The Omaha Sunday Bee. PAGES 1 TO 12. NEWS SECTION. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1905-FOUK SECTIONS THIRTY-TWO PAGES. SINGLE COrY FIVE CENTS. ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, 1871. 1 POLES ARE PLEASED Two Imptritl Crdert tf Bnttia Add Much to tbt Rational Lift. UNIATES JOIN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH Permission to Lett Stato Churoh ii FolUwod hj Withdrawals. RIGHT TO BUY LAND IS APPRECIATED fU'irei of Poland Seo Ronwl Hope of Prosperity of Base. CZAR IS MORE UBlRAL THAN KAISER TelUh Papers Cnl Foct that Ucrnwr riaces More Restrlc- ' tloas People Than Does Russian Government. 8T. PETERSBURG, Oct. H.-(8pecial Ca blegram to The Bee.) After year and more of commotion and trouble the conflict of despotic bureaucracy with the revolu tionary forces continues and may be pro longed for an Indeflnate time. Even the manifesto and the constitution will remain mere Incident In the conflict. The keenly critical Russian mind 1h already turning against what it terms political mimicry, mock constitutions and sliam parliaments. The Imperial ukases of December last and STATE OF CHURCH IN IRELAND Survivor of Establishment Talks of Hard Times of the Plahtlnsj Period. DUBLIN. Oct. 14 (Special Cablegram to Tho Bee.) The leading lights of the Es tablished church have recently been In con ference at Londonderry for the purpose of discussing the state of the church in Ireland. Dr. Chadwlck, the blhop of Derry. presided. The bishop said thought the bond of common churchma ship wa more felt nowadays than eve, . before. He was .one of the number, now MATTER TAKES fast melting away, who had shared the J counsels of the church of Ireland from their beginning, thirty-six years ago. Those who had not come through It could scarcely conceive the bitter Isolation then, the storms that raged round them, the obloquy pouded upon their synods, their lay representation, their canons, their re vised prayer book and above all their treatment of the Athanaslan creed. But they set their faces to the blast. They did not suppose themselves to be Infallible; but they dealt with great subjects firmly, since they had to deal with them and God gave them the blessing. The storm had blown over. He did not believe anyone seriously thought them to have compro mised their orthodoxy, the Protestantism or their churchmanBhlp. No one thought the worse of them because the clocks In their Irish towers were not set to English time. He thought that many of their de cisions at which Englishmen shook their heads would be welcomed in England now. Those former days were days of legisla tion. Toaay they had problems to solve and work to do which could never be en- I tangled in the meshes of a resolution, or EAST INDIANS AMY NatiTes of British Ernpiro HaTo 8Urted Jojcott in r " at Earnestness. ORDERS ' ,ODS COUNTERMANDED -jars Now Eelnie to Handle Mer chandise from Qreat Britain. A NATIONAL PHASE Starting ii Bengal, Movement Against Europeans (Spreads Of er Land. PETTY PRINCES BC0MIJIG ALARMED Rulers of Small States Fear Policy Regarding" Benaral Mans tltl aiate Destruction of Their Present Power. the manifesto remain no more than vague j drawn to the shore by a vote of orders, promises from which there may emerge They were there to consider those prob elther the victory of the rwr and his pres- lems in an Informal and homely gather ing In the subjects to come berore mem It was Inevitable that they sheuld be con scious In the first place of their position as a national church In the midst of a population which was not theirs. Such a position waa a hindrance and a discour agement, but not altogether so. By them as an organic unity God gave the gospel to Ireland, and by them the reformation. By them all over Ireland he nourished a creed which waa not superstitious, an or der which" was not slavish, a laity who were not gagged, a patriotism whose hands were not red with Irish blood, a concern for learning which had not Invented ex cuses for denouncing every effort to en lighten Irish people. ent counsellors or the victory of the poo pie. And the representatives of tho people will enter the tluma In order to wage battle against the old system In a new disguise. One positive fact cunnot be gainsaid. It has been predicted that the old feud be tween the two nations would come to an end, Hnd when the Poles reconciled1 to Rus sian hegemony would enjoy such national autonomy as would guarantee them the Independent development of their civilisa tion In contradistinction lo the policy of op pression followed by Prussia In the for merly Polish provinces under Its sway1. The reconciliation has been furthered by two measures which emanated some months . since from the very government of which !he general tendency seems to be the maln .enunce of the old autocratic system. The Irst of these two measures, the edict on religious toleration, Is of a general char icter and applies to the whole Russian empire. But the Poles will undoubtedly benefit the most by the relaxation of that spirit of orthodox persecution of which M. Pobledonostxeff Is tho foremost repre sentative. In two governments out of ten forming the kingdom of Poland (governor general fit Warsaw) there are something like rw,0() of "IJttle Russians" professing the Greek Catholic creed. Their priests of the lower orders are permitted to marry. Their ritual differs only In some quaint oriental ceremonies from the Roman, the principal difference being that the liturgy Is read In the Little Russian (Ruthenlan) language, and that the Greek calendar Is . maintained. . The hybrid church, a compromise be tween Roman and orthodox principles for political reasons In the fifteenth and six teenth centuries,-wrs. tolerated for a time, by the Russian government, but for the last forty years . the Unlaces have been treated as herltlcs and all means have been employed to drive them Into the orthodox fold. Their churches have been closed. ineir nisnopa aeposea and exiled, many thousands of families were punished for SOCIALISTS ISSUE MANIFESTO Revolutionary Party at RnVu "ends De rtanee tn Owner of Oil Works. BAKU, Oct. 14 (Special Cablegram to The Bee.)