HIE OMAHA DAILY DEE: MONDAY. JUNE 17, 11M7. M ' - 1 ' 1 I . 1 . Hie Omaha Daily Br,t OVNVD Bt EDWARD rtOSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATKR, EDITOR. Entered at Omaha poelofflce as second class m&tter. - TE.IVMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. fJslly Rn 1 without Bur.dsy), n year. .MM i'ully bee and Sunday om rear fJJ Bund.-iy l;ee, on year J Saturday on year 1 bUXIVERED BT CARRJEK. Dally Be (Including Sundsy), per week..1So llly Bee IwLihoat Sunday). per week.. .100 Evening Bee wltooiit Hunday). Pr week. So Kvenlng Bee faith Sunday), per week Address nil complaints of Irregularities IB '.silvery to Clly Circulation Lopariment OFFICES. Croeos The Be Building. fcfluth Oniahx-Cltr Hall Building. Council bluffs 16 Scott Btref. l'hlca;o lt, Unity Building. . Few York l Home Ufa Insurance Bldg Washington Cut Fourteenth Street. CORJRKSrONPENCB. Communications relating to news and edi torial muir should b addressed, Oroabo Bee, Editorial Iwpartment. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft. express or postal order, payable to The le Puhllnhlnn Company. Only 2-cenr stumps received In payment ot irinll accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchange, rot accept STATKMUNT Of CIRCULATION? Stit ot Nerrsk.t, Douglas County. Chsrles C. Koewater. general manager ot The Ree publishing Company, being duly sworn, that the actual number of full and complete copie of Th Dally, MnrHIng, Kvenlng and Sunday Bee prtntad during tha m-.nth of May, 1107. was a follows: J 35,50 18 WO 1 3,810 it 80 I 3S.S90 10 W70 4 35.410 II M-630 I 34,300 SI.. '.... 35,610 I 39480 ! ,500 1 3fl,480 14 86,6! 1 35,680 U 34300 38,T90 SI 84,600 16 , 3S.8S0 tl 38,450 II 35,390 II 35,510 It.... 34,550 ! M.010 II 35,420 10..., -6,U0 14 35,380 II 35,810 II 36,330 14 35,480 Total... 1M0 IT 35,360 Less untold and returned copies 8,087 Net total l,oe,P53 Calif average 35,083 CHARLES C. ROSE WATER, General Manager. Subscribed In my presence and worn to before m thla list day of May, 107 (Seal) M. B. HL'NOATB. Notary Public. WHEN OUT 09 TOW. Snbserlbers leaviasr tko tty tosa porartly thonld hava Tho moiled to tkcaa. Addroaa will bo AH this war talk appears to be sim ply a flash in Japan. There Is at least one Orchard In Idaho that is known by lis fruits. Wisconsin has passed an antt-Ughts bill. Another form of prohibition? A New York paper notes the return of Thaw's brother-in-law. Thaw, Thaw. That name sounds familiar. A scientist claims to have Invented a machine that will ralsa the dead. Ho might try It on the populist party. The green bug Is, , said to have,. In vaded Ohio. Parole searching for the. Foraker presidential boom might dissect the green bug. ' San Francisco finds its bonds do hot sell well on the market. Bad govern ment Is always expensive. In more ways than one." ' " - ' Attorney General Bonaparte has not determined whether he will close down th Umbrella trust, put it up, break It ribs or knock the cover off. It It looks very much as if Mr. Harrl roan's "lawyers and subordinates" were still running the railroads in their relations to the public and pa trons. French consumers complain that their native winea are adulterated with acetic acid and red ink. France ne?ds a pure food law, with a "Tama J la" to enforce it. The Atchison Globe wants to know what has become ot the girl who said Bhe wouldn't marry the best man la the world. She kept ber word and married man from Kansas. If the country demanded rhetorical candidates Instead of logical candi date. Senator Beverldge and Colo nel Bryan would head the oppos ing tickets next year without a con test. "Wbat." asks a Boston paper, "Is more pronounced than' tha American's enthusiasm for his flag?" Nothing, unless it Is his enthusiasm for the home team when It haa a winning streak. ' Abe Hummel has abandoned hU ap peal. His sentence has ten months to run, , and he knows the New York courts could not be reasonably ex ' bected o act on his appeal tor a couple t yoaxa. Hotel porters In New York are strik ing tor $25 a month and' tips, or M a day without tips. 1 Kven the first J class in arithmetic may figure out wnai poruon oi tuo " hotel men expect the public to pay. Mayor SchmlU ot Han Francisco Is said now to be mayor "In name only" as a consequence Qt his. conviction for extortion. Some other cttlea not so far away are . ruled by mayors "In name only" M a consequent ot schisms between the city council and other inmates of the city