TUB OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 17, MOC. Tiie Omaiia Sunday Dm E. ROSEWATER EDITOR. Entered at Omaha Fostotflce as s-coud class mattr. TF.RMfl OF Bt BBcnirriox. Daily Bee (without Sunday), one year. $4.00 Dally hee and Sumlny, m. jut S-W Kunrtay liee, one y-r .W Baturaay Wee, one year 1 DELIVERED Bf CAIUUfc.lt. Dally 1'ee (Including Sunday). per wekJ7c l.ai!y B- (wltnout Hiiiiun , p r w.'ek..l.c evening Wee, tw.inuiil Kum.ajrj, p r . u Eventng liee (with Sunday), r week. .10c Sunday liee, per copy Addres cumplulnts of lirerfuiantles In de livery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Dee Building. South Omaha Clt Hall itulldlng. Council Ulufis 10 1'enrl Street. Chc(0-ltM I'nlty Building. New iork 15' 8 Home Lite ins. Building. Washington 01 Fourteenth Etreet. COKIIESPONDEMCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaiia Bee, Editorial Department. REM ITT A N C KS. Ramlt by draft, express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received a payment of mail accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or eastern rxchnnges, not accepted. THE BEE FLBLlbillAO COMi'ANV. STATEMENT OT CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, ps: C C. Kosewster, general manager of The Be Publishing Company, being duly sworn, ays that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally. Morning. Evening and Hundiy Dee printed duiiug th month of May. was as lonows: 1 80,270 i ... nn.No I si.nro 4 Sl.fKiO t ilWM t wt,(ino 7 ai.wio 8 31.50O t Ml, RAO 10 81, (MH) II. . Sl.ttfiO 12 :vu,2ao 13.. 1XMHM) 14.. 81. TOO 16 81,620 18 1.340 17 1,B.1 lg l,M)t 19 82.2T0 JO 8(,no 21 81.II20 2? 81,I(M 23 ai.mtn 24 81, MOO 25 81,.-0 20 aa,4K 27 Sl.MOO 28 81.070 29 81,740 50 81,820 51 81,040 Total OHW.A70 Lees unsold copies lo,tfl Kct tetal sales 07s,(t.H Daily average 81,570 C. C. rtOfiKWATEU, Oenerul Manaser. Subscribed In my presence and sworn td Derors me this 4th day of June, IS. (Seal; M. 11. I1UNOATE, Notary 1'ublic. WHEJI OUT OF TOWN. Habscrlbera leaving the city tem porarily shoal4 bare Tbe Be ailed to them. Address will be ebaaged oftesi us requested. Stenographers looking tor sinecures are fighting shy of the White House. If Walter Wellman succeeds in find ing the North Pole, hot air of more than one variety win be justified. The publicity bureau of the Asphalt trust may now resume operations President Castro is again la office In Venezuela. Senator Oalllnger certainly has the logical side. of the question In objecting to the use of the Irrigation fund for draining swamp land. BiaIy8t,ok may supply the incident needed for the salvation of the Russian autocracy. Race prejudice Is often stronger than patriotism. - Congressman Wadsworth's expressed opinion is that he can prepare 'a bill more nearly embodying the president's idea than the president himself. The endorsement of the action of a democratic governor by a prohibition convention leads one to believe that the age of miracles Is not past In Mis souri. President Roosevelt seems not satis fied with making history, but evinces a desire to write it at the same time, probably desiring to keep the record straight The decision of western railroads to discontinue elevator allowances must signify that the. officials prefer to avoid the appearance of evil in these days of Investigation. "Work has begun on the Philippine railroads and exponents of high finance are doubtless laying plans to Juggle the government's interest into their own pockets. Through his resldcuce in Colorado and experience In politics. Senator Tel ler in discussing canal affairs should be an expert on both rock blasting and mud slinging. In the light of "parliamentary in quiries" Great Britain may yet adopt its Asiatic ally's war diet of rice and fish. Japan Is one country not affected by the beef exposures. Secretary Wilson presents the unique spectacle of a public officer who is willing to assume responsibility for disregarding the letter of the law in the interests of the public The commencement, addresses this year for the most part turn upon the tendencies of the times as shown in the demoralization of social and bus iness life resulting from the excessive centralization of wealth ta private hands. The commencement address is always timely if nothing else. Colonel Bryau's Commoner is in sisting loudly that the Chicago plat form still lives. So does every other' platform live In the historical archives. But platforms, like the events they deal with, pass into history except o far as they enunciate principles that are applicable to sew conditions as they arise. Investigation of packing houses by special committees of commercial and industrial bodies continue to raport everything in spick-span condition. But an ouuee of government inspection would go as far as a pound of private investigation for re-establishing public confidence- in the parjty of packing bouse products. rRESCSllSO