m it TIIK OMAHA DAILY ItKE: SATURDAY, JANUARY 2. 100 f. if n ITiie Omaiia Daily Bee. E. ROB EWATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF Sl'HSCRlPTION. lastly Bee (without Sunday!, One Year.. 14 no I'sily Bm and Sunday. One Year t Illustrated life. One Year 2 Sunday Bee. One Year I.W Saturday Bee. One Year 15" Twentieth Century Farmer, One Year.. I.W PEUVKKKIl BY CARRIER. tHi:y Bee (without Sunday), per copy... 2c JDally Bae (without Humlayi, per week...Uc laliy Bee (Including Sunday), per week..l7e Bunds y Bw, per ropy 6c JKvenlng Bea (without HundHyi, per week 8c Evening Bee (Including Bunday), per week 10c Complaint of Irregularities In delivery Mould be addressed to City Circulation D-LartmL-nt. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha City Hall Building, Twen-t-flfth and M Street. Council Bluffs in I'earl ftreet. Chicago 1M0 Unity Building. New York MS Park Row Building. Waahlnglon 601 Fourteenth Htreet. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to newa and edi torial matter should lie addressed: Omaha lies. Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order riayable to The Bee Publishing Company, inly 8-cent stamps accepted In payment of nail accounts, personal checks, except on (Jmaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION, fitate of Nebraska, Douglns County; as.: George B. Tsschuck. secretary of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, says that the actual number of full and ' complete copies of The Dally, Morning, Evening and Bunday Bee printed during the month of December, 1903, was as fol low! : l aosao 17 o,6ko t IMMNIO 18 ,HT( I bd.oto i ai.oa 4 HO.UM 20 2T.OUO t UW)0 21 31,37" 6 no,10 22 SO,77 7 JWUWO a 3,!MO mjnto 24 ai,8K 31,110 25 31,0KI ID 80,330 26 3I!H 11 30,400 27 aoj-ioo 12 31 1,44 M) 28 3t.7flO 13 27,010 29 :iO,OHO 14 80H0 30 :3,OI() 1 ..ao,To 31 a:i,4;u It 81,100 Total 047,3(13 Jss unaold and returned copies.... 10,41 Net total sales f3tl,!34 JNet average sales 30,u:m GEORGE B. TZ8CHUCK. Subscribed In my presence und sworn to before me this Slat ciay ot December, A. D. ! M. B. HI NGATK, (Seal.) Notary Public. In 1904 look before you leap. In the language of Bob IngerHoll, Jsrbere wts Molse when the light went ut? Leap year protection might possibly lord a new and lucrative field for the variegated insurance companies to oc cupy. Put it down that the year lin)4 will be A year full of politics. It does not take seventh son of a seventh sou to pre dict that Alleged fireproof theaters are not fire proof so long as. they are filled with combustibles on the stage or In the auditorium. All of which Jrerulnds us that It Is the upreme of danger to block theater isles with chairs, as is altogether too often done right here in Omaha. The birth of the Webster vice presi dential boom antedates the birth of the new year a trifle. With this handi cap in its favor, it ought to keep In the race. Bouth Omaha begins the new year under very heavy auspices. It has a very respectable surplus in the city treasury and a certificate of health from Dr, Towns. When it comes to promotions Jn the army, Nebraska always has a full quota of captains, majors and colonels willing and competent to serve as brigadier or major generals. Some congressmen are insisting that the present land laws must be modified. Perhaps so, but the changes must be in the Interest of the bona fldo settler and stock raiser rather than of the lawless cattle syndicates. With the horror of the Chicago theater fire before It, the council would scarcely be Justified in closing the city electri cian's office Just because the mayor de clines to appoint its preferred candidate aa city electrician. It's a good thing to take block at least once a year. The individual can find an Inventory of his assets, mental, moral and physical as well as material, us useful as a merchant finds his inven tory of goods on, lmud and bills re ceivable. According to the back-caster of the Dun commercial agency, lixxi was a year of irregularity in speculation, dis tributive trade and industry, In some cases of severe strains variously applied and as differently withstood. With sacb a diagnosis before him, the patient afflicted with a contraction of assets and an inflation -of liabilities will feel much easier. The Missouri state republican com mittee has been called to meet January 0, to fix a date for holding the con vention to uomlnate delegates who will represent Missouri iu the national con vention. The forecast made by repulv llcau leaders is that the convention to elect delegates will be held during the early part of February. Why should not Nebraska do likewise? The Chicago & Northwestern railroad is about to erect u fourteen story head quarters building, with foundations strong enough to carry four additional stories. Omaha would be satisfied if the Union Pacific would erect a seven story headquarters building In the Jubl lee year WH. We feel sure we cast no unkind reflections upon the management when we say that the dilapidated old rookery that serves as Union Paetn headquarters Is now sadly out of Joint with the pretentions and needs of the great transcontinental railway. M n i. tJ""'"' " " " 1 31 -" isi'isn i iisis sn-s ns. -tmmm' ' sa, t.. , -jst, . bHt JTfc, J"-fryt JifcS - -t -MaT-. .,' ss-sp sn iis sruia. XtBRASKA FVH ROVSKTLT. Governor Mickey struck the keynote of the impending campaign when he de clared that the republicans of Nebraska propose to send a delegation to the na tional convention unequivocally pledged to support Theodore Uoosevelt's nomi nation to the presidency first, last and all the time. The rank and file of the republican party are overwhelmingly In favor of Hoosevelt and resent the In timation recently disseminated through the eastern press that widespread dis