THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1906. I ! The Omaha Daily Bee. K. ROSE WATER. EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Bee (without Bund7, one year. .14. o Daily Bee and Sunday, one year " Illustrated Bee. one year 2 M (under Eee, one year 6" Saturday Bee. one year " DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Daily Bee (Including Sunday), per week. 17c Dally Bee (without Sunday), per week. 12c Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week Sc Kvenlng Bee (with Sunday), per week.. 10c Sunday Bee, per copy c Address complaints of Irregularities In de livery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Be Building. South Omaha City llall Building. Council Bluff-10 Pearl Street. Chicago 140 Unity Building. New York 150s Home Life Ins. Building. Washington col Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, eipress or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received as payment of mail accounts. Personal check, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. THIS BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION, Stata of Nebraska, Douglaa County, as .: C. C. Rosewater. goneral manager of The Bee publishing Company, being duly sworn, nvi that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Daily, Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of March, 190, was as follows: 1 31.R-40 1J 1 31.WVO lg 2000 I 82,120 is si, -too 2ft,B4M : StJHM 6 si.4no n st.iao S 81,470 22 S1.B20 7 ai,.io 23 JIH.530 t 81.a.10 24 82,12 a 1,870 26 20.1BO lo ,..aa,oBo 2s a 1,2 to II 2,100 27 SI ,050 12 81,200 28 r 810 13 . aa.oTu 2 aiwo 14 81,4lO JO 81,300 la 81.1BO It ......82,180 16 31.430 Total 96T,40 Less unsold copies 10,741 Net total sales tK,TO Daily average 81,151 C. C. ROSEWATER, General Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn ta before me this Hist day or ftiarcn, ijw. (Seal) M. B. HUNQATE. Notary Public. WHEN OIT OP TOWN, sabsribers leaving the city tern porarlly shoald have The Bea sailed to them. Address will be Arbor day In bearing la sight and Omaha Is still In need of further em bellishment by tree planting. Between the Zionists in Chicago and the Mormons In Utah the apostolic dis card Is nsaumlng alarming proportions. Colorado politics continues to mystify residents of other states. A federal judge out there has now resigned his office. Neapolitans may now realize the full meaning of the popular expression of being "between the devil and the deep. blue sea.. , . Chicago preachers who took Dowie as a subject' for Sunday serruous eemed to realize the difference between prophets and profits. Apparently the arrest of liberal can didates and roters by the Russian gov ernment had the usual effect of the campaign roorback In America. Senator Millard explains that bis pres ent home, visit Is strictly on business. But he may perhaps be persuaded to talk a little politics between times. The arrest of a Massachusetts man for not turning money over to a cam paign fund may cause George W. Ter kins to wonder at the vagaries of fate. In the light of the pleadings at Kan as City that trip of a United States Judge as the guest of Missouri railroad attorneys promises likewise to become historical. Still another eouncllmanic candidate declares under oath that be got his nom (nation without paying out a cent But it will not do to examine these gift horses too closely. If It Is true that New York democrats are declaring for Mr. Bryan, he may find, the "enemy's country" catching him in the rear when he begins hi tri umphal march upon Gotham. Former Senator Allen is now In favor of a convention nomination for United States senator. When be himself wns a candidate latt time, however, he was decidedly opposed to It. It evidently makes a difference. . The postponement of the coal confer ence at New York for twenty-four hours would Indicate that the majority of operators have a little contest of their own to settle before they, present a united front to the miners. With the United State. Great Britain and Germany all requesting the czai to change the date of the second con ference at The Hague, be may conclude the true Interests of peace can be fos tered by talking about It later. John l. Rockefeller has made his re apiearance in New "York. Ills retire ment mast have been caused by a fear that Standard Oil employes would learn bow little he kuew of how the business was being conducted. Kvery railroad doing business la Ne braska filing its returns for assessment with the state board shows Increa sed earnings and Increased profits. The kick against increased valuation w ill iowever. be. just as strong- as of old An Oklahoma district attorney U ac cused of adjourning a session of the grand Jury before a witness summoned by the attorney general could rejsjrt. If the (act are established it will be easy to foretell the uext lauding place of the tig. stick. 