OX POPULAR 1QVQRASCK. Dy order of court procured br the opponents of Edward Rosewater's can didacy for United States senator every republican in Douglas county 'who wants to have a voice in the choice of the party's candidate for that high of fice will hare to pick out elghty-tthree names from a list of more than 200 on a rotated ballot and make eighty three cross marks opposite the names of the delegates who stand for the can didate whom he favors. To vote for the congressional delegation he will hove to make 118 additional cross marks, or a total of 201. The purpose and object of inflicting this outrage upon the republicans of Douglas county by a perversion of the primary election law Is to so confuse the voter and to make It so difficult for him to mark his ballot according to his Intent as to prevent an effective ex pression of his will and defeat the very aim of the primary election law, which Is to assure every voter the same voice In the choice of his party nominees that he has at the polls for election after nomination. Under the circumstances only one thing Is left for Douglas county repub licans to do, If they do not want to sub mit to being disfranchised by a trick of jugglery with the primary ballot. Every republican must make up his mind to record himself at whatever cost of time and effort at the coming primary by complying with the onerous conditions of the rotated ballot. A ro tated ballot means one printed with changing position of the names upon It so that an exact duplicate sample ballot will be Impossible. Every voter, however, will be entitled to take into the booth with him a list of the names for whom he wishes to vote and to compare the same with the official bal lot In making bis cross marks and to take all the time required to exercise the franchise. If It is a physical possi bility for those who favor Edward Rosewater for United States senator and are persistent in it to mark their ballots for every one of the eighty three delegates filed In his interest no more and no less they will do so in spite of the vicious ballot. If we mis take not their temper. Another thing, should be distinctly understood In this connection. The Idea of forcing a rotated ballot at the coming primary springs largely from the knowledge that Mr. Rosewater has always been specially strong with the foreign-born voters, the supposition being that these naturalized citizens are specially subject to make mistakes in voting a complicated ballot. If the foreign-born voters could be disfran chised at the primary the enemies of Mr. Rosewater think it possible to com pass his defeat for nomination and that they could then coddle the foreign born voter with soft words to make him forget the indignity before the election In the fall. These people presume altogether too much upon popular Ignorance. The rank and file of Douglas county repub licans are not such fools as they take them to be, whether American-born or foreign-born, and they will assert them selves at the primary to resent the out rage and rebuke its perpetrators. ADAMS OS COLLEGE METHODS. The Phi Beta Kappa address of Charles Francis Adams at Columbia, wherein with characteristic bluntness and force he assails the elective sys tem of studies and the tendency of the American coUeee to tnero bulk of stu dent attendance rather than rounded development of the individual student, is entitled to the serious attention of all engaged or Interested in educational work. The widening of the . gulf be tween teacher and student as a result of the increase of the mass of the col lego class, rendering practically im possible the direct and intimate rela tion that Is vital in the most impres sionable and critical period of life, is a fact that has long been universally recognized and deplored by thoughtful observers, but for which no thorough going remedy has, so far been provided or'even seriously discussed. The small college, while in some respects avoiding the extreme of the big college, Is gen erally so straightened as to endowment and other resources that the deficiency shows even there on some scale, so that the tendency Is to make the average student merely one unit in an imper sonal mass. It sounds little short of revolution ary to hear-Mr. Adams, himself a grad uate of Harvard and for twenty-four years an active member of Its board of overseers, deliberately declare that. It it were in his power, he would discon tinue absolutely, and wholly break up. the traditional academic system and have a number of colleges, all inde pendent, a limited In size that Individ uality would be not only .possible, but a necessary part of the system, the master of each collegia giving tone and character to it and to each individual student in it. While no such radical leactlon Is at all probable, a point has undoubtedly been reached at which the futility of the competition among col leges for mere moss ol attendance is boginnlng