TI1K HKK: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 2f, 1911.' Till: OMAHA DAILY BEU KOlMlKD JIY KllWARU KOSEWATER. VICTUH ROSEWATEH, KDITOR. Kntct-ed at Oinahii pustofflie aa second ers matter. TERMS OK SUBSCRIPTION: h'inl;i Hje, Otie )ear ti SM Saturday Jiee, una year I W L'Hily Bee iithout Bunday), una year.. 4.UJ liHily lire and UnnUuy, una year ttl PEUVkiHlilJ Y CARRIER. Krn lua Hee without 'Sunday). pel4 mo..a4u Evening He (with bundayi, per month. .tfco pally tiee (including Sunday), per mo. Au pally lira (without aunday), par month. 4dc Auitresa all complaints of irregularities In delivery to City circulation pepartment. Or'KlCEd. mm haThe bra bunding. t-outh Omahi-e-4 i. Twenty-fourth St. lO'.m ll i ul fa 16 rjcott Ht., Lincoln- Little lluiidiug. t. hicago iu IS aiaruueti.. nullolng. Kn City Reliance building. xsew York .'I V et Thirty-thud St. V ashinglun- i-'i J" ourteenth tit., N. W. I'OKKKSPONPUNCU. Communications relating to news and ed itorial matter ahuuld ba addressed Omaha iia, KUituiial Ueparlmenl. Kfc..ill"i A.NCE.S. Remit by draft, express or postal order, pKjuuit! lu i ne Dee I'uollBiiiii company, only It-rent stauipa received in payment of mail accounta. iersonal checaa except on oinaha alio rastaru eacnange nut accepted. MARCH CIRCULATION. 48,017 6late of Nelrak, county of Pouglas, as: Uwlght Wllliania, circulation manager of Tha Dee Pubilsmng Company, being duly aworn, lay a that tne average dally circu lation, leaa a polled, unused and returned copies, tor the niontb of March, 19U, waa 4,W.. P WIGHT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my preaaaae and sworn to before me thia 31it uay of March, WIL trieai.) huiih.lt i iluNla.il. Notary Public Mabserlbers ! the city tem porarlly shoald hare The Bee mailed to then,. Addreaa will be chaaird aa oftea aa reeaeated. Nearly a week since Tacoma has recalled any of its mayors. One of the new members of the Diaz cabinet is named Sodl. Pop! Never mind, every base ball team is expected to win Its first home game. There may be a whole lot of truth in that old one that "Murder will out." The question of the hour: Will peace on the border end the army's vacation? A Kansas City man bottles smoke for a living. He would get rich in Pittsburg. Those statesmen who want to tack riders on the reciprocity bill must in tend to straddle It. A Kentucky mob lynched a negro on the stage of a theater. Let us hope there will be no encores. I'erhaps the Mexican insurgents feel ashamed to continue war, now that the 1). A. R.'s have capitulated. The date for Omaba'a aero meet has been fixed. The local weather man will kindly govern himself accordingly. Diamonds are certainly getting very common when folks cannot find any v other place to wear them but on their feet. Macon, Ga.. is reported to be crying for water. Who would have thought Georgians could ever come to like It that well? Combatants should understand that all fisticuff battles pulled oft In the city hall are governed by the Marquis of Gooseberry rules. ' Senator Getem is a member of the South Carolina legislature. How nicely his name would tit into a seat in the Illinois assembly. A great base ball pitcher says women will never understand the game. Perhaps not, but they will at tend It on ladles' day, Just the same. The Baltimore American thinks Omaha society circles may be fussed vup over tha anklet. Not at all. Omaha has even refused to take the harem skirt seriously. i With another company of the Na tional Guard ready to respond on call, Omaha will feel fully able to defend Itself against the "Jape." no matter when they come. Unfortunately, Omaha's experience with two telephone systems Is not par ticularly well calculated to encour . age doubling up on other public serv ice corporations. Host on may become a rival of New York aa a port of commerce. Minneapolis Tribune. Bur. It may also become the capital uf Germany. New York Herald. My, what a temper! One of tbe new lawa passed by the recent Nebraska legislature altogether probibita boy a and girls under It years of age from driving automobiles. That ought to help some. The girl dismissed from a univer sity because she wore a f 300 hat now sues for $100,000 damages. But what use for an education has a girl who can wear $300 hats? . Omaha geta In on tha State Board of Pardons even though it is left out of the commission to codify the law. The codlfyera may say what the law is, but tbe pardoners may suspend the penalty clause. ' In the meantime, the local public is yet waiting to be advised how much the new water mains and extensions recommended by the engineering ex pert, specially engaged for that pur pose by the Water board, are esti mated to cost Regulate Sale of Dynamite. The necessity of better regulation of traffic In dynamite must be thor oughly reinforced on ntost people by recent events. The