hall. Publication and classification of the passbolders' lists pursuant to the Ne braska antl-paaa law continue to throw Idellshts upon the activity of various prominent clUaena who volunteered lust wlntrr to gq to Uncoln to, fight the terminal tax bill and other leglsla ! unii!aialiJe in tXe raUi lobby. that twvj-cjcjvt Fare rtro. Railroad mans gars; through their publicity bureaus and other channels, are making a determined effort to man ufacture capital out of the veto by Gov ernor Hughes of the I eont fare law passed by the New York legislature, the veto cam a at a time when the railroads apparently are planning to make n concerted attack through the courts on the Z-cent fare laws passed by a number of states and this use ot the Hughes veto is pntently In the hope of Influencing the public, If not the courts. In the. proposed contests. The railroad plan is a shrewd one, in some respects, calculated to deceive those not familiar with transportation affairs in New York or the conditions which led to the veto. For many years the principal railroad of New York has charged no more than S cents a mile, because that Is n part of its con tract with the state. Much of the passenger business within 150 miles of New York City is carried at commu tation rates, frequently a low as one half cent a mile and the 2 cent bill passed by the .New York legislature was so worded as to leave some ques tion whether It would not compel the railroads, or at least warrant them, to place the flat 2 -cent rate into effect in the commuters' sone. But the real motive of the gover nor's veto was to strengthen his utili ties bill, which he haa succeeded in getting through the legislature after most determined opposition on the part of the railroads. Under this measure the entire question of fixing and en forcing passenger and freight rates In New York Is left to a commission with unlimited authority in all transporta tion affairs. Having succeeded with the commission policy, Governor Hughes feared to discredit it In ad vance by approving the 2-cent fare bill. His veto leaves the commission free-handed to level the passenger rates to a 2-cent basis or to any other figures compensatory .to the railroads that will furnish the relief desired by their patrons. The situation in New York is pecu liar to that state and distinct from other states in which laws have been passed reducing the passenger rates and the railroads are wasting effort attempting to make it appear otherwise. TB COMIJVQ or THE POSTMASTEBS. The annual meeting of the Ne braska Association ot . Postmasters Is scheduled to be held in Omaha the last week in Juno and an effort is be ing made to carry out at the same time a suca-estlon originally offered by The Bee a year ago for a Joint convention which will Include the postmasters oi Iowa as well as of Nebraska. The success of these meetings natu rally depends upon th6 attendance and the attendance depends pon the In terest aroused among,thos' ought to participate. The . postmasters tt Nebraska have for several years main tained a reasonably strong organiza tion, with annual : sessions . presided over by officers of their own selection and recognlxed by the Postofftce ' de partment by the assignment of de partment officials to expialn particular features of the work. . , No similar or ganisation has as yet been perfected by the Iowa postmasters, but It the projected meeting proves successful it will surely result In he formation of such an association. 1 The value of conferences of. this kind for promoting the efficiency of the postal service through the ex change of Ideas and experiences need hardly be emphasised. Almost all the great business undertakings which cover a wide geographical territory are coming to call In their men In the same line of work for periodical con ferences, and the Poatofflce depart ment, aa the biggest business estab lishment in the world, cannot fall to profit by pursuing similar-methods as to associations In different subdi visions, providing they confine them selves to their legitimate scope and functions. The Bee hopes, therefore, that the word will be passed along the line so that the Joint Iowa and Nebraska meeting will see the postmasters of the two states here in goodly numbers to transact business and fraternize with one another. . MR. COMRLrOVS TROUBLES. Mr. Cortelyou, secretary of the treasury, has troubles and is really becoming pessimistic. His pessimism, however, is of an entirely different brand from that