to be realized. This has been perhaps an inevitable stage in the development of our higher educational Institutions. It will be fortunate if effort shall be more concentrated to the end of reaching and developing the in dividual student, which will infallibly require the breaking up of vast classes luto small grot-ps, a correspondingly larger rtaff of real teachers rather than mere lecturers, or a system of tutorship like that at the British universities, or some equivalent, all of which involves immense change in current methods. Mr. Adams' hostility towards the elective system, particularly as de veloped at Harvard, the pioneer in abolition of the old Procrustes bed sys tem which he does uot defend, is not less uncompromising. He characterizes the elective system In its present form as "crude, ill considered, thoroughly unscientific and extremely mischiev ous, and would substitute for it com pulsory schemes of study which would take into account both the aptitudes and the deficiencies of each student. Many will regard as an overstatement Mr. Adams' unqualified denial that the average youth of 18 has any well de fined aptitudes, or, haviog them, that he Is at that age in any sufficient de gree qualified to Judge of them or of Ibe training most calculated to develop them. As a matter of fact the stu dent's election ordinarily represents not only his own Judgment, but as well that, of his parents, of his intimate friends and of his teachers In the pre paratory schools who may have known him from childhood, and their collec tive opinion Is presumably at least as likely to" be rlsut as that of the col lege faculty under the disabilities of existing methods which Mr. Adams does not paint in too vivid colors. The substance, however, of Mr. Adams' trenchant criticism Is true. College training does fail In vital adap tation to the" average student, and tho elective system does let down the bars for him to neglect the very faculties which he needs most to strengthen, giving too much play to Ignorant caprice or uncontrolled perversity. If the Ideal of college education be to cultivate all sides of the mind, so that the intellectual, like the physical, athlete should be evenly developed, far-reaching alterations of method are indeed necessary. LIMITATION OF PRIVATE FORTUXES. It Is not at all probable that arbi trary limitation of the amount of money or property an individual may lawfully acquire will become a prac tical question, at least for a long time, if ever, although a judge of the Wis consin supreme court. In a public ad dress, advocates 'it with sensational posltlveness. His proposition, It Is to be observed, Is essentially different from' the president's recent tentative suggestion of limitation by taxation of the estate which the owner may at death transfer to another. The more pertinent question with which public attention Is now and is likely long to be absorbed Is the meaus by which wealth Is accumulated. The organization and production of wealth through the form of incorpora tion has been developed with incom parably greater rapidity within a period covering only one or two gen erations than adjustment of results to fundamental rules of human conduct. In final analysis popular complaint touching acquisition and use of wealth for the most part rises out of the growth of Incorporations. Accordingly the Issues that are uppermost in our politics bear upon the point, not of so cial revolution, but of subjecting cor porate wealth to the fundamental rules developed under our traditional sys tem. - When the old common law rules embodying average Ideas of honesty, fair, dealing and public Interest as to Individual and partnership wealth are equally enforced as to corporation methods, there Is not likely to be more complaint of tho peril of great fortunes than there was in the past, or what ever peril there may still be can then be removed by remedies of the class which the president has suggested, which are far less radical than was the abolition of primogeniture or the earlier enactment of the statutes of mortmain. When the public is engaged in so arduous a struggle along the lines of practical reform of abuses in methods of acquisition of wealth, and especially when the struggle is proceeding so hopefully and successfully aa it Is at this time, it la a detriment to moot lrn practical remedies, which can only tend to divert attention from the business In hand. SHOXTS' CUKE FOR SOCIALISM. Among many admirable commence ment addresses on vital current social and economic topics few have been more forceful and significant than the one delivered by Theodore P. Shoots, the chief executive officer In the Pan ama canal enterprise, at Drake univer sity. In which be attributed much of the present unrest and incipient an archy to departure from the old stand ards of honest and patient accumula tion in a mad rush for wealth. Mr. Shonts, himself a wealthy man and