0 TITE OLATIA DATIjY BEEt "WEDNESDAY, MAKCIl 5, 1002. THE omaiia Daily Bee. E. ROSE WATER. EDITOR. . PUBLISHED EVERT MORNING. Trnua nic aiTHRCRIPTlON. 4rv.11. xj ,..... u...h. v.r. .14.00 I f niiy n and Sunday, one' Year "ilu-trated Bee, One Veer punoAy ee, one ir 1 so I nueV&itury k.Vom riar" hk l.IVl- Rl.il lit CARRIER. ' I Ft"? i lhZ lund.'V. 52r wiVr.:::i lt.Hr Bee (including- Sunday), per week..i7o (wr.hoTs'undaVi.'pVr weeklioo fcvemna ue ync.uains ouuu, ,. . rniiVn'l''V'iV.'a..'iritieii' indeiivery I bouid t addrts.ed to city circulation V-1 paTtmPIl t. I iih it r.a. - - I omana Tne Bee wuiiaing. I Honlh Omaha City Hall iiuiiamg, x wen- tv.Hfth nrl M Rtrept. Council Blurts 10 Pearl Street ChtcaaoltrW Unity Building. New JTork Temple Court. .Waahlngtun (nil Fourteenth Street. ' r rOHHKKPONDENCE. torw ihouid T be .ddre-iedT omah iiee. Editorial Department. I . . . .. A v.L.i....l.t.Vr. .,d remittance. ahouM be dureeeed: The Bee puoiiehina company, maha. remittances. 1 pM. t vto1?' Only s-cent stamps accepted ia payment of Em.hVTete the bee PLBLJBHiwa COMPAQ. statement OB CIRCULATION. ; I "oeorai R Thuckf .!c"ta?yU oTht Bee A'UOJiBnwa; company, veins uuii . . v. ... ays that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Pally, Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during tbe month of February, 190 was as fol lows: 1.. .. 80.1O0 8O.220 16. uiiuin 16 ,. 80140 1 t 80.S30 4 80.T20 t SO,4HO 30,040 1 30,210 t SO.HOO S0.250 10 .80,100 U 80.84C U 80,230 13 80.14W II 80,420 . .80,380 I 20... 21... 22... 23... 24... 25... 24... 71... 28... SO '120 80,iio 80,120 can a rvjk I ao!4To ....sotoo ...ao,o7o aolooo I Xas unsoid and 'returned coDles"" 10124 "" '- Zl S2S, rvtV;:::::::::::::::::::22 GEO. B. tzbchuuk, Suhscrlbed In'mv presence and sworn toi nerore me mis win oay oi r XVJ tSeai.J notary ruouo. On bis next visit Prince Henry will not be satisfied to go home without tak ing in Omaha. One prosperous year of the term which President Roosevelt has been called to serve haa elapsed. Prince Uenry saw plenty of water iwhen he was In the east and south. Jv'ow It is Milwaukee's turn. Prince Henry may be an early riser. but the Kaiser will have to get up still earlier to get ahead of Uncle Sam. tlon to the prince open the door of Ger many wider to our American meats? If Lincoln Is the moral paradise its bards sing It, why should Carrie Na- tion waste time in its sanctified pre- clncts? Fort Crook Is about to welcome back the old Twenty-second Infantry and Omaha will join In extending a cordial greeting. . Banks that can carry school warrants on & per cent Interest ought to be willing to pay at least some rate of Interest on deposits of county money. The United States supreme court has held the Illinois law which prohibits op- tlon trading to be constitutional. The aupreme court Is evidently not well equipped for drawing fine lines. A member of the German Relchstas- has delivered himself of a screed on the I Visit pf Prince Henry to this country. it is comtorung to Know that all the Asslnlne legislators are not ln the Anierl- can congress. The Turkish government has denied liability for the kidnaping of MIbs Stone, .even u u were possioie to convince the orte mat ne ia nauie.lt would require aoveral years to get the bill liquidated, If it follows the usual course of Turkish uuuuuieniu; Aa waa to have been expected, the usual number of notoriety-seeking pul pit pounder, have fractured the. atmos phere Ja Imitation of Congressman Wheeler's denunciation of Prince Jlenry islt But the prince will con sider the source. Sir Thomaa Lipton savs he la wllHn that Americans should take his yacht nd race it with an American crew against Columbia, but expresses the opinion that the boat will be defeated just the same. Sir Thomas haa the merit of knowing when he is beaten and the candor to own It n A report to the British Parliament by the War omce states that American Biuiea are greatly admired. Klther the America u mule has become more do- die under the influence of the South African climate or the new owners have neon cautious about approaching the fcuslnetut end of the animal. The president of the British Assocla- tlon of Chambers of Commerce expresses hUiiself aa being in no way fearful of ment bonds, aggregating1 $1,333,100. are business, the trouble arising from the attainment or starve, there would be more tbe United States becoming a serious not debts of the city, but of the partlcu- fact that the magtstratea usually en- hope tor his future, leas fear of his laps fomoetltor In thrt tMm.lnn-iiiiit,. t... ! imnmwnuni iiMH,. ..1,1.1. rnn lnwor mhnliik of riM thin th Ing Into barbarism. The fact that an In- albly It may never be, but past experience ahould teach him that any task this country seta Itself In real earnest to do Is generally accomplished. Give the local pro-Boer organisation credit for persistence in trying to project Its cause to the f rout at every oppor- tunity. With the same amount of en- ergy devoted to providing relief for the vicums ot tne ttvt war as It aiaplays In trying to make political capital out! at the Rur inUrnrtiinM. nnwli mivn 1 .. . ' would be accompyshed for the cause of amanlty. TOPROJton