TIIE OMAITA DAILY 'BEE; MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1909. if 1 i ( I i3 ( t if p i !) BRIEF CTTY NEWS Ssv BK rrtat ta. Oil Osbss Bdholm. Jeweler. Base Bmm f twa, ft I. HQ. ) F. Qrwe hHM Amulwli suae art, Bi, llta rtrtM. fcegala U Ttt mwi Time Sgwlta .Pot, sight grafts M maturity. II. lx Naclr, mtitftr, Qroaj, 9. Mm tglta, 101 Ural NtUoul Unl building, 1 making real HUtl loan wlth ot delay tad on tar ma vary fa ante la t Borrowers. a Xetoaaka Kavtags lou Asa los ns on horn only In Douglas county. Senrle prompt, term reasonable. Board of Trsds building. e Toms Money sag, TaiaabWe in a acta ccaosit kox la th Amtieaa Bart Deposit VaulU 1 the Baa building. 1 rents a baa. f. C Hamr preaideBt, TSalon Pacific Make Test Baa-i-Th Union Pacific made a splendid un Sat urday with the Filipino band from Ogden to Denver. Tha Special train left Ogdcn t Friday eventng at 10:40 and reached Den ver Batarday evening at I o'clock. Tha ' band will be rua special from Denver to dqtah for. tha concerts at tha Auditorium today. , ., - FUrs 'toubb: People's Boelal Tha Bap tist Youaa? PMmla'a union nf tha Im. manual Baptist enure a will hold Ita flrsM social (a tha naw church at Twenty fourth and Pinkney atreata Monday even ing. A. unique program will be rendered and refreshment will be tarred. Friend, members and neighbors are earnestly re quested to be present Washington's birth day at o'clock. . Haa Wko Stabbed Xis rother-U-Xw On the charge of cutting with Intent to kill and wpund. A. U Xlngea waa arraigned In police court Saturday morning. He la the man who stabbed his brother-in-law, Wll- Ham Hanson, during a family quarrel at m the home of the iattar In the rear of 1S1I r Chicago street Tuesday night. Klngens preliminary hearing was set for March I and his ban at tl.000. Hansen la at the General hospital and la said to be Improv ing. Venlea W ea Ckaewaa, Making Vis Ova William fc. Jacobs filed' an answer to his wife's petition for divorce Saturday morn- . leg. He denies having said that ha waa act the father Of their son, Arthur Jacobs, a boy of (, and denies other charges of cruelty In plaintiff's petition. ' With regard to his Wife he Makes Various charges el Infidelity. Three affidavit are filed by men for Ja cobs alleging that they had spent time In Mrs. Jacobs' company. Charles A. Boutcher asks k. divorce frotn Marian 8. Boutcher on the ground of desertion. stew kWlway Mali Appolntueate These .bav been appointed aa certified aubatltutes for the railway mall service operating out of Omaha: Flnley D. McLean, VBA South , Tenth at reel; Robert J. .Jensen, Hi South Fifty-first street, and Andrew T. David, all of Omaha; William O. Craig of Leigh, Henry D. Maaa of Ines, U J. Cook of Grand Island and F. J. KoUar of Columbus. These substitutes will be held on the waiting list and under Instruction for vacancy emergen cies. All are eligible for permanent ap pointment, according to their qualifications and efficiency. . . , , W. . Smlta'a JDeath' Vstusal Natural causes ara, held responsible' Jar tha death of W, D.- Smith by . the coroner's Jury which Investigated th case at an Inqueat Saturday afternoon. Smith was the Adam ' Express ' messenger who was found dead In the bathtub of his board ing house, 1011 South Tenth street, Frl--day evening. . Heart trouble la given aa the cause of his death la the verdict ren dered by the coroner'a jar. ' BMltn'e wife le said to be on her, way to Omaha from "the famiiy home in Chicago, where Smltfi 'also' has two children. Arrange menu for the funeral and burial will not be made natli Mrs. Smith's arrival . J Sigh Sckool Cade Offleera' Twm frl S.day evening will witness the most bril liant affair in the calendar of tha high .achjb"! aet- ..T!ie cadet ' officers' prom la . e glvea ea that day at Chambers ' acadeiiV, and It la expected to be an Iro porttnt ivent not only In point of at tendanc.ut also aa regards the nature nd apeclaleature that make the occa sion .one of great Import to every high echool atudentWho Is socially Inclined. Bam Carrier and Herbert Ryan, the two cadet Captains who have the dance In charge, have planned a decorative scheme tl.it will ; be' bofi novel and attractive and with the poaslbte preaenoe of Com mandant Oury at the prom and leading the grand march will make It the gala affair of fne year. Waatts aHve a MoWar to Beot Be cause he refueed to pay $1 he owed a bollerntaker, over whom he was boss, un til he could see the man and "lick" him, John Lewry was made the defendant in a suit In Judge William W. Eastman's Justice court The case was won by the plaintiff on default Saturday afternoon. Lowry "falling to appear at the hearing. Bo now. Instedd of giving the boiler maker $1 and the Intended "licking,'' Lowry will have to pay the small debt and the costs of tha suit, which will amount to flvs or sis times tlia amount originally In question. He avers he will never pay the Judgment, but says he Is , willing enough to pay SI, provided the I man who wanta It will come to Dim and take tha "licking" also. I SB cleans and sterilizes Babys playthings should be kept sweet and clean. t Everything that his little hand can grasp goes right into his mouth. And -the rattle, the ball, the horn are tossed carelessly about the floor, to be again picked