B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 2, 1911. w 1 I V f H !i i 1 1 1 1 Y MUST RAISE BURT ST. MAIN ji Ia Spit of Protest. Ordinance it V raised Unanimously. rnwniTinw in ampritan 1 WWIWIIIWI I IK nillhllivnti COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES XaiESGENCY HOSPITAL FINANCED foesolatloa to t'haa Grade af Fortr eeeaa Street, Alio Oa ta Par rasas lra Oarbaae Boies Ar Adapted. . Though the water company, through Iti attorney. Halleek P. Rosa, and Stockton Heth, treasurer, fought the paasage of an ordinance forcing the water company to rale water main at Eighteenth and Burt treataa the meaaure wa passed by unanl tnoua vote by the city council Saturday morning at an adjourned meeting. While laying the Burt street sewer, the city requested the water company to raise the water main, but the company refused. Suit was Instituted In the district court, where the company won. Later It was ap pealed to th supreme court, and that body held that the notice to the company was Irregular In that It cam from the city engineer. Instesd of the city council. To remedy tha defect an ordinance directing th raising of th main was Introduced in th council and the officials of the water ompeny were granted a bearing. Base contended that the company should ot be forced to raise th main, saying that th change would handicap th water 'ompany In serving patrons. He stated that tha principal water supply to Omaha was furnished through this main and that service would have to be discontinued until th change ,waa completed. He also sa d - that th expense would ultimately have tj b bom by th city, as the water com pany was operating th plant as trustee for th city. He suggested that th sewer tould be changed In construction at this point to meet the conditions. City Engineer George Cratg opposed the changing jf the sewer, as :t would cost as ' much. If not more, to make it, than to raise th main about two feet. As to whether the city would have to bear th expense, h contended that It was immaterial. In that th expense of changing the main would hav to be paid by the city if decided on. Craig convinced the members that th or dinance should be passed. A resolution diverting $1,000 from th ' lighting fund to a special fund for th maintenance of the Kmergency hospital was passed. This action followed tha pas sag of an emergency ordinance to provide funds for the hospital, passed last week. A resolution to change tha grade of Forty-second street from Lafayette avenue to Nicholas street prevailed, as did an other ordering th purchase of eight Iron garbage wagon boxes, eight wooden lined boxes, twelve wagon braces and twelve sets of springs. The monthly payroll was passed. Th payroll for day laborers will be passed Monday morning at an adjourned session. ansnary of tae Fllta Aaaaal Report tlaa. i PACKAGE OF PIOUS SMILES ii i 1,1 ma Iacldeats la Charehly Life, la. vested wtca Astasias; Mala, 1 . Fred A. Emery of Washington looks Ilk a divine, but moat distinctly he I not. He wa on a visit ta a little town In New Hampshire when a friend of hi at th hotel Introduced him to a group of business men as th Rev. fr. MoCab. Emery fell In with . th Jok. and his pious looking fc helped tha thing along. In a short while ha was lamenting th tendency among men to disregard the duty of going to church. :"Oolf," be said sadly, "and automobile and other amusements hav supplanted worship In tha church. This generation Is deteriorating, and It I th greatest thing w hav to flghtXthl lack of Interest In th church." With that h k saved a windy sigh and looked Ilk Nlob at her worst Th business men looked uncomfortable and agreed with Dr. MoCab. This moved him to make an appeal. "Why can't you Mart th reform T" he asksd, and added enthusiastically! 'How many of you will promise to com to hear my aamon tomorrow morning?" Of oours they all promised. This per formance was repeated with another group, and when th thing was all over Emery had th promise of twenty men that they would hear this sermon th next morning at tha ohurch he named. At ohuroh tlm he stationed himself with his friend In th vestibule of tha building, and, as each of to faithful twenty filed In. JJraery laughed up his sleeve. Thsy saw him and realised how they had been sold, but they were too far in to back out, and they heard th sermon preached by a real minister. After church they looked for Xmery. But h had bean wis. He had taken a train which ran through th town at a convenient hour while services were In progress. Popular Magaslno. Fait aad Works. Representative Crumpacker of Indiana assured Representative Korbly of th same tat that It was ten minutes to U, "al though," he added, "my watch may be a few minutes this side or th other of th correct tlm." Tou are not as confident about your timepiece." said Korbly, "as my friends, Bishop Chartrand of Indianapolis