which has been both ering some of the Wall street specula tors and captains of finance and indus try. Mr. Cortelyou's trouble Is due to'lh tact that the, revenues, ot the government are so largely in excess ot the disbursements that he does not know what to do with the surplus. It has been a settled policy, under repub lican administrations, tor secretaries of the treasury to keep as much monoy as possible in circulation, to meet the legitimate demands of trade and In dustry and to prevent It piling up iu the vaults ot the Treasury department. Just now Secretary Cortelyou has an available cash balance of 1269,452, 1 17-4 6, according to balance sheets on the last of May, and haa, as n added annoyance, a little matter of $70,089, Hi as the surplus of receipts over federal expenditures for eleven months ot the fleral year. Ordinarily, when one person has a surplus some other fellow U short and agerly anxious to get a portion of It In federal transactions, when the gov ernment dim overs that it has more money on hand that Its business needs, the national banks aro ready to take It and Use it in their business. At tfcio. tl"a thu hanka 4r not nrd tha money. The 6,4 2 9 national banks of the country, under the call of the comptroller of the treasury on May 20, reported total resource of 18,476, 601,434, a gain of more than $7,000, 000 In less than a year. They showed that individual deposits In national banks had Increased from $4,055,873, 366 in May, 1906, to $4,22.8S0,141 In May, 1907, a gain of about $200, 000.000. Tbe government had $80, 000,000 on deposit In the national banks a year ago. Today It has $170, 000. 000. Unofficial advices Indicate ftiat the deposits In the state and sav ings banks have increased even more rapidly than those in the national banks and the country Is not caring a bit about Mr. Cortelyou's worry over what he Khali do with his money. To add to Mr. Cortelyou's trouble, other departments of the government are turning liabilities into assets and handing him money instead of asking him to make up deficits. Th6 Post office department, which usually runs from $10,000,000 to $20,000,000 be hind each year, promises to break even this year and may show a profit. The customs receipts have increased to about $1,000,000 a day and the re ceipts from internal revenue for the year ending June 30, 1907, are esti mated at $265,000,000, an increase of $15,000,000 over last year. The sit uation Is very gratifying to everyone except Secretary Cortelyou. wfgRE does tub gold oof Eastern bankers and financial or gans are expressing considerable con corn over the increasing exports of gold, which have reached $10,000,000 since the movement started the last week In May and which, it Is esti mated, will amount to at least $2 5, 000,000 by the end of June. These financial experts contend that the bank reserves can not face such a drain con veniently and that a deficit of $3,000, 000 in the gold reserve fund may be looked for at the end of the month. This condition Is not assuring, In view of the fact that the comptroller of the currency Is already complaining that many banks in the east are not com plying with the law in maintaining thtelr lawful money reserves. While this condition will probably right itself, discussion of it haa started an interesting question as to what be comes of the vast amount of gold an ually produced from the mines of the world. Of the new gold produced in the last ten years, a surprisingly large amount of It can not be located. The New York Journal ot Commerce has compiled the following tables giving the world's gold production since 1896 together with the gold holdings of the government treasuries and banks of the leading countries including the national banks of the United States: Gold production. Held by banka. 1807 1238,810.000 ' $2,lt7.B45,Ono Xm 2S7.430.000 l,2St,515,000 1199 806.725,000 1,360,540,000 1900 , 254.675.000-- -t458.S50.0OO 1901 2T0,90,000 ' 2,45,44O,0UO 1901 296.740,000 t841.645.000 1903 326,90.00t t930,665.000 1904 346.890.000 1,288,106.000 19H6 SSI, 250,000 1.460.260.000 1909 400,000,000 1,600,000,000 According to these figures, the banks and government treasuries hold less than one-half of the $3,000,000, 000 of new gold added to tha world's supply In the last ten years. Director of the Mint Roberts estimates that gold to the value of $80,000,000 Is annually consumed In the arts, while It was less than $60,000,000 ten years ago. Allowing, however, for the maximum