THE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY. JULY 16. 190$. fin: Omaha Daily Bli FOL'NT'ED HT HOWARD ROBEWATKR. VICTOn ROSEWATER. FDITOR. Entered at Omaha postofflce second class matter. TERMS OF SPBSCRIPTION: IT'ally Bra (without Sunday), one fr..t4. Oally Be ind Sunday, on year 00 DELIVERED BY CARRIER: I'ally (Including Sunday), per week. ,15c Dally bee (without Sunday), per wex..loc Evening Bee (without "undayl, rr week e Evening baa (with Sunday), per week 10c Sunday Dee, una year M Batorday Be. on year 60 Addreaa all complaint! of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Department OFFICES. Omaha The Ftee rtulldlng. South OmahaCity Hall Building. Council Bluff a IS Scott Street. Chicago 1:.4 Marquette Building. New York-Room 1101-1102, No. 84 West Thirty-third Street. Washington 726 Fourteenth Street N. w. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication! relating to news and edi torial matter ihould be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postsi order payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment of mall account!. Personal checke, except on Omaha or eaitern exchangee, not accepted. STATEMENT OF CTttCUUATlON: State of Nebraska, Douglas County, a.: Oeorge B. Tsachuck, treasurer of The Bee Publishing company, being duly aworn, aaya that the actual number of full and complete coplea of The Dally. Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of June, ism. wai aa follows: 1 3530 15 38,490 86,740 IS 38,490 3 88,080 17 38,930 4 35,800 18 39,110 85,700 19 38,400 0, 35,880 30 35,890 T ,...35.900 81 85,750 8 35,950 83 38,480 35,910 S3 38,099 10 80,970 84 38,340 11 38,380 85 38,800 13 30,030 88 38,070 13 35490 88 35430 14 88,050 89 38,500 15 39,080 30 3380 Total! 1489,090 Ltii uniold and returned copies. . 9,877 Nat total 1479413 Dalley average 35,977 QEOROES B. TZSCHUCK, Treaaurer. Subscribed tn my presence and aworn to before ma thla let day of July, 19. M. P. WALKER. Notary Public WHEN OCT or TOWH, Subscribers leaTla the city tm pnrarlly aaoala have Tae Be mailed t them. Adarcss will be eaanaied aa aftea aa raeaia. Naturally, the prohibition platform carries water oa both shoulders. "Denver has been making history says tho Denver Post. And money. Denver tackled too big a contract when it tried to howl Hobson down. I Castro Is getting to tho point where he will soon be on friendly terms with none but himself. Mr. Bryan has put publicity Into his platform. Mr. Taft has arranged to put It Into practice. I ; None of Mr. Hearst's managers has yet called at Fairvijw to congratulate the democratic candidate. The Geographical society has located a new volcano In Oregon. There la one In Oklahoma, too, named Haskell. The colored voters will notice that there was no protest In the democratic platform over the Brownsville Incident. Anyway, Mr. Taft .and Mr. Bryan will be able to have th dandelions In their front lawns properly extermi nated. A man named Hazard has been nom inated on the democratic ticket in Illi nois. Hazard Is tho man to take big chances. Senator Piatt celebrated his seventy fifth -birthday by having "Three Weeks" read to him. He seems deter mined not to resign anything. Secretary Wilson estimates the com ing corn crop at 2,700,000,000 bush els. The Peoria class In arithmetic can reduce that to pints, quarts and tarrels. Ia addition to having been twice defeated as a candidate for governor of Indiana, it Is charged that John Worth Kem was onca city attorney of KokOmo. "The republican party will be rid of Mr. Roosevelt in a few months. When will ths democratic party be rid of Mr. Bryan?" asks th New York Sun. In few months. Returning democrat are asserting thst they lost a pound a day in Den ver. Most of them lost aeveral pounds a day, with extra shillings and pence on the side. "This is a democratic year," said Permanent Chairman Clayton at Den rer, and at the same time the govern ment reported the crop projects bet ter than the ten-year average. Omaha has gotten along finely for nearly forty years with the High school at the present location and the pros pect are good that it will get along nicely with one central high school for a few more years. Just to show that he Is not over particular uor unduly proud, W. E, Corey of the steel corporation gave 3 dinner In Parla at which he enter tained a duke, two counts, three princes and a miscellaneous assort ment ef titled personages. By the way, the law of Nebraska re tjulree every candidate lor office to file a public statement of all the moneys expended in procuring his nomination, Mr. Bryan la a resident of Nebraska and baa Just 9 esq, nominated for the presidential effloe . Havre la a eaaoc lor him to make another gallery play. OALLKRY PLAY rVnLHITf A most casual examination of .trip resolution for campaign fund publldty adopted by the democratic national jcommlttea at the request of the candi