Omaha . Daily Bee 0;ir ftajuziir Ie3lurcs Wit. hnnirtr, flrtinn ar- Tenli' 1'lftiirrs: 1hr h-ef of cntertaln-m-?t, laHru't'on and pTnicfrnert. WEATHER FORECAST. For Nebraska Kaln or snow. For Iowa t'nurttlrd. For weather report pp pac.o 2. ViiL. .VI- -No. l :::'. OMAHA, MONDAY MOKN'INU, XOVEMBEK 21, 1910 TEN PAOKS. SINGLE l)I'V TWO CENTS. The lOLSTOl & OF iil ti' i im, Re neated Attacks u.ve Sevi.'. 'oari'i .v'arniny of latal Termini';,' i Noted Authci's Illness., ' ei;d cojiEi PEACEFULLY Countesi AdnnlUu u ci;k Room Only) at tn Last. DOESN'T RL HIS WIFE! Daughter Alexanu.a in Constant At tendance during; Illnesi. CARELESS OF UP TO DEATH "Thrr Are Millions of People and Many Snfferers In the World. Why Alnin Anxious A boot Met" A."TAFOVA, Kua.'ta. Nov. 30 Count Leo Tolstoi died peacefully here this morning. Mr. MakoveUky and the other attending physicians and Countess Tolstoi were at bedside when the end ratne. It wan recognised Inn before that hla rase ii hoyass and at B o'clock In the morning, after the countess had been sum moned and olncr member of the family had gathered In an adjoining room, the physicians Issued a bulletin, announcing that tha activity of tha heart had almost ceased and that Tolstoi's condition was extremely dangerous. Several of tha phyalciana wera greatly overcome by tha approaching death of Rus sia's great writer. Tolitol, accompanied only by Dr. Mako vetsky, left hla hom at Yasnaya Follana with tha purpose of ending hla daya In aoli tuda to which ha mora and more inclined In hla later years. Hla pilgrimage !ed him to tha monastery at Fhemardlne in the province of Kalgula. where ha remained as the guess of his sister, Maria, who la a lun In tha cloister. Retreat ta Dlsrovered. Learning that his ratreat had been dis covered ha insisted upon proceeding on hia lotimey to' tha Caucasus, whera he hoped to spend Ma last daya close to tha Tol- stulan colony on tha shnrea of the Black Be. But on the railroad Journey ha was overcome with exhaustion and tha cold and Dr. Mekovetaky was compelled to have him transferred to the flag station at Aatapova. whera ha was made as comfortable as pos sible In tha ruda wooden building. For five days ha had lain there suffering first from bronchitis and later from Inflammation of tha lungs. Specialists bad been called but despite their utmost efforts tha heart of tha great Russian responded but feebly to the restoratives and stimulants admlnls ;ored, On Saturday, the, attacks of haart failure IncrveswD nkerminKlv and tnnny hours prior to the end the physicians had given up all hopes. Countess Tolstoi was admitted to the sick room for tha first time last tilght, but her husband failed to recognize er. fill , had hastened to be beside him when alia teamed several daya ago that bin Illnoss was serious, but tha physl-' duns had deemed It advisable that she j be one of the largest and most interest be kept away from the count, fearing I Ing sessions of the organization and that her presence might cause the pa-l8'"0" topics to be discussed will be that dent emotion. j of the formation of a national political Other 'members of the family wera from time to time admitted to the pres ence of their father and hla daughter, Alexandra,' haa been in constant attend ance. Heart Attacks Frequent. Tolatol suffered several aerloua at tacks of heart failure last night.. In tha early morning houre these followed each other rapidly, but were quickly relieved. Between the first and aecond attack the members of tha family were admitted to tha bedside. Tolstoi's . condition after each attack w4 what tha attending physicians called "deceptively encouraging." The patient alept for a little while, seemingly breathing moro comfortably than usual. Doctors Thtchurovsky and Uaoff, neverthelesa, in a statement to Tolstoi's son, Michael, held out but alight hope and did not hesitate to predict a uuick end under ordinary mortal c-lrcum-i lances. Tolstoi, they hald, was a splendid pa- tient tn mind and body, except the heart. During one of the heart attacks Tol-j slot was alone with hla eldest daughter, Tatlne lie suddenly clutched her hand! ami drew her to him. He aeemed to be vhoklng. but was able to whisper. "Now, the end has come; that Is ail' Tatlna was greatly frightened and tried to free herself su she might call the doc tor, but her father would not release her. She called loudly from where she sat. The physicians Injected camrhor. which bad an almost immediate effect In! relieving the pressure. I Tolstoi aoon raised hla head and then ' drew himself ui to a sitting position. I When he had recovered hla breath, he said; "There are millions nf people and many sufferers in the world. Why al-1 a'Mva anxious about me?" sketch f I. He. County Dyof Nikolalvltch Tolstoi, usually i cal.ed Count I.eo TolMol. novelist ai.d s j. ial reformer, was born August IX. 1XJ8. at Yss tiaya Polisna, province of Tula, Kussla. When St years old he entered the army and served in the Caucasus and in de f. use of Seb.iMoi o aRalnst th British and Funth nllied forces. He first made a reputation In literature by a series of vivid sketches written from I 3ctiasui)ol. and when he left th armv hkwi after the Crimean war he devoted himself entirvlv to literature. His War uiiti PeiKe," a tale of the In . aun of Rust-ia by Napoleon in 181!. Is 'Kur.!.! 