Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 11, 1910, EDITORIAL, Page 19, Image 19

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THE REE: OMAHA. SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1910.
10
SIDELIGHTS ALONG
WASHINGTON BYWAYS
LITTLE KM TIE' WEEK D
Things You Want to Know
The Itoosrvrlt
Home-Coming.
liiBcr"
fg$mS& HOME mGEQ
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ii
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Well, thl certainly looki like old times,"
remarked Representative James E. Mann
of Illinois as ho observed Mayor John F.
, Fitzgerald of Boston in a corridor of the
capltol, surrounded by newspaper corre-
' ftpondents.
"Right." ' Chfmed In Representative
Roberta of Massachusetts as he Joined the
group and shook hands. Still talking,
Fits?"
'When Mayor Fitzgerald was a member
of the house In Iffl7 he was tho youngest
wrw i - yv., i -zr- - - -s- I
member, of that body. Incidentally he was
the most energetlo and he had the repu
. tation of being able to Ret more news
. .paper space than any other member of
' congress. I
"Fitzgerald's visit." said a member of
the house, "reminds me of the days when
he) was a member here. He was the most
i remarkably busy man I have ever seen in
congress. He always had something on tap
that made good newspaper copy and when
r the correspondents were in a bad way for
- news they always could count upon Fitz
gerald to give them something worth
while.
"The present mayor of Boston was the
. greatest hustler I have ever seen. I re
member a story he told ma ones about the
way he kept his constituents guessing as
; - to his whereabouts. He would deliver a
; corking good speech In the afternoon,
1 hustle down to the station and catch the
. through train for Boston and tha next
morning ha would be back home getting
first-hand information aa to how his re
marks were received in his district. Jump-
. ing back and forth between Washington
and Boston was quite aa ordinary a Jour-
' ney for him as for the members who go
'back "and forth between Baltimore and
'"Washington every day."
Mayor Fitzgerald while here disclosed a
"plan for a, -combination between the demo-
crats and republicans of , Massachusetts
' with the avowed purpose of trying to bring
r about tne defeat of Senator Henry Cabot
Lodge next January by swinging demo-
JlH.mborsT Steak. '
This name is commonly given to Inex
pensive cuts, of beef chopped, seasoned a
little, shaped into small balls, or Into one
large thin cake, and quickly broiled In the
r way that a tender steak woud be. Owing
' to the quick coo king much ot tha natural
V flavor Of tha meat la developed and re
tained. Tha fact should be kept In mind
, ' that Hamburg steak should ba mads from
'-Afresh, wall ground meat. It I much safer
' to chop the meat, at home, aa choppod
meat spoils very quickly. Much depends,
' too, upon browning it sufficiently to bring
out the flavors.. Many cooks think that
Hamburg steak la Improved if tha meat la
mixed with milk before It la cooked.
., ' In soma parts ot the country, and par
ticularly In soma of tha southern states,
two kinds ot beat are on sale; On la lm
",( , ported from other parts of tha country and
' is of higher prioe. Tha other, known lo
cally ma "native beef, la sometimes lacking
la flavor and In fat and la usually tougher.
" Southern native beef such aa Is raised In
. . Florida, la almost Invariably, however, of
extxemelx good flavor, due presumably to
',; .the feed or other conditions under which It
la raised. By chopping such meat and
Brightside and His
. BY LAFAYETTE PARKS,
i 'I'd like to go to an old-fashioned picnic
' .again this summer, ' Brightside announces
' with a note of sentimental yearning in his
' voice, as the autocrat of the Harlem flat
trolls languidly In.
'One .word to Mother and she'll do the
rest," replies Son, prying looaa a cork tip
from his cigarette case.
"It means a good deal of work for the
y women folks to prepars food (or an out
Ing." thoughtfully continues Father.
"The angel cake, pickles, stuffed olives
and other near-food tha skirts tuck Into
a shos box for tha ptcnla eats will never
give 'em heart failure from overwork,"
, growls Son.
'"When I was a boy," reminlscently re
marks Father, "my mother always had
fried chicken, three or four kinds of cold
meat, half a dozen home-mads pies and
cakes and ao many othsr things no one
v could begin to sat them alL"
' "Those happy days have gone by tor
. aver," pessimistically laments thy First
' Born. "If a gink at ons of these modern
denies can pry loose coupls of feather
weight sandwiches, a slab of store cheese
and a bakery bun, he's pretty closs to the
- limit"
( 'The homo-cooked vltuals were always
'. the chief eharra In tha old style outing,"
says Father. "My mother would bs busy
IT over tho cook stove for a week before the
great event, baking and roasting the var!
sua good things.'