fatal experiences that have been encountered of late are sufficient to impress thst. All over the country the sale and use of fire arms are subjected to certain restric tions and a great hue and cry has only of late gone up against even the lax enforcement of the laws control ling them. No doubt restrictions on the sale of dynamite vary In different places, but manifestly either one of two thin-Is true those regulations are not what they should be, or they are not enforced. It should not be possible for an unidentified derelict to buy all the death-dealing explosives he has the money to pay for. Before anyone bought an ounce he should have au thority from accredited sources, and be able to satisfy the merchant as to the use he intended making of it. If the law were so framed as to Impose a responsibility for misuse of the ex plosive upon tha merchant it might help to bring about the desired re sults. In the California cases that came to light soon after the appalling de struction of life and property in Los Angeles last autumn, evidence was adduced to show that men neither known to nor identified by San Fran cisco merchants walked in and bought allhe dynamite they pleased. It is folly to ssy that tbla traffic could not be regulated. It might not be possible to secure absolute proof against perfidy, but certainly there Is room for great improvement. The gun habit Is bad enough, but it is nowhere near the potential evil of the dyna miter. One need not Jump to prema ture conclusions in any of the cases now before the puhllo to appreciate the need of better regulation of tha sale of dynamite. The Wild Calls in Vain. The New York railroads are meet ing with a new obstacle in their splen did effort to rehabilitate the farming industry of that state. It is the ob stacle of scarce farm labor. Some time ago these railroads essayed to attract young men of energy and en terprise to the soil, much of which had been impoverished by lack of at tention or the wrong sort of tilling. Land was placed on the market at very reasonable figures and the roads undertook to aid tha farmers in helr work of regeneration. The results have been good and the prospects are better. Now, however, arises a new problem. Just as tha harvest becomes great the laborers are . few. Many young farmers, says the agriculturist of tha Lehigh Valley road, according to the New York Times, are tilling, or trying to till, farms of eighty and 100 acres without help,' because "the men who sit all day on the park benches of this (New York) city" will not ac cept employment on the farms, even at the fair wage of $25 and $30 a month with board. This Is, indeed, a problem. New York City, through Its offltlal bodies, should see It it could not do some thing to help solve the problem. Per haps It might prevail on some of these professional bench warmers to go to work, or if they did not; choose to accept xthe paid labor on the farms that are crying forfhelr help, put them to work for the city on rock piles or in work houses where they would get the board without tha wage. Cities are entirely too tolerant of their loafers. They are parasites on so ciety and should be made to work or "move on." They are the very fel lows in v whose idle councils crimes of the worst types are bred. The labor problem for the farmer is ever present, especially in tha harvest time, out here in the west as well as in the east, but there is no good reason why sum a situation as this In New York should' exist anywhere when there are armies of unemployed men plenty able for bard work and none too good for thewages. 7 t Open-Air Theaters. When the New theater in -New York, failed an artist in explaining why said that such a theater aa that purported to be was an idea, not merely a struc ture of fine bluldlng art and material, and the Idea had not been developed. Now .New York proposea an open-air theater with an J mm en a stadium, where high-class plays may be pre sented for popular prices, thus afford ing opportunities to those not able to pay for them at the ordinary theater. - This kind of a theater Is also an idea and should not fail for lack of the Idea's development. It is in line with other trends of thought. It would be far more than a theater for the presentation of drama. It would be essentially a great educational insti tution, for other forms of Intellectual aa well as athletic, exercises and enter tainment could have a place there. Indeed, the New York Herald even proposes, that it might afford space for a baae ball diamond for the boys. At any rate it would be a great thing for New York with its congested mil lions to have such a place of amuse ment snd entertainment in the warm months of the year where people might go without being housed In. And if it proved a success In New York, as It undoubtedly would, the example might ba followed In