and Bishop O'Donagbue of Louis villa, whan hay compared watches once upon a tlm. It U Just thro minute to .' said Bishop C&artrasM. .""It U exactly four minute and a half ta .' retorted Bishop O'Ponaghu. "1 know th exact time.' exclaimed Bishop Chartrand, 'for rar watch Is one lu whJoh I have th utmoat faith,' "Ah, bishop,' replied th prelate from Louisville, 'we must not hop to succeed through faith alone. I hav pot only faith In my watch, but I know of its good works.' "Washington Post. A f arptaa to the Pastor, The Rev. Henry R, Roe tells the story of a young minister who had only recently taken charge of a small parish In Vermont H Mplred to greater thing and a larger field, and In the bop that hit reputation would travel beyond the limits of the vll lag te which he had been sent, he threw Into bis sermons all th fore and elo qusao at his command. 11 was, however, totally unprepared for What 'was Intended for a compliment, but which was put to him In such a way that It left hljn la doubt as to the real Ira preeeloa be bad made. On Sunday morning, after an especially brUUaat effort, he was greeted by an old lady, who was en of th most faithful attendants at all cervices. Approaching the young minister, she said: rV" 'Ah. air. we do enjoy your aarmona an Jt,.) f much, thsy ar so Instructive. Do you i. 'believe It, never knew what sin was . " until you came to the parish,' Newark tar. Th fifth annual report of th president of the Carnegie foundation covers the year ending September . 1!V. The report Is divided Into two parts. Psrt one pertain t- th current business of the year and thl second 1 a discussion of the relation of the college and the secondary school. The report shows that the trustees hrd In hiind at the end of the year funds amounting to tll.114.0M M. consisting of the or Rlral gift of $10,000,000 par value of 6 per cent bonds snd tl.non.O00 accumulated surplus. The Income for the year was fM,Wl Jo. Purlng the year sixty-four re tiring allowance .were granted, of which forty-six wrre In accepted Institutions and eighteen In institutions not on the accepted list. During th year twenty-three pension er died. Among d stlngulshed teschers who retired during the year were Prof. Burt O. Wilder of Cornell, Dean Van Amrlnge and Prof. Chandler of Columbia, both well advanced In years snd In academic honors: Prof. Oeorge L. Ooodale. the famous botanist of Harvard; Prof. Osborne of tho Massa chusetts Institute of Technology, who hns taught mathematics In that Institution since Its foundation: Chancellor Moc Cracken of New Tork university! Presi dent Reel ye of Pmlth college, and Prof. Calvin M. Woodward of Washington vnl verslty, St. Louis. These distinguished men average In age soventy-two years, snd Illustrate how well the vigor and Influence of the scholar can be continued to a ripe maturity. There were admitted to the accepted list during the year the University of Cali fornia, the joint Institutions of the state of Indiana Indiana university and Purdue university and Wesleyan university, th last named a college. In the first part of the report the presi dent of the foundation follows up the bulle tin on medical education by a paper on The Relation of the University to the Medical School," in which ha calls atten tion to th responsibility attaching to sny college or university which undertake medical education. The second part of the report is a careful attempt to state the existing cause of friction between the secondary school end the college, and the loss of educational efficiency in the present methods of bring ing pupils from the school to the college.' Th complaint of th college against th secondary school and th complaint of th secondary school against the college are set forth. An extremely Interesting part of the re port is a statement of the observations of Oxford tutors upon the preparation of the Rhodes scholars. The strong points In the American boy's preparation are readily seen by these tratned teachers, and tha weaknesses which they find point directly to the superficiality and diffusion of the work don in th American secondary school and college. Th president of th foundation urges that this whole question be approached by secondary school men and college men In a spirit of co-operation. Neither the certi ficate method of admission nor the piece meal examination method have In his opinion solved the problem. He urges that the college must find a solution which will test better than the certificate or the piece meal examination tha fundamental quali ties of the students, and which will at the me time leave to the high school a larger measure of freedom. He recom mend a combination of certificate and x aminatlons, the latter of a simple and elementary character, but -caning for a high quality of perfwitiano wlthovit which the candidate will not be admitted.."' For example, under