-The following Is a translation of the proclamation Issued by the revolu tionary socialists in connection with the recent outbreaks In the Caucasus. The document, which has been confiscated In large quantities, la of considerable Interest, as It exposes the revolutionary forces which underlie the present outbreak, .ex plotting for their own ends the racial and religious feuds between the different sec tlons of the population. The proclamation Is as follows: To the Masters, Managers and Plrector Manngers of the Oil Wells and Refineries: Atthnuah we have not yet como to the end of the day of unexampled destruction which have left without roof or shelter tens of thousands of working people, some firms are already preparing to resume their usual work without niHklng tho slightext effort to safeguard our lives and property. The green of tne owners stops at notning. Thev want money, nothing but money. mora money and yet more money. Hitherto they nave acnuirea tnis money as tn' .1... n n f mi. ...II n n tw hAI resistance by transportation Into faroff demand our blood also. Enough. We shall governments and at last the Vnlatea were willy nllly Inscribed on ' the registers of the official church. Effect la Polaad. ' ) The recent edict on toleration does not directly put a stop to this persecution, and the Greek Catholic church remains, as be- return to tho fundamen fore, an unrecogni.ed heretical sect of the j "'.onas "the present" MEAT FAMINE !N GERMANY Claim Made that Cattle Feeders Are to Bluate for the Hlsja Prices. CALCUTTA, Oct. 14 (Special Cablegram to The Bee.) The trouble between Lord Curson and Lord Kitchener has been forced to the background by the boycott of English-made goods growing out of the petition of Bengal. The peculiarity about this particular boycott Is that It Is not confined to the province of Bengal, which Is naturally the moat affected by the petl tlon, but It Is spreading over the entire In dian empire. The principal nat'v news papers are constantly appearing In mourn lng and with black bord'-rs, the Bengali colleges have been closed and reopened and closed and reopened again, until one scarcely knows where to find them In the matter of education. At Mawaree the merchants, who are enormous distributers of Manchester piece goods, have counter manded orders and declared sale prac tically stopped. It Is too early as yet to decide Just what the effect will be upon the manufacturers and exporters nnd Import ers, but ir the movement continues to spread it will be the greatest blow which English prestige has received In southern Asia since the Sepoy rebellion. Ever since thst famous rebellion the native princes and many of the ryot mil lionaires have heartily desired some way of "getting even" with Great Britain. All sorts of projects have been planned, but through diplomacy and with the liberal use of money these have broken down. The Idea of a trade boycott appears never to have entered the oriental mnd until the recent trouble between the TTnlted States and China, when the refusal to purchase Amirlcan goods was used with tiylllnsj ef fect against the Americans. Tf directed agslnst British trade In India It. gives promise of being a thousand times more powerful and dangerous because of the enormous volume of trsde between India and Great Britain as compared with the trade between the United States and China and because of the Intimate rela tions existing between-the native princes of India and the Imperial forces at Ion don. ....... Natives Secants Srlos, . .. Th Twlley of tha-Indian government, has been freely subjected to criticism In this matter of the partition of -.Bengal nnd great deal of nonsense has of course been thrown out on both sides. But a serious BERLIN, Oct. 14. Spei..sl Cablegram to The Bee.WThe outcrv aa. Inst the prohibi tive regulations concerning the Import of meat from abroad la becoming louder and louder all over the German empire, so that It will be Interesting to watch whether the government will much longer continue to turn a deaf ear to the apparently Just demands of the people. In order to satisfy the Ideas of the Uem.au farmers. Ttia price of meat has at lengih risen la audi n extent that It la becoming partly pro hibitive to people of au vll Incomes and wholly prohibitive to the poorer section of the working classes in towns where artisans and factory hands have become accustomed to a meat diet. It must be known that It la not simply a question of meat as food, but of the fat of pork that Is used tn Hrge quantities In small households In the pi-eparattons of most articles of food. During special In quiries on the subject In East Prussia, which is a poor province, It was found