TIIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE:' SEPTEMBER 17, 1911. n Thr Omaha Sunday Bee. FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROHEWATEK. VICTOR ROSE WATER. EDITOR. Entered at Omaha postoffice aa second clan matter. TERMS OK SUBSCRIPTION, unriay lief, one year 12 W Psturdsy Bee, one year Is Daily (without Sunday), one year... 4 .(to Dally He and Kunrtsy. one year ) DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Evening bee (with Hunday), per month.. Pc Dally Bee (Including Kunilayi, per mo., 6c Dally Bee (without Wunday). per mo efco Address all complaints of irregularities In delivery to City circulation Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by drnft. express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing company. Only l-cent stamps received In payment ol mall account. Personal checka accept on Omaha and eastern exchange not accepted. Omaha The Dee Building. friTt D PCOnwnrMrn' Communli atlotn relating to newa and editorial matter should be addressed Omaha Beo, Editorial Department. AUGUST CIRCULATION. 47,543 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, as., Dwlght Williams, circulation manager of The Hco Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that the aveiage dally circu lation, less spoiled, unused and returned fopl-s, fur tba month of August, lsll. waa " DWIOIIT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. f uhscrlbed in my pi esem e and aworn to before mo this 4th day of September 1911. ) ROBERT HUNTER. Subscribers leaving; (ha city tew porurlly ehould bar The Dee mulletl to theiu. Aildreaa will be changed as attest si requested. Making a 13,000 mile trip it going some. Why not employ the boy scouts to drum up base ball recruit? Junuy how a littlo thing llko an ankle totally eclipses the short skirt. President Tart shows his contempt for signs by starting his tour on Fri day. Mr; Bryan does riot want any har mony in his. Ho knows what he thrives on. Tho open season between congresses- seems to have revived a good many lame ducks. Borne friend of Colonel Astor should advise him not to slip his card under Queen Mary's door. Cur ses on the luck, the rabid antl Tarters must exclaim at the president's vindication of Wiley. Mr. Astor did not hare to go to Reno to get married, but he may have to holler for help yet. The St. Louis man's Idea of high flying la life In that metropolis during the Veiled Prophet's festival. When Mr. Carnegie starts his Inter national Peace Gazette we fear there will be no Job for a sporting editor. The question Is now propounded, Ii the arbitration treaty constitutional? We pass that up to the supreme court. If some of this rain could be turned off now we might have a little more of It ten days hence. Pittsburg Dispatch. Bounds like a voice from the tomb. If Alfred Austin does not commit poetry again soon folks will be in danger of forgetting who Is the laure ate. "Harmony means to halt," says Mr. Bryan. It certainly does, but it tome times makes the halt come at the land ing place. An exchange remarks that the old hell game Is no longer played. No, not since Champ Clark and Underwood adjourned. Mayor Harrison orders the saloons closed at night, but the whole town will be closed soon unless the Cubs come to life. Not content with printing columns of it when it was news, a Baltimore yellow is now running "Echoes of the Beattie Trial." It is said that Hetty Qreen's eon received 6,243 proposals of marriage from as many women. . What is the man waiting on? The election in Canada takes place next Thursday, and when the votes are In we should know whether reci procity reciprocates. , England prefers the American type writer to any other. Sure, so do all countries that know what womanly beauty and winsome ways are. Now they are after President Baer of the Heading for selling bad eggs. Just ot if ft man with divine right in ui4 thing did not have divine right in all. Now. if Mayor "Jim" had only lari ated the executive mansion, he might have commanded attention at the gov ernor's conference by an exhibition of rope-throwing. Those prophets of ill-omen who were predicting the failure of postal savings banks must have taken to their holes without waiting for the groundhog to show them the way. Chicago boasts of automatic electric megaphones in use at one of its depots for calling out the names of stations of departing trains. Now, here is where we object. If these innovations continue all the pleasure of traveling win be soon destroyed. Council Bluff 13 Heott St. Lincoln 2") Little Bit lid Inn. Chicago 164 Marquette PulMlnf. Kan-ad Clty-Helianre Building. New York-M Went Thirty-third t. Washing-ton 73 Fourteenth St.. N, The Aerial Promontory Point. When the links of the first great transcontinental railway were started In opposite directions across the coun try a spirit of friendly rivalry ani mated the builders to see who could lay the greatest length of line before the east and west ends met and when the Union Pacific and the Central Pa cific came together a golden spike was driven In the mountain at Promontory Point to mark their conjunction. Now, less than half a century later, another air line of travel