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the WILL AUCOMMODATE PUPILS| Former Btadents at Eeals I IN COLUMBIAN AND WIND3OR BUILDINGS srea, | STORIES TOLD BY GEN. DEWET er pupl’s of the Beals econd grade will be able 1o attend school this morning. and the first and second grades and kind garten will be provided for as socn as the insurance on the south bullding of the Beals school can be adjusted and the bulld- ing repaired. This was the statement made yesterday morning by Fred Stubben. dorf, chairman of the committee on bmlll-| ings and property. | There are three vacant roms at the | A% Columbian school, one of which was already provided with seats, and one of the others was furnished yesterday preparatory to its occcupancy today. The third room also All "ot the for echool above the by at men from Mr. McNeil Echool Board Will Provide Rooms fr | .oo" disposed to pursue the most conserva that tTHE OMAHA ILY BEE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 e movement No definite with information has It is und course in «his direction and will convineed of the prudence of the step be- | fore he orders an extension of this strike | Finanetal support and other contingenctes | | must be caretully looked after first Africa Tells » of the What he calls “the most wonderful of all the escapes that whole course of the war™ is thus described “On the third evening He said lived about twelve miles from the farm of Commandant Nel, | could not remain in the serviee of the wite of such a bad ‘bass.’ could not become one of my ‘achterrijders.’ still speaking to me Landdrost Bosman, from Bothaville, came to pay me a visit. shall wished to cross-question him. God allowed me in eneral Dewet nset a Hottenlot came to me. his ‘bass’ whose family bad laid down his arms and that He asked me It he wa ‘Good.’ 1 sald to the Hotteatot. see you about this again.’ Il the Union Pacific come ratood the lat- For 1 n went WOMEN IN WORLD ACTIVITIES Civilization Clamors for Bkilled Hands, for Brutal Hands. HENCE THE VAST OPENING FOR WOMEN be Not ates—Superior ment of Women. (Copyright, 1993, by David Graham Philiips.) Only ten years ago the women numbered less than onme-fifth of all the wage and salary earners in th: United States. When these figures were published there was a great outcry of wonder and alarm—wonder at the changed conditions, alarm lest ihose changed conditious might be permanent and the old-fashioned woman cf the fireside and the stoveside and the cradleside might be passing away. Today nearly one-third of all the women in the United States earn thelr own living outside their own homes, and these independent women constitute no less than one-third of all the persons fn the United States engaged in gainful occupa- he he 1 of 1dle women sprang up—not only among the Fieh and the well-to-do, but even among the artisans, small tarmers and small shop keepers. And this class came to be re anfl as typleal and exemprary. In real ity It is neither. It has no place in our tradition of mothers and srandmothers who spun and made preserves, did their own housework and were busy every wak | ing moment about matters which are now | largely attended to in factories and shop And it has no place in our future, If the [signs ‘ot the times mean what they seem | to mean. Our society is founded upon two | ldeas—work and equal opportunity to all | to work. 1t abhors an idier as nature ab | hors a vacuum. And as the old-time oc | cupations of women are carried on in a different way she must and will find othe oceupation Emerson well sald lazy as he dares to be woman, alfo. The very powerful that is acting upon th% woman idleness and genteel ineriia passion for independence and the passion for luxury. These two passions impel | women to work that they may be free and | may have the lusuries and comtorts which | must be carned. These two passions impel men to refuse to burden themselves with the dead weight of the support of idle, in- what Every man He mean is as every impulse bred Is found in the | | tout cutery. foree protest, white the sew | order is establishing. Change always means | aiscomtort | the secret of human content, and sinc | work at a ftting. time filling oceupation | with & future in It s the secret of human happiness, who will venture to say tha the end s uot to be for the best of bests® And, as we can't alter the decrces ot destiny, may we not as well accept them cheertully | cHIcAGO ELEVATORS CLOSED ozalze People Must Use & & Owners Refase to Ree- Starters’ Umion and CHICAGO, A strike was inaug urated this in a number of the office buildings by the elevator starters and condu rs. The janitors and window clean ers are aiso out. The men were called out because officers the Build and Mapagers’ assocl on declined