THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, FEimtTARY 13, 1503. DISCISSION OF WATER Bill Stenographic- Eeport of Hearing 1 ore Senate Committee. WEAK POINTS Or PROPOSED LEGISLATION Hlatarr f Omaha. Water riaat and ol the Steps Lale ta Its Aeqalslttoa by tha City. Following Ss the conclusion of the dlnpuii on of the writer bill before the mate cowmHtee at Lincoln last weok, the first Prt having been printed In yesterday's wue of Tbe Bee: Mr. Rosewater Have we not the right to Srovern ourselves? 'Why hn the mayor anil council the right to Issue a proclamation for a bond election? Another query. Our charter expressly provides that when bonds are Issued for the purchase of water works and electric Jtghta It takea two-thirds of the voters. This bill makes no provision of any kind. It simply authorises the Water board to call the election and Issue the bonds. It says, trust these gentlemen. I have known some of these gentlemen many years. They are honorable men, but I never before heard of their fighting a battle for Omaha, whether It wns a battle for a charter revision or a battle against tboodlers and grafters. Now they have gone through, tha two houses begging to be retalnod and their powers extended. What do these bankers care for a salary of $M a month? There Is something back of that or there would not be such great Tresure, even to sending dispatches by tmnkera from the small towns to their rnembers of the legislature to pass this bill. ' ' ' Oraahans Oppoie the Bill. Have we anybody In Omaha opposing the 1)111? Tes; there are thousands; but they cannot spare the time or can't afford to come down and protest. I am Informed that the executive committee of the Com merclal club has said that this bill meets their approval. A dozen gentlemen repre Renting the Commercial club at the In atance of the gentlemen who come here, and who will follow me, go Into a cozy chamber and there they listen to the pre sentation of one side of the question .They have not seen the bill 'and do not know Us scope or how far reaching It Is, and what the effect will be and they pass the resolution. I would almost say that they would pass any resolution. If a clever hypnotist should come around, and ask tAem to )et the city's business be man- AgJ by a special committee of the Fonts neua club, they would do It. under tnis bill the water commissioner is a pretty big man. In fact he la the whole thing. I am not going to discuss the nonpartlsanahlp of the board. That means nothing. We have seen those things before. We have had nonparties n police commissions, and yet, 1 have never known any difference be tween a democrat and a republican or populist when there was a scheme which they all wanted to carry through. The proper thing la to have the water works employes guaranteed their Jobs so long as they behave and prohibit Interference with pontics. That la about the only com mendable feature of thla bill. That nonpartisan clause reminds me of what Elmer Thomas, attorney for the ., Clvlo Federation, sold In his Chicago lee ture. He said that they were strictly nonpartisan, but when they heard that Mayor Moo res had said that It was a fight between the machine and the federation the nonoivrtlsans went Into' politics and sent a man to the national convention that did not have my name. (Laughter.) frhai - . . . . .,o4iilmi - vlotnrv. - tit course. T. J. Mahoney, the president, a democrat, and EJlmer Thomas, a populist, went Into the republican primaries to see that one man- did not go to the national conven tlotv That merely shows that nonpartisan shtr Is a sham. Bix republicans that would ro IntaJn civil eervloe rulea would be just as good and probably better. Board Becomes Liable to Bio One. Under the Dodge bill the water board la accountable to nobody and can, do anything 1 . - . 1 . anln.il.tllltf th 1 A fl f 11 nn Hi. IIMHH'i"H - water bonda. Are the members of the board so arood that they are to be above public nurvelllance? Should they not, like all other . public officers, be within reach of the pub- llo eye and public ear? Nobody has objected up to date n . ilr iiir chamber work be cause the board has had noth Ing to do, but when the board cornea to negotiato a mortgage debt amounting to millions, extend contracts amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars, the peo ple will want to know how anyone of the board stands on any one of the propositions and how he votes. Under the Dodge bill the water board la empowered to negotiate in star chamber for the purchase of the water plant located In South Omaha. They may allow $501,000. or even U.000,000 for the South Omaha fran chise or contract, which waa extended from 1906 to 1913 while the appraisement of the works In Omaha waa In progress and without causing any protest from the would-be commissioner. Why should not the bill be so drawn as to empower the city to acquire the South Omaha plant by eminent domain. Instead of accepting tha appraisement of the three appraisers who were appointed under the contract of 188 to appraise the worka that supply Omaha and expressly prohibited by that contract from making any allowance for tbo franchise value of the works within the elty limits of Omaha? Rates aal Fsvora.' Doea the Dodge bill contemplate that the South Omaha water works plant shall be acquired and owned by Omaha, or Is It proposed that the city shall allow the water company to supply the water? 