is bring sur veyed from east and west across the entire continent. But If any one of the rival railroad builders in the 0s had ventured to predict that within fifty years men would be flying over the route of these then marvelous bands of steel, be would probably have been put where he could not barm any of bis fellow beings. Everybody hopes that Ward, flying In his aeroplane west from New York and Fowler east from Ban Francisco, may ' succeed in completing their strange Journeys. The men did not start out simultaneously, but nearly so, nor yet with the specific purpose or racing, though, undoubtedly, the spirit of American sportsmanship is alive enough in each to suggest ri valry before the end is reached. But whether either man succeeds In his undertaking, the adventure cannot but suggest a new and wonderful era of invention even though, as most people believe, it still leaves us far, very far, from practical aerial navigation. The mere fact, if it bo a fact, that men can, by dint of great effort and perse verance, travel above the 'ground from ocean to ocean, would be a mar vel far too remote to the imagination. of fifty years ago to have been toler ated. What stupendous strides for ward this country and other countries have made since the Union Pacific and Central Pacific came together on top of that Utah mountain, May 10, 1869! On May 11, 1869, General W. T. Sherman in Washington, wrote to General Urenville M. Dodge: In common with millions, I sat yester day and heard the mystic tape of the tele graph battery announce the nailing of the last spike In the great Pacific road. But what would General Sherman say of the mystic flaps of the 1911 blrdman's wings? State-Wide Community of Interest Keal efforts are being exerted by business men of Chicago and out-state cities to break down the "artificial barriers reared by the politician" be tween Chicago and the rest of the state and build up a substantial struc ture of mutual interest for the entire state. The level-headed people of Illi nois, without regard to whether they happen to reside in Chicago or Rodora. have grown sick and tired of seeing the business interests of the large and small community suffer at the hands of self-seekers, ready to arraign one part of the state against another when ever it will promote their personal fortunes. The plans of the state wide harmony movement seem to be sane and comprehensive, calculated to onen people's eyes to the fact that to rosier suco prejudices is simpiy to sac rifice their Interests to personal avarice. Illinois and Chicago are not alone in this thing. Nebraska and Omaha have felt the effects of such selfishness and prejudice, more formerly than now. In this state, the politician, aided by cer tain corporations which he served, suc ceeded in disseminating an anti-Omaha prejudice calculated to harm, not only Omaha, but every community in the state. It acted, therefore, as a boom erang, and not until its reflex action began to be felt did most up-state people awake to the evil of the thing and lend Omaha their aid toward de stroying it. No man can think twice on the subject without admitting, at least to himself, that the interests of Omaha and the state are so wrapped up In each other as to have common misfortunes as well as common for tunes. Our Commercial club trade excur sions and Ak-Sar-Ben have been in struments for overcoming this barrier in Nebraska. They have served at a tie to bind the people of the metropolis and rest of the state together in that mutual relation they should enjoy and must maintain if tbelr state is to ad vance. Kamai' Latest Freak. Every now and then Kansas seems to catch Itself running short on freak Ideas, but it never falls to respond to the demand upon its reputation. Mrs. Ella Wilson, belligerent mayoress of the bustling town of Hunnewell, has none very well of late in holding the boards, but hers ia necessarily a too transient chapter to promise much re sults. Kansas has Itself, therefore, stepped into the breach with a novelty that will be hard to cry down or rip up. It is a statewide movemeut tor the teaching of domestic science in the schools to boys, as well as girls. Now, domestic science in itself is no new departure. Nebraska and other states are doing a good deal in that line, but not as a boy's study. It is all very well for boys and men to know enough about the kitchen and culinary art to be able in the absence of the housewife to fry a slice of bacon, make a cup of coffee and wash dishes when they can not find room in the house to stack them any longer, but it is not probable that boys and men are ever to encounter a practical demand for domestic science; neither Is it ap parent that boys In school have so much time or genius that they can afford to extend still further the di versity of their studies. The com mon criticism of our popular system of education is that it Includes too many branches and fads, already. But what cares Kansas for com moo criticism? Beside, that sort of talk applies, possibly, to boys other than those residing in Kansas. Who has a right to say what a Kansas youth shall not do? Or why suggest tbst if he must devote time to do- mestlo service, he