amsrivan bbippixq. I The bill before the senate propose to I promote the building up of an American merchant marine for our foreign com- tnerca bv rovernment aid In the form I w of subsidy. It wwiUmrnlnt-s. m nolnted ont l(y genator Frye, the application of luo pnnecure policy 10 iu buivk,uK u I tereata. which, the Maine senator said haa tuion irltlunt nnhrtinn tnr ftftv I years. One of the earliest acts of the nirrpi. In 178. was to legislate for the protection of American shipping imtvinff diwrtmlnatin duties on Aa imm.rt.ui in 'nmiim voeeoie Tin. I i .i. . v,. ,. L IClOiaUVU VM UIC11.UIUI. iuh I rillt? KrPW I M I ) II 1 1 V HU11 1L LUn IR'UIUU UK 1 I i 1 1 u . . iv. . i i .. i . ... . , I - i ol me citu war to per ceui ur mom ui i our exports and Imports were carried In I American vessels. - That policy cannot be appUed now, because It would con- travene commercial treaties and provoke reuiiatlon on the part of foreign gov- ernments. The free shin policy urged by the opponents of protection being out of tJie qUe8tlon, since it would serl- ously Injure If not utterly destroy our Kreat shipbuilding Industry, the alter- native, if we are to have a merchant marine for the foreign , carrying trade not u, to depend npon the TeB. I Bei ownerg of Europe, la to promote the building .up. of such a marine by gov- eminent and as other maritime nations do. - President Mc Klnley said: "Next in advantage to having tbe thing to sell Is I . V . I. . I I. uuro iuq vuiiveuicutjQ lm tair ib wf 17 8o,iothe buyer. We must encourage our I 18 80,370 1 mo-hnnt marine. V must have mom I . , . 1 ... . I Sn'P8' X Ut'J UlUHl KB UUUer U Allien- I can flag, built and manned and owned I h Amrrinni. These will not onlv he I " I profitable in a commercial sense; they will be messengers of peace and amity I wherever they go." With Judicious en-1 couragement on the part of the govern-1 ment there Is reason to believe that in the course of ten years there would be constructed a merchant marine that would be eaual U every demand and wmca wouia ue a most important wp- niomonf in n- naw aa la th nurohnnt mJlPine of Orat Rrlraln to the navv of " " . . . . .. I xnis matter is or me greatest import- ance to our commercial progress and no section of the country has a monopoly of Interest in it An American mer- chant marine would be no less beneficial to the agricultural producers of the west and south than to the manufacturers who have passed the civil service exam- have recovered from his schrecklicher kat of the east and the middle atates. lnation. The good faith of the govern- aenjammer and has resumed his place In Our present dependence upon for- ment Is involved in this matter and if rrai8Su"l-hringofrmin eign snip owners is extremely ex- pensive. At a conservative estimate it costa our people $150,000,000 year ana nearly the wnoie or that a year and nearly the whole of that Bm goes abroad, only a very smaU part or it being expended in this country, I It requires no great Intelligence to un- derstand that If this large sum were kept at home and expended for ship- building material, labor and supplies, it would be a material benefit to numerous I interests.. But this is not all,, for this I dependence places us a,t a lsadvan- tage in competition with commercial ri vals that have a merchant marine. It is unquestionable that a country whoso trade Is carried on under ita own flag has a very decided advantage. Our experience with South America has dem onstrated this. The outlook for the proposed leglsla- tlon, appears to be more favorable than ever before, it Is the intention of Sen- ator rye to push the bill In the senate and while the opposition will undoubt- edly f"1 discuss It, it is possible that vote on lt 'i11 be reached within a reasonable time. If It should pass the senate there Is no doubt of Its prompt passage Dy tne bouse. Omaha s municipal DtBT. clt comptroller has come to the rront t0 Justify the misleading state- """"" vl uullu'1 " iuucuwuucts, ""'i" have been circulated out of his office to tne aetnment of the city. While the uuiuuui ul uie municipal ueui ia not at I present a live Issue, the damage inflicted by the circulation of exaggerated state- I ments makes It of constant concern to our citizens. The fictitious and mislead- Ing figures to which The Bee has several times adverted are (1) the grand total of S6.681.8tJ2. found on a card nurnort- ing to be an abstract of aU bonds and i-uuimu- vuuuuium, inKKuiuer ox, ibw, abd (2) the total of $6,S14,068, used for comparative purposes in one of the COT ernment publlcatlona. As to the first the comptroller seeks to explain that while it is not a correct statement of the municipal debt yet It 0UKnt not to misleading. The fact uowever sUtement has misled nearly every ono who seen It is the 1)684 rnment that it ought never to ve been issued in such form. To givo the Vn that coupons for interest 'Bl tTeu " couniea aa l,art ot tne cit7 Present obligation la utterly Inexcusable, especially when it dd more than fl.OOO.OOO of fictitious debt to the actual outstanding bonded inaeDteanesa to the second statement it Is equally unfair to Omaha, although it In- eludes the school district as well