1 do not know how they can do it without .owning the works. They say In this bill that South Omaha must pay the same rates that Omaha pays. In one of those let ters Mr. Howell wrote last fall he charged that the stock, yards only pays 444 cents per. 1.000 gallons for water. I know that we are paying 10. He saya under thla bill .South Omaha will have to come up to Omaha rates. How the packing houses will enjoy that sort of thing I do not know. I understand thut this rate waa given to them because they proposed to put In RAW ITCHING ECZEMA Slotcbts ei Bands, Cars, tod Anklts - Fir Thru Yiart. Instut Relief ia4 SPEEDY CUrTbY CUTICURA " Thanks to Cutlcura I am now rid of that fearful pest, weeping ecsema, for the first time in three years. It first appeared on my hand, a little pimple, growing into several blotches, and then on my cars and ankles. They were exceedingly painful, itch ing, and always rsw. Alter the first day's treatment with Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills, there waa very little of tha burning and itching, ana the car now seems to be complete. i signed) S. B. Hege. Passenger Agent 8- &. Washington, P. C", iheir own water plant and supply their own water from artesian wells unless thla rate was given them. Another section of thla bill provides that all Improvements connected with the water works shall be under the water board. That la. they tear up the streets and lay new mains or relay old mains or do any work In the streets, the city engineer and Board of Public Works have nothing to do with them. Whether they will employ an en gineer of their own I do not know, but how will it be In South Omaha.' If they ac quire those worka repairs will be needed. If thla bill passes they are to have complete control. Under the charter of South Omaha they cannot have complete con trol. The mayor and council are supreme. Would they be permitted to tear up the streets In South Omaha and repair them without having permission from the mayor and council? I would also like to know whether they propose to own a paving plant In Omaha, or whether they are to be given the use of the one owned by the city when they want It? Coatrol of the Streets. Why should not the city engineer of Omaha have control of the repairs of streets so that they will be In conformity with plans and specifications. If they pro pose to monopolize that work, when they acquire control there Is sure to be clashing and trouble all the time, wny snouia we have a corporation within a corporation? If they would content themselves with simply controlling the water rates, collecting the money and having It disbursed properly, subject to the comptroller or some other officer, well and good, but when they as some to take control of the streets of Omaha and ignore the rules and regula tions of Its police and health department and every other department, and in fact become a law unto themselves, when they ask you to enact such an unprecedented law as that, I protest. Such a legislative monstrosity has never been enacted for any city in the union. They cannot cite an Instance where the legislature of any state has ever commanded a com munity to purchase a public utility plant. ' In Chicago there Is a great struggle going on over street railways. The Illinois leg islature permits the city to do those things, but does not command. They cannot com mand us to Invest our moneys In public utilities. The fundsmental principles of self-government, are the right of every com munity to select Its own servants and com pel their public servants to be accountable to them. That Is a fixed principle for which I have been contending for a lifetime and I am not going to give It up now! Matter of Hydrant Rentals, In the red letter water primers pub lished before last fall's election Mr. Howell called public attention to the high rental that we are paying for fire hy drants. I concede that we are paying very high hydrant rental, only I do not like to put It In such a way that It is deceptive; that It becomea an Imposition. For example, he would Blngle out the city of Minneapolis, which owns Its own works. He would say, In Minneapolis, water for an eight-room house Is supplied for so many dollars and the city of Omaha so many, but the city of Minneapolis pays nothing for hydrant rentals, while the city of Omaha pays $93,000 a year for Its Are hydrants. The exhlbtts were mislead ing and demagogic. In hla red letter primers he denounces the excessive hy drant rental, but In the Dodge bill he au thorised the Water board to Impose a tax of 1100,000 a year for hy drant rental after the city haa acquired the worka This la not all. The citizens of Omaha are to be taxed not only for hydTant rental, but for the water supplied to public buildings, to the city halh to the parks and public fountains. Thla Is a newfangled Idea. I am told they want to do this In order to reduce the rate to private consumers. I concede that they should be reduced. In Kansas City they did not do anything of the kind, however. They do not charge hydrant