other cities all over the land. In fact, thia probably will In a very short Uma coma to pass, for the Idea of open-air enter tainment la popular. Tha New York project baa tha hearty endorsement of men prominent In various lines of life and a sufficient money backing to warrant its ma- terlallzation. It is proposed to erect the structure adjacent to the buildings of the great College of the City of New York, which doubtless would be a very convenient and desirable loca tion. Othe,r cities will watch with more than usual Interest what comes of this movement In the metropolis. Just Cheap Advertising". Because the draft of the Income tax amendment, used as the basis of the measure reported by the committee, happened to bear his name as intro ducer, our own Senator Norrls Brown Is letting no opportunity pass to keep in tbe public eye at every turn of the progress of ratification by the states. That, of course, is not unnatural and quite to be expected, and no harm can come from the Issue of dally or hourly bulletins from the Brown press bureau telling Just how the score stands. But the learned senator, looking to the main chance, Is evidently tempted to ride a free horse to death. In a self-made interview generously dis tributed to Washington correspond ents for Monday morning consump tion. Senator Brown, after rhapsodis ing on the imminence of the necessary three-fourths majority, exclaims: JiiBt the minute that I can get oppor tunity to do ao. following, the conclusive ratification of the amendment, I shall in troduce an Income tax bill I have drafted. It has been submitted to the beat authori ties and It la designed to raise by taxation of Incomes somewhere from 170,000,000 to $100,000,01)0 a year, etc." To be sure, nothing can prevent any senator from Introducing anything formulated for him as a bill that he may please, but that is as far aa the Income tax bill which Senator Brown has had drafted will get. The trouble Is that the levying of an Income tax is a revenue measure and by express provision of the constitution every measure for raising revenue must originate in the house. When it comes to enacting a revenue measure all the senate can do is to mark time till the bill comes over from the other end of the capitol and then make such changes In it as it sees fit. Aa a great constitutional lawyer and an aspirant for a place on the mighty Judiciary committee, Senator Brown knows this as well as anybody. He knows that he cannot set in mo tion an income tax bill either before or after ratification of the amendment except by tacking It onto some one's else bill that originated in the house. In the Interval, however, the advertis ing thus gained is JuBt aa good, es pecially as it comes at no extra cost. Serving Notice on Mr. Bryan' The campaign for tha democratic presi dential nomination next year Is getting an early start. Governors Harmon and Wilson and Speaker Clark are already tn the field making hay. Certainly, any one of these three, If nominated, should be able to com mand the support .of every loyal and con sistent democrat. World-Herald. Mr. Bryan will please accept service on this notice. Ha will observe, too, that Governor Harmon comes first in the World-Herald's enumeration of available eliglbles for the democratic 1912 nomination. Governor Harmon did not support Mr. Bryan Jn, 186 and 100, and Mr. Bryan has invited Gov ernor Harmon to "prepare to stand aside," and declared politely and pub licly that he would not support the Ohio man. Unless Mr. Bryan pre pares to take it back he may expect tha World-Herald to denounce him as having ceased to be "a loyal and con sistent democrat." Returning From War. It waa Mr. Cannon, who, speaking of the late Spanish-American war, ob served that any nation could "go" to war,, but no nation could foresee all that war might mean to It in the fu ture. This is a very simple truth, one whose simplicity is always more ap parent on the return from war than on the going. Every nation that has ever been on-one of these terrible ex cursions realizes that. This nation has not yet and will not for some years to. come eeasa to realise, the force of the fact In Relation to Its last engagement, inevitable aa that aeemed to be. But this counsel of Mr. Cannon's waa repeated on .a very timely oc casion In the senate the other day when Senator Stone gave way to the Impulse of war with Mexico. Of course, there never waa any danger of the Mlssourian'a plea carrying weight, but it serves to remind us of the Im mense Importance of having cool beaded men on hand when the hot headed onea get into action. The ex perience of the United States in re turning from her late wars in tbe sea should census. In not only her own citizens, but those of ottjer nations who might he thinking of trouble. It la always a longer way hack than It seemed going. Even should the