iff TIIU OMAHA DAIIA BEE: THURSDAY, NOVBMHEK 1005. The Omaiia Daily Bee. E. ROSEWATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNINO. TERMS OF BUBSCRIPTION. Pally pr (without Bunday), one jrear..$4n0 I rally It and Sunday, on year 6 00 Illustrated Uee, on year tin Fund lio. on year 2 50 Baturdny Bee, on year 150 DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Dally Pi (without Bunday). per week. ..12c pally Bee (Including Sunday), per werk.lTe Kvenlng Bp (without Bunday). per weeg.tw Evening line (with Sunday), per week....lt)c Bunday Bee, per copy 50 ' Address complaint of Irregularities In de livery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. - Omaha Trie Be Building. Bouth Omaha City Hall Building. Council Bluffs 10 Pearl Rtreet. f'hleagoltMO Unity Building. New York 1.ipo Home Life In. Building, i Washington 601 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. 1 Communication relating to new and ed itorial matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, eipress or postal order, f avable to The Be Publishing Company., (nly t-cent stamps received as payment of mall accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Stat of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss.: . C C. Rosewater. secretary of The Be Publishing Company, being duly sworn, May that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally, Morning. KvenJng and Sunday Bee printed during th month of October, 1906, was a fol lows: 1 AS.IOO 2 SO. TOO t 80, (MH) 4 S1.820 (.. 81.ST20 81.B20 T 82,4 lO I ao.oao ai.cio 10 31,100 II 31.190 12 HO.TIO 13 SO.HWt 14 Sl.NIO 15 RO,4nO 16 30,700 Total Less unsold copies.... 17 W.MW IS SO.HBO 19 no.iiso 20 80.020 21 31.5IO 22 jeo.ono 23 30,070 24 SO.WOO 25 Sl.lOO 26 30.HN0 27 ao.nio 28 81.HOO 29 HO, TOO 30 Sl.OOO 81 80.&U0 ...002.H40 ... 10,051 Net total sates BA2.!i4 DHlly average SO.T1T C. C. ROSEWATER. Secretary. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this 31st day of October, 1006. (Seal) M. B. H UNGATE, Notary Public WHEJI OCT OP TOWJT. Subscribers leaving; the city tem porarily shonld bar The Bee mailed to tbem. It la better than a dally letter from home. Ad dress will be changed as often as reqaeated. With the advent of November the Ice man baa given way to the coal man. Taul Moriou uh uie j. resent agita tion of insurance lit a "good thing." lie ought to know. American uinuence on tiie canal zone Is being surely established. A fatal wreck on the Panama railroad Is chron icled. Unfortunuieiy it is uo jjurt of the du ties imposed, by law upon the police Judge to sing lullabys to the prisoners in the dock. Coal mine owner of iteutucky have declared against the Esch-Townsend bill, but coal consumers of Nebraska are of another opinion. Lander, Wyo., is retried to be In the throes of the wildest excitement aver a find of a nine-pound nugget of gold. It is suspected tlint It is a boy. It will take uurd wortt tor New York people who are becoming hysterical over the election to attract attention while real red flags are flying at St. Peters burg. "Jawohl" and "J a inin herre." County Treasurer Fink's refusal to hand over that scavenger list advertising to O. M. Hitchcock's paper was an unpar donable offense. It Is up to Count Wltte to show him' elf equal to Marquis Ito, who made the constitution of Japan, but the Japanese statesman was fortunate In having no binding traditions to follow. The admission, of Mr. lads that he noM raTifltcto te nhlnnpr mlfrhr aunnlv an r - " : opportunity for getting the Elklns law squarely before the supreme court of the United States to determine if it cov ir private car line. The glamour is knocked off that spe :1a message brought to the president trom the king of Great Britain by the British admiral because of the knowl tdge that bad it been really Important It would have come by cable. Residents of St. Petersburg though better acquainted with the csar than people of other communities, are still un willing to accept the manifesto granting I constitution; so it may be that celebra tions elsewhere are premature. Prince Louis of Batteuberg will now e called upon to demonstrate his abll ty to partake of the peculiar hospitality if America. Prince Henry of Prussia itood the test, but since that time one Japanese envoy went down and out No doubt the outcome of the election text Tuesday will have a bearing on the nunlclpal election next spring, but the issertion that the defeat of any candi date this fall will have a bearing upon the next congressional election is the veriest nonsense. Since Couuiy Ireu surer Fink has been In office over I24.0QO baa been ac cumulated In the county's sinking fund and that in less than two years. Under his democratic predecessor in office the sinking fund was milked dry for the whole four years. Manager Leads of the Sauta Fe Re frigerator Dispatch company says the cars of that