up and placed in the -mouth of the unsuspecting infant A simple and effectual way to guard the baby's health is to frequently cleanse his toys with hot water and God Dust . It is nAO antiseptic V aau will, kill an trerms that may be V'W' on them. S SBak a h ii v SCHOOL AND COLLEGE WORK Strong: Defeats of Women Tetchen in rublio School. PARENTS SHBLX THEIR DUTY Frwcireea f Indaatrlat fthels la MasaarkaweMa Mtl wlater Ed ratloaal Activities la tha Middle- West. Nebraska university's botanical depart ment is recognised as one of tha best of any Institution in the west, largely through the constant endeavor of Its head. Dr. C. te. Bessoy. who baa been with the Institution since 1M. Graduate of the department have taken Important places In the- world of science In thla country and their wrlt Inga have been recognised abroad as au thority on a variety of subjects In botan ical lines. Some of the early students of ths school bow hold Important places with the Depertmeat of Agriculture at Washing ton, and some of the most valuable work In building up this national organisation has been done by Nebraska unlveralty men. Dr. Bessey has been tendered membership In the American Civic Alliance league. Merely as an Indteattoa of the growth of the state department. H was found last week that the herbarium of the botanical departanent has grown sine Dr. Bessey took hold of tha work- from a collection of Just IS specimens to one of 130,000 specimens,- In which Is a full collection of all plants growing In the weat and many nota ble smaller collections of plsnt growths In otkar countries. The collection of Ne braska plants numbers 10.000. A collection of Philippine plsnts la one tha way and the arrival Is expected dally. The portrait of Lincoln, a gift to the State university from General Manderson of Omaha, waa received during the week and hangs In the off Ira of the chancellor. Jn response to the token a letter of appre ciation has been sent (o the donnor. The Board of Regents held a short ses sion charter week, during which degrees were conferred and a few matters of ad ministration were taken up. The appoint ment of Dr. E. T. Wanning to be instructor of therapeutics In the medical school at Omaha waa made, and tha resignation of Dr. D. F. Lee as Instructor In materia medlca was received and accepted. The regenta will hold their next formal session April 11 Dr. H. M. McClanahan nf rim.h. .a. dresaed the students at convocation Friday, speamng on "The Economic Importance of the Child to the State. " The dignity of tha senior class has been ruffled In the past because of the manner In Which the irhiwil ntk..tti.. aneak day, long regarded as one Of tha Inalienable rights of the members of the outgoing students of the university. Sneak day has had a demoralising effect nmui th whole school because when one of the classes was "skipping" ths remainder of the students wers unable to do serious work. An agreement has oeen made now wiu me seniors to recognise one day of the year as senior dav ana hnii..n sneak day. The seniors will have the ngni to nuc and enjoy life free from the responsibilities of tha elass room, but tha date la' to be keot a secre. in ihi. manner the authority of tba school will m upneia. nut the urmer v iudm. have Just SS much asm aa thv oimj Into twenty-four hours of freedom. Dr. E. A. Ross, formerly of Liiland Stanford. Jr.. university. Iair at ih. it-i- vernlty af Nebraska, aad now -of Wiscon sin university, wher he' has ' eharire of the department of sociology, has been Sfiinted leave of abaenc-a' fnr i. ..... during which he will study in Chins-. He recently aeilvered a lecture la Bolao City oti "The Family," In whkh he upheld the tlieocy that dlvoreee are breaking tip un- nippy marriages ana are not entirety detrl mental to the human race. A full-blooded Persian student rriimtr.A mr wort in tne univetslty during th week, being Lassrus Mallek. He la taking work in chemistry, preparatory to returning to hi i country aa a missionary. TABOR COLLEGE. fleeeat Happealage aad Fatare Bveats at law Inetltattoa. S rover Aker. Charles I- Finn-, bih IVase and George Toung were the Tabor college Toung Hen's Christian association delegates to the Youaa Men's Christina aaaoclatlop convention at Dea Moines. At a mass meeting on Thursday tha students In structed Dean Johnson to represent them and presented him with a purse for bis expenses as a birthday present. The centenary of ths births of Lincoln and Darwin was celebrated with appropriate exercises by the literary societies In the college chapel The local Grand Army of tha Republic post and Won win's Relief corps each attended In a body. The exer cises conalated of orations, essays and read ings dealing with the varloua phases of the lives of tha two men. . Mies Rtoaa Adelaide Marquis left her posi tion as Instructor In violin and piano on February 1 after a very auccessful service of pearly two yeara. She goes to tba directorship of the music department of the State Institute for ths Blind at Jack sonville. III. Her place Is to bs tsken by Miss Pauline Englemann of Dea Molnea. A very Important meeting of the local board of truatees was held oa Tuesday alght, tha result of which will be apparent in a short time. Plans for a summer school ara being made. The college and public aohoola are plan ning a patrona' meeting from the 11th to the lh or March, which will Include teach ers and patrons of both Institutes of the surrounding districts. On the Itth of March the annual declama tory contest of the high schools la Mills, Fremont and Page countlea will be held at Tabor. 