satisfaction exists in Nebraska with President Roosevelt that is liable to culminate In the selection of a delega tion to the national convention antag onistic to the president. For this report there is absolutely no foundation. It goes without saying that the republicans of Nebraska who favor the nomination of John I Webster for the vice presidency will not tolerate any Intrigue by which his candidacy for the vice presidency could be turned to the disadvantage of President Koosevelt. The delegation to the national conven tion will be for Roosevelt for first place and Webster for second place. While the delegation will doubtless labor ear nestly and enthusiastically to secure the nomination of Mr. Webster, their para mount duty will be to represent the practically unanimous sentiment of the party that favors the nomination of Koosevelt in preference to any other man suggested for the presidency or any dark horse whose name has not yet been sprung. When it comes to national Issues and national candidates Nebraska repub licans nre not made of willow. This has been repeatedly exemplified when ever attempts were made by party lead ers to repress or defeat the popular choice. In the coming campaign Ne braska will occupy no equivocal ground. When the rank and file was for Blaine It stood for Blaine, when It was for Mc Kinley It pledged Its delegation to Mo Klnley without inentnl reservation. Its delegation to the national convention of 194 will Im Instructed for Koosevelt and will stand as loyally by Koosevelt as the delegations of 1890 and 1900 stood by McKlnley. AltTAOO.XlZlNO THK COAL TRCST, Coal consumers will find some satis faction in the fact that the Independent producers in the anthracite coal region. or some of them, are no longer disposed to submit to the oppressive dictation of the railroad operators who control most of the mines and whose policy hitherto has been such as to operate to' the dis advantage of the Independent mine own ers. A recent report Btates that one of the largest Independent producers in the anthracite field has refused ab.wlutely to obey the edict of the four big produ cing companies. The dispatch says: "Up to the time of the strike in 1002 the big companies ruled the smaller producers with a rod of iron. When they ordered a shut-down not a pound of coal would be shipped during the prohibited period. Since the strike, however, the independ ents have struck out for themselves and now refuse to take orders from the trust." While the Independent producers con stitute only a small part of the anthra cite production, they are still sufficfent of n power to make themselves feK. If they will persist in refusing to allow the big companies to rule them as they have hitherto done. The Independent producers are at a disadvantage because of the fact that the railroads are under the control of the big producers and can deny the independents transportation, but it may be possible to find a remedy for this. At any rate, if the independent producers will hold out in their opposi tion to he oppressive policy of the big companies they are certain to enlist pub lic sympathy and this will be no small help to them. The position reported to have teen taken by the independent operators in the anthracite region gives promise of better conditions in the inter est of consumers. A DEMOCRATIC HARUUSY DINNER. Next Monday evening the democrats of New York ill have a banquet which is expected to have an important in fluence in harmonizing the party and in indicating the candidate for the presi dency this year. While ostensibly this dinner is to celebrate the victory of Tammany hall in the November election, its real purpose is to get together the democrats who represent the factional divisions of the party and to endeavor to bring about a realignment that will ef fect n unification of the democracy and an agreement hi. to a' candidate for the presidency. It Is a most interesting movement that the organizers of this dinner have in stituted, tiecause the effect cannot bo otherwise thau most pronounced upon the future of the democratic party. Dis tinguished democrats are expected to participate In the oecuslon. Mr. Cleve land will make the principal speech, thus attesting that while he has declined to be considered as a candidate for nomi nation by the democratic national con vention of this year he Is still willing to be among the advisers of his party. Mr. Olney. who was secretary of state In the last Cleveland administration, will at tend the dinner and undoubtedly will have something to say by way of en couraging the democracy. Judge Parker of New lork, Mho Is at present most prominent in democratic thought, will be there and undoubtedly will indicate what in his Judgment Is the proper course for the democracy to pursue .In this year's campaign. Senator Gorman will he there and the democratic leader of the house of representatives, Mr. Williams of Mississippi, and David B. Hill, with a number of others more or less known as democratic leaders. This event has been called the "presi dential dinner" and undoubtedly it will have souje influence In determining who Is to lie the democratic candidate. It is an interesting fact that no one prom Inently Identified with the Bryan ele ment of the democracy Is to participate In this banquet. A few men who sup ported Bryan will be there, but they will be entirely overshadowed by those who have been conspicuously opposed to Bryanlsm. The most significant fact In connect Ion with this event, and cer tainly the one which will most incense the supporters of he Chlcngo and Kan sas City platforms, is the prominence accorded to (Jrover Cleveland. That single circumstance. It Is safe to say, will nullify and render abortive, with the people who still lelieve In the prin ciples and