dates on their presidential ticket will show that It is a gallery play pure and simple. After the republicans had named a treasurer subject to the publicity laws of New York for the express purpose of having that law govern the receipt and expenditure of campnlgr moneys, there was nothing left for the democrats but to follow suit with some sort of effort to make good their professions of su perior virtue. But the proclamation made by the democrats is such a trans parent fraud with such big skimmer holes left for evasion that it is not likely to fool anybody with ordinary Intelligence. No contributions are to be accepted whatever from corporations. Of course not. But they will be accepted from men who are officers of corporations or who get their money from corporate sources, or who serve as substitutes for the corporation men. With men like "Boss" Murphy, Roger Sullivan and others publicly denounced by Mr. Bryan as corporation tools helping to gather the funds and to direct their ex penditure, the corporation odor Is not to be disinfected by resolution. No single contribution is to be re ceived over $10,000, nor over $100 without public listing, but contribu tions of less than $100 are to be kept strictly confidential. If a man wants t6 ante up $15,000 ho will have to put In his chips In two stacks. If a man wants his name posted as a self-sacrificing democratic patron he will give at least $100, whereas If he wants to "keep It dark" he will make his dona tion $99.99, or he may make any num ber of donations he may desire, pro viding none of them exceed $99.99. Publicity Is necessary to insure the pure motives of the man who gives $100, but entirely unnecessary to ex pose the corrupt motives of the man who gives only $99,99. Again, the list of contributions sub ject to publicity Is to be set out to pub lic light October 15 and subsequent contributions Immediately as received thereafter. But why wait until Octo ber 15 two weeks before election? If there Is any good reason for pub licity then, why not now? If the con tributions to the democratic campaign fund were to be Juggled or misbranded which, of course, Is not to be im agined what relief could be had or remedy applied fifteen days before election? The Bryanlte plan of publicity is a good gallery play, but it will not stand publicity. "THE EKEMY'S COUNTRY." In an apparently studied effort to convey the Impression to the outside world that the entire sentiment of Mr. Bryan's fellow townsmen has un dergone a change toward him since 1896 and 1900, democratic news pur veyors make gut that Mr. Bryan will be notified at home of his nomination for the presidency this time, because the political hostility of his neighbors has sufficiently subsided to allow the ceremonies to be held In Lincoln with out danger of an outbreak of some kind. The Lincoln correspondent of the democratic World-Herald, writing in this vein, says: To Lincoln especially and to the stat! at large In general the declalon to have the official notification take place at Fftlr vlew is of tremendous Importance. It will bring here crowds -which probably no other event In the history of the c ty has ever done. Twice before thla Mr. Bryan has had to leave his home and his home city to be notified elsewhere. This was mada neceasary by the hostility of too great a proportion of his neighbor!. Tcday theso same folk are overjoyed that from the doorstep of his own house he may fire the first formal gun of the campaign of 19. Mr. Bryan has long been recognized aa a reputable citizen of Lincoln and this premeditated insult to the intelli gence of the residents of the state capital can not be excused by a mere deBlre to manufacture political capital. Mr. Bryan himself has furnished writ ten and oral evidence in refutation of the flimsy misrepresentation of his newspaper organ. When he was nom inated In Denver last week the first to congratulate him were hundreds of his neighbors and fellow townsmen. In response to their greetings Mr. Bryan spoke feelingly of the friendship of his neighbors and the good people of Lin coln, who, regardless of political dif ferences, had always been lavish with their expressions of good will to him personally and to his family. The conditions that exist now in Lincoln Indicate no revolution of senti ment. In 1896, when Mr. Bryan was for the first time a candidate, he could Just as well have been notified at home, but chose to go elsewhere for different reasons. In "The First Bat tle," Mr. Bryan's own story of that campaign, he Includes this speech, made to a throng of neighbors who marched to the train to spued him on his way to New York, where he was to receive notice of his nomination: In ordinary vmiea I would have, desired to have the notification take place ut my home. But this is not an ordinary cam paign, and. feeling that the principles in which we are interested should rls