1 his la a meeting arranged by the college. The prltoe are very large ones and a great deal of Interest la taken by the surrounding schools. On the Kth of April there will be a debate between Tau PI and Phi Delta literary ao elettee and on the same date the academy debating team will contest with the acad emy of Mornlngatde at Sioux City. Oa April Uth the Junior elass of Tabor college will ateet the Junior claas of TarkMt In a literary contest at Tarkio. preparation and training for these varloua contests Is going on vigorously under the leaderahlp of Prof. H. E. Smith. 1 I'NIVKRSITT OF NOTRB DAME. Oratorical Haaare Ml am y Meeaber af Sealer Claaa. A recent ruling of the faculty Imposes a penalty of IS per cent for each absence from recitation or lecture. This Joss can be made up by two hours', work outalde tha regular recitation. Toe work In each case to be assigned by the 'professor and submitted to hlsa for examination. This reefuction la eomputed agalnat the student at the end of every .two months in deter mining his standing. Five examinatlona to be held during the year. . Ignatius K. McNamea of Partlaad. Ore., g member of tba senior claaa. tba repre sentative of Notre Dame hi the state ora torical conteet, waa awarded ft rat plaea. Tha ooateet was held In Indlaaapplta and seven eollegea competed. Tba Nous Dame student will represent Indiana In tba In ter ns te contest to be held ct Appleton, WIS., tn May. The mechanical engineers are now en gaged In building gasoline engines of tha latest type. The seniors are constructing a large stationary engine for the shops. The course In Irish history, which was Introduced after tha holidays, has proved popular. It h placed among the optional studies snd One-half credit la given for It this year. A general view of tha history of Ireland will be covered this year. Begin ning next September the atudy will be raised to a full course aad Intensive study of special periods will be made. A military Instructor has been detailed by the War department at Washington to tabs charge of the military companies. Cap tain Ronayne la tne appointee. He visited the university last week to make tha first Inspection and he expects to take ap his quarters at Notre Dame In a few days. Ths president of the university mat the Notre Dame club of Chicago at a dinner glvea at the Chicago Athletlo club. In his address he dealt largely with the future of Notre Dame and the plana for Its exten sion and growth. One hundred and fifty of the alumni were present. . WOMAN TEACHERS I.f SCHOOLS. A Woman's Reply te tha Criticisms af Soma Men. A woman teacher In the publlo schools of New Tor City, who says shs is 'TO. un married, and stilt possesses normal tinman Impulses," discusses in the New York TrtMine soma phases of tha question sprung on the Omaha Board of Education a week go. namely, that bora In the nublln aohnnla ara being feminised, made unmanly, by the natural imiuenee or too many women teach ers. At the outset shs concedes ths sin cerity of those who object to ths present preponderance of women teachera, but con tends that the critics do not consider all sides of ths osstioa. They Ignore parental responsibility In the charaoter making of the boy, and charge against women teachers defects for which parents should be held accountable. Concerning parental responsibility aad present conditions of school Mfs, the teacher eys: "Is It true that boys are becoming less msnly. less manful? I think. It Is. But Is-rt due to the influence of the women teach ers? No, not In the slightest degree, any more than It is due to the women mothers. To what, then? To tha different conditions of life, the different environment, to he different Ideas of parents regarding the training of chUdren. The first gives chil dren so many and such varied outlets for their energies that they are no longer da pendent on those things alone which tend to develop a vigorous, resourceful man hood. The children of the merely well-to-do. aa well as those of ths rich, ara pro vided with Innumerable toys, books and tools with which to occupy their time and sttentlon. They no longer make tha thing snd the thing that makes It. These many playthings, requiring neither effort nor sacrifice in the getting or In tha using, tend to wesken the character of ths child rather than to strengthen It. It wtll be argued that tha ohlld. In using fnese won derful toys, is learning many things that Will be of use In after life. Granted, but R Is intellectual development that is going cn, not character building. In such play either energy nor resourcefulness, tn any degree, la necessary, and tha child gets only amuaement and. In most cases, a superficial knowledge of aa Intricate ma chine. No creative powers are called forth, no efficiency Is exercised. "Tha child of today Is foolishly and lu BTtously clothed So that' he cannot engage In the strenuous ptay,' man)' times half work, which served to develop the strength. Ingenuity and manhood