doctrines advocated by Bryan, whatever may be said at tht so-called harmony dinner. The utterances of the distinguished democrats who will be present at the banquet in New York next Monday night will be read with profound Inter est. It is a safe guess that they will all counsel harmony, but it is most un likely that they will contribute anything to that consummation. Congressman Mondell indulges In in vidious comparisons between the land laws of the United States and those of the Dominion of Canada as an argu ment in favor of a radical change in the homestead laws. Mr. Mondell points to the fact tbst homesteaders can take up 200 acres of land in B' itish Columbia and after an occupancy of two years may purchase it at the rate of $1 an acre and lease adjacent lands on reason able terms, while homesteaders In the United States are limited to 100 acres, with an occupancy of five years. Mr. Mondell falls to explatm however, why homeseekers have given preference, at least up to a recent period, to lands located in the United States over latids in the Canadiau dominion, which are going begging at $1 an acre, and the only reason why any considerable num ber of homeseekers have of late taken up lands In Manitoba and British Col umbia is because Uncle Sam's farm Is very nearly all occupied and what Is left will be eagerly sought for when they return after a few years' freezing and thawing in the hyperborean regions. A battalion of the First infantry, sta tioned at Fort Thomas, is to furnish the subjects of an experiment with a new kind of canned hash for three days next week, and if the test proves sat isfactory another test will be made the following week at Fort Sheridan, near Chicago. We feel sure that we dlvnlge no secret in assuring the commissary department that the battalion stationed at Fort Crook draws the line at hash mixed with kinky hair, even if it is certified to by the army medical de partment as healthful and nutritious. At the annual love feast held by the republican leaders of Indiana at Indian apolis Wednesday, Senators Beveridgo and Fairbanks delivered addresses, both strongly endorsing President Roose velt This straw foreshadows that In diana does not propose to project a republican candidate for the presidency this year. - It is now practically settled that the movement to confer statehood upon New Mexico, Arizona and Oklahoma will not get beyond the congressional committee during the present session and aspirants for senutorshlps from those states will have to possess their souls In patience a while longer. The Mighty Gtne of Grab. Philadelphia Record. The earth hungerers of Russia and Japan are threatening each other with war over the possession of regions to which neither of them has the least shadow of honest title. Gold Mines Outclassed. St. Louts Globe-Democrat. Between April and November a corn crop was raised in the United States valued at $952,000,000. Digging gold Is a alow business compared with plowing corn. Looking; Oat for Number One. t Chicago News. With Uncle Barn's bonds in demand the world over It Is not wholly surprising that some financiers should have become con vinced that a bond Issue will be needed to make the payments for the canal. Cold Proposition Getting; Warm. Kansas City Journal. nitirri Olnev has been regarded as a r.ihpr enld nroDOBltlon. but since the Judge Parker boom' has been skating about the country Massachusetts reels Justified in In viting the democracy to cuddle up to Olney and get warm. Old Heads for Counsel. Indianapolis Journal, i iinlniie Jaoanese cuatom In times of national crlsea haa probably had the effect nf uvlne the nation from many a false step. At such times all the leading public men of the empire are summonea to ttjkio, where a conference la held. This is called "the council of the elder statesmen." The men have outgrown the rash Impulsiveness of youth and exert a conservative influence upon popular patriotic fervor. Such a coun cil has recently been summoned in Toklo. Tko Asphalt Swindle. Philadelphia Record. The list of stockholders of the Asphalt Company of America shows that the or ganisers of the gigantic financial swindle were too clever to have any amount of shares worth speaking of when the con cern went to pieces. Hence they escape liability to any extent upon the 80 per cent assessment upon the company, while Inno cent Investors deceived by grossly false representations are as usual the chief vic tims In holding on to what haa'llttle or no substantial value. Gambling; nnd Storks. Leslie's Monthly. The very fact that the professional gam bler la to s large extent a social outcast, plying his craft at night and behind steel doors and only then with the purchasable connivance of the authorities, Is in Itself a warning that not even the stupidest can fall to observe. .Stock speculation, on the contrary, hangs out the banner of respecta biUty which a great many ' unthinking persons have somehow come to confound with morality and. under its protection, carries on Ita traffic night and day, In city streets and village lanes. In parlor and boudoir. In store and In factory In short, wherever It can find a single human being possessed of thia mania for getting some thing for nothing. Men who would scorn to cross the threshold of a gambling house gamble openly In stocks and are not ashamed to discuss their ventures in the presence of their own children. When Wall street ruins a man It strips bint of everything that ha possesses flea troys bis THE ANIMUS OF Demand for His Removal Was Made Two Years Ago, Based duct, Without Reference to the Dietrich From the Springfield (Mass.) Republican, December 29. To the Editor of The Republican: My attention has been directed to the follow ing paragraph that appeared In a recent issue of The Republican: Doubt of the advisability of Mr. Roose velt's nomination Is beginning to And some expression west of the Missouri river. The chief spot of disaffection might easily be guessed Nebraska, where one of the re publican enators is under Indictment by a federal grand Jury and the president has refused to remove the district attorney who had been obliged to prosevute the cane. Mr. Rosewater of the Omaha Uee and others are salii to be much Incensed be cause the president declined to assist In shielding Senator Dietrich and other promi nent party men in the state from the con sequences of alleged "grafting" In riation to local pos to (flees. I trust you will permit me to correct the false assumptions on which this comment Is bused. There are no signs of disaffec tion with President Roosevelt west of the Missouri river and no audible expression of doubt in Nebraaka of the advisability of his nomination. There is absolutely no foun dation for the assertion, or Intimation, that I have ever been, or am now, much Incensed, or Utile Incensed, because the president refused .to remove the United States district attorney In order to shield Senator Dietrich and other prominent men In the state from the consequences of alleged grafting In local postofllces. My reputation as an editor haa been es tablished by consistent and unrelenting warfare against bribe takers, boodlers and embezzlers, and my ardent support of President Roosevelt has been chiefly be cauaa he has been an uncompromising enemy of Jobbery und dishonest practices in public office. I am not an apologist for or defender of Senator Dietrich and other prominent republicans who have re cently been Indicted by the federal grand Jury, and have not even suggested to the president that he should Interpose to shield them from prosecution. I am under no personal or political obli gations to Mr. Dietrich, and there is noth ing in common between us, except that ws are both republicans. Mr. Dietrich has always been Identified with the corporation wing of. the party, while I have been s pronounced anti-monopolist and was notori ously defeated by the railroads In my candidacy for the United States senator ship when he was elected. Thero nre peculiar circumstances sur rounding the Dietrich case that Justify the belief that he la the victim of political in trigue and personal malice, and yet I would be the laat man to condone the of fense with which he la charged If his guilt should be established by Irrefutable proof. At long range, my call at the White House, In company with Senator Dietrich, prior to his indictment, urging a change In the United States district attorneyship, very naturally created the Impression that we were both actuated by a desire to get rid of a prosecuting officer who had rendered himself obnoxious by hla unyielding de termination to prosecute violators of the law. So far as I waa concerned the contrary was true. I had filed specific charges with the president against District Attorney Summers on March 1. 1902, and asked for his removal on the ground that he had scandalized the public service by his in timate relations with former State Treas urer Joseph 8. Hartley, sentenced to twenty years In the Nebraska penitentiary for the embezzlement of .more' than half a million dollars of state, funds, and had, moreover, been a prominent factor In procuring the pardon of Bartjey. This complaint waa supplemented In July, 1S.02. and again In the spring of 1903, by the charge that District Attorney Summers waa using the machinery of the federal court for the protection of parties whom he was In duty bnund to prosecute for violation of the fed eral statutes. A citation of two or three examples in point will suffice: In February, 1901, charges were filed by me with the commissioner of Indian af fairs, and subsequently with the president, against the agent of Omaha and Winne bago Indiana and the trader at the Win nebago Indian reservation for acting in col lusion with a syndicate of land speculators who had procured between 3,000 and 1,000 leases to Indian lands which they were sub-letting to tenant farmers at s profit of from llOO.ono to $150,000 a year, thus defrauding the Indian of their legitimate Income. In support of my charges, I filed with the secretary of the Interior an Itemized ex hibit of the land leases procured by the members of the land syndicate; about twenty-five affidavits from Indians and white settlers, charging fraud and collusion on the part speculators with the agent; charging the trader with selling gambling privileges on the Winnebago reservation, charging the agent with being frequently Intoxicated, bringing liquor on the reservation and tolerating debauchery of Indians on the Winnebago reservation. By direction of the president. Inspector Churchill waa detailed by the Interior de partment to Investigate these charges. In stead of making an Impartial Investiga tion, this Inspector allowed the land lease speculator to select his stenographer and Interpreter, and conducted the Inquiry in a most shamefully partial manner to shield the agent and speculators. He was ably seconded by the United States district at torney, who secured an Indictment against a member of my reportorlal staff, who had made a thorough and Impartial Investiga tion of the conditions then subsisting on the Winnebago reservation, on the charge of "personating an officer." He also had the federal grand Jury indict an attorney who had assisted the reporter In making the investigation aa an accessory and also with giving liquor to the Indiana a charge trumped up by the conspirators Interested In fleecing the Indiana and defrauding the government. At the Instance of United States Attor ney Summers the same grand Jury pre sented an Indictment against another re porter of The