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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1910)
TTIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 27. 1910. ROYALTY ON ROLLER SKATE! King and Queen of Italy ai Well at Entire Court Take Up the Fad. iikma tower" leans more C"",M'- RP-rt, IlM sjeea A. . l.Te. . Apl R4r v "trartare. ,.BVLEMENT J- BARRETT. 11.1 Vf"Ch - t Pub ron ")Th u- of th. roller skate has taken place at Rom. Th, Am.ricM sport ha, caught th fancy of Queen El,n and Kins Victor and almost any day now ihoee who have the privilege . or the Inner court circle may see royalty on roller, enjoying Hself with as much gusto aa American children on anphalt streets. The queen haa had one of the big halls at the Qulrlnal converted Into a fine rink and whenever time permlU nhe ives quiet IKttUs skating- party to her Inti mate friends. On a recent afternoon there were on the floor beside the kins and queen the duke and duchess of Turin, Princesses MlHtia and Veroa of Morvtene ro. nieces of the queen, and Helen of nervla. Naturally, the lead of the queen is being followed by the high nobility. I hear fear Js felt for the famous lean Ing tower at Pisa. Some time ago It was noticed that the angle at which the tower leaning has Increased slightly and a commission of experts has been sent to Pisa to make an investigation and apply the remedies. Before an Illustrious gathering of caticor epeclallsts at 1'avla Prof. Uampoldl. a local opthalmist, presented twenty patlentls, for merly vlcUms of malignant tumors In the face, eye, lips, mouth and tongue, whom fc'-yiad wholly cured by the use of a trop ical plant known as Indian liquorice or rosary tree. This plant belongs to a vege table order, whose leaves contain glyoerlne, and with an eggsliped seed of a deep brilliant scarlet color, hard and al big aa dried peas. It abounds In abrlna, which Is a wonderful toxin for the blood. Prof. Rampoldi began his experiments ten years ago by treating external cancerous growths and has achieved about a hun dred definite curea. Of these growths about ten were located within the cavity nd walls of the mouth; others of his pa- iiat ui viicir ariiii in m, perfectly normal state. They were per sons known to have had the entire face nd forehead covered for many months with cancerous sores thought to be In curable. The most notable results pre sented were that of a girl In whom cancer of the eye had previously made such rav ages as to have eaten away part of the socket bone, and three others where the glands had bren affected. Uampoldl claims that his method super sedes the surgical treatment now In vogue, which often disfigures the patients with hideous permanent scars and seldom ef fects a testing cure, and Is likewise free from the well known perils that beset the Roentgen rays method. A beautiful Italian girl, S'gnorlna Ma tilda Muslo, known as the belle of Varese, who was engaged to be married to an Italian professor, he been the victim of a dastardly act of vengeance. Her home was entered by three masked men. who brandished knives. The girl fainted and when, several hours later, her parents re- turnml thev fmint thnlr riniiirhtr hound and gagged and her hair shorn close. It qs utaxea mat aurtng me torn twelve mrti.t Vi Rlfrrtnrtnn Mu!n hit rfilari m. dosen offers of marriage before becoming engaged to the proressor ana it is tnougni th- - the act Is the revenge of disappointed admirers. Pirates' Loot Found in Spain Coins Buried During the Eighteenth Century Discovered by Some Workmen. LISBON, March W. (Special to the Pub lishers Press.) Treasure burled by some of the pirate of the eighteenth century has been discovered at the town of Colmenar. The discovery was made by a wot k man who wns digging on the site of a ruined rastle nesr the town, and he found a number of old Spanish gold and silver coins. He reported his discovery to his employer, and a systematic search was made In the castle ruins, the result being the discovery of a dungeon which had been carefully sealed by the buccaneers. In this apartment, th walls of which were of extraordinary thlekness, were two rusted Iron chests filled with treasure. The con tents of the chests were carefully examined by experts, who believe that they form part of the booty obtained from ships captured more than 150 years ago. Old Spanish and Portuguese money formed the bulk of the treasure, but many gold and silver ornaments, Including vases, jewelery and eccleslatlcal plat were also contained In th chests. The excavations are being continued by th Portuguese government. REPORTS OF SPIES EXAMINED Larare Commission Reads Many Secret Documents Collected tor the Saltan. CONSTANTINOPLE, March 26-(Speclal to