulpit preaching for a few hundred dollars a year who know perfectly well, and everybody else knows, too, that they could make many times ns much money In business careers Many of them do not see why they should not become rich nnd powerful; they do not understand why using this money making capacity Is not as legitimate fur them as for others. In other words, there Is a powerful temptation today for a cler gyman to turn Ms rreatlve faculties Into money making channels. Many of our lawyers are looking for big fees rather than for grent legal acumen or high standing at the bar. They know that lawyers are envied, today, nut so much as members of a great and learned profession, upholders of the majesty and Justice of the law, as because many of them make a great deal of money from their practice. They know, too, that they are ranked by fellow lawyers largely In proportion to their ability to get big fees. It Is well known that some of the men who get enormous fees and become mil lionaires nre not great lawyers nt all, and have nothing like the legal ability of others who nre not paid a quarter of their fees. What is his practice worth? seems to be the question by which to measure a lawyer's standing In the minds of most people. Physicians and surgeons are measured In much the same way. How often we hear it said, "Why, that physician has a prac tice of $26,000 a yenr." Sometimes th sum named Is twice or thrice as great. Just as If this was the measure of a phy sician's usefulness! Of course, In a sense, getting enormous fees Is some proof of his ability; but it Is not the best evidence of a man's real service to the world. Many authors today do not seem to think so much of putting immortality Into their compositions of writing books which hall live through nil time as of earning the largest amount of money possible with their pens. Few modern writers would spend years upon a tiny bt of composi tion, or exchange their lives for a few Immortal verses or a single book that the world would not let die. OMAHA'S YOITHFIL MAYOR, Sncressfnl. Politician nnd Aetlnar Chief Executive of Omnha nt Tnenly-Mi. Human Life. Another Nebraskan of meteoric career, though not as widely known as Coloacl William Jennings Bryan, Is Harry li. Zi.n mnn, acting mayor of Omaha in the ab sence of Mayor Moores. This young man, who stands at the head of a municipal government controlling 125, 000 persons, is barely 2ti years old. Brought by his parents from Poland In his fourth year, Mr. Zlraman's first home In the land of liberty was the city of Omaha and in the Third ward, the most vicious in tho city. At 9 years old Zlmman was put to work to aid In the family's support. ; Quick, alert and energetic, he picked up a great deal of useful Information nnd ap plied it, too. According to his own state ment, he has been a politician since his sixteenth birthday. The fact that he ha.i had small opportunity for education has not been as great a handicap to Mr. Zlm man as might be supposed. Everybody In his ward knew him as a boy, listened to him when he argued questions of the day, became convinced of his ability and was ready to vote for him as a party candidate ' Each time he has come before the people on election day he has been victorious in a bitter and hard-fought campaign. Recently he was elected president of the city council and as such stands next to the mayor. "Frankly, I am a politician," he told the Human Life correspondent, "but I hope you realize that there are politicians who are as anxious to do what is right and wise as there are politicians anxious to do what is wrong and unfair." A greater part of his salary he gives to his mother for her support. POLITICAL IIHIFT. Governor Merrick of Ohio proposes to ex terminate the 'legislative lobblest, perhaps Ohio governors are permitted to work over-. time. Lincoln Steffens In MeClure's prononnc Cleveland "the best governed ci'y." When Tom Johnson absorbs the significance of that assertion It Is feared he will "slop over" Into the next county. One of the clerks in the Treasury di part ment In Washington has rounded out record of forty years In the public service. He did not celebrate the event, but nclghlxirs stirred up some noise about Richard Croker Is on his way bark M! the "States. " Mr. Croker whi n he left New York thought he knew all the points In tin game, but Philadelphia hns opened up a school which will make his experience look liko 30 cents. Tom Tnggart Is up against more trouble In Indiana. Petitions have been nent to the Hoosler governor protesting nmilnst Tng gnrt's Monte Carlo at French Lick Springs and demanding- the suppression of that gambling resort. The governor Intimates there will be something doing presently. Boss Murphy of Tammany Hall already