3dR BR YA y ASA CnSSERYATtrE" The article In a magazine for" the cur rent month In which Mr. Bryan dwells on the excellencies of Individualism In contrast with socialism conies at an op portune moment for those who are Just now preparing to press him upon the attention of the democratic party and the country in the character of "a con servative." It Is true that his niagasine treatise deals with the subject from a theoretical standpoint, but Its generali ties and catchwords nevertheless chime with the Increasing apprehensions of many thoughtful men In the democratic party whose aversion to Mr. Bryan In the past was caused by his radicalism. , It Is curious to note with what cau tion and calculation Mr. Bryan's spe cial partisans, many of them old time supporters because of his very radi calism, are at this time emphasizing every possible point and appearance of hlm in the contrary character, and that his public deliverances now and for some time past have smoothed the way for them. And It may bo fairly ad mitted that while the general public at titude toward vital questions has been materially modified in a decade, so Mr. Bryan's outlook may also have been modified, and there Is little question that the tendency toward this opinion Is increasing in a conservative element In his party. At any rate a very considerable tacti cal advantage seems likely to result to Mr. Bryan so far as practical demo cratic politics ts concerned. For, what ever alteration may have occurred in his favor in "conservative" quarters, he has, so far, apparently, committed him self in no way that forfeits the support of the legions who in the past have fol lowed him because of his radicalism and co-operation with socialistic ele ments. It will certainly be interesting to observe at this Juncture, when his rarty Is beginning to cast the horoscope, how far Mr. Bryan can be successfully exploited as a conservative bulwark against socialistic excess without ex citing the apprehension and resentment of the radical hosts of which he was In 18'.H3 and 1000 at once the leader and the idol. WHAT OF THK POPVLISTSt So far' as is ascertainable, no steps have yet been taken for the presenta tion of a populist ticket for the coming election In Nebraska. For years the populists have been going through the motion of nominating a fusion ticket in conjunction with the democrats, but more recently the populist conventions, which formerly overshadowed those of the other allies, have lapsed Into a mere handful of delegates, while democratic conventions have monopolized the main tent Do the populists, or what there is left of them, intend to go through the same performance again this year, or aire thy ready to recognize the stern realities and withdraw from' the "stage? Here in Omaha and Douglas county, neither last fall nor this spring have the popu lists, who once presented a fair front been brash enough to put candidates bearing their party banner on the ticket and the same is true, so we are told, in many other counties throughout the state. The fact la that so long as the re publicans of Nebraska adhere firmly to the Roosevelt program, the old line in- llsts find more to attract them into the republican ranks than to remain in alli ance with the democrats. As an effec tive, indeiendent force In politics, how ever, the populist organisation has been dissipated. Nothing but the gross est mistake on the part of the repub licans could cause it to revive its strength. The greater part of the old populist party was originally driven out of the republican party because of dis satisfaction, not so much with repub lican policies as with republican party management and party candidates, and most of them who have come buck of late for a trial will stay in the repub lican fold permanently. If not aguln driven away. CORP iR A TIOS FCSDS AST) PA R Tl KS. All legislative bodies ought to pro hibit under severe penalties the us of corporation funds for political purposes of any kind. Public opinion Is practic ally unanimous as to the demoral)y.in( effect of such contributions, and in the light of the disclosures of the past year, showing how baleful Is the intimate re lation between corporation funds iu the hands of party committees and candi dates and corporation funds In the hands of legislative lobbyists, no one wonld now have the hardihood to de fend them. The seat of the evil is more particularly in coqiorations wbU-b by their very nature or by mere bulk of their operations assume the character of public institutions, but there is no need of limiting the prohibitions of the law to any particular class of corpora tions. The law will be more effective In such a matter if Its provisions are simple and sweeping. No one proposes to Infringe the right of the citizen to contribute to the pollt ical party of his choice for any legltl mate purpose. His right la indlsputa ble. It la the corporation contribution that infringes that right, liecause the stockholders of a railroad, telegraph or bank company or the policyholders of a life insurance company entrust their money to the corporation for the spe cific purosee of the business carried on, and are sure to llong to differeut polit ical parties. If there were no other objection, it Is a flagrant breach of trust to devote the money of one stock holder to promote the oppofite political purposes of another. As a matter of fact in the use of coriioratlon funds In politics Is almost Invariably for pur poes hostile to the Interests of the great majority of all snx-kholder. Public policy requires that political activity shall emanate and be sustained from citizens as Individuals and that it shall be divorced to the utmost extent possible from those great corporate iKxiies which, created by law for cer tain specific purposes, it Is supremely linMrtnnt should be held In subjection to law. And every corporation, railroad or other, under the Jurisdiction of the national government, should be aa rig orously prohibited as coriwratlons under that of state governments from divert ing so much as one penny of Its funds to the nses of political parties under any pretense whatever. XF.OAT1VE CRITICISM OF RATK BILL. An extraordinary feature of the sen ate debate on the Dolliver-Hepburn bill Is