figures for the whole de cade, that would account for but $800,000,000 ot a missing sum of about $1,700,000,000. It Is contended that the people ot the oriental coun tries are much given to the hoarding of precious metals and that this may account for much of the new gold ap parently disappeared from the visible tupply. But the growth of the ori ental countries In material prosperity is not marked enough to warrant the belief that they have absorbed and se creted such a large proportion of the gold supply. It Is tar more probable that the gold used In the arts Is un derestimated. Our unprecedented In dustrial prosperity .in recent yeara must rave added largely to such con sumption ot metal. At any rate, a dlf ferenco of about $900,000,000 exists between the visible supply of gold and the amount actually produced, and the great financial centers are now In active ompetition for all the gold available to add to their present stores. The officers of the street railway company and the management ot St. Joseph's hospital ought to try to get together before locking horns over the proposed erection of a street car gar age under the shadow ot the hospital buildings. There Is no question but that the selection of this particular location by tbe street railway company must be more or less disturbing to the hospital. A way ought to be found by which this beneficent institution may be safeguarded without unduly Interfering with the right of the street railway company to store its cars at the most convenient points. The Omaha Grain exchange an nounces that It will be equipped with all the latest Improvements and me chanical facilities for doing business when It moves Into its new quarters. Presumably this will include a her barium for breeding little green bugs, cutworms and all the other Inciden tals that have been found useful In raising corn and wheat on the Board of Trade. If the Nebraska law providing for a state license for automobiles de prives the cities and towns of power previously possessed to exact an ad ditioatal license fee for the n:e of paved streets and roadways It will knock quite a chunk of revenue out of the local treasuries. But if the automobillsts arejhus to escape pay ing a special license fee for the cities they ought to have their machines as sessed up to the limit tor taxes on the general property list, because In this way only will the municipal authori ties be able to make them pay for the special privileges enjoyed within city limits. Editor Noyes of the Washington Star says President Roosevelt owes much to the American newspapers. The obligation would appear to be mutual. No living man has equalled the presi dent's record in furnishing good, read able copy for the press. The dime museums are after a Cali fornia miner who was carried 2.000 feet on a landslide and escaped In Jury. That's nothing. Colonel Bryan was burled twice by landslides and came out of them healthier and wealthier than ever. The fact that the Omaha High school is this year sending out the largest class in its history must lend encouragement to those who are en listed in the movement to make Omaha show up 200,000 population In the 1910 census. The campaign for better street pavements is not confined to Omaha. It Is being waged in nearly every con siderable city In the country. That however, is all the more reason why Omaha should not be the last In the race. Whether monopolies are good or bad, it Is a safe proposition that so long as the public schools form the groundwork for universal education In this country no one will ever get a monopoly on brains and Intelligence.' President Cabrera of Guatemala hastens to assure the world that the report that he had been assassinated belongs in the same class with the re port that Tom Piatt has resigned from the United States senate. One unfortunate feature of the pres ident's criticism ot "nature fakirs" is that a lot ot cheap writers are getting advertising from it that they do not merit. There Aro Oothera. Washing-ton Herald. One of the probable senators-to-be from Oklahoma la blind. He will not be the only member, however, that haa eyes but sees not Not Fltttnc Abode. Indianapolis News. Joaquin Miller says Jocularly that his mining- ventures have been so successful that he has concluded to enter politics. He picks Oregon, and wants to be a United' States senator. Peirastis stabled In the sen ate chamber would be. In a box stall.' , Somethlaa; 1W111 Drop. Chicago Record-Herald. Japan Is