OMAHA DAILY .BJCHi TITlttHfcAY. AFBIL , 11. ISM. THE. OMAHA DAILY BEE. B. nOSKWATEH. Editor. l'Unt,1KHKD KVKIIV MOltNINU. TnttMs or Hunscun'TioNt Pally rti-o ( Without Sunday ) , Una Ycr IS M Dnlly life anil Sunday , One Year S CO SI * Month * < 0 } Three Month * I W Hun.lay Hit. On Year SW Haturilny Ucc , One Year 1 M Weekly life. One Year * > OKFlCCdl Oml.lia ! The Dee Klllldlnc. Bouth Oirnha : filnn'r lllk. . Cor. N nnd Jlth Sis. Council lllurr < ! 10 I'cnrl Slice ! . Ch'cuKO Oin : 02 Chanilr of Commerce. N \v Ynrlt ! Temple Court. Woihlncton : Ml Kourtecntli Street. coitncai'ONiiscB. : All cnmmunlcntlonft relating to new * and cdlto- rlal matter hmilcl bo uJilrcdWil : To the Editor. IlUSINnS-S I.KTTKI13. All builnrM lrtter nnd rcmlttnncei should bo mir ! a to The Ileo rubllihlnn Company , Ornahn , Dinfts , checkii , rxpreM ami pontolllce money Jnlori to be made payable to tlie onler of the company. TUB DHB I'UllUSlltNO COMPANY. STATKMINT OF cmcuuvnoN. Btntp of NelirarOtn , Douglas county. M ! Oeorsp It. T cliuck , necretnry of The life Iiib- Uniting company , being duly mvnrn. snjthut tnp nctunl ntimlwr of full nrnl comulctn copies of Tiie Daily , Mornlnc , n enltiR and Sunday Ilw prlnlr. ) during the month of Marrli , 153S , was ns follows ! 1 22.443 17 23.4il i 22.S22 1 22.510 ' . ! ! ! ! ' . ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! . 4 24.7M 20 22.IBO S 22.274 21 , M > < j 21,511 22 22.52S 7 22.278 23 .2S.SH ; 24 22.V.1 . ' " ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' * ' ! . . ! . . . ! . . . . . . Z2.'S9 < K n. 4M 19 22.2S2 M 22.477 II 22.2S4 27 22.U1 12 22,377 21 23.G41 13 21.H18 23 29,1 ? > 14 22,4I , M 21.70. ! H 22.207 SI 22.W7 "Total" " " ! ; ; ! ? .7M.607 I > cai returned and unsold copies 11 , 3 Net lotnl r-alPi Wl.wn Net dally averngo 2.3 < ! 9 aiouan u. T/.SCHUCK. Rworn to l > eforc me nntl subscribed In mv pres ence thla 1st day of April , 1S38. N. P , FEIU ( Sonl. ) Notary Public. In the hiiiuls of men truly Krent , the pen Is mightier than the sword. It Ls comforting to know that Hitytl nml San Domingo have rusolruil tipon maintaining a neutral attltntle. For a few days the focus upon which tlio eyes of the world will Iw riveted will be the eapltol and not thu White House. , Some of the ministers of the gospel fit'cin to have found It hard to make their Knster Hcrmnns Lorrespond to the text. Dirt will lly this wet-U. It will at least If the farmers of the northwest realize that the season Is well advanced and the tlino for seeding near. It will lie noted that the morchanl.s who are getting the spring trade are the. merchants who patronize the advertis ing columns of Thu Hoc. And to think Hryan wouldn't even take time to look at the brass band ml- vi'iUsing charity train , and that when lit ! was within a few blocks of It. Thai was the most nnklndest cut of all. One novel excuse offered by the fu- filonUts for their defeat In the recent city elections In Tacoma nnd Seattle Is that nearly all of the staunchest "friends of fiilvor" have gone'to Alaska In search of gold. Is It possible that Governor Holcomb proposes to run nway from those man damus proceedings ? What Is there In the Impeachment charges against his police commissioners that he Is so afraid of ? Hi'forc the season is .over the popocrats will be charging that the railroad com panies In making such large additions to thi'lr equipment are simply engaged In a conspiracy to make It appear there is prosperity when there Is none. In the meanwhile tlie city Is paying 7 per cent interest on obligations that were to have been discharged with the pro ceeds of the funding bonds. This loss tiliouhl be counted In with the damages assessed against the Iraiul brokers who liavo broken their contract with tlie city. Governor Ilolcomb's bogus reform po lice commissioners have held several meetings since their confessional with the governor's substitute , but they have not yet taken ri single step looking to ward revoking the licenses of the tc- sorts where open gambling was car ried on. If the telegraph nnd electric light com panies cannot be induced 16 put their wires under ground nnd remove their unsightly poles , they onght at least to innko them less unsightly by the appli cation of a fresh coat of paint. That much of a concession ought to bo se cured by the city authorities for the asking. The story about news having been re ceived from Explorer Andreo Is rightly regarded as n fake. The probability Is nil against Andreo having over reached the North Polo and being ullve now. Yet several other expeditions to the North Pole are under consideration and most of them no more promising than was that of the balloonist. Under the now charter the council has the authority to order the pavement of any street within II.OOO feet of the court house square without waiting for the abutting property owners to ask for the Improvement. This authority has been conllrmed by the courts and tlie council onght to take advantage of the oppor tunity to order pavements on alt the streets within the prescribed district which are not already paved. These pavements should have been laid years ago. Lumber Is om > of the most Important of American exports. The steamships doing business at the Gulf ports nearly all carry lumber from the southern forests - osts and the Paellle coast steamships take from the northwestern ports great quantities of lumber destined generally for South American cities. Some of the South American nations are threatening to Increuso the duty on lumber to shui AmeMcan shippers out of certain mar kets. A demand Is made that the reci procity clause of the lust tariff law bt brought Into use to save this lumber ex port trade and It can very well be done Hlneu the Imports from the South Amer lean cquntiles nro largely of