to sign an agreement to recognize the union | The offices affected by the strike are Manhattan, Eagle, Monon, Girard, Wat- son, Natlonal Life, Quincy, Harrison, OM | Colony, Kaskaskal, Bay State, Caxton Como, Harvey and Lowell. The strike was called by J Feb. 5 evening ot Owners But in the end, since work is | H. Baines | and soda crackers live have strong flavors What's th: result? Mackerel, tea, cheese, kerosene together at the store Mackerel, tea, cheese and kerosene Soda crackers have a delicate flavor All exposed to the air together ! The soda crackers lose their own flavor | and absorb the flavor of their neighbors | Unless the soda crackers are Uneeda Biscuit in the In-er-seal Package with red and white seal, which protects their flavor and keeps them fresh will be used, If it is found necessary. | !Dt0 the Bouse with the landdrost and epent There 1s one room at the Windsor bullding, | ® 5004 deal of time in writing with him. which will be ready to be used this morn- | L4t® in the evening he went back to Botha- ing. ville and I to bed exactly at 11 o'elock. I E. S Freeman, sdiuster for the Me- scarcely lain down when the Hottantot chanics Insurance company of Milwaukee, | “AMe back to my thoughts and I began to in which the south building insured, | S7O% uaeasy. I got up and went to the is now negotiating with the committee, and | Outhouse where my Kafir slept. 1 woke representatives of the company in which | Bim up and asked him where the Hottentot the other two buildings were insured have | W&S- ‘O, he Is gone,’ he replied, ‘to go and tions. It is evident that the changed condition are not passing but permanent; that the ew woman™ is the woman of the future. Yet we still have the old order taiked of, as it 1t were not a departing ordes, and the new order criticised as If it were the cre ation of a few “‘freak” women. The theory still is that man bears the brunt of the battle for food, clothing and competent women ] Men Alse Displacing Women. | of the Elevator Conductors’ and Starters’ | Thus we have a social organization which | 80d Charles L. Fieldstack of the Janitors' | s in process of revolutionary change. The | 804 Window Washers' unions. Ther fssued | | women are rapidly going to work at occupa- | A0 ultimatum to George Holt, president of | tions which have been transferred from |‘'he Bullding Owners’ and Managers' asso- jthe domestic to the general sphere, and | €lation, and Thomas Hall, chairman of the t the occupations, new and old, which, i+ | 1Abor committee of the association, giving was expected a few years ago, would be in | tB€m two hours fn which to answer possession of the men only. The men, on | BOth refused to sign the agreement, and their part, are not only working as for- | (he strike followed. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY assured the school officers o fetch bis once felt | and went to saddle the farm tlement. Qu: Speaking n of Rebuilding. of the tendent of buildings, and Mr. expressed themselve: bullding. replacing year. not cost much more Beals stfucture than residents of that neighborhood UNABLE TO FLAG THE CARS| Omaha Man Who Holds ship for W Motors Tells < His Troubles. “Hang it! xelaimed Citizen Conv ing. “I missed my car twice. cars in And 1t's all because I can't stop them. haven't any signal. \front door as they reach the corner. have to make a noise. wife to know what wa: threatens to desert if I ever do it again. “Now if 1,had a whistle 1 would be all Nobody pays any attention to a is the one a fellow wants to have pay attention. “When I was a youngster I could stick two fingers in my mouth and startle people 1 quit when T got my first ‘steady girl' and got out of practice. Now I would give $100 40 get the knack of it agaln. It might not be exactly dignified, but it would be as dignified as for a man of | my walst measure to go lumbering along the snowy tracks a half block behind a car and either waving ltke a flagman or yelling right. except the conductor, and in the nmext county. ke a Comanche at every step.” Hereafter trains, for their transcontinental Union Pacific, years past. The introduction of this rule makes a de- cided difference in the amount of switching It brings here all the switehmen who were stationed for this work i Council Blufts. No change in the roundhouse affairs at Council Bluffs is at the local Usnion depot. occastoned by this arrangement. Ope of the reasoms which led to this of Northwestern passengers, bound for Omaba, | who were obliged to lay over in Council Bluffs to wait until the engines and crews change was the constant complaint were changed AWAIT WORD FROM M'NEIL Union Pacific Strikers at a St still, Pending Developments on Sow Pacific. Union Pacific strikers are still awaiting word from President John MeNell