THE COURIER. oil, on the condition of streets and alleys, on vacant lots foul with stag nant water after every rain, on other lots where rubbish is dumped and left, on the largo sheets of bill-board paper torn from the bill boards and left where the wind deserted It, com mittees to confer with Indifferent householders whose carelessness neu. trallzed the societies' efforts, commit tees to Interest the school children and to solicit their aid were appointed and the effect was Immediately ap parent. More weeds have been up rooted, more rubbish has been burnt, more scavengers have been exhorted and In consequence have made more trips In the last five years than In any other fifteen. Women in clubs have not confined their attention to exterior housekeep ing by any moans. Most womens' clubs have a domestic science or household economics' department which is studying, not by the use of books butby means of original investi gation and experiment, domestic problems, which perplex and confound the great majority of women. An oc caslonal woman having the diplomacy and tact of a statesman, the health of r. ploughman and large common sense and executive ability enough to make a good lawyer, a good doctor, a good minister, and a superb cook is occasi onally found and serves as an example to all the other less richly endowed women in the neighborhood whose husbands observing the consequences of marrying a paragon are continually comparing her to their own overwork ed helpmeets The latter has struggled with indifferent success to teach the ignorant foreigners who came to this country with the purpose of hiring themselves as cooks, housemaids and laundresses. The fact that they know nothing about cooking keeping a house clean or fine laundry work docs not embarrass them or prevent them from getting good places, so great is the demand for such service. Study of the servants and their duties as well as the dutjes of mistresses to maids may after years of study and trial improve both mistresses and maids, and the quality of the service. The New York State Household Eco nomic Association has opened a bureau which amounts tp a new and improv ed intelligence office. Its prospectus announces that ty will supply patrons only with capable servants. To fulfil this advertisement every applicant for a cook's place must pass an ele mentary examination in cooking, a second girl in dusting, sweeping, the care of brlc-a brae, waiting at table, making beds, etc., and a nurse maid will be put through a much more rigid examination in the care and treatment of children. The associa tion which has lately been incorporat ed at Albany hopes to establish a school of domestic science which will be of great usefulness to mistress and maid. The First's Welcome. Soldiers received a welcome from the whole stato when they entered it on Monday. Every little town was at its station when the three trains loaded with Nebraska's pride passed. By the time the soldiers arrived in Lincoln they were accustomed to the wild shrieks or delight the cheering, the cannonading, whistling and ex plosions that marked their arrival at every town, and roost of them re-' ceived the adulation with a good humoured toleration. I think the people in the towns were a trifle disappointed at the sang froid the ' Idols displayed while re ceiving their worship. But lrapas slvlty and unresponsiveness Is a characteristic of idols the world over. They cannot permit themselves to express the emotions of gratitude they must occasionally feel, because the worshipers arc so many and tho worship so fervid. A response to ono Involves a recognition of all and that Is, of course, Impossible. It Is equally impossible for Nebraska to express by guns, Hags, bunting, cheers and re ceptions to the First, our pride In tho regiment and our joy over Its return. We are proud of the unique record It made in the Fillplnes, and In getting our own back again, our gratitude to Providence is unspeak able. It shines In every mother's eyes and is expressed by tho fathers in handshaking and by trembling voices. On Tuesday when the sol diers were expected at every hour between six o'clock In the morning and nine at night, the city was filled with country folk with glorified faces, albeit as the day wore on and the boys did not come the faces grew anxious. When the thrco trains finally ar rived at the station here and the boys tumbled off the cars into the arms stretched out to meet them the scenes were indescribable and even beyond the power or the desire of the reporters.to describe. Not quite a third of tho men were Induced to go to Omaha. Only a few, comparatively speaking outside of the Thurston Rifles went to the recep tion there. Those who accepted had no near relations or were lacking in natural affecUon, and there were very few waifs in the regiment and very few heartless. Men who could resist a mother's entreaties after sixteen months separation are not the kind of men that make good soldiers, and the First Nebraska has gained the reputa tion of containing the best soldiers there are. The reception to bo given the First is offered in gratitude and has no designs upon the boy's pocket money. Before that time arrives they will have had an opportunity to spend it in their home towns and for the Dene fit of their families and themselves. Those who choose to accept the in vitation which Lincoln and the sur rounding country extends, to come and be feasted and honored and cheered and thanked will be very welcome and Lincoln will be over paid in seeing the First Nebraska something which does not now exist march on- the streets of Lincoln even as on the hills and through the rice-fields of Luzon. By that time the boys will think of their trials with pleasurable toleration as old soldiers and be ready for a reunion and company drill again. Dewey Sense. The horse has monopolized the kind of sense we all admire and that is much rarer than the use of it Indicates longenough. Admiral Dewey has had such unusual opportunities to say foolish things and has, Instead re plied to his tempters with so much discretion, that his name should en ter the language. Dewey means to the American people, discretion, bravery, frankness, reserve, modesty, manliness and patriotism. The civil war added two words to the language, shoddy and loco. If this little war should bring to the language an adjec tive so rich in meaning as Dewey even the anti-expansionists and antl administratlonists can have no plausi ble objections. sent to the chief of police of each city in America. Doubtless many an Innocent man has been under suspi cion and doubtless his picture Is oc cupying a place In tho rogues' album in several hundred police stations. Tho injustico of such a lasting pil lory is apparent. Just how far society has