that the people consume a large quantity of pork, the fat of which Is used In the dress ing of vegetables, soups, etc Not very long ago the market price of pork waa about sixty pfennings In some case less; but meat which till comparatively re cently cost sixty pfennings la now sold at eighty-five to ninety pfennigs and rose to even one mark (Is) per pound. In other words, there has been a rise In price Of from 40 to AO per cent. Meat has never been so high in Dantxio aa it la at the present moment and the same doubtless holds good all over the kingdom of Prussia. Berlin prlcea have risen enormously and all crosses In the towns, without exception, are being seriously affected. According to the law now In force the number of pigs that may be brought across the eastern frontier Is per week. Next spring this number will be raised to 2,6o0. It is submitted that In view of the present great demand which cannot be satisfied by the home producers, the new regulations should forthwith come Into force. But the farming Interest Is, of course, dead against any concession to tho general public. The present situation Is naturally exploited by Liberals throughout the land and above all by the social demo crats. It Is a question of political strength. The matter has two sides. From the point of view of the town population, In cluding all workers tn Industrial life, mat ters stand as Just stated; and taken as a question of housekeeping, the result Is that the weekly bill for food at the present Juncture must necessarily . be higher If meat Is to continue as heretofore a regular article of food. But there Is something to be said on the other side which In a great measure accounts for the high prices. A couple of years ago the farmers had no food for their cattle, owing to the drougth, and were obliged to, sell' at any price In order to get rid of their stock. Meat waa consequently a drug on the market, poor as It was. This year there waa a super abundance of fodder.. Oats are better and more pk-itlful than they have long been; potatoes, which last year cost up to 4s per cwt., can he bought for Is 84; even la Sd and Is per cwt. The farmers are endeavor ing to take advantage of .the situation, partly In ..order -te eww.trt,'- their" f odder and obtain good manure, and partly tn order to feed up their stock and recoup themselves for former years of lean stock and poor prices. According to many authorities tho high prices will soon go hack again. Them is WARDS OF THE STATE Nebraika's Oare of the DVortouatoi Usder Pnblio Charity. COMPARISON OF ADMINISTRATIVE RECORDS Wreck Left 'by "Economical" Tusionists and Effect on Institutions. PUBLIC PROPERTY SADLY NEGLECTED Buildings Dilapidated and Equipment in EUte of Decay. WORK OF FOUR YEARS OF RESTORATION Repabllcans Haro Placed la Splendid Condition All tho Institutions ad Redaeed Cost Below tho Poynter Figures. mood has succeeded the discussion of these troubles which for a time proceeded along i plenty of live stock; but It Is a question of the lighter vein. For Instance, there was j Interests. The farming Interest Is trying not permit ourselves to be thus treated. If the owners value their capital above every thing we value most our own lives and safety and we ahull defend them with all of the strength at our command. We de mand the establishment of such condl tions of life as will allow us to work with out tho fear of being shot down or burnt i alive In our barracks. We shall hereafter runanmentai , question. ions consist? -LnvuuK.il. oi miner me new law It Is I Unties we shall neither begin work our no lonaer a misdemeanor tn v ..... 1 selves nor allow any one else to do so church for another of th. r.-i.. Let. the Baku naphtha Industry, with Its . . " ' .. mia- i world-wide importance, remain at a stand- tian churches, and such Is the hatred of still. . I.et the owners' capital perish. Let the former "Unlates" against the official 1 the state railway and steamship 'lines re form f rhi-iatianii ik., ,i,. ,, . . ; main without fuel. It Is time that at last form Of Christianity that they avail them- K,tl, h. vnvernment nnH the nnhfh nm- elves of the opportunity to turn Roman I ducera should be punished as well as our- catholics. The Roman Cathollo bishops of 1 "'lcs. otherwise we snail never attain our . v. . i . . , . . . ends. .m ..oim. immediately arter the j And we warn you. masters, managers and publication of the edict, made a progress ' all others who have so cynically played through their dioceses and many thousands witn our rate, tnai we snan not permi . i i...- r, , . you to work until you have secured for ui nuin, nuneno registered ,nHitinn. f .v.,.n.. rk. against their will as orthodox, have adopted and refineries which resume work before the Roman creed. In one town alone the , ihe,.e rond"lon?.av guaranteed will . . T, ,, ' " ' be destroyed with fire. The masters, man number of Roman Catholics has risen aud- agers and administrators who are seen to denly from 2U0 to 12,000. As throughout all ' have initiated the resumption of work or those parts of the formerly Polish provinces 1 Tiho 'iK? M U ,,,1pBy for th,"r c ... ,. . ,. ' rrovm (on w)th t,pr lives. This we promise you -Eastern Galicla, Volhynla, Podolla, Llthu- : and we shall keep our word, nia to be "Roman Catholic" and a "Pole" ! This Is signed by the militant council of have always been synonymous terms. It Is ' the Baku and a committee of the socialist