of the tour of the hich & decision will be resched as to the matter of calling out the shopmen on that road in a sympa- | boller makers, who is on Southern Pactfic, pending PLENTY OF PROOF From Peopls You Know— From Omaha Citizans. The greatest skeptic can bardly tUme. Read the following case of it Mr. William Cooper of 518 Scath Seven- | the Waterlos | teenth street, employed at creamery, says 1 was taken with severe case of the grip and it left bad mornings. whe myself about and it get dressed stand in wet places al times, and & tendency to make my back worse ing Doan's Kidoey Pills advertised an early set- question of rebuilding the Beals school, Mr. Finlayson, superin. Stubbendort in favor of a brick It does not appear probable that anything can be done for some time toward the bulldings which were de- #troyed, because the new Monmowth Park bullding, already arranged for. will take the entire bullding appropriation for the An issue of bonds may be author- ized by vote of the people at the spring election, but that would not make it possi- ble to bulld until well along in the sum- As an argument In favor of a brick building. Mr. Finlayson sald that it would to rebulld the s !t was befcre the fire, and would be much more acceptable to the | Champlon. T'd give $100 tor & whistle,” rse as he reached office ten minutes late yesterday morn. | I can miss more less time than any other living mbite man, and I'm willicg to bet on it 1 live just a block off %he line and I'm always just coming out my The conductors decline to see me wave, 5o I 1 tried yelling once, but everybody on our street telephomed my wrong and she the westbound Northwestern in exchanging ecngines and crews service with will run into Omaba fnstead of stopping for that purpose at Councll Bluffs, as has been the practice for il to be convinced 1u the face of evidence like this. It is impossible to preduce better proof of | merit than the testimeny of residents of | Omaba, of people who ean be seen at aay | me with a lame and aching back. especially I could scarcely drag | was a bard task to| My work requires me |u| things to go with the baas.’ I at that there was something wrong and called my men. I told them up and went off with my staff to of Mr. Schoeman ou the Valsch | river, to the east of Bohtaville. On the following morning before daybreak a force of 200 English stormed the farm of Com- mandant Nel. They had come to take me prieoner.” At Potchesfstroom Dewet sat for a photo- graph, which afterward became well known and in which the Boer leader holds a rifie in his hands. He thus tells the history of the weapon: “When the enemy passed through Potchefstroom on thelr way to Pre- toria they left a garrison behind them and armes, which forthwith were burned In heap. Whnen the garrison left the dorp the burghers returned. Among them were some who set to work to make butts for the rifles that had been burnt. “This rifle,’ I was told by the man who showed it to me, ‘is the 200th that has been taken out of the burnt heap and repaired.’ This made such an im- pression on me that I took it in my hands | and bad my photograph taken with it.” In describing another of his escapes from the British, General Dewet says: “I de- cided on climbing the Magalies mountains without a path or road. Near by there was | & Kafir hut and I rode up to It Kafir came out to me I pointed to the Ma. alies mountains and asked: ‘Right before can & man cross there” ‘No, baas, you cannot,’ the Kafir answered. ‘Has a man ever ridden across here? ‘Yes, ba plied the Kaffir. ‘long ago.' ‘Do baooons 1 man.’ ‘Come on,’ I sald to my burghers. “This is ou: only way and where a baboon can cross we can cross.’ " After a terrible climb, much of the time in full view of the enemy below, the burghers escaped. WIFE WANTS TO RECONCILE Us DiTculties. A letter has been receivea by Chief Dona- hue from Superintendent of Police Corner W. E. Curry, who disappeared from that city December 21, 1902. He is described. as six feet In height, light blue eyes, weighing about 185 pounds, reddish brown mustache, dark hatr, thin on top, and wore a plaid suit and black overcoat when last seen. He is an interior decorator by trade and is 33 years of age. The letter states that he Is |awantcd for mo ather purpose than to as- sure him that his wife in Cleveland desires a reconciliation, and that everything else in Cleveland has been made secure for his re- turc. He is advised to communicate at once with his old friend, John A. Thompson. WESTBERG TALKS ON MONEY City Comptroller Declares Omaha to Be the Most Prosperous City in Country. City Comptroller Westberg, in an ad- dress before the Prospect Hill Improve- ment club Wednesday uight, sald the city of Omaha was In better financial condition than any