Bee, who had made an affi davit charging him (Summeni) with admit, ting to him that he had actively Interested business, places a mortgage on his home, eats up the trust funds of which he was custodian and leaves him naked to the world. ROVTIJQ IMMIGRANTS. A Railroad Pool Having Government Snnctlon. Chicago Record-Herald. Despite the recent Investigation of the Interstate Commerce commission, the west ern railroads have again reorganized the Immigrant bureau, by means of which they maintain a pool on Immigrant traffic, dividing more than U.OOO.OiiO worth of busi ness annually among themselves according to agreed percentage. Through the opera tion of this pool every Immigrant, or nearly every one, who goes west of Chicago U con trolled, and ths money hs pays for his transportation goes into the general fund, where It Is divided by the agent of the bu reau. Although the law prohibits railway pools, and although the commission mads a rigid Investigation Into the organisation and working of ths bureau, during which Chair man H, XL Mafilond of ths Western Paa DISTRICT ATTORNEY SUMMERS himself In procuring the pardon of Hartley, the embezzling state treasurer. The charge preferred against this reporter Is alleged perjury, said to have been committed two years prtvlously In giving testimony about the condition of a postoitice safe that had been burglarized by unknown parties. Four successive grand Jflrlcs had been In ses sion since the reporter had testified In the postal case without having their attention called to the alleged perjury by the dis trict attorney. These Indictments of my employes were procured in May, 1902, but up to date no effort has been made by the district attor ney to have either of the cases tried. Their manifest object was to discredit the testimony of the parties with the Depart ment of Justice or In case they were called Into court. The indictment of the reporter who Investigated the Indian land conspiracy also served the purpose of intimidating the Indians and whites who were disposed to testify against the land speculators and the Indian agent Although subsequent exposures fully con firmed every charge I had made. Special Agent Churchill made a whitewashing re port. In which he not only exonerated Indian Agent r Mathewaon, but also char acterized the charges of conspiracy and fraud by the land speculators as baseless and inspired by personal malice and polit ical bias. In spite of this perversion of Justice, I continued to hammer away at the Indian land frauds and was effectively seconded In my efforts by the Boston In dian citizenship committee, with which I was in constant touch through their chair man, James W. Davis of Boston. Writing to me under date of Boston, December 15, 1902, Mr. Davis says: I congratulate you on the grand measure of success secured in the cancelation of the Iniquitous leases and in behalf of our com mittee. I have renewed our vigorous pro test against the continuation of the nfcnt. The commissioner stated that the reports of the Inspectors on this cane do not agree In being against him only another instance of whitewashing on which point I re minded him of two other recent cases, re newing our earnest appeal for purification of the inspection and special agent branch of the service. Is It possible for you nnd other friends to name a true and reliable man as successor to Mathewson on whose nomination we can concentrate effort and with which meet, any nomination of the harpies still greedy for spoils? In June, 1903, Mr. Davis, writing from Newton, Mass., says: I have written to the president again, transmitting a memorial and remonstrance from Mrs. Dr. ricofte, and certifying to her thoroughly Christian reliability. It is un certain whether It will avail or no, but we want the president to know that the case will not stay down. In my warfare on the Indian land r!ng I also had the co-operation of George Ken nan, who made a vigorous exposure in the Outlook of the abuses prevalent In the In dian bureau with reference to western In dian reservations. Including the Winnebago agency. The outcome of the campaign against the Nebraska Indian land ring waa a revision of the rules governing the leasing and sale of Indian lands that effectively prevent speculative subleasing and the can celation of Indian land sales made on col lusive bids. In response to the remonstrances of the Omaha Indians and the Indian Rights as sociation the Fifty-seventh congress re fused to appropriate money to pay the calary of the agent at the Omaha and Win nebago reservations. The backers of the malodorous Mathewaon managed, however, to secure his appointment as superintendent of schools at the Winnebago reservation, with practically the same authority he had formerly exerted as agent, but when It be came too warm for him to face another investigation by an honest Inspector he re signed under pretext of bad health. An other sample of District Attorney Sum mer's serpentine ways was furnished dur ing the closing months of lost year, when the federal grand Jury was Instructed ex pressly by the court to Investigate the pub lic land frauds in western Nebraska. The fencing complaints were brought in early in the session and after hearing Special Agent Mosby and other witnesses the United Slates attorney asked the Jury to postpone final action and Introduced other cases that monopolized the time of the Jury until two or three days before Christ mas. All the members of the grand Jury, except those residing in Omaha, were fur nished railroad passes on a requisition from the district attorney and were allowed to draw pay for mileage going and returning to and from their homes. Having made himself solid with the grand Jurors, Dis trict Attorney Summers managed adroitly to distract them after the holiday