as the cltT- To one not familiar with the facta It would indicate that Omaha had far exceeded the statutory limits nn Ita Wl Indebtedness In the first place, the apeclal assess- they have been issued. These bonds, I moreover, are merely ' accommodations I tor the owners of the Property benefited. I who. Instead of being required to pay for the pavement or aewer. aa the case may be. ln a lump sum, are by this de- I vli-e permitted to make their payments In annual Installments extendiuir over a ten yes r period. The same appllea to the warrants against unpaid special as- I seesmenta. The floatln? debt, riven at I'm turn, la I a ....raroin. uh . .r,,,. . I figures could only have been reached by Ita-klng the outstanding obligations at tie period tf thlr very maximum and add-1 Ing every claim of colorable validity. I While the outstanding warrants dcslg- nated as "general levy fund warants" I on December SL 1000. were something over 325.000. according to the books of . I the city treasurer the average for the 1(vv .,i. ion i? Bi.n.ri, ""'"""ji while the outstanding school warrants December SI. 1900. ajr irrerated t!5d.30R. the average for the year waa only $94,738. We have here In these two I Items a difference of $115,000 In favor of the city If an attempt were made to rate It where It really belonred. I Tn arid in marir nsrinm nt rieima I nrvr nain aa nn.nnff nnnr in aiai nastin. - i - . uvhwu. . n V ( mv.mm I ,i.l h Aaanui -"ceo v ucuu.uvu of floating debt Is made to Include every possible contingency. That no such rule Is applied In other dtles goes without aaylng. Yet the figures furnished for Omaha are measured up against debt statements of other cities that show only the actual matured obligations. The trouble with the city comptroller Is that he seems bent on advertising the city's debt to be just as large aa It can possibly be made to appear, whereas the interest of the city Is to have It no large than It must be. W cannot gain anything by closing our own eyes to the actual facta, but wa art the aufferera of our own folly when avery point Is stretched against us. TBS FRKSIDKXrS OBJECTION. The statement that President Roose- velt objects tothe provision of the bill creatine a oermanent census bureau klnt. .! n-n.nnt. n.r.tn. tt ujvu uiaan an icncu. cuivjn of the bureau eligible to appointment In the general service, is not surprisiDjr. Like all other friends of the merit sys- tern, tne presiaeni regaras uus provision as being unjust to those who have passed a civil service examination and are waning an opportunity to enter tne public service. These people, all over the country, have upon invitation of the government token tbe prescribed exam- iuuuu, mm uin munuin vi mc gu- i lernment that thev would receive nmtolnt- ment aa vacancies occurred. The em- nlnvM nt tho wnnii hitNi.1 n iha , , . . . :u.uireu iu mac this examination. They were appointed j on the recommendation of congressmen I and while it is undoubtedly true that they are capable, this fact does not Jus- tlfy giving them precedence of those mere is a poeaiuie way oi correcting tne i injustice on the part of congress it should be employed. Whether or not the president can do wnetner or not me president can ao this Is problematical. It is said that be win rcguiate Dy executive oraer tne ap- polntmenta under the bill, but It Is doubtful if he can entirely avoid the Injustice to which he most properly ob- Jects. If there is a way, however, tolg remedy the wrong President Roosevelt can be depended upon to apply it, though he should thereby antagonise the spoils men responsible for the injustice. TBE PANAMA COMPLICATION. The position taken by the Colombian government in regard to the proposed transfer of the property of the Panama I iinnl pomnnnv to the United Rtate In-I troduces a new complication which will delay negotiations. If it shall have no othpr effect. The action of Colombia is gald to be regurded at Washington as simply a notification on the part of that government that the canal company can- not sell Its property without paying something to Colombia for the privileges, it is pointed out that that government la not only a stockholder In the new Panama company, but also receives an I annual Davment from the canal coin- pany, hence Colombia does not propose to permit the company to transfer its property witnout a payment oi money t0 the government This is a matter entirely between Col- nmhln and rhA canal oomnanv and rinea nt immAdiatelv concern th United states, but It Is said that the greed whiCh la being shown by the Colombian government, if persisted in, may defeat th Panama nroooalHon In mnm. Tt appears probable, however, that the viA.,,. tn k. i.raa to be equally exacting ln ita financial demands, provided that route is selected tor . canaL The fact is that these I BZi-iiitharn rniiHHrat vhrtBA trait aiirtaa ata empty. ln u, proposed construction ot an Uthmlan canal by the United States an opportunity to put themselves in n excellent condition financially and as appears they are disposed to improve the chance to' the fullest extent This u quite natural, of course, but they may make the mistake of going too far ln their demands,-for anxious