"If you oaa find one little wtfla In any
Six-room flat in Greater New York wbo
won't buy her plonlo supplies In the corner
delicatessen store, handsome reward will
be paid and no questions asked." retorts
Son.
"I fear the average city woman doesn't
take the same delight In tbs wlldwood
excursion that we used to," Is Father's
opinion.
vr..w-
HJjS Ar
on tha homo made grub proposU
ths damea I nthia little old town,"
eirrees Son. "They can't aee any fun la
jamming a bunch of flfty-aevea varlettas
of eats together, until they all taste alike.
cratlo votes to some Independent repub
lican. There Is ne member of congress who la
certain to be subjected to all of the
troubles which a waiter can, Inflict on a
person who cats In a fashionable restau
rant. He Is Representative Arthur Phillips
Murphy of the Sixteenth Missouri district.
Every waiter In Washington has the In
dian sign on Mr. Murphy and they 'have
sworn to make hln ! !' miserable every
time ha dines away f: cr.i home. Tho reason
is because Mr. Murphy has sonic decided
views about tho propriety of the great
American public being called upon to pay
toll to the waiters after it has paid a
fancy price to the hotel proprietor.
Mr. Murphy's convictions on this subject
are so deep seated that he has been trying
for years to get a bill through congress
making the practice of tipping unlawful.
Members of the committees to which these
bills have been referred usually have a lot
of fun with them, but they never get within
a thousand miles of being enacted into law.
Mr. Murphy's antagonism to the tipping
system Is said to be due to his knowledge
of the value of each and every penny
which comes Into his possession. He has
reached his present position only because
of a bulldog determination. Ha began life
on a farm and worked as a farmhand
from sunup until sundown. When he had
developed sufficiently to engage In harder
work he - found employment as a section
hand. After working out on the road all
day Murphy atudled telegraphy at night
and finally got a Job as telegraph operator
and filled that place so well that he waa
made train dispatcher.
When he' waa not engaged in plotting
the routing of trains In Missouri he was
studying law and was admitted to prac
tice In 1894. Murphy still finds use for the
fighting qualities which made it possible
for him to desert the railroad for congress,
for his district Is so close that he considers
himself lucky It he geta at majority of
209 or 300. '
cooking It as Hamburg steak, a dish almost
aa palatable aa the best cuts of the more
expensive beet may be obtained. ; In such
cases, however. It la desirable because of
the low percentage of fat to add suet or
butter to tha meat. The reason for this
Is that in tha cooking the water, of the
Juice when unprotected by . fat evaporates
too quickly and leave the meat dry. This
may be prevented by adding egg aa well
as fat, for the albumen of the egg hardons
quickly and tends to keep in the Juices.
The' proportion should be one egg to one
and one-half pounds ot meat.
Boy
"Joys of Old Fashioned
Picnics," Their Lat
est Tabloid Sketch. '
and carting it off ten or twenty miles by
trolley. Then when the procession finds
a vacant lot with three or four acraggly
trees they camp out and unllmber the near
food." "It is a bit different from tha wide,
clover-scented fields ws usually selected
for our rural festivities." admits Father.
"If you don't get an early start the best
pTaces are always taken and the bunch
has to beat it to one of those cheap little
beer gardens or a publio park. If you
nappen to live In Brooklyn you can nick
out a quiet spot, In a new cemetery where
a lew Jots are still on the market and
picnlo parties are welcome. Before you get
through the ham sandwiches to the devilled
eggs tho agent comes around to show you
bargains In choice burial plots where the
view is extra fins."
"I don't think I should cars for such
mournful surroundings," ventures Father.
"When you get tired of reading tha labels
on the packages of patent biscuit, canned
sardines and mixed pickles, you can always
cbko a stroll around tha grounds and read
luu.iue uu tut lomDsiones," auggeets
Son. "If you eat enough of the olonie
grub, and are there with Imagination, a
uy ougnc io do sole to think up a few
neat inscriptions nlmselt."
"I prefer to let my relatives prepare my
iiixnoriai, aeciares f ather.