the Publisher's Press.) The committee entrusted with the duty of going through the reports made to Abdul-Hamld by the spies In the service of Ylldls Kiosk, has Just ended Its labors. This commission, which consisted of thirteen officers, one senator and one deputy, had to go through 'reports which filled 420 large boxes. The number of the Individual reports ex ceeded 10.000. Of these 1.000 were sent In y the general Inspector of military schools, who was afterwards hanged by th Toung Turk commute. He had begun to make these secret reports to Kiosk while still a cadet. Prince of Wales Has Great Bogey LONDON, March 26 (Special to the Publisher's Press.) Prince Edward of Wales, who Is not after all, to accompany his parents to South Africa In the autumn, has one great bogey. This Is the threat to produce a certain photograph. It Is some years sine the Incident happened, but th young prince, having been up to some piece of boyish mischief In the park at Sandrlngham, was called by his mother, who proposed to admlslster some rebuke. He ran off like a hare, and was Just get ting clear away when he', unfortunately cam up to the king, who had seen th Incident, and promptly took him by 'the ear and led htm up to the princess to re ceive his punishment. As he was being led forward the queen "snapped" him, and the result has been held over him as a threat ever since. Needless to say. Prince "David," more especially as the years pass. Is more and more anxious not to of fend, for fear th compromising photograph should see the light of day. DEPOSED SULTAN GONE MAD Althoaak Officially Denied This I Believed to Be the Trwe Sltaattoa. CONSTANTINOPLE. March 26. -(Special tolhe Publishers Press.) Though the government denies th story. It Is persis tently rumored her that Abdul Hamld has gone mad, and It Is for this reason that J the princes and princesses of his family, exiled to Salonlca with th deposed sultan, have been allowed to return to the capital. Abdul Hamld, the rumor runs. Is un- man.BuKl. ! ! .la .tat , W W - - attempted suicide several times. BELGIAN KING WORKS HARD FROM MORNING TO NIGHT Rises Karljr and Keeps Busy at Play or Work During all His Waking Honrs. BRUSSELS, March 26. Special to the Publishers Press.) King Albert Is one of the hardest workers in his realm. He rises at 5 and Is quickly at work. There Is a church near the palace, which he attends every morning, going without ostentation passing unnoticed by th people. At half past 7 he breakfests with the queen. At 8 the little princes come to ' wish their parents good morning, and to play with them. For the king, work conv mences again at 8 and continues until 11, when he rides with the queen or motors with her, unless, indeed, the queen Is ket at home by some of her work for the poor. The luncheon of the king and queen Is light, and after luncheon the whole day Is given up to work within doors and out of doors. At 0 the royal babies are put to bed In a room next to their parents. At ft the king dines. The ladles and gentlemen In attendance dine at the royal table, and the dinner Is per force a. ceremonial affair. But the king Is back to his work as soon as he can leave th table with courtesy. BRITISH POLITICS IN YANKEE EYES (Continued from Page One.) ROYAL FAMILY IS TO BE SUED Member of District Council Has Large Inheritance Claim Against Swedish Rulers. STOCKHOLM. March 26. (Special to the Publisher's Press.) M. Johanneson, a member of the district council, Is about to bring suit against the members of the royal family of Sweden to establish the existence of an Inheritance amounting to MCO.OOO crowns. The suit Is to be filed against the Dowager Queen Sofia and her sons, Princes Oscar, Charles and Eugene, brothers of King dustav V. POPULATION NCREASES FAST Censn of New Sonth Wales Shows a Good Increase for the Year. SIDNEY, March 26. (Spectal to th Pub lishers Press.) The population of New South Wales on December SI. last num bered 1.645,445, an Increase for the year of 60,436. Of this number 4,323 are assisted Immigrants. Th natural. Increase Is the highest on record. Th birth rat Is 26.94 per 1,000 of the population, being slightly above the average for the preceding five yearn. The number of marriages Is th highest on record. W ff?wP atim'ii hi p 38 Ess T zui,., mmwwiZLlz J. ,,m,,.