as the United Bute. .!. to construct an inter-oceanlc canal it will not submit to unreasonable I demands. I At nreaent neotlatlona with Colombia are at a standstill, but will soon bo re- sumed, while there have been no nego- tlations as yet with Mcaragua, i ' . Down ln Lancaster county a dispute is waging over the right of the county Judge to retain me lees paid to mm lor performing marriage ceremonies. It I seems to be the old fiffht over attain be- tween the ministers and the magistrates aa to which ahould do the matrimonial ministers. The marriage feea do not cut much figure officially, but on general I principles public officers should be con - fined to a fixed income and all feta go into the treasury like other putUc dues. .: I A biu Ba 1ea introduced ln the NeW Jersey legislature to repeal the charter ' Northern Securities company on the ground that it waa Incorporated lo I mat state to eoauie tue cumpuiea to violate the laws of the states ln which I It mteratea. While the Jeraev con - 1 " " . I science is toocnea witn mis sense or I jusuce it mignt repeu ma geuerai u. - corporation Uwi of that itate which ara Intended to Invito companies to lncorpo- rate there In order to enjoy privileges other states will not grant ....... ... a. After all the noise over tne warrant brokerage business, the school board has andnrawl hT nnnnlmniia vote the action of Ita finance committee In arranging to consolidate the cashing of the employes salary warrants. It la fair to say thst the board would not be unanimous on this proposition If there were anything in " tnat in any way mierrerea wiui me right of employes to do aa they please with what they earn "by their services. - I no rewiiirTinn rr nriMi nr (WTm r iiff-nt. . . . . . . . . . . Ing lamps under the proposed new con tract Is expected to enable the city to extend Ita lighting area. The additional lamps, however, should not be all placed on the outskirts of the City, aa there are several dark corners In' the business cen ter that should have, attention. People with dark ways seek dark streets and good street lighting Is one of the condi tions of good police protection. The local labor unions having adjusted their difficulties with . the Ak-Sar-Ben managers, would do well to smooth out the path for the coming season In all other directions as welL IX Omaha can avoid labor difficulties It la sore to enjoy a season of actJva outdoor' operations this year that will keep every working man In the building trades busy from start to finish. Leaders of Great Epochs. St. Louis Globe-Democrat Secretary Hay's grouping of Presidents Washington, Lincoln and McKinley la fur ther justified by the fact that their blrth- day .njiiveraarles occur wlthla twenty-five idays oi one asotner. Let's "Hoch" !( Cleveland Leader. While the commerce of tbe United States with Germany amounts la value to nearly t300,000.000 a year, why ahould not the JAS. False Cries of Combines. Indianapolis News. wneneyer ma aiiempv maae o eiir force the law against big corporation they !nttmate that war Is being mad on capital n is their custom to violate the law which they have construed into a privilege, neis to His Kaittin Philadelphia Press. The genial AdmlraP Evans appears to gueit. Marl Throws m. Fit. TOnfPalA Rxrjrega. w . . " . . n...MW mMn th other day a T.r8lon of the nursery tale 0f "'Little Red ' Kiainghood," in which Great Britain . was tne sweet mtis girt f114 tn" Unltd J?'. 7" HTr l"1 . ' , lon- .. ,h. writing novels and Alfred Austin Is writing poetry, we shall think twice be fore we absorb "Great Britain. 1 I'tlltal vCorastalks, Portland Oregonlon. A few days ago a company was Incor porated In Baltimore 'with a capitalisation of 810,000,000, which controla patentr. whereby fiber and celluloid can be taken by cneaD process direct from cornstalks. it will enter at once Into competition with the atrawboard trust, placing upon the ""A '"'c.1" . two comb,nmtU)n represent the tremendous rrnwth in intensified industry between the period fifty yeara ago, when atraw waa burned In the fields to get rid of it, and k. ,.,, nd., ln the sorlnr. their sub- stance having been beaten out and diffused by the storms. Capital haa many alns to f'w". I0P' no, ' 1-ower that it broui.ht to bear upon industry in ntlilx- tng waste for the comfort and convenience of mankind. EDl'CATIHO THE INDIAH. I M..i Traiaina- oa or Hear tbo Reservatioa. salt Lake Herald. I ... . .nn. t.ji.. .ha hA had ail the advantages of an elaborate education returned to hie tribe. Except for copper-coiorea ." , I highest deiree of civilisation. His .i.ti,in. wait atti fcim. hi. hair waa short and his English perfect Just a year 1 later thU Indian came to draw his rations. fZtaW-hl i could never be much as a white man, be said to the agent, "but I can be a hell of I AH Indian JJSf for ,BaUn -hoola Mr. Cannon of Illinois, who has fought many aa appropriation In hia time, but who never fought any Indians, 'i0 rftt..t eltr to educate aa Indian ln the east and then relegate him to the savagery of his tribe. Delegate Smith of Arlsona declared thlt f mn mu" d"c ?iMJ& tribes. The stand taken by Messrs. Cannon and 8mlU seems proper. Instead of spending Ur ,f. "TTT ..L"!!'",?..? th, appropriations would bs put to better use by distributing them near the homes of the students. In this wsy the other members of the tribes could have the edu- jJltlv I wouid b, hardly noticed, sad when the I "finished" student was turned out hs would I cause no shock to his people. vBut" tnJ .re,r oume " .duciUa ...aae were required to use his JJ I -tittle a bar to his recslvtag rations from 1 the government. I n ae same incentive to wdot ,nml I . !?LJV- ' ".. ,. " V. I th. bre.d of Uncu Sam alone. On the I other hnd, few fields of labor are open I to educated Indiana. Just why this should not apparent, out taa proDaoia reason Inarhha-been .oent'ia odu- ding tkem. there Is not today In tbe United States army a full-blooded India lho holds a commission; tnero are no ia -,. ., ....- . l.wvsra. or doctors. I they la say of th so-caUad Uaraed prefsaslosa. POLITICS lit TUB Fl'SIOK FOLD. Madison Mall: Thus far the names of John S. Robtasoa and Rufus A. Tawny have been mentioned aa probable candidates for nomination by the fualonlsts for congress. They are good men and well qualified for the office. Beatrice Democrat: General Victor Vlfqualn la being mentioned as a candi date for governor on tbe democratic ticket this fall. General Vifquata Is a bigger man ttan haa occupied the executive obatr for a great many years. He Is a pioneer, who has seen Nebraska grow from Ita earliest territorial existence. He Is a soldier, who baa won his medals upoa the field of bat tle, and whose services were recognised by congress. Holdrege Progress: Gubernatorial candi dacy ta Just now a virulent epldemlo In Nebraska. There ia scarcely a county In the state but has a favorite aoa whom they think would look well In the governor's chair. Republican stock seems to be most plenti ful, but the populists and democrats are also beginning to point out "good timber," some of which la reasonably tall for In stance the altltudinous John Sprecher of Colfax county. Auburn Granger: The Crete Democrat In looking about for a candidate for gov ernor saya that the one to be cnosen ahould be a platform la himself. The Idea la a good one. These dodgasted cusses whose only boast la that they "are true to party" and "stand squarely on the platform" are too often men who have but little stamina and hardly fit for-official positions. The Oranger looks with lota of suspicion upon the fellows so anxious for office that they will promise to stand by the acta of the convention, support the nominees, etc., etc, before they know who are nominated or what the declarations of principle are. Where Is the aspirant for officer Call him out and let him construct his platform, Fremont Leader: There have been a number of namea mentioned In connection with the governorship nomination by the fusion forces, especially by the republican press. They seem anxious to name the man they know would be an easy mark. It la almost a foregone conclusion that the republican gang will force the nomination of Governor Savage, the man who par doned Bartley. This It seems to us would bo a good reason for nominating C. J. Smyth, the man who successfully prose cuted Joe Bartley, while attorney general, and succeeded in placing the embezzler In the penitentiary. Ever since the young democracy organised in this state thta man haa alwaya been found la the front ranks of reformers. We will, of course, be for fusion first, then for men after, but at the present time there are few men who would represent the populist principles more fully thaa Mr. Smyth. , Holdrege Progress: The recent organi sation of a state editorial association by the democrats ahowa a wonderful "desire' on the part of the democrats to unite the reform forces of the stato a union of the democrats principally, however. An Invi tation to the populist editors of the atate to join them would not have been seriously out of the way bad the Instigators felt really desirous of uniting the reform ele meats and would have been a far greater guarantee of good faith. The Progress calls attention to thta fact, not because its editor Is a populist; or because he cares anything about the ostensible slight, but purely as a common sense proposition and tn the Interest of a harmonious union of the forces in Nebraska aa elsewhere who are striving for the same end. The demo crata cannot hope to gain anything by la noting Its press simply because the popu list party may have been wrecked through political perndy. . , ; FBRSOIVAE, NOTES. Tillman's nephew must be something of a prophet. Inasmuch aa he seems to be with out honor ln his own country. The Filipino general, Lukban, waa cap tured by the simple process of' crowding him off earth. You can do that on an Island. . Rev. Sheriff Pearson of Portland, Me.. saya that when he. waa elected there were 271 open .saloons ln the city and that now he'll give $100 to the man who can show him an open saloon there or anywhere In the countr. Two lawyers began to use some pretty sharp language toward each other In a court in Charleston, 8. C, but were quickly brought to book by Magistrate Memmin- ger, who admonished them and told them that it "was not the United States senate ln which