experienced in large corporation affairs, insisted that the primary re sponsibility is upon those who control the great corporations and combina tions which modern Industrial condi tions In his view render inevitable and hlch, If conscientiously and faithfully conducted, are potent for great good for the masses. But the real trouble grows out of the fact that rich and powerful men have been violating duty and the law and escaping the conse quences, to which Mr. Shonti attri Lutes the spread of socialistic and gen erally unsettling doctrines. "The evil consequences of this state of mind," he declares, "can only be avoided by a convincing demonstration that there Is the same law for the rich as for the poor, the same Justice for the trust magnate as for the penniless man. Mr. Shonts therefore welcomes the present moral awakening which though it may go to extremes in some Incidents. Is a condition precedent to social safety and health. For If the mass of sincere people are convinced that impartial Justice exists or Is in course of being fairly approximated the mere disturber and destructionlst will be powerless for rerious mischief, The supreme court of Illinois has just handed down a decision affirming the right of Governor Dlneen to ro- tain for himself and his assistants $2 40,000 collected as fees during his eight years' service as a state's at torney for Cook county. This ought to be a sufficiently shining example of the evils of fee perquisites to Induce Illinois lawmakers to make sure that n the future fee offices are abolished. and salaries established for all public servants gauged according to the value of their services. James m. wooLvranra With the death of James M. Wool- worth has passed another Nebraska pioneer, who by his ability and his works reached a position of national renown. Chancellor Woolworth, as he pre ferred to be called, stood at the very fore-front of the legal profession, not enly of the Nebraska bar, but of the American bar as well. In the period of his prime and . power no western urlst was recognized superior to him as a thorough master of legal history and legal principles. Mr. Woolworth was especially strong in the ground work of the English common law, for which he was an acknowledged au thority, and In Amerloan constitutional aw, which he did much to develop in several celebrated instances of litiga tion. The high record which his abilities commanded among his associates was fittingly demonstrated by his elevation to the presidency of the American Bar association an honor thoroughly In keeping with his talents and prefer ences. Although the most important public office held by Mr. Woolworth was that of member of the convention that framed Nebraska's state constitu tion, he would, without doubt, have made a matchless judge of any high tribunal. His loyalty to the west and his spe cial devotion to the people of Omaha and Nebraska, among whom he was just rounding out a residence of full fifty years, made Mr. Woolworth pre eminently one of our distinguished citizens whose, departure will be felt. COMMITTEE "HEARINGS." It may well be questioned whether the complaints now being made so em phatically and generally against the character of "hearings" before con gressional committees, go to the root of the matter. It Is true that some of the hearings are farcical, evasive or unnecessary, and that a vast amount of time is thus wasted and other harm done. Not a few committee hearings during the present session are cited where the prime purpose Is plausibly alleged to have been, not to inform congress what it should do. but to manufacture excuses for doing what should not be done, or for denying ac tion which public sentiment and inter est clearly demanded. But so far as the house at least is concerned the difficulty runs back to the practical necessities created by sheer bulk of membership and busi ness. It is simply Impossible for such a body to consider in detail on the floor the business which It is called upon to transact, and thus the work is neces sarily thrown back upon the commit tees without the safeguards which reg ular parliamentary procedure has pro vided. It Is Imperative, in many im portant cases, that the committees col lect special Information and take testi mony so as to put a subjsct In shape for intelligent action by the full legis lative body, and some of the best work. as in the house hearings on the free denaturized alcohol question, is done In this manner where there is good faith and competency. The essential point is that the shift ing to committees of so great a part of what the house Itself once did or more directly supervised has not been ac companied by corresponding systemiza tlon and regulation of committee meth ods, chief among which must be pro vision for more complete publicity. What does this mean, coming as it does from the Lincoln Independent, which has usually been recognized in tbe past as