April 8, 1000. Polished in Society Versed in War (CopyrlKht, 1!M0. !y Huth Kimball Gnnllnor.) WASHINGTON, April 7.-Of nit tho Iwenty-nino nntloiw represented by tho diplomatic corps nt Wnshlngton only eight havo paid our government tlio compliment of Including ofllccra of tho army and navy In tho staffs of their embassies and lega tions. Flvo ICuropenn nrmlos aro at present represented nt Washington, and Germany, COLONEL A. H. LEE BRITISH MIL1TA Husslu, Franco and Japan havo sent naval attaches, Tho military attache Is no now thing at tho capital, but tho coming of tho "llrst naval attacho Is a matter of very recent history, and was a token of tho Interest awakened In tho great and growing naval powers of tho world by tho exploits of our shipe. Tho duties of a military or naval attacho aro not onerous, and tho layman has tho vaguest possible Idea of his mission. Tho minister or ambassador Is understood to bo engrossed In affairs of state, but tho attacho seems to havo nothing to do but attend assiduously to social dutlce and lend thu gllltor of gold-laced uniform and gay decorations to an occasional stato enter tainment. Ho Is always young, anyway tho right side of mlddlo ago, and ho is usually a dancing man, or at least a dining man. Ho Is In great demand by ambitious hostesses, and his namo Is on tho dinner lists of tho socially great. So ciety is, Indeed, a part of his duty, and no man not perfectly fitted to mako a favorably Impression In Washington Is over sent hero as a military or naval attacho, for' ho Is expocted to add to tho social priHtlgo of tho legation to which ho Is at tached. Sorlrly .Not tin Only Duty. Hut attention to socloty Is by no means all his duty. Thero aro a great many things ill American army and navy affairs which foreign governments like to know about and it is precisely these things that It Is tho business of tho attacho to learn, though ho In no sense of tho word a spy. Almost ev ery foreign nation has secret moana of In formation concerning our fortlllcatlos nnd our a r amnion U, but military and naval at taches do not deal In secrets. An army of ficer recently stated hoforo tho house com mltteo of military affairs, whilo a bill tor tho reconstruction of Port Hamilton, at Now York, was ponding, that plans of tho fort and tho surrounding works wore in tho pos session of foreign war ouiccs and It Is known that tho Spanish authorities had many maps of southern coast fortifications, which oven tho Innocent amateur pho tographer Is forbidden to snap his camera at. Such Information as this, however, Is ob tained through channels less olllclal than tho attache. Tho attaches aro hero to sco only what tho government officially permits them to see. They visit shipyards and array posts and mako Investigations of mothoda of transporting troojs, of victualling armies and of supplying fuel to tho navy. Thoro Is very llttlo that a military or naval at tacho wants to know that tho department! 'at Washington do not furnish him evory facility for learning. His work Is open and abovo board and tho position Is ono that Is almost always conferred as a reward for srmo especially meritorious service. In con soiiuonco tho military and naval attaches aro tho very cream of tho diplomatic corpi and a flnor body of men could hardly bo found tho world around. MonI Wlilcly Known II lie In-. Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Lee of the Hrlllsh embassy Is, no doubt, tho most widely known of tho military attaches, nnd a better liked man cannot ho found In all Washington. Although ho Is only a year or two past his 30th birthday, Colonel Leo aaMHN ..aYaaVlaaYaVW jH IBiiw .aaaaavaaaaaav 9aaaataaaBKav ivaaaaaaaaV IBv'. (Im aaaaw Kfl lAHrSLlftk adaaaLav has already had a career brilliant enough to Katlsfy a soldier of twice his years. Hi1 wan cemml.HHloncd a second lieutenant ! the royal artillery nt 20, and went out t i Hong Kong as adjutant of tho llong Kong volunteers. Ho was stnft olllcer of the coast defense school on the Isle of Wight from to 1S93, when he came over to HY ATTACHE. Canada as profess r of tactics at tho Hoyal Military collego at Kingston. Ho camo from Kingston nt tho beginning of tho Spnnlsh Amorlcan war to Join our army in Cuba ns British military nttneho. Ho has written several magazine articles on tho Cuban cam paign, but tho men who woro with hliu down thero say ho h.is left tho best part of his oxperlenco untold. Ho showed himself In Innumerable Instances to bo both bravo and kind of heart. All tho day of tho El Caney engagement ho wns with General Chaffco, nnd under flro for a great part of tho time. Ho himself tells that ho Imitated tho ser pent's mothod of travel In making his way fiom ono part of tho lino to another. Onco In tho course of tho dny ho camo upon nn Amcilcan soldier, a mero boy, who had lain out In tho burning sun, desperately wounded, for hours. Ho wns almost un conscious, but ho roused himself ns the young olllcer drew near, to ask If ho woro a surgeon. Bullets woro spattering every where about, but tho Englishman forgot nil about them, and went tenderly to work to dross tho soldier's wounds ns best ho could. Tho boy died In his nrms, hut not without a fervent "God bless you," for tho holp which had como too late. A group of attaches from half n dozen Europenn armies watched together tho charge un San Juan hill. Some of them said It was foolhardy to attempt It. Somo of them said It was madness. Thoy were nil learned In tho science of war, and tho toxt hooks nowhero rccommcuded tho charging of an entrenched position by dis mounted cavalry without bayonets. They shook their heads and prophesied many things. Leo alono was silent. Ho said nothing till tho lino had gono up and up, and the American Hag glenmcl In tho sun from tho blockhouse at tho top of tho hill. Then ho turned to his fellow attaches and took off his hat. Friendly lo A nut I en. "Gentlemen," ho said, "this Is a great day for tho Anglo-Saxon." That speech Is tho keynote to tho wholo man. Ho Is a kinsman of tho Lees of Vir ginia; ho haH married very recently, too, an Amerlcnn girl, nnd his ono great hobby Is an Anglo-Saxon alliance. Ho lets no chnnco slip to further friendly relations botweeu Englnnd nnd America, nnd only hl3 Intlmatu friends know how many ar ticles ho has written on tho subject, for thoy appear anonymously. Ho recclvod his commission as lieutenant colonel In January, 1899, In recognition of his services in Cuba. Among all tho nlno or ten uniforms Colo nel Leo's rank obliges him to possess, ho prizes nono so much as tho bedraggled khaki coat ho woro In Cuba. It hangs In his "den," and ho tronsurcs tho canteen nnd battered tin cup that go with It moro than ho docs tho gorgeous snbrotacho which dangles from Ills belt on stato occasions. It Is a dazzling thing, that sahrotacho, or mounted officer's pockot. It fairly blazes with gold laco. Tho royal nrms nro em broidered on It In red nnd gold, tho figures standing out nn Inch and moro from tho black background. Tho artillery