Mexican revolution end where it Is, it would be many years before that country saw and felt tha last of Its effects. It Is one of tbe wars which aeeru to have been unnecessarily precipitated and cool heads in the southern republic, what few there may be, will appreciate this many times over before the nation figuratively returns from its battle fields. Now If the late Mayor Moorea were only still holding down the executive chair he could be heard crying from tha ringside. "Go it. Funkhouser! Go it. Cosgrove! And may both men win." A decision of the supreme court of Nebraska upholds tbe law limiting re tirement pension fund for members of the fire department In Omaha and Lincoln. The same rule doubtless ap- piles to the retirement pension funds J for policemen and for school teachers. If we ever have complete civil service the retirement pension may be made to Include ell the regular permsneqt employes of the city, county and school district but that Is still In the dim and distant future. An active Kansas City business m an declines to run for mayor on ground that he never goes out tbe at night. That Is a mighty good town for a man of tbat habit, too. t ( tlllty of a Letter. Brooklyn Eagle. The new minister to Portugal la Edwin f. Morgan. If echo answers '"Why Mor gan?" the response la easy. "Y" la at common In Portuguese names aa in those of Wales, Vhence all the Morgana came. Kspaualoa of tanned Mnalr. Chicago Record-Hera li Nearly I3.0n0.000 worth of phonographs iere exported from thia country last year. f vntl think tVieaa fiaurea Imnreaslv wall till you hear of the number of ragtime records that were shipped. Kapert Opinion. Houston Post. Mr. Bryan manipulated with such poor succees In trying to defeat Senator Martin of Virginia for the minority leadership of the senate that he seeks to mollify his wounded vanity by dubbing the distin guished Virginian "a master of manipula tion." The Favored Tto. New York Tribune. In his treatment of the two misguided young Americana who got Into trouble In Mexico and Incurred the Just penalty of outraged law, President pits shows hltri self as generous 'and humane as he hi at times been stern and Inexorable. Straphanifere, Cheer 'p. Philadelphia Record. . Let' the stiaphanger take oourage. He Is not the property of a street car com pany. A Minnesota law for his protection was attacked by the trolley company In Minneapolis on the ground that It deprived It of Its property without due proceas of law. A federal Judge has sustained the law. A trolley company can be deprived of its straphangers, or a part of them. without violation of the constitution of the United States. PARTY GROUPS AND PLACES. Philadelphia Record: These Insurgent senators are either members of the repub lican party or not. They cannot expect to enjoy the privileges of membership in the dominant party and also share as a separate organisation in the distribution of good things. Springfield Republican: The action of the majority In refusing to meet the In surgent demand waa In harmony with all the precedents of party organisation and It cannot be much critlolsed In view of the fact that tha Insurgent senators will actually receive committee assignments In proportion to their numbers. That Senator La Follette's policy is of a disruptive character becomes clearer day by day. Philadelphia Ledger: The La Follette senators either are republicans or they are not. If they are, they must be treated aa such; if they are not, they are entirely at liberty to flock by themselves, but can have no possible claim to party recogni tion. ' On the La Follette plan the demo. er'atlo senators might dlvldi Into three groups, and if tbe committees were all divided among them nt party oould ba re sponsible for anything. - Brooklyn Bagle: Thia trouble may be compromised. The radical divergence be tween tha views and policies of radicalism and the views of conservatism cannot be compromised. It la vital and everlasting. The situation puts a real and stern respon sibility on those democratic senators who are conservative. If they stand together another balance of power may be created. If they yield to the majority la their own caucus, and the republican insurgents do not yield to theirs, then the radicals win control the senate, and lasting damage may ba done to a system of government which on the whole has made for the pros perity of the people of the United States. If tha conservative democrats do not yield, the worst mistakes feared from this s pe dal session may be avoided. People Talked About Paul Drennan Crsvath was a prize tutor at law auhoul and he haa been a prise tooter at law ever since he hung up his shingle to practice to New York with millionaire clients answering to his call. Governor Den en of Illinois baa re ceived a request to renew the license of notary publlo held by Thomas E. Canter