abov any perianal preferences which we nil) have, I expressed the desire to be notified In New York. In order that our isuie may be preaented f rit In the heart of what now seems to la the enemy's country, hut which we hope to la our country 1 efore this campaign la over. I appreciate the kind neaa which you, our neighbors, have shown In gathering here to bid ua good bye. All that I can promise you la tht, whether what I shall do mreta your approval or not, i shall do my duty as I see it and accept all cajieyjeocta which may fgllow. Mr. Bryan went to Indianapolis to accept the notification In 1900 and he went not because of hostility at home, but because of his own preference. Jest as he west to New York la 1196. In his two former campaigns he went from home to receive the notification becaus he thought his political chances would b bettered by so doing. He elects to receive the nomination at home this time because he doubtless feels that the home field needs cul tivating. It is unfair to him and to his neighbors to attempt to place any other construction upon his course. A IfAXtiSVMt! OFT. The offer and acceptance by the city of Omaha from the widow of the late Levi Carter of $50,000 to pay for the acquisition of a public park around the old Cut-Off lake makes a hand some gift which should be gratefully appreciated by the people of this city. Gifts of this kind are often burdened with conditions that make It questiona ble whether they are real benefactions, but in this case the conditions seem to be few and wholly reasonable. The proposed park is a natural and necessary part of the park and boule vard system of Omaha and would have to be acquired at public expense even tually to round out that system. In fact proceedings are already well un der way to acquire the property, having been Instituted with no Idea but that the bill would have to be paid In the usual way. The requirement that the Park board for a period of five years expend upon Its Improvement one-fifth of the funds available for park Improvement pur poses simply puts the new park on the same basis as the other established parka, assuring it substantially ' the same attention for development as may be devoted to parks In other sections of tho city. The final condition, that the new park be named after the late husband of the benefactor, for whom It is In tended as a memorial, Is entirely ap propriate. Even without that condi tion In the gift It would be only decent recognition of the source of the bene faction to Inscribe over Its entrance the name of the man without whose work and thrift the donation could not have been made. The people of Omaha, now and In the future, who may enjoy the beau ties and opportunities of the Levi Car ter park should not forget the noble purposes and the generosity of the Im mediate donor, Mrs. SellnaC. Carter, whose name is thus enrolled on the scroll of our public benefactors. CENTRAL AMERICA'S TROCBIKS. Those who tumultuously acclaimed the conclusion of the recent treaties among the Central American states as Instantly eliminating all trouble or possibility of trouble from their future history do not understand the Spanish American character. Revolutions are apparently Indigenous in that section of the world and rejoicings over the treaties and the donation by Mr. Car negie of $100,000 for the construction of a Central American court of Justice to adjudicate differences between the toy republics have been suspended while Salvador and Guatemala Indulge In one of their regular mid-summer revolutions and make a determined ef fort to Involve their neighbors In the row. Costa Rica, Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua have Joined In the agreement, suggested and nego tiated by Secretary Root, by which they seek to place law on a higher plane than It has heretofore occupied In Central America. They have the tame climate, language and resources and have begun to realize that they must have a common destiny. Their progress has been hindered by revolu tions and by wars against each other and the leading men In all five of the little nations are professedly anxious to Join in a federation for the common good, but find it difficult to break away from old habits. Honduras has a little outbreak of Its own, with a fine chance that Salvador will Join In the mix-up. The president of Guate mala narrowly escaped assassination through a revolutionary plot, and re taliated by putting to death some thirty of his enemies. Costa Rica and Nicaragua have kept free from the iatest outbreaks, but the whole neck of land connecting the two hemispheres Is seething with the revolutionary spirit. The right of Intervention by the United States is partially provided for In the recent treaties and, If ordered, would be fully warranted by our Inter ests at Panama and throughout the Central American section. With the opening of the Panama