recess from discharging their paramount duty. The public land fencing cases never came up again. The Inquiry was smothered, and on the last day Summers got up a smoker and entertained the Jurors with funny stories and a shower of compliments on their splendid work. After this fiasco I again called the atten tion of the president to the utter unfitness of Summers as a federal prosecutor and hs assured me that another attorney would be appointed at the earliest possible moment, but the change waa not made because the two Nebraska senators failed to agree on a succeasor. My recent Insistence that the change be made whether the senators agreed or not waa based upon my knowl edge that District Attorney Summers is un truthful, unprincipled and crooked, conse quently a dangerous man In his position. His latest performances In securing the indictment of several cattle barons who have unlawfully annexed public lands to their domain are mere grand stand play. After the exposure I had made at the De partment of Justice of his efforts to block their indictment a year pgo he had to make a semblance of showing. I am Im pressed also with the belief that his prose cution of Senator Dietrich has been Insti tuted to satisfy his ambition for notoriety and Indefinitely extend hla own term which expired more than eight months ago. His statement to Attorney General Knox that he had sought to shield Dietrich be fore the grand Jury last summer when it was probing the charges of alleged bribery senger association and F. A. Wadlelgh, agent of the bureau In New York, openly admitted the existence of the pooling ar. rangement, no steps have been taken to ward disrupting the organization or pun ishing ths railroads for being parties thereto. The conclusion Is therefore war rantable that the commission has decided to Ignore the exlstenoe of ths pool and by lack of action tacitly give approval to Its operation. If such Is the case, this course is un doubtedly largely due to the testimony of Edward McSweeney, assistant commis sioner ot Immigration at New York. When asked his opinion of the pool he replied: "From the standpoint of the Immigration commissioner the presence In New York of these responsible concerns, the Immigrant Clearing house and ths Immigrant bureau, doing business In a manner approved by and at the original request of the com missioners of Immigration, Is of the great est assistance to the government In the proper transaction of business, and Insures the safeguarding of Immigrants to their destination," The testimony showed that prior to the organisation of the pool In 18M Immigrants were handled worse than cattle. As soon on Charges of Official Miscon Case. 1903. In postoffieo appointmunts is flatly contra dieted by members of that grand Jury, who asserted that the attorney did all he could to get Dietrich Indicted, but failed to con vlnco them that there was testimony suffl clent to convlt t. The natural Inference Is that Mr. Summers wrote the letter In order to be In position to assure Senator Dietrich on his return from Alaska that he owed him n. debt of gratitude that could only be repaid by an endorsement of his reap polntment. With these facta before the Republican I trust that my motives In urging the di missal of District Attorney Summers in the Interest of better government will not be misconstrued. E. ROSEWATER. Omaha, December 26. 1901. An I nmltlatnted Oatrase. (Editorial In The Bee, May 23. 1901) At the Instance of United States Attorney Summers the foderal grand Jury Is said to have returned indictments against two re porters of The Bee. One of these, 11. II. Claiborne, la charged with having given false testimony In a cose tried In the United Stutes court two years ago. Too other, C. J. Beet, Is charged with person ating an oflicer while recently making an Investigation of the conditions prevailing upon the Winnebago Indian reservation. The attempt to place a stigma upon these men Is manifestly a deliberate effort on the port of Lnlted States Attorney Sum niers to destroy their credibility to shield himself and other federal officials over whom charges axe hanging at Washington. The spirit that animates the action against Claiborne Is so transparent that to amount of palaver can conceal It. If Mr Claiborne were guilty of a crime two years ago there Is no valid reason why he should not have boon prosecuted within reasonable time after the alleged offense was com mitted. Four federal grand Juries have been In session In the time Intervening, but neither Attorney Summers nor anyone els saw fit to present accusations. Even without a grand Jury, Mr. Summers could havo readily preferred his charges before a United States commissioner and had the offender bound over. The true reason why Mr. Summers has suddenly awakened to the gravity of Mr. Claiborne's alleged offense Is that an affi davit signed by Mr. Clalborno has beer filed at the White House some weeks ago relating to an Interview between himself and Summers on the Sunday following the pardon of Baxtley from the penitentiary. In this Interview Mr. Summers boasted that he had been instrumental In Inducing Governor Savage to grant the pardon; that in his (Summers') opinion Bartlcy was still the great political power In Nebraska, whose Influenoe would make Itself felt In the future. Incidentally, Mr. Summers ad mitted to Claiborne that ho had invited Bartley to come up to Omaha for a confer ence, whloh took place In the wine room of Flynn's saloon at the corner of Thirteenth and Douglas streets, lasting from 8 o'clock In the evening until 2 o'clock the next morn ing. The facts set forth In this affidavit were verified by the direct and Indirect proof. It la a matter of notoriety and has been a scandal that District Attorney Summers has been closely affiliated