had better do it In a practical way, helping mother in the kitchen at home? The Kansas boy can take care of all such little extras they see. fit to load on him. He can get his regular studies, take his man ual training, do his gym work, play at his athletics, look out for his liter ary society pursuits and find ample time for his domestic science and that too, with no' danger whatever of fall ing Into the mollycoddle class. What's the matter with Kansas, anyway? Dead Letters. By a sort of paradox one of the livest subjects of posto(flce adminis tration Is -the disposition of dead let ters. It Is reasonable to assume that when Ben Franklin as our first direc tor general of posts - supervised the handling and delivery of the mails, the dead lotters were not numerous enough to cause him much bother. It is the immense expansion of the coun try, and its business, and the corre sponding Increase of the work devolv ing on the postofflce that has multi plied the number of undellverable let ters and packages posted in the mills, until last year the. aggregate footed the colossal total of 12,545,133. , Everyone knows the dire conse quences that often follow the loss or misdirection of a letter, and it is the purpose of the postal authorities to spare no effort at prompt delivery to the person for whom the letter or pack- age Is intended. To this end, the prac tice has prevailed, and still prevails, of transmitting undellverable first class mall matter, after the lapse' of a prescribed period, to the dead letter office at Washington, where it is opened, and if possible forwarded to destination or returned to sender. This process has been found to b not only expensive, but also comparatively inerrective. With the utmost expedi tion the time lost may nullify the dun pose of the message. Despite the skin of long experienced clerks, a large part of the dead letter mail remains unclaimed and unclaimable. To obviate some of these difficulties It is now proposed to abandon the dead letter office at Washington and nave the work done in division offices In different parts of the country or by the postmaster in each separate post- office. The ordinary fourth class post office may average one dead letter a week, and the postmaster can open and dispose of them and keep the necessary records without much additional labor. The postmaster is bonded and con stantly subject to inspection, and the danger of misappropriation would at least be no. greater than it now is. The dead letter mail could be held, in the local office a stipulated time awaltlne a claimant, and then destroyed If not called for, unless containing articles of value which could be forwarded to the division or central headquarters. The strange thing is that to accom plish these obvious improvements in the postal service will require con gressional legislation, which it is not easy to get. The subject of disposing of dead letters, however, as here out lined, illustrates strikingly the ob stacles met by the postmaster general in his efforts to manage the depart ment according to modern business method. The School and Home. Much, perhaps too much, is being said these days about the Inefficiency of the schools in accomplishing with the children all they should, but too little about the inefficiency of the homes in this same relation. - Does the parent who criticises the school Imagine that the ' child can be edu cated without his or her help? An eastern educator recently af firmed the need for closer contact be tween the school and the home. If the appeal could be made so strong as to reach every parent's ear, it might have the desired effect. The trouble with many parents is that they have the wrong conception of the school's func tlon. They imagine that all they have to do is to send their children to the school. They could not make a graver mistake. The school does well if it teaches the child how to study. It is largely for the home to see that he does study. When a child lags in his books, when notes begin to come from bis teacher and finally he misses his grade, the parent generally blames it on the teacher, or the school, when, as a matter of fact, the fault may have been rather with the home and with the parent. Children in the lower grades may not be expected to do much school work at home, but for those In the higher grades it is not only important, but absolutely essential. In the case of the high school pupils, they go to school only to recite. Their recitation "hour" Is forty minutes, as a rule. In that period it is not supposed that they shall study. It Is all required for recitation. Therefore, if they have not studied at home before they come to school, where do they land when they come to recite? In boarding school or college, the Instructor counts the study hours the most valuable time of the day. It is folly, therefore, to go to the class room the next day with out preparation. It "has been well said that "the great est good to the greatest number" must be the school teacher's guiding rule. The teacher cannot devote time to the apt pupil or to the Inapt to the exclu sion of th other. The laggard must do his "making-up" out of the class room. And the parent should