The ICopyrlght. 1903, by Guy T. Vlsknlskki.) HAPS will Bound around the world next Saturday bidding America's soldier dead sleep peacefully on. Hours before America itself has awakened for Memorial day, a solitary khaki-dad bugler, standing over few graves in the little island of Guam, will start the saddest notes in all music on their long Journey. Fifteen hundred miles to the west, while the smoke from the guns of many a firing quad rolls silently upward above the heads of serried ranks of bronaed men gathered about tropically-decked mounds that mark the spots where heroes lie, bugle after bugle will sing the song of rest In the Islands of the Philippines. Then, as the heart-wrung reverberations die away, the tender message of a nation's undying grate fulness will swell out over the narrow homes of its defenders In the Chinese em pire. After that, as the sun goes westward, taps will follow It, for in many legations and in the American colonies of Paris and Ionion the practice of observing the day by sounding the call Is followed. So tbc air will bo caught up in Ruropc and sent on Its way to Cuba and Porto Rico. There, Instead of a lone bugle carrying the strain, a hundred will take up the burden. This hundred a few minutes later will give way to thousands, for America will be reached, and from countless God's acres in city and town and hamlet will rise the mighty wall of a nation for the legions that have died for Its faith and hone. In an ever swelling chorus the bugle's music will sweep through the land out over the Pacific. Far away Hawaii will honor the heroes slumbering within its soil and. last of all, Samoa, a'most be tween day and night, will catch up the notes, renew their energy over the graves of a handful of storm-wrecked sailors, and stand at attention while they sink. The whole world will hare been witness to Its noblest lesson In national grateful ness and patriotism. It will have teen witness, too. to the nw spirit nf Memorial day; for it will behold a nation mourning more In the fashion Of the first . decoration days. Then every noise In the land was bushed except the Public Library a Feature E9 HE GREAT majority of cities of 25.000 inhabitants and upwards In the United States have a public library of some sort, and the same is true of many of the miller cities. Many of these libraries have been founded on gifts of individuals, some have developed from subscription libraries but the majority are now sup ported mainly or entirely by funds appro priated by the city government. A con siderable number are still In the formative stage, this being true of those for which buildings are being erected from funds pro vided by Mr. Carnegie and for several hundred others for which he will probably provldo buildings in the near future. The conditions upon which ho provides funds for tho erection of municipal library buildings ure simple. The city must pro vide a site, which It may obtain by gift if it can, and it must agreo to provide an nually for the maintenance of the library a Bum equal to at least 10 per cent of the cost of the building. Practically this offer Is open to any city which has no public 11 bray building, but the length of time dur ing which the offer will thus remain open Is unknown. Under these circumstances what is the duly of a city which either has no public library buildings or has one which is inadequate and insufficient for its purpose? Should the municipal authorities take the initiative, decide as to what kind of library building they want, and then make application to Mr. Carnegie for the amount of money required for Its construc tion? The answer to this is not unanimous. Some good citizens think that the city should provide Its own building and not ask for It as a gift. Some municipal authorities are willing to accept the buildings as a gift If It is directly offered to them, but are unwilling to ask for it themselves. In such case it has often happened that a few enterprising persons not connected with the municipality have prosecuted the case and asked that the offer be made at the same time giving assurances that the offer With the usual conditions will be accepted. In three or four cases, however, when the offer has been made by Mr. Carneg'e, on the solicitation of private citizens, it has not been accepted in at lesst two eases because of the opposition of leaders of the labor party, wh claimed that Mr. Carnegie had no right to the money he offered. It may be that there have be.Mt one or two cases In which the offer has been declined because the municipal au thorises were unwilling ti guarantee the future support of the library ta the amonnt required. Tht Is really the main point to be con sidered by a innniclpjlity In tTealln? with such an offer, but I doubt whether In many ease it receives much th-night. In order to make the Carneglo library an adorn ment to the place a special feature of New Spirit tread of millions going cemetery wards, the roll of muffled drum, the voice raised In praise and prayer, the cracking rifles of the firing squad, and the bugle's call. Then no one, as In later years, thought of mak ing the day a holiday. To many next Saturday will still be In the nature of a holiday pure and simple, but to hundreds of thousands be.iidee the tottering old men who will ha'tlnglr march to the graves of their long dead coirades the day will have solemn significance, for it has been brought home to them. They are the men who fought In Cuba, who stormed the Spanish strongholds in Porto Rico, who languished In southern mobiliz ing camps, and who have known the hard ships of campaigning In the Philippines. They have learned by experience on the battlefield and in concentration ramp what Memorial day really stands for, and when ever It recurs they and their kinsfolk keep It with a new spirit which offers refutation to the frequently mude statement that, now that the veterans of the civil war are dying off so rapidly, the true purpose of their great day is as speedily being lost In that of the holiday. Four hundred thousand soldiers served In the Spanish-American and Philippine war. Kach soldier that fell had at least ten relatives to mourn him. Kach soldier that lives has at least ten kinsfolk to honor him; and so four millions of people one In every twenty In the country have leav ened the whole