articles no produced In the United States. At tin , saino time , while the 'lumber business Is nu Important Industry , we should node do anything to encourage the over-Lusty destruction of American TIIK pnt,8WKNm rower. President McKlnloy'n policy , M pro * flouted In his mea.iago to congress , ap peals to the ? enlightened , conservative and sober Judgment of thu nation. It will not satisfy those who want war , but It will bn approved by all who hope that thu pacification of Cuba and thu Independence of the Cuban people may be attained through peaceful means. The aim of President McKInley - ley Is to secure the freedom of Cuba. No ono desires this more earnestly than he. Hut he would accomplish It , If It be posslblq to do so , without the shed ding of American blood. In the course ho has pursued the president has shown the hlghi'st moral courage. Neither the clamor of men In his own party nor the abuse of political opponents has Influ enced him. With dignified calmness ho has steadfastly adhered to his con scientious convictions of duty and his Icar fiouso of the momentous rrsponsl- ) lllty resting upon him and he will eon- lime to do so. The president graphically describes he conditions In Cuba and says of the var there that If allowed to go on It will ilually cud only through the ex- niustlon of one or both of the parties o It Tills ho thinks cannot bo con- cmplated with equanimity lny the civ- llzcd world and least of all by thu United States. lie therefore feels It to bo a duty to bring about an Immediate tor- nluatlon of the war. This , In the pinion of the president , Is not to be ccompllshed by a recognition of Cuban ndcpcndence. He still holds In regard o this the views expressed In his annual lessage of last December , when ho said hat the Cubans had not succeeded In stabllshlng a claim to bo recognized ns lelllgerente or as an Independent state. il\o \ attitude of the president at that line met with very general public ap- > roval and the Cubans have no better him to recognition now than they had ivo months ago. Mr. MeKInloy quotes ho position taken by President Jackson n regard to recognizing the Intlc- idcncG of Texas and finds In It abun- lunt warrant for his attitude In respect o Cuba. The president further points tit that to commit this country to the ecognltloji of any particular government H Cuba might subject us to embarrass- ng conditions of international obliga- lon toward the organization PO rocog- ilzed. If we should recognize the In- li-peiideiice of Cub.i and then Intervene o slop hostilities there our conduct vould be subject to the approval or ills , ipproval of the government recognized. Vi > fehonld have to submit to its direction ind assume to It thojnere relation of a 'rlendly ally. President McKlnley declares that for- ilblo Intervention to stop tlie war is ustllinblo on national grounds and he itates thp. e grounds with clearness and 'orce. The destruction of the Maine Is cited as Impressive proof that the state of affairs In Cuba Is Intolerable and ) erhnps nothing said by the president will have greater effect upon public pinion , hero nnd abroad , than this. The > rcsldent then speaks In this decisive anguage : "The only hope of relief and epose from a condition which cannot linger bo endured Is the enforced pacifi cation of Cuba. In the name of hn- nanlty , In the name of civilization , In jehalf of endangered American Inter ests , which gives us the right nnd the luty to speak and to act , the war In Cuba must stop,1' President McKlnley asks congress to give him authority to : ako measures to terminate hostilities in Julia anil to secure n stable government : here , with power to use the military and naval forces of the United States for this purpose. What response congress will make to his request is uncertain , but suspense as to this will not be prolonged. It Is to be hoped that the matter will not cause an Issue between the executive and congress , because unity at this time s of the tlrst Importance. Wo must stand before the _ world a united people us to whatever policy the deliberate udgincnt of those In authority shall de cide to adopt. MUST DIFFICULT PROBLEM. The exposition management has wres- led with many perplexing problems and ms successfully solved nearly all of : hem. It has dealt with the question pf location nnd tlxc l upon the alto most satisfactory to all. It has steered : hrough legislative shoals and reefs and organized more than twenty states for participation that have had to depend ntlrely upon private contributions for their exposition funds. It has passed through the rapid : ) and whirlpools of the water supply and dually secured ample lire protection and an abundance of water for man , beast and machine. Ono Important problem , however , ro- nalns bcfoie the exposition promoters. The first question propounded by people who desire to visit the ex position Is , What assurance Is there of commodious hotel accommodations it reasonable price or at any price ? All the preparations made to date to Increase the facilities for lodging and caring for exposition guests fall to meet fully the estimated demands. The consensus of opinion among the best informed citizens Is that something must be promptly done to provide respectable quarters for nu overllow of from fi.OOO to 10,000 people dally that Is sure to present Itself on every special occasion If not throughout the entire season. Two different avenues remain open , both of which should bo utilized. The ft rat Is the erection of a large , temporary liotol , planned on the style of sen.sldo and mountain summer resorts. Such a hotel can bo built and equipped In time on plans already at hand providing the capital Is subscribed and contracts let without delay. That the Investment In such a structure would prove