see to It that he Is not on the street when be should be perched up at a table in a quiet room at home, digging out hla lessons. It is a gross mistake for any parent not to know the standing of the child In school. It is another gross mistake for the parent to let the child feel that the blame for poor progress Is laid on the teacher. That is one good way to prevent the child from getting ahead. The school can guide and present In formation to the child, but it cannot fully succeed without the faithful co operation of the home. ' Delinquencies of High Society. When taken to task for the misbe havior of the so-called high society set, Its flevotees usually seek refuge In the reply that the same things are going on In other social classes, al though perhaps not so fragrantly, yet do not attract public attention. Whether this assertion be true or false, It cannot be accepted as Justification for claiming the right to defy all rules of morality, and scandalizing the com munity, as a perquisite of wealth or social eminence. It Is true that the frivolities and es capades in high society are more con spicuous than they would be if com mitted on lower levels, but that Is all the greater reason why they should be more severely condemned. If the so called social leaders are to recognize no accountability for their actjons, their bad examples are sure to have a per nlclous Influence, and work damage by imitation in places unexpected. The deficiencies and delinquencies of the high society set of today may be no greater than they have been In times past, but they seem to be more in the spotlight, and the need of a sense of re sponsibility is much more urgent. v Seizing Opportunities. Theodore P. Bhonts, writing in the magazine, Business, under the- caption "Be Alive to Vour Opportunities," says: If I were to set down a rule of action, the observance of which, more than any other, aside from the Ten Commandments, might lead to succeaa In business, I would ay, "Though shalt not be caught nap ping." In the present trend of the times when every moment ia regulated by a pen dulum of value there are thousands of opportunities going to waate for want of people to take them when they come. As a matter of fact the history of reverses In business might be summed up In two words, "Lost Opportunity." Mr. Shonts, like most other people now, evidently takes no stock in the late John J. Ingall's poetic idea that opportunity knocks only once at every man's door, but rather believes that opportunity has no limit to its knocklngs. It knocks every day and a good many times every day. It may not offer with each knock to. admit one to the embrace of some great achievement. Opportunity does not necessarily mean that. It may mean the chance to do the smaller things, but to do It well. Yet the smaller thing must be done, aa a rule, before the larger task can be essayed. Most men of renowned success did not leap at once Into tbelr positions of ad vantage, but got there by dint of a p. plying themselves along a long way and seizing each opportunity as it arose. These little detailed opportunities that precede tne larger one are not to be neglected If the larger one Is to be achieved. It is the details of life that compose Its success, after all. Heaping the measure to the full, whether it be the measure of success or the measure of meal, means put ting in a little at a time. It is the constancy hooked up with the alert nesB of the effort that brings the re ward. Business is a good deal like ball playing in this respect of being caught napping. The runner who goes to sleep at first never scores at the plate. Another View of Chinese Outbreaks. In all the periodical antl-foretgner outbreaks in China, one seldom, if ever, reads of an enlightened native, one who has been converted to west ern civilization, lending material or moral influence to the hostilities. Kather, these Chinese, where they take any active hand, are found try ing to protect the unoffending Ameri can or European and repress the rage of the native mob. In this fact Justification is sought lor the presence in the orient of the men and women who have gone there to show the people our way of living As a rule, once the natives 'have learned of this new way, they do not want to, and will not if they can avoid it, go back to their old methods of life. It is perfectly natural that a race born, bred and steeped for centuries in worshiping idols believed to be Inspired and pursuing all the vague cuBtoms which superstition can contrive, should resent the Intrusion of anyone daring to offer an improved system of existence. But the veil of oriental density has not been found which the rays of occidental enlighten ment could not penetrate. And when they yield, as many do in time, they have no wish to revert to old stand ards. It is going to take years and decades thus to awaken the hordes of the east, for there are so many hundred mil lions of them, but real progress is being made and every step forward lessens the difficulty of the next. It Is putting precisely the opposite con struction on the uprisings, such as la now going on in China, to say that because they seem in part to be aimed at the foreign