'n Russia as his masterpiece, honi! lil "Anna Karenlna," which ap oeaivd lu 1VH; and "The Cossacks'' found Kte.ifr favor abroad, where his "Kreutxer SoiiSta." translated In 1M), also attracted side attention. Tolstoi wrote much on education and piilillxhtd aevernl short storiss and reml u.scencrs of childhood and youth, but of recent years ha hud devoted himself to re ligious leaching. He hd made "resist not tvil' the keynote of th Christian faith, and said that the literal interpretation of las Sermon on the Mount was tbe only tula t t'hrtpuan life. The rdlg!ou vlcwa of Tolstoi were set forth In h Chiist's Chrtslianlty" and "My lteliglou. ' Olker Wi.rVs of Tolatol.' In Ki Tolstoi wrote the Kingdom of Uod Within Is." an important work on tha social queaiton, and in lv ha wrote (CootUuwd oo a)ocw4 faga) iHenry Hoyt Dies of ! Peritonitis at His Washington Home Valuable Man in the Department of State Passes Away After Brief Illness. WASHINGTON. Nov. 20 Henry Martyn Hot. couiifl for the Department of State, lied at his home here at 8:20 o'clock this morning from peritonitis. Mr. Hovt was ta';en ill In Canada while there In connection with the reciprocity negotiations between the United Stat ea and that country. Since his return last Monday l a had been confined to his home. Fhysi c'nns railed into consultation with the fam ily physician considered the case extremely serious from the beginning. Almost from the time Mr. Hoyt took to his bed there were rumors that hla condition was very i fcruve. Ills condition was such last night that Dr. Uobert M. Faker of this city and the wife, urn and daughter of Mr. Hoyt deemed It advisable to remain at the bed side throughout the night. Shortly after midnight they noticed a change for tha worse, when a perceptible weakening of tho pulse beats was noticeable. From then on. except for a short period during which lie rallied somewhat, Mr. Hoyt sank rap Idly until death came at 8:20 o'clock. Mr. Hoyt, It was said, had been suffer ing from an Intestinal trouble for more than a year, resulting eventually in tha disease which caused his death. He suf fered during his last illness with a per forated ulcer of the stomach, which re- ! suited in peritonitis. In the death chamber with the physician were Mrs. Henry M. Hoyt, Henry M. Hoyt, Jr., and Mrs. Philip Hychborn, wife, son and daughter of the deceased. The body of Mr. Hoyt will be taken to Wllkesbarre, Pa., for burial, which will be private, mollowlng short funeral services at the residence here tomorrow? The date has not yet been fixed. Henry Martyn Hoyt was the strong hand of Philander C. Knox when the latter was ; attorney general. In fact, he made him self so indispensable that when Mr. Knox became secretary of state he lost not time In obtaining the transfer of Mr. Hoyt from the Department of Justice to his own field of action. . Mr. Hoyt was assigned August 21, 1909, to a new office, that of counsellor of the department. In that field Mr. Hoyt ren dered Invaluable service to the government. Mr. Hoyt had a thoroughly trained legal mind. Because of the brief term of hla service In the State department, compared with his work in tha Department of Jus- tlce, hla legal reputation must rest prin cipally upon what he accomplished in his professional pursuits before entering the realm of diplomacy. Equal Suffragists to Meet at Huron South Dakota Association Will Discuss Proposed Formation of National Political Party. HURON, S. D., Nov. 20. (Special.) The local organlxatlon of the Kqual Suffar glsts ' Is busy, preparing for the annual meeting of the state association to be held bere ' December 1 and 2. It promises to party. It Is also stated that a number 'of propositions reported as being "heavy weights" to the progress of the cause of equal suffrage will he eliminated from the curriculum. The matter of state as well as national legislation will be discussed at length. The officers of the state organization are: President, Mrs. Julius Johnson. Fort Pierre; first