rental in Kan aas City. They bought the worka for $3,500,- 000 and expended $1,000,000 more in repairs and reconstruction, and for five years they could not make any reduction to private consumers, although Kansas City has 75,000 to 100,000 more population than Omaha. Only within the last year haa Kansas City reduced water rates 16 per cent. Why should we pay hydrant rentals If we are going to own the works? The whole thing Is conceived In autocracy. They take the community by the throat and say, thus you must do! They want to be free to do as they please, submit nothing for approval of tho public and say we are great and good men, and therefore, you must trust us. 1 do not care If they were the most hon orable and noble people on earth, when they take a public office they should be made responsible to the people that Day the taxes. They jhould have been electable In the first place, when there Is something for them to do and not draw salaries two or three years before the works are ac quired. I have ststed that there Is a chance of legal complications that may defer the nnal acquisition of the water works for two or three years. Should they be held up un til after the contract expires In September, 1908, we would be free to fix the rates at what would' be right and reasonable. I suppose that the gentlemen will try to per suade you that It Is not necessary to In sert anything In thla bill about submitting the contract extension to the people; that the charter provides that whenever a fran chise Is granted It must be submitted, but I take no stock In that. The charter only relates to the city of Omaha, but you are creating a new corporation to be known as the Omaha Water district, and the charter provisions will not govern the Water board. Where there Is a specific grant of power tne new law takes precedence over the old law. This Is to be a corporation with power to sue ana te sued, to have a seal, to call elections, issue bonds and do all those things for which corporate powers are granted, and unless you have It In the bill that the Water board shall submit certain thlnga to tha people they need not aubmlt them. School Boira and Water Board. Dr. Hippie You were the father of the present metropolitan city educational bill, were you not? Mr. Rosewater I was the father of the law that created the Board of Education. , Dr. Hipple-Ia It not a fact that the Board of Education in the city of Omaha has ths right of eminent domain? Mr. Rosewater I do not know whether they have now. I do not think that was In serted in the original bill, but that they have acquired It since. Originally the school district was not coincident with the entire city limits. A pert of the Fifth ward was left out and we had twe school boards. The rvgents of the Omaha High school were a board of control of the high school and the people of Omaha Issued the bonds for the erection of the high school building. Dr. Hippie Is It not a fact that the pres ent Board of Kducatlon has a" right to call elections? Mr. Rosewater Tes, sir.' Dr. Hippie Have they not the right to submit bonds? Mr. Rosewater Tes, sir. Dr. Hippie Have they not the right to sell property, practically without limit, by a two-thirds vote at any regular meeting? Mr. Rosewater I underatand so. Dr. Hippie Have they not the right to ex pend $5,000 In any one year without submit ting to a vote of the people ; Mr. Rosewater Tes. but the original water bill limited the expenditure, snd that Is krocked out of the second bill. Dr. Hippie Doea the Board of Education employ Its own attorney? Mr. Rosewater Tes, but I havs always opposed it. It was not In the original Board of Uduoatlon act. They have made a sine cure office of It. There Is no law for it. In the original Bet the city treasurer of Omaha was made er. -officio treasurer of the school district. They had their own treasurer be fore. The city has a law department that draws $12,000 per year out of the city, and they are employing an attorney to do the work that might just as welt be done In the city attorney's office. Dr. Hippie Is It not a fact that the Board of Education haa a right to em ploy ta own superintendent at any salary It sees fit to pay? Mr. Rosewater Tes, and that Is wrong. Dr. Hippie And they employ the teach ers? Mr. Rosewater Tes. Dr. Hippie Is It not true that the power that we seek to confer upon the Water board by this bill are no greater In re gard to water matters thah are now con ferred upon the Board of Education In re gard to school matters? Mr. Rosewater Tes, they are greater. Thla $26,000 la a bagatelle. With your right to extend this contract nine-tenths of the taxpayera are agalnat It. Dr. Hippie The powers. In reality, that are sought to be given to the Water board are not extraordinary, viewed by the powers already given to the Board of Edu cation? Mr. Rosewater Tea, I think they are. And some of the powers should be taken from the School board and placed In the hands of the mayor and council.. In Chi cago and In other cities In thla country the School board are appointed by the mayor and council. But I don't advocate that. I feel sure, however, If you were to submit a proposition to the taxpayers of Omaha to give the School board the power that It now exercises levying taxes. Irrespective of anything, that nine-tenths of the people would snow It under. Why create a new corporation with such vast powers? The school district of Omaha has never raised more than $200,000 at one time, but we are going In here and Invest millions and put It In the hands of a board not responsible to anyone. The School board Is elected by the people, but this board Is appointed. 