very profitable Is iK'yond question. Hut even If the big protlts which It promises were not absolutely assured , the building of such a hotel Is as much n necessity as has been the erection of the great build ings on the exposition grounds. The second avenue for supplementing existing hotel accommodations lies In the proposed arrangement of trackage for sleeping car trains , In which excur sionists coming to Omaha could be lodged In comfort during their stay. In this arrangement the railway company should take the lead. If abundant track age , easy of access , can bo located be. yond the rau e of disturbance from rail- way trafllc , icrentl thousand Kacflt.il couM bo tnkcn cnro of nlniont ; lw well ns If they had rooms in first clans hotels. HPAlX'ti'AU \ Spain Is going on with prcpnintlons for possible war , leaving no doubt of her purpose If necessary to give the United States the very best light she can make. It Is said to be the opinion of pome of our military nnd naval olllcers that In case of war Spain will carry on a program of hostilities very different from what Is commonly supposed. They take the view that Spain will leave the defense of Cuba to the army now there , with such volunteer reinforcements ns can be secured , and will carry on n war of reprisal , whoso solo purpose will be the dcstructloTi of American commerce. All her resources , It Is thought , will bo utilized In the employment of privateers- men , which will seek American com merce bearers and attempt to extermi nate' our foreign trade. It Is assumed that Spain would probably declare a blockade of American ports , not with any Inten tion of actually carrying that out , or even of attempting to do It , but In pur suance of her policy of destroying Ameri can commerce. Concentrating her energies upon that method of warfare Spain , It Is suggested , believes that ho will thereby attack the United States at the most vulnerable point and can main tain for many mouths a warfare upon the seas disastrous to our commerce. It Is said Spain focls that It Is at great advantage , because Its own foreign com merce Is small In comparison with that of the United States and its losses In this direction would bo relatively small. Undoubtedly if war comes Spain will do all she can to Injure American com merce and she will hixvc no dlllleulty In llndlng means to do this. She Is al ready assured of getting any number of prlvntoersmon. which she would simply have to equip and send out under the Spanish tlag to prey on American com merce wherever It .should be found on the seas. Very likely our coastwise tradb would suffer from this sort of warfare , unless American vessels were sailed tinder - dor neutral Hags and oven this might not bo a complete protection. It Is hardly conceivable that Spain would ex pect to retain Cuba In n war with this country and It is probable she would not make any serious effort to do so , but would employ pretty much all her resources - sources against American commerce. A Sl'ANlliH-.lMKIlHAJt ! C In view of our present knowledge of the agricultural and mineral wealth of the transmLsslhSlppl region , it .seems strange that neither the Spanish fortune seekers who penetrated the region more than three centuries ago nor the Spanish colonists who followed their trails were able to uncover the riches they t > o much sought. The expeditions of De Vaca and Coronado in the sixteenth century could not have been better planned to miss their object , and when Don Juan de Onatc led hl.s small band of colonists up the Hlo Grande valley In IMS It would have been natural for him to have , at least sought the headwaters. Hut he was doubtless entranced by the sireen Holds cultivated by the Pueblo Indians and he paused In the valley opposite the mouth of the Chauia and there built the church of San Gabriel , around which was quickly gathered the first permanent colony In Jhe western part of what Is now the United States. The Indians wore already civilized nnd engaged In agriculture , and the Spanish colonists wore welcomed. The old San Gabriel colony ought to have nourished In the Illo Grande valley , even though It might have been planted In a more favorable location , but the Spaniards were poor colonizers and ' seemed to lack the Industry , patience and contentment necessary to permanent settlement of n new and unknown coun try. Other Spanish colonies were planted later In the southwest , but not until within comparatively recent years has the population of New Mexico Increased sufficiently to make statehood only a matter of time. The history of San Gabriel colony Is but the history of all Spanish-American colonization outside of the tropics. Preparations arc being made for the celebration July 13 next of the ,100th an niversary of the founding of San Gabriel. It can be made an Interesting historical celebration and in nothing more Interest ing than ns a showing of the Inefficiency * of the Spanish colonization methods compared with those of other pioneers who were attracted to the now world. A n'KST INDIA UU.ILIZO STATION. The Bee has received from Hon. Clark E. Corr , formerly American minister to Denmark , his views In regard to the proposed purchase of the Danish West Indies. Colonel Carr carried on the ne gotiations some years ago for the pur chase from Denmark of the Island St. Thomas and he still thinks the United States ought to acquire the Island nnd utilize It for a coaling station. Colonel Carr makes a very plausible argument In support of his opinion. There Is no question that the harbor of St. Thomas Is one of the be.st In the world Colonel Carr says there Is scarcely any other which In amplitude , Impregnahlllty.dept ] : of water and In every requirement Is equal to that of St. Thomas. He says It could iloat nnd shelter all the