outclasses his predecessor In scooping lit wealth. He hns a country estate, a town house, a string of hnrsca, two automobiles, a yacht U the frills of greatness. And the money from rich contracts Is rolling In fas ter than he can "burn It." He has been In politics about fifteen years. Mayor Weaver of Philadelphia finds his propensity for gifts somewhat embarrass ing for a r former. Last Christmas. Ions liefore he dreamt of breaking away from his political partners, lie received many val uable presents. Santa clans brought him a $7 set of dl-shes. a team and carriage, 4 0 books, Turkish rug, clocks, jewelry, library furniture nnd minor articles, practically all of them sent by officials whose heads are now In the basket or approaching that gruesome receptacle of the defunct. Some o fthe donors would like to have their do nations returned, together with their love letters; and supporters of the mayor urge him to send back the "tainted Rifts." A delegation of republican politicians called upon Mayor William B. Hayes of Pittsburg and sounded him as to his will ingness to be tt candidate again. "Not for me," was the decided reply. "I wouldn't accept this Job for another three years It the salary were raised to $50,000 a year." Before he became mayor Mr. Hayes was In the lumber business and he says that thut life Is strenuous enough for him. When he was elected mayor he appointed, a numbe?- of his friends to good positions. It srem( mat aDout nine-tenths of them have "laid down" on him and his troubles have caused his brown locks to turn white. The mayor Is going back to the lumber business Just as soon ns he can get out. Ice. . his - J L PASSIG I'LEAMA VritlES. Jaggcrs pid your wife die a natural death? ' I Wiiggers Indeed she did. She was talk- f ing when the end came! Cleveland leader. , J "My daughter." said Nexdore. "Is nulie, familiar with all the classical compost exclaimed Mrs. Peon positively lllppant." Plillau7T Is Combination Conspiracy? Buffalo Express. A Nebraska grain company has sued the Nebraska Elevator trust under the state anti-trust law for $128,000 damages on ac count of alleged discrimination and con spiracy. A grand Jury in Cleveland has Just reported Indictments against members of the so-called plumbers' trust and of the Mantel and Tile Dealers' association. Con spiracy to restrict trado Is the charge against the Cleveland men. Hardly a week passes now that some kind of trust prose cution is not started. "why, she phia Press Gerald I wonder whether I shall be num bered with the sheep or tho goats on the day of Judgment? Geraldlne Well, you nre always butting in. Judge. Everybody is wondering who brought that young Dobson to the picnic. The first thingr he did was to sit down on a custard pie." "Made a bad impression, eh'.'" Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Do you know vour eyes nre crooked and out of focus?" said the quack oculist, sud denly appearing at the busy man's desk. "That may nil be," was the teply, "but If your brain wasn't any more out of plumb than my eyes you'd be lucky .'"Detroit Free Press. "You have served your country nobly," ald the mikado. "Anything you may ask will be granted." "I have but three requests." answered the Japanese naval hero; "don't erect a tri umphal nrch, don't present me with a house and don't let the girls kiss me." Washing ton Star. IT IS IIEKE. Chicago Chronlole. The picnic season draweth nigh, The little nnts are due; 7 1 1 f,nmn. Iha nnaltv llttli. flv And fierce mosquitoes too. The garter snake is In the grass, And wriggles like a streak. Ami as the spinsters see him pass They utter shriek on shriek. The little bee Is on the wing, Tho kids think he's a fly. Until he hands them out a sting, And then they sob and cry. V It's lots of fun for him, t'ntll he tries and cannot float When he falls in the swim. i ThA h ii mm.ipl, nnw ta linns' hv a nm m I- Poor addle-pated chump, f And two sit spooning, when, ah, hut? They both come down, kerbump. i A I.eaaoa Driven Home. Kanuas City Journal. Mr. Bowen has been taught the lesson which Russia recently learned that It ta unwise to provok fight without being fully (trepajsd. Browning, Ming & Co CLOTHING. FURNISHINGS. AND BATS From Now . Till July 1st we shall have a great va riety of bargains to offer you. On July 1 we take inventory and meantime there are lots of odds and ends in men's and chil dren's suits that we would like to sell, and it ought conouseurs and f0 interest you because of customer are ont J SrXtS the good things it puts in "at my clothkr'-" reach at a very low price. Suits, extra trousers, furnishing goods, hats and caps, for men, boys and children. Flltccnth and j Douglas Sts. Broadway l Had trl NEW t IP OMAHA NEB. YORK f actory, Cooper sqr n