"Hera's a very pretty little thing I made
up out ol my own head when I attended
a 'cemetery picnic last week," concludes
Bont
He didn't miss a picnlo
In fifty-seven years.
Till angel cake and mothball
Let flow a widow's Usrs.
vi-opyright, 1810, by the N. Y. lierald Co.)
"It wishes were horses the beggars might
ridel"
So spoke some old Sage full of notions and
viae,
But what If they might? In these days full
of wheals
Most toeggars are yearning for Automobiles!
Rehold the fly so small a thing
To dart about on busy wlng
How sad lo thlok It aan't be naat
Aud, wipe the microbes from lis feet!
T, K. M.
Ideal
Fhillpplans 3:13-14.
The Ideal life In religion, politics, busi
ness. Is a life that Is concentrated, for it
only grants peace to the toller, and It only
scores deep enough to preclude effacement
Others may leave shapely foot prints upon
the sands of time, but It leaves them In
the cooling rock which grows more re
tentive as the years die. Dissipated energy
may be spectacular, but oonuensatlon is
force and Increases in proportion to the
condensation.
Proporly understood narrowness Is power
and breadth is weakness. The stream that
wanders lazily through the country-side.
breathing under lily pads, toying with the
fringing sedges, only succeeds in filling the
district with malaria. Send the waters
down the narrow channel and they are
purified, turn them Into tho flume and they
speed away to minister to the parched low
lands, or dropping into the great turbine
they send belts and wheels flying, beneath
HgTit created by its power. Light and power
take the place of disease germs. The sun
light falling In mellow spray over the
world, begets a flame when focussed. The
air la charged with electricity, but the
world trembles only with the crash of a
thunderbolt. Gunpowder exploded In open
might please a child , with Its flash, but
confined it shatters a granite boulder.
In us there are mightier forces, moral, in
tellectual, spiritual, but they operate ac
cording to similar great laws. Wreckage
strews all the coast line of life since lives
are not compressed, concentrated. Lofty
ambitions are vital in the problem, but
they come to nothing till work pins them
down to. earth.
Exuberant life must be harnessed to some
one calling before the work-a-day world
gets any relief with Us burden.
We feel sorry for the broad-minde'd man
who sees so much good In all forms of re
ligion that he refuses to adopt any. He is
so well disposed toward all that he refuses
to open his shop and see about his business.
There are many good- things about this be
lief, and so much to be offered In favor of
that, ao he permits the Bhole to pass away
as some sort of a collection gathered for
his inspection. Need .he be surprised when
he comes to the end of his years that he
finds himself envious ot tha bigot, who, at
least, accomplished one thing. His ability
may be marked, his knowledge extensive,
his charity world wide, but heart and
hands are empty.
Over against such efforts the heroic life
of Paul stands In perpetual rebuke. ' Where
gained) he the power to mark the ages as
the great lee cap has engravd our counti
nent? He answers back through tha cen
turies in his simple creed, "One thing I
did."
Across the vision swings that great Paul
ine life, and Its message is, narrowness,
"One thine do." Facts of life, are seers of
God.
Viewed on tha outward side, there never
was such a busy life certainly: ' Born at
Tarsus, educated at Jerusalem, converted
at Damaeeus, preaching at Ephesus.
Women's Calling Cards are to be Almost
To possess always visiting cards of oor -
rect size and quality requires close obser
vation, for so slight is the difference from
sason to season, that a woman who is
Indifferent to such matters may easily con
tinue to use the same ehe ordered three or
four years ago. This spring, for Instance,
visiting cards have undergone a trifling
change and are the merest shade smaller
than those which were the ne plus ultra
last winter. This difference is noticeable
in men's cards, which have shrunk about
one-half an inch in width. At present they
are fraction under three inches long and
one and one-half inches wide. Anything
Ov AlY..
jMISTER lVEOtiW fbD GIRL." I'VE
. i - v A BAD MALT WORKED THAT
JsfL fGKACIOU-3-ME! DOLLAR AMD MAMV
5fe THAT FLOWER I HEED CARFARE ATiMr' OftkOLTT
1 MAN GAVE HE IPVOULLBEKINO A, T inc. LOOK OUT
CtrJ A&ADHALrlWMO CHOUGH TO LOAM J ) . ss rOR
&4t WOULD THINK ME 572? ) ( ?4rL
THERE COULD BE FIVE T?TiCOP'V.