-MWKwr immi 1m You 17111 Revise Your Notions About Filing Systems BT as show jon "Be Hornets' Lot as show you a ooaapiot modera 1 fflc srVtem that la dastgmod t coat you mm Itttl as poa alblo not aa much system leaving utMif to ho deotrod la th way of eompletenoaa , that doosat lavolv th ex penditure of a fanny mors than Is aeoessary for your Immediate needs a tx roa only ro- ea.tr oao-half of one standard "oiiwsasaeM" make modern office met ods pooalblo and oooaossioal for every no ssa tho smallest business man or the profoaslonal man who woata and kaa the minimum of office detail. Vhoy ar araeMaal, aoUara and oeots sssnway tt tha brferi mo la th aaaa. Big or llttl you need "woetloaetk again let us shew you how and why. lott plac youreelf unier do obligation by vw wuing. In addition to the above lines we carry the largest stock of high grade office Desks Charra and Ihsbles in the west. We are makinrr an unimial TlAitftlrm r7mM RccuJar Prices this month on all Desks Chairs and Tables, Omaha IPFlntlno Co. Phono Douglas SIS; lad. A-315L 918-324 Prnam Street S make any attempts to carry out their promises. The liberal psrty wrote th law upon the books, and this In spite of the fact that In reality the vast proportion of the conservatives really hate the old-age pensions. Such Is politics, and English politics are not a whit better than those of the rest of the world. These are th only features of the budget that can be re garded as objectionable. To me they are rather excusable and even Justifiable on account of the existing Inequalities of tax ation. If the duke favors himself unduly In the matter of taxation and cannot be made to pay his Just share. It Is not "too bad" to make his heirs disgorge. Oettlnc Into th "Show." I wss also down to London February SI to see King Edward open his third Par liament. It was certainly a festive, though solemn, occasion. I liked the presence of the dearly beloved king and queen and I enjoyed the whole ceremony, but many of the creatures In the limelight filled me with disgust. I had with me plenary cre dentials entitling me to admission, but I must have been compelled to give the countersign to a hundred policemen, more or less, to get my rights. From a consid erable experience I advise those placed In similar circumstances to treat the offi cials in charge with a reasonable amount of contempt and disdain; then you are taken for a lord. If, however, you show the plebian spirit of hesitation they will cause you no end of trouble. The only English I ever heard of who were keen In hunting out distress were King Arthur and his knights and Robin Hood; but, alas, we are now told they never lived and moved and had their being. The English are, however, the most loyal servants and followers of accredited masters. It cannot be denied that the Englishman really likes the nobility, although they oppress him beyond all belief; he enjoys their patronis ing treatment; he believes In the Invincible honesty of all Judges and In the virtues of all lords, and Is In the seventh "heaven of happiness when he Is chanting the English paean, "He Is a Jolly. Good Fel low," In honor of a lord, however Ignor ant, selfish and oppressive he may be. The earl of Rutland understood this feel ing and voiced It In the song much quoted Jn the campaign "Let wealth and commerce, laws and and learning die, But leave us still our old nobility." Under the English system the king can do no wrong. He Is supposed to do about what the prime minister says, and the prime minister takes the responsibility. The king's speech to Parliament was the shortest on record, and yet In spite of Its brevity, It contained a grave grammat leal error In Its most Important subject. The king used the term "House of Com mons" in place of the "House of Lords." It was an amusing mistake. Nona, how ever, misconstrued the meaning, and at the time no attention was paid to It, but later a lord said that If the government was going to destroy the House of Lords, It should at least be done with proper syntax. One Day with Commons. Although my nerves were nearly ex hausted In my attempts to get somewhere near the presence of th king on Feb ruary XI, nevertheless I decided to re main over another day and see th work ings of this great mother of all parlia ments. Th next day was February 23. I did not hear, however, even passing mention mad of on George Washington, although I feel sure that ho la known to the English. It was the only political oc caslon when my ears were not dinned with a lot of Billy stuff about America. Durin the campaign both sides essayed to prove everything by America. The chamber of the House of Commons Is about th also and shape of an Omaha city lot. I should say that It might seat 400 as the seats are arranged, whereas the House has more than 600 members, It seemed to me that the lndlvldua amounts to nothing In this Parliament, His leader runs him as he will. I was greatly Impressed with Mr. Asqulth, un doubtedly an able and good man, also with Mr. Lloyd George, Mr. Churchill, and. In fact, with the whole cabinet. They are young men, younger than any cabinet we