" 'Vjrvmri fpfnJMJipTTTT The Commoner. VOLUME 5, NVIibei, 2) CCURR6NT If I" ,. -T ' 5 WWrJawK -iyj B L. ' ih i ? i 1 THE New York board of charities has recently issued a statement showing that the num ber of people dependent on public charity in New York is increasing. According to these figures the percentage of this class of the city's whole popu lation in 187G was 3.22; in 1904 it was 8.69. The secretary of the state charity board, speaking to a newspaper reporter and referring to the increase said: "It is due largely to the increase in population, which has gone up from 1,041,886 in 1875 to 4,437,202 in 1900. It is due also to what is evidently ..n increase in dependency which has resulted from the great influx of immigrants to New York, and finally the incrtase is in part due to the more adequate methods of supplying relief to the poor. In early years vagrants were cared for at police stations, now they are cared for at municipal lodging houses. The pub lic medical relief is better organized today." YELLOW FEVER s made its appearance in Louisiana, but New Orleans authorities re port that there are only a few cases and no alarm need be felt. Adjoining states have adopted quarantine methods, and it is believed that the spread of the disease will be checked. The great yellow fever epidemic occurred in 1878 when the death list in two southern towns alone amounted to 5,000. In 1888 the disease appeared in Florida. In 1893 it appeared in Georgia, and in 1897 New Orleans and certain sections of - ississlppi and Alabama were again visited, although in these later years there were few deaths. THE Balfour ministry, it is announced by the Associated Press, has no intention of re signing on account of the adverse vote. In an address to the house Balfour cited -the record in tho effort to show that former administrations had ignored defeats similar to that encountered by the Balfour ministry, and declared that such instances never had been regarded as general for resignation. He said that the government would not either resign or dissolve parliament. Campbell-Bannerman, the liberal leader, and John Redmond, leader of the Irish nationalists, re plied to Balfour and according to the Associated Press "the heated tone of both leaders indicated that the government will 'have to face the most determined opposition during the remainder of the session." ATTORNEY GENERAL MOODY recently ad- ' dressed the Lincoln club of Boston in which address he had considerable to say concerning the Indictments against the members of the Beef trust. Mr. Moody said that the indictments would probably be tried during the present year. Referring to the merits of the case, he said: "The action of tLe grand jury was the result of an ex-parte investigation. The accused have iot been heard. The are each and all to be pre sumed innocent. That presumption for their x-o- . tection follows them until the case has been passed upon by the trial jury. Let us hope that its verdict will be a declaration of truth in fact as it is in name." THE Interstate commerce commission in ses sion at Kansas City is investigating the charges that the big shippers of Kansas City have received in the neighborhooJ of $225,800 a year in rebates on freight shipped from the east. It is claimed that these rebates were secured through a transportation bureau in New York, and that in the neighborhood of 300,000,000 pounds of freight was annually routed to the one hun dred shippers who belong to this transportation bureau. THE Milwaukee grand jury returned twenty four indictments July 24. This makes a tctal of two hundred and fifty-one indictments returned in tie graft investigation. These in dictments are against one hundred and six i ar sons. The following table given by the Milwaukee correspondent for the New York World illustrates the wido flDld covered in these indictments: "Supervisors 7, former supervisors 29, former al dermen 12, fire department officials 3, state sen ator 1, former county officers 6, former city em ployes 5, contractors , real estate men, 1, archi tects 1, newspaper reporters 2, miscellaneous 35. Total 106." THE investigation of graft in Milwaukee com menced several years ago with the expos ures made in connection with the Milwaukee street railway company's twenty-five year fran chise. It is charged that in nearly every de partment of city and county government corrup tion prevails. So far in prosecution thirteen have been convicted; four have escaped. There are one hundred and thirty cases now on the docket involving fifty-five individuals. THE REMAINS of Admiral Paul Jones ar rived at Annapolis July 24. They were deposited in a temporary vault and rill be finally placed in the crypt under the new chapel now being erected. The story of John Paul Jones is told by a writer in the Columbus (Ohio) Press Post in this way: "Jones hoisted on the Alfred, in January, 1776, the first distinctively American device, the snake flag, ever used on the seas. Jones, by capturing the British brig Mellish and her valuable cargo of military stores and uniforms on November 13, 1776, enabled Washington to win the battle of Trenton. Jones set sail for Ports mouth, N.- H., November 1, 1777, and was the first to fly the stars and stripes on a regularly commissioned ship of war. Jones, on the Ranger, at Quilberon bay, on December 14, 1777, secured from the French admiral, La Motte Piquet, the first salute ever given the stars and stripes by a foreign power. Jones, while cruis ing in the Irish channel early in 1778, was pur sued by British men-of-war and succeeded in mak ing his escape by the most daring seamanship. Jones, on April 23, 1778, fought and captured the British sloop Drake, superior in tonnage, number of men and weight of guns. Jones, on September 23, 1779, being then in command of the Bon Hommie Richard, not only single-handed but in spite of being fired into by his Trench consort, fought to a finish the Serapis, of greatly superior armament and general equipment, in the liveliest battle that was ever fought on the seas." A DISPATCH under date of St. Louis, July 24, , .,and Printed in the Baltimore Sun follows: On the body of L. M. Booth, about 60 years old, who was found today in Forest Park dead from chloroform, self-administered, was a slip of paper containing these words. 