I -sCS. JPr SUCH WICKED CENTS' X A
XL PEOPLE IN THE '-: JKA s
WORLD -ILL HAVE (( LMtijfflt$Ihl&
$&Z&& TASK SOME GOOD viXTSJT v Vflf K ifi'lM?
VTg? samarItan for Pt Cl
YpL J fniSTEFWn IN frtl HOHE-AtX FMGHT-
. riO IS EYTHAM J PREDICAMENT t (
HO!GO(rrj ) could vou )
1) JL Iloanmefive- v A J. k 'jTtw
jCiVA ( .AFOR kPZiL LOOK LIKE V 3k
' G . ci?WiCAR VW3 5 'MHHONE'bT
lad i ' ''"r'-it
DOLLAR THATfc NO JfL
GOOD I NEED CAR f . -1 s K
FARE HOnC AND NO J rlsM (O'VOU BAD M
r"7TNONEwiu, Jfes Vl hlt. vou. V
l-g2A BELIEVE J 1 i ?CiZr Vou UO At:'
cVlnvsToRV- - K -7 i rV ruu Jw
Y&SvT J ' Y THEM ! fj tGtODTOME-j
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COPYfilOMT. WO, IT THg
M 1 A-' R
t I I
It Rev. W.
Presbyterian
IT. X,anrenc. Pastor Tlrst
Church, Lincoln, Neb.
Athens, Corith. all' the great centers of
the east, dying at Rome. He traversed the
great forests, visited the nations, sailed
the seas. He stood before the polished phil
osophers, he reasoned with little com
panies In synagogues, he caused rulers to
tremble with the declarations of the truth.
His hands ministered into necessities knot
ting the tent threads. He felt the chill of
the Roman prison. He knew what it was
to be sick and troubled. Writing letters
that live for ages. From Tarsus to Rome
his life was made of many threads, and
few men have played so many parts.
Viewed on the Inward side, few have
risen to much heights or sounded deeper
depths. To the Corinthians he said, "I am
not one whit behind tho chlefest apostle,"
and a few pages further he writes, "I am
not meet to be 'called an apostle." In con
fidence he exclaims, "I know that he Is
able to keep that which 1 have committed
unto him against that day," but his hour
comes when he declares, "I buffet my body
lest after I have preached to others I my
self should be a castaway. " In the Philip
plans his heart thought Is rejoice, but In
Galatlans It is weep for your sins. He
wrote a sharp reproof to the Corinthians
and then regretted the epistle. He was
caught up to the heaven in spirit, and yet
landed heart sick and discouraged at the
seaport of the Imperial city. He sounded
all the notes ot a human life. Unified by
doing common things In an uncommon
fashion with a new spirit, under the spell
of a heaven-born purpose.
The cause must be reckoned when a life
Is estimated. Snuffers are only snuffers al
though they be made of gold and set with
precious stones, but they are named when
they relate to the furnlshment of
the tabernacle. A horseshoe nail is a
small thing, tut when It loses a kingdom
as Creasy declares, it becomes a matter
of great moment. It Is difficult to build
a mansion upon a twenty foot frontage.
A man may be strong in character setting
4arger than that (or a tnan should be
voided,
Cards for married women are almost
square, being three by two Inches. Paste
boards bearing the names of both Mr. and
Mrs. are half an inch larger each way,
the proportion remaining the same. Since
cards as thin as a piece of writing paper
were carried several years agoy the quality
has slowly but steadily grown heavier, un
til now it is of appreciable thickness, with
out being actually stiff. It is pasteboard,
however, and not bits of paper.
An address ot some kind should always
be In the lower left hand corner, save
ma ii
ittsD nALr
KgW YORK gVENINQ TELEGRAM (NEW YORK HERALD CO.). As Riohli Rwtrvttf,
ELiASEQlNEJJ ,
out to become the master In some simple
thing, hia purpose may glorify the simple
duty, but a great cause Imparts Its breadth
to tho endeavor. Paul was large with the
uplift of the Christ Ideal anil guspel. He
hitched his wagon to a Btar. , He threw his
life Into a calling that taxed the Son of
Man to realize its largeness, lie could not
be small in spirit. Kach duty was weighted
with momentous Issues.