likely to become possessed of the belief pretty soon that the rest of th Brest nations have - no present Intention of permitting her to go outside of her own present borders for the purpose of being the most progressive country on earth. Paaa tt tp to Dooley. Now York Sun. It Is gratifying to bo , assured by Mr. Thomas O. Walker, representing1 the Japanese Association of America, that the outrage on a Japanese horticulturist at Berkeley haa turned out to be a fusillade of stones by small boys. It seams to be a case for Mr. Dooley and not for the state department. GEORGE) W. LINIXGRIt. Howells Journal: George W. Uninger, one of the truly' good and great men of Nebraska, died at his home lh Omaha last Saturday. He not alone knew how to make money, but he knew how to spend It for the benefit of its fellowmen. The latter accomplishment very few possess. York limes: Omaha and Nebraska loat cne Of their best citizens tha other day In the death of George W. Unlnger. He waa progressiva, benevolent and publlo spirited, and refined and gentle In taste and dis position. ' His modest residence was by far tha most elegant art gallery in the west and one of the very finest In the country. Mr. Llnlnger will be greatly missed by the better element of Omaha, who regarded him as a benefactor and friend. Kearney Hub: Another of Nebraska's pioneer rich men, George W. Llnlnger of Omaha, whose death waa announced a few days ago, was one of the strong coterie of men who helped to make the Nebraska of today, who lived a useful and honorable life and made the world a great deal bet ter and many people happier for having lived In it. Upon a monument reared to Nebraska pioneers who strove manfully and successfully and finished gloriously, the name of George W. Llnlnger, like Abou Ben Adhlm, would lead all the rest. Norfolk Press: In the death of G. W. Llnlnger Omaha loses one of ber best friends and most enterprising and publlo splrlted cltlsens. No man In Nebraska has given more of his means to benefit and uplift tha community in which he lived or took more pleasure In tha giving. To him the value of a dollar was In the good to which It could be put, and he did ao much In an unostentatious way that It will only be In the years that are to come that Omaha people will fully appreciate the Value of his cltlsenshlp. His death Is not only a loss to Oinaha, but to Nebraska as Well. Fremont Tribune: Goo. W. Llnlnger of Omaha Is dead. Mr. Llnlnger was a suc cessful business man: so successful that he could afford to travel extensively and buy works of art with a lavish expendi ture. Nevertheless Mr. Llnlnger was not generally known as a successful business man. He so subordinated money-gelling to money-spending that he had real fame aa a collector and connoisseur of art. His gallery In his Omaha home Is one of the sights of the city and he always kept It open to those who wished to see it and enjoy it with him. He possessed the ar tistic spirit and he indulged it as a life passion. His career la nnedd to teach that money is a blessing only as It min isters to something that cultivstes, en nobles and uplifts. These are ths things heeded and If money will not Insure them, then money a eurae beyond what la needed to provide sustenance: There are not many devotee of art in this new, de veloping West and when one appears and lays down hlijvork It Is worth while, to give paune t ay at leat a brief tribute to UU worthy career TfllB DOWNFALL Or ICHMITI. Fletore-aojao Career of San Frearlwo'a Convicted Mayor. Eugene E. Schmlts, the fiddler mayor Of Snn Francisco, who was tried and con victed of extorting money from licensed restaurants, occupies a unique distinction In the municipal history of the Golden Gate. He Is the first labor union mayor fun Francisco has ever had. Ho la tha first mayor of the city that has ever been Indicted and convicted of malfeasance In office. Tha career of Schmlts haa been a spec tacular one, and many elements of the hliarre in the record of his office holding have served to raise him beyond a purely local fsmo. Since April 18 last there are men all over the country who have heard of the work that Schmlts did In the dnrk days after the fire and who hope that the one who proved himself such a big man in disaster Is not srxillty of robbing the city thst he worked so hard to save from anarchy. Schmlts was born In San Francisco of German parents. His father had come across the plains In the early days to find a fortune. He did not find