have ever had. I was not, however, much Impressed with the character of the house as a whole, or with Mr. Balfour, or any of the conservative leaders. The latter seemed to me to be trlflers, and not really sincere. Th members keep their hats on If they want to, soma of them are In evening dress; there Is little formality, no oratory whatever, but a lot of Interrup tions, and, what I regarded, aa silly ques tioning. It Is evident that many of the members are men of little training, and Parliament much more resembles a state legislature than our congress. Expensive to "Sit." Members of Parliament serve absolutely without pay of any kind. They do not even get any traveling expenses; they are required to contribute to all sorts of charities, etc, and their election expenses are as high as from 11,600 to 16,000 or S7.000. For my part, I do not understand how they can afford the honor, and It certainly Is a serious matter for the liberals. They have not got th money for another elec tlon. It seems queer that It should be like this when the English pay their of flclals very much larger salaries than we do In America. English say they get better men this way. They always think that whatever Is with them is right, but I am decidedly from Missouri in this mat ter. I have studied closely the English system, and I think that there Is more Inequality and Injustice here than In any country I know personally anything about. In many things It amounts to corruption and would be so called In America, but her it Is class-privilege no longer re garded as divine, but still considered sacred. leenea of tho Campaign. So much has been said In the American press anent the Issues of the campaign upon both sides of the question that It must be difficult to form a decided opinion or even a satisfactory notion as to which side deserves our sympathies. Thinking that possibly to my acquaintances my own opinions may be of soma value, I will tell how th Issue presented themselves to me. When I left America I thought I had heard for th last time th slogan "Shall the people rule." and yet the first thing that met my eye as I enterrd th vast Albert Memorial hall to attend the first political meeting of th campaign was a motto blazoned on th walls lu large let ters reading aa followa. "Shall th people be ruled by th peers?" This was the real Issue that was fought out on the hustings and In th voting booths, and yet under England's peculiar system. It was not at all that question that was decided. It must be born In mind that In England they hav no platform of principles and th Issues ar clouded alt th Urn and appeals ar mad to every prejudice to get th vote. I had th groat eat diffi culty In getting Into this meeting on ao eount of arbitrary rules of admission, and ha4 I not boon a colonial from Saskatche wan (T), I doubt if I would hav suc ceeded. Mrs. Crawford was not able to get la at all. she being oonsldarod aa a poaalhla uttragotu (a good guass). Jy predilections were against th socialism of th liberal party and In favor of the pro tective policy of the conservatives. I was even Inclined In the dilemma to look for relief from th suffrages of the women, who have always made good In every un dertaking. For many reasons I wss hoe tile to the liberals, but as t began to study the situation carefully from both sides and to get Into the real history of th House of Lords, I changed my views and became willing to swallow objectionable doses of socialism and ready to renounce tho bene fits of tariff reform, and 1 thought that I saw clearly aa the days went on that the liberals were really making a great fight for civil and religious liberty. Fight Ttot aa F.qaal One. This fight hss. however, hern an unequal one. Money, church, liquor and land, a formidable host, have been allies under the conservative banner. Furthermore, not much more than one-half of the male adults have the right of suffrage. A rich man can vote wherever he owns certain kind of property, and In some cases they vote fifteen or twenty times. This Is made easy, because elections are not held on the same day, but are extended over a period of three weeks. The powerful Es tablished Church of England Is decidedly tory. and Its ministers are accused of being tory political agents, with how much truth I do not undertake to ssy. I feel sure that undue pressure was brought to bear upon the poor tenant. His promise to vote "right" was exactrd, and be It said to the honor of an Englishman that he makes his promise good. John Bull Is but a poor liar. It Is Interesting to note that the Dally News, a powerful liberal newspaper, for several days prior to elec tion gave this advice to the rural voters: 'Never mind who tekes you