of tha child of a generation ago. Neither does he have any regular task for which he Is held resnonsj bls and which serves to develop a sturdy rampiiny mat will atand undaunted be fore temptation. "As for the second point, modern pa rants do not 'bring up' their children. They simply provide them a home, with few or many luxurlea as the case may be. and m dulge them Inordinately. They must not be reproved either st home or at school. If corrected at all If is in an indefinite, nerveless way, even for repeated offense; hence the correction is worse than laef feotual. It is harmful. They receive no In cidental or deliberate home training which fits them for Ufa and Its opportunities, which develops a fortitude that makea them masters over destiny and eventually men m tha highest, beat aenae of the word. "It la often atated that teachers hare tha children under their control and In fluco.ee the greater part of the time during school age. A little arithmetic wtll show that this to not true, if the year and not tha day Is eonsidered. Aad If It were true. CualKy of influence will overbalance quan tity; therefore, only if the teacher's In fluence Is stronger and batter ih.n th.t of the home will It tell In ths character or tne child, regardless of the time element, and tha parents who ara tan weak - careless to take thought fcr the future of meir orraprmg should be forever grateful that the teacher has added aonwhlnr . tha natural qualities of ths ohlld. If, how ever, ths Influences at home ara iimioar and better than theae will mould the child's nature, which to much more plastic In the home environment The strong, aenatble. firm yet gentle mother will erulda tha ehiM so wisely and so well that the home in fluences will be aver dominant, and no teacher In contact with him for a few houra five times a week can nravall v that Influence. Then, too, the authority of tha parent Is always final In the mind of the child, and, let the teacher urge ever so eloquently, she cannot chanea the Idea Impressed upon the mind from Infancy, that father and mother are supreme. This Is rlarhL and the narent who raaJlv thinks Af tha welfare of the child and trains hhn for toe future la not the one who makes ths poor woman teacher tha ScaDeaoat fa all his sins of omission. 'The fact remains that women tnanra are and must of necessity be in the ma jority ror many yeara to coma. Then let pa rente remember that theae teachers ara mare mortala. but that they have no more "" w i u i m iniuim, .ana that they can be held responsible for1 only a email portion of tha Uvea of students and lor no part of their Inherited tendencies." MISaOl'RI VXIVEntlTY. Varloms Activities af Stadeata la tka Several Departments. Six senior law students of tha Unlveriity of Missouri. In order to get a little prac tical work before graduation, havs organ ised to defend all negroea arraigned before the police court of Col-imhta. They have decided that the poor negroea do not get l square deal when they are arraigned for "shcotln crajis" or "acrapptn'," and In the future every negro yeutn who la un lucky enough to get caught by tha police wlli be certain of having good counsel on I la aide. The law etudenta at tret said that their attitude toward the negroea was rromptcd aolely by a feeling of pity for tha wronged Mack man. but their friends were cruel enough ta say that they are merely seeking soma practise and having a little fun In getting tha negroes to tell them their trouble. Those who started tba movement are B. W. Porter, J. E. Moore, H. Q. Hunt. W. W. Wright. D. H Hoffman aad R. Q. Lgda. Twenty-four students In th agricultural department of the tnl varsity of Missouri have solved the problem of cheap board in Columbia. They have for the last four years maintained a eo-fperatrve associa tion, by which they ara able to live for a little leas than lla a month. They occupy a niodera building of twelve rooms, em ploy servants snd manage the flub entirely by themaelvee. The students In Journalism at the Tnl verslty of Missouri held their first annual "stunt last Thursday. They gave a bur leaquo play in ths university auditorium. Which was fitted to Imitate a modern news paper office. The. entire process of getting cut an "extra" was gone through, from ths assignment of the reporters on. Im possible stories to tha final big "sooop, which waa a fake stcry about the president of th unlveralty entering Into a conspiracy with the Cosmopolitan club to start s revolution In China threugh the Intrtduc- tlon of the American spcon to supplant the traditional chop stick. STATX'B or FATHER CORBY. . MsTtasst far a Meaasaeat ta m Civil War Chaplain. NOTRE DAME. lad.. Feb. tl.