vice president, Mrs. Charles S. "Whiting, Pierre; second vice president, Mrs. H. E. Hendricks, Kloux Falls; third vice president, Mrs. A. H. Oleson, Dead wood; recording secietary. Miss O. L. Ogln, Mitchell; . corresponding secretary, Mrs. M. I-. Walton, Huron; treasurer, Mrs. L. K. Fairbanks, Huron; auditor. Miss Gertrude Walker, Bruce. Wisconsin Captures Cross-Country Race , , -n i r. , , Dohmen of Badger Squad Breaks Record Nebraska is Disqual ified Ames Third. MADISON. Wis.. Nov. 39. Wisconsin's i cross country team won the annual confer- ence five-mile rave yestorday, and Manager Dohmcn of the Badger squad, who finished first In 2i:21, broke the record by twenty six seconds. The result of the race: Wisconsin, first, with points; Minne sota, aerond. 8;- Amea, third, ' 30; "North western, fourth. S3; Purdue, fifth. It; In d.ana. sixth, 167; North Dakota, seventh. It; Chicago, eighth, 14; Iowa, ninth, 131; Nebraska disqualified." Dohmen led the entire group of contest ants by almost a quarter of a mils. Cap- I lain Hover of the Wisconsin team was ; second. Thorsen of Northwestern ran a ! pretty race, finishing third. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUTS BAN ON BOXING EXHIBITIONS m Order Prevents Jack Johnson Iron Filling- His lOngasruirst In Theater. WASHINGTON. Nov. 30 (Spocial Tele- ! gram.) The police department haa Issued I a w regulation prohibiting all forms of I boxing exhibitions within the District of Columbia. New Explosive Asserted Best for Aerial Warcraft ASIII.NiiToN". Nov. 20. If airships ate to be past of the naval equipment of xthe futurc. i). i;i as the successful flight of Eugene! ,n ne" ""0 " ("'1" rea wun . , out exploding before siriklnf the object at from the i ruiser Birmingham last . . . .. , , . which It is aimed. Mondav Indicated might be the case, the! Al noWn by the ,,.,, Mr I.ham de prop r ammunition for them to carry, tn ' clared no velocity would be required for the opinion of VVIUard 8. Ishain. would be , the exploxlve to work its havoc. It did the high rapltadvti wlilch whs used In the t its damage to the Puritan without any tests on the nmn::ur i'uritan In Hampton I momentum to add to Its force. Therefore, load.'i in the i'.u following ITiy's flight. If dropped upon a battleship from an air Mr ishtim elalnia that nltroglycrrini ship, no matter how low the latter might g.Utine will do Kiuvli mure damage to a . be flying, the full effect of the explosive balUnip Uian Uie inside sxyluslva cuw In would be fait. CANAL PROGRESS IS SATISFACTORY Colonel Ooethals Makes Annual Re port to War Department of Present Conditions. SECRETARY EIUvINSON PLEASED Vast Machinery Employed is Working Smoothly. All HEALTH CONiiiilONS BETTER Maximum of Laborers Since Begin ning Ifow at Work. SLIDES, BREAlib AND FLOODS .More Than Million Yards of Earth Had to Be Moved Because of Acci dentNearly Forty Thou sand Employes. WASHINGTON, Nov. 20. (Special.) Summarized in a phrase, "satisfactory progress all along the Panama canal xone" ia the gist of the annual report of the Isthmian Canal commission made to Sec retary of War Dickinson by Colonel fJrKo Ooethals, chairman of the commission and chief engineer In charge of the work on the canal, and made public today by the former. S Ith the work of excavation and of con struction progressing favorably at all points along the line; with health condi tions better than ever before; with a cen tralisation and consequent economy in cer tain parts of the work, and with a maxi mum of laborera since the Vnlted States began to dig the canal. Colonel Ooethals' report was decidedly pleasing to Secretary Dickinson. The chief engineer reports, however, that It was not all smooth sailing during the past year, Blldes, breaks and floods hinder ing the work to a certain extent. He men tons four slides, covering, respectively, 47, 7.3, 4.6 and 1.7 acres, and requiring during the year the removal of more than a mill ion cubic yards of material. "It was ex pected," he says, "that slides would occur, and in the estimates provision was made for them, but It now appears from crocks that show In the upper surface, adjacent to the faces of the cut, that sufficient al lowance had not been made, and the esti mates were corrected to meet the new con ditions." Three Bad Brraka. Three bad breaks, he reports, occurred during the year, one at the town of Cule bra oovertng an area of more than tea acres and requiring the removal of .more than a million and a half of cublo yards of dirt and stone. The aecond largest brean ! covered an area of mora than eleven acres and required the removal of more than 300.01)0 cublo yards, while the: third break