It. Instead he became the father of a large family of boys and was hard put to It to give them a Common school education. Gene Schmlts, as he IS affectionately called by his parti sans and patronage beneficiaries In San Francisco, set himself to become a doctor. Ill health forced him to give that up, and he followed a bent for music. When In the fall of 1901 Schmlts became a local figure In politics by appearing as the candidate for maor of the city on the newly born labor untdn ticket he was first violin and leader of an orchestra In the Columbia theater. He was not a good musician, but he was a good union labor man. The theater orchestra leader rode Into power on the froth of one of the most bitter fights between union labor and Its employers that San Francisco had ever experienced. Once established at tha city hall Schmlts began to surprise people by tho sanity and sagacity of his rule. He gave many union labor ,men good Jobs, but ho did nothing radical or subversive. He waa Srood to his brothers, among others. One of them became a member of the city's electrical department, and another was later put on the city almshouse board. The new mayor had not been long In office when the name of Abe Ruef began to be whispered about, and the hand of 'Abe Ruef was occasionally seen for a fleeting Instant behind the mayor's chair. Ruef was a lawyer who had the wisdom never to run fpr municipal office. He had the reputation of being a shady lawyer people said he could pull off a trick In the courts that no other man could. He was credited with making lots of money through the handling of other people's estates. Before Schmlts had been long In office the wise ones around the city hall learned that it was not Gene who was mayor, but Abe and Gene: and Abe's name was always spoken first. Abe set out to . establish a Schmlts machine which could be strong enough to Insure his re-election to office. All of the officeholders who owed their Jobs to Schmlts, from tho president of the Board of Education down to the tender of the municipal ducks In Golden Gate park. were herded together Into the 8chmtts club. Membership waa practically com pulsory. Membership entailed aa Its sole duty boosting for Schmlts. Ruef, It was learned later, was retained as the perma nent attorney of the Schmlts club at $21,000 si year. It was never said why tha club needed an attorney, but Abe persuaded ths organisation that it did. At the expiration of his first term Schmlts was re-elected. Then scandals began to be unearthed In the offices filled by Schmlts. One of the San Francisco papers mad a great pother about ths theft of a black colt from the city flro department by a Schmlts appointee on the Board of Flro Commissioners. This farce was quickly followed by the discovery of greater Irregularities. Police graft In Chinatown gambling dens waa found to be flourishing, but the police com missioners whitewashed tho chief of police. The Board of Election Commissioners was found to be thoroughly rotten and to be winking at Irregular work at the primaries. A scandal arose In the fire department be cause of the peddling of questions for an examination tor firemen by one of the fire commissioner. 1 Through all the storm of Investigation and denunciation Schmlts rode securely. While many were free to say that the Schmlts administration had become rotten, there was no proof of Schmlts himself being corruptible until after he was elected again In November, 1905. Though the republicans and democrats had combined to form a fusion party and had put forth their most strenuous efforts to beat Schmlts. the Schmlts machine I served to overwhelm the fuslonlsts. The fiddler mayor won by a big majority. "The city 1s under the red flag; every thing Is up for auction." was the cry that waa raised when Schmlts and his boss again found themselves nailed down tight In office. The figure seemed to And Justi fication In facta, j Over all the tenderloin there sprang up i protected cafes, where the closing hour j was never heeded and where tho side en , trance for "ladles" was nailed up as super t fluoua. A wldo open town was the order. ) Wide open meant that tho police could I not hear tho songs and shouts of women j that mada Turk and Eddy street a bedlam j in the small hours of the morning; that they could not see the lights streaming through the windows of the three-room suites piled high over Innocent French res taurants on the ground floor. The red flag hung over every 10-rent