-A move- ment ha been started In Philadelphia to erect a monument on tha battlefield of Get tysburg to Rev. WUllam Corby, C. 8. C who served as a chaplain through tha. en tire civil war. It ts the Intention of those most nearly Interested that th monument shall stand everlastingly as a tribut to the strong devotion ef the chaplains to th soldiers during the terrible yeara of Civil at rife and Incidentally commemorate on of the moat striking acta of religion that ever took place on any battlefield th giving of general absolution to a whole brigade Just before they entered battle. Tha Gettysburg Memorial commission which haa as president General St, Clair Mulhotland, who was an officer In the regiment of which Father Corby waa chap tain, has the erection of the statu In charge and ts pushing ths project vigor ously. The plan already has the warm endorsement of Cardinal Gibbons, Arch bishop Rysn of Philadelphia, Bishop Bhanahan of Harrfsburg and Bishop Canevln of Pittsburg, all of wbom were among the early contributors. Th modelling of the statue will he en trusted to Samuel Murray,, a sculptor of eminence In Philadelphia, who was sculptor of th Barry statue' tn that city and who designed and executed the memorial arch erected by the stats of Pennsylvania to soldiers of that commonwealth who fall at Gettysburg. The statue of Father Corby will be of bronse, eight feet high, and will represent him giving absolution. The priest wilt be shown wearing the uniform of a captain of cavalry, which was his rank. It la the hope of the commlaalon that the statue will be ready for unveiling on July 10, M6, when the grand memorial arch will be dedicated. The statue will cost tlO.fOO. At the beginning of the war Father Corby was appointed as chaplain 4t the Eighty eighth New Tork Infantry, one of the regi ments of the Irish brigade. Previous to his appointment to tha : ehaplalnacy Father Corby was serving as a professor In the University of Notre Dame, then struggling for aa existence In, the weeds of Indiana. When war was dec ft red Rev. Edward Sorln. C. 8. C. founder of Notre Dame, called his young priests about him and said there would be need of chaplains for tha soldiers. Although he could 111 spare from the duties hi the new college any of his young professors, he believed It waa a patriotic obligation,- to re ska sacrifices tn orJer that Catholic soldiers might hsve the benefits of the prlesti tn fighting for the union. Accordingly. tia. chose six of th priests and sent themay to the front. Father Corby was one 'Of these six who left Notre Dame. - it His career during the war haa been mod estly told tn voiums by himself celled Memoirs of a Chaplain Life." He served with fine effect during the entire struggle gnd merited th praise of all the com manders whom be met, to say nothing of the love he inspired In the hearts of the men In the rsnks. When th war was over hs returned to Notre Dame and resumed his place aa professor, H was twlcs president of the university, and. at the time of his death, in XiSl, he was provincial of his order in America. The battle flag of the Irish brigade was presented to the university a few years before he died, the living officers and men declaring that this precious relic should be preserved near the spot where lived their old chaplain, who had loved and ministered to the men who fought be neath it. WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY. 61ft of Hereto Brans State Llaeela fer Campaa. Th gift to tha University of Wisconsin of Weinman's heroic bronse statuts of Lin corn, the only replica, of the one being erected Jointly by tb United States and the state of Kentucky at Lincoln's blrih plaoe, Hodgenvllle, Ky.. and to be unveiled by President Taft on Memorial day, waa announced by President Charles R. Vsn Hiss at the Lincoln centenary exercises at ths university. The statue la given to the university by Mr. Thomas E. Brittlngham of Madison. , The statue, which Is to bs placid In the center of the court of honor on the upper campus. Is to bs tin veiled at commence ment In June. It( represented Lincoln seated in a massive chair, and Is seven, feet high, which is equivalent to' a standing figure nine feet nine inches In height. It is to be mounted upon a granite plinth six feet six Inches tn height, ths total height of the statue and plinth to be thirteen feet six Inches. t ,The present training courses preparatory to consular services are to receive an im portant addition next semester in the form of a new course on the Consular service to be conducted by Dr. Ernst C Meyer, for merly of the United States consular service at Chemnlts. fkinneberg snd Dresden, snd recently appointed lecturer In political scienc at the university. The prevention of disease among students ts tha prime aim of ths new course of study on general hygiene, which, haa Just been announced for the second semester, beginning February 13.. The relation of the mind ta health, ths cars of the nervous system. Infectious diseases and antl-toxlns. ths effects of drugs, alcohol and tobaoco. food supplies and their adulteration, exer cise and health, water and milk supply, and a aeries of similar subjeots are to be dis cussed for the benefit of the students in weekly lectures by ths members of ths fac ulty from the college of medicine, depart ment of bacteriology, phyaical training de partment and chemistry department. Prof. William Thompson Sedgwick of ths Massa chusetts Instltuts of Technology wtl give tw lectures tn thus- course on air supply and ventilation, and oa water supply and water purifications, MANY INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS. ' Masaackaaetta Reparta Prgra Along; Thre Dtatlaet Llaes. In th third annual report of tha Ma see chuaetta commlsetoa on Industrial educa tion progress along thre distinct 1 Lines la noted day Industrial schools, evening la duetrval