Livingstone concentrated his energies
upon Africa, but he was consecrated to the
Lord Jesus. Africa was only a part ot the
program. The thought that drew him from
forest to lake and down forest way again
In the unknown land of the blacks was
this, "The end of the geographical feat Is
the beginning of the missionary enterprise."
Whoever did so many things in modern
life? Explorer, traveler, geographer, as
tronomer, zoologist, botanist, physician, lin
guist, missionary, all by turn he was. The
breadth of the life is tho fact that It fell
upon tho plalis of the Master's life. Super
imposed triangles that coincide are alike
In breadth. A life consecrated to Jesus
Christ cannot be narrow, for His line goes
out to the ends of tho earth, falling ever
where the true, the noble, the pure abide;
where light always gleams and darkness
never comes.
Life for self la tne spinning ot the web
out ot self, spider like. In all things It Is
by eagerness and upward straining and Its
determination to advance that human life
wins aught of praise. Only by positive
progress and achievement docs life become
worthy. Life for Christ Is weaving the
golden threads which come from divine
hands, and following tho plans he gives we
raise the figures that delight ourselves and
satisfy the heart. The world Is startled by
the reach and projectile power of a life for
Christ. The upward calling" of God in
Christ Jctus will make a life worth while
or there Is no purpose large enough so to
do. The mists of the gathering ages wrap
In slowly thickening folds of forgctfulness
other events and other names In history
and make them ghostlike and shadowy, but
no distance has dimmed or can dim that
form at the end ot the, Journey. Other
landmarks sink below tne horizon as the
tribes of men pursue their solemn march
through the centuries, or are like stars
that blaze awhile and then fade Into com
plete Invisibility, but our light shall ever
beam, never consume, but will illuminate
every face and, purpose that is turned to
ward him. With the face turned down the
way of power without the thought of the
Ideal purpose, there will steal upon the
dull gray of the frozen north. Toward the
Christ In the high calling the flush of the
warmth and life of the southland will
spread above and within. Concentration
alone is a frowning cliff fronting some
polar sea, white with ice and black with
bleak rocks. Consecration, a life lived to
the Christ, Is like the limestone walls that
keep back the Mediterranean, green and
flowery to. the very edge, a barrier. com
plete, unmoved, but draped with beauty
touched with sunlight, crowned with fruit.
W. W. LAURANCE.
Lincoln, Neb.
Square This Year
when the day also is used. In ifhe latter
case the address should be placed in the
right corner, the other being used for the
day.
When a woman lives in a small town
and all her friends know the exact spot
where her house Is located an address is
still Imperative. This 4s obvious- When one
remembers that women go away to visit.
or travel, almost every year, and during
that time will require cards with home ad
dresses. The street is not necessary for
the resident of a village or small town, only
the name of the cHy. The name of the
elate is not necessary.
CoTttirvued.
fbUD GIRL-" IVE
When Theodore Roosevelt reaches New
Tork next week he will be accorded a
welcome such as has been given to few
moral men. It has been with the greatest
difficulty that the committee has kept
the demonstration within the limits im
posed by the physical conditions of New
York City, the second lartieat town on
earth. Mr. Roosevelt will set foot on the
s.ill of his native land to be grevted by the
cheers of hundreds of thousands of his
fellow-countrymen who desire him to be
come a candidate for piesident in 1912.
Hundreds of thousands who do not desire
him to be a candidate will admit that he
can have the presidency again for the
asking. Other hundreds ot thousands say
he cannot, even if he will.
General U. S. Grant came home from a
trip around the world and waa greeted
with a third-term boom. He was defeated
In tho republican national convention of
1880 In spite of the fact that his followers
were captained by the superb Conkling
and in spite of the fact tliut the "Immortal
306" stood faithful to the end.
Admiral George Dewey came home from
the victorious battle of Manila Hay and
was greeted as few Roman conquerors
were greeted. He listened to the bussing
of the presidential bee and, with the speed
of a Lucifer, fell to a place of comparative
obscurity.