navies of the world and with Its natural ad vantages for defense at a comparatively small expense this stronghold can be defended against all the navies of the world. Hut does the United States need this harbor ? Is it necessary to our KG cnrlty that we fortify St. Thomas ana establish a coaling station there ? What Colonel Carr says doe.s not fuinlsh an entirely satisfactory answer to these questions. In regard to the contention that the acquisition of this territory would be a departure from the estab lished policy of the nation , Colonel Carr characteiizcs It as absurd. Wo do not think so. On the contrary It 6eoms to us to bo the ono sound and valid reason against the proposed acquisition. The development of an appetite for territo rial aggrandl/emeut Is full of danger and is to bo dlbcouraged. The safe plan Is to adhere to the policy of kec-plng out hands off of remote territory. Quito n number of available buddings In Omaha can be readily transformed Into hotels for the exposition season , but If this Is to bo done no time Is to be lost. It Is a mistake to figure that the attend- fnncn from abroad will not coinmRtico us noon ns the fkty'p are opened. The pro cession of visitor * will Iwgln to nrrlvc before the cpflgC next month and will continue until .after the Kfo.it show IM concluded , nniirim must be prepared to take care or"ijyory one of Its guests whenever th j"njay choose to accept the general Invl tlan that has been ex ' tended. n . , , The death "of , judge Hector nt Dallas , Tex. , last Kiigilny ca.lls attention to ono of the defectH I" our federal judiciary system. .Tudicu Uector was Judge of the northern district of Texas and had been Insane two yVn'rfl. Ills Insanity was of an InolTeiislvRfilial , ntid as he did noth ing that would subject him to Impeach ment or removal and would not resign , his court had boon held by Judges from other districts. The ltnatlon became intolerable nnd recently an Iowa man was appointed Judge In the district un der a special law to meet this ease alone , but his appointment has not yet been continued. Had Judge Hector lived the district would have hart two judges , one of them Insane , but both drawing sal aries. Ills death simplifies matters at once and relieves thu Department of Jus tice of embarrassment. The Iowa supreme court has recently- set the seal of condemnation on that i method of law practice which consists chlelly In looking for legal loopholes. The case was one Involving a construc tion of tiio law relating to exemptions from the Inheritance tax law and the court held that the exemption of $1,000 applied to the whole estate nnd not to each share Into which It would be di vided after distribution. The law Is so plain that it would seem like an Insult to the court to call It In question before it. The platform of the Hryanlte demo crats on which W. W. Krwln Is ritnnlng for mayor of St. Paul contains a plank In which they declare themselves "as sep arate nnd seveied from all persons callIng - Ing themselves by the traditional name of democrat who refuse to follow the cries of a distressed people. " It Is evi dent that henceforth the democracy ot St. Paul must be distinctly of the cryIng - Ing and howling brand and the faction that smiles at prosperity will receive no recognition at all. \MV You're TsilkliiK. Philadelphia , Times. Lots of men tread on each other's toes trying to crowd into the gallery of congress who'd hardly take part In the rush if a re cruiting ofllco was there. IIooiuiMl.t < > UlxlutoKrntlon. I'lijluvlelphla kcilgcr. China Is a country practically without the cohesive "force ofTitrlotlsm. The enormous population , the'hunUrous dialects , the con flicting Interests of the varloiu provinces nnd peoples are operating nil the time against that solidarity of Interest , and feellcg which llnkii together the parU of moat Uu- ropeuu countriee < < The disintegration of China seoius to bo a foregone conclusion among Eu- ropcaa statesmen ; ' Tlie" ' < ; iilileii Tide. Now York Tribune. While preparations for war are loud In the land , gold continues to pour In upon us from abroad In Increasing volume. It Is true that It Is , ln settlement of commercial balancles and mrt the proceeds of borrowing , but the fact U txigratlfylngevidence of onr couiid financial fcBndltldn. ' Spain , meanwhile , having sritrandefred'the ' gold of four hundred years' spoliation of the Americas , Is reduced to her last peseta. Huxh of Trnvolcrn Checked. lluffala Express. A great falling off In the patronage of Atlantic steamers Is reported as a con sequence of the prosp'ect of war. This la not an unmixed misfortune , for toutlsts take a largo amount of gold abroad each year. If their number Is greatly reduced this season , the Inflow ot the metal will be still further augmented , to the benefit of the financial stability of the country during the war. If hostilities do not take place , there will be a rush of travelers later on. Ilooiu liu Klondike Ynrim. Sprlnprteld Hcpubllcan. It Is noticed that the stories of marvelous riches In the Klondike Increase as the travel thither declines. Ono letter purporting to como from Dawson City Is .being . given wide publicity , which records the existence on one of the claims 'there of a woodrack four feet high and twenty-four feet long filled with gold nuggets and gold dust. The width of the rack la not given , but presumably It must be four feet or thereabouts , forming a receptacle - ceptaclo capable of holding all -the gold ktiown to exist In the world outside of the Klondike. Hulfn for I2iillHtmentM. Hasten Globe. Women who are Interested to know what 'disposal might possibly bo made of their husbands In case of war are Informed that for enlistment a man must be between 21 and 30 years of age , of proper character and good