other city in the country d asserted that the value of assessable prop- jerty is about $130,000,000, while the total amount of bonded indebtedness is only a little over $4,600,000. Harry Fisher and | J. H. Butler glso spoke on the subject of finances. The club voted to attend the mass meet- ! of citizens and taxpayers at the city hall . Friday night. The committes on street cars reported that two extra Harmey cars would be added to the service at once. Health at Small Cost. A few doses of Dr. King's New Lite Pills { will cleanse. tone and invigorate the whole system. Try them. Only 2c. For sale by Kuhn & Co. we. Dr. H_G. Miller of 1143 South Twenty- sixth street and E. F. Townsend of 2% North Twenty-fifth street were arrested at late hour last night and charged with attempting to procure an abortion. The ar- rest Ferris. The you Princella Wyeth, 3 years old, and she is now at the home of Dr. Miller. Detective Manefield was left in charge of the ho: after the arrest. At the police station it was said that Dr. Miller denied any guilt in the matter. but Townsend pgactically admitted the charge to be true. The latter is said to have been intimate with the woman for some time and o have taken her to the doctor. City Physician Ralph will investigate the matier today. olice Thiuk They Have Bad Tri In the arrest of Frank Welsmiller. Ed ay and E. C. Davis the police belleve they have brought to light three clever thieves who have been piying their voca- tion in Omaha for some days past. Wels- milier, the detectives have learned, pawned three vercoats at three different pawn- shops this week. using the name of Baker while both he and Fay are accused of hav. ing stolen & coat and vest from a dwelling Davis was found to have been with Fi when the latter pawned several articles of wearing apparel. Welsmiller has been sent to the county jall for twenty days on & charge of larceny. w He Loat. When first | met her years ago, So long | almost have forgot ihis bad | Tue circumstances, | was not slow See- | 1 pro- To fall in love. The term is what | 1 then appiled it does as well As anything. For at the start, cured them at Kuho & Co.’'s drug sicre. | To this incomparable beile They completely cured quickly.” For sale by all dealers Fosger-Milburs Co, Buffalo, N. Y., agents for the United States. me and aid Remember the name, Doan’s, and take no other. Price 50 cents. | sole | Also in mo Her Cures a Cold in OneDay, & Db 2 Dayr on every box. 35¢ 1 lost my heart. That's what I said and what 1 thought 1 thought I had. and told her. too; ing phrase besought own. and then despondent grew When she woild laugh and put me off Did I my tale of love impart But, though the young coquette might scoff, 1ot my heart I Jost my heart! | wonder why It was that | was in this wise Mixed up In mwy anatomy' 1 own | feel no small surprise, For now 1 know- That it was something else instead— The consequence 1 now endure, 1lost my head 1} many burghers went there to give up their | When the | walk scross? ‘Yes, baboons do, but not a | was_made by Detectives Davis and | woman in the cdse is | elter, while woman is sheltered and is comparatively at her ease. This theory never was sound. From time immemortal among the masses of the people every where the men and the women bave worked equally for the support of the family both at home and away from home. But lat- terly, under the pressure of modern condi- tions which are forcing all into the general service of soclety, the women have been drawn from the obscure toll of occupations | within and around the household, and also bundreds of thousands of women from the classes which, until recently, did try to keep thelr women at home. We may pres ently see practically all the capable mem bers of our soclety self-supporting and the home fundamentally reorganized to meet the changed conditions. Some Modern Oce Today the women vote in four states and hold publie office 1n all the states and under the national government. There are women policemen and firemen, women loco- | motive engineers, women masons and | plasters and gunsmiths, women street car drivers and conductors, women black- smiths and coopers and steel and {ron work- ers, and even women sallors—to take only a few occupations which on the face would seem to exclude women. In fact, there is im( in this country a single department | of skilled or unskilled lsbor, except only soldter and man-o-war's man, which has not its women workers in swiftly increas- ing numbers. In the professions there are thousands of women doctors, lawyers, authors, professors, musicians, artists, decorators, journalists, public speakers, and more than a bundred thousand women teachers. In the trades there are thou- sands of women hotel and restaurant keep- ers, insurance and