theater that wanted to get a permit from tha Board of Publlo Works for remodelling and that hired Ruef as Its attorney to se cure tha coveted right. Prtxa fight man agers who wanted to-pull off exhibitions contrary to the law worked under the red flag. It was the symbol of the red flag that floated over the "municipal crib" on Jackson street before the fire and defied the securing of an Injunction from tho courts. Tho flro came when San Francisco was in the height of her folly. "You can get 'everything In 'Frisco you find In Paris and I get It cheaper," was the comment of one ' sporting character which was used as tho j subject of a sermon by one of the preach i rrs and which Inspired a new editorial at ' taok on the part of one of the papers. The town had run mad with license. Then came April 18. In the first hours after the earthquake, when the red tide of flame had commenced to eat into the vitals of the city, the mayor sent out auto mobiles to all porta of the city bearing message to the most prominent ult!x.ns. "Will you serve on an emergency committee fr the prrsrrvatlon of law and orlerT" the messages read. The basement of the par tially ruined hall of Justice was named as the meeting place for tho committee. It was in the selection of the men to com pose this emergency board that Mayor Schmlts flist showed thst the Imminence f anar hy as a result of the appalling dis aster had Jarred him out of hla rut Into 8 Be en your (usrd aralnst substitution. Therssremany so-called "wtteh-ritel'' sosps, artificially colored green, of fered sa " kiat as good." 8 Pond's Extract Soap Is ruar srrteed tinder Pure Foods and Drugs Act. Jane 30, 1906 a pure as Its cream-white color Indicates. Tho name appears on cake and conarinaf. Atk your drurrlst. ARMOUR Maken ei Fhts Teflel Soasa. tho measure of a man. He asked more of his political enemies than ot his close friends to serve. Men of Influence who had been the chief proteatants against the reign of graft that had flourished under his terms of office largely dominated the emergency committee of fifty. In the three days of the fire and through the dreary days of threatening starvation and Impending epidemto that followed Mayor SchmlU acted tho man. He was the backbone of the committee of fifty. He was chief In the direction of succor, the prime mover In the restoration of the machinery of police regulation, loader In the councils for the rehabilitation of the smoking ruins! Schmlts and tho men on his committee worked In harmony. , The mayor's real, triumph came a few months after the fire when at a banquet of congratulation given by the business men of the city In a temporary structure In Union Square he made a speech whloh seemed to be a declaration ot Independence from the thraldom of Ruef and the gang. "History begins for us with April 18," said Schmlts. But after the spirit of Utopia had passed all too quickly and Ban Francisco dropped back Into the hard and selfish rules of cut throat existence Schmlts found that he Could not put ths history of the days be fore April 18 behind him. The strong men of the weary days after tho fire watched him slip back Into tho grip of tho "curly boss," even as thoy themselves slipped back to the, normal, of "good business." The papers which had ao . Joyfully pro claimed Schmlts' emancipation from Ruef began to hammer harder than ever at the graftsmlths.' Abe arid "Gene. 1 Eugene Schmlts, the fiddler mayor who was 'Jarred out ot bed by opportunity on the morning- of April 18 and who for a time found himself a man at the forefront of opto events, had not the strength to saddle opportunity firmly. .In twelve shcrt months he has slipped from his pedestal to the bar of Justice. .... PERSONAL NOTES. A famine Is approaching In Cuban cigars. Fortunately we are able to produce "some thing equally as good" In this country. American ,. horses at the London show have accomplished nothing, unless to prove that Americans can be good losers. Secretary Root will leave Washington on June 21, for his country home near Utlca, where he will spend tha summer, remaining probably, until the date of his Mexican trip. t Time expended in sociological research is not always wasted. Chicago experts have differentiated the hobo, the tramp and the bum, whom common Ignorance hod re garded as a single entity with several titles. Tha effort to purchase the John How ard Paine "Homo, Sweet Home,1' cottage at Easthumpton, L. I., has failed and It Is likely to be removed to a