invasion of church and commerce and education, they Indicate a measure of defeat for these forces. These outbreaks usually precede, as well a follow, f reat advances of civ- lllzstion and may be regarded as the breaking away from the old regime. This thought has a commercial as well as religious and educatlonnl as pect to It. The westerner's platform In th'j far east, fortunately, has been constructed so broad and big as to enable all Interests concerned in push ing forward-the outposts of modern civilization, to work shoulder to shoul der upon It. Wlth a view of reducing the exces sive mortality among the Indiaus, the Indian bureau Is to have recourse to moving pictures to show the red man the right and wrong way to live. Mov Ing pictures will doubtless help some toward the desired end, but keeping the bootleggers and land thieves on the reservation moving would help more. If he wanted to be perfectly frank about it, our democratic United States senator from Nebraska might have told those postmasters that he was not only on record opposed to parcels post, but also could not well recede because he had received much coveted support for his election in considera tlon of the assurance thus given. A so-called university In Washing ton has been exposed in which the degree of Doctor of Phllosopl'y may be had by reading eight prescribed books and paying 75. The high cost of living must be a myth when such necessaries of life as a college diploma can be bought so cheaply. We poke fun at the slowness of our Canadian friends, but that charge can not lie against those who robbed the British Columbia bank of $320,000. That is a better haul that anyone on this side of the boundary has been able to make for some time. According to the Outlook, reel nrocity is a more heated issue in Can ada than it has been at any time in the United States. Still, the United States has had enough heat this year to satisfy all reasonable demauds. Senator La Follette must be an im pressive man, for he has impressed into his Nebraska following the man known tn the Nebraska senate of 1903 as the "general manager" for the rail roads and franchised corporations. . Those Mexicans cannot have gotten vArv far on their presidential cam paign as yet or there would be more of them running back and form across the bridges that span the Rio Grande. rninrAi Hnosevelt is reviewing some books under the caption ''A Hunter- Naturalist in Europe ana Airica. n Is at least enlightening to know that it is possible to have the two in one. I ' When th" ColoneU Met. Boston Transoript. The two colonels met in the Outlook of fice and talked of "Interesting subjects, What subject could interest both an ex prestdent and an ex-e-ex-presldentlal can didate? He Did Thing". Brooklyn Eagle. The unveiling of a monument to 'Edwin McMasters Stanton recalls a period !n American history when sand waa more useful than sugar. Stanton was no hand shaker, and no demagogue, but he did things. Hlahteons Hndely Jolted. Baltimore American. . eminent mil road Dresldent has been shocked and surprised by being summoned to court on the charge of selling bad hen fruit. He doubtless win aaaiy essen umi popular prejudice has egged this charge on. The Valne of a Tree. Chicago Tribune. Foresters are Interested in a recent de cision of the New York courts sustaining a claim for 500 for a tree cut down by a onn..riintinn comoany. Thla was upheld as a fair estimate of Its "going value." It was not baaed on sentiment, aitnougn it - ..uiinn tn the value of the tree aa lumber or firewood. The tree, alive. had been a thing of use ana prom on mi street. When it was cut down the loss had not been merely, esthetic It had been ..ri.i Foresters are encouraged to find that the courts take this view of the mat ter. People Talked About O. H. Hell, a prospective New Tork busi ness man, has asked a court to change his name lest It might attract attention as an exclamation or a resort of summer. The claim of Arkansas for the record peach weighing twenty-two ounces la dis allowed. Omaha can ahow a crop of peaches, each weighing 100 pounds and up. No superiors In design and flavor. Feara of a famine of offlceaeekers In Pittsburgh, Pa., prove to be groundless. A newspaper canvass shows 20.000 aspirants for half a hundred offices, insuring a rea sonable amount of competition in the race. Bam Harris of Farmersvllle, Tex., who for six years held the record of being the largest town marshal in the United States, has retired from that office. He Is SS years old and weighs 410 pounds. Hla weight was no handicap in performing the duties or police officer, but he got tired of the Job and Is now ready to take other employ ment. Two opposing forces in Ohio are pulling R. J. Plegle to and fro. One wants to tighten his muszle, the other struggles to remove it. Mr. Dlegle la sergeant-at-arms of the state senate, and la believed to know more about the grafting operatlona 'of the senators than the dictograph. A three years' sentence, suspended on appeal, has not loosened his tongue at last accounts. A gleam of humor filters through the fierce battle of factions for the spoils of office in Philadelphia. Every citlsen must go to the designated