arms aro worked below tho Hon nnd unicorn, with tho mottoes, "Ublquo" nnd "Quo fus et gloria ducunt " Colonel Leo, with his snhrotnche, bis heavily laced uniform and his cocked OMAHA I LLTSTIi AT I I) 111313. hat of black beaver with tho pltitno of white nnd scarlet. Is as striking a llguro as one can Hud even on a gala day In Wnshlng ton. Hy way of amusement, Colonel I.oo col lects autographs and r el lea of Napoleon Ho possesses Napoleon's own pistols, with tho case originally inado for them. They aro of the long lllntlock pattern, perfectly plain, except for an e.iUinlto Medusa's head In repousso silver on tho butt. They havo been an heirloom In his family since the days of his grandfather, who was In the diplomatic service nnd In Paris when the allied sovereigns entered the city, after Waterloo, t'nllko tho military attaches of MMaaKaW rav. JaaaL. 4 V aamavaNatiaVilt?awaaaaa h WHf BflLaaaH tl''' ' aa&VHI I aaaaaaB CAPTAIN V1QNAL, PUENCH NAVAL ATTACHE. other countries, Colonel Leo wears no ordira or decorations of any kind. lllllltlMOIIII'Nt In II (ilTIIIIIII. Tho handsomest man among tho military and naval attaches nt Washington Is Llcu tennnt Commander von Hobcur-Paschwitz, tho naval attacho of tho Gorman embassy. Ho Is as typically German as tho kntsor himself, and loyally combs his moustache In tho very military fashion his sovereign Invented. Commander von Honour was with our army In Cuba and watched tho sea fight off Santiago from tho ship Seguranca, on board which thoy spoko eight languages that day, for thero woro two Russians, two Japanese, two Englishmen, two Germans, an Austrian, a Norwegian and a French man, all attaches, on tho dock. Tho lieu tenant commander says It was groat fun to hear tho bullets lly, ns ho did hear thorn when ho wont on shoro to bo with tho land forces In tho engagements which followed tho sea victory, but thero aro thoso who toll of acts of kindness shown by him to wounded soldlors, and of othor things more than ordinarily bravo, tho merest roforonco to which sets tho handsomo officer to blush ing llko n boy. Ono of tho correspondents, who was with tho army, relates mat on mo dny of tho battlo of El Caney, as ho sat, tired to death, by tho sldo of tho sun-bakod road, making coffeo In an old tomato can, Von Hobeur-Paschwltz camo riding along on a woo-begono army horso. Ho va3 cov ered with dust. Ills fnco was scnrlot with heat. Ho had a bullot holo through his cap, but ho was no erect ns If ho wero on tho bridge of olio of tho kaiser's men-of-war at a nnval parade. Ho stopped when ho saw tho coffeo nnd his mouth" wntcred nt tho aroma of It. Ho had emptied his canteon hours before for tho rolief of a thirsty soldier with a Mauser bullet through his shoulder. Ho looked at tho tomato cau longingly. SOIll Of Polllflll'HN. Tho correspondent offered him a drink. Tho German was tho soul ot politeness. Ho was nenrly dead for a tasto of tho coffeo, but ho couldn't think of robbing tho c rre bpondont. Ho would bo very grateful, ho said, for a doml-tasso a doml-tasso out of nn old tin can by tho sldo ot a broiling hot Cuban road in wartime! Tho correspondent held up tho tin, tho officer seized It and tho Imperturbability of tho German navy went to pieces In tho Instant. Ho drank nnd drnnk nnd drnnk, and when ho handed tho can back If thero was any doml-tasso nrywhoro about tho placo it was tho amount of fluid left In tho bottom of tho can. Then ho dismounted nnd sat himself down In tho dust, In all tho tarnished glory of his uni