the official organ of the populist party in Nebraska: The railroad political agents are work ing overtime now-a-days. They have their pins set to capture several delegations to the democratic state convention. They will fall if the democrats turn out to caucuses and allow no passholder or other doubtful person to represent them In county con ventions. Can It be possible that the railroad agents are inside of the democratic campT One would Imagine from the popocratlc press that all tbe railroad political agents were centered in an effort to control the republican party and had their hands full there. It must be either that they are trying to control all parties or that they have come to the conclusion again, as in the past, that the popocratlc bunch Is more easily handled than the re publicans. The promotion of Major Church Howe from the position of American consul general at Antwerp to the more Important post of consul general at Montreal Is a handsome endorsement of his work in the consular service, particularly In view of the well known policy of the administration to recog nize efficiency as tbe sole test of merit for advancement. Whatever may have been the differences of opinion as to his part In Nebraska politics. Church Howe has certainly "made good" as a commercial representative of our gov ernment abroad, and every foyal Ne braskan rejoices when a Nebraskan "makes good" in a responsible position of official honor and trust. Former City Attorney Breen now declares that he must have been mis taken when he officially advised City Clerk Elbourn that the law did not re quire ballot rotation at tbe late city primaries. Wonder whether the fact that Mr. Breen was a candidate for nomination on that ballot and that by his ruling his name gave him a supposed advantage in position on the ballot over his opponent whose name began with the letter further down In the alphabet helped him to be mistaken T Whatever else may be said about the arrangement for the opening of the Russian Duma, there is no question but what an ample array of photog raphers was present and properly lo cated to snapshot the royal procession at every step of the proceedings. In adjourning the investigation of Missouri oil companies until September Attorney Hadley has an opportunity to take advantage of the facts developed by the Interstate Commerce commis sion, but the companies will also have time to prepare their defense. Harper's Weekly, which has been endeavoring so assiduously to promote a boom for President Wood row Wilson of Princeton for the democratic presi dential nomination should take the bint and send Its preferred candidate on a trip around the worm. After all. It seems to be a question of the number of locks on the Panama canal, nature having made an open waterway Impossible, and it seems to be the opinion of the majority that the greater the number of locks the safer the enterprise. Nevada stands with California in threatening to bar from the state in surance companies which will not pay their San Francisco losses in full. Other states may do well to remember the repudiators. Unwarraated Reflection Chicago Post. After Mr. Bryan has studied the durna how tame a democratic convention will ap pear to him. ' Real Mean Suggestion. Detroit Free Press. People who admire the June bride don't stop to think that the young woman's mother has been working since last De cember on the details. qaeesed Between. Chicago Record-Herald. The corporations," says Chancellor Day, "are the worklngman'a best friends." Where does the middle man who works on a salary or practices 'a profession come in. The Ideal and the Practical. Washington Post. Some of our college graduates could make a hit this year by cutting out the "Italy Lies Beyond tho Alps" song and dance and giving the public an erudite es say on "What Shall We Eat?" "Dsr'l" Tapping Outlawed. Buffalo Express. Both houses of congress have now passed the bill prohibiting political contributions by corporations In national elections. It is one of the good acts which has been put through without making much noise over it Vegetarian Favorite. Cincinnati Tribune. The vegetarian has a right to live and promote Nhls Idea, and tbe administration has been of remarkable assistance to him of late. Mr. Roosevelt Is entitled to the vegetarian nomination for president In 1908. Tarred with flame Stick. Cincinnati Enquirer. It Is noted with some degree of sarcasm that a Pennsylvania railroad clerk saved 176,000 while working on a salary of 1126 a month. What of ltt The railroad mon archs who have their millions did not save them out of their stated compensation. . Hard Job Pnshed to a Finish. Pittsburg Dispatch. While other cabinet officers may cherish more or less well founded plans for suc ceeding to higher place, Secretary Hitch cock plods along at the congenial task of sending land thieves, large and small, but the large slses preferred, to the place where they belong. 