concern are owned by the Santa Fe and leased to the private car line. Of course the "official" declaration that there la no connection between the two companies must be true. TTM TdRirr AXO FOfiE'rt.V TRA PC In his speech at the McKinloy club mass meeting' Representative Lncey of Iowa said that the democratic party lind assailed the protective policy on the ground that It would destroy our foreign trade and close the markets of the world against us. He cited the statistic of Imports and exports for 1M)4 and under the Dlniiley tariff for the lust fiscal year, which show n grent Increase hi our for eign commerce since the present tariff went Into effect. These ficts are fa miliar to every studeut of our economic history and they furnish a complete ami conclusive vindication of the protection policy. There are later statistics than those cited by Mr. Lacey that show we are still making progress in our foreign trade. The Department1 of Commerce and Labor has Just given out Its figures of foreign commerce for the nine months ended with September. These show that the Imports of materials for use In man ufacturing amounted In that period to $422,000,000 and the exports of manufac tures amounted to $421,000,000, a total of $840,000,000 In nine months, which assures more than a billion dollars' worth of foreign commerce in the yenr 1903, transacted only by the manufac turers of the United States. More than this It represents to some degree the ex tent to which the existing tariff encour ages domestic labor by keeping the mills busy. It is pointed out that tlie ma terials for manufactures now form prac tically one-half of the total Imports, sub stantial evidence of the great activity and prosperity of our industries. At the some time It is to be noted that the ex portation of manufactured articles has grown much more rapidly than the Im portation of materials for manufactures. suggesting that the exporters of the country are drawing, year by year, a relatively larger proportion of their raw materials from our own country. When the Wilson tariff was enacted, In 1804, its supporters declared that It would have the effect of largely Increas ing exports of manufactures. Its author, on visiting England, told the British manufacturers who banqueted and lauded him, that they must be prepared for an American competition that would take from them no small part of their trade In the world's markets. The re sult was the opposite of this. British manufacturers found that tariff to be highly favorable to them and there was a general revival of Industrial activity in England. In proportion as that took place there our industries experienced depression and American labor snffered. "No party can escape history," said Mr. Lacey, and the history of the tariff Is all against the democratic party, which still assails tlie policy of protec tion to American industries and lalwr. It may be somewhat less aggressive In this direction now than formerly, but given the power it would not hesitate to strike down protection and subject our industries to the competition ef the prod ucts of foreign chenn lnbor. WITH THE PKEMDEST. Mr. Roosevelt la assured of the sup port of one prominent southern demo crat in bis effort to obtain legislation for the regulation of railroad rates. This is Representative John Sharp Wil liams of Mississippi, who was leader of hts party in the last house and undoubt edly will continue In that position in the Fifty-ninth congress. Mr. Williams has announced that he, with other south ern democrats, favors the program laid out by the president and it Is said that the announcement has somewhat per turbed the republican opponents of Mr. Roosevelt's rate regulation policy. So far as the democrats of the house are concerned, Mr. Williams will un doubtedly be able to marshal them in support of the president, but it is not so certain that be will be able to influence any of the democratic senators, or at any rate such of them as are opposed to the president's position. It is not known how the southern senators, with ti .i if -m ,., T"" buiuu' uu mis iiucsuuu, uui it. is quite possible that a majority of them will be found hostile to the president, mainly for partisan reasons. The declaration of Mr. Williams Is, however, a guln for the cause of railroad rate regulation that will have a good denl of Influence. SUCCESSFUL SAMTATIOy. It appears that the work of sanitation on the Isthmus of Panama has been so successful that the yellow fever danger has been practically removed and there is now no fear of a return of the dread disease. It is stated that when Governor Magoou went to the Isthmus last May there were numerous cases of fever and the number increased In tlie following month. The governor lmmediately'pro ceeded to Investigate the situation, with the result that he found several condi tions which needed to be remedied and issued