places and be regis tered personally. Formerly any Individual properly Identified by a registration officer could put down as many' names as he chose, a custom which made large drafts on the city directory and gravestones. The oldest woman Alpinist in Ewltserland. still on the active list, Is Mm. Louise Favre, a widow, aged 81, who lives in a hamlet near Bex, Canton of Vatals. The other day she climbed up the Chamoasaire, a mountain 6.M0 feet high, with one of her grandaona, in orler to light a bonfire on the summit in honor of a local featlval, whlfh was attended by a number of Alpinists, who cheered the veteran climber. ookln Backward JhbDqy fnOmnlm COMP1LF.D t ROM IU.F, FILFS J J SKPT.. I L Thirty Years Ag A steady cold rain fell during the grenter pert of the night, driving all the fnlr ex hibitors, who could get away, off the grounds and seriously Inconveniencing Che rest. Meny of the tents and booths became flooded with water, and the occupants were obliged to get out and seek drier quartets. The" sun, however, ram out about 10 o'clock and produced a more encouraging aspect. It did not get dry enough until 3 o'clock to admit of the races. The program concluded with the feature of the day, the chariot racea. Two chariots were driven, one by a man and the other by a woman (and, by the way, a very pretty woman), four prancing horses hitched to ' each. They started like a shot at the word inj flow around the track at breakneck speed. The woman driver plied her whip dexterously on the homestretch and eucceeded in forcing her horses ahead just a neck. The crowd was almost wild with excitement. . Word comes from Denver that the Bur- lington A Missouri railroad has filed papers of Incorporation there for the extension of this line into Colorado, with a capital stock of $0,000,000. "The Incorporators are O. It. Harris, T. T. Calvert, A. E. Touzalln, T. M. Marquette and James M. Barr. The object of the corporation la to construct a ra'l road from some point on the eastern boun dary to Denver and It. promises to com mence work of construction at once. . Hon. J. L. Webster left on a business trip to Falls City. Miss Clara Rosenfelt Is visiting friends in Omaha, the gueat of Mrs. Mattte Roths child. Miss Dora Lehmer Is once more numbered among her Omaha friends after a pro tracted visit In New Hampshire. Miss Congdon of Chicago is In Omaha visiting her cousin, Miss Carrie Congdon. Mrs. Ida B. Lawrence and Mrs. Maggie Shull left for Pennsylvania, their old home, thla being their first visit there for twenty years, Mrs. Frank Shears of Grand Isianji ar rived to visit her sister, Mrs. Nathan Shel ton. Twenty Years A go Plans were announced for the marriage of Ed Neal, the murderer' of Allan and Dotothy Jones, to a woman of the town known as Josephine Clarke, the nuptials to be aolemnUed in the county Jail, where Neal was Incarcerated. It was really in the shadow of the gallows, aa Neal had been doomed to die. Neal, 25, and the Clarke woman, 29, had been schoolmates and sweethearts In their childhood days. The Young Men's Christian association held a reception at the parlors of the building to enable the directors and com mitteemen to become acquainted with the new general secretary, Frank W. Ober. Pat McDonough had Pat Ford, sr., ar rested on the charge of disturbing the peace. It seems that McDonough, a man who hit a woman over the head with a heavy shovel, passed along the street where Ford was laying a sidewalk and started trouble with Ford, who proceeded to do him up. Omaha's list of "first-class" hotels was swelled by the addition of the Brunswick, which waa opened at Sixteenth and Jack son streets. Rev. Charles W. Bavldge conducted the conference revival meeting at the North Nebraska Methodists' annual conference. Miss Flora Webster left for New York. Benator R. F. Pettlgrew of Sioux Falls, S. D., was at the Paxton. Herman Kountse took the train for New York. Major J. W. Paddock returned from the east and went at once to his home just outside the city. Ten Years Ago - W. A. Webster and C. H. Young won In the semi-finals of the singles of the inter state tennis tournament played at the oourts of the Omaha Amateur Athletic as sociation. Old Jack Frost arrives ahead of time, much to the disgust of many Involuntary hosts. Chairman Ed Howell and Secretary X J. Piattl of the demooratlo county commit tee filed the name of James P. Connolly for commissioner from the Second district. J. F. Nixon, 1019 Harney street, reported to the police he was held up and robbed of 78 cents and a pocketknife while crossing the Eleventh street viaduct at night. High school Is dismissed because of the sudden drop in the temperature making it too chilly for the students and pro fessors. John Larson, a bachelor, 63 years old, for thirty-four years a local hackman, was found dead with hla scalp torn from his head in the alley back of 2219 Dodge street. The circumstances of the death were not then known. IflnHannAllB IftllMt.l' Tt 1 U T1 ACAM Q I-V to 4M14lllOClftU., w V . . i w - J restore competition, says Mr. Bryan, and yet he objects to Governor Harmon's coming Into the race. HOTEL ST. FRANCIS SAISJ FRANCISCO if fl7 to , f 177 - ew Perfection