William Jennings Bryan returned from
a trip around the world and was greeted
at New York by the ever enthusiastic
legions of the democratic party with con
fident predictions that ho would be nomi
nated the third time for president and
would be elected. He was nominated,
but not elected. Many democrats believe
that his defeat was due In some measure
to the speech hich he made at Madison
Square garden in acknowledging his home
coming reception. '
William Howard Taft came home from
a trip around the world, undertaken under
orders from President Roosevelt when
Taft already was a candidate for the
presidency. There waa no general popular
reception, but Mr. Taft found upon reach
ing Washington that sappers and miners
had taken advantage of his absence to try
to explode his boom. Mr. Taft made some
very positive Ftatetnents and' did some
very positive things that Sunday. Among
the results may be mentioned the admitted
facts that Mr. Taft is now president of the
United States, and Mr. George B. Cortel
you Is in private life. But the Taft home
coming was not the occasion of a popular
demonstration.
The record of General Grant, Admiral
Dewey and Mr. Bryan goes to prove that
It Is a highly dangerous thing to subject
a presidential boom to the haxards of
travel In foreign lands and then bring It
home to bo the object of a hip-hlp-hurrah
mass meeting at the steamer docks. No
great presidential boom has yet survived
this treatment.
Since it is- given to no Vnan to say what
Is In the mind of Theodore Roosevelt, it
cannot be said what he thinks of his third
term boom. Yet everybody admits that
there Is such a thing and that It has Its
roots in the soli of the whole country.
'Will it survive the herolo experience of a
great homecoming? Or will It go the
way of the booms attached to the trains
of Grant, Dewey and Bryan T
The Grant third-terms boom was
launched in the great enthusiasm of his
welcome home at San Francisco. It was
wrecked on the rock, of precedent George
Washington refused a third term and no
man has been able to overcome the force
ot that declination, Mr. . Roosevelt, If he
is again elected, will have what Is prac
tically a third term, although it will be
what Senator Bourne calls a "second
elective term." '
The Dewey boom was born 1n desperation
of the defeated and divided democratic
party. It died of too much cuddling. The
moment the gallant admiral admitted that
he entertained the notion, that moment the
boom collapsed. WIbb politicians now say
that the only possible way to kill the
Ropsevelt boom Is for the colonel himself
to appear to be over-anxious. There Is
nothing In his past record to Indicate that
Roosevelt is capable of such a gross tac
tical error.
The Bryan third nomination boom was
born the day Alton B. Parker was defeated
for president and reached high-tide when
he was given the third nomination at Den
ver In 1908. His home coming and his Madi
son square garden speech in 1906 affected
rather his chances for election than his
chances for nomination. The explosion of
the Bryan boom is harder to account for
then the others, since Mr. Bryan had ex
pressed his opinion about government
Types We Meet Every Day
By BOBBIE BABBLE,
flays Trivia, "Other play seems tame
Beside this noble outdoor game.
Which years ago, ere time took wings,
Was brought In vogue by queens and kings
And when betimes the royal spouse
In sulky mood stole from the house
His wife might follow, and, In short,
Might beat him on the tennis court.
"They play the game' the same way now,
With tumbled fhalr and dripping brow.
There's Tommy Dolt he falls, they sayi
In love Willi aoma new girl each day,
And that Is why his favorite call
When playing tennis Is 'Love all'
Uke Jaok with loves In every port
He wins out on the tennis court.
"Watoh him Hlas Prune, who likes to play
With young men, though tier hair Is gray.
ownership of railroads before he left for his
trip around the world. He repestod it in
New Yok, and with that repetition ended
his chances for the presidency. The ex
pression of an ultra-radical Idea at the
moment when the whole country wss eager
for some message of power from tho Ne
bruskun caused the political disaster.
Colonel Roosevelt Is nothing If he Is not
a destroyer of precedent. It was a tra
dition supported by history, that a man
elected vice president who succeeded to
the presidency on the death of the presl
dent could not be elected to the chief mag
Ifcracy on his own account. Mr. Tyler,
Mr. Fillmore, Mr. Johnson and Mr. Arthur
had tried it and failed. Mr. Roosevelt tiled
It and did not full. This Is but one of the
thousands of precedents broken by Colonel
Roosevelt, both at home and abroad. He
niHy break other.
When Generwl Grant returned to tho
United States from his long trip, he found
at San Francisco a welcome which, he said,
surpassed In Its heartiness any ovation he
had up to that time received. His progress
around the world was a continuous serins
of ovations. Whether in Asia or in Europe,
he was everywhere greeted by vast throngs
who recognised In him a great war
rior and a late head of one of the earth's
mightiest nations. When ho reached San
Francisco, it was assorted that during hia
lifetime he had seen more human beings
than any other man in the history ot tho
race. During his service In the army, ho
had seen millions of people, and during his
terms In the White House he had seen othmr
millions. No one ever attempted to approxi
mate the aggregate else of the throngs
that had greeted him on his world tour.
