'H'fP ""' f '.-wfyy nMH-jte"T .t''r'fljirj' l-WT' ,r I? The Commoner. 12 ' i iVOLUMB 3, NO. 50, V -,T'W..-,''fl5'ffcIW ;," r fc'" " f " t THE WEEK AT WASHINGTON On December 19 Edwin Softon,. as sistant secretary of the democratic national committee, was named as a member of the committee of the Dis trict of Columbia to All a vacancy. .On December 19 both the seuato and the house of representatives, after a short session, adjourned for the holi day recess, which will conclude Jan uary 3, 1904. The session of the sen ate on December 19 was largely do , voted to the Panama question with speeches on both sides. In the house a resolution was agreed to by which the postmaster gonoral was requested to forward to the house papers in the postofllco matter. The American naval commanders in isthmian waters r6cently received in structions from Secretary of the Navy Moody, the keynote of which was: "Let Colombians take the initiative." The navy department is busy prepar ing for activity on the isthmus, how ever, and on December 20 it was an nounced that the Colombian govern ment had sent two battalions of troops to the isthmus. Ten United States warships are now in isthmian watersready-foiv any Colombian at tack. It has also been made known that Panama will assume payment of a portion of Colombia's debt, although disclaiming any obligation to such a course. A letter written by Secretary Root to Senator Proctor, acting chairman of the committee on military affairs, which letter was dated November 18 last, was made public on December 20. This letter points out all the good words said of 'General Leonard "Wood and his administration and urges in the strongest terms General Wood's promotion. , According to a report made.' by the commission on internal exchange in r.egard .. ti-the monetary . system for China, it has been recommended.-that - the ratio tfor, China should be 32 1 to i between. gpjd and, silver coiusf .and that the same ratio should bo adopted ifor other sliver-using .countries? that may hereafter adopt the gojd stand ard. . '. .. - . : . " . agreed to the demands of the United States government and has ordered the governor of Alexandretta to make ample apology to Consul Davis for the insults and assaults to vhich he was subjected by the police of Alex andretta while he was escorting to a departing steamer a naturalized American citizen named Attarin, who had been liberated from prison through the intervention of Mr. Davis. IIMI I III On December 21 it was announced that several European powers will bring diplomacy to bear upon Colom bia in order to prevent war between that country and the United States, and that several foreign powers have already taken the" first stop In that di rection by informing General Reyes, through their representatives at Washington, of the futility of any at tempt by Colombia to retake Panama. It has been made clear that Colom bia cannot expect sympathy from the European powers in any movement she may make in Panama which would tend to involve her in war with the United States. On December 21 Secretary Shaw transmitted to congress his estimates for the deficiency appropriation bill to be passed at the present session. The estimates aggregate $8,025,801.22, in cluding the following items: State department, $199,483; treasury depart ment, $3,QG7,305; navy department, $3,019,201; interior department, $592, ,978; department of justice, $171,340; postal service, payable from postal revenues, $732,727. Speaker Cannon, . Representatives Hopburn and Richardson, comprising the commission having in charge the construction of an office building for the house of representatives, have beon informed by Attorney General Knox that arrangements are being pushed to secure the title to various "iiio(!ts of property preliminary to the erection of the building. The struc ture is to cost between $3,000 000 and $i,U0u,000, and its construction will tako several years. mian affair called for. and an explanation is On December 19 General John C. Black of Chicago accepted the civil service commissionershipr recently made vacant by the death of John R. Proctor. It was announced from Washington on December 23 in a special dispatch to the Omaha World-Herald that President Roosevelt is exerting his ef forts to have Secretary of War Root, who will resign the duties of his pres ent position on February 1 next, to become the chairman of the republican national committee, and thus succeed Senator Hanna who, it is conceded, will retire from the committee after the meeting of the national conven tion in June next. It is also regarded as certain that Secretary Perry S. Heath of the national committee will also retire from his post. Conferences are being held, in Wash ington in regard to the issue of bonds for the raising of money with" which to, pay for the friar lands in thoPhilip pines. It has been determined to au thorize the issue of $7,000,000 of 4 per cent, redeemable after ten and within thirty " years, Philippina bonds, and these bonds are to be offered forsale early in January. On December 23 it was announced that C. M. Watson will succeed George W. Beavers, one of the officials, con- corned in the frauds in the postoffice department, and who hadthe position of superintendent of salaries and al lowance of the postoffice department. Mr. Watson's appointment will take effect on January 1., The annual report of the commis sion on Indian Territory was made public recently, and treats the Indian born in New York irt 1832 was question in all its bearings. - -The imtted to the bar in 1853, and commission declares it has adminis tered" on 20,000,000. acres' of land be longing to the five tribes, and no less than 200,000 applications for citizen ship enrollment have been passed upon. According to a Washington dispatch, to check the speculation in ! pine timber on the Choctaw and Chickasaw lands, the commission rec ommends the sale of the standing pine under sealed bids. 