health ; be must not bo loss than five feet , four Inches tall , and his weight , according to height , must be between 128 and 190 pounds. A man more than five feet ten Inches tall and weighing more than 1G5 pounds cannot bcccmo a cavalryman , but must join the Infantry or artillery. This rule for enlist ments up to date applies , of course , to all of a wlfes * relations. Cholera VCI-HUH Cniiiionn. Minneapolis Tribune. In the war between China and Japan we used to read about the terrible fighting , but It appears that the Japanese lost only 739 killed outright auJ 230 who died subsequently of wounds received In battle ; 3,148 of yellow fever and otL r diseases ; 3,009 were In- valldd on account of wounds received and 58.E52 were Invalided from cholera and other diseases contractol during the cam paign. Thus It will bo seen that while modern destructive weapons slay their hundreds , dlscasa slays Its thousands. It would be the same , only more so , should wo ssnd aci army of qbpupatlon to Cuba. AH Sri-ii Thr ) UKli Smoki'il ChlfagQ ) Chronicle. As a. sort of preliminary practice drill for war with Spain Bdltor Ucaewater continues to push hostllltc'l ( against the Omaha lire cud police comm'ssion. ' His rapid-fire guns am raining writspt Injunction and QUO war- runlo upon the unhappy -commissioners , and ho has now began to shell Governor Hot- comb's position with siege mortars Icadel to the muzzle N\UU.jnandamu3Cfl. The ene my replies wlth.-splrlt and the thunder of the World-Herald's circulation batteries In dicates that , though ( General Hosewater may be vlctoilous In thp epd , the engagement will ba protracted and bloody. At any rate , the citizens of Omaha ! will get a gooj Idea ot the horrors of war , e\'en > though we should patch things up with Mr. Sfagasta. Nut llliiHlcr , " lint Slmi'lf Truth , Louisville Courier-Journal. The resources of the United States are so vast that wo ourselves wholly fall to realize them. We are masters of the greatest of the continents. We are the possessors of a per fect syBtem of government. On our own ground wo are more than a match for all Uuropo still barring England and Hussla. Wo have to go abroad for nothing. Within ourselves we are absolutely self-sustaining. In all mechanical arts and martial appliances wo lead the world. Our food products are cxhaustless. United c a nation no power on earth could successfully come against us. Til's Is not bluster. It Is the simple truth ; and the statesmen , soldiers and financiers of Kuropo know It very well. The American v.-ha disputes U cither does not know his own country or greatly overestimates the outer world. TUB PHII.AATHMePICX POLtOY. Intf to Hnmnnllr In Cnhit Nn ! < * thnn ll tr > In Hnmnnllr nt Home. Cnrt Scn'ur In Hnrptr'n Weekly. Neither should we Corset that the phllan- hroplc policy , If It Is to be genuine , rmut > e philanthropic "alt round. " It must not , n order to alleviate the * sufferings * ot some , tnposo avoidable suffering on others. That ! uba 1ms been sorely oiiprepa.nl and mal- rcateJ by Spanish mlt-govcrnmcnt ; that the trugglo between the Cuban Insurgents and ho Spanish forces bore traits ot outragcoua ructty ; that the forcible "concentration" f the country people In the towns without nirana of subsistence was n barbarouti meas ure , subjecting Its victims to horrible nila- ry ; thut the Spanish government has been unwilling or unable to put an end to such evoltlng atrocities , and that the condition of ho afflicted portion of the Cuban people lowcrfully appeals to the sympathy and the iclptul Impulses of every generous person all this Is certainly true. It Is no Ics ? true hat If , 'm obedience to such helpful Impulses , vo resort to war , wo shall sacrifice the Ives of < in Incalculable number of our own jeoplo In battle or , In case of an Invasion of Cuba , by disease ; we shall spend In the vork of slaughter and devastation perhaps a hundred times as much money as It would cost to feed the hungry and to clothe the lakcd In Cuba or , for that matter , to ro- levo the miseries of the Indigent In our own country for many months ; wo shall ause that trouble and dlstrew among the > ocrer classes of our own people by which every war Is accompanied .and followed , ami vo shall call Into unbtIdled activity there elements of corruption and demoralization n our social and political life which war lover falls to stimulate , and of which we already witness the premonitory i < ymptoma. All this , too. Is certainly true. If the ono ildo la entitled to generous consideration , s not the other ? If philanthropy demands hate avert harm flora the Cutun people , oes not the tame philanthropy demand that vo avert harm from our own people like wise ? la only the ono thing to be called 'magnanimity" and ' "honor , " and the other 'cowardice ? " Uut. wo are askcxl , "Snail we stand by In cold-blooded unselfialmekB , unwilling to take ny risk to save our unfortunate neighbors ? " "Jo. " ( But If wo are a wise , a truly generous , a truly philanthropic people , willing even , If necessary to take any risk , we shall exhaust he last chance for the peaceable attainment of succor to the suffering and the stoppage of bloodshed nnd Spanish misrule In Cuba ; ve shall ( Irmly sustain the noble , patriotic and statesmanlike efforts of 1'rcjldent Mc- Clnlcy to nccompllPh that object ; we shall loner him for Ms bteadfaat fidelity In scek- ng to save both slJro froml.aim ; and with ilm we fhall firmly uphold the first prlncl- ) le of true philanthropy honorable peace sn eng as It is pouliilo , r.ar only when It bo- omes an Imperative necessity. * 11131M3WS i'HOMOTIOX , Jreut Tribute to the Ability of the Imminent Xew Yorker. Leslie's Weekly. After tde 20tfa of April the most exalted nd responsible position In the railroad