aggregated about 40,000 cubic yards. "The floods seriously Interfered with the progress of the work," says Colonel Goethals, referring In particular to that of the central division and the Culebra cut, "and the one of December 29 overflowed the dike separating the cut from the Cha gres river, cutting a channel through It about 200 feet long and twenty-one feei deep." The total amount of material removed from slides and breaks In the central di vision of the canal during the year was more than two and a half million cubic yards, or about 15 per cent of the amount removed during the year from the Culebra cut, the principal part of the central di vision. More than 36.600,000 'cubic yards of ma terial were removed from all parts of tha canal during the year, of which 15.000,000 were from the Culebra cut and almost 10,000,000 from the Ch agree section. About 35.000,000 cublo yards remain to be removed from the Culebra cut before this section of the canal la completed. Reporta from various points along the line show that the cost of excavation varied from 24 cents per cubic yard at one piace to as high as 12.61 at another. There Is no such divergence of price in the cost per cubic yard of concrete work, the low est average being $6.09 and the hlgherft I8 60. More than 700,000 cubic yards of concrete were laid during the year. Fonr Thnnsauil Men In Shopa. Economy haa been sought by the com mission In various directions. "To reduce to a minimum delays on account of break down of machinery, plant and equipment, which reflect largely In the unit cost of work." says Colonel Goethals. "and to pro vide proper facilities for overhauling plant and equipment, as well aa manufacturing necessary repair parts, large shops have been provided at certain points on the Isthmus In which are employed a total of 4.391 men. "In general." he adds, "the repair shops and equipment on the Isthmus are adequate to meet all requirements during the con struction period. Nothing as yet has been dine toward permanent shop facilities which will be needed after completion of the canal. "During the year special attention was paid to reducing the cost of maintenance and operation of equipment in the shops, Including the standardization of salaries and wages and of material and supplies necessary in construrtlqn repair work." In this same connection he reports a centrali sation of repair work to rolling equipment other than steam shovels al the Ourgana shops. "In the division of bookkeeping," the re port says, "Improvements Jiave been made In the classification of expenditures and the compilation of statistics. A distribution of the accumulated plant charges, formerly carried as one item, was made, so that the plant is now shown in the expenditure ac- (Continued on Second Page.) I use. Tha plosive itself was not origi- nated by Mr. IshaJii. his contribution b- Must f r vvvV s ,V $ J v vCxV V" & From tn Cleveland Plain Dealer. WESTERN BUSINESS PICKS UP Harriman Line PcegsiBfr Ail Cars Pos sible. Ib to Service. STOCK MOVEMENTS ARE - HEAVY Long Trains of Holiday Goods Are Belm Shinned West to Dellgrht the- Yonnsr Folks at Chrlstmaa Time. OODEN, Utah, Nov. 20. (Special.) The Harriman ioads centering In Ogden are busily engaged these days capturing "for eign" ears. That means that the Union Pacific, Oregon Short Line and Southern Pacific are doing a business so extensive as to exceed the capacity of their own equipment and to be in need of more rolling stock. Coal cars, stock cars and flat cars from other lines, loaded with merchandise, if eastbound, are sent to the transfer tracks here and the contents placed 'In "system" cars, the coal cars of other lines being sent to the coal fields of Wyoming and the stock cam ordered to the cattle ship ping points In Nevada, Utah and Wyoming. West of here there Is quite a rivalry over stock shipments between the South ern 1-aclflc and the lately opened Western Pacific. After the Gould line, by having stock cars available for immediate use, had captured twenty tratnloads of live stock originally Intended for the Southern Pacific, tlie Harriman officials became aroused and since then they have been commandeering every stock car within reach. W. JR. Scott, assistant to Julius Krutt schnltt, reconnoitering through the local yards, came upon a transfer gang unload ing through freight from a Chicago. Bur lington & Qulncy stock car to a "system" car and sought an explanation from the men and, falling to obtain a .satisfactory answer, stormed around demanding to know who In authority was so devoid of common sense as to waste money and en ergy In that manner. Later he was quieted by being Informed that