canal, and dur Ing Its construction, the United States cannot connive in any disturbance that would Jeopardize American interests. For some years Uncle Sam has been looked upon as the policeman for South America and with the develop ment of American Interests In Central America the policeman will have en larged duties to perform. When he U asking for money under cover Secretary Gruenther finds the outlook for Bryan In Nebraska "dis tressing and discouraging." When he Is boosting his favorite candidate in the open everything In Nebraska la roseate and promising. Put It down that the noisy Nebraska democrats are simply whistling to keep up their courage. In connection with the $50,000 gift for the purchase of the Levi Carter park let it be remembered that credit for the tdea belongs to the chairman of our Park board, the Hon. E. J. Cor nish of Omaha, who has given his val uable and efficient services freely to tho city for so msny years In that ca pacity. Congressman Norrls membership In Iks Interparliamentary union may re quire bis attendance) upon t gaaalons In Berlin In September. This call comes at a rather awkward time, con sidering the fact thst Judge Norrla Is seeking a re-election, but the people) of the Fifth district may be depended on to care for his Interests for him wlien public duty takes him awsy. A little matter of $2,500 a month accumulating Interest on unpaid bills for hydrant rental Is nothing to the Water board or its attorneys so long as their salaries and retainers are paid. The money for the Interest, costs, law yers' fee and Water board salaries all comes out of the taxpayers' pockets. Both Mr. Bryan and the democratic national committee seem to have for gotten to call on Brother-ln-Law Tom" or Mayor Jim to make the eworn public accounting for the Wall street boodle which they got In 1904. sb required by the csmpalgn publicity law or Nebraska. Mr. Bryan has paved the way for the embarrassment of his campaign managers by limiting the amount any one person may give to $10,000. Many democrats, particularly after the fourth drink time, will refuse to give anything at all If they cannot give more than $10,000. The list of benefactors of Omaha by gift or bequest is lengthening. It now Includes five names: Tho late An drew J. Hanscom, the late Byron Reed, the late Frank Murphy, the late Ed ward Rosewater and Mrs. Sellna C. Carter. There Is room for more. T. Fortune Ryan will not be allowed to give more than $10,000 to the dem ocratic campaign fund, but he may hand the other $10,000 to Mayor Jim or Brother-ln-Law "Tom" Allen. There's no law against that. Dun's report says that "Instances are noted of orders for fall goods plaoed too late for delivery at the specified time." Those Gray and Johnson presidential booms, for In stance. Governor Johnson's supporters are already planning for his nomination for the presidency In 1912. The gov ernor may discover as much danger In starting too early as in starting too late. Rear Oaard Infantry. Boston Tranacrlpt. The ancient meaning of Kem Is a foot soldier of the meanest class, ao we assume that Bryan Intends to keep the donkey entirely for his own use. Foallah Test of Langs. Pittsburg Dispatch. Eighty-seven minutes of yelling at Den ver would, make forty-aeven mlnutea of the same thing at Chicago look foolish except for one thing; that la that both luoked foolish from the start. A Misleading; Symbol. Brooklyn Eagle. The dead eagles suspended from the roof of the Denver convention hall must have been Intended to convey the lmprea alon that the republican ticket Is not in vincible. A dead donkey would have car ried a more plausible suggestion. Political Aeronautics. New York Sun. Mr. Bryan thinks ha can carry New York. "In fact," ha says, "you can't pffek out a state In which we do not have a chance." Hopeful, confident, cocksuro as ever. Al waya sura to win, and If he loses, try, try again. If Mr. Bryan can only live 200 years, as Mr. Wu'i recipe Insures, who knows that he may not win at last? Mean while It's no trouble for him to run. Winning Plank Overlooked. Baltimore American. What the democrats ought to do to win Is to put a summer cool wave In their plat form, making It obligatory on tho weathei bureau to provide such at short and regu lar Intervals during all hot seasons. As they are going to bring about the millen nium In about everything else, they cer tainly should not overlook ao Important an adjunct to the public peace and happiness as the weather. Why Disturb lb "boaters. Kansas City StRr. If Bryan carries every state he carried In 1MW, which Includes Kansas, Colorado, South Dakota, Washington, Nebraska, and a few others the democrats have no chance to carry thla year: and (f Taft falls to carry New York, Indiana and Illinois, which the republicans stand no chance to lose, then Bryan could win. It's a. long shot, of course, but why discourage the