'Heartily agree with Dr Osier; an old man and a poor man has no busi ness on earth. I am broke and no one will give me work. They look at me with a smile and say: "We've got a man." This is no temporary in sanity on my part.' On another slip of paper the Tg?d omaS Lad BCribbled: 'Forest Park Sunday, July 22, 7:50 p. m The reason I single out thfs S l?SSTe !t V0 far'away from a dispen sary, so that I can be gone before they get me to a dispensary. Dr. C ler is all right I do ho no one will identify me.'- Clutched affectionate in one of the cold hands was a babv'sXnpTS Booth f had evidently carried Tlilt&X T H? EfX LSION on the United States sun 1 boat Bennington resulted in the death of fifty-eight persons. Forty-six were wmmdoS a retary Bonaparte has MfuZZS. gation and a public statement is promised ?w no one will be made a scape goat hS? tS of ? responsibility will be placed Swtfi wntre i? belongs. Captain F. J. Drake of the Maym Ilni navy yarJ, who has made an tnvCfS? island that the accident wasTue to the be ers VdT was one of those unfortunate accidents tl d !t occur at any time and for wffno L fay explanation can be ma:e satisfactory WALTER, WELLMAN, Washing pondent for the Chicago RecordrniS " has seemed in the past to beTerv famn?' Wm the secrets of the Roosovelt admiSstrn? With . "Important ch ages havl occurred tauff'wffii Hor circle and others are imminen? tL?11? surprising of these is the flnsh of qlt! of Massachusetts as a chum t confidential0? viser of President Roosevelt. Lodce is ,wS d,' out, and Secretaries Root and Ta'ft arSe men of the present and the future. Secretin, Shaw is out of favor and will soon retire S the cabinet without any regret, on the nnrt S President Roosevelt, though he will probably foi low his usual course and give the retiring LZ' tary of the treasury a handsome farewell Mr' Roosevelt is exceedingly generous about such things. Assistant Secretary of State Loomis 5 going to resign to co into business, and Commis sioner of Corporations Garfield, one of the presi dent's closest friends, lost a cabinet post when iio gave to the public his infortunate report on tho beef trust last spring. In good time he may se cud a seat in the cabinet, but he will have to wait, as the pixddv :t thinks this not an oppor-tU- a time for his promotion. Secretary of Agricul ture Y.'ilson is without doubt secure in his place, despite the cotton report leakage and the bitter fight that is being made on him by certain per sons and newspapers. President Roosevelt thinks Mr. Wilson far and away the best secretary of agriculture the country ever had. He takes no stock in the criticisms .f the secretarv that ..re daily spread broadcast in certain circles!" SENATOR LODGE 1ms seemed to be in such high favor with Mr. Roosevelt that Mr. Well man's statement will surprise many people. Mr. Wellman says: "For many years he has been Th:odore Roose It's closest friend. It was :ir. Lodge who made Roosevelt a civil service com missioner 'and gave him his first chance to win distinction in the national field. It was Lodge, too, who helped Roosevelt into the assistant sec retaryship of the navy, where he won renown as the man who did as much if not more than any other to make the American navy the best in the world in accurate shooting, and where ho had the distinction of ordering Admiral Dewey to sail from Hongkong to Manila to smash the Span ish fleet." THE INTIMACY between Messrs. Roosevelt and Lodge has been so strong that some explanation of present day differences is required, and Mr". Wellman has the explanation. He says: "It has been approaching for a year or more as the president gradually discovered that his erst while chum was altogether too grasping and pe culiar properly to belong in the Roosevelt class. H is one of the cleverest men in public life to day. But he is all for Lodge, and he throws his best friends down when it comes to a chc a between serving them and his own interests. The climax came last winter when Mr. Lodge joined with other republicans in defeating the arbitra tion treaties. Mr. Roosevelt never forgave him for that. The president might have looked upon Lodge's course in that l .atter with more com placency if the senator had not explained his attitude toward the treaties as being peculiarly 'delicate on account of his close personal rela tio . with Je president. To flaunt his friend ship with the occupant of the White House and then go directly contrary to the president's wishes, at the same time giving it out how vii.u ous he was, proved to be the last straw. Mr. Roosevelt does not believe in that sort of friend ship." IF MR. WELLMAN himself stands as close to the Roosevelt administration as is popularly supposed, the news of the president's break with the Massachusetts senator is given through an authoritative channel in a very blunt way. "Ir. Wellman says that he is not sure that Senator Lodge is aware of it, but "President Roosevelt has no. further use for him." Then the Massa chusetts senator is by this correspondent given a delightful hint in this way: "When the Massa chusetts senator goes to the White House, if ho ever does again, he will be treated with po liteness. The dog will nox. be set on him. But that is all. He has lost his status as one of the charmed circle. Probably this will go pretty hard with Mr. Lodge. For years a considerable part of the capital of the Massachusetts boss for it may surprise a great many people to learn that while posing as the scholar in politics, Mr. Lodge U about as. fine a specimen of the political boss as they makehas been his influence with Theodore Roosevelt. He has not enjoyed as much real influence as he thought he had or as other people S$4 t . . . Si - . U.ii.-X wMVr I-V mmmwmmmuanmuwiK4lY,-f-tlVll,f,, nsga; LiESfi!A