1 Redaction la Foreign Postage. Boston Qlone. The reduced rates on foreign postage will go Inta effect October 1, 1907. Then It will be necessary to remember that while the unit of weight between Great Britain and the United States la one ounce, the unit of weight between the United States and other countries will be 20 grams. In all cases the rate for tbe first unit will be 5 cents and for each other unit or fraction S cents. ECILAR SHOTS AT THE FCLFIT. Minneapolis Journal: Prof. Charles A. Brlggs has been moved to write a defense of Dr. Crapaey. Here is a fine case of two theological tlck'jt-of-leave men back ing one another up. New York Post: Those Boston Christian Scientists who gathered by the roadside, after being spilled from a sight-seeing au tomobile, and sang Mother Eddy's latest hymn, "Shepherd, Show Me How to Go," spoke too late. The Congregattonal'.st: Scotch Presby terian scholars and laymen as well are having fun chuckling o.ver Prof. Lindsay's remark In his lately Issued "History of the Reformation," that Erasmus' personal ap pearance suggested "a descent from a long line of maiden aunts." New York Bun: Rev. Dr. Robert F. Coyle of Denver has been convinced that Mr. Bryan will be the next president be cause he Is reported to have preferred go ing to church on Sunday In Japan to din lng with a hospitable governor. Perhaps Mr. Bryan had a tip that he would be In vited to preach. Chicago Chronicle: Old, 111 and broken, It is still Impossible to deny the force and power of John Alexander Dowle. He may be a charlatan, a quack and a hypocrite, but he Is the Intellectual superior, ten times over, of the men who are trying to pull him down and establish themselves In bis place. And this U all the more true because the Issue Is not one of righteous ness on the one aide and Iniquity on the other, but of unadulterated selfishness on both sides. The fight for the control of 21 on la a fight for the loaves and fishes Indianapolis News: The dedication of the great Christian Science church In Boston with members present from all parts of the country and from foreign lands, callk attention In a striking way to the extra ordinary growth of this new cult. It' Is evident that it responds to the needs and aspirations of certain people or It could not have made so great progress. What ever outsiders may think of Its founder and Its faith, the fact of Its succesaful ap peal to Increasing numbers of people and of the fervor and devotion of Its disciple cannot fail te ue woadur and admira tion, AW June Wedding Engagements or Are not complete unless the brltle or to-be has a diamond ring. If you can't to pay all now then call and bave This Watch $12.75 $1.00 a Week Regular 117.60 value. IERMOKS BOILED DOWN. Time amends a good many prayers. Upright walking Is the strongest talk ing. A deaf heart soon makes a dead con science. Virtue Is none the worse for a few vouchers The ruddy eyes do not get the rosiest outlook on. life. The walls of the house of happiness are built of sacrifice. Hearts of gold do not come by setting the heart on gold. No man is civilized until he has learned to live with himself. The troubles we meet are as nothTng compared to those we manufacture. The end seat hog does not become a lamb because he gets into a church pew. The road that cuts through right to riches has a down grade extension to ruin In the kingdom of darkness might makes right; in the kingdom of light might but adds to responsibility. Don't count too much on the virtue of owning up when you know you're on the verge of being found out. It's no use talking about the way you bear the cross If you're unduly anxious to get hold of the little end of the log. Chicago Tribune. PERSONAL, AND OTHERWISE. The exit of ,Mr. Addlcks from the Dela ware situation Is sufficient excuse for Tom Lawson to break into' print. The lordly Pullman porter cannot count himself a masterful tipster until he gets his hook on the Pennsylvania coal com panies. The Standard Oil people, having cornered the oil and the rubber markets, are In po sition to catch, automoblllsts "a-comtn" and a-goln'." Two members of the Toledo (O.) Ice trust have been convicted of holding up consum ers. They didn t use a gun, but tney got the coin Just the same. 