ecrv- ce ot the world will be occupied by Hon. Shauncey M. Uepow , who on that day will etlre from the presidency of the New York entral and bcccuie chairman of the boardH if directors of the four great , railroads com- irlslng the Vanderbllt system , namely , the VPW York Central & Hudscei River rall- oad. the Lake Shore , the New York. Chicago t St. Loulrt and the Michigan Central. At > rct > ent Cornelius Vanderbllt In the executive lead of Ifio New York Central and the Mlchl- ; an Central , and William K. Vanderbllt of he Lake Shore and New York , Chicago & 3t. Lou 1.3. Both of these Important positions , vhlch have heretofore been occupied by the icac's ot the Vanderbllt family , will bo united In ccie , and their great responsibility i'HI be placed In the competent hands of Mr. > epew. Uoth of the Vanderbllts will remain n the directorates of the respective com- anles and tdelr Identification with their great properties will be as largo and as close aa hey have been heretofore. Mr. Dcpew'o advancement , which Is per haps the greatest tribute that has over been 5ald to hl3 splendid ability , opens the way or the choice of S. n. Callaway , now presi dent of the Lake Shore , to the presidency of ho New York Central. The change In Mr. Depew's relations does not involve any change of residence. It simply puts upon hla bread shoulders heavier burdens and greater esponalbllltlen. The Vanderbllt system , vhlch , under the masterful guidance of W11- . lam K. Vanderbllt , has of late been extended 'ar beyond any possible conception of the > ld coiTimodore , has become one of the most 'lKantlc railroad enterprises In the world. The changes In Its executive management vhlch wo have Indicated have been necessl- ated by the consolidation of the Vanderbllt 'ntercsts and cannot fall to be conducive to' .heir continued prosperity , development and rowtb. iA .Mnitter of Fnltb. Indianapolis News. Free coinage by this country at the ratio of 1C to 1 , Mr. Bryan asserts , will make that ' .ho true market ratio between gold and sll- rer , not only here , but throughout the world , lie asserts this ; he offers no proof. There night to be some simple proof on his theory , 'or ' he says any child that knows that when ono end of a teeter goes up the other end 0C3 down can understand the money ques- lon. He asserts ; ho does not attempt to irovo. But this accords with Hon. George Fred Williams' Idea that btmetalllsts are a church. Mr. Bryan Is the chief priest or irophet. He does not have to prove ; all he needs to do Is to announce , and those who are of the faith will accept. But these who are not of the faith require a sign , The great prophet should give outsiders a pointer , 10 that they m-ay climb to his altitude of con- Idence. They know that free coinage In ndia did not preserve the par of exchange at the legal ratio ; they know that In Mexico t des not do It ; they remember that In thU country , In the long years preceding 1870 , It did not do It. And now , when conditions are ho most difficult and adverse they have ever been , they want something more than a prophet's mere assertion that what experi ence scemo to show cannot occur will occur , f the gospel of 1C to 1 has free course and Is glorified. 1'rolltlnK by Experience. Chicago Tribune. Apparently the railroads have decided to real the Omaha 'Exposition a little better than 'they treated the World's Fair In Chi cago. Tourists who wish to go to Omaha 'or ' the summer can go and return for four- fifths of the regular double fare. Thofe who are content to limit their stay in Omaha lo hlrty days or less can go and come for ono and one-third fares for the round trip. To ittcnd the opening ceremonies the rate In still more liberal , being a single fare for the ound trip , or ono cent a mile lor all living within 150 mllcn of Omaha. In making "the-Do concessions thus early the railway managers mve evidently profited from their World'o "air experience. iAiiotber I'orclKii lloyoolt. Philadelphia Ix > il i-r. Austria-Hungary Is the latest power to propcse a general European boycott agalrtut Lho United States on account of our tariff. Mke all the rest , Count Szpchenyl'a ( sugges tion will amount to nothing , for the very good reason that the United Statco can get along without the patrcoage of foreign powers mutli better than they can do with- 3Ut the products of the United States. Tbo Royal Is the highest fjrade baking powder knerwn. Actual tests show tt goesonft- tblrd further than aa/ other brand. POWDER Absolutely Pure ROYAL iuma rowotn co. , HEW YORK. RICJJIB OT'TIIH TIMK9. Simrmon , Schlcy , SlRsbco three caplUl S'a. Sama number In Succci * . I'orto Hlco Is A fertile little lilaml of 3,630 ju ro miles and l.COO.OOO luhiblt-ints. The auxiliary crulsrrn Dlxlo and Yankee will shoot together this lime , If the orJcr Is clven. ( lovernor Tanner of Illinois announces his ( U'tarmlnatlon to command the state mllltl * If It I * called out for 0. II , 1 . Belmcnt , grandson of Commodore Terry , who cleared the lakes of the Urltlph In 1812 , has offered his sword to the country In case of war with Spain. Havana contractors have been selling the troorn corn at * l In gold for twenty-five pounds , though the cost was only 66 cents a lui-.jhel. These are the patriots who want war to the lajt ditch. The yacht Kllldo placed at the disposal of the government by K. llurgcss Warrro of Philadelphia. Is the fastest vessel afloat. It Is eighty feet long , eight feet four Inches deep , draft three feet six Inches , and can go a mile In 1:33. : The Klllde can outpace the fastest of Spain's hornets. A well known officer of the Navy depart ment boa beoa ats'sneil ' to one of the new war ycsai'ls Just bought The name of the craft Is the Josephine. When the wife of the naval officer heard of his