1,1 fe of the Contraet. Mr. Jackson Do I understand you that this contract lacks three years of being matured? Mr. Rosewater Yes, the 4th of Septem ber, 1908. Mr. Jackson What reasons are advanced for taking advantage of the provisions of this contract before It has matured? Mr. Rosewater Here is a pamphlet that clearly states that. The contract expires, but we have a right to buy at the end of twenty years. (Here Mr. Rosewater pre sented and left In the hands of the com mittee a pamphlet.) Mr. Congdon What contract do you refer tot Mr. Rosewater-The one that Senator Manderson drew up as city attorney. The fire hydrant rental contract. Mr. Congdon Tou are wrong on that.' It Is twenty-five years. Mr. Rosewater Any one of the members of the committee can read that (referring to the pamphlet) and see what the ordi nances and extension are. The last ordi nance Is the one that accepts the works. The date of the approval of the ordinance by the mayor and city Is September 4, 1883; C. S. Chase, mayor. That Is the date of final action and that has been settled by the federal courts. They have recog nized the validity of this contract and the federal court decreed years ago that the franchise was not forfeited because of foreclosure. That was argued before Judge Dundy and he decreed that the new com pany not only bought the plant but also the right to operate the works and enforce the contract with the city for hydrant rental. Mr. Congdon I understand you to give this committee to understand that the city of Omaha has some contract with this water company concerning domestlo rates, whereas the only contract we have Is for fire hydrants that run for twenty-five years. The other matter Is a perpetual franchise granted by that ordinance. Tou evidently gave the committee to under stand that the whole matter was In con tract. We have but one contract and that Is for fire hydrant rentals. Rates Now Belnar Chara-ed. Mr. Rosewater I want it understood that the ordinance calling for bids for water works to be erected In Omaha, Included within it the plans snd specifications as a part of the proposition, the right to charge certain rates that were mentioned in the ordinances, the agreement of the city to pay for at least 260 hydrants at $84 per year. , That was the original agreement. If the city could get lower water rates I would be glad to see It get them. I went Into the water company's office this morn ing to satisfy myself on one point. I Inquired how many patrons were taking water at meter rates and they told me over 6,000 and that over 1,600 of these were paying less than 60 cents per month. That is not a terrible thing. In other cities they fix a minimum rate for private consumers. Their meter rates are lower, but they say you cannot take less than 60 cents worth of water a month. They do not do anything of that kind. They have a rate in South Omaha of 4 cents. The stock yards and packing houses In South Omaha were going to put In their own water works and the water company naturally gave them a rate In order to head off competition. Under the contention made by Mr. Howell the South Omaha packing housea would have to pay higher rates. Mr. Gibson I have charge of 150 or 300 houses and buildings In South Omaha that the water company Insisted be Installed with meters Instead of providing them the water under the house plan. Mr. Rosewater I do not know anything about that. Mr. Barns The third house from where I live they do not have a meter. Where I live they have a meter. Agreement That la Binding. Mr. Mockett Your contention la that there Is an agreement or contract under and by virtue of. which the rate cannot be reduced below 35 centa per 1,000 gallons. Mr. Rosewater I contend that the rate waa a part of the contract and that the Can your appetite conceive anything more toothsome than a sweet,deliciou s chocolate cake and a cup of creamy Ghirardelli's Ground Chocolate ? A pantry without Ghirar delli's is like a garden with out roses. Freshness preserved in patented hermetically scaled cans. rate was Inserted In the ordinance asking for bids and that was the condition on which the contract was made. Mr. Mockett And as a part of the gen eral agreement? Mr. Rosewater Yes, If It were not so, we would have got rid of It long ago. When these works were first contracted for Omaha had less than 30.000 population. The advertisement wss for the person who would furnish wster for use under the plans and specifications prepared by J. B. Cook. The city attorney says In a report gotten out September, 14, 1F99 (referring to a pamphlet). It must be borne In mind that the purpose of the ordinance was to procure bids and naturally to procure low bids. Howell's Statement. R. B. Howell said: "Mr. Chairman and Members of this Committee: I hope you gentlemen will pardon me for