'Immediate municipal ownership" con tinues a day dream In Chicago, but the nightmare of cable cars Is going and trol leys are multiplying. This Is the hour of reform in the Lake City. Jimmy Hobson, a matinee Idol, has the stags all to himself in a Philadelphia cell. He deems himself safe there. Outside the walls are six wives and six pairs of hands Itching to caress his locks. Hearst papers insist that Tom Taggart should resign as chairman of the demo crats national committee or close up his French Lick gambling shop. At last ac counts Taggart was too busy stroking the kitty to hear the call. A word of sympathy and encouragement Is due the June bridegroom. He Is In tbe Drocesslon. though barely visible. He Is sociable, happy and absorbs the reflected light. He isn't saying a word for publica tion. His spell comes later. Every sound-hearted man will sob a sob or two for the Illinois girl who fractured her plump right arm while buttoning her shirt waist in the back. Orlef Is made keener because the accident was needless. Still, some women will take the risk rather than have a helpful man around. Pianos Here $190 Zy Elsewhere $250 , Pianos Here $210 Elsewhere $300 N On Terms of $10 Cath, $6 and $7 Monthly A customer says he sees this announcement so often upon this page, p.nd asks how we can sell these planes so much under the price of other dealers. One reason Is: In the manufacture of pianos fixed charges, like rent, light, power, superintendence, office help, etc., remain about the same, whether the factory la busy or dull. If the manufacturer Is equipped to make, say, ?C pianos a day and has orders for only 15, the fixed charges over tie n pianos will be as much as If be made the 20. We take advantage of this by giving him orders during Ms doll days, thus getting them for less than such pianos cost in the 6pen market. And, besides, we pay spot cash and save the discount. "Why don't other dealers do that, too?" Because they haven't the capital or their trade doesn't warrant It. Aimcnn Cf 1513 Doughs Street. . IlUSrfc LU. OmaJux, Neb. 153 Premiums Distributed on the Piano Playing Contest. JUNE WEDDING GIFTS Ml Art Pictures Nicely Framed You Can Gel Them for $t50, $2.50, $5.00, $10 and as high as your tasfe dictates. A. H0SPE CO., 1513 Douglas St. ES bride, afford It charged. Your cn-dit is good. Diamonds Advance I received word yes terday from New York Importers that dia monds would positively advance 10 per cent July 1st. You can still buy them from me at the old price. A Dollar or Two a This Diamond Ring $23 $1.50 a Heck Buys this benu tlful ring, it's as goid as a g o v e r n m ent bond. Are you wloeT Week Will Do LEADING JDVDLER DOMESTIC PLFASAM'RIKS. "Sir, if you offer to kiss me I'll scream." "Of course, my dur lady, I could not risk a disturbance." "And 1 am suffering:, too, from a very weak throat. Philadelphia Prens. "Every once in a while," said Hrideman, I notice my wife cutting wedding notices out of the papers. I wonder what she docs with them?" "Probably," remarked Henpeck, "Rhe castes then in a 'scrap' book.'1 Cleveland Leader. Hicks What are you growling about T Wicks Doggone it! I asked my wife to sew a button on my coat Hicks And didn't she do It? Wicks Yes but I've discovered that she cut the button from the vest. Phlludelpiii.i Ledger. Employer Whose funeral do you want U attend? Office Boy Do umpire's. New York Sun. Yeast I was talking to your wife today. Crlmsonbeak How did that happen? "How did what happen?" "That you were doing the talking?" Yonkers Statesman. She He married her for her money. Wasn't that awful? He-Did he get It? Bl.e-No. He It was. Judge. "I'll wager Nell will pot give herself away this summer the wny she did last!" "How wua that?" "She and Dick had their heads together so much that Nell got freckled on only one side of the face." Detroit Free Press. Podd The Marmaduke children are ter rors, aren't they? Purdy They certainly are; but you can't blame Marmaduke. "Why not?" "It Isn't his fault What can a mere parent do against two sets of grandpar ents?" American Spectator. "Dear," she said, and she threw her shoulders back and loolted him squarely In the eyes, "is It because 1 Inherited a for tune from my grandfather that you wish to marry me?" "Darling, how can you dream of such a thing? I would marry you regardless of where you got your money." Milwaukee BeuUneL HLSIO IN MOONLIGHT. Richard Watson Glider In the Atlantic Was ever music lovelier than tonight! 'Twas Schumann's "Song of Moonlight;" o'er the vale. The new moon lingered near the western hills; The hearth fire glimmered low; but melt ing tones , Blotted all else from memory and thought, And all the world was music! Wondrous hour! . . Then sank anew Into our tranced henrts One secret and deep lesson of sweet sound The loveliness that from unlovellness Outsprlngs, flooding the soul with poignant Joy, As the harmonious chords to harsh succeed, And the rapt spirit climbs through pain to bliss; Eternal question, answer infinite; As day to night replies; as light to shade; As summer to rough winter; death to life Death not a closing, but an owning door, A deepened life, a prophecy fulfilled. Not In the very present comes reply, But In the flow of time. Should ths song cease Too soon: ere yet the rooted answer blooms. Lo, what a pang of loss and dlssonsnce; But time, with tho resolving and Intended tone Heals all, and makes all beautiful and right. Even so our mortal musicmakers frame Their messages melodious to men: Even so the F.tern His mighty harmonies Fashions, supreme, of life, and fate, and tima. 133