'Recommendations also are made that railroad compa nies bo required to file with the com mission plats of all lands sought to be acquired; that the coal and as phalt lands and deposits of the Choc taws and Chickasaws be sold under sealed bids; that congress authorize " the" establishment ot public .highways in the Choctaw and- Chickasaw na- tions and that all leases, contracts or instruments of conveyance exe cuted by citizens of the Cherokee and Crek nations, affecting the title of their lands, to become valid, shall, within thirty days from their date, lie recorded in "the recording office of the respective districts. Frederic R. Coudert, the well-known lawyer of New York, died in Washr ington on December 20, where he went to spend the winter. Mr. Coudert was ad-for many years has been active in demo cratic politics. In 1877 Mr. Coudert was a delegate to represent the in terests of American commerce at the. international congress on the law of nations held at Antwerp, and five years later he attended a meeting of the same congress at Liverpool. He won great praise as the American rep resentative in the Behring sea com mission in Paris in 1895. A year later, when President Cleveland sought and obtained authority from congress to annoint a commission tn Investigate Venezuela's boundary dis pute with Great Britain, Mr. Coudert was appointed commissioner. It seems that General Reyes, the special emissary from Colombia to this country, realizes that the situa tion in regard to Panama may mean grave consequences Ho his , country, and he is exerting . every effort to bring the Colombian people face to face with the situation as he sees it. It was recently reported that he will conclude his mission to this country ar speedily as possible and return to Colombia and assume personal com mand of the "army. It was Reported from Constantino- pie on jjecomuor tu tnai uie pone nas AV OLD AND VkKTIi TRtKn RKMF.tiY Mrs. v?iNsr.ow'fl RooTHTNo Struv for. children taetktog shouli alwty be used Tor children .while te4hlHtr. TtSfftoM ttie irumg, nllnys Mlpnln, cures wlad collo and fe the beat remedy ror diarrhoea. Twenty-fire emu a battle. It U the beat. The state of Minnesota on December 22 filed its brief in the suit of that state against the Northern Securities company which is being tried In the United States supreme court at Wash ington. In this brief it is declared that the purpose of the merger was in order to stifle competition. Brigadier General G. H. Burton, who has just completed a tour of in spection of the various branches of the national soldiers' homes, recently made a report of his tour and in this report it is shown that during last year 33,157 old soldiers were cared for. Of this number oyer 25,000 were draw ing pensions aggregating $3,166,743. Secretary of the Navy Moody has asked congress for an immediate de ficiency appropriation of $57,146 for the marine service, this s"Um being made nocessary by the recent activi ties in Panama and also the plans in regard to the new naval station at Guantanamo, Cuba. of the United States and government property to be stored there, also to prevent interruption of cable com munication between San Francisco Hawaii and Manila. This estimate is submitted with the object of begin ning the construction of these defenses at once at such insular localities as are now the property of the United States, or may become so before the appropriation is exhausted, and of ac quiring additional land deeded as sites for defenses of the territory of Hawaii." Ex-Governor Isaac Sharp of Kansas died in Washington on December 25 at the age of 71 years. He .was born in Pennsylvania, but went to Kansas in the early '50's, where he played a prominent part in the Kansas-Missouri struggle. . It was anndunced from Washington on December 25 that Minnesota mem bers of congress declare that Joseph. J. McCardy, formerly city comptrol ler of St. Paul, has been practically agreed upon as the successor of Henry A. Castle in the office of auditor for the postoffice department. Castle is a Minnesota man and on the streugth of that fact the Minnesota senators and representatives laid claim to the place. It is admitted at the war depart ment that several transports ore be ing made ready at San Francisco to bo sent to Panama immediately in any emergency, and" depsite the secrecy maintained, it is. believed that troops aro to be sent to the isthmus. By a cablegram from the Colombian minister of foreign affairs to General Royes in Washington recently it was made clear that Colombia desires -an answer to several points submitted to this government" in regard to the Pa nama situation. In this cablegram the United States is accused of acting contrary to its precedents in the isth- The prosecution against those per sons who are engaged in trying to ac quire large tracts of the public do main in a fraudulent manner is be ing pushed and it is reported .that the laws that have made this absorption of the public lands possible are to be speedily repealed. S bscr.ii)8rsr Advertising Department Character of circulation, as well as volumd of circulation, is taken into account by the shrewd advertiser. The Commoner offers both character and volume. - .140,000 . people subscribe for The Commoner, and they are peo ple who are seekers, after bargains. They represent the. thinking classes, and are reached by appeals to their Teason. They aro willing to pay a g6od price for a good. article if they want it. Tf vbu have something good 'to sell, call it to their attention, and to do that .you need only to insert your advertisement in The Commoner. This department "Was inaugurated solely fo- the use and benefit of Commoner subscribers, and none other is allowed to use it. Its purpose is to serve as a clearing house between the readers of this paper, and that it accomplishes that purpose is admitted by all who have availed themselves thereof. Tne rate for advertising In the "Subscrib ers' Advertising Department" is 0 cents per word per insertion, in ad vance. Address" all orders to The Commoner, Lincoln, Neb. On December 25 it was reported that Secretary Root had forwarded to the house of representatives through the treasury department a supplemental estimate of $2,526,100 for the defense of the insular possessions of the United States. In his request the sec retary says: "Defenses for Porto Rico, the Hawaiian- islands, Guam and the Philippines are urgently needed to protect the newly-acquired territory Afi FARMS. CO MILES SOUTH OF KANSAS U City, old settled country. Pen for lists. Tho Parker State Bank, Parker. ICana. WATCHES-IO JEWELED ELGIN 20 YEARS " case9.28. Send for catalogue. G. H. Good- yrln Co., Tracy, Minn. rnRY "BRONKETS" FOR THE COUGII, AND 1 "Paine-Curo" for Fnino or Headache, incy aro sure to pleaae you; they ;do too work, aro package, trial alzolOc? either kind, by mail pre paid upon receipt of nice. By Sloan Drup Ftore, uouuersport, r. VOX! COULD SELL OLDjr,INE LIFE IKSCBg anceuyou khow uir( ..Vim. no Tree of charge and pay you 'orjoyncVS airanle contracts awaiting P Vi1 J E Editor News, Montlccllo, Fionaa. WR SALE-NEBRASKA SUPREME COURT records. 1 to 44 Suolnrtre. M&"j$g& as new--l per volume. J. S. White, iu-" Tejo St, Colorado Springu, Colo. csMf: ..