eolwwila id agricultural educa tion. Day Industrial schools have beea es tablished in two cities and authorised In five more, while vning schools ara In operation tn eleven cities. The report shows Increasing Internal la agricultural --ducatioo. Rural industrial schools of two types hsve been provided for: First. wHere two or more cities or town units ss a district for the malntenanc of an indus trial school, each paying Its proportionate shar of ths expenses: second, where a town or city establishes an industrial school at a center easy of access to neigh boring towns and receive such pupil from the latter as may deelr to attend thla erhool under the provision of the law of 190. which authorises such attendance. Such Is th school established at Mon tagu where pupils from five neighboring towns are tn attendance. Tha com mission flnda that a careful su pervision of the industrial schools must be carried on In order to effect th progres sive Improvement of the schools, which ts necessary for their full development. Special attention la being given by the commission to the problem of Industrial education for girts. It being In many ways more difficult and complicated than that, of the Industrial training of boy This difficulty is partly because of the double aim tn the education for girls, who need to be prepared for home life as well ss for an occupation which will provide self support The commission feels that domestic efficiency Is of Importance to all women, and training for housekeeping and home management should be an essential part of the education af all girts, but on the other hand, a large majority of girts are obliged to earn their living for a time tn Industry, aad th occupations that are open to yonng, totally untrained girls are for th most part 111 paid, without educa tional value, and not a stepping stone to better positions. Th commission favors Independent day schools furnishing girls with definite special trade Instruction; part tlma schools for girls who are obliged to become wage earners at an early age, and evening classes whose general aim shall be to Increase Industrial efficiency and give greater opportunity to women whose daily occupations do not lead to more advanced posltlonsx-w1thout additional training. MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY. Expected Resignation, of President AageU Aaaoaaeed. President James B. Angell of Michigan university haa tendered his resignation, to take effect with the close of the school year. The distinguished dean of American college presidents recently celebrated his (0th birthday anniversary, and on that oc casion appeared remarkably alert and vig orous for a man of hla yeara. But the burden of directing a university of S.OOO Students la too great to be borne much longer, and President Angell wisely re linquishes It before a physical breakdown. The resignation has been accepted by the regents. At the same time the regents con ferred on the retiring president the well earned honor of president emeritus, with salary for life. Student attendance at Michigan paaeed the 5.000-mark for the first tlms this year, tt having reached t.OOO In 1904. The unlveralty haa acquired by glfe of an alumnua and from the city of Ann Arbor a tract of land of about ninety acrea, to serve aa a botanical garden and arboretum. This land haa an exceptional variety of aoil, ele vation and exposure. Including a border of over one-half mile on the Huron river, easily accessible from the campus. The op portunities for the study of landscape gar denlng by th students In engineering. architecture, forestry snd general culture, as wen as those In botany and landscape gardening proper, arc considerably extended by this gift. The Woman's league of the universit ies purchased a seven-acre tract of lend. very convenient of scceaa, which will be developed as an athletic field for the women of the unlveralty. . , . Another welcome gift is In the form of about 1.500 acre of land lying along the shores of Douglas lake In Cheboygan county. This land will serve as th sit for a summer engineering camp, and Ita ton. ography, Including forest and open, land enq water, varloua elevations, etc.. Is par ticularly well adapted to the purpose, and we also look forward to Ita use aa a hlnln. leal station of Importance. In honor of me oonor it naa been named the Bogardua Engineering camp. Buildings completed, or nrrfl,-iiv . during the year at the University of Mlch- au inciuae tne memorial hall, the gift of alumni and other friends, and a new build ing for the dental college. The latter erected at a coat of $128,000, is probably re sponsible In a large part for the Increase In enrollment In the dental college. Contracts hsve been awarded for a chemical labora tory to coat $245,000. and an addition to the engineering building to cost rrs 000 Ed neat I nal President Phartaa 07 mi-. . . upon h.m at that tlms ths degree of dSto, Representative Samuel W. McCall of Massschnaetta n ...I . 