f * ! * t r < A\ M l ! Conservative , In the good old POPULAR days of the conh- AMUSEMENT. try lyccum , when ouco a week the sturdy farm lad escorted his rosy- cheeked sweetheart to the little school house , and listened to the debaters wrestle with the issues of the hour as though upon the decision of the judges rested the fate of the common wealth , the question which frequent ly commanded the attention of the orator was : "Resolved , That United States senators should be elected by direct vote of the people. ' ' Looking backward one may see the first speak er for the affirmative side , who , with his store suit , white shirt , and cellu loid collar , his boots well greased , hair pasted tight to his foreheadhands dangling uselessly at his sides , look ing and feeling extremely idiotic , and wishing that the meeting had never been called to order , opens the debate. We see this future statesman gradually warm up to his work , en couraged by the applause of his friends , and finding much to his sur prise that his knees are getting stead ily stronger aud > liis voice more under control , and by ; the time he has been' at it 'fifteen minutes he is flinging out arguments right and left , as though' he neve'r did anything else in his life. Just close your eyes andimagine the stuffy little hall-with "its red-hot stove roasting every one at one end of the room , and the draught through a broken pane freezing every one at the other. Allow yourself to think of that old familiar scene for a few minutes before you go to sleep to night , and in dreams you will hear the orator thunder forth in stentorian tones " Honorable judges , there is no more reason why a senator should not be elected by direct vote of the people ple , than there is why a congressman should not. " When you arise in the morning sort over your daily papers , and there is every chance that you will find that never-varying sentiment in the edito rial columns , or , if not to be' found there , it will appear in some inter view given out by"au office holder , or office seeker , who makes his campaign upon that issue , as it is always a pop ular one. But in spite of the strenu ous efforts of the debater and the well rounded speeches' the politician , the senate continues to be chosen by ! i the state legislatures , and will con tinue to be so chosen simply because the men who v comprise that august body well know that they have a good chance to bo re-elected under the prqseut system , and the change might 'jeopardize their position. But after all that has been said in the district school house for years and y ears , in spite of the speeches with which congressmen have regaled then .i.j constituencies , the" important and sig nificant fact , remains that the United States senate' is composed of tjio'very best and brainiest men that the coun try affords ; that here there is no place for the ward heeler * or district loss found so frequently in the lower liouse. It is 'set fortli that legislatures may be manipulated , ' but jcannot party conventions be also prostituted , and are not elections equallyuiisat- isfactory in thisn respect ? Under the present system , with the "parties evenly divided , as they usually are , a few men who have' afhigh conception of what a senator should be , have the , power to prevent the electipn of a ihyster , and they almost invariably do so. ' In party conventions it is the "vote- getter , " not the statesman , who is nominated ; at the polls it is the 'good fellow , " rather than the man of talent who is favored , but. sena tors , as they are now selected , are , with a few notable exceptions , men of whom the country may well be proud. They are the choicest of the choice , the second siftiugs of the country's statesmanship , the result of the deliberations of state legislatures composed of men who are chosen Be cause they are supposed to possess judgment superior to the rank and file , and , who meet and measure the various candidates for senatorial seats a privilege the average voter does not and cannot enjoy. President R pose- FIRST VETO , velt has for the first time exercised the executive's prerogative by stamping his disapproval upon an act to' ' purge an ex-soldier of the sin of deser tion in the face of the enemy. Con gressmen all too frequently use their in fluence to erase this blot upon the record of menwhp desire to , be placed in a po sition where they may ask a pension from the government they have never served , This course of proceeding is not only in direct opposition to the pur pose and intent of the pension laws , but it is an insult to the faithful/soldier of the rebellion "to be included in the'same class as the man who refused 'to allow himself to be exposed to a shower of of lead , but has no objection to being assaulted with a hail of gold. The white man A SUPERIOR boasts of his superior SYSTEM. ity over the men of darker hue , but ever and anon some savage proves that ' fool may give a wise man counsel. ' ' To support this assertion we point to the bush tribe of Central Africa , whose orators tors are required to stand upon one leg while addressing the council ; the speech being abruptly ended the moment the , Ji other foot touches the floor. or ground. 1 [ Such a simple _ , find effective system of curtailing eloquence' and promoting the transaction of serious business , if intro duced at Washington , would shorten the sessions of congress about 90 per cent , and relieve vthe gorge of political buncombe which now burdens the con gressional record. There , is JUDGMENT. talk of placing Sen- " f , ator Gorman in charge of the congressional campaign committee , with a hint that should he prove'a ' sncqess he "may _ , bewailed upon to do a little harmonizing on his own account in th'e coming presidential cam paign. It is now'time for the chief ob jector to let an anxious public know what his next issue of the Comical will state as to'Mr. Gorman's availability. Of course the decision 'will be adverse , but allthe maiii thoroughfares of Ameri- ca's principal cities are thronged with people , who are clamoring to know what the " peerless and eminently suc cessful politician and candidate has to say about Gorman. Will he , with his usual acumen , decide that Gorman can not lead the party forward to a glorious and spectacular. defeat such as was achieved in 1900 or 1896 ? Fire destroyed IHDESTRUCTI- , $50,000.plant of BLE WEALTH. the Fremont ( Neb. ) Tribune , probably the most complete and valuable news paper equipment to be found in a city of that size in the world. To many men this loss would have been irrepar able but to Hammond Bros , it is merely an item. The three-story brick build ing is in ruins , the machinery warped and useless , the type melted and mingled with the ashes of thousands of dollars worthof stock paper , but the business , credit , the reputation for hon esty and n integrity , of the Hammond brothers is unimpaired ; it is an inde structible reserve fund ever'at hand in cose of necessity ; a .part of the capital stock which ban now b'e branded ' "time ' > tried and fire' tested. " The Tribune plant will arise . .from the ruins , not be cause its owners rhave' money on deposit or tangible possessions upon which to draw.'bu't because they are known near and far 'as men 'of honor , and supply houses everywhere "are telegraphing their willingness to furnish them" with new goods to an unlimited extent. This is a cheap sort of fire insurance ; it is a policy which every business man can hold without cost ; it is a reserve fund which cannot be lost , burned or stolen , and the moral is be honest. STOPS THE COUGH AND WORKS OFF THE COLD- ' Laxative Bromo- Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure , no Pay. Price 25 cents.