represent ing personally, myself. Mr. Rosewater's references to me have been of such a char acter I think I should do so In a preface of my remarks with reference to myself. He haa unjustly charged me with apparent conspiracy. It seems to me that these re marks that I am about to make are neces sary. I am not a very old man at the present time, and of course ten years ago I was ten years younger, and yet he would give you to understand that ten years ago I was exercising the prerogatives of a citi zen of Omaha and that then I was Insti gating what he states to be ft policy of robbery, so far as this water company la concerned. And furthermore he has charged that at the legislature I succeeded In so Impressing every member of this legisla ture that I secured the passage of the water bill contrary to the Interests of the ' people of the city of Omaha. I "Now, gentlemen, as a matter of fact. It I happens that W. J. Broatch was elected mayor of the city of Omaha, and It Is for me to say to you that there has never been an amicable personal feeling on the part of Mr. Rosewster and I might sly on the part of Mr. Broatch as to each other. When he was elected mayor he choose me as city engineer. That was the first act of which I was guilty. I was chosen by W. J. Broatch aa city engineer of Omaha. The reprehensible act was that I succeeded Rosewater's brother, and from that moment until the present time ftje hand of Mr. Rosewater and The Bee has been turned against me, and I have had a single-handed fight In the city of Omaha, as I came there a young man and had no family or fortune to sustain me In my ef forts. While I was city engineer the water company of Omaha came to the council and asked for an extension of their franchise, which they claimed did not ex pire for seven years, and no one heard the voice of Mr. Rosewater raised against such an extension of the franchise." Mr. Rosewater It was not an extension of the purchasing period and not an ex tension of the franchise. It was simply a proposition made at the time when the Transmiselsalppl exposition was projected and they offered te give us free water for the exposition. That was before we started to butld. It was at that time and I have the record. It was not designed to extend the franchise, but the right of the city to purchase from 1903 to 1907, so that they would not be obliged to sell If they did not want to until 1907. Resolution of 1806. Mr. Howell In 1896, when I was city en gineer, the mayor sent a resolution to me that was adopted by the council extend ing the rights ot the water company for a period of seven years, although their contract did not expire for seven years. Not a word was heard from our friend here. He was In favor of It then, as he Is today. As the city engineer I sub mitted a report, and as a result of that report the mayor vetoed the ordinance, although the city council was ready to pass It over his veto by a two-thirds vote. Mr. Poppleton ,nnd . some of the public spirited men of Omaha went Into the courts to prevent the passage of this contract Before they had an opportunity to act the charter of the city of Omaha went through and provided therein that.no ex tension of the franchise of the water com pany for the city of Omaha could be granted. I was attacked and charged with blackmail by The Omaha Bee. It was stated that I had a grudge against the Omaha Water company and was trying to ruin the company and he was going to protect the people against blackmail, and I was the guilty man. He did not succeed In driving me from the office of city en gineer, and when my term expired I went on with the practice of my profession. I felt then and now that the city of Omaha was paying the highest water rates of any city In the United States, 36 cents per 1,000 gallons for water and $84 for hydrants, whereas Denver paid only $G6. I deter mined then and from that time forward that I would fight for municipal owner ship of the waterworks for the city of Omaha, and In the year 1900 the people of Omaha voted $3,000,000 In bonds to pur chase that plant. Condemns the City Council. But the city council made no attempt to acquire the plant and no effort was made In 1901, and In 1902 I was a -candidate for state senator for one avowed purpose, and that was to compel the council to do thetr- duty. I waa nominated and elected to the atate aenate, and S. F. 1 was a bill pre pared by myself that provided that when metropolitan cities voted bonds for the pur chase of a water plant the city council must act. The city council had the choice of the methods. That became a law and was signed In February, two years ago, and for two years this thing has dragged, and why? Because it has been In the hands ot the city council and they have deliberately, notwithstanding the prohibi tion In the present charter, confessed Judg ment to the hydrant rentals every six months snd without resistance allowed the mandamus proceedings to collect. That la the council ws have to deal with, a coun cil In the hands of the water company, with which Mr. Rosewater has great In fluence. Mr. Barton resigned from the Water board In June lust year and the Water board saw lit to fill the vacancy by appoint ing ma to that position and I took