of Chicago, the only messenger boy In Illinois who can sign his name with the great seal of the state. The Syracuse Herald has started a movement for a monument in tbe Salt City to Edward Noyes Wescott. author of "Pavld Harum." Mr,. -Weacott was a native of Syracuse and for years a banker there. He died before his bock reached its great popularity,.. Frank A. Kennedy, an engineer on the Boston, Revere Beach It Lynn railroad, dived from tha cab ef his engine into the water at Kaat Roston and saved the life of Joaaph Mag-rath, aged T, who bad been hurled from tha bridge at the foot of Havre street by tbe train. Rev. Prank Poole J oh neon, curate for two yearwf Emmanuel church, one of Boa ton's oldaat and wealthiest congregations, will come to New York May 1 at rector of All Saints' Protestant Episcopal church, Henry ad ScaniHiall streets, where a con gregation that twenty years ago num bered l.kftt haa dwindled to a bare 100 today. A reminder that President Plas of Mtx loe, waa onoe an "Inaurrecto" himself waa given by tha reoent death of Captaia Samuel J. Phillips of Rockvllle Canter, l4aa Island, who gave shelter on his ship to the future dictator, who waa escaping from Mexico. Captain Phillips, who died at tbe age of SO, was 1 when he began to follow tbe aea. Around New York Blpples oa the Current of Life aa Been ia the Great American Metropolis from Day to Day MaKifttrate Appleton Is an old-faahlonert sort of a person, w ho scatters Justice aStfong the flotsam and Jetsam of the big city. To all but one class of lawbreakers he displays old-fashioned sympathy, re flected In diminished flues. Hut the wife beater gets neither sympathy nor consid eration. Over the road to the Jug they go as quick as the magistrate's machine can work. In almost every case the mag istrate expresses regret that the law dos mil permit him to operate a whipping post. The other day one John Adams appeared In Judge Appleton's court. He was charged with 'wife beating. Though a burly speci men of mankind he cringed when he met the magistrate's eye. "lld you beat your wife?" asked the Judge. "rthe saya I did," said Adams. "Well, did you?" ""ay, Judge," responded Mr. Adams, peevishly, "don't go for to pester me about this. Jf she says I did, I reckon I did, tor what she says goes." Magistrate Appleton gaxed in astonish ment at the wife' beater who betrayed such a thoroughly domesticated dUposJ tion, ana called Mrs. Adams. The court wanted to know of that lady -it her husband had beaten her. "Him beat me?" asked Mrs. Adams. "Nix, now. Judge, don't make me laugh. That shrimp couldn't lick me In 4.000 years. I brung him up here because he belt out a dollar on me Saturday night." "Discharged," said Magistrate Appleton. As he 'watched the Adamses leave the court room he leaned his hHid upon his hand. "I wonder," said he, "If there are others?" Johnny Donlvan, a New York boy, needed a Job. The family was In hard straits. He was only 15, but his father had been out of work for some time and there were eight mouths to be fed. In the course of his search, relates Harper's1 Weekly, Johnny reached Battery park Just In time to see a crowd gather round the sea wall. A man had fallen over, struck his head on a rock, and was drifting seaward. "Why don't youse go after him?" de manded young Donlvan of the by-standing men. They were the riff-raff that lounges about the city parks, with one or two well dressed strollers. "He's only a tramp," said one of the latter, regarding his natty ' clothes with concern. "I'm not going to take any chances. Resides, there's a boat pulling out from that schooner over there." "It won't reach him In time, you piker!" yelled Johnny Donlvan. "I'll go for him, even If he Is a bum." t .Over the wall and out Into the water he sprang, and, being a good swimmer, was soon at the aide of the half-conscious man. Then came the fight of his life. The man, partially revived? by the chill of the water and In a frensy of fear, seized the lad about the throat. Twice they went down and came up; and still nobody went to their assistance. ' The boy made a terrific fight. The man was almost unconscious again, and Donlvan managed to pry him self loose. Then he towed the man by his arm to a nearby pier. This story, appearing tn the city's news papers, brought so many offeri thst a hundred Johnny Donlvans could have been supplied with Jobs. hen President Taft sets out from the Hotel Astor on the night of April 27 to eat a meal of fogash, with the Hungarian Re publican club at the Cafe Boulevard ' he will be accompanied by a mounted retinue of members of the club dressed as Hun garian noblemen. Second avenue will be decorated from Sixth street tq Fourteenth street and 10,000 electrlo lights will help to light his way. At the cafe fifty girls tn white will greet him. Weber, a Hungarian orange grower of Keystone