clear that the toleration edict by pushing revolutionary party. the spirit of orthodoxy to the point of not even mentioning the I'niate church has in advertently and unexpectedly presented the Roman church with 500,000 converts and tho Polish nation with 600.000 Individuals whose descendants will not only be Roman Cath ollo but Poles, Indeed, Orthodox communi ties In many districts are already literally reduced to the priest and his beadles, all of the petty vexations of passport regulations being powerless against the converts, who tick closely to the letter of the edict. a Bengali editor, well known as Mr. Ml trs,, late of the TJeccan Post, who dis missed the arguments against partition as "a farargo of nonsense." According to Mr. Mltra the Bengali will not be "a farthing the worse for the change In per son remits tlon or nocket." But now It appears to be agreed that aa a result of nd they will in the end not gain much the savage boycott of British-made goods more than a good supply of manure for bv the natives, from princes to peasant. tho "" Meanwhile, the butchers and that the only thing which can ssve trouble ' dealers In meat, who as a rule reap large of the most serious kind Is the visit of . rflta from the public, are forcod to the prince of Wales- And this "trump ' to take advantage of circumstances and to recoup Itself at the expense of the general public. If It be true that the farmers are only holding back their stock In their own Interest, and that they will have to bring It to market now without loss of time, their time will soon be over. card" will be played by the government of Great Britain and Ireland and the gov efnment of India with consummate skill. Two lines of opposition to Lord Curxon's decision appear to permeate the serious part of the discussion regarding the partltlpn of Bengal. One is that any change In thp ad ministration of Bengal was unnecessary; the other Is that even admitting Its neces sity that It wa certainly unwise. The as sertion Is repeatedly made that the burden of the lieutenant governor of Bengal has been actually heavier In the past than it Is at the present time, because facilities of forego these profits owing to the Inability of the general public to purchase so much meat: and they accordingly Join the poli ticians, who are working for' political purposes. BRITISH LABOR STATISTICS Net Decrease la Shown In Wages of Workmen of the I'nlted Kingdom. (From a Staff Correspondent.) LIN'COLN, Oct. 14. (Special.) For a long time the fusion politicians of Ne braska have been reduced to the necessity of charging the republicans with extrava gance in the administration of state af fairs. Either this or go without campaign material. Without specifying any particu lar Instance, the opposition has accused the party In power of wasting public funds, of recklessly squandering appropriations, and of mismanaging the several charitable Institutions maintained by the people of the state. Governor Mickey la In receipt of reports from the officers In chargo of the various state Institutions that give in the most matter-of-fact way an account of the administration during the loot four years, since the fusion control ended, with a contrast of the conditions that prevailed when the chance was made. Some startling conditions were discov ered when the Poynter administration came to an end, and the Incoming officers were at first charged with a great number of extraordinary expenditures. In order to bring the rundown buildings and neglected equipment of the several Institutions Into condition for orderly use again. This work has been accomplished, and the several state charities are now being carried on under auch conditions as were not known during the days of the fusion regime, and yet at a lower cost than then prevailed. The per capita cost of maintenance for the last two years under Governor Poynter and for the first two years under Governor Mickey is thus shown from the bonks: First Second Bien yer. year, nluin. Poynter m ;o Ud4 9o 4il.6rt Mickey mm Aftti.M 399.06 A saving to the state under the admin istration of Governor Mickey of 12.64 per each Individual in the Institution in the two years. A further comparison cannot be made because the fusionista so fixed the records that It Is impossible to get a true statement from them, It Is true that during the last four yeara tho republican .have expended for perma nent improvements on the various In stitutions ths sum of $1,007,300, while dur ln 4nefMir yeara previous the fusionista spent only $469,615. It is a comparison of such figures which the' fusionista are hold ing up to the people of Nebraska to show the extravagance of republican rule- Money For Permanent Improvements, In the beginning It should be borne In mind that the appropriations made by re publican legislatures, aa shown above, were for "permanent Improvement," and to di pel any Impression that the fusionlsts may have created by exploiting these figures. that the republirana have been bad man agers. It la necessary to show what the money has been spent for and whether It was necessary to be spent. Just before going out of office the fusion superin tendent of the Hastings asylum for chronic insane bought $2,000 worth of butter from a favored friend, $K.0O0 worth of clothing for the same Institution was bought Just a few days before the management waa turned over; when a tunnel was dug by the fusionlsts down at the Geneva Institution they plastered the earth celling of the tunnel instead of walling It up with brick, as the contract called for. The state in stitutions were in such a condition when the fusionlsts retired that It was neces sary to spend enormous sums of money to make them habitable. The fact that the republicans have always held that the unfortunate of the state should be well cared for and that the fusionlsts THE BEE BULLETIN. Forecast for enrka Fair Bnnday and Warmer In West Portion. Mon day Fair aad Warmer. XKW" SKCTIOI Twelve Paaes, 1 People of Polnnd Are Pleased. Fast Indiana Itajrcotf DMtlsh. ' How Wards of State Are tared For lJist Mtht of the Horse Show. , Drrdf Starts Insurance Inquiry. S News from All Parts of Nebraska. 