demo crat whose cheerful optlmlam will allow him to shout over the outlook? Pemltar Traits of Memory. Chattanooga Times. The Omaha Bee having observed thai "thera Is to be no peace for the southern colonel," the Atlanta Constitution forgets Itself long enough to retort: "Don't think it. A hammock swung beneath two shad) oaks; the mint growing gloriously green near by; spring water, cracked Ice, tw able attendants to fan him, and tin Julep winning out on the straw vote'.'' Either prohibition la a failure in Atlanta, or this editor has a beautiful and highlj cultivated memory. GHIDIRO.M.XO OMAHA fOl'STBY, Aitanrt otlce of Coming Develop ments In the Corn Belt. Chicago American. Mr. W. K. UcKeen is going to trollsyise Nebraska. His associate is K. H. Hani man. Electric lines are to penetrate all parts of that fertile alate. From Oman- rails will ha laid in every direction. l'or I to be had pro the Missouri river. "Riley" McKeen, the father of the young man, waa the first person to show Ives, the former Napoleon of Finance, that even u county court clerk had wisdom. McKeen wrested the Vandalla road from Ives when he had only a county clerk's salary to U It with. For a long while he van president of the ayatem. He owns now one of the finest farms In the world. Fairbanks beat .him for senator in 17 because McKeen slept too late one morning Terra Haute, the home of the UcKerns. Is one of the great centers of trolley lines. Springfield. 111., is another. The Illinois lines era controlled by Congressman Wil liam B. McKlnley. who. as a farmer' boy. bad to drive long mile to and from tit markets. Now, for I cents, he will whisk the boy with his basket of tggs to the nearest store and b-k to hi home for breakfast. Interurban roads in Illinois. Indiana and Ohio have revolutionised he farmer's life. Young McKeen has naen an of McKin ley'a atuaeuta. aad Nebraska may con gratulate ltstif tbat It i.ow possesses him. norwn about jtiew touk. Rlnnlea n tho Current of 1.1 fe la the Metropolis. When te wheels of Justice are properly oll-d In New York City the criminal courts can make a record for speed and toboggan a culprit to Sing Ping with as rmich celerity aa a Chicago divorce court, A burglar csua-ht In the act of robbing a bedroom occupied by a man and wlfa waa taken In indicted, pleaded rullty. and within ten hours wss on his way to the penitentiary to serve a term of forty years. The un ususl speed with which tha case against the burglnr was prosecuted was partly due to the fact that his victims had engaged passage on a steamship which sailed for Europe that afternoon. They appeared be fore the grand Jury and later In court to testify agalnt the prisoner. It was within thirty-five minutes of the sailing time of the'r steamer when they left the court room, but they rushed up town In an auto mobile and got on hoard. Talk about finding the proverbial needle in a haystack! Here's a story told In the Tribune by a New York Central official, Not long ago a woman paasenger on a fast express Just leaving the outskirts of Schenectady attempted to open a ear window. The window stuck for a moment half way up, as car windows will, and then crashed down on her fingers, knocking from Its setting a diamond valued at $500. The diamond went out of the window, of course. Luckily, the unfortunate passenger thought to pull out her watch and note the time at which the accident happened. Then she got busy with the telegraph line. At the first station at which the train stopped she telegraphed to the Grand Central sta tion, giving particulars of her loss and the exact time at which It occurred. With visions of a damage suit ahead, some quick wltted official rushed an order to Schenec tady, and a young engineer In the mainten ance of way department, accompanied by a oouple of section hands, was sent hurry Ing down the line on what he thought vai a craiy man's search; but six miles out of the Electrical City he found the diamond in the track ballast. "One happens upon architectural freaks here now and then." said a New York man quoted by the Sun, "which don't show for what they are from the outside of the build Ing. For Instance, a friend of mine. In hunting up a doctor who'd been recom mended to him, stumbled onto as complete a three-story dwelling as you ever saw which was built Into a largo and fashion able apartment house. It was nothing like your duplex apartments or anything one ever seen before. It was a single house In corporated as part of an apartment Inquiry developed the fact that the doctor had wanted a private house and had also craved all the conveniences of first class apartment house service, so when an ad ditlon to this desirable apartment was con templated the doctor and the architect got together and the single room within the large apartment building was the result, The doctor gets his separate entrance- on the street, his private hall