form, and went to work to help mako moro coffeo. Lloutcnant Commander von Hebour raschwitz was a momber of tho gcnoral staff In IJorlln hoforo ho was sent to Wash ington and has been decorated on several occasions. His cnrllest decoration was ecu forrwl on him by tho king of Swcdon, who camo to visit a training ship of which ho wns In command when It touched nt Stock holm. Ah alde-do-cnmp to tho grand duke of Weimar, at tho opening of tho Kaiser Wllholm canal, ho was decorated for his sorvlces, Somo of his badges of honor aro (Continued on Pago Sixteen ) I fjtwfflw win hhwiih HiiuitiH (iumwiMUimwmnwBTOiffir P ye shodlph 1 , 1 and briWjPH llllffllllllllM i mi i a m nmTii Piii w rm a i 1 GLYCERIN SOAP An American fh?cf act. MAKES IT mm WONDERFUL BOOK ON HYPNOTISM FREE TO MINUMl ON llAItni lmial to iirmiotum lltftit u tiinill family (rod 1 1 r irrntlhr tliu mnlli'iira of an oirra home lis I'iMnittf rtij(t from Km vi) In iniy from Ih'U ( ett'P' Now (ill tin iwenMon for ilo iplUlltitf litUKhUr Again It U thu hmihn for thrilling nlr It U turn hy turn rMlouhnis, imltiillo iiumiirmit mix I imaur iij 'I lie uim p'tlnli i I'llnMu It ilr llir croMtUuf ui.ln Wlini vt r cu lit iiiiucii i noil v iimkt (Hi ntv r inm t I aiKiw ion how una ciin ih iiniif i in nnoiu (-phth i i umh-h 111 Mil KfV to (ho u rvm uj lH-"ollltl 'I III U llll rligitlit trfxitt whlrli I lilivi iiiMiIm- In Die liileroiic.riiiv Wuv I 01 VI; ! f AH A Y I'lll.K Von Imvi onl tu rn. ..r lihy n-tti r ir Miiut Nut, IK ''fill I-H' 'l -'out Hlil Ji'i ll I'f-riKUil will kUi- mm lcMuro unl profit You w III It-urn in ii In. in A o mm)UI Oil" invlt r iou hiiI wmi.ltr working hiI (h' flu lit tun of the lit I'lioili 'rutin I - ilium) lo ion Tiu tii'iioliiuiiit of Un- i li'li'i- an- -iilitlot(iiit mi l i-scrllHl 1 In iu.1 ti v ui' nf Hmihokmii m rHonui aikI iiiiiii nn full (Iim uhhi iI You nn- lo'-l of in rrl uoiia (t) inw -int;ttliiii hii I Ih'aUiik. You nn furiillii A wllh nuiiK'nniv i'imiii' of l i'liillny rni-ni on (tit' mnitc nti'l 1 " ith i.lciun, on i-ti-ry tK to innkt '! nr tln H'lmlruldn iicrljt I ini A I I'.l-l V" TIIK HOOK IS l-'KKK 'rlt for a foj.y nt tmov uul von will leurn how to wmheulili wraith ami fame A'llrrai I'ruf. A. II AllltAltr Uril 13, J.rlMin, Jtkh. Jnlian ilo Arnica. Savon lieittifrlcti li'Artilcn. Arnleit 7,uhn Halfv. The Only International Dentifrice. TheStandurd for 30 yeurs. I'roHiTvi'H ami hIiIUmih tlm tci'tli, HtruiiRtlieiiH lllll UUIIIH -nVM'Ktl'IIHtllU liriMth. 2JC ut All DruKK'ts. C II.STHONd &CO.,lrnps.,Clilciiio,U.S.A. Brass Band MBiriiiiii'Mi. irriiiiiv, 1 iiiiiinii", A ni'ii Ic. Writ" fin ratitlnu, lift llluotr.iiloiiu, Hitti it kIvi.1 In. (oniintlon fur munU'lnniunl new tMn.l., LYON & MEALY, flil .lnm Mt CIIIOAGO. 1 i im 1 i n ! in mimi ihm imp ii hi -fln -T mm Ro Hiitmniii'i"ii!'!ii!inliH DEALERS SELL IT to nnuim anl witrruin we in-oMir it will uo ii HAVE ROOT PRINT IT' n. 1 moot rititer BOOK BINDER BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURER 1609 HOWARD STREET ILL! OMAHA 1 UWANTA Snow White Cotton Down SECTIONAL MATTRESS, I'nr Md.iry llmlm mnl iiclilnu hnrk, liny tli" inattinaK Unit iiiivit pack, Ih to wirtlmiH l.f0 In nnn plio'ii if 11,00, llttT lliau 11 li.nr Hair will pack, ci,i luun tt III null hair altraiix luntliHii'iiltim 11 m i cr ilm . Hair I -it animal nrlulii, itml may carry ilUoaMi, l uilnii ,uii U vi(utnhlH lllirn. clnan, tntt uml liualtliful. I'rululit propula If not too dlntunt. tienil for calulouuu. FORT WAYNE FURNITURE CO.. Fort Wayne, Ind 4