tho right to go in prosecuting tho suspected In order to make certain the guilty do not escapo is a question upon which there is much debate. Professor Tlcdeman in his "Llmltu tlons of Police Power," says: "An other phase of polico supervision Is that of photographing criminals and sending copies of the photographs to all detective bureaus. If tills be di rected by law as a punishment for a crime of which the criminal stands convicted, or if the man Is, In fact a criminal, there can bo no constitu tional or legal objection to the act, for no right lias been violated." The Dreyfus Melodrama. M. Sardou Mdlle. Bernhardt and Mdlle. Rejano In interviews with newspaper corrcssondents speak of tho Dreyfus trial and maitre Labori's as sassination as a drama of exceeding subtlety and power. M.Sardou says no man over wrote a play with sucli fine situations and sustained interest. It is a pity though, that Frenchmen seem unable to conduct themselves In a court of law as reasonable human beings who have adopted cortain legal conventions for settling disputes. The dramatic character of the French court Is increased by the confronta tions between opposing witnesses who are not so much witnesses in the American sense as advocates whom the judge allows to argue tho Jury, and revile or compliment the prisoner at the bar. The playwright and the actresses who have expressed their opinion of the trial as the finest play they ever saw, have expressed the opinion of Frenchmen and men of other nations. Until the French take themselves, serlouoly nobody else will. Until they do, It does not matter much whether they have a republic or a monarchy. Both arc farcical as French Institutions, though the Anglo Saxon fought, and fought steadily for hundreds of years for his constitutional monarchy and the world never smiled, nor thought of smiling as it looked on. Y. M. C. A. NOTES. The Young Woman's Christian As sociation has a friend who volunteer ed to teach any members of the asso ciation who wish to learn the art of making paper flowers. The flowers thus made to be donated to the asso ciation which will All orders for paper flowers for use in the street fair. The flowers are on exhibition at the rooms and at Sandersons store on O. street. The association will be glad to receive orders. Tho association has reserved space for a booth at the street fair. It will be an' undertaking of some magnitude and will require much work on tho part of the members. It is tioped that all who can will report to the secretary at once and recei vo an assign ment of duties. Tho regulardevotional meeting will he held on' Sunday afternoon at four o'clock. All young women are cordi ally Invited. Special music Is prom ised for next Sunday. MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM The Right to Photograph. Suspected of crime, a man when ar rested in certain cities of this country has his photograph taken with or without his consent. Frequently when a man who is suspected of a crimo cannot be found, his picture is Gillilan can assist you in finding a de sirable home. It you intend moving call at his ground floor office 119 south 12th street. When love goes out at the window these days, divorce drives up to the porto cochere in a four in-hand. t fTHE PASSING SHOW J W I LLA GATHER I should call Richard Waiting's work "Number 5, John streot" the most en during book of the year. All writers today are, for tho most part, aflllctod by restloBsnosB and tho t'lsoase of their generation, hurry. Tbey have an idea, or borrow an idea, and procood to got it into literary form and rush it off to tho publishers. Tho idea may be a good one, the troatmont skillful and felici tous, but somohow thoso stories lack conviction, power, solidity. Thoy did not Ho long onough in tho author's mind to absorb much of his personality, and he never put much brain stuff into them, because usually, cleverness sells junt as well as earnestness. Now "Num ber 5, John street" is the reverse of all this. It is the second book that Rich ard Whiting has written, and he is now a man of fifty. He has boen a journalist all bis life, and Iibb writton for years on social questions and on tho life and conduct of tho London poor for the "TlmeB." Into "Number 5, John streot," and his former book, "The Isl and," Mr. Whiting haB put tho result and the net gain of all bis thirty years' study of how tho other half lives. There Ib not a line of padding in the book, and there is not a page that does not bear the stamp of a thinker. Yet with all this, it is so interesting that a foolish man might road it merely for thn thread of the story, and so simple that who runs may read,' Socialistic studies in the guise of fiction are usually unattractive, not infrequently dishonest, and almost never have they anything new to say. If I must bear grewsome statistics and particulars as to sanitation and the death rato of infante, I prefer to get it as bluntly and brutally hb possible, and not disguised behind a feeble love story or sugared over with pretly phrases. But Mr. Whiting seems not to have sought for a convenient mould into which to run live facts and figures. His booku.ust have come to him in very nearly the form in which he published it, you cannot imagine it being written in any other way. Mr. Whiting, like Mr. Jacob Riis of New York, has lived among the people of whom be writes, to be puts his hero In very much his own place. The story is written in the form of a personal narrative, told by a young man of the fashionable world of Lon don, who voluntarily accepts the life of a wage-earner in the world of the ex tremely poor in the heart of the great metropolis. The hero, after he takes up bis abode iu John street, lives the life of John street, leaving his chambers and servants behind him, he enters a factory as a workman and subsists on the wages he earns by the work of his hand He lives with the people. He cultivates them in a kindlier and morn human sense than as mere sociological studies, he draws them close to him until they become to him and to his readers, not studies, but folk of the real world, of the realest of worlds, with a convincing antualness of speech and manner and the blessed warmth of blood in their veins Mr. Whiting does not merely "handle" these types of the London poor, he thinks of them, feels for them, knows them and .lives with them, gets their attitude toward all the great questions of life, their purpose in work, their tastes in recreation, their notion of pleasure. One feels that here is an explorer who has gone into that dark interior where dwells the lost halt of civilization who did not leave his heart behind. He tabulates not at all; gives no statistics, makes no cold blooded observations, offers no theories draws no conclusions. Mr. Walter Wy