It was an act of piracy made necessary by the ex traordinary demand for stock cars and he was further Informed that the same method was being employed In securing enough coal cars to meet the requirements In t,he transportation of fuel. A car shortage is unmistakable evidence of re-established prosperity here over the entire Harriman system. Italia for Harriman l.lue. Nine carloads of rails, the first of a shipment of 1.400 carloads for the Southern Pacific railroad, arrived today and are being transferred from Union Parlflc or what Is known as "system" cars to for eign care. The rails are for Nevada and California points and run from aO.OCO to llf.Ono pounds to the car. The Southern Parlflc company is con structing a line north from Wadsworth. Nev.. to Klamath, Ore., which is to con nect with a line south to Ios Angeles. This road will be known as the coast cut off and It will eliminate several hundred mlle tietween Portland on the north and I.oa Angeles on the sooth. Ogden will benefit by this new con struction work by reason of the fact that part of the road Is to serve as a connect ing link, plating Oiiden and Los Angeles In closer communication than is possible even over the Kan Pedro or Clark route; likewise It will reduce the distance from Omaha to ti e metropolis of southern Csli Iforma Oadrn Kalldlna Fast. For the first time in the history of the two cities, Ogden. during the last three months, has out. lased Salt Iike City in building permits. Since the slump in Zlon. there bas been a heavy failing off in con struction work and a considerable exodus (Continued on Bee and PagO We Go to War With Panama? Wholesale Grocery at Columbus Burned' Sunday Morning Building and Stock of H. W. Abts & Co. Damaged Twenty Thou sand Dollars. COLUMBUS, Neb.. Nov. 20 (Special Telegram.) Fire which was discovered at 7 o'clock this morning damaged the stock and building of H. W. Abts & Co.. whole sale grocers, of this city, to the extent of $20,000.. From appearances the fire had been smouldering for some hours and was probably caused by mica and matches. When discovered the flames were bursting through the roof. The east portion of the firm's double building was practically destroyed, the stock on this side being almost a total loss. In the other portion of the building the loss Is from smoke and water, and espe cially In the basement, which was flooded to a depth of over two feet. The firm carries a S1O0.O0O stock of staple groceries, Including a large supply of sugar, the latter being soaked with water. H. W. Abts, the senior member of the firm, dis covered the fire as he was coming to the building. This is the only wholesale house in the city and It is making arrangements to open Men day morning and take care of the business as usual and will probably occupy the Rickert building opposite the present location. The firm carried ample Insur ance and expects to have the loss adjusted during the present week. ONE VOTE TURNS ELECTION ponsrreaanaan Gains Heat by- Correction of Error of One Ballot In Cnnntlnat. BUFFALO, N. T.. Nov. 20.-A single vote In a district where over 41,000 ballots were cast on November 8 elected Charles Ben nett Smith a member of oongreaa. The board of canvassers completed the official count for the district, the Thirty-sixth, to day. The face of the returna Indicated a tie. Representative D. S. Alexander and Mr. Smith received 20,84 each. Smallpox Kplderaln Kxagserated. rHEKKNNB, Wyo., Nov. SO. An official Investigation of the smallpox epidemic on the Arapahoe Indian reservation shows the scourge to be not so had as at first re ported. There have been only thirteen deaths, Instead of ninety-three, aa re ported. The disease la In virulent form and much excitement prevails, as new cares are appearing daily. Petty Thief Gets Prized Violin Many Years of Age Somewhere In the city, and possibly In the hands of a person who little guesses the true value of his possession, there may be one of the almost priceless, old Stradtvarius violins. Among the numerous entries of petty thefts and stolen over coats, which furnish, aa a rule, very proxaic reading, In the atolen prop.-ity book, known aa "the squeal book" in police nomenclature, at the Omaha police fetation, is an entry to which some little romance may attach. It records the fart that Louis Miller of 3154 North Fifteenth street had an old violin stolen from his room one day tills week while he was at work. In describing the Instrument It calmly states that 11 was marked "Antonlus Ktradlvarlus, J7'J9." Of couis. there are numberless imlta lions of the old violins In existence, and tha known genuine Instruments of that make can be counted upon tliw fingers of one hand Yt t Miller atsei ta be Is very positive that the stolen instrument was genuine. 