resl estate agents, book- keepers, clerks, merchants. officers anc corporations, saleswomen, telegraph and telephone operators. In manufactures the women operatives almost equal the men in pumbers. There are thousands on thousands of women’ mili and factory hands, and many thousands of women are in respoosible positions in the | management of manufacturing corporations. | All these occupations, with the exception tions of Women. of Cleveland. O., requesting him to locate | o¢ guch occupations as nursing and teach- | | Ing school and music, were once exclusively { in the hands of men. |, The cause of the change is the same as | that which has revolutionized every part of | modern society—the amazing discoveries of sclence, creating an cmormous number of new occupations and radically changing the method of all the old occupations, from ernment. . Re: 1bility for the Change. War the department of human en- deavor which not only excluded women from itself, but also kept her fast anchored | at home.” Until the second quarter of the last century war was the chief thought, the chief pursuit of the human animal. He was either just going to war or just | coming bome from war, or engaged in war or preparing for an imminent war. Obviously, to long as war occupled this position in human affairs. woman was in- evitably In the background, in the secondary | places, a household drudge or a plaything. But war is no longer the principal busi- ness of the race, with peace tolerated as & breathing spell mow and then. Peace and its arts are now the serious business of civilization, with war as a dreadful nightmare. | upon a peace basis by discovery and in- vention. It clamors for skilled bands, not | for brutal hands. Hence the vast opening for woman and the vast inrush of woinen. This country was remote from other great nations and, therefore, from the ever present threat or actuality of war. It was also—perhaps through its freedom from war | and war alarms—eagerest in seizing upon and using the mighty industrial machinery which sclence gave to the race. Thus it has come t6 pass that with us the progress | toward the industrial equality of the two | sexes bas been most rapid | Whers European socleties had a very complex organization our soclety bad from the beginning simplicity as its chief char- acteristic. We were really all tollers until recently almost all tollers at oecupa~ tions close to manual labor. The women and the men were, throughout, on that equal basis which (o Europe was, and to & great extent s yet, found only among the peas- |ant and the shop keeping classes. And as the mew era—the era of steam and electricty—developed with us, our women and our men naturally remained side by side | Why Women Were Backward. | Our government was founded in war. | 1ts founders assumed, trom the history of | all other nations, that offense and defense | were to be its main functions. That ex- | plains the lagging of the political rights ot | women behind their industrial and civit | righta—or. rather, industrial and eivil ne- | cessities. for no right ever has beem. or | probably ever will be, recogaized untit | it becomes a mecessity. The development l-m s of a class of women who were bousekeepers only and were, for the most of the time, idle or half idle, is a develop- |menl unnatural to the spirit of our demo- cratie republic It was due in the main to three causes. First. the survival of the old world, old era ideas of “woman's sphere of the coarsening effect of labor upon her “finer nature, of the “aristocratic favor” and igh breeding’’ of usefulness and idleness. Second, to the simpler tastes of even the better educated classes among our an- cestors, and the comparative ease with which the labor of ome individual in the tamily could provide money enough to sat- isfy those tastes. Third, to the very tardy development of a class of domestic laborers and providers to relieve woman of the care of the household the npursery, when her talents could be more proSitably employed in other ocoupations As 8 result of these three causes & class into the ranks of women toilers have gone | stenographers, | housekeeping to carrying on a national gov- | Civilization bas been forced | merly, but also entering occupations once followed exclusively by the women. Some of the new employments of women have already been enumerated. The new em- ployments of men In this country include laundry work, cooking, general housework, nursing, keeping boarding houses, teaching primary and kindergarten pupils, dres: making, millinery and sewing.” The list is far shorter, and, from the old viewpoint where the equal dignity of all homorable labor was derived, seems far less dignified than the women's list. The reason for this [ is, ot course, that the men