body politic and given a more serious note to Memorial day since the late war than was present for many years before on the anniversary of the dead. This Is Ihe testimony of Grand Army posts and of Memorial day speakers throughout the country. Their testimony could not be otherwise. A soldier can never forget the days of his service; he cannot be enlisted a month without hearing in camp or In battle the benediction of the bugle over the body of some comrade-in-arms; and, though un conscious it may bn, the thought Is never from him that the name call that puts him to pleep nightly with lights out. on the morrow may lull him to his eternal slum ber. It Is the contact with death and Its militant song that brings home to him the deep significance of ths Day of the Hero Dead and causes Its proper observance by the townscape certain cities have planned buildings which by reason of materials and architectural' embellishments, cost about double what the same library ac commodations could have been provided for they spend 1100,00) for tha space that could have been furnished for 151.0X1. If the city were Itself paying for the build ing this extra expenditure for the art education of the people might be iterfectly justifiable, but When the-e architectural features involve the doubling of the li brary tax for aJl future time, their desir ability becomes more doubtful. There may be excessive and un justifiable taxation for the support of a public library the amount which the city can afford for this purpose should be caie fully considered in connection with its needs for a pure water supply and good eewage disposal, for means of communica tion, for the care of tho sick poor and for public schools. Each case must be judged by Itself; the only general rule I have to suggest Is that In the Department of Kducation the claims of the Public Library for support are more Important than those of a Municipal College or High school. Thr. people who have no taxable property, and who therefore often er roneous suppose that they contribute noth ing towards the payment of the taxes, are usually quite willing to have a higher tax rate imposed for the purpose of securing for themselves and their families free library facilities although in exceptional cases religious or sociological opinions may lead them to oppose it. A considerable number of taxpayers, on the other hand, are more or less reluctant to have their assessments increased for this purpose, and their arguments should be considered and met. They say: First That they should not be taxed for things they do not want and never use. Second That the furnishing free books tends to pauperize the community and to discourage the purchase of books for borne use. Third That there Is no evidence that free public libraries improve the community materially or morally. Fourth That the greater part of the books ured are works of fiction, and that these are injurious tc the readers. Fifth That most of the arguments used In favor of free public libraries are merely sentimental and emotional, and that those who urge them most strongly do so for ad vertising and political reasons, or to make a place for themselves or some of their relatives. The first of these reasons would app'y also to taxes for public schools, street pav ing, sewerage and many other items of municipal expenditure, and has no weight. With regard to the second argument it Is not a sufficient reply to say that everyone pays through the taxes, for this would of Memorial him and his. Ask any of these men who are respon sible for the new spirit of Memorial day or the old one revlvlsccnt why the day is the most solemn one of the year to him, and the answer very likely will be In the form of on Incident of the man's cam paigning days. And if a member of a certain regiment that served In Porto Rico Is questioned, his reply most probably would contain the following story: For days the regiment had encumped on the brow of a hill overlooking the sea, .waiting for tho transport that was to take It home. As the soldiers waited and swept the horizon for their ship they worked in the cemetery that had been luid out to receive the soldier dead from over the Island. They were kept busy. A day did not pass without one or more burial squads being detailed to give decent interment to some "poor devil" whose body bad been brought on mule back or in army wat?oii from a camp In the interior, or who had died in the regiment's own hospital on the sun-baked slope. So It cmne to pass that at any hour of the day during the weeks that the regiment sat on the hill no one was surprised to hear taps come to him through the tropical air from over the grave of a newly laid soldier less than a milo away. At last, unexpectedly and after the regi ment had about given up hope of getting off the Wand in time to spend Thanksgiv ing In "God's country." tho transport steamed Into tho harbor, and the order was given to break camp the next morning at 3, that the soldiers might be snared from the beating rays of the sun as much as pos sible. It was when camp was broken, every thing packed in knapsack and wagon, and everybody, hilarious at the prospect of sailing, lounging and waiting In the shade of plies of baggage for the word of com mand to fall In In the company streets. And then, when chaff and banter wore at their height, word was passed along that up In Company B a soldier, overcome at tho thought of seeing his Invalid mother, had dropped dead of heart disease Just as he had finished packing his knapsack. A soldier la not afraid of death when the beat of battle la on him, but Intruding in Municipal Organization apply equally well to free lodging houses, (res lunch rooms and soup kitchens, free fuel, etc. all of which it Is generally be lieved do tend to pauperise a city, except In great and special emergencies. The proper answer Is that the free public li brary Is an Important and Indeed necessary part of the system of free education which Is required to secure Intelligent citizens In our form of popular government, and that while In a few very exceptional cases free schools and free libraries may tend to im providence, or Indolence, or even to certain forms of crime, these rare cases are of no Importance In comparison with the benefits which education confers upon the Immense majority of the