Park, Fla., will bring him an orange tree. Soma of those who have sig nified their intention of being present are Andrew Carnegie, Baron Henglemullec. the Austrian ambassador; Oscar Straus. Pavld Jane Hill, William Barnes, Congressman Bulser, Lloyd C. Qrlscom and William Loeb. "Tbe Flatiron building has lost Its vogue," said a connoisseur In the New York Press recently. "The scene has changed. reoall when the Flatiron was a magnet beoause of what the wind did ' there. "But now comes a new place. It Is be tween One Hundred and Fifteenth and One Hundred and Twentieth streets on Broad way. To be exaot. It is close to tha One Hundred and Sixteenth street subway sta tion. Broadway Is a populous street there at a o'clock in tha morning, at midday and up to i o'clock In the afternoon, Hundreds uf women going to and from the Teachers' college, the Horace Mann school and Col umbia paas there. Moat of them are young and beautiful. The winds from the nearby river or the gales that sweep across the college campus play elfish pranks with them. Not only the girls themselves, but the people in tha neighborhood have kept this a Jealous secret. They have fostered the Idea that the Flatiron was the only place to see the latest in hosiery. But this spring the secret is a secret ne longer. Every windy day there Is a big audience alocg the fence at Columbia bigger than the more famous corner ever knew. When ever the wind rises above fifteen miles an hour during the day run up there yourself and see." In a New York corporation, where $20 for each director was laid on the table, It was customary tor those who attended to divide tbe whole pile. If half came, each got 940. The members were men far advanced In years and riches. One day It stormed violently when a meeting was to be held. The executive Officers did not believe a single director would be there, but every man of them was on hand, each having fig ured It out that nobody else would appear and that be might swipe (he entire allow ance. - Morgealaed Philanthropy. Springfield Republican. The new president of the Equitable Life Assurance society of New York, William A. Pay. is opposed to mutuallzlng the con cern, at least for the present, and another Obstacle has slso arisen. J. P. Morgan Is understood to want I4.0UO a share for hie kH of the l.OoO shares of the society's stock capital. This is more than Thomas F. Ryan paid. People who thought Mi. Mor gan bought the stock for philanthropic purposes now have another guea. Karl? Start la I en a. 6ioux City Journal. It is suggested that the Iowa delegation to t' e national republican convention should be selected aext year with reference to a proposal of Colonel Lafayette Young for 'vice president No doubt the sugges tion Is made In the Interest of harmony and In full recognition of Colonel Young'e power as a stumper. Where Rvatrtcttoa Fits. hi. Louis Republic. Fifteen men who hold union cards are members of the present congress. This la a place where a uulon Idee relating to restriction of output might be tried with highly beneficial effeota. rzsssasssoi For making quickly and per fectly, delicious hot biscuits, hot breads, cake and pastry there is no substitute for cn CAM Sixty Years tho Standard Made Irom pure Grape Cream of Tartar No AlumNo Lime Phosphates I am entirely opposed to tho uso of stlam 1st Boldna Fw4er.M Pro. Chandler, Columbia Untv. Head tho Label Alum, odlam alnm, panic alnmlnvm anlpbata aalphata ol alsmlnnm, all mean tbe aatne thing namely, BURNT ALUM." Kansas Stat Board of Health. 0OLTNO AT OMAHA. Fremont Tribune: Mayor Jim of Omaha objects to the rock pile. Well, he still has the mayor's power of pardon. Pierce Leader: That Pierce young man Who was. "rolled" In Omaha for 200 cases by a fair damsel with "goo-goo" eyes evi dently believes In the saying of "back to the farml" Kearney Hub: Mayor Pahlman has begun a spring Job of housecleaning In Omaha. It applies only to the streets, however, and will not be permitted to lap over Into any dive by the atreetslde. Peru Pointer; Nebraskans have believed for a long time that this state had a pretty sensible supreme court, but since that de cision last week of the Omaha automobile oase they are sure of It, Grand Island Independent : The chief of police at Omaha recommends that the dance halls b cloned at midnight. The ef fect of this on the market value of Omaha bands has not as yet been very damaging. Of course such a step cannot help but be of destructive effect to the city In general, but so far nothing really serious seems to have happenedl Auburn Republican: Governor Adrch. in signing the new medloal college bill for Omaha, said that he did so reluctantly. To the everatse Pmha man the declaration of tbe governor seemed entirely unnecessary. Pender Republic: Somebody haa proposed that Omaha sell Mayor Jin) Pahlman to Memphis, Tenn".. for i.