tothe polls. Vote liberal. The bnllot Is secret as the grave." I hav nothing to say as to the ethical quality of this advice and I am not able to say how far It was followed. If one Is to be au fait in English society he had better be tory. It is probable. however, that the real nobility are not so particular as those who spe them. With these latter bulwarks of the empire. It Is a de rlguer matter. Several sensible and charming ladles have told us that they would not have a liberal to the house to dine for ftar It might vex or corrupt their dear husbands. As to Americans, how ever. It Is another matter; they are ex pected to be liberal, the sacred and divine truth of class superiority has not been re vealed to them, and they are not held ac countable. Again the universities are hot beds for conservatism and the tory party Is sure of nine members of Parliament from these sources. Strange to say Lon don is strongly conservative. One Is sur prised to find that the very man who has greatest reason to be liberal Is strongly conservative. Suffice It . to say that In my Judgment there Is going to be a great change as time goes on In the returns from London. Advantages of lleekllasr. I have seen much mention in The Bee of the heckling that took place In the meet ings. Those reports were true. The con servative meetings were constantly Inter rupted and the poor lords had to retire early from the rostrum. It would be Indeed deplorable If freedom of speech were In terfered with In an Anglo-Saxon country. This heckling, however, cannot be said to hav gone to that extent at all. Bear In mind that there are bounds of human en durance. Think for a moment of the kind of speech you would get from such lights aa the earl of Yarmouth, th duke of Marlborough, or th noble Lord So and So, who rides so well to the hounds and tells In such a patronising way of his gifts of a brace of rabbits to th poor. If these lords by any ohanc talk sense well and good, but If their arguments ar mediaeval and Insulting to the intelligence Is it any harm to question them a bit It was the conservative meetings that 'mode me a liberal and Mrs. Crawford a heckler. The average English political meeting Is as antiquated as many other things here. and can hardly be said to be helpful for any purpose. The chief speaker makes a short speech without the slightest attempt at oratory. He deals In generalities. The publlo are invited to hand up questions to be answered. They do so to the extent of at least fifty. He takes them on by one and In a venevolent and masterful way, consuming much time, disposes of them In generalities even more glittering. Then some man, almost sure to be a fool, gets up and makes a motion that the meeting Indorse the candidate, and makes a long speech befitting his role. Another worthy seconds the motion In a long speech, say ing the same thing. The chairman an nounces that the speaker has stood trie yrobatlon, has answered all the questions, not a single on being omitted and par consequent is entitled to his reward, The motion is put and always (?) carried. Every conservative meeting I attended was crowded with liberals and several fights took place In each, arising out of In terruptions and questioning. Conservatives Avoid Hastings. The conservatives were without speakers of merit throughout the whole campaign. The dukes were early scared off the field. Mr. Balfour was sick all the time, item Lord MUner, item Lord Cromer, item Lard Lansdowne. Lord Curs on. chancellor of this university, though really a sick man, alone showed courage and took the stump. He made several able speeches and had the courage to argue before the peopl that the hereditary principle was the better principle of government, it was of ad vantage that some one In the party take advanced ground. Lord Curson was the scapegoat and his reputation throughout England has suffered In consequence. It seems strange, but It Is true that practi cally the only voice raised In all England in favor of the hereditary principle In Parliament was that of Lord Curson, and yet the whole conservative pnrty Is flght Ir.g to the death to maintain that very principle which they dare not and can not for one moment defend and sustain. The conservatives becloud the Issue by claim ing that they are fighting for the ex istence of a second chamber, whereas not a man In England has anything against a second chamber, provided the hereditary principle Is don away with. The liberals propose. If they can not do away with the principle, to take tbe power from the House of Lords. The liberal meetings were always Inter esting. It was evident that the liberals tfally believed that they were fighting for rights which they were entitled