with the rottoi.est element of the republican party In Ne braska and he made no bones of his Inti mate relationship to and championship of Bartley. At the state capital he has been given the credit of writing the lame and Impotent explanation that was attached to the pardon over the signature of Governor Savage. The conference In the Flynn saloon as verified by affidavit of witnesses has, as we understand It, been admitted, but with the assurance that Mr. Summers confined his thirst to apolllnarls, while the liquors served were consumed by his com panion. This Is not Intended as a reflec tion on Mr. Bartley. It is safe to say that had not the Claiborne affidavit been filed with the president the grand Jury would never have heard of Mr. Claiborne. The case of Mr. Best is if anything a greater and more Inexcusable outrage. Mr. Best was dispatched to the Indian reserva tion a few weeks ago to run down and verify reports of maladministration on the part of the Indian agent and abuses to which the Indians on the Winnebago res ervation were being subjected by a land lease ring In collusion with the agent and trader. In the discharge of this duty Mr. Best took pains to get at the truth as well as he could, notwithstanding the obstruc tions put In his way by the parties who have despoiled and debauched the Indians. Mr. Best made no secret of his connection with The Bee and resorted to no decep tion. To assure his Informants who had been victimized and terrorized by the ring that they would not be punished for telling the truth, he said that their complaints and any disclosures made would be forwarded to Washington. For daring to discharge his duty as a reporter and to counteract the damaging effects of the affidavits be gathered and the affidavit he made he is to be perse cuted and smirched by the misuse of the power vested In the district attorney, who, while pretending to be anxious to punish the rascals who have been robbing the Indians, is pursuing a course designed to protect them. Fortunately there Is a higher authority than District Attorney Summers. That authority, we feel sure, will not be distracted In Its purpose to get at the true Inwardness of affairs on the reservation and to discharge the obliga tions the government has assumed toward Its wards regardless of the beneficiaries. The Bee has up to this time refrained from giving publicity to the facts in Its possession relating to the discreditable con duct of Mr. Summers In connection with Bartley and the rottenness on the Indian reservation, preferring to allow ths depart, ment to right the wrong and deal with the recreant officers. When the attempt Is made to wreak personal revenges on Its reporters It Is compelled, however reluc tant, to defend them and expose ths animus of their persecution. as they arrived In New York, beyond which they were not ticketed, tbey became the prey of the middlemen, who rounded them up, herded them Into noisome boarding houses, where they were robbed, until the middlemen finally sold them to the highest bidder among the transportation lines. Not Infrequently they were stopped at Chicago or St. Louis, where the robbing process Was repeated. Accordingly If the unfortunate seeker after a home In a free country finally landed at destination, to which he was not Infrequently sent by circuitous route, he found himself fleeced of his last penny. Very often, however, the Imml grant never left New York, where he be came a public charge after having been robbed by the middlemen and boarding hou-e keepers. Under the bureau this is all changed. All Immigrants are kept at Ellis Island, where the middleman cannot pene trate, they are ticketed through to destina tion from Europe, are examined aa soon as they arrive at the Island, are routed by the agent of the bureau and started upon their Journey the same day on through trains which make fast time and afford them the common comforts of travel. It la evident that ths commission believes that the law should not disturb such a pool OTI1KR I.Ar THAN OlBft. The tide of Irish Immigration has beer nowlng during the past year in I'MSf v volume than It showed In 1901. Twits expected that the high hopes, railed by the new land act would tend to check the popular exodus, but ths returns of the British Board of Trade, which are Issued monthly, show that ths outflow continues unabated. According . to (hose returns for the first eleven months of 1903, the total number ot persons of Irish nationality that emigrated from porta in Ireland and Great Britain to oouotries outside of Europe waa 44,809, bains; an in crease of ! SS over the corresponding period of last year. Of this Increased emigration the United States has received t7M more than last year, Canada 1,184 more. South Africa 649 more, while the number going to Australia and New Zealand has de creased by 224. Of ths total nun.ber of emigrants for ths eleven months, 39.000, or R7 per cent, came to ths United States; 2.00, or 6 per cent, went to Canada, and 2.000, or nearly B per cent, went to South Africa. About SB per cent of these emi grants were between the ages of 16 and 45 years. And It may be bonis In mind that the returns quoted from do not embody the grand total of emigration for the period referred to, as they do not Includo the Irish who emigrated to Great Britain and various European countries. It may be noted that Ireland has lost by emigration during the eleven months a population equal to that of the city of Limerick, and more than the population of at least one Irish county, as Carlow. And the awful drain by the outflow of the young and virile of both sexes continues, notwith standing the allurements of the land act and British promises of further remedial legislation. Economlo forces am In opera tion which must be controlled or