the necessary orders for their cor rection. The effect was sulutary, the number of cases of fever steadily .leclln ing, the last case reported being on Sep tember 29. What has been done In Panama is not less creditable to the officials than the sanitary work accomplished In Cuba and It has taken less time. To put the Isth mus In a condition such as is stated to exist seemed like a formidable task, but it was seen to be absolutely necessary before the work of canal construction could be actively entered upoq,.aud ener getically prosecuted. It was difficult to secure labor for a region where diseases constantly prevailed. Now that the con ditions there have Ix-en so much Im proved there probably will lie no serious trouble in obtaiulng all the lul-or that will be required. It is stated that the general health of Panama is excellent, while the spirit of the American colony baa become, a admirable as it was a few month ago deplorable and deuior- alized. Tlie redemption of the isthmus, says a correspondent, appears to be com plete, n ml there Is every reason for con fidence that tlie (;ood work of the hist six months will never lie undone. Mean time sanitary vigilance renin Ins uure lied. Secretary Taft Is on the way to Panama and it is exported that his visit, very likely made at the stigKcstlou of the president, will have the effect to stimulate greater activity In tlie matter of construction. It Is well known that the president Is anxious to have the work pushed with all possible rapidity. CAX LESLIE HE TRL'STEOt When Charles Leslie presented him self as a candidate for county Judge his unfitness for tlie place was pointed out by The Bee on two grounds: First, that he lacked the essential legal quail-! ilcations, and, second, because his can didacy was, slrnply a continuation of Judge Vinsouhalcr's administration. The first objection was grounded on the fact that Mr. Leslie had never practiced law and at. best hail only training as a court bailiff mid chief clerk of tlie county Judge. The second objection was grounded on the fact that Judge Vln Hotihaler had importuned the county commissioners to allow him to resign in fuvor of Mr. Leslie, leaving the natural Inference that Leslie would help him to cover up the things he wanted to keep dark. The fact that Mr. Leslie received only 2.000 out of the 7.0K) votes cast for county Judge at the primary would seem to indicate that the rank and file of the republican party shared the views of The Bee regarding Mr. Leslie's un fitness. Up to tlie time of Mr. Leslie's nom ination no suspicion was entertained that Mr. Leslie had shared with Judge Vinsonhaler uny of the graft that had made the county court malodorous, and his friends claimed that whatever his InckMif qualification might be, he was absolutely trustworthy. The revolu tions of systematic graft lu the probate branch of the court that have been made within the past few days through the inspection of the books and records afford convincing proof that Mr. Leslie Is not a fit person to become a super visor of the estates of widows and or phans and the custodian of trust funds. It was shown beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Leslie was participating know ingly and wilfully In the petty plunder of the heirs of deceased citizens of Douglas county. In tlie published partial list of 7."8 estates plundered by the county court Mr. Leslie touched ninety-six and pock eted $132.80 In fees, which should not have been levied, or should have been turned into the county treasury. Tlie law provides that the clerk of the county court shall administer oaths as clerk of the court and tlie fee charged therefor shall become the property of the county, but Mr. Leslie In many instances charged $1.75 and more as notary public fees for administering oaths to his fel low clerks as appraisers and treated these fees as perquisites of his own. As clerk of the district court Mr. Broad well and his deputy administer oaths quite frequently, and so do the county clerk and his chief deputy, tut the fees collected are not retained by these offi cers, but are accounted for to the county. The most scandalous thing In connec tion with this petty grafting Is the fact that Mr. Leslie despoiled even the mea ger estates of his unfortunate associates and brother members or the bar, most notably of Attorney Von Mansfelde, that popular young lawyer who was drowned while on his vacation last summer, nnd of Attorney I. R. Andrews, who like wise perished by drowning in the riatte river. The estates of ex-Judge Herbert J. Davis, W. C. Ives. Councilman Rob ert W. Dyball and Public School Prin cipal Ellen M. White were plundered in like manner. The executive committee of the Com mercial club has endorsed tlie course pursued by Euclid Murtlu and other members of the club who went to Chi cago to attend the Interstate Commerce law convention, called