the failure of those who are recog nized as Its most positive opponents to agree and put forth their chief objec tions in amendment form. Month after month such opponents have busied themselves with destructive criticism, but they have so far persistently avoided constructive co-operation. At the outset Senator Foraker, ex pressing the legal view which embodies the substance of the extreme railroad corporation opposition, made an elab orate argument the logical conclusion of which denies the whole scheme of rate control either by congress directly or through the medium of any executive commission. But Senator Foraker him self and the coterie of senators who re gard the subject from the same stand point have perceived all the way through that the passage of a regula tion measure is Inevitable, and, along with other senators who profess to favor such a measure, have directed their efforts to magnify the faults of the measure devised by the friends of the president's policy with bis encour agement. The two points upon which the brunt of attack has fallen are Judicial review of commission-fixed rates and their sus pension by judicial order pending ap peal to the courts. Senators Foraker, Culberson, Knox, Spooner, Bailey and others, including the very ablest law yers In the senate, have elaborated at great length constitutional arguments against, the rate bill on these two cap ltal points, some Insisting that It is ab solutely void for failure to provide spe cifically for court review and that a pro vision prohibiting suspension of rates by court would be void, but most of them holding that congress has power in one degree or another to define both appeal from the commission and the enjoining of its rates while appeal Is being tried. The bill was drawn in the form In which it is before the senate and is de fended by its foremost friends, on the ground, as Is familiarly known, that the constitutional right of appeal to the courts exists independent of any spe cific provision by congress therefor and that the constitutional minimum of re view Is all that should be allowed, since Judicial delays and incapacity to deal effectively with the rate subject in its length and breadth is one of the great est evils from which the public has suf fered. The country has not failed to note that these senatorial critics, while cry ing out so loudly and ingeniously against what they assert should not be in the bill as it stands, either refuse to formulate or are Incapable of formu latlng a substitute provision that would be free from objections. The Impres sion Is deepening as this negative and destructive criticism is persisted in that their hostility really goes to the very essence of the measure and that they have no substitute for Its chal lenged features which they dared to submit to the same thorough and delib erate public Judgment before which the pending measure itself was fairly placed at the very beginning of the session. The friends of a great measure of public policy may properly and honestly seek to perfect It but only enemies and that sort of weak-hearted friends who are tools in the hands of enemies con fine their energies exclusively to nega tion and destructive criticism. It is to be hoped the city and county authorities will get together on the as slgnment of quarters for the con soli dated city and county treasuries. The financial department of our local gov ernment comes in close contact with i greater number of individual citizen than the other departments and it ought to le made as easy as possible for people to come in and pay their taxes The natural location for the merged treasuries Is lu the rooms in the clt hall now occupied by the city treasurer. These should afford ample space for the enlarged work after merger. An ordinance submitting the question of voting bonds for a city workhouse has at last been prepared for Introduc tion Into the council. To get It through and submit it according to the pro visions of the charter will require prompt action, as notice of not less than ten days must be given the voters. We see no reason, however, why there should be any opposition anywhere to the submission of this proposition, ex cept possibly from the beneficiaries of the Jail feeding graft, which might not be so lucrative if the city made its pris oners work out their board. With the pure food bill as a "flller' in the bouse this week congressmen will be given an opportunity to express themselves on a subject which may In terest their constituents just before the electious, but if they desire to make the best Impression they will enact the law and talk later. . The agent who sold the voting ma chines that will be used at our coin! ng election is trying to make people Here that machine voting conduce be to scratched tickets. In the light of ex pertence already bad It will be bard to make this story go down. The ma chines as now set unquestionably "on- duce to straight party voting. The only way to give an Independent candidate an equal chance with a party candidate Is to take off the stralgnt ticket lever and make every voter Indicate sepa rately bis choice of candidates for every office As Interpreted by one of its god fathers, the democratic city platform demand for municipal ownership of pnbllc utilities means that municipal ownership Is to be held In abeyance until the acquisition of the water plant, and, Innsmuch as the In'st promise for completion of the water works purchase puts It off from two to three years yet and probably Into the city administra tion to be elected In 1!!1, people may