to. Tholr meetings were Invariably packed to the doers In spite of the difficulty In getting In them. Admleslon wss always by ticket and policemen by the score guarded the entrances against the approach of any ravenous suffragette. On the other band. J there was no life and no spirit In th con servatives meetings, and 1 am sure that the conservative traders heaved a sigh of relief when the last meeting was over. Lords" a Menace. In conclusion I would direct your atten tion to the real condition of things and to the prospects of relief. The members of the House of Lords have ever legislated chiefly for themselves and hav never legislated for the nation and they never will. Mr. Lloyd George has well said that th cats can not be expected to legislate for the mice. The record of the House of Lords Is tad beyond all belief. If new liberal lords are created, experience has clearly proved that they or their sons will soon become as all the rest of the privileged class. The House of Lords, as constituted. has too much power. They have exercised this power for centurlss snd they will fight to retain It. I prophesy that soon In the House of Lords and perhaps In th? House t-f Commons, as well, thev will of Clelr own motion introduce a bill making some specious reforms. I think that If they were politic enough to make generous con cessions, with their great resources they would be able to retain the major portion of their privileges for primps many years, but Judging from their past record." I be lleve that their selfishness will loom up so large that It will be the reuse of tholr undoing, and mill deprive them of tholr ancient privileges. "Whom the gods would destroy they first make mad." The House of Lords Is nn anachrorlsm. A hereditary legislative chamber Is a remnant of mx.laevallsm, scarcely an argument can be put forward In Its favor; It has never been adopted by a single one of England's col onies, and today has a place In the system of not more then two or three of the civilized races of the earth. I do not know what Is going to happen this year of grace, but I do know that the lords can no more stop the swelling tldo of liberty and equal ity thnn old King Canute could be his flat stop the tides of the sea. The English will emancipate themselves. The Irish will get home rule. The powers of the House of Lords will be diminished and the common people of Great Britain and Ireland will come to thtlr own. FRANK CRAWFORD. (At Its session on Tuesday the House of Lords voted by an overwhelming majority to abolish the hereditary right to legislate. -Ed. Bee.) GREAT SCANDAL SHAKES PARIS (Continued from Page One.) with historic memories, and so. ton, does the large garden In the middle of the place. In which stands the equestrian statue of Louis XIII, grandson of Le Balofre, killed the grandson of Collgny In a duel. Dobs Aid Police. Two police dogs were sufficient to put to flight a number of disturbers of the peace at Vlncennes, and to secure the capture of eight others the other day. A shop keeper In the district was being boycotted for some time, and latterly he. received threats that his shop would be demolished or burnt down. The police had to be called out In force to keep the disturbers away, and when quiet seemed to b restored they re tired. But Immediately afterwards gangs of suspicious looking individuals again ap peared, and finally some' fifteen of them assembled and were going to pillage the shop. A telephone oall informed th police of what was happenlnng, and two policemen, with their dogs, were at once despatched to the seen. Seven of the men took to flight, but the rest remained and Intended to put up a good fight against th two policemen and two dogs, who. they thought. were no match for them. The policemen simply let their dogs loose and In a few minutes It was all over. The rebels capita lated amid yells and groans, as they were being bitten scientifically In the calves of their legs and other obvious parts of their body. The dogs made short work of their courage, and the eight men marched hum bly off to the police station, .where they were kept In custody. Law Prove Cumbersome. The authorities of the National Library In Paris do not know where to store the thousands of scenarles and miles of bioscope films which must be deposited according to law. There are nearly 400 miles of films In the national archives. Good Spring Tonic W hav taken Hood's Sarsoparllla for a spring tonle and as a blood puri fier. Last spring I was not wall at all. Wna I went to hod I was tired and nervous aad could not sleap wU, la th moralag I would fool twlc aa tired; my aaotasr got a botU f Hood a oaraapa rtlla. whloa I took. I fait Ilk a now poroea whoa I had