new site and completely remodelel for a dwelling house. Cltlsens of New Berlin! O., are devising ways and means to raise money to erect In that village a monument to the mem ory of the late Presldent"McK!nley. The monument will stand In the public square The MEWPH Wicli Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove The different Oil Stove The improved Oil Stove Gives best results. Reduces fuel ex- ru-rise. A vorkinfl1 match. "Blue Flame" means the hottest flame produced by any stove. The New Perfection will make your work lighter. Will not over heat the kitchen. Made in three sizes, with one, two, and three burners. Every stove war ranted. If not at your dealer's, write to our nearest agency. JSaj Lamp gives a clear, steady Kzht. Fitted with latest improved burner. Made of brass throughout and beautifully nickeled. Every Ump warranted. Suitablefor library, dining-room, parlor or bedroom. If not at your dealer's, write to our nearest agency. TAROAftO OIL COMPANY UnoorporateO " "W " W!!'!' " H-H!H.IM!W1I7" iSl ! Pond's Extract Soap is Antiseptic C Keep tha skin pure, wholesome and proof against harm by using Pond's Extract Soap dairy for toilet and bath. C, The Best and Purest complexion soap, plus genuine Pond's Extract. G, Pond's Extract Soap has rare anti septic properties that make It a recog nized aid In the prevention of skin affactions. C It kills the germs of Rashes and Humors. C Physicians prescribe Pond's Extract Soap for reducing Inflammation, and for cooling, cleansing and healing Irri tated or infected surfaces. G, Use Pond's Extract Soap always In nursery, boudoir, sick-room. & COMPANY Sols Uceasees froai fooa'i Eitrict Co. where, as young tnan, McKlnley de livered his first political speech on tho evening Of September J,' 18S7. The woman physician Of Iowa 'who broke up an engagement with an under taker by sending him a bill for profes sional services rendered while he was ill has destroyed the possibilities for a splen did joint business arrangement. Frank W. Berkshire of New York haa been ordered to El Paso, Tex., as . Immigra tion commissioner for the Mexican border with instruction to keep out undesirables. This raises dhe El Paso post to the same rank as New York In immigration matters. The large Influx of Japanese, Chinese and undesirable aliens of all claoses from Mexico led to the step. PASSIXG PLEASANTRIES. "My husbnnd," said the doctor's wife, "Is a bad pill." "Mine," said the lawyer's bride, protidly, "is a bad bar gain." Baltimore American. "Hello!" exclaimed the first traveling man. "still In your old line, I suppose!" "No." replied the other, . "No? What are you In now?" , "Hard luck." Philadelphia Press. "Have you seen the latest thing?" asked his friend, who came along after he had been standing forty-five minutes on a sub way platform. "Yes," he said: "I'm waiting for It now. I'm married to It." Judge. "Does your son 'commence' this month, Mr. Smithcrs?" "No, he fa'led. He'll have to commence over again next fall." Cleveland Plain dealer. . "It la a very peculiar avummor."-,- "Yes, answered the man whose' mind' la always on figures. "It Is the first sum- -mer I can recall when the Beef trust was putting up prices Instead ot the Ice trust." Washington Star. "Is Sue Brette married yet?" asked tho returned traveler. "Of course," replied the native; "give her a little time, will you?" "Eh? What are you talking about?" "Why, the wedding only took placa six weeks ago." Philadelphia Press. THE MAN WHO WINS. Success Magaslne. The man who wins Is the man who does. The man who makes things hum aatd buss. The man who works and the man who acts, Who builds on a basis of solid facts; Who doesn't sit down to mope and dream. Who humps ahead with the force of steam, Who hasn't tho time to fuss and fret, ' But gets there every time you bet. The man who wins ' Is the man whs wears A smile to cover his burden of cares; Who knows that the sun will shine again. That tho clouds will pass, and we need the rain. Who buckles down to a pile of work And never gives up and never will shirk 'Till the task Is done, and tha toll Is . sweet. While the temples throb with red blood's heat. Tho man who' wins Is the men who climbs The ladder of life to the cheery chimes Of'tho bells of labor, the bells of toll. And Isn't afraid that his skin will spoil. If he face that shine of the glaring sun And works In the Itght till hla task 18 done; A human engine with triple beam And a hundred and fifty pounds ot stear lost