had small room | to expand their already multiform activities, while the women had all the room in the world. | The underlying principle of this redis- | tribution of activities is the common sense | prinetple that every unit in a soctety should do the work at hand for which it is best | fitted. This principle explains every case. | Where we find a man dusting, scrubbing and sewing and doing laundry work it is | because he could find nothing more re- munerative to do and could outbid the | women applying for that particular task | Wherever we find a woman plastering or | keeping books, or driving a street car, or managing a store or corporation, it is for the same reason. And this modern prin- ciple wholly ignores sex and looks only at the work to be done and the comparative skill of the male and female applicants | tor 1t | It is not prophecy to say that, as more | | and more millions of women enter the | industrial fields, these readjustments and | redivisions, these absorptions of some occu | pations by women and of other occupations | by men will go on apace. We may not like it, but we can no more stop It than we can stop the physical and mental develop- ment of woman or the use of steam and | electricity. Super ment of Women. | Fully to grasp what is even now in sight to the future, one must copsider the rapidity with which women are educati emselves. There i§ eyjdence of this from | the statistics of colleges—already one | woman graduate to every three men. But | that is not all. In higher education in any proper sense -must be-included the thou- | eands of high schools.” There we find the women cutnumbering the men four and five and six (0 one. These.are most conserva- tive proportions. This means that in & | eivilization where education counts heavier and heavier as an industrial factor the women are equipping . themselves better | than the men. And as our civilization de- | velops along its now clearly defined lines, the importance of coarse labor and |even skilled manual l'abor declines, as the higher wages go ever more and | more to those who can minister to what were once regarded as luxuries and ex- travagances, will not the women inevitably ume an ever more important position? Will not the men be harder and harder put {to It to maintain their ground® They may | retain the most of the few originating and directing positions, but how can they pre- vent the women from dividing with them the positions where the intelligent execu- tion of plans and purposes formed by others is all that is required? Does not woman's intelligent receptiveness of ideas peculiarly fit her to excel in such work? The great advantage the men have had thus far in this country has been not thejr superior strength or skill or faithfulness or industry, but (hat woman has worked merely as a temporary expedient. She has tenaciously assumed that she would pres- ently “quit work” and be supported by some man. This dream has been largely fanci- ful. The woman, married, has too often found that she has mot stopped working, but bas undertaken a far more laborious and ever grudgingly paid occupation. But | her indulgence in this dream has not only made her wages smaller—who will not pay more to a worker who expects to go on working than a worker who expects pres- ently to quit and is meanwhile giving at least balf the emergy to another occupa- tion, *that of catching & husband? Ia- dulgence in this dream has also prevented woman from cultivating ambition—why struggle to rise in an occupation which one hopes and intends presently to =bandon for another that is wholly different? Astonishing Cha he Fu We have an astounding increase in the number of divorces. We have the increas- ing frequency of families where both the busband and the wife work, contributing to the family income. We have more and more familics where the woman's earnings are larger than the man’s. We have the fa- millar restiessness of woman as she views her own condition and ‘compares it with man's. Are not these unmistakable evi- dences of a coming race of women who will bave the same ambitions for careers for getting on, for industrial and social in- dependence that men can have? To be prepared for astonishing changes and developments in tbe relations of men and women to each other and to the social organizatioz. which ls ever more a purely industrial ¢ ganization, ome bas oumly to compare half a century ago with today, the time when our motbers and fathers were young. with this geveration of ours. Thes the woman who showed herself 'z any de- partment of life not immediately related to the housebold was Jooked on as a sus- picious character, if (Bere was any reason or, excuse for thicking she might bave remained in seclusion without etarving A girl was the