assignment , she remarked. "Wul. H will be the llrst time ho ever com manded a Josephine. " The lady's name Is Josephine. At the request of the officer , the name of the vesreel Jins been changeto ! the Vixen. This coming scrap has begun to de velop Its humors. The flag of the Maine was not saved when the vessel was blown up. The flag that was kept flying over tlm wreck until It was finally taken down o\i Monday was one sup plied by the Fern , and has no other connec tion with the catastrophe than the fact of that association. This Is scarcely enough to hallow It in the eyes of the American people , as the 'Maine's ' own proper flag would have been hallowed , had It been preserved. Buffalo Bill IB willing to guarantee the freedom of Cuba If given > m army of 30.000 Indians. He says : "If these 30,000 shouting Indian braves on horseback , resplendent la brilliant war paint , the eagle feathers on tholr war bonnets fluttering 1 the wind , should sweep down on Havana In u grand charge what a picture It would make ! Taken unawares , hundreds of thousands of men could not withstand such an onslaught. " "If this craft Rets a shot In the right spot. said an officer of the dynamite cruiser Vesuvius , "there will be no call for a board of Inquiry. " The vital spot of the. Vesuvius is Its magazine stored with thirty 'tons ' of dynamite. If a hostile shot strikes the magazine there would .lot 'be 'left enough of the cruft to make a souvenir button. The Vesuvius has a speed of twenty-two knots , carries MX ofllccrs and slxly-four men and cost ? 3DOO,000 to build. Woe to the craft that stops a shell from Its three fifteen-Inch dynamite guns. All sorts of war Jobs are , of course , paurlng I" on tuo government , attracted by the $30. . 000,000 national defense appropriation. A southerner sends up word that palmetto COD- bases make the test kind of fortification and ho offers ( fora ccnsldetatlon ) to buy up all In sight and deliver them to points of coast de fense. A citb.cn of Kansas City writcn that hog brlstlca make Jnilletprcofcloth which , In the form of thick mats , could be hung around the hides cf the. war vofael-s. He adds Inci dentally that , in anticipation or the adoption of h'n suggestions , ho his secure-d an option on all the hog brlr'.lcs In the market. A Wasp and a Hornet are again on the rcatcr of ships In the American navy , thwe hktarlo names liavlng been given to rece.it purchases of smaller vessels by the govern ment. The war of 1812-14 was diatlngulshcd by the brilliant actions of toth the Hornet and the Wasp , eighteen guns. There were two Weflps In that war. The first one cap tured the British brig Frolic , and was then In turn captured with her prize by n British seventy-four gun frigate. The second Wasp captured the British ships Helndecr and Avon , and a few months later was lest at sea , when , 'wtoerc ' or how Jiclnc unknown to this day. PKKSO.VAI * AMI Senator Morrlll of Vermont will on Thurs day evening next hold a reception at till Washington homo to celetn-ate tils SSId birth day. day.Mr. Mr. Schad of Michigan , wbo showed his mon'ey to a Chicago stranger and lost $1,100 within a few minutes after arriving there , must bo a queer fish. Wel-Hal-Wei , England's new port , Is on the south side of the entrance to the strait of Pecdllll. Kcally , all these miimlsno dis turbances do servo to brush up one'ii geog raphy ! Charles Dlttmar of Baltimore , who has Just returned from Havana , says that General Weyler received $120,000 In gold from the tobacco dealers of Cuba for laying lib cele brated embargo on that commodity last year. Mark Twain , having noticed In an Amo-Ican newspaper statistics of the Increase ol crime In Coinectlcut dur'ng < the laat seven years , la sorrowfully constrained to admit that "this . Is Just the time that I have been absent from I the state. " Judge Martin of Chicago was recently given an old Scotch coin by a tramp whom he be friended. He now finds that there Is only ono other such coin In existence that In the British museum and he has been offered $2GO for h's by n collector. Piper Flndlatcr , who piped the Gordcn Highlanders to the charge at Dargal after ho bad been shot through the Icga , has readied r/ondon , and 1 ? overwhelmed with Invltatlcns to go on the Stage , , to go Into museuimi and to get married and all the other things. Charles H. Hacklcy or Muskegon , Mich. , has offered to place In Hie city park bearing his nemo statues of Lincoln , Grant , Sherman and Parragut , at a total expense of $20,000. The park , with a soldiers' monument , was a pcevloun gift by Mr. Hackley to the city. Urbina B3ttasso , the young artist who was given the commission to reproduce the de stroyed statue of i'.lio Doge Grlttl , which stood In the west fn > nt of theDoge's pa'-acc In Venice , has finished his work , and the xtattio will < bo put In position about the last of this mcnth. The Boston Transcript announces that only abJut $7,000 of the necessary $ S3OOu tor tno Lowell Memorial park remains to bo con tributed. In T. B. Aldrich'fl pom. "nim- wood , Jn Menury of James Russell Lowell , " are these lines concerning the plnos which are In the part of the estate to preserved : "O nutumn nvlnd nmong the somber pines , Breathe you bis dirge , but bo It Bwcet and low. With deep refrains nnd murmurs cf the ? ea , Like 'to his verse the art Is yours nlone. Hla once you taught him. Now no voice but yours ! Tender and low , O wlndl nmonf ? the pines ! " YKM.OW KW lit COMOHKM. fhllnilolphlii Tlmos : Inlo.id of nbuiln * thp prc-Jldcnt tlil-i In n time the nation should proudly hold up Its head. New York Mall and Kxprcaa : The con gress ( us repeatedly demonstrated thl unity during thp trying days ot the last six woekit , nnd that ono man should have forgotten - gotten fnlnicM and