4 Eastern War Officially Faded. 5 Steps to Protect C'onntr Ticket. Happenlnas la Omaha Snbnrlis. Impetus ;lvcn to lire Keeping. 6 Affairs at Sooth Omaha. News from the Army Posta. T tiermana Bound to Have Bin Nnvr. toadltlon of Omnha's Trade. S Past Week In Omaha Society Woman la Clab aad Charity. Council Blaffs and Iowa News. 1 President Set on Hate Hevlsloa. Prison Sentence tor Congressman. 11 New York Winn Championship. Cornhoskers Piny In Good Form. Frenchmnn Wins Bis Aato Race. Repairs, to C ounty Conrt nous. EDITORIAL, SECTION F.lgrht Paea. 1 Police Force to Be Cot Down. Repairs to County Court House. Fdltorlnl. 8 gome Indian Funerals Elaborate. Ocean Liner Hns a Stormy Trip. 4 Wont Ads. 5 Want Ada. U Want Ads. T Financial and Commercial. 8 Two Murder Cases on the Docket. HORSE SHOW IS OVER Second Annual Event Cloiee witk Fine Becord for Sncoeia. PRESIDENT PECK SPEAKS OF ITS PROFIT City Eat Been Benefited and Direotory Feeli Batiified. MANAGER HALLER PLEASED WITH RESULT . HAI.F.TOKF, SF.CTION F.laht Pages. 1 Sherlock Holmes Story. 3 Playa and Players. Mnale and Musical Notes. 4 Ak-Sar-Ben'a Cnrnlvnl Nursery. Work of the St. James Orphanage. About Noted People. 5 Conditions In Hawaii. Naval Station for Panama. 0) For and About . Women. T Grist of Sporting; Gossip. 8 Little Stories for Utile People. Tersely Told Tales. Curious Capers of Cupid. COLOR SECTION Four Paves. 1 Bnster Drona Is Photographed, a Lovers Meet Only After Marrlasje From Near nnd Fnr, H The One Woman Story. The House that Jack Rnllt. Sons; of tho Shee. , 4 Leading; Indies nnd Chorne Girls. FOOT BAM, SCORES. Nebraska. lOl Knox, O. Chlcaaro. 1 Indiana. V Columbia. Ill Williams. K. Princeton. 4M Rncknrll, O. California, tit Stnnford. O. Naval Cadets, Hi Dickinson. O. f'olarnte, 1H Dartmouth. lO. Virginia Poly., 1 West Point, 6. Tale, ROt Holy Cross, O. New York I nlverslty, Oi Trinity, O, Wesleynn, 14 Vermont, 11. Pennsylvania. 17i North Cnrollnn. O. Michigan, 1S Vnnderhllt. O. Tufts, 2H Worcester Polyteehnlc, O, Brown, Rtl Maine, O. Syracuse. 3T Hamilton, O. Purdue. 12 Wabash, O. Amherst, 2.1 1 Bowdoln, O. Cincinnati In I.. IZi Earlbam. O. Western Reserve. ISi lleldelburgr, O. Carlisle Indians. l.t Virginia, O. ', Wisconsin.. Ill - Notre, Dame, , West Virginia, 2H Ohio 1'nl., O. Iowa Alumni, 4 'Varsity, O. Minnesota, 42 Ames, O. Hastings, Oj Aurora. O. Arkansas, rt Washington In I., O. Illinois. 12 St. Louis, A. Rose Polytechnic, 17 Mllliken, A. ftrlnnrll. Hi (Of, 4. Northwestern, 1H Relolt, 8. Iowa Normal, liti Iowa Industrial, 4j Geneva. 1) Seward. O. North Platte. 42i Kearney. O. Council muffs, 2ft Mo, Valley, O. Temperature at Omaha Yesterday t Hour. Ha. m . 'A a. m . T a. in. 8 a. m. ft a. m . 10 a. m. 11 a. m. 12 m. , . . Dear. . . nti . . nt . . nt . . rst . . ft . . A4 . . Ml . . no Hour. 1 p. m . 2 p. ra . it p. m . 4 p. m . R p. in. A p. m . T p. m . IJro-. . . HO . . r.it . . R . . R3 4. Rl . . RO . . 4U ROYAL BLUE JTRAIN WRECKED Baltimore A Ohio Southwestern Flyer Striken Two Coal tarn, Near Springfield,, III. SPRINGFIELD, 111.. Oct. 14 The Royal Blue train on the Baltimore & Ohio South- western was wrecked near Springfield to- , night, killing Mrs. John Murch of Vlr DAURIGNAC WOULD RETURN Brother of Mme. Humbert Desires to Live la tho Called States. PARIS, Oct. 14. (Special Cablegram to The Bee.) An Interesting point In connec tion with the return of Romaln Daurtgnao, Madame Humbert' brother, without wait- To the Poles directly refers the second ! ln tor the hearing of his appeal to the of the ukases that regulating religious emigration commissioners, who refused to teaching, the revival of representation of 11w him to land In New York and de the nobles and the acquisition of landed tRlne1 hlm on E1Ils Uland. Is the fact that property In the nine western governments, ! M- L0". the "rnch lawyer In New York, via.. In Lithuania, Volhynla. Podolla and I r,al" bv M- Daiirlgnac to bring his sp in the government of Kleff, the last be- j P"1 before the commissioners. Is the same Ing the old Polish I'kralne on the western i Uw'r ho a directed In May, 1902. by banks of the Dnelper. tne French consul general iu New York to : take the steps necessary for the arrest of Rnssla More Liberal Than Germany. Madame Humbert and her brother, then The Poles regard the terms of that ukase I fugitives from Justice, should they arrive 4 I wiiu great aatisiaction. .Even the out spoken 'pan-Polish papers in Galicla de clare that the nation never expected from auch a quarter such a meaaare of liberal ity In the nine "western governments." and the papers of Posen (Prussian Poland) point out with scorn and vexation, not to any alarm, with which the Prussian or gans