11 told enough about Its history r TAFT TO TALK ON WATERWAYS President Will Make Opening- Address ' to Riven and Harbors Congress HARMON WELL ALSO MAZE TALK Governor of Ohio Is Leading; Advocate of the Doctrine that United States Should Improve In terstate Streams. WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 (Special.) The seventh convention of the National Rivers and Harbors congress, which will be held In this city December T, and 9, next, it Is expected, will bring to the national capi tal the largest gathering of waterway enthusiasts ever assembled In this country. President Taft, who will deliver the open ing address to the delegates, said In the course of a speech in Chicago that trans portation was the question of the hour and that the only solutkm of the problem was recourse to the waterways of the United States. Probably next In Importance to the ad dress of the president of the United States will be the speech of Judson Harmon of Ohio, who has for years been a close stu dent of the question of improved water ways and at the very meeting held In Cin cinnati seven years ago when It was deter mined to organise the National Rivera and Harbors congress. Governor Harmon com pletely refuted the Idea In his address to the delegates at that time that the different states through which interstate waterways run should be called upon for a pro rata sum for their improvement, insisting that the Jurisdiction belongs entirely to the federal government, whose duty it Is to Improve such streams for the benefit of all the states through which they flow. Two Korelan Visitors. In addition to theae distinguished cltl sens others quite as well known in their several vocations will deliver addresses during the days of the convention. Includ ing the Hon. Clifton Sefton. chairman of conservation of the Canadian government; the Mexican ambassador; General W. II. Blxby, chief of engineers; Governor Horace White of New York, Representative Champ Clark of Missouri, Colonel William L. Hitert, member of the Panama Canal com- mission, who vli speak on "The Panama Canal as a Connecting Link Between Our Coasts;" Walter 8. Dickey of Kansas City. the chief promoter of the Missouri river sleamDoat line; t. W. Lrandal . national chairman of the railroad committee of the Travelers' Protective Association of Amer- lea; Robert J. MacFarland of Brooklyn, (Continued on Second Page.) to make It certain that at least the violin ! th war nnd the "lebest ranking vctnran In was a very old one, and correspondingly congress. In the Forty-sixth congress valuable. People who have seen It sayltn,,!e were thirty-one general officers, in that the words, "Antonlus ftradlvarlus. ' eluding such dMIngulshed soldiers as 17'jS," are Inscribed on the inside of the ! l-h utrnnnt Oneral Wade Hampton. Major bottom of tha box. and that the wood had the appearance of being very old, being black in color and like hard wax to thf touch. They also stated that the instru ment was very sweet toned. Miller asserts that he got the Instru ment from a friend to replace a borrowed one of hla own. He can tra- it baok only to about fifty years ago when It wan In possession of a family of, musicians. In I rar'l' every stale In the union contributed toe northern part of Finland. At that!10 ,1,e ne"r futu'" hasting Washington, t'me It was said to have been a very old ' ranned milk; Oregon and California, violin. Miller rays that ha haa refused I 'ru": the Dakota and Iowa, beef and an offer of two for it, and that he would lrh; Woinlng, mutton: Minnesota, bui not have sold It for any price. Miller Is ter; Vl.-eon.-In, eggs; Kansas and Ne a rVaridliiavlun alio sp akj very broken j hi aska, poultry; .Michigan, breakfast foods, Knghsh. He was orue a musrisn, but and Vermont, maple sjgar. Other states has since become a cabinet maker. De- . not named representing every section of th tactlves are working on th caa an 4 b J hops to recover Lis property. NEW SPEAKER HAS FAT J01J8IN HAND One Thousand Positions Controlled b) Party in Power in the House. CLERKSHIP iin . . i-ESIRED PLUM Carries Salary of ti.i Ihousand Fiv Hundred Dollars. CIVIL SERVICF DOES NOT APPL1 Postmaster Has Desirable Berth and No Hard Work. SOLDIERS TO Rv. REMEMBERED Transport Hla on Way to Manila vrlh Hla Car am nf Good Thlnas Many States Contrlbnte to Ftiat. (From a Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, Nov. SO. (Special.) Now that It is assured that the democrats will organize and control the next house of rep resentatives during the SIxty-.seL'ond con