1 v. . . - --'!,! mwit to accent ra Vr. y tftmouth collegs. Dr. r. "uu irom tne new Hsmo . hFtntiS if-Jln,i "I' ''-U- ?? -i ----- vitji -case- gia w am iQiior or. the Boat en Advertiser. . Vu Wvuln XL' I It I . tr . . ....urn iuw, inmese, naa been chosen to edit the Dally Spectator at Columbia university. It is said to be the !i ' J' Chinese student has been placed at the head of an American col!eg old. ts a slender chap snd is known through out the university as a master of pure English. He Speaks without accent, knows more about American politUs than the average American, la a debater of wonder, ful ability and one of the most popular men In the unlveralty. . Edwin O. Cooley. who.hae resigned the supenntendency of the Chicago publlo schools, has accepted the presidency of the Boston bock publishing concern of D. C Heath A Co. The reason given for hla resignation la that the position has become altogether too- strenuous for his health and strength, and he prefers to retlro Into a more quiet occupation before his health has become permanently Impaired. He U tt years old, a native of Iowa and a gradu ate of the unlveralty of that staf. His salary as superintendent of schools has been 110.000 a year. NOTES FROM FORT BUSY. Second Lieutenant Walter H. Nell!. Thir teenth cavalry, Is at thla poet undergoing examination for promotion. From reports that have been received here it la understood that some of the trcops will be ordered to Des Molms, la, In the late summer or early fall to take pert in a military tournament which It is Intended shall be held In that city along the lines of the last two that were held la St. Joseph. Mo. The athletes and these Interested tn this class of sport in the garrison ara anticipat ing an athletic event which has been ar ranged by a committee for March t. One of the featurea of the track events will be a two-mile relay race between the differ ent organisations. There will be a base ball game between picked teams of the Seventh cavalry and Sixth field artillery. First Lieutenant William J. Kcndrick, Seventh cavalry, haa been designated by the War department to make the uaual annual Inspection of the Kansas National Guard, which Is composed of two Infantry regiments, one battery of field artillery and the ueuat complement of engineers, signal corps and hospital corps detach ment Lieutenant K end rick begins hla in spection the fit st of the month and expects to to on this duty for a couple of weeks. Hereafter, according to a ruling recently made publlo by the War department, en listed men who are attending the school of Instruction for farriers aad horseshoe: a will not be detailed for tha eouree ta ease their enlistment expire during the school period. If a man is designated to take the course snd his period of enlistment ex pirns during the period! he will be discharged and re-enlisted before detailed. This method will do away with breaking up the claaaes and Ja of beaflt not oaly to tb echool, but to th pupil as well. Lieutenant J. M. Banister, deputy sur geon s-tieraJ. aonuBU.an.ted by Mr Banls lr, left Wednesday fw Omaha, wber h Will be chief iirgon of tba Department of- the Missouri. Colonel Baolster relieves Colonel W. B. Davis, ordered to the Phil ippine for duty. The detail le of a tem porary nature pending the asilenlng of a colonel of the meolral ataff to that station aa a permanent detail. Captain Van Pusen of the me-dlcaj rorpe haa arrived at the poet t. take th place of Lieutenant Col onel Banister. Conaldersble Interest Is manifested here In the bill now before congress which pro- f loses cutting down the mimtwr of horses n each troop- by five snd substituting In thalr places five polo ponies. The artillery regiment haa forty-elcht polo pontes which are dlatributed among the six batteries sta tioned here, but there are none for the cav airy. The cavalrymen feel that they would like to have, the use of polo ponlea provided free of charge by Uncle Sam. ao that they may learn the game and compete on Ihe field with their comradea of piece and caiaann. In one of the most Interesting bssket ball gamea of the season, S. John's Military academy team of Pnllna. Kan., defeated the team of Troop F, Seventh cavalry. In the post gymnselum Wednesday night by a score of II to 11. The soldiers wen- quite outclassed In the first hslf, but gathering entirage In the seonn.t period, they got busy and all but beat oat their cttisen opponent The Story of a Medicine . Ir Bam "Ooldcn Medical Discovery" was u- geeted by on of It moat important and valuable ics. radiants Golden Seal root. . Mora Poaa forty years af o, Dr. Piece discovered that b eovld, by tb use of par, triple-refined giro Brio, sided by a certain de(re of constantly main- ' taioed beat aod with th aid of apparatus and sp pliastees designed lor that purpose, extract irom oar moot valuable nstiv medicinal root their curative properties much better than by th ue of alcohol, so generally employed. So th now world famed "Golden Medical Discovery," for tb cur of weak stomach, bdifestioa, or' dyspepsia, torpid liver, or biliousness aod kindred derangement was first spado, a it ever sinos be boon, without a particle of alcohol in its make-up. A (lanoo at th fall list of Its ingredients, printed on every botde-wrapper, will show that k ta mad from the moat vala abla anadioinal roots found trowing; ia onr Amsrioan forests. An these tag radiants hsve reoeived th strongest endorsement from th leading medloal experts, tsaohcre and writer oa Ma teria Medio who recommend then aa tha vary best remedies for tb disease for which "Golden