denounce that ukase as enhancing the "Polish danger" In the German "Ost inarken." The press in Gallcia and Posen alike notes the contrast between the Polish policy of a constitutional kaiser and that of an autocratic csar. The nine "western governments were never thoroughly Pol ish, not even before 1722. when their whole territory except the city of Kieff lay within the boundaries of the republic. Today out of a population of X.AuO.WO hardly "1.600.000 Is of Polish extraction. Thhi thin Polish leaven is very Irregularly spread over the whole area, and there are governments (P.v1o!ia) where It repreeents hardly J per cent of the population, while In only one or two (Vilna, Kovono), does It range as lilgh aa SO lo JO per cent. In Prussian Poland, where Pules form a) and more per cent of the population, they have no right to give their children religious In struction In their own language Polish ta. in that city. Daurignac has requested the advocate, M. Ieon, to proceed with the case, aa he hopes that a decision will be given, which will enable him to return to America at a future date. lONnnw - 11 fSneclal fa hlrr. , . . , .v.t . . J - negncira niriii in wi-ir eager aesire io i .i.i. tn . nj .huM f..n .,,,, Ti,. ni.Th Tj.hor nensrtm.nt ,.f h. ... ... . i ginia, in., and probably fatally Injuring communication have transformed the prov- TranB hBJ1 l8lud ... Mm . r"" "i T.L: . Mr"- Gardner of Pleasant Plains Inceand there Is no district now which the " , " h.n . r.,.. nf wa" " -i -""-"" """"" ,.ow ng j j. D. T,pp(.,t of Chicago and Mrs. William Em r. o, ..hor in the United Klnnlnm In ' ""T " "d '"Jurln, sev - , - , " provemenis. i nis snows wnai nas Deen : .rai other nasienirerH Throuirl. the f illing I with romnaratlvo statistics from isas ... . . , erai otm r passengers, i nrough tne falling to 1903. With regard to changes In the rate nf lieutenant governor cannot reach In a single day. Petty Princes Alarmed, One thing which has caused alarm among the. petty principalities Is the fact that Great Britain, for the first time In Its bis. tory pernapa. appears to oe aiming at tne 1 1901-1 continued In 1904. The Industrlea Integrity and the autonomy of a province. principally affected were coal mining, Iron done with the money for the Improvement of the Institutions made absolutely neces urv ' hv the bad management nf t h . mages, tne report stairs mst tne necune i fogionigts- in wages wnicn ciiarni-ieriEeo: me years Heretofore there haa been a hodge-podge of governments In India. The home office at London haa simply taken things as It found them and governed them In accordance with the apparent wishes of the people. In some ways It Is doubtful whether a wider meas ure of home rule has ever been extended to millions of people than was accorded the people of India. It Is not too much to say that if Great Britain had found a republic In any of the provinces the republic would have been allowed to remain. The fear Is everywhere expressed that the military government which appears to be planned for India In the future will mean the ren- mining. Iron and steel manufactures, ship building, glass bottle making and building. In the other trades covered, the changes were on the whole unimportant. The net fall in the building trades Is the first which has taken place since these changes were first recorded In 1893. Bo far as could be ascertained by the department, nearly 801,000 work people had their rates of wages changed during the year. Of these nearly 785.000 sustained decreases amount ing to about fcWO.OOO per week, while about 18.000 obtained advancea amounting to about 16.000 per week. The net reault. therefore, was a decrease of about $194,000 traJlxation of all government in the hands I WT week. If. however, the effect of thel . M I a .1I1 Al. II a - ii. I . . m . i ,CooUiiUtd ia Fourtti FftsO NEW REMEDY FOR CHOLERA Berlin Doctor Finds That Clay stops Development of the Asiatic Disease. BERLIN. Oct. 14. (Special Cablegram to The Bee.) Dr. Btumpf. writing to a Berlin medical paper, calls attention to a cure for cholera which lie has recently discovered.' It consists of a fine powder made of clay, which) on. being administered to the patient immediately stops all vomiting, and the fever begins to subside half an hour later. It is, however, necessary for the cure that tbe patient should take no food or alcohol for the next twenty-four hours. A numbur of patients In ths cholera In fected districts have already been treated by Dr. Btumpf and all have recovered. It Is believed that the powder, being an unchangeable Inorganic substance, mechan ically stttU-s the bacilli and stupa the grow ill u( the disease. of what will practically amount to a milt tary despotism, and this, too, despite the fact that Lord Curson, Lord Kitchener's arch-enemy, is held to be responsible for the partition of Bengal; but It Is events and tendencies of the times which the editors of the native newspapers appear to be studying, rather than the character of the men themselves. One suggestion has been put forward that the present administration of Bengal should be superseded by that of a governor and council, on the plan of the presidencies of Madras and Bombay. This suggestion Is de. fended on the ground that this would be a j progressive measure of administrative re form and would satlsry the patriotic aspira tions of the people so far as the mainten ance of the integrity of Bengal Is con