for tlie specific purpose of endorsing President Roose- volt'8 railway regulation policy, and lunded iu a convention committed lu ad vance to opposo President Roosevelt's policy. Inasmuch as the Omaha Commer cial club had not been Invited to send delegates to the Interstate Commerce Ijaw convention, and inasmuch as the members of tho club had no opportunity to express their views on the issue in volved and had authorized nobody to ex press It for them, the action of the ex ecutive committee Is, to say the least, of questionable propriety. That wits the view held by the members of the Lincoln Commercial club regarding the action of certain of its members who, while mas querading as Roosevelt men, had es poused the cause of tlie corporations that are antagonizing his railroad policy with all their uiit;ht and inn in. If the surviving members of the pres ent city council want to drive the last nail in their own political coffins, they can do it most effectively by electing I to tlie vacancy caused by the sudden death of Councilman Nicholson some mau notoriously selected for them by paving contractors and public service corporaiUuis. It seems to us that it the surviving councilmeu hud a grutu of seuse they would fill the vacancy caused by the death of Mr. Nicholson by a man who has no affiliation with put, He works con tractors and Is frett from entangltug ob ligations to any public service eoriiora tlou. And now we ure told thut if two sipo cruts are only elected to membership In the Board of University Regents, the door will be opened. There are two popocrutlc regent right this minute. Why don't they open them? And for four years the popocrats had complete control over the board. Why didn't they open the doors then? It looks as if wlrnt Is wanted is merely an ojen door for the popocrats to enter. The doctrine that republicans or dem ocrats must vote for crooked men in order to elect the straight ticket Is per nicious anil demoralizing In the ex treme. It is the duty of every Amer ican citizen to cast his ballot according to the dictates of his own conscience. It would lie his duty to himself, his family ami his fellow citizens to vote against any candidate whom he knows to be Incompetent or dishonest, eveu If he were unanlmouslv nominated. The Omaha Fakery nas nddressed epistles to the Germans and to the Swedes In their own tongue to rouse them against County Treasurer Fink and It will be In order to follow up the polyglot bombardment with epistles to the Danes, Italians, Greeks. Hungarians, Bulgarians, Polanders, Bohemians, Syr ians, Russians, Roumanians and Afro Amerlcaus lu their native tongues. The Omaha Fink-o-fobiiic has fired three columns of bird shot In German and three volleys of canister In Swedish. The next thing we may expect Is that a broadside In pure Irish that will make every son of Erin don the kilties next Tuesday nnd ploy the hornpipe for Fleming. Uraftera to Shoot At. Philadelphia Press (rep.). Tills is a great time for the voter who owns himself. Hitched for Life. Chicago Tribune. The people may rest comfortably In the belief that there will be no necessity for reuniting the north and south again for several years. Too Much of n Good Thin;. Indianapolis News. The burden of our big crops is now weighing heavily on the country. Pity the poor railroad managers who have to sit up nights making money. Chancellor Andrews Qualifications. Washington Post. Chancellor E. Benjamin Andrews of the Nebraska university is In favor of turning over condemned murderers to the doctors and surgeons for experiment, tlie subjects to receive their liberty, "if they survive." The qualifying clause relieves us of any danger that might come from having a lot of murderers turned loose. In ft Nutshell. Kansas City Times. The impregnable position of the president and the people respecting the demand for railway rate regulation is based on tho evils which exist under the present sys tem. And this altogether wrong condition Is admirably stated In the following suc cinct sentence of Mr. Ray Stannard Baker, writing In McClure's: "When a shipper or a citizen who thinks he Is wronged at tempts to get relief he must submit his case, not to an impartial tribunal, but to his adversary In the case.'