the case waa being tried." Franklin Delano Roosevelt of Hyde Park. N. T., has Just been elected secretary of the Harvard Crimson, one of the high liter ary honors which Harvard university has to offer to ita under graduatea. Mr. Roose velt ta the president's cousin. He Is a son of Mrs. James Roosevelt. His class Is 1904. Bo great waa the demand upon members of congress for tlokets of admission to the McKinley memorial services that tbe mem bers themselves were paying $25 eaoh for the coveted pasteboards. Congressman Sibley promised five of his constituents that he would get them tlcketa and it cost him Just $125 to keep his word. The Lieutenant Strebler who captured General Lnikban, the Filipino leader, is of German birth and enlisted ln the regular army before he waa 20 yeara old. Hs waa promoted to a lieutenancy by President McKinley, being then a aergeant serving his third term. He has seen much active service, but never sustained any injury. ' SOBRIETY OR THE ROAD. Strlnsjeat Rales Aaralaat Booslaar isieag Tralaaaea. Chicago Record-Herald. Tbe adoption by the Burlington road of mors stringent rules against the use ot liquor by employes Is a movement In the Interest of public safety and good rail roadlng that will have the unqualified en dorsement of the traveling public. Tbe Burlington, ln common with most railroad corporations, had already put ln force a rigid ban on the use of Intoxicants by employes who had anything to do with the operation of trains, not only on duty, but also while off duty. This rule' haa now been extended so as to apply to em ployee la all departments, including track bridge and building departments. Tbe new book of rules lust Issued by the com pany contains this paragraph: "Tbe use of Intoxicants by employes while oa duty Is prohibited. Their habitual use or the frequenting of places where they are sold la sufficient cause for dls missal." The reaaona for the promulgation of this sweeping rule are obvioua. No service la the whole range of Industrial activity sue tains such vital relation to the public aa the operation of passenger trains and no service presents so many elements of danger. The fatalities on the seas and the great lakes are email In number com' pared with those on tbe railways of this country. With all tha modera aafety ap pllancea railroading atlll depends for Its safety upoa men with clear, heads snd alert minds. - The trainman whose brala la muddled with whisky becomes a menses te bun dreds of Uvea and to the property at transportation system. Tha rigors of railroading present unusual temptations to alcoholic stimulation, particularly In winter, but the aafety of the public de mands the employment of men who have Jaa power to resist this tetontaUoa. ROtTND AB017T HKW tork. Ripples oat tbo Carreat of Mfo ta the Metropolis, It Is quite evident that Mrs. Coll Is P. Huntington, widow of the late railroad magnate, did not Join la the protest of American women to the secretary of the treasury against the annoying searching of baggage of foreign tourists by customs cjn- cere at tbe port ot New York. Mrs. Hunt ington returned from a trip abroad a few daye ago. She had twenty pieces of bag asse packed to the covers. Being an experienced traveler, ahe knew what was coming to Vncle 8am and met bis In- qulsltors with a smile snd a bunch of keys. Mora than that she handed the cus toms officers a paper showing the value ot her purchases to ba $76,000. The paper waa found to be correct a duty of $31,191.43 waa levied and paid on tha spot In cash. The collection Included gowns. Jewels, sliver, paintings, btio-a-brao and three mag nificent fur coats, two of Persian lamb, heavy, long and made of the finest skins, and a suit of Russian aable, coat muff and collarette, constituting what la said to be tha most costly set of furs In the United States. The Persian furs were appraised at $3,000 each and the Russian at $4,000. According to the official survey made by tha New York Board of Fire Underwriters, the Park Avenue hotel was tar from fire proof. It la rather lata now to make such an admission, but It ought to spur on the proper authorities to punish all those whose negleot may have contributed to the lamentable calamity that haa cost nineteen valuable Uvea. The report ahowa that the building was not only of "ordinary con struction," but described eome glaring de fects, such aa "interior partitions of lath and plaster." single (not double) floors, and a hollow Iron front That auch a atructure, having an area of 81,600 square feet devoted to publlo purposes should pass aa "absolutely flreproof,M and for that reason not within the scops of lawa govern ing the equipment of buildings with fire escapes and extinguishing facilities, is the question that the otty authorltlea alone must answer. On the evening of March 7 a number of cttlxens of New York who have attended German universities have arranged to give Kommers for Prince Henry. It Is expected that over 1,000 will bs present The af fair will take place at the Arlon clubhouae. A salamandar la always a feature of a Kommera," reports the New York Trjbune, Those who take part alt at long tablea. At a signal from the toaatmaater they rise. Thi