community, and with the fact that without free schools and libraries a large part of the people will not be suf ficiently educated to be useful citizens un der our form of government. With regard to the third count, the pub lic library, again, may be considered, to gether with the public school. While It is difficult to trace to either specific instances of material or moral improvement, it la certain that the general diffusion of Intel ligence which both certainly affect, does result beneficially In these directions. Com munities with flourishing free schools and libraries are usually more prosperous and better than those without such facilities, and while there is doubtless room here for a confusion of cause and effect. It Is prob able that there is both action and reaction. Prosperity calls for Increased facilities for education, and these In turn tend to make the community mora prosperous. That the majority of books withdrawn from public libraries are works of Action cannot be denied. Many librarians are wont to deplore this fact, and most libraries endeavor In one way or another to de crease the percentage of fiction In their circulations. The proportion of recreative reading in a public library Is necessarily large. In like manner, the greater proportion of those who visit a zoological or botanical garden, do so for amusement. Yet tho Information that they secure in so doing is none the less valuable, and both are certainly edu cational Institutions. So, If In the publlo library a large number of its users get their history, their travel and their biog raphy through the medium of recreative reidlng. we should not complain. Were it otherwise, these readers would probably lack altogether the Information that they now certainly acquire, although perhaps not In the most systematise way. TaVing up the final count in the indict ment, it is doubtless true that sentimental and emotional considerations have had much to do with library development They have furnished the initial motive power, as they have for free schools, for the origin and progress of democratic govern ment, and for most of the advances of Day when his arms are stacked It aobora him. There was not a sign of merriment over leaving the Island, as, shortly after the news had spread, a burial detail started for the cemetery with the man's body In a mule wagon. It was a solemn-faced regiment that the colonel beheld a quarter of an hour later when It was drawn up before him for the final parade. It whs a brighter regiment when the band had paraded and finished playing "The Star Spangled Manner," as tho flag came down, and It was almost Its normal self when, with the officers of the line and the first sergeants In their places a km In, It stood expectantly watting for the word of command that would swing It down the hill homeward. The colonel drew his sword and flashed It to position. "Reg-l-ment at-ten-tlonl" he commanded. "Fours." He got no further. That Instant there came to him the notes of a bugle taps was being played over the grave of the comrada Who had dropptd dead an hour before. And as tho call cut short tho colonel's order and stopped his mouth, so It wrung an audible gasp of sympathy from the stolid double line of blue. Not a man moved while trie music lasted or Its echo could be heard making its way up the mountains at the camp's rear. Nor for almost a minute after the faintest re verberations had died away did o nicer or private move or look to right or left. Then the colonel gave the Interrupted order, and the regiment swung down to the sea to the strains of "Home, Sweet Home." Rut Intermingled In many a marcher's mind with the bars of the song that has brought tears even to the eyes of savages, were the notes that had sounded over the grave as he hsd paraded at the top of tho hill. From such Incidents the new spirit of Memorial Day has sprung, and by such Incidents It will be kept aflve until the young men of the Spanish American War organisations, who will decorate the graves of their dead, in aa decimated by time as are the ranks of the Grand Army of the Republic that will march behind bat 11 0 acarred flags next Saturday. civilization. They often precede deliberate, conscious reasoning and judgment, yet they are often themselves the result of an unconscious reasoning process producing action of the will in advance of deliberate judgment. Sometimes they are pure re flexes, like winking when the eye is threat ened by a blow. The free public library can neither be established nor maintained usefully without their aid, but their meth ods, or want of method, must be carefully guided to produce good results. The sentiment that we ought to estab lish institutions for the diffusion of knowl edge Is the expression of a real economic need and should be directed and encour aged, and not suppressed. Logic Is-a useful steering apparatus, but a very poor motive power. JOHN G. BII..UNGB, I.L.D.. Director New York Public Library. She Would Interrupt Ihey went down on Twenty-third street the other morning. Each had a bundle and each looked happy. After a few Introduc tory remarks. Just to Impress each other that they were glad they had met, this cou venation ensued: "Yes. Mollis is down with" "Oh, you don't ssy so!" "She waa taken with" The poor girl!" "As I waa going to say. Motile is" -And she always waa delicate." "Yea; but I waa going to say" "G1 e her my love and tell her I hope she will socn be out." "Pardon me, my dear; but I was going to say" "Who's your doctor?" -'Pardon me again; but as I started to say" "Oh, you did start to say something; I beg your pardon." "As I started to any, Mollie Is down with her aunt In Hackensack. Blie was taken with a desire to get to the country, and went yesterday." And then both went back to the bargain counters. Detroit Froe Press. Etiquette of the Fucd 'There's Just one thing, sah," pbrerred Colonel Goro of Kentucky, "in which we are behind Turkey." "What's tlmtT" Colonel Bullet asked, quickly. "Well, sah, after a general klllln' the j. rlo always sends a polite note of apology to the survivors of the massacre. If we could only end our feuds in that way, sah " "Rut we can't Bah," exclaimed Colonel Jiul'rt, excitedly, "fur tho sliuplo reason, sah, that when one of our feuds ends no body's left,' sah, to apologize to'." Balti more American.