truth and plunged Into ribald fnlKchood only brands him as a do- aplrublo exception to the rule. Wflishlugton I'ost. It Ifl to tlio nhamc ot the American congress that such a debits nu was Injcctest Into Its proceedings on Thursday ihould form n part of the history of the nation's crisis. In standing sponsor In the hou.io for tonsAtloiml nnd Irresponsi ble rumors affecting the loyalty and In tegrity of thp president of the United States , the 1'cst does not believe that Mr. Lc U of Ohio spoke for h ! democratic colleague * or for the democracy of the country. We believe that the young Ohio statesman , rootless - less nnd Impetuous , honestly eager for ac- tlon , gave Impulsive voice to charges that ho himself never seriously entertained. riilladelphla Press : All thliiRs , however humble , have their uses. John J. Lcntz , a democratic representative from Ohio , wan created fcr a purpose , though hitherto that fact has been more or less concealed. Hl scurrilous and Infamous reflection on the- mo tives of thp president of the United States In withholding his Cuban meceiimo served to call out Congressman Grosvenor to grixit advantage. The splendid and crushing reply mailp by the latter v.ao at once a tribute to the , president and nn annihilation of Lcntz. As a rule , the democrats have Hunk partisanship and supported the prosU dent In this Cubnti matter as patriots. But there are some of the Jackal kind who need to be clubbed Into silence. Washington Star : How stands the Ameri can citizen In comparison with Senor do 1.01110 uho follows the Spanlnid In his Im peachment of the president at this critical time In the country'a history ? What shall bo said of him who brings charges of A grave personal nature against the prrsUent of the United States founded solely ujmn the most flagrantly Irresponsible gutter gteslo ? What la to bo produced by It but so much upon which the enemies of the United States abroad may feed ? Who will bD the first to snap It up but the Spaniards themselves ? Who will point to It meet triumphantly as cxciflrniatory of all that ho himself has said but Honor de Lome , who , for n similar offense , had to pack his trap * nnd leave ? SAI1 > IX I'MIX. Detroit Journal : "I am tojd that she Is descended from kings. " "Not now. She- used to l > p , but her tieo- plu arc much reduced la ulruumstuucu ! ) . Chicago Tribune : "What's the latest about the war ? " "Ilaug the war ! " "Say , It's your 'kind of fellows that's v keeping the country In susj > eti e , b.amo yen ! " Cincinnati Kuqulror : "They ain't enough pudding to go round , " the waitress s.ild. hoarsely. "Tell the rest of "em as they come , " raid the landlady , "that It Is Sp.inl h sauce. Then they'll refuse It. " Cleveland Plain Dealer : "What a long , 1 thin bead Jltnson has. Hasn't be ? Louies * as If he 1ml piiHhed It under a. bureau for u collar button. " Somcrvl'.lc Journal : Xcd I mot Miss Up- -to-Dato yesterday , and didn't llnd her In credulous. Shu swallowed cvciy thing / said. Jack-What did you say ? Ned-Ice cream soda. Washington Star : "Willie Olggs Is rp- Knrded as tlie ( lower of the family , " salil Maud. "Perhaps , " rejoined Sfanilo , "that ex plains why wo so frequently he.ir him al luded to by the men as a 'blooming1 guy. ' " W.VHIUOU OF TUB ( I. 31. II. Demer 1'csl , Back In t'nc days of sixty-one his auto matic tonpuo In sharp demands for bloody war with en ergy was swung : He ached to amble to the front , a deadly gun in hand , And with the foeman's ruddy gore baptize thu southern land , And when at last the summons came for men to do and die He found 'ills stack of courage chips wan quite n number shy , Hut well ho played Ills warlike hand he had u pull , you see And got a proud position in the M. D. All through the long and bloody war he stood right nt hm post. And dealt out clothing and supplies unto the battling host , And , though the roar of cannons from a distance smote Ills ear , Ills aetlons demonstrated that he never felt a fear. He was a sinew of tlio war , a powerful one , too , For If ho save not grub to t'neni what could the soldiers do ? And thus he battled for the 'causa with true fidelity Right at his post of honor In the II. D. And when t'no bloody war was o'er , back to his home ho came , Upon his commissary brow the laurel 1 wreath of fame , \ And since In every great parade he Is on hand , of course , Dressed In the finest uniform and on. the tallest Viorse. Upon him every eye Is bent with bright admiring glnnco As with the gleaming spurs ho makes his charger snort nnd prance , While In the rear the boys who marched with Sherman to the sea Keep step and guy the hero of the thoM. M. D. Now once again his eager cars engulf the sounds of war , And once again his fearless voice Is crying out for gore , And once again he'd raise his arm with courage tried nnd true And dish up coffee , beans and things unto the boys In blue , Amid the commissary stores , by patriot valor swayed , He'd slice up bacon for the boys with trusty , KleamitiR blade , For that Is war enough for him , Just Ills Vilm to u T. This non-blood-spllllng warrior of the Q > M. D. must be too late. " Pliny. Don't put off getting your Spring Suit. It is ready for you here ready in a few minutes. How long would the custom tailor keep you waiting for it ? "We can save you not only the fortnight that the tailor would take , but half the price that he would ask as well. Isn't that worth while. We have as large an assortment of patterns from which to se lect as he has to offer , and indeed , if you prefer it , we will make you a suit to measure , but in any event , a suit to fit. There is no reason for doing so , however , unless you are beyond the am ple range of sizes and shapes that we always have in stock in our ready-to-wear garments.