toastmaster saya, 'Exercltum aalaman dre,' and the guests fill their glasses. The toastmaster then says, alowly, 'Biblte elns. swel, drel." At the first count the guests raise their glasses, at the second they drain them and at the third they bring them down on tbe table with a bang. Then they rub them over the table with a rotary motion, and this noise constitutes the real music ot the Kommers." At the "Captains of Industry" luncheon to Prince Henry, the Evening Post re lates, one of the hosts ssked the con ventional question: "How do you . like America?" The prince ln a burst of aallor-llke con fidence replied: "Oh, I'm having the time of my life. I don't count for much over there, you know. They only use me to send to funerals." Collier's Weekly announces Its removal Into ita new home on West Thirteenth street, where It haa surrounded Itself with the finest equipment and conveniences that modern skill could supply snd means com mand. The new print shop waa a year under way. It haa facings of granite and glass, 8,000 ateel beams and acres of floor space. All this represents the Weekly's forward march ln four yeara. There are four acres of working room for tha mech anical and editorial energy necessary tb get out an edition of Collier's. On the first floor there ia an acre ot presses mastodons, all. Second floor, an acre of smaller presses and hundreds of machines that all but talk. Third floor, an acre ot handsomely furnished offices. And in the basement an acre of engines, boilers dyna moa and books. To make room for tbe new Collier plant five tenements were torn down on West Thirteenth street and nine on Little West Twelfth street. The three atorlea and basement comprise 140,000 square feet of floor space. This is an area equal to nearly two and a half city blocks, it Is twice the ground space occupied by Madison Square garden. And It Is one-half the floor room In tha government printing office at Washington, the largest printing establishment In tbe world. And to this huge building four more acre stories will be added aa soon as the pub' Ushers can catch their breath. TWO PERORATIONS. Closlas; Words of the . MeKlatey and the GarBeld Ealoa-lea. Kansas City Star. It Is a curious coincidence that on Feb ruary 27, 1882, and on February 27, 1902, a secretary of atate of a murdered prest dent delivered a eulogy of hia dead chief before the houses of congress. Mr. Hay la primarily a writer. Blaine waa first ot all a speaker. It la Interesting at thta time to compare the peroration of Hay, pub lished yesterday, with that of Blaine. Here ia the conclusion of ths eulogy of McKIn ley: "There la not one of ua but feela prouder of hia native land because the august fig ure of Washington presided over Its be ginnings; no one but vows It a tenderer love because Lincoln poured out hia blood for It; no ono but must feel his devotion for hia country renewed and kindled when be remembers how McKinley loved, revered and served it, showed ln bis Ufs how a cltlsen should live, and In bis last hour taught ua bow a gentleman could die." Tha oration on Garfield ended with the famous passage: "Aa tha end drew near hia early crav Ing for tha aea returned. Tha stately man sion of power had been to htm tha weari some hospital of pain, and bs begged to be taken from hia prlaon walla, from Ita op pressive, stifling air, from its homeleaaness and Ua hopelessness. Gently, silently, tha leva of a great people bora tbe pale sufferer to ths longed-for healing of the aea, to live or to dls, as God should will, within sight of ths heaving billows, within sound of its manifold voices. With a wan. fevered face, tenderly lifted to the cooling breeie. he looked out wistfully upon tbs ocean's changing wonders; on Its far aatls; on Its restless wavea, rolling shoreward to break and die beneath ths noonday sua; oa the red clouda of evening, arching low to the horizon; on tha serene and shining path way of the atars. Let ua think that bis dying eyea read a mystic meaning which only tha rapt and parting soul may know. Let us believe that ln the alienee ot tha receding world hs beard tha great waves breaking on a farther shore and felt al ready upon bis wasted brow ths breath ot the eternal morning." The first of thee passages ia evidently ths work of an essayist the second of aa orator. Tha words of Mr. Hay are com paratively eold and formal. Those of Blaine pulsate with Ufa and amotion. Tha dtr fereace between the two ahowa why one man was ths Idol of his party while the other, with ability as great has never aroused popular enthusiasm. ELECTIO OP SENATOR. Peaalar Bentlateat Toleed r 1e Heoae of Repreaeatatlves. Chicago News. The house baa again passed practically without opposition a resolution to 'amend the constitution ao aa to admit of the elec tion of aenatora by popular vote. Although the sentiment In favor of the proposed change Is obviously growing stronger, the senators manifest no more disposition to consider it than they have shown on the three previous occasion a that a similar reio- lutlon passed tha houao. If the senators refuse a fourth time to take action en this proposition tt can only be inferred that they believe an overwhelm ing