The. people of San Francisco stood on the
tiptoe of expectancy while awaiting the
appearance of the steamer City of Toklo
In the harbor of the Goldon Gate, for there
was no wireless In those days to proclaim
the approach of tho distinguished traveler.
Kvery hotel In the city was thionged with
visitors from the east, arid tho shipping la
the harbor was gaily bedecked for the oc
casion, as was also the city itself. When
the ship was sighted his son, U. S. Grant,
jr., went abroad a tug and accompanied
the reception committee down the bay.' He
was the first American to greet the dis
tinguished traveler. General Grant had
taken his son Fred with him, Just as Col
onel Roosevelt had. Kermlt to accompany
him. The nearest approach to big gamo
hunting General Grant made was when
Fred went boar shooting In the wilds ot
India. General Grant was away almost
twice as long as Colonel Roosevelt haa
been.
The return of Admiral Dewey In the fall
of 1899 represents the most spectacular
homecoming America has ever seen. Not
only did New York City outdo Itself, but
It inspired the . whole nation to take up
the refrain. In more than 200 cities can
non boomed a welcome to the victor of
Manila bay. It was estimated that during
the two days of the great celebration vis
itors to the metropolis . spent 126,000,000.
One of the features of the celebration was
the great naval review. Here Admiral
Dewey was in command of the largest
fleet that had ever gathered under tho
American flag. The land parade was mors
than seven miles long. The Dewey tri
umphal arch was modeled after the great
arch of Titus built in Rome to commem
orate the fall of Jerusalem. The figure of
Peace on this arch was a representation of
a blacksmith, and Robert Fltsslmmons,
then In. the heyday of tils career as a
prize fighter, posed for the figure.
Mr. Bryan's trip around the world was
another scries of ovations. Greater honors
were paid to htm 'Jian ever have been
given to any man who has never held high
office. When he returned to New York
his reception, although participated in
mainly by democrats, was the greatest
demonstration ever given In America to m
mere private citizen. General Grant was a
war hero and had been president for two
terms. Colonel Roosevelt stilt Is "Presi
dent Roosevelt" on the tongues of mil
lions. Mr. Bryan mado little reputation
in his short service in congress. He was
a twice defeated candidate for the presi
dency when he was welcomed home from
his great tour; and now he has been de
feated once again.
j The Roosevelt reception will set a new
record in the demonstrations accorded to
private citizens. The Dewey welcome was
In the nature Of a military triumph and Is
not to be compared with the others, Py
lltlcal history will bs enriched no -doubt
by what the colonel has to say upon his
return to his own, his native land.
By rUDEMO 9. KASKOr.
Tomorrow Soma Mew ratents.
The Tennis
Girl,
When; with a mild, Inquiring air,
Raising a racket here and there,
Her partner looked at her and said,
'Ah, forty, love?' her cheek grew red.
It seems he must have told some sort
Of truth upon the tennis court,
"When Jared Green, our hired man,
While we're at lunch tries If he can
Play at the game first thing ws know
A tennis ball at Jarod's blow
Breaks through the window, loops the loop,
And lands with splashes In the soup.
Buys Jared, 'Gueea I hadn't ort
To do that on the tennis court,
"When father plays the gamo with me '
It's always on a wager see?
He's surs to, lose, and I'm content
With gloves or candles. When I've spent
My month's allowance I am glad
To play a winning game with Dad.
Who murmurs sadly, 'Well, my rofiAi
Is not upon tho tennis court.' "
(Copyright, 1910, by tho N. T. Herald Co.) '
Don't Mary the Man
Who Is secretive snd constantly covering
up his tracks and on his guard lest ho
betray his real self,
Who bosses his sisters, and does not
think It necessary to show' them tho lams
consideration as other girls.
Wbo Is always talking about what hs
will do when "the old man" is dead and
he geta control of the property. .
Who lets women hang on to straps In
the street cars while hs keeps his seat
and hides himself behind a newspaper.
Who regards his cigars, drinks and other
dissipations as necessities, but who would
consider his wife's meager allowance ft
luxury. t