and stairs lead ing to the upper floors of his house around which Is built the apartment house proper. Not one person In a thousand wrould ever notice anything a bit unusual about the portion of the building which constitutes this separate residence and yet It's there and fills the bill to perfection." Customers of a certain uptown florist pause frequently before a roped off en closure and ask the price of potted plants blooming there. Always the florist replies In the same words: "They are not tot sale." TJusually the customer passes on to other flowers without asking why, but now and then one more curious than the rest seeks enlightenment. To such the florlut tells an Interesting little story. "They have been left to me in trust," he says. "I'm simply those flowers' guardian They were formerly owned by a retired physician who lived almost entirely alone. These plants were his chief companions. He attended to them himself and, as a con sequence, he became very much attached to them. The thought of their being neg lected after his death grieved lilm. So ho made a will designed to save them from such a fate. He bequeathed the flowers to me and Invested a sum of money the In come from which will be sufficient to care for them for many years." That there will never be a great confla gration In New York City Is the first and most Important fact which fire Insurance men say the trial of the new auxiliary salt water systern haa developed. For many yeary the bogey of Insurance men and others has been dread of a great confla gration, but after the saltwater test It was claimed that the new system would be able to set up a high pressure battery against which no fire could live. Another thing foreshadowed by tha establishment of the new pumping stations Is the gradual disappearance of tho steam fire engine. This wil be heard with great regret, for where ia thera anything more picturesque than a fire engira on Its way to a fire with horses at full gallop? Fires fought without the aid of fire engines will be de prived of the chief element of romance and interest. The disadvantages of the engine are every day becoming more manifest. The delay In the fuel, the time loat In get ting up steam and other delays all were rauaea of tha spread of fires. The high water pressure mains are fed by salt water pumped directly from the river. Every hydrat-t haa a pressure up to 900 pounds, if desired. The tales often told of poor water presure at fires will now be a thing of the past. It seems certain. The new service protects the area between Chambers and Twenty-third streets on both sides of the river known as the downtown district On the day when the cars were with drawn from the Pulton street cross town line a merchant displayed a card In his window bearing these words: "Ooodbye, New York horsecars we shall not miss you." People who saw the sign might have thought that the Fulton street cars were the only onea of their kind. There are still fourteen horsecar lines In operation In the big city, namely, tha Went Side belt line, East Side belt line, Chambera street crosstown, Chambers and Urand streets crosstown, Bleecker street, Chambers street and Ave nue C, Deshroaees street and Sixth avenue, Grand and Desborses streets, Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets crosstown. Twenty eighth and Twenty-ninth streets crosstowns Avenue B line. Canal and Orand streets ferry line. One-hundred and Tenth street and St. Nicholas avenue and the West Eighty-sixth street line. The last named is the shortest, ex tending from Amsterdam avenue to River Side drive. Although the )lr's one car runs only six blocks when It makes a round trip, schedule time Is maintained. The car is In charge of a veteran who haa been in the Service thirty-five years, and wlitn a passenger comas aboard thla sometimes happens on rainy days he offers Broadwioy transfer when tha fara la paid. The megaphor. man on the sightseeing car says, when passing Eighty-sixth street: ''Here you see the shortest horsecar line In New York. Three blocks. The car makes furly-flve trips a dy." Tvrloa u i Hastle. Pittsburg Dispatch. Prosperity continues growing In harmony with the euro, and the corn ia dulcg wen-dara. MOULDED puddings of any kind blanc manges, jellies, custards, etc., will "stand up" more firmly and be more deliciously good and whole some if a little b added. Two of America's will tell yon In our book "OrfefatW Jfcap) awtaf CmoUnfi Matjsa' the unusual benefits to be derived from Klngaford's Oswego Corn Starch In the betterment of foods la scncrsL For qnality. always get Klnfsiord sixty -fix years of superiority. Grocer pound pkp. 10c T. KafCSFDRD ft SOU, C SWT GO, N. T. Ntireau. fTuca cswf urr. tucotnu PERSOJIAL KOTF.9. It Is not good form to call a balloon n gas bng. Moreover, this title should be reserved for some of the balloonlsts. Fnnor Obaldla has been elected