! PLATITl UES Oik HMIIEZZLEMEXTSf Condition Which Cannot Be Ex plained by Snerrlns. Chicago Record Herald. When Charles O. Dawes denounced the "platitudes" of the Nebraska bank presi dent, who made a speech at the bankers' convention at Lincoln, he showed that he was laboring under a serious delusion as to the quullty and quantity of western public opinion. The Nebraska man had been talking, perhnps, in a declamatory style, about the various abuses in high flnanco which recent Investigations have revealed. He said he was tired of having to apologize for them, and wanted genuine reforms to inted genuine reforms to Thereupon Mr. Dawes or the N'ebraskan harder , begin at once. started in to belabor than ever the "latter had belabored the i abuses. However familiar the truth about high finance may have been to Mr. Dawes, it Is certain that the great mass of the pcoplo of this country were Just lgnorajit enough of what was going on in tlie neighborhood ' of Wall street to be startled and alarmed when the fact began to come to light. I And this la true of the residents of Chi- I cago a well as of the residents of Ne- braska. The people had literally no con- j ccption of the financial rottenness thut I existed. The things that were common, everyday business In New York were high- j way robbery In Chicago. And happily so. So It was no mouthing of platitudes that the Nebraskan Indulged in. His theme wus of embezzlements. Embezzlements are not platitudes. Falsified books are not plati tudes. Abuses of trusteeships are not plati tudes. To denounce these things loud and long Is not to dabble in platitudes. The discussion cannot be silenced by sneers. It can only be silenced by genuine reform. WHAT'S TUB I SK. President Stlckney Throw m Head light on Rnllroad Rebate. Detroit Free Press. So long as Mr. A. B. Stlckney Is the president of It. the Chicago Great Western railway must be rated as on of the good corporations.- Mr. Stlckney Is an admirer of Mr. Roosevelt and coincides with the view that the rates of railroads should be subject to federal supervision and regu lation. He Is Arm In his conclusion that rebate are the product of competition, and so long as there Is competition there will be rebates unless some appropriate and effective remedy Is adopted to prevent them. But In the very speech In which he explained that unreasonable rate ara practically Impossible where there Is com petition, but that it is important to es tablish the correct principle before coin petition Is eliminated, as it will be In ten or twenty years, he explained also the system In vogue by which the railroads avoid the law which forbids rebates and the means they employ to destroy all evi dence of the lawbreaklng. It is simple, too. At regular intervals a young man carrying packages of currency leaves New York and distributes the money among the shippers. He speaks to no one, makes no explanation oi what the money is, but the amounts he leaves behind run, accord ing to Mr. Stlckney, into hundreds of thou sands of dollars a year. With such a sys tem it would make little difference what the law was unless there was some change in the views of the parties to such con tracts. Of course tlie shippers will make the bkt bargain they can with the rail roads, and the railroads will do what they can to get business. In these circumstance It would seem a pertinent reply to Mr. Roosevelt to ask, "What's the user' But It would be as pertinent and logical to Ray that because It Is usually difficult and often iniHsHible to detect murderers and punish their frillies, that we should have no law making murder a felony or pre scribing punishment for the felon. ROIHKl K.LT AI It TK R Kill I.ATIOI Statements of the Convention sap purl In a" the President's Poller. The executive committee of the Chirsen convention which approved President Roosevelt's policy of railroad rat icgula tiou has Issued the following statement: "it Is doubtless due to the public that some express statement be made of the facts leading up to and which furnish the occasion for the position taken by the executive committee of the Interstate com merce law convention. "The nsme was given to a convention held at St. Louis In lsl. the object of which was to bring: closer In unison numer ous shipping and commercial organisations In their efforts to secure such amendments to the Interstate commerce law as would result In giving to the commission enough power at least to correct a rate which It found upon investigation to be wrong. "It was thought that the expenses of the effort would be much less If the several organizations desiring this amendment to the law would act together. That meeting resulted In appointing a committee of the organizations which met to carry on the work. The committee selected E. P. Bacon of Milwaukee as its chairman, und pro ceeded In as Inexpensive a way as possible to call to tlie public attention some of the abuses of railway transportation which needed correction. "The convention and the committee thought that the simple method of giving to the commission the power to correct the rate, W'hlch It was supposed to posses up to a short time previous to the date men tioned, would be sufficient, and did not apprehend serious objection upon lb part of the railroads generally conferring such Power on the commission. "I'p to that time It had not been charged that the commerce commission was a menace to the public safety. Repeated ef forts before congress had the effect ftl least to develop the fact