cerned. , Curson Glad ta Leave. One thing la certain, the lord viceroyshlp haa been clouded not only by the troubles with Lord Kitchener, but by this attempt to carry out a measure which is certainly the moat unpopular undertaken in years. The reference of Sir Henry Cotton to "the close of his brilliant career," aa referring to I-frd Curson, certainly appears to be pitched in a key truly funereal. It is felt here that It It no wonder that the health of Lord Curson broke under the strain. After the most popular administration of wage changes be calculated from the date of each change to the end of the year It Is found that the aggregate decrease In wages, due to tnese cnanges in 1904, was 1470.000. The number of work people af fected by changes In 1904 was less than tn any of the years 1698-1903, though ur eater than In any of the years 1895-1S97. The ! number whose wage changes resulted In net decreases in 1904 waa smaller than in any .. i r ' ! of the previous vi me years under review. 1896 and 1901-4 were yeara of falling wages while In the other years net in creases were recorded. Ths aggregate of these Increases was considerably greater than that of the decreases, the net amount of the Increase being $910,000 per week. iCwuUuusU wa IfuuiUi Pa. FRENCH FEELING AGRIEVED gay that Germans Ara Not Acting Friendly Toward Alaaeo aad Lorain. Appropriations for Permanent Im provements. Fusion Republican Administrations. Administrations. 1897 and 1899. 1901 and 1903. HASTINGS ASYLUM, t 85. PX $ 66.GOO 49.0OO 42.000 HOSPITAL AT LINCOLN. $ y.M . $ i2, 47,100 17,000 SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' HOME, GRAND ISLAND, f J.0O0 $ 1.000 17.000 0,0u0 INDUSTRIAL BCHOOL, KEARNEY. $ no " $ .aoo J.ouu g.uuo SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' HOME, MIL FORD. $ 300 $ 800 19.0UU W.2X INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL. GENEVA. $ l.fiOO $ 1,500 700 1,000 INDUSTRIAL HOME, MILFORD. $ 300 $ 1.600 6o0 DEAF AND DUMB INSTITUTE, OMAHA. $ l.Soo $ 6.000 3S.4U 12.0U) I FEEBLE MINDED INSTITUTE, BEAT- $ $.000 $ M.0C0 49.UM 7.&uu PENITENTIARY, f 2.0110 $ 79.60O 2,up0 12an HOME OF THE FRIENDLESS. $ t.COU $ 6.000 3,u00 HOSPITAL AT NORFOLK. $ I BM $ 6.7.5 100,1 STATE UNIVERSITY. $ 46.OU0 STA'l E NORMAL SCHOOLS. .u00 $ 1.4o0 b.iM) W.auu PARIS. Ovt. 14 (Special Cablegram to The Bee.) Now that misunderstandings have again arisen between the French and the Germans it la claimed that the German police have been behaving badly towards Alsatians and "Loralners who Insist upon cherishing souvenirs. At a circus in Straus, burg recently, for Instance, I lit Legion of Hcac? was buppreaKd. Totals.., mo ii,w(,uu Institute for the Deaf aad Dumb. When the republicans took charge of the Institute for tbe Deaf and Dumb At Omaha the walls were tnutllated, the plumbing leaked, the buUdlna. was unsanitary and filtliy. In cleaning the well and reservoir of a derailing switch to work, two cars of coal had run partly on the main track from a coal mine switch. The locomotive of the passenger train scraped the coal cars, but the baggage car hit them squarely knocking two passenger coaches and the baggage car off the track. The Injured were brought to hospitals In Springfield. Others severely Injured are: John Kluckma, Pleasant Plains, Intent' ally injured. J. D. Coffery, Pleasant Plains, Internally Injured. B. T. Alexander, La ton la. Mo., back sprained. H. B. Cox, Springfield, back sprained. J. T. Johnson, Framtngdale, III., head cut. John . Dobbson, Pleasant Plains, back sprained. John Bliss, Springfield, ear torn off and shoulder injured. Generoui Co-optntion of All Adii to tbt EiootH f ths Show, SATURDAY DRAWS OUT BIG CROWDS Last Two Programs 'Witness Much im Ring; that la interesting: nnd Exciting; and Spectators Applaud to Echo. Ist night's performance at the Audi torium finished Omaha's second annual Horse Show, and It was a creditable ending to a successful week. The rain did not affect the attendance, unless perhaps It was that some who had been seen In boxer all week were not there. The spirit ol Interest which has been manifest all along was as marked aa on the opening night The Horse Show has come to fill a place Ir the life of Omaha's people. President Peck of tho Horse Show associa tion said that tho bills had not all come It: and the exact status of the finances of the association could not be given, but the directors were very well pleased with the attendance, and the show had made money this year, but Just how much could not b stated until after the affairs have been straightened out a little. "We would have made good money and had a nice bank account to work on next year," said Mr. Peck, "If it hadn't been for the threatening weather, which kept the crowd down on the opening night, and which has kept those back who hud not purchased reserved scats at the other performances." Omaha the Proper Place. "Only one place in the country has Omaha beaten for a horse show, and that Is New Tork," said Manager Sam Hallor. "In New York the attendance Is, of course, larger than It has been here, but the other cities of the country cannot come up with Omaha's record of the week. They are having a horse show at St. !iul now. and I will wager that they do not have more than 80 per cent of the attendance we have had here. "It Is far ahead of last year. I tinder stand, though I wasn't here then. You people Just got a fair start the first year. but