gress the question naturally arises as tft the personnel pertaining to the organisa tion of the house. There arc at least 1.00( Jobs about the capltol which ute controlled by the party In control of the house. Thes4 range from laborers out In the caplto, grounds, Including police, engineers, fire men, coal passers in the engine roomt which supply heat, electric light and power, laborers and messengers, clerks and ste nographers, committee clerkships and at tendant messengers, besides, of course, th many high officials, such aa clerk of the house, srrgeant-at-arms, etc. These posi tions, great and small, belong to the scalp" belt of the victor and are not hedged about by any civil service rules. To start with In the remuneration of th good things the speaker has the Selection of a private secretary whose salary li $3,500, a clerk to the speaker's table at $3,000, another clerk to the speaker at $l,80t and a messenger at 11,400 per annum. These are the speaker's Individual and personal appointments. It Is his little family, so to speak, of clerical helpers. Iloase Clerkship II I Plum. The clerk of the house Is one of the best In the gift of, ths vtctorB, earn ing with It a salary of I6.W0 and having under him some thlrty-slx employes variously assigned to the conduct of the clerical business of the house, ranging In salaries from $3,000 to $300 per year. ' In the clerk's document room there is a superintendent and at least three annual employes and, perhaps a score or more 4 carried ' during- JUf seeslons , o -cbngre all at good Jiving tsilarlei. The librarian of the housa Is a nice easy, billet and there are three assistants undar him. The office of sergeant-at-arms la In many respects a most choice morsul of patronage. There all accounts are knpt and payments of salaries of members mads. In reality the sergeant-at-arm'a office Is the bank of the house of representatives and many members keep their accounts there and check against the credit Just as they would at their bank at home. Then onj'a mind turns to the office of doorkeeper under whom comes the super vision of a great number of miscellaneous employes. ' Then one might suggest many good berths under the superintendent of th folding room. It la in this section of the building that documents of all sorts ar wrapped, reoorded and stored away In readineaa to be mailed out to the consti tuents of the members as they may call for them and still another storehouse of congressional printed matter Is the docu ment room and during the sessions the combined forces of these two places will be near sixty men. Poatmaeter Has Snap. Then one should not forget the office of postmaster Is a really good Job. While of course, responsible, his assistants are trained ad skilled men of the highest type detailed from the Washington city post office and Mr. Postmaster of the house of representatives" really has but little to do but be about when congress Is In session, look wise and draw his salary. Furthermore, there are some twenty reg ular standing committees each currying a clerk. These clerkships pay salnrles at from $1,800 to $1.U0 per annum, the general average being about t-,400. Many of the larger committees, such as appropriations, ways and means, agriculture and others have several clerks and each committee ia given a messenger ut Jl'iO per month. Each representative In the house Is en titled to employ a clerk al $I2T a month. and there are about thirty-five men on the ; police force assigned to work on the house side, and their pay ia $100 per month. I In reality It la safe to say that the party j In control of the house of representatives has at Its disposal nearly 700 good Jobs, ranging from $i0 down to $720 per annum. The corps of pago boy appointments must not tie overlooked The riiroa la l.r.,,t strong, equally divided as lo appointment between the dominant parties. These brio-tit little lada receive i;f, i,er i,,.h during the sessions. Soldiers In I ott er House. Of the veterans of the civil war elected to the Hixty-second congress only three were gent-rat offhiip. They are Bingham and Shorn ood. union, and Gordon, con federate, the three having been brigadier generals. In the present congress, de- I feated for re-election Is Kelfr-r of Ohio, who was a major general of volunteers in Generals Burnslde, lyOgan Sewell, Bose c:an and Kelfer, union; Ma'ione and Wheeler, confederate veterans. Soldiers ot Korgrut Ira. The officers and soldlera In the Phlllp- ' pines will not be forgotten Thanksgiving day. The transport Dig Is on the way to I Manila with a big carno of good things. , homeland, helped to swell the cargo wua J their conlri '"'lions. .