that the power of the railrouds to prevent any legislation not de sired by them had grown to such propor tions that the ordinary citizen had but poor opportunity to get a respectful hearing upon such a proposition. "After Theodore Roosevelt became presi dent, and after numerous rate advances In various parts of the country, believing that a more powerful effort must be made If anything was done, the executive commit tee of the law convention In 19c4 called a general meeting of commercial, ahlpping and producing organizations to meet at St. Louis October 28, 1904. "Recognizing the honesty and capability of Mr. Bacon, he again was appointed chairman. Within the limit of such mod erate funds us were provided for the pur pose, the work was carried on at Washington before the committees and otherwise by the distribution of literature, and by laying before the public the neces sity of remedial rate legislation as well as presenting the matter to congressmen and senators. "The result of no legislation, tho untiring efforts of railway interests and of those who received some advantage or other In the matter of their freight rates to mold or affect public sentiment led the execu tive committee to make Inquiry of various organizations touching the propriety of calling another convention. This was to provide the means of carrying on the work nnd to renew ihe demands concerning leg islation as outlined In President Roose velt's message and In his subsequent pub lic utterances. Generally the replies were favorable. The convention was called to meet at Chicago. "We expected that the railroad would attempt to discourage organizations from sending delegates. But we were astonished to learn only a short time before the date ef tho convention that the attempt was be ing made to secure enough delegates op- 1 posed to the principles and reasons for the call to vote down any resolutions favoring the legislation as outlined by the president to Increase the .powers of the commission. It was beyond our desire thus to faiT Into such ambuscade. "In order to avoid such a culm: ''v and In order to hold a convention wl:!cli would afford the opportunity to speak our views we were put to the regrettable necessity of requiring that all those who attended as delegates must subscribe to the principles contained In the call of Chairman Bacon and in the message of the president quoted therein. "It wus far from the Intention of the ex ecutive committee to exclude anyone who entertained those views. It was the Inten tion of the committee to exclude only those who opposed those views. The committee now Invites tho active co-operation of everyone who Is in accord with the reso lutions adopted at Stelnway hall on Oc tober 27, endorsing President Roosevelt's views respecting the needed amendments to the Interstate commerce act. "While the committee does not invite or desire to provoke the criticism of those who do not hold to those views. It does not expect and did not expect their aid. "Much has been charged against the ex ecutive committee, but mainly that It ap plied 'gag' rule and throttled 'free speech.' To this It pleads that In order to afford 'free speech' It was necessary to exclude those who themselves would have applied the equivalent of 'gag' rule by capturing the convention. ' "The executive committee, having per formed its. duty, appeals to the public to stand by the principles of railroad rate reg ulation as demanded and outlined by Pres ident Roosevelt and the resolution as adopted by the law convention. "The method which the president pro poses Is simple. The machinery of the law exists; it simply needs the power, the strengthening of its weak points. That I what we advocate; that Is what the opposi tion does not want. Det not those who are opposed to practical, speedy regulations dictate the law or the plan to secure It lest when you are expecting bread you receive a stone. "You can afford to stand firmly by the position of a president who has the moral courage to lead you, coupled with the Judg ment and honesty not to lead you astray. "Let the public render Its verdict." PKKsOSAL. MiTfcS. The crop of election guesses exceed th average In quantity, but the quality of much of It Is threatened by frost. Leading men of Michigan have had a full-length portrait of Senator Julius C. Burrows painted by Percy Ive of De troit, which will be hung In the Senate chamber of the Capitol at Lansing. Prof. Irvln 8. Perry, head of the physic department of Purdue university, has In vented a piece of apparatus to Illustrate the acceleration produced In the motion of the body by a force acting in the direc tion the body is moving. Albert Gallatlp of Sacramento, Cal., who ha just died, conceived and first carried out the modern method of the long distance transmission of electric energy for power and light by carrying electricity to hi city, twenty-two