elose-kept ward of ber par- enis until she was married. A warried woman was, to use the legal phrase, in the condition where “husband and wife are one, and that ome §s the busband.” Woman worked as bard as she does now, probably much harder, so far as physical toil is concerned, but she was “the grest unpaid laborer of the world.” Today, ail one has to 4o to find out woman's industrial posi- tioa is jo glance about him as he walks the busy sireets and goes in and out of the beebives of any American city or tows There will be irritation and suffering, e in The teamsters, it is claimed. will refuse to deliver coal tn any of the buildings to- morrow, and the engineers and firemen may go on strike until a settlement is | reached In the bulldings already affected people are employed 20,000 Booky Bits. A book In the hand is worth two In | press Too many books epoil the trade | Many hands make light verse Circumstances aller bookcases. A good name is rather to be chosen than | great characters Dead authors teil no tales It's a long page that has no turning Authors will happen, even In regulated families Fine leathers do not make fine words. | Where there's so much puff, there must be some buyer A gilt-edged volume needs no accuser A profit is not without honor save on a e 1ling book. The love of sequels is the root of all evil | A publisher is known by the Co. he | keeps. Some are | Corelli them Two Vanrevels are better tharn one. Don’t look a gift book in the binding the | | born Corelli; some achieve and some have Corelli thrust upon | RELIGIOUS, | The Jesutt Pater Zotto died at Shanghai, aged jeading athorities o and literature Rt. Rev. Julius A. Charton, bishop of Qsake, Japan. who is traveling around the world 'seeking aid for the Roman Cathollc | misstons in Japan, is in Brookiyn. | Rev. David M. Cooper. the venerable | Presbyterian_minister of Detroit, preached the sermon Sunday at the geml-centennial of the Presbyterian church in Sagina which he helped to build fifty years ago. The Mormon church now claims 300,000 members and 116,000 teachers and pupil its Sunday schools. Every Mormon boy fs looked upon as a future missionary, and the first object is to make an orator of him Rev. J. J. Adams of Rochester, N. Y., has issued an appeal that denominations unite in building a church as a tribute to the famous _anti-slavery agitator, Frederick Douslass. A_shrine will be erected in Catholic cathedrsl at Philadeiphia as a | memorial to tne late Bishop Newman. It { wae paid for by the women of the congre- { gation. It will be constructed in white and ! Pavannazo marble. Rev. Benjamin M. Nyce a Presbyterla | ciergyman of Lockport, N. Y. who has achieved considerable notoriety by his de- votion to outdoor sports, especially foc ball, has recelved and accepted a call he ‘pastorate of the Westminster Prest terian church of Grand Rapids, Mich in commemoration of his haif-century of service as usher in the Plymouth church, { Brooklyn, former Senator Stepnen M. Gris- Ve he well known oanker and mii | alre, gave a_dinner the ®ther night to 1% members of his church. A set of engrossed | resolutiors and a loving cup were pres: | to Mr. Griswold, who in a Rhort speccn | satd: I begun as assistant usher in the | west gallery and have been steadily pro- | moted until I am now chief usher in the | main atsle. Do you know I am prouder of | that fact than I am of being a banker and a millionuire.”” Mr. Griswold Is now 70 years old The editor of an illustrated week!y wro! to Dr. Henry Van Dyke, professor of Eng. { lish literature in Princefon university, ask- ing him to write a prayer ror publication The professor complied with the request and in a day or two received a handsome check, which he returned with a good- | natured note saying he could not take money for saying his prayers. The writer | thereupon sent the same amount to a | enaritable institution. Dr. Van Dyke Is the man who accepted the pastorate of the Brick Presbyterian church in New York on eondition that services should be “Ten- dered without salary as & token of esteem and love.” who recently was one of the the Chimese language the best | the Roman | ted | STATES T0 NOVE 0N TRUSTS President and Krox Appreve Dooument All Legialatures Are Asked to Pace. Colorado Senate Draft is First to Receive | with Stronz Memor | voring it from Nat | Stoek nal Live ssoclation. i DENVER, Colo, Feb. 5.—An anti-trust bill, which, it is sald, hds the indorsement of President Rooseveit'and Attorney Gen- eral Kuox and i3 to be presented to the legislature of every state in ihe union, was introduced in the Accompanying the its favor from the National Live Stock as- soctation The bill provides heavy penalties for conspiring to restrain or monopolize trade, for giving or receiving rebates and for con- ! tinuing ia business after failure to make annual returns as specified in the bill leUGH AT LIBERTE STORY | Fremen Papers Hola vive Dreyfus Case but Rank. ling of Old Sore. tempt to Re- PARIS, Feb. 5.