flalaood that boltl. W always have sua ef Hood's taooi clnaa la th bouoo." UUvor KnsaUa Marinette, Wla. Thar la a "Just as good" madlcina, Insist a having Uoda. Oot It today la usual liquid form ff "" wumu cauoa Bar NO DIVORCE FOR P00RERCLASSES (Continued from Page One.) newspaper approached the artist a couple of years ago and endeavored to beard the old "lion" at his house In Portsdown road, he only succeeded In arousing Sir John's surprise that an editor should want to know anything about him. He blushed like a school boy when asked to give the en terprising Journalist the secret of his long life. "My age doesn't seem extraordinary to me," he said, "and, as I hav no program for longevity, it Is Impossible to give any receipt. My best advice Is Just go on liv ing." New Order Defined. A tramp was stated at the meeting of the Plymouth guardians to have declared that he belonged to the order of "N W. B. M." Investigation showed the nam of the order to be the "Never Work Be tween Meals." gonads Like Home. A woman told the Old-street magistrate that she borrowed a sovereign from a money lender five years ago. Since then, she said, she had repaid 13, and now she was threatened with a summons for 10. PEACE MUST BE MAINTAINED (Continued from Page One.) Wlderhofer's feet, but that the heavy charge of powder caused the pistol to kick. The recent suicide of Herr Ludwl; Hevesy, well known author and JournalUt, Is still shrouded in mystery. Herr Hevesy wss a frequent contributor to the "Pester Lloyd" and to numerous Gorman papers. Although 66 pears old he had never tired of writing and the day of suicide he com pleted four articles before committing the fatal act. Th llttl commune . of Klsszekeres. In Hungary, consisting of but eighty houses and numbering a population of but 665 souls, has Just distinguished Itself by re fusing to accept th estate of th late General Haynau. who had gained an un enviable fame throughout the world by his ferocious methods In suppressing the Hun garian revolution in 1M9. Uy his will th estate passed to his daughter, after whose death It was to be presented to th com mune. This daughter haa Just died, but the Communal Council, after much delibera tion, hss declined to accept th gift, and ordered that th estate should bo left to fall out of cultivation, and be called th "Bloody Meadow." This decision has evoked general enthusi asm throughout Hungary, and though It He In th power of th provincial admin istration to overrule it, it la doubtful whether they will do so, "M1"1 ' n.rmv i ipw. w m I " '"owfY'i . - fin m a' fix ZZjj'Jr$A ( .w-A ' f. Js V '-. - es.iT ie lVr', m rlin' inii v 'Strouse & bros jL rjGHSJ-o h: i To Tailor-Tied Men! THE cord that binds you to your tailor is one of sentiment, not "centiment". Do you get full measure for what you payp Here's the way to weigh it: Style How can the small-town tailor, remote from the great centers of fashion, imbue his garments with the advanced style that marks "HIGH-ART" Clothes? Fabrics How tan the small-town tailor, who buys cloth in limited lenglht from "middlemen," obtain a range of patterns equal to the immense range of "HIGH-ART" patterns bought in a hundred lots from the mills? Tailoring How can the small-town tailor, employ ing the men and methods of yesterday, turn out gar ments of to-day level with "HIGH-ART" Clothes which are created by artist-specialists in a shop so big, that it could house Sfj separate tailor shops? The best shops in this town and every town sell "HIGH-ART" Clothes. Thai you may be sure to pick out Ihe beil from the ml, seek the label, "HIGH-ART." Th "HIGH-ART" Fashion-Guide for Spring and Summer it truly a work of high art. You'll find it fatcinatinf pocket companion. Sent free for a potlcarl. STROUSE & BROTHERS Maker, of "HIGH-ART' CLOTHES BALTIMORE, MD. I-' c ifijiviaBiTfasMiiw, t'i"i Those New Tan Shades For Spring Wear Molony- -"Roomy Tailor has a full line at 320 South 15th St. loAltmmt&GItfo HAVE READY THEIR CATALOGUE No. 101 FOR THE SPRING AND SUMMER SEASONS AND WILL MAIL A COPY UPON REQUEST. JFffifi Attftra. 34tff tmb 35t 8tnttn. Nrm tfcrtt.' l jtammtmmMimmmmamm Engraved Stationery WtdJimf Inmltmtionm Annomncmnvnlt VUitins Card All correct forms ia currant social anjat-a nrravao! ia tha beat manner an J punctually dalivarej wKaa promieod. Embossed Monogram Stationery and other work executed at prices lower titan ueually prevail eUewhere. A. I. ROOT, Incorporated 1210-1211 Howard St Pheae D. 104 at its i j .LP--- DENTISTS I Heat aauloped dental offlc in th mttie HIjhest trad dsntUtry at reasonable prices. f ftffZ. forceialn fllllugs, just like tbe tooth. AU InsUa- iMevw SMItJI VoaVU, yiutUb TUUtO IXXi PAXTON IVLrOCX Co letb aad Faraaia Kta,