popular demand for It exists and tbat they do not wish to yield to It To secure ths necessary amendment to the consti tution even though both ' bousea unani mously favor It will be a difficult matter. In their efforts to protect ths constitution from hash f nd Ill-considered changes the su- thors of that document rendered Ita amend ment extraordinarily difficult. Two-tbtrds of both bouses must first approve a reso lution for amendment or else ths legia- laturea of two-thirds of the states must apply to congress to call a convention to propose amendments. Any amendment ap proved either by congress or by a consti tutional convention, before tt can become a part of the constitution, roust then be ratified by tbe legislatures of three- fourths of. all tha atates. In other words, the election of Sana tors by popular vote can bs secured only by action which eould not be taken unless an overwhelming majority of tha cltltena throughout tha country stood ln favor of It. Tha recent history of senatorial election conteata points unmistakably to tbs need of a reform. Senatora doubtless will urge that election by legislature preserves the Idea of atate sovereignty, that the way to check auch abuses sa exlat In connection with tbe present method of election la to secure better legislatures and that to take the power of election away from the legis latures Is to stamp them wttb Irresponsi bility and still further confirm them In bad practices. Tbeae are questions which the various atates themselves ought to pass upon. It Is not to be supposed that the state leglalaturea would throw ' away one of their most valued privileges lightly or without due consideration of popular feel ing. If the aenatora have any good reason for not aubmltting this question to tbe nation they should hasten to make It public. ' FASSINO PI-KASAltTniES. . 1. I 1 1...'; I .'. 111. V .. . .1". . .1 k. 1 . I III IV. . . doctor," the patient said, "I don't feel well at all, although 1 eat and sleep very well and" I'll atoo all that In no time." said Dr. Quack confidently. Brooklyn Life: Mrs. Stiles I thou ah aha sang much better In the second act than nn did ln the nrst dldn t you 7 Km Va,,An. ill. A ...... V. . .. . ...ao . v ... . lira w.l( ' f . Ann miiw yu. that lovely white allk dress on. , . , Philadelphia Record: Tha Friend la the editor enjoying good health? The Poet (sadly) No; from what I've aeen of him he has been declining for the lsst five years. Chlca.ao Tribune: "It seems to re marked the Observant Forelimer, "you al low your girls great freedom In the matter of choosing their masculine companions, lee, reoponaea me f lippant Native, "we seem to give them all the laddie dude they want." Philadelphia Press: Rev. Mr.- Tatlman And what did you think of my sermon? Miss Sharpe Oh! It was ao like you, Mr. Tollman Rev. Mr. Tallman Characteristic, eh? Miss Sharpe Well, no one could aav It was stunted. , Ohio State Journal.- 'Blewblud tt Isn't aenerally known, but my ancestors cam. over on the Mayflower. Numskull on, that a all light, old man; don't be afraid of me telling anybodv, be cause you can't help what your ancestors did. ..... The Optimist: "Why did you place such a tough old fowl before me?" asked the Indignant. lady ln a down-town restaurant. "Aae before beauty, always, you know." replied the tactful waiter. And then, womanlike, snn smiled, and paid her bill without a murmur. . TUB LOST THRILL. 8. E. Kiser, In the Record-Herald. "He corneal" "He conies!" the people shout, a And autocrats In blux Wave back the crowds where men press out And boys ao saulrmlnar throua-h: They cry, "He comes!" and distant drums uive time lor marching feet Behold the guards who lead the way Come proudly down tne street. Men atand upon their toes to see, And wave their hats In air ' But what Is all this fuxs to me. And who la passing there? Erect and proud be vlewa tha crowd, I cannot cheer him, though. As I could cheer the splendid, big uruin major, long ago. Here paasea one whose fame haa spread Wherever men abide; There's grandeur in his poise of head,' Ana in nis oreasi is pnae; But when, at last, the guards have passed Unthrllled. I turn away, Forgetting that my aaao baa been Upon tne great today.,! The yeara have robbed me of a Joy' I'll ne'er regnln, alas.1 Oh for the ardor of the boy Who aees the marchers pass!' Oh that I still mlKht have the thrill wtucn set my cheeks aglow When glory centered in the big iTum major, lung aaoi v own X I weak, nervous, exhausted, all out of sorts. Over worked nerves arc, always irritable and restless. The eyelids twitch, the stomach, rebels, the brain is fogged, and the heart is unsteady. Stop the waste of nerve force. Stimulate digestion, strengthen the nerves, and replenish the vital power. "Failing strength bad reduced my vitality; grip brought oa bronchitis and nervous prostration, and I suffered iron dizzy spells, nervousness, con tusion oi ua miad and palpitation of the heart Dr. Miles' Nervine and Puis worked a complete curt." Maa J. .UAawau,Kast Atlanta, Ga, i 1 is a perfect restorative for the weak, the , tired, the feeble and the run-down. ' Sold by drug-giits oa guarantee. . Dr. Miles Medical Co, i-Uthart Ind. R D