Judge how little substance there is In such platform declarations at this time. The World-Herald attempts to jus tify its flagrant inconsistency between preaching and practice of municipal ownership by asserting that while it has always believed in the theory, It is opposed to applying It to more than one thing at a time. It forgets to say that in the application the fake municipal ownership advocates have put the big gest and toughest Job first, so as to postpone Indefinitely all the little ones that could have been completed In short time with ease. What They Hanker For. Chicago News. It Is said that President Roosevelt is preparing to roast some of the magazine writers who have been looking tnto things in Washington. In their wildest dreams they could hardly have hoped for such ad vertising. St. Paul Pioneer Press. The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune still assail the fallen magnate of the New Tork Mutual, poor Richard A. McCurdy. To escape them he fled with his family to Europe. But even thither, on the wings of the lightning. Is borne the announcement that a poem written by him before the day of discomposing "Investigations." has been sold at auction for thirty cents! Perplexities of "n Loral Issue." Chicago Chronicle. Mr. McCall of Massachusetts has been trying to get the tariff revisionists In con gress to act together and finds, it Is said, that he can not because In different locali ties they can not Agree on what should be revised Massachusetts wanting free hides and the central west not wanting hides free, for example. What a curious re minder this Is of the universal guffaw that once greeted General Hancock's dictum that the tariff Is "a local Issue." Would these gentlemen laugh so loud now? KIcklnsT on Carnegie Money. Philadelphia Record. In Guthrie Center, Iowa, the feeling against the crime of being rich is ss strong as It was In the fight over sllverlsm. The town has refused by a popular vote to ac cept $5,000 from Mr. Carnegie for a library on the ground that his money Is tainted. Women cast nearly half the votes and did most of the work;, their acute moral sense was particularly aroused against the ac ceptance of money from an eastern pluto crat. And yet Mr. Carnegie Is not a trust magnate: he broke the steel rail trust and the steel beam trust and refused to go Into the Bteel trust or to take its stock In payment for his property when he sold out. It Is true he 1s guilty of being very rich, but he Is only ss rich as he can be and the same Is true of every other man. As he Is trying to divest himself of his gold and his guilt, It seems as If the good women of Guthrie Center might have consented to relieve him of (5,000. HOUSE STILL I! THE LEAD. Preachment on the Animal and His Mechanical Rival. Cincinnati Enaulrer. The automobile has not discouraged the useful animal, the horse. Official reports show that th equina Is still paramount. In 1906 there were 17,067,702 horses In tha United States, against 14,213,837 In 1SS0. The export price averaged J3U6.98 last year, against 1174.50 In 1S92. The horse Is flesh, blood and intelligence, and people cf natu ral and practical predilections can have an affection for him. He has tha graces of instinct, and if he gets proper attention is a thing of beauty and satisfaction. The spread of the automobile is amazing, but it is still to a great degree a fad and a toy. It is a product of prosperous times, when men are making money and have the means of treating themselves to novelties. Its best use is for heavy delivery transporta tion In cities, but it has nothing to oom mend It over the horse for family driving or pleasure riding. It goes faster than the patient, four-footed beast, but the horse is as rapid as Is necessary. It goes at as great a pace as ought to be permitted In the streets of a city, and Is less tempestu ous than the bellowing and snorting motor. Anyboy with human Instincts can acquire a positive affection for a faithful horse, but who could love a greasy automobile, with its absurd noises, gaseous wheexlng and noxious odors? The horse, the noblest of all beasts If, indeed. It is not a shame to call it a beast is a creature of bounti ful and beautiful nature, while the horse less wagon Is a senseless, ponderous ma chine that is not bridle wise, snd has to be guided at every motion by a man In a spectacular overcoat and wearing on his eyes horrid goggles. The automobile has not advanced much save in devilment. It Is still largely a vehicle for the transpor tation of grotesque- exhibitions. Loyalty to the horse la a sign of the best human temperament. He la one of the pioneers of civilisation, as well aa one of Its great est finishers. BOTH FOOD AND MEDICINE. We like best to call Scott's Emulsion a food-medicine. It is a term that aptly describes the character ana action of our Emulsion. More than a edicine more than a food. et combining the vital prin ciples of both. It is for this reason that Scott's Emulsion has a distinct and special value in all wasting diseases. There is nothing better to remedy the troubles of im perfect growth and delicate health in children. The action of Scott's Emulsion is just as effective in treating weak ness and wasting in adults. SCOTT ft aOWNK, as tmti . Keo Vent ARM V CiOSSIP IX WASHISUTOV (arrest Events Ulenned from the Army and Navy Restlater. There la under consideration the project of withdrawing the signal corps from Benl ria Barracks, Cat. The corps has at that place a supply depot from which material Is sent to signal corps commands on the Pacific coast and In the