that po sition, and ane of my first arts was to in troduce a resolution asking the city council to lower the water ratea. because we have maximum water rates and not minimum water rates. The United States court had decided a case on all fours with the city of Omaha and we had a right to have these rates reduced, and the council did nothing, and as a consequence I made a campaign on that basla. I went before the primaries and through fraud, of which this man had knowledge, I was defeated and then when the chairman of the republican central com mittee stated that this changing of the bal lots had been done without his knowledge, and the secretary stated the same thing, I said, "Gentlemen, In that case, I will go beforo the people. And notwithstanding no man had ever yet been elected on an Inde pendent ticket In the county of Douglas, I will go." The night before election this man saw that the tide was turning In my favor snd wrote this article. I want to call your attention to It. It Is entitled "An Open Letter to R. B. Howell." (Here Mr. Howell read a long editorial In The Omaha Bee.) Howell Indulges la Melodrama. Mr. Howell That Is what he wrote. That la your writing Is It not? Mr. Rosewster Tes, sir; snd I signed it, too. Mr. Howell I csll upon you here to note that that man wrote that and signed It. Mr. Rosewater Yea. and I want to tell you that you were not elected this last time by republican votes. You were elected this last time by the democrats snd the boodle of the electrlo lighting company. that spent thousands of dollars to elect you. Mr. Howell This man here, sfter publish ing this In the paper the night before elec tion, did not succeed In defeating me. I was the first Independent candidate that was ever elected In Douglas county, and elected by S.600 majority, when every re publican Nominee was elected by from 4,no to 5.0n0 majority. That Is the fact. And I have lived seventeen years In Omaha and I have not had a newspaper. I have had to labor with my hands, but this man. In aplte of his boasted power and Influence, has been unable to destroy me, and after writing this paper I had him arrested that very night and I prophesy that he will spend at least one year In your penitentiary In Lincoln as a result of that letter. Mr. Rosewater You threaten me, do you? If you are going to threaten me, I want to tell you, I will name one Judge In this last election who got paid for working for you, who called off your name when Wellcr's name was on the ticket. Mr. Howell I want you to remember that I am threatened by this gentleman. He threatens that he will destroy me. When he found that I was elected he announced tothe people of Omaha that notwithstand ing that he was going to take legal pro ceedings to destroy the water board, and he wants, to destroy this water board be cause I am on It. Qaratloa of City's Option. Mr. Hughes I have been unable to learn whether there was anything In this agree ment that provided any option that the city possessed to come In and buy at any time before this twenty years. Had the city the option to buy In 1901 or any time be fore the twenty years expired? Mr. Howell In 1880 the city of Omaha had advertised for bids for the construc tion of the water plant by the city. Sidney E. Locke and his successors and assigns were the successful bidders and received the award of the contract. This contract provided that they should furnish hydrants for the city of Omaha for a period of twenty-five years at a fixed rental. That at the end of twenty years, however, the city of Omaha would .have the right to purchase and the twenty-five years was to run from completion of the works, which were fixed at one year, therefore, the contract would run out, the twenty years would expire In 1901. Subsequently an attempt was made to Increase that period by three years. We have always contended, at least the city attorney did, when I was In the city engineer's office, that such contract would hold, probably. It was because of this fact that our right to purchase was to accrue with the people of Omaha after voting bonds In 1900 so that they could take over the plant and the city council refused to act. It should be understood that the franchise of the Omaha Water company Is a" fran chise In perpetuity. They have a right, so long as we do not take away their plant to maintain pipes In the streets of Omaha. They have a contract for hydrants at cer tain fixed prices for twenty-five years from 1881. Flxlnar of Rates. Mr. Mockett Your contention Is ba-ed on the recognized principles that a court will protect any public service corporation In reasonable profits and that they cannot charge unreason ible amcunts? Mr. Howell Yes; It was prominently stated In an editorial not long ago. Mr. Rosewater Did I state this Freeport case wrong? Mr. Howell I will admit that you were correct In some of your otatements. It was so rambling I cannot recollect. Mr. Rosewater The court decided that because of the law of Illinois authorizing the mayors and councils of cities to reg ulate and fix the rates the supreme court, five out of the nine Judges, held that they had a right to do this and they all agreed If that statute had not been In Illinois that they conld not have