diverted before the Irish exodus can be checked. Fhyslcally, ths Corenn Is a fine, stout fellow, with vigor enough, but his apathy and cowardice and impotence are beyond belief: he Is the hrother fn t Hat nrlonn Un has animosity, but no action. A little Jan .in . . . iimuresi a score or stout Coreans, and they will cower and shrink A Kl r ..r..,. n walking along the street who lias been josuea ny a Jap will fall down and cry, so great Is his innate feeling of helpless ness. The people impress the foreigner as Indomitably or senselessly patlont, dumb with the callousness of aires of rinsmiir- and they have a bit of Joyousneas. too, and care not what fate befalls. The Corean naa been the plaything and the spoil of the nations of the far east from tim im memorial, and Is destined to more 111 usage nu oppression, ir the Japanese win their case, the Coreons will be vassals; If Russians prevail, they will be sUvesfho cumber the earth, or, at best, beasts of burden in the hands of relentless task masters. Senor Salmeron. the Eoanlsh renubnean leader, who In response to a request from a leading newspaper at Berlin for the ex pression of hut hopes for the futuro, de clares that he "Jonas for a sne.ndv p.vni.,. tlon at Madrid to clear away the present regime there." which, he Says. "Is an un interrupted series of accidents, disorder outrages and suppressions,'- has been a president of the Spanish republic und Is the most eloquent and eminent lawyer nf the entire Spanish bar. Whlln Rq the shrewd liberal leader, was alive ha succeeded In keeping Salmeron and through mm uie enure republican party' from any antl-dynastie agitation and aggression by promises of liberal reforms. So friendly were the relations In those days bttween Salmeron, the recognized reDibllaari lir and the reigning family that cntll Uiee years ago he actually had charge c.f all the legal Interests In Spain of old Queen Isabella, who makes her home in nH drawing her civil list from the royal treas ury ror ner and acting In her thalf In all questions, both with-ths tvmi faSAlr with the stafe and In connection with her pri vate property In the kingdom. All this has ceased since the death of Sagasta. - The ad vent to offloe of Senor Maura who la lha most reactionary of the conservative party. aosoruiaiy opposed to every kind of teform, political, 'administrative and financial, has stirred Senor Balmeron and his followers to Inaugurate a very active warfare against the throie. Ths dismissal of four more Gorman army officers because of the revelations In Lieu tenant Bliss's book, "In a Little Garrison," shows again that the author Is not being punished because hla book gavs an inac curate picture of army life. But the min ister of war Is evidently trying to live up to his promise that there shall bs no more such garrisons In ths service. In sll prob ability, there are but few, yet the code of morals under which they flourish extendi throughout ths army, and la responsible for any amount Of misconduct. If It Is Im possible to keep Anglo-Saxons m barracks and have them saints. It Is all the mora difficult to keep young Teutons In order when fhsr think themselves,' because of their uniforms, of a higher order of so ciety than any olvOasn, and not bountVby ths moral laws whloh apply to ordl mortals. What the German army Is suf fering from la merely what must happen to a ay troops whan their officers are made detnigods and overlords, when they may Ml at leisure airy one who displeases, and go practically unpunished. What la needed Is to znaks ths army feel that It is the servant of the German people, and not that the nation exists for Its benefit. The remedies are obvious. They could be put Into operation at ones by the emperor, but that commander-in-chiefs Influence ha thus far merely strengthened the caste fuel ing and the abominable military code which Is a direct Inheritance from the middle ages. The International Sanitary Conference. which has Just conoluded Us sessions In Paris, accomplished some Important work. Practically It perfected the plans of pre vious conferences held In Venice. Dresden- and Parte. Among other things It resolved that the period of surveillance In case of plague shall bo five days Instead of ten. Greater facilities will be gtven to com merce without diminution of sanitary pre cautions. The representatives of the differ ent powers will take collective action t compel Turkey to obey the stipulations agreed upon. Some of theso affect the San itary council In Constantinople. Hitherto the porta has been represented by eight members. Hereafter It will have four, on the other hand, the appointment of the In spector general of the sanitary service, as also thst of the Inspector wUl bs subject to the ratification of the Turkish govern ment. The decisions of the council voted by a majority will be definitely binding. Roumonla, which is recognised as a mari time state, will now be represented on the council. The international council at Tan gier will be invited to attend to the rigor ous application of the sanitary regulations. The new convention provides for the man ner In which any outbreak of cholera or p'ague Is to be proclaimed by the country where It occurs; in what ctrcumstancej the locality Is to be considered as In fected and afterwards as free from in fection, and ths measures to be tukeu against Infected countries by such coun tries as are free from infection, it contains special stipulations for those countries sit uated outside Europe. There are regula tions for pilgrimages, and very ample and practical provisions for marillmo sanita tion. Hlcht Klemrnt for Snips. Boston Transcript. , The United Htates Shipbuilding comix. u. was logical, after sll. It meant to be sura of plenty of water befurs It began to build the ships. i a t