this plan the boy who con not write good Idtomatio English would not be admitted to college at all, but would be sent back to the secondary school. The entrance requirements recently adopted at Harvard are quite In line with these recom mendation. The president of the foundation urges a co-operation between th secondary school and th college not as unrelated institutions, but as two parts of a common system education. He argues that the In terest of the great mass of high school students must not b sacrificed to th In terest of th minority who are looking toward college." He Insists on a large measur of freedom for th secondary school, but on the other hand he argues that the Interest of the boy who goes to college and of the boy who goes from the high school Into business ara alike con served by learning a few things well, not j by learning many things superficially. The boy who has obtained such Intellectual discipline Is a fit candidate for college, whether he has studied one set of subjects or another; without this Intellectual dis cipline ha la unfit alike for college or busi ness. It la therefore. In the opinion of the president of the foundation, the plain duty of the college, at the present stage of American ' educational development, to articulate squarely with tbe four-year high school and to leave to tha secondary school the largest freedom so that It may educate boyg not coach them; but at th same time to require of the candidate for admission testa which rest upon high performance In the elementary studies and which mean mastery of th fundamentals. In such a program He th hope of scholarly better ment and of clvlo efficiency for both college and high school. Th report may be obtained by writing to the Carnegie Foundation, 7I Fifth avenue. New York City. ' llW Colle for llssi City, . " BIOUX CITT, la.. July Ju-Franclacan priests, who now have college at Spald ing, Neb., will open a college here, Sioux City business Catholic and priests of the diocese guaranteed a fund of IM.0QO. Tbe school building will cost CHILD DRINKS GASOLINE Frosapt Aetta f Fhyalelaa saves Life of af B. B. Dish- tea at Dllloa. MARSHALLTOWN, la., July l-- Spe cial. "There is water over there," said B. B. Dtghton. of near Dillon, to his wife, when th latter Inquired last evening, white the oouple was In a local garage getting their ear to go bom, for water to give their baby son, Eddie, aged I ysers, a drink. Going to tha red tank In the corner, Mrs. Dlshton turned the fauoet and filled tha aanltary drinking eup she had brought along for the child' use, with gasoline. Holding the cup to the child mouth. It took one big swsllow and then began to scream and' kick. Smelling the gasoline by that time the mother shouted to th husband to get a doctor. On was caught by telephone just as be was leavtrtg his office near by. getxlng tha child he hurried with it back to hi office, got th tub of a stomach pump into th child in a few moments and Pumped put the gasv I ,. uv t:iu win iv, owing io xne doctor's promptness. Culls from the Wier Joseph Samuels, former captain of the Keokuk fire department, was today sen tenced to life Imprisonment for the murder of his wife, Essie fomuels. The supreme council of th United Com mercial Travelers of America has elected i naries t. ururiin or ienvr counselor. In th presence of several hundred per sons Lcrado Taft's statu of the Indian chief. Black Hawk, wa dedicated at Ore gon. 111., Saturday afternoon. Hoke Smlnth was inaugurated governor of Georgia for the second time In Ma life taturdey. Governor fcmlth Is mentioned as a probable candidate for the the United Ststea senate to succeed Senator XcarreU. lit" m$$mm?fo I III VMi If jmMmi III vP-iiiII lr 1 . it jmmAki ... I - . ' f Freedom of the Plains A Home in the West Means Manhood, Womanhood-New Life Y Thousands Are Coming From the East This section offers opportunities not found in any other part of the United Stajes. Cramped conditions, which prevail in the east, do not exist here. People are flocking to the west. 1 They are buying land. . There is no possible way in which they can lose. Nebraska and Iowa lands, as well as Colorado and Wyoming and the far western states, are growing more valuable every day. Now is the time for you to buy. Buy Nebraska land, Iowa land, land in the Dakotas or Wyoming. It will be gold some, day. After awhile the man of moderate means will not have an opportunity to acquire any of this property. ILivc land agents and real estate dealers are keeping you posted through The Omaha Bee about lands in the West. Read what they say. Watch the property offered in today's paper. The Bee should be valuable to you now. Call Tyler-1000 and ask ques tions. Or write us if you wish to buy or sell, addressing Omaha Bee Land Department. We are glad to give information about property advertised, or about those who list it u -