Medical Discovery" is advised. A little book of these endorsement has been compiled by Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. T., and will be mailed frt to any on asking earn by postal eard, or letter addressed to ths Doctor as sbov. From these endorsement, copied from standard medical books of all tha different schools ol practice, it will be found that ths ingredient composing th "Golden Mediosl Discov ery" ara advised not only for tba cure of the above mentioned disease, but also for th cur of all catarrhal, bronchial and throat affection, accom-. pained with catarrhal discharges, hoaraenes, tore throat, lingering, or bang on -coughs, and all thos watting affections which if not promptly and prop erly treated ar liable to terminate in consumption. Take Dr. Pierce Discovery in tims snd persevere in it use until you give it a fair trial end it is aot likely to disappoint. ' Too much must not b expected of it. It will not perform miracle. It will not cure consumption in its advanced stage. No medicine will. It will cure the affcotion that lead up to consumption, if taktu im (fat. Yon can't afford to accept any medicine of mnkntwn fmptilim at a sub stitute for "Golden Medical Discovery," which is a medicine or inown com position, having a complete list of ingredient in plain English oa ita bottle, wrapper, the asm being attested a correct under path. GOOD SERVICE ADVERTISES better than ariTthing else and the service .to St. Tan! Min neapolis and the Northwest offered by CHICAGO GREAT WESTERN IS GOOD SERVICE Choice of two trains daily 8:30 P. M., and 7:30 A. M. CITY TICKET OFFICE, 1512 FARNAM STREET. W. . Davidson, City Vaaeengsi aad Tloket Agent. r THE AUTOMOBILE SUPPLY COMPANY'':;'".'. OF CHICAGO Will exhibit at the Rome Hotel, February 23 to 27, inclusive. WE CARRY A FULL AND COMPLETE LINE OF. . PARTS AND ACCESSORIES, - A. W. Egcertson, Eteprcsentatlve. Mtlste CHOOLS AND mBamwimmaMW Direct Ml 1 The SmifrPi eraier Typewriter Co., vaByijLj!.BsjatfaJiupiunaiirra1.iiaTi.i1 Nebt-auki Military Academy A Military tUMirdiia H1UO0I (or boy, now located for the winter at Fourteenth and U streets. Alt de partments ara in full operation. A good plaea for boys who don't fit In public schools. No entrance examinations sre given; regular class work Is Supplemented by ln - dlvldusl Instruction; back work is easily made iis. , Pupils ars received at any time frero fifth to twelfth grades. Inclu sive Write for Catalogue. S. B. HTWAIB, Mnperiateaent. tlnoola, sTsa. - Kearney Military Academy A boy's progress depends upon his com fort sad the lotereel be lake ia his e-urk and stu.ly. Ws first tnaks aur boys comfortable, then make their svork Interesting, ptvvlde healthy outdoor sports and suvi! func tions. Our discipline' and training tend to build cbsractar, create habile of obedi ence, p'tnciuaiity, neatceas aad a tanas of reapoBtibllliy. Thorough Instruction; healthful loca tion; larae gymnasium; meUeru. fireproof buildings. Write today for illustrated catalogue, BTAaUIT . BVBSBIX, Xa4 ktastsc. Kearney, attar k The game was followed.br a dsnce, th music for the ocrasirtn being furnished b the Seventh csvslry band. Kully hO couple Were on the f!ior.. C R. Kluger, the Jeweler, 101 Virginia Ave., Indlanspolls, Ind.. writes: ."1 waa so weak from kldnoy trouble that ! eould hardly walk a hundred feet. Four bottle t Foley's Kldney Remedy cleared my com plexion, cm red my bnckacn and th trreg aiarltlea disappeared and I can new attend to business every day, - and recommend Foley's Kidney Remedy to all snfferers, as It cured me after th doctor and other remedies had failed." For sals by all drug gist. ' PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Dr. Mvrta A. Wells, "who has' been sick line January 1, Is ante to be out. Dr. Edwin Oxford, a practicing physician of Salt Lake City, la vlsltlng with hla par ents. Dr. and Mrs. Oxford. Dr. Milliner, electrical ' expert t th Union Pacific shops, has gone- east on special mission for the company. He will be absent a month. RAILWAY zc COLLEGES. m .i , i .1 ,i.iujiii.ili...j fr. Route t m I H J g A straight line la the shortest distance between t'o point. Why not teach your fingers TBI MAX (Ft SKOVTB The ocmplete keyboard. Smith Premier. Ia the woMX.fa'g Ksajr mivaiTiB. Free Employment Bureau P'.i-nographera are furnished to business men k Mi out charge to school, stenographer or-em- rii. lor particulars... . . now Mi Msasw. mama, an, WHAT SCHOOL Information concerning th ad vantages, rates, -extent of cur riculum and other data about th , beat schools and coliegea can be obtained from the ' Schooh nd College Informatloa Bureau of the Omaha Bee All Information abaolutely . fre and Impartial. Catalogue of any particular school cheerfully far nlahed upon request. ....-- GRAND ISLAND COLLEGE Rnilar collets preparatory courses Music, Art. and Commercial eouraes of fered. Healthful location. Expenses mod srate. Catalogue aunt on request. Ask us GRAND ISLAND, NEBRASKA THE WOLCOTT SCHOOL. -parteBth Avena sag atartoa at Peases, Oolora.. Not a low priced school, brat equipped private school In the Hst. 1 1 ik ti eat standard of scholarship. Diploma admits to Wei. laley, Vasasr, hmitli, in addition to 1 western universities. . Introductory ' inferences required. 1 .