of service means economy to the guest. European Plan -:- Under the Management of James woods. SECULAR SHOTS AT PULTIT. New York World: The New Orleans pas tor who in twenty-seven years officiated KVOii weddings and received over fO OUr in wedding fees may he snld to have started well, but as lie christened on'y 1 00 bah.es the record is not consistent. Brooklyn F.ale: The man who thinks the weak churches in a village are leterlng out only needs to urge unity In Chrtst'eit effort to start a row that will till the buildings with advocate of the only aimon pure scheme of Introducing brotherly love. T .1 1 ......... I ; . V-..H... Tli. t?, T I.. r. - Chalm.irs Jtlchmonrt, rector of St. J.ohn's Eulsential church of Phlladeluhla. evidently1 belongs to that class of men who never lose their wholesome self-restraint when sue cebs attends their efforts at sparring for an opening. Chicago Tribune: There is some curiosity to know why the Kev. Mr. Straight, whose secular calling is that of a carpenter, did not perform the Astor marriage ceremony, In accordance w.th published announce ments. Mr. Straight, though a carpenter, may not be a good Joiner. Springfield Republican: Rev. Dr. Wash ington Glndden has not resigned his pns loiate in Columbus, O. The Congregationul let wired him for Information, and the an swer came back: "Haven't resigned or dreamed of It. All newspaper blundering. Or. Gladden hns associated with himself Dr. Carl 8. Button, recently of Ann Arbor, Mich.. Who iR t,l Ifllf. kn atiur rt tha n,.i. work and to assume most of the routine pastoral duties, but the senior pastor Is to remain In the harness. Nobody will whiu to take back any of the pleasant things written under a misapprehension of Dr. Uiadden's purpose. POLITICAL SNAPSHOTS. Pittsburg Dispatch: President Tnft has had the bad luck of being defended by Cannon against the assault of Cummins, but there Is yet time to rescue him from the Irretrievable calamity of being cham pioned by Lorlmer. Sioux City Journal: Mr. Bryan was In New York the other day and made a call at the Roosevelt editorial offices. Fol lowing the visit, walch was nut hurried, Colonel Roosevelt said: "Mr. Bryan and ... .. ... i nave naa quite a lam on interesting sub jects. That was ail." Hut one cannot tell from this whether the matter of Mr. Bryan's stolen policies was considered. Springfield Republican: Senator La Follettes presidential candidacy has been well under way since headquarters were opened In Washington, under the Immediate direction of a Wisconsin politician, and it la therefore somewhat surprising to read that the senator has decided not to an nounce his candidacy until next winter. The delay in, making a formal announc ment, however, may signify merely a. tac tical purpose. By awaiting the develop ment of the president's policies the sena tor would be able to act with less uncer tainty aa to the actual conditions to be faced In the presidential year. Many things may happen in the next six of eight months to alter the political situation. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. "Most people," snld the Boarding House Philosopher, "as soon as they are married ana sareiy launcnea on tne stream ot isl h.irtn tn rnfil, , V V n fm-nnt. 15 1 S Wife (complainingly) You never prals B4SS me me up 10 any one. Hub I don't, eh? You should hear describe you at the Intelligence office when I'm trying to hire a cook. Boston Tran script. "There Is one time only which will con vince me of the downfall of the trusts." "What la that?" "When the Ice trust Is frozen out and the Coal trust has coal to burn." Balti more American. "I don't see how people can ever fall out with a street car conductor." "Why not?" "Naturally, you perceive, he sees every thing and everybody In a fare light." Baltimore American. Mrs. Culchaw Did you see any of the old masters whtln you were abroad? Mrs. Newrlch Mercy, no! They are all dead. Boston Transcript. ' "That distinguished curst made nnlte Impression in your community during hi uriei visit. ies, repuea f armer .orniossei: tlieie were moments when he seemed nigh aa important as the chairman of the reception committee." Washington Star. OVER THE HILLS. Eugene Field. Over the hills and far away, A little boy steals from his morning play. And under the blossoming apple tree lie lies and dreams of the things to be Of battles fought and of victories won, Of wrongs o'erthrown and of great deeds done Of the valor that he shall prove some day, Over the hllla and fur away Over the hills and far away! Over the hills and far away, It's O for the toll of the livelong day! But It mattered not to the soul aflame With a love for riches and power and fame! On, O man! while the sun is high On to the yonder Joys that lie Yonder where blazeth the noon or day! Over the hills and far sway- Over the hills and far away! Over the hills and far away, An old man lingers at close or day; Now that hla Journey la almost done, His battles fought and his victories won The old time honesty and truth, The trustfulness and the friends of youth, Home and mother where are they? Over the hills and far away? Over the hills and far away! 1 From $2.00 Up iiaWJt. i(tIi i r n MsMsBBsasJ