mile, from water power at Folsom. Elliott Pitch Shenard of New Tork. who was fined GuO franca, assessed 20,0u0 franc damage and sentenced to three months' Imprisonment for running down and kill ing a girl In France, ha lived la Pari for several year. H ha had an unfor tunate business career, having lust heavily In several enterprises. Eight years ago, when he was about 22 years old. he mar ried Mrs. Alfred Potter, a wealthy widow of Philadelphia, The Doctor Asks "Arc your bowels regular?" He knows that daily action of the bowels is absolutely essential to health. ' Then keep your liver active and your bowels regular by taking small laxative doses of Ayer's Pills. Just one pill at bed time is enough, just one. We have no secrete! We publish the formulas of all our medicines. M4 by tli 9. 0. Ayr Co., XwU, Mass Also afananktarrs ( ATKR'8 HAIR TIOOR-For th hair. ATER'SCHBRRTPKCTORAt-Forcesflis. ATIR'3 8ARSAPARILLA For th blood. AVER'S AGUE CURB-Tor malaria and ago. RRTIIIN TO EK-OHOMV. Department t'blef Reduce Drafts on the National Trensnry. New York Tribune. Secretary Taft has set a noticeable exam ple of administrative economy In the esti mates he has Just sent to the secretary of the treasury for transmission to congress. These estimates cover the fiscal yenr 19oti 7 and the startling thing about them is that the appropriation linked for Is nearly SlOiOCO.OOO less thun the amount granted the War department by congress for 19.15-6. A cut Is made of nearly 10 per cent. The amount appropriated last winter for all military purposes. Including river nnd bnr bor Improvements and public works gen erally charged to the War department, was nearly $115,000,000. Next winter. If con gress follows the department's estimates, the net sum will fall to about $105,000,000. If congress chooses to economize a little on its own account the total may drop as low as $100,000,000. A cut of this sort carried through tho regular appropriation bills would net the government a saving of over $60,000,000. It would also solve effectually the problem of treasury deficits. The Department of Commerce and Labor has also submitted smaller estimates for 1906-7 than those it submitted for 1905-6. So tho policy of retrenchment Initiated by President Roosevelt Is alrendy beginning to bear fruit. Hitherto it has been an al most unexampled thing for the head of a department to ask less money for any given year than he had asked for the year pre ceding. On the contrary, the universal ten dency was to enlarge expenditures and create new fields of outlny. When congress did not vot enough money to last through twelve months many department and bu reau chiefs authorized contracts in ex cess of the appropriations and then sent the bills In as deficiencies. In certain years the deficiency account has run as high ns $30,000,000, and the power to spend the money In the treasury as they saw fit was virtually usurped by minor officials In the departments. Congress last year outlawed this dangerous practice and made It a mis demeanor for any department head to cre ate anticipatory obligations. Under that provision of law the treasury will benefit annually to the extent of $20,000,000 or $25, 000,000. But from having formerly imposed on the good nature of congress by chronic over drafts on the treasury the department chiefs seem now to bo converted into ex acting and scrupulous economists. ASTOlSDIG CHAPTER O.V liHAFT One Nam pie Public Job Carried on In Philadelphia. Philadelphia Press. The report of the investigating engineers, Major Gillette und Mr. Maclennan, on the filtration Job Is the most amazing history of municipal iniquity which has ever been written. No single chapter even of the stupendous Tweed knaveries approaches this startling revelation. The simple recital la appalling. No intensity of language can add-to the force of the astounding facts. The broad, sweeping expose of the extent of the fraud which comes to the very beginning of the report takes the breath away. For the filtration job, including the minor items of the two boulevards, the city has paid or pledged $18,761,541.23. First-class work under the specifications, Including an allowance of 20 per cent, for legitimate profits, should not have cost over S12.43O.00O. The difference, $6,331,541, I unmitigated graft! I the full measure of this staggering revelation realized? The sum of 1 18.761,541 Is paid for what cost the contractors, even If It had been first-class work, only $10. 