—The Liberte today 12-| ( seserts in spite of comtradictions that an organized effort will be made 10 resuscitate | the Dreyfus affair. | 1t repeats that the document which fis expected to throw & new light on the sub- | ject is mow in possession of the min- |istry of war, under the special care of lonel Faurie,and declares that M. Cle- menceau and others have been made a | quainted withidts contents. i M. Grosjean, a deputy wha waa.infer- | viewed on the subject by the Liberte, says: If such new evidence exists it should be presented ‘10 the coirts instecd of belng infected as a political maneuver before the Chamber Outside of the Liberte the newspapers are not giving serious mttention to the story, | which is regarded as being only another manifestation of the old bitterness, BUYS UP HAWAIIAN COINS Honolula Bank Will Redeem Caxh Issued When King Relgned | HONOLULU, Feb. 5.—The First National | bank has received $50.000 in United States silver coin shipped by the San Francisco mint. The bank will at once begin to re- deem the Hawallan issue of $1,000,000 coined in 1883 during the rejgn of King Kalaka Dollars, balf-dollars and quar- ters will be redeemed, but dimes will be allowed tu circulate. Montreal Street Cnr Men x MONTREAL, Feb. 6.—At a mase meeting | of 1,000 street railway employes held after ! midnight a strike was ordered | Feb. 5.—There is no truth in | ted in the United States Sehwab is LONDON, the report circul at Canmes. | uPRISING MEASURE MODELED AFTER HOUSE BILL! that Charles M. Schwab had arrived Petersburg. Mr. Schwab reached Tuesday on Margarita and o remain in the Mediterranean m month of February at 8t Cannes st of the AGAINST TURKEY Macedonian Question Already Regin- ning to Take First Place in Earopean Courts, NEW YORK, Feb. 5.—While the Venez- uela affair still has precedence as the lead- ing foreign question, there is a general feeling in Flect street thet it will speedily be overshadowed by the Macedonian ques tien A formidabls insurrection agalost the Turks is expected In the early spring by rearly all who are following the course of events in the Balkans Predictions of a similar nature have been made year after year, but never with equal ronfidence since the preliminary stages of writers | the last war between Russia and the porte. The Turkish government clearly expects trouble and the Russlan and Austrian gov- ernments also dread a movement from Bul- garia which they cannot control, since they cannot agree upon a joint policy. Canada Lifts Cattle Bar. OTTAWA, Ont., Feb. 5.—It is understood that the embargo on the shipment of cattle through Maine will be lifted at an early date. IRCN SHIP BUILDERS STRIKE d is Likely to Close B mpany Refuses Higher Wages. Chicage ¥ eduse CHICAGO. Feb. 5.—Boilermakers. and iron shipbilders began a strike today at the yards of the Chicago Shipbuilding. eom- pany, at' fouth ‘Chicagd, for higher wages. The 200 men who went out will probahly he joined by 200 ships carpenters tomor- row. apd in that case the entire plant, em- ploying 1,100 will close down. The machinists struck over a year ago and are stlll out. \om Take No R In using Dr. King's New Tiscovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. It cures all 'ung troubles or Lo pay. c and $1. For sale by Kubn & Co. AMES FACES SIXTH CHARGE te Minneapolis Mayor Now Indicted for Taking Bribe for Varlety Showa. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Feb. 5—The grand jury Pas renorted another Indictment against former Mayor A. A. Ames, now a fugitive from justice. He Is now charged with receiving a bribe of $1,000 from J. C. Sodini for “protection to several variety theaters run in violation of the law. This is the sixth indictment found against him. Former Seuator Canmom Very L SALT LAKE CITY. Utah, Feb. § —Formes Senator Frank J. Cannon lies critically Il 2t a hospital in this city. He was brought here from Ogden late last night and taken to the hospital. where b: underwent an operation for appendicitis A fecling of regret comes with the first gray bairs. They stand in the way of business and_social sdvancement. Hay's Hair-Health affords & sure means of restor- ing youthful besuty to hair. g et “My hair is now restored to its youthful color. I bave not a gray bair left. My husband says 1 look 20 years younger, and my hair ceases to , while jore 1 was in danger of becoming bald.” We Teceive many such letters. earned sonds are enjoying fine heads of hair produced by this prepara- tion. It quickly cleanses the scalp. 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