president of Tanama, having received all the votes cast. Several gentlenun In this country would like to know the name of his cam paign manager. Dr. Slglsmund Tarrasch and Dr. Eman uel Lasker will meet to contest the chess championship of the world next month, the preaent date for the beginning of this momentous engagement being August 17 though this msy be changed. Milton Dwlght Purdy of Minneapolis, former Vnlted States attorney general, has been formally sworn in Saturday at Min neapolis as Judge of the T'nlted States dis trict court, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Judge William Lochren. Judge Purdy was appointed by President Roosevelt to fill the recess term. Dr. Aletta H. Jacobs, who was elected president of the Nstlonal Suffrage asso ciation of the Netherlands, is a woman of strong character, who has been very successful In everything that she has under taken. She was the first woman physician In her country, and 'n order to enter the medical university, had to get permission from her government. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia vinlveraity. New York, who Is to give a aeries of lecturea at the fnl- versitles of Copenhagen, Stockholm and Chrtstlfinla, haa been fairly overwhelmed w-lth attentions sinco his arrival la Paris on Thursday. When he visited the Palais Bourbon Friday, as the gu.est of Baron D'Estournellee de Constant, he received a veritable oration from the French Parlla. mentary arbitration group which went to tha United Stats last year. - VARIATIONS IX HUMAN TIDE. Outflow of Castle Garden Far Ex- reeds the Iaflon-. Indianapolis News. The "gatea of Castle Garden" have been swinging outward In recent months In a striking way. in 1X7 there were 733.7tf alien arrivals and 166.792 departures. In 190S the. half year there have been 186, 5S6 arrivals and 377,66 departures. Never before In a whole year did ao many peo ple of the laboring class have thla coun try as left In this halt year. More than thla, the Immigration adds to the total effect. It was 70 per cent less than a year ago. And this also breaks tho record for panda effects. The Springfield Republican quotes the figures for 1893, showing that the decline In Immigration then was from 623,000 In the fiscal year to June, 1891 to MtJ.SOO in im, and from JH,i7 In ISM, to 279.W8 In 1435. So the relative decrease In those years was less than this year. After 1S7J tha falling oft was about one-half In the two following years and about two- thlrds In three yeara. Hitherto the greatest decline waa from 78S.8O0 arrivals In to 831,200 In lSS6-a smaller relative shrinkage than the present year. Possibly a greater proportion of recent Immigrants were labor adventurers, so to speak; that Is our abounding prosperity attracted Immigrants merely for the Job. Men may have calculated the cost of passage, and the wages which the cer tainty of work offered, and taken chances on a visit as an Investment. With hard times they Incontinently returned. This theory seems to be borne out by the im pression left by the returning aliens that they did not Intend to come back here. Be this as tt may, the fact abldea and the drain on rough and unskilled labor. In western Pennsylvania notably, is so great that tha Iron and steel Industry Is appre hensive lest there be a lack of laborers when prosperity returns. But when two Jobs are again hunting one man wa shall have a renewal of Immigration. The hu man tide seta easily these days between Europe and America; and Its recent flow the other way may have Its useful lesson In demonstrating that K Is a small thing to cross the ocean. GREAT PARTY LEADERS. Reaabllcaas Richer In Good Material Than Democrats. Collier's Weekly. Why Is tt that leaders in on great party are so much scarcer than In the other? The war gave to the democratic party a stunning setback. The solidity of the south haa kept It back, and free silver completed the demoralization. What Is the meaning of the word democrat, when the most that haa been done for the so-called democratic policies has been done by a republlcun president, who likewise believes In tariff reform? When the preaent republican nom inee endorses the policies of his predeces sor? Why is La Follette called a republican? Why do the "progressives" of Kansas, Ne braska and Wisconsin work doggedly with hat party? Why does the tariff-assaulting McCall carry that name? Apart from a perfunctory adherence to a tariff Idea In which he Is not Interested, what have the democratic principles of Governor Hug.es to do with the party in which he Is en rolled? Men now In later or middle life belong to the republican party either as a direct or Indirect result of the slavery conflict. Young men of ability go Into It because the democrats offer them no coherent pro gram and a much weaker group of leaders. Probably It would be better for the coun try tu have two parties led with equsl suenglh, but the democrats will hardly furnish many leadera equal In ability to Koosevr't, Taft. Root. Hughea and I.a Follette, until tha south Is badly broken, sr until intelligent end educated northern ers feel at home In the democratic pM The president of Harvard univeraliy may be selected as an Illustration. He 1 uiw of the ableat men alive a distinguished leader ef hla country's thought He ts a democrat, but when will he have an oppor tunity te vate taa atnieeretto ticket la a national eleetlvaT most iamout cooks Hi ll X D 1 1' u d "-ll Ul -:.