Plllippines. Com Danles E and H of the corps are on dutv at Benlcla and much work of an experi mental character has been conducted, and more has been In contemplation, at that place. If Benlcla Barracks Is abandoned by the signal corps, which seems probable at this time, the corps will concentrate its depots and Its facilities for experimentation at Omaha, Neb., retaining, of course. Fort Wood. N. T., which Is a source of supply tor the signal corps In the east and where is on duty company G. Much interest attache to the experience of the company of signal corps men who this week have started out from Fort Leavenworth, Kan., under the command of Captain William Mitchell of the corps for a tour of duty on the target range. Last year was the first season when the signal corps command at Leavenworth took part In the rifle competition. The men did so well that It has been determined to con tinue this work and it is expected that dur ing this season the signal corps men will make even a better showing than they did last year. The War department Is In receipt ot ap plication for mileage claimed by officers who are now on the retired list and who feel that they are entitled to mileage which appears to have been paid General Leonard Wood under circumstances that seem to Justify a similar disbursement of public money In the rase of the claimants. It Is likely that nothing will be done In these cases since there were very good reasons for the action originally taken In denying mileage. The conditions are not understood to constitute a new situation In any respect. The claim for mileage which may be re ceived will have to be filed. Army signal officers have been engaged this week on experiments with the pyro technic form of signalling with which there has been some -work between this city, Fort Washington, Alexandria and other places In the neighborhood. In the tests which were held there wss signalling by bombs by daylight as well as after dark, the former Including the discharge of smoke bombs or devices which carry and expose to view smoke of different colors, to be observed at a distance to ascertain with what effect that system may be employed In, communication. There were further tests also with bombs and rockets at night. Bo far as the experiments have gone there Is a demonstration of the bomb as com pared with any other conveyor. It Is found to be more reliable. The army signal of fice has accumulated a supply of pyrotech nics put up In hermetically sealed tin cans as a protection against the weather. THIS COUNTRY IS ALL RIGHT. Conditions Which Pnt the Calamity Howler Ont of Baslnesa. Washington Post. The advent of spring finds the people ot this country in the heart of an era of mar velous prosperity which, for duration and scope, will remain one of the wonders of history. No brighter period is recorded In the story of any nation than the past half doxen years in the United States, and no such progress noted before. Beginning with wonderful crops, the era of prosperity has developed still greater yields and tilled more fields, until the world has been astonished by the output of foodstuffs from American farms. Railroads have wrestled with tha problem of moving these crops and the task of extending their lines into new sec tions that have begun to swell the torrent of production. They have succeeded only passably in handling the enormous business that has been offered. Industry of every kind Is now Intensely active. It was thought that the limit of ac tivity had been reached last year, but the prospects are favorable for still greater ex pansion In 1906. Manufacturers are per plexed In finding ways and means to en large the capacity of their plants. Skilled labor of all kinds Is employed and unskilled labor is busy In a thousand directions, dig ging and clearing the way for their more expert brethren. Communications are ex tending, the building trades are overworked, factories are behind with their orders, trol ley lines are knitting city and country with Incredible rapidity and every city In the country, without exception, la Increasing in population and wealth. The bank clear ings of cities east and west, north and south, are heavier than ever before. The postal business Is greater. The bank de posits are larger. Every test of business activity, when applied to these times. proves that the United States Is in better physical and financial condition than ever before. The country find Itself confronted, not with the task of making a living, but the greater task of keeping Its head above the rising flood of good times. With such a situation at the beginning of another season that promises to be greater than those that have gone before, it is not surprising that the people have little time or inclination to listen to the calamity howler or his little brother the professional graft hunter. The country is all right and everybody knows It. PERSONAL NOTES. Secretary Root announces that In mak ing his trip to South America next summer he will go clear around that continent, com ing up the west coast and crossing the Isthmus. Hilarious news comes from Oklahoma. Joe Sober, Henry Stud, Rev. Gripe, Grandma Root and Charlie Loveless have organised a co-operative domestic estab lishment at Enid. Congressman Weeks has given to his native town. Lancaster, N. H., the sum of $115,000 for the erection of a library in memory of his father, William Weeks, who was a life-long resident of the town. The emperor of China has a household consisting of 500 persons, including thirty bearers of state umbrellas, an eaual num