done It. Mr. Congdon You are wrong. The Free port case was this: The legislature of Illi nois had authorised a certain town to fix a set rate, and Freeport passed an ordi nance fixing so much money, then after ward the city council found that that was unreasonable, and the supreme court found that they had a right to fix the rate. In the Free ik) rt case a fixed rate was made. Our rate In Omaha is u maximum. Ing a quart cup of coffee snd a couple of slices of bacon through the kindly Inter cession of his striker. That Impecunious officer was only retired several months ago as a brigadier general." CRUDE OIL PRODUCERS MEET Resolutions Adopted Condemning; the Action of Standard Oil Com pany In Kansas. TOLEDO, O., Feb. 12. At a meeting to day of the Western Oil Men's association, composed of crude oil producers In the Trenton rock oil fields of Ohio and Indiana, the situation In Kansas was discussed by the thirty or forty members present and the following resolutions were unanimously adopted: Resolved, First, that It Is the sense of the producers and others interested here as sembled that the state of Kansas Is en titled to the sympathy and moral support of the oil trade everywhere in lis contest with the Standard Oil company. Second That In the recent action of the said company In promulgating the extraor dinary order suspending operations Jn the Kansas field. .It has violated high class business principles and been guilty of an act that Is good public policy. Third That we hereby heartily endorse the Kansas legislature In Its efforts to secure relief to the trade and to see that Justice be done. ourth That In view of the fact that the rule of the equ-l rights ha been Ignored bv the company we hope that the state will sec that the Independent producers have a square deal and are supported In a substantial manner in their efforts to ob tain relief from an oppressive situation. Fifth That In maintaining their priority rights thev should receive all iiei esary aid r.ot nnlv from the state, but from oil pro ducers In all other fields. Re-olved, That a copy of these resolu tions be forwarded to the speaker of the house at Topeka, Kan. It was the consensus of opinion that the Standard Oil company In suspending all work In the Kansss fields was due not so much to the refinery bill now before the legislature of that state ss to the bill making pipe lines common csrrlera. J. B. HayneB offers his house for rent; house of eight rooms and hath; hot wnler plant; S33 Georgia ave. See Tayne, lioet wlck at Co.. N, Y. Ufe bldg. Auditorium March 7 tliavs all. niF.D. GOLDSMITH Jeannette, beloved wife of I,. A. and mother of Ixnils and Sam Ooldsmlth and Mrs. L. Levy. funeral Tuesday at 1 p. m. from lata residence, 1611 Orsce street. Interment at Pleasant Hill cemetery. CAJORI-Anton, Saturday. 6 p. m.. aged (A rears. Funeral Tuesday, 1 p. m., from residence, 1212 8. fith St. WAS NOT ALWAYS A GENERAL Story of the Trials n Present Brig adier Experienced in the Good Old Army Days. "In the old army days," said Captain TenEyck, a retired regular army officer, at the Paxton, "the mess system was not as perfect ss It Is now, and It very often happened that some of the younger, un married officers had to do their own cook ing. Once up at Fort Sedgwick, Colo., a young officer had let his commissary bill run up so high that his credit was no good at the commissary for anything more than the most necessary substantiate. He was a high-spirited young fellow, and having been turned down by the commissary for a few extras, he concluded to go It alone until after the next pay day settlement All he had to live on was bread and rice, and he determined to worry along on that for a while. "Just at this time he was visited by an old West Point' classmate, and he was up against It hard. The host was up early next morning, but too early to strike the commissary for ' supplies, and hence his only resort was to make up a meal of stowed rice. He made his coffee out of parched rice and managed to get up a sort of a meal. When they sat down to it the host still pleaded the excuse of the ab sence of hla cook, and he asked hla visitor to take some rice. " 'I never eat rice," waa the reply. " "Well, then, by thunder, you will have to eat mustard on your bread, or I haven't got another thing In the quarters and there Isn't a mess house at the post.' "The dilemma was finally velleved by the officer sending over to one of the com pany messes, where he succeeded in rals- ASuso A Great Magazine Offer THE METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE is glad to announce a truly remarkable ningnrina offer whereby all citizens of the United States may receive a popular, leading, illus trated magazine for 12 months, and a copy of a vital and unique book, entitled The Roosevelt Doctrine For $1.80 the price of the magazine alone., This Is a copy righted book. It U edited, by B. Oarrlson, is bound In cloth, l handsomely printed, contains 190 pases, and sells through the book trade for $1.00. The METROPOLITAN pays all postage on the book and on the 12 magazine. 1 $1.80 Includes everything. This offer should nppeal strongly to every mart and woman la tbt land. 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