this year yon have made a record. Thi success has been due to the general Interest aken by the Omaha public. The mer chants have been as enthusiastic as the Horse Show association, and have spared no pains to decorate their windows and otherwise advertise the show. Then the newepnpprs have been very generoua and have accorded the show such treatment as has seldom been known tn ether cities. The police of Omaha deserve credit for the gentlomsnly attention they have given the show. The department has had eight or ten men here every night under Sergeant Rentfrow's command, and they have man aged the crowd on foot and the carriages to perfection." Manager Gillan of the Auditorium spoke the appreciation of the Auditorium board for the general Interest taken In the show. He said the average night attendance was 2,ono persons, although at the matinees It was considerably lighter. Fremont People In Evidence. It was Fremont night and that town was represented among the spectators. There were a good many people also from other Nebraska towns who found Saturday a good time to come to Omaha. They could see the Horse Show and on the same trip stay over Sunday In the metropolis. Good use was made of the promenade gain, although many who have been In evidence along the arena rail all week hnd become tired and kept to their boxes. Their places wore taken by others, however, and there was a fine display of gowns on the promenade to engage the attention when one was not observing the horses. The must Interesting event of the even. lng was the jumping contest. It had been given out that an attempt would be mads to beat tho world's record of 7 feet S Inches on the high Jump, .and Interest was at a high pitch when ths horn waa sounded for the event. Crow & Murray's horses withdrew before seven feet had been reached and the others did not continue. Yet it was as pretty a sight as though the horses had Jumped a few Inches higher, and the applause of the spectators pro claimed that they appreciated It. BUSHNELL STAYS IN COLORADO Governor Refuses to Honor Requisi tion for Ills Return to Nebraska. DENVER. Oct. 14. (Special Telegram.) Dr. Edward C. Bushnell will not have to return to Nebraska to answer to the charge of wife desertion. A short time ago Mrs. Bushnell, who lives at Elwood. swore out a warrant for Bushnell, alleging ronsup-I Mrs. F. B. Kl port. Her attorney. A. E. Harvey of Lin- f embroidery iuiii, iu wjiim, v-oio., Duarineu s home, and attempted to mitke a money set tlement. After Governor McDonald had honored Mickey's requisition, representa tions were made today to Governor Mc Donald that an' attempt was being made to force Bushnell to pay under threat of extradition, consequently Governor Mc Donald recalled the requisition. 41'gntlnued on Fourth Page.) -1 Movements of Ocean Vessels Oct. 14. At New York Arrived: Philadelphia, from Southampton. At Plymouth Arrived: New York, from New York. At Cherbourg Arrived: Grosser Kur furst, from New York. Balled: St. Paul, from Southampton. At Venice riulled: Glulla, for New York. At Bremen Mailed: Kiicdrich der -Srosse, for New Yolk. At Boulogne &illd: Slatendum, for New York. GOWNS AMD WEARERS LAST NIGHT Women Maintain Illsplny I ntll the End of the Show. Last night was nearly If not quite as brtl- ' llant as any of the week from the purely social side. Those who were faithful In. their attendance apparently enjoyed the closing moments as much as If It were the beginning, and those who had been but oc casional visitors to the Auditorium during the week laid themselves out to get what they could out of the closing hours. The result was a much more noticeable Inter change of visits between the boxes and a greater throng on the promenade. Alto gether, from a social point of view the af fair was voted a huge success. Among the more striking gowns worn last night the following were noted: Mrs. Joe Barker Cream figured si I It frown elaborately trimmed with lace; small ilark hat and Mark silk coat with white satin collar and stole embroidered In black. Mrs. J. K. Kaum While singled net over pink; black hat. white plumes. Mrs. A. D. Brandels black lace over black; black silk coat with ermine stole and tuffs; white hat trimmed with white plumes and faced with black velvet. Mrs. Clement Chase Pink crepe de chine; black lace coat over pink; large black pic ture hat. Mrs. Carl Connell Cream satin with crtam satin hut trimmed In while plumes. Mrs. Robert Ullmore Light blue gown with picture hat of light blue and collar of J ermine. lrkendall Gown of white over yellow silk; black Miss Ada Klrkendall Light blue crone tie chine; white hat faced with ermine with white plumes; ermine stole. Mrs. Charles Kounlxe Blue silk gown with while lace; while hat faced with blHi k. Murk plumes. Miss Mildred Lomax Pink silk gown over pink with liumimaiie lace, bolero; chinchilla hat with while plumes. Mis Mohler Brown panne velvet gown; while hat trimmed in ermine and pluinos; ermine collar and muff. Mlxs Murray of Chicago Blue chiffon ov.r blue silk Inset with enibroldred lace; white murabiiet cape uitli stole ends; blue Slurred hat with blue plumes. Mrs. F. A. Nash Purple silk with white hat Mrs. James L. Paxton Pink brocaded satin, white brocaded coat. Mis. F.d Swobe Pink satin gown with wlilte 'broadcloth coal; white hat with pinnies. I suns flora enster rtirpie velvet gown , with ermine trimmings; blue hat. J Mrs. iUrry .Wukms WLlte lace gown