&o0,oou He may ba worth the price, but If he had to be Judged by some V the speeches he made last fail for governor he would be dew at W cents. JAPAN'S LOSsKS IN WAR. Veil e Secrecy. Lifted from 'the , Mortality Holl. St. LuuU qiube-Peinocrat-At last the world Is getting tha correct figures, or some of them, of the losses sustained by Japan in the war of it04-06 against Ruaala, and they show that the mortality was far greater than the Japa nese pretended at the time. An 'article on this subject by LJeut'enant Colonel Charlne E. Woodruff of the medical corps of tliaVnited State" army, published In a New York medical nisgsatne, telle the story. He obtained his figures from the official report by the Japanese medical buiean, and they are the first accurate data which have been published In the United States. ' The Japanese deaths from disease were at the rate of 1.477 a month for tbe eight een months of the, war. These were no as nupieroua, man fur man, sa were the deaths from disease In our army during the clyll war, but the proportion of deaths from wounds wss greater than with us. With an aggregate strength of by us In the Spanish war of 1WS we had very nearly that many cases of sickness tn all grades In four months, and Japan had 600,000 serious "hospital" cases out of an army of KO.QuO In eighteen months. Our medical and commtnaary departments were known to be defective In 1808, while Japan's was' believed to be as far ad vanced as these of aKy ether nation, yet In the comparison with Japan we do not show up badly. jjWJ Symdsiy Tomme Commencing April 30thj the cars of Omaha & Southern Interurban Railway Company, will run on Sundays as follows: - Leaving N Street, South Omaha, 7:00 a, m. hourly thereafter until 1:00 p. m., then every 20 minutes until 7:00 pt m., hourly thereafter - until 12:00 midnight. Leaving Fort Crook 7:30 a. m. and hourly until 1:30 p. m., then every 20 minutes un til 7:30 p. m., then hourly thereafter until 12:30 a.m. OMAHA & -en. ws--w-- r I - Interurban Railway Company ML Vsmsk f nlrTTrinr?7 -"ill SMILING REMARKS. "Out In our suburb we have an appen dicitis club" "Club? Great Scott! Can't you afford to hire a surgeon with the regular Instru ments?" Chicago Tribune. "Jack said he was going upstairs today going upsinira inoay ten now It's yelling me could he haver sounds being wafteJi ge It was a bav lerlcaji. wun tne oauy ana listen now us jini. wnat Kin a oi a game started r "I'n liifliPA from tha an down 1 should Indira game." Baltimore American. "You are seen with Miss Wombat a good deal." "Yes; It's Just a little harmless flirta tion." "It Is? Fhe has asked me to be a bridesmaid." Kansas City Journal. Blobbs Rjones Is a lucky fellow. He won 15 from' Harduppe In a poker game last night. Hlobbs I don't consider that so extraor dinarily lucky. Hlohbs But he actually got the 16 Philadelphia Record. "That vauna-atar of mine Dlava base bat like a professional," said the proud father. "1 understand he pitches a good game. "Not only that. He baa announced to bis club thst ha won't play any more unlesa It conies across with a salary." Washington Star. "I have nothing whatever to say." said the eminent statesman. 'Wall.'' replied the Interviewer. "I might print that. Rut ! am afraid the publlo will think that I am faking." Chicago Post Kdison was Inventing the phonograph. "I'm going to make life one grand sweet song!" -he exclaimed enthusiastically. Nobody 'heard the remark at tha time, but subsequently one of the machines g,ueaJaq on him. Chicago Tribune. I am going to ask your father tonight for your hand in marriage." "How dreadfully old fashioned you are." "In what wayt ")oo't aea him; tell him." Houston Post. THE S0NO OF PEACE. New York Independent. (These lines are the ooncludlng stansaa of a poem written by John Ureenleaf Whlttler Just after he had uoaatd Iilat nineteenth birthday. 1 find tliHin in a scrap book kept by his eldest Sister. They were writ ten before his First tmni In the Haverhill academy, and have never appeared In any Collection of his works. 8. T. llckard ) "The battle ceased along the plain, for tha paras naa sung ute sung oi peace. on X S.au. Tt JrcdsJ whose vlsons swell The glories or our age. Bay, have ruuc mlgbtv Jgys no spell To calm the warrior's rage? No! 'tis not thus you seek - No mead for this yuu claim! Tls join in glowing trrms to speak Of the warrior's deathless name. - Ye tell pf the fame that falls Around the mighty dead. Ighty dead, lory's trvlmn Who following Ulory s trumpet calls In the tbrang of strife havs pled. Heaven-hallowed Peace! to thee A bard to fame UtiRnown" Wouid dedicate lite mtnatreiay, And thy eeL influeo.ee own- And oh! had ha the powers of song Whirl) loftier spirits feel, The Joys that to thy away belong His visions should reveal. Second Month, 1827 bM D n mmmn ) ' . T T- vast ffjjp aja) I r