356,0u0. In other words the profit was &2 per cent., and this graft or steal, above legitimate profit, was 62 per cent of the job! This, mind you, even if the work were first-class work under the specifications. But it is not flrst-cluss. Most of what can lie examined, the engineer say, la second class; what is concealed nobody knows about. The real graft is evidently about tmt Khii faajtytar Sum Cof Iii a Coidt, Shftd severe nimrnci d wtilra truled on my luiitf. Slid I IrlrJ nrlolts fciiius of oouti rfindia, sons of wbit:li did me ftiif fuod until fltmllj tried one botile or Dr. Hell iMne-Tu Uoner.ahl' t re script piy truuikt for Uu mat aliiatil miiimI,. Very nvj, Henry f rank, tit Puiuil 8k,LuU Hack, Ail. W' OVER 4.COO.OOO DOTTLES OF Dr. Bell's Pine -Tar-Honey War M isrlsf tat year lM, ABSOLUTE OUAIATTEE. Th strongest evident of th merit of proprietary medicine la lhopin on of the consumer. Ber is tli record I Over l militea dohkb is ii. Fear Millie aeuiaa I !. 101 consumer regard mf th Boaey. beet couga IW Look lor th ISc, tOv. tlf ar tb 1 1 sirrituLANO MutUKe CO, (, ij. c s tea 1 100 per cent. That Is to soy, for every $3 spent the city got only $1 worth, nnd the dollar was steal. That Is on what Is past. What was t come? 'The estimated cost of completing existing filtration contracts at contract prices Is $l.fiS5.0iNi. A fair price, allowing 20 per cent, profit, would be $1,21R.(X. If completed under these contracts Ihe Iofs to the city would be $4ti7.00O. Can the carp ers understand now why the work was stopped? The total cost of bulb !he north eastern and the southern boulevards as planned at contract prices would be $7,033. Oiki, nnd tho dead loss to the city would be $2,7aO,io, Including the loss already sus tained. On filtration and the boulevards the totul prospective loss would be $2,sri4.fV. Added to the graft already shown It would make an aggregate colossal steal of $9. ise.l'.tti. But even more appalling than tlio money loss In this gigantic ste il is the wanton loss of lives. Graft, delay and death went band In .iand. The report shows that with proper management tho filtration plant Might have bef n completed and in operation on January 1, It makes plain by comparison that this would have saved 1.200 deaths by typhoid. These 1.200 murders are directly traceable and charceable to the fraudulent mismanagement. Oh, the shame i:f tho un speakable crime! The crushing report points straight to the penitentiary. I'ASIU PLIOASAVriUKS. "Whv Is this cheese so full of holes?" "That's ull right. It needs all the fresh . air it can get." Cleveland Deader. "What do you think posterity will say of you?" asked the Indignant patriot. "My dear sir," answered Senator Sor ghum, "what posterity says of me I do not expect to hear. It Is the present generation that duns you If you do not look out for your finances." Washington Star. "What started old Pinchopenny to study ing occult science?" 'He wants to cultivate a new sense so he can see a bill collector through a tirick wull." Chicago Record-Herald, i ' "What we need." thundered the principal sneaker at the political banquet, "is good judce!" "You bet!" yelled one of the banqueters, ' who hnd tasted tho beverage in his glass, nnd pushed It aside with a wry face. Chicago Tribune. "Jlmpson Is anxious to get a divorce." "Doesn't ho know he will have to pay alimony amounting to 60 per cent of his income!" "Yes, and he's anxious to do It. "That's funny. Why?" "Well, he says his wife get 100 per cent of It now." Kansas t'iiy Telegram. "That westerner s-enis to be telling you some pretty tall tales." "Yes, he was telling me that out his way It was nothing unusual to harvest 150 bushels of wheat to tlie acre." "Of course, you told him that was a lie." "Not exactly. I merely remarked that It was a 'cereal story'." Philadelphia Press. SllAHOAIII.li AUVICK. S. W. Glllilan In Puck. Don't mind a shivered fin, toy lad, or frac tured collarbone; If you were hurt with wrong intent the barm is not your ow n. Don't mind a few unraveled ribs, disinte grated silne If t'o'her uid it purposely the injury ain't thine. Don't care a whoop If both your hips are yanked from out their sockets The pay for damages like these comes out of other pockets. Don't notice shattered femurs, crumbled flbne Oh, no! The man who meant to smash you get the lion's share of woe. Ignore that storm-cloud-tinted eye, that cheek that'B black and blue In after yenra your smasher must feel vastly worse than you. Just giggle o'er ynur fractured skull, paste on our severed oar The rattcal meant to do it, SO It's I who should have tho fear. And if with fell intention twenty bucko mount your chest And trample on it till your soul ha (ought the land of rest, Within your silver-handled home you'll lie and gloat like fun O'er whut those chaps must undergo fdr all the dirt they've dune! mm Cm Wbe AO Ela rails. I tmd a spTer encib and tuld. I tried a groat iimny reaiexuee but Done of I hm Metned to do iue ny good, end at lM I tried one bottle of Dr. Hell', fine. Tar. Honey and It cured rue. Very reene:fu.lr, Herman t'liliuau, 114 E hl ( aiu. nu bb, UxuenUe, Ay. r2?. 1 u,er lire jnintea oeiins is le. uvay eviaenoei trie opinion of to menu of Or. bcll't Piae-Tar. maaioin on In market. Bell aa th Bottle. "S I ma4 $1.00 Bottle.