- II cXLN .Mil IQhi L ' ;fi mm. l 1 I j.-arrr-r. II II WHITTLED TO A POIT. "It was certainly awkward for that pa triotic orator when he leaned over thT cannon to empliMstxe a point, and found some mischievous urchin had put fly pa per on top of it.' "What did lie do?" "The only thiiiK possible. He stuck to his guns. '-Halinuore American. "On you think theie is any reliable way of foretelling the weather?" "Yep,'' answered Farmer Corntossel. "Jes' think of the kln.i vu don't want and then prophesy It." Washington tar. "My daughter." remnrkod Mrs. Nex dore. "has developed a perfect passion for music." "Yes," returned Mrs. Peppery, "I'll war rant It isn't as strong as the passion our daughters music arouses In my husband." Philadelphia Press. "Hut how could you tell, darling, that I had never proposed to any other girl?" "Because you were not married. " she' murmured rapturouBly and admiringly. Judge. Stella When people go to the country thev leave the tats behind. Bella Then where do a'l those on the hotel piazzas come from? New York Sun. "You no longer hear about a candidate being in the hands of his friends," said one delegate. "No," answered the other. "Nowadavs a candidate Is supposed to have his own srtp on everything and everybody In sight!" Chicago Heeord-Herald. "That sign seema queer 'headquarters for fC pants.' " "What's queer about It?" "Well. I thought pants were designed for other quarters." Philadelphia Press. Facetious Acquaintance Well. Mrs. Comeup. did you have your daughter's picture painted by one of the old masters when you were in Europe? . Mrs. Comeup No, I didn't. I tried to, but they mum have had a kinder epidemic of painter's colic, for they were all dead. Baltimore American. "You say he is one of our most remark ahl oratora?" "Yes." "For what is he remarkable?" "For never having been heard to say that he put his trust in the wisdom of the piain people.- Washington Star. OI JOSHWAY AM' DB Sl'W. Uncle Remus. Ol' Joahway stood In front er his tent. An' slcc'd his soldiers on. But when he turned for ter look aroun', De day wax nearly gone. He rubbed his beard, he scratched his head, I An' kicked his heel ira de groun'; 1 Kaze he wanter finish de battle-Job I Befo' de Sun went down. ' He look ter de East an' he look ter de West, An' he wave his han' on high, "King Sun," sezee, "I want you ter see Me smite um hip and thigh! Come down ter camp and' rest yo'self A title while wld me, I'll gel you a fan an' big wide cheer AiV net it wiiar you kin see." Dey wuz lots mo' talk, but de Sun corns down An' tuck a little ease, An' when he got too awful hot, He called up o' Brer Breeze! "My time is short," sez d Sun, sezee, "Am1 you better do yo' do. Kazo I'm feeling like I wanter see lls mortual scuffle throo!" Well, dey fit an" fit an' fowt an' fowt Bight dar in de light er de Sun, But Joahway fralled um out an' aooa He liml um on de run. King Sun, lie say, "I'm over due 'Cross dar whar de night's still black De folks will wake 'fo de chickens crow An' put der big clock backs." Ol' Joahway thanked him mighty polite. An' ax him fer ter come ag'ln; King Sura, he say, "I speck dat I Will bo whar I've allers been." Pen he nioaied off, kaze he ain't got tlmt Fer ter set an' talk an' stay; He hatter go off whar de night still dark An' start ter breukln' day. Well' time run on an' people 'spute 'Bout Joshway an' de Sun, Some say dls an' some say dat. An' splaln why Joshway won; Sometimes when he wuz settln' 'roun' Whar ha couldn't he'p but hear, Ttp'rt mjlv. '(ln In H setrln'-rrtom an Ma How he scorched my big arm cheer!" C0RN.ELAIIE9 TbArfeXfJ The Improved Toasted Corn Flakes rTHE Egf-O-See Cereal Company's 1 famous E-C Procea makes E-C Corn Flakes positively sb parlor to Ua ordinary kind. E-C quality the hlfft est quality ever attained ia a flaked corn food makes E-C Cora Flakes tfce most popalar cereal food is nillieas at Americas hemes. All Grocers, 10 cents EGG-O SEE CEREAL COMPANY, Ckteaaa Latitat Maaufacturera of Flaked. Cereal Poods la the World wheTmyimg GLASSES i Be sure you consult sn optician' who has had experience. It la t-xperitiiutf llitft makes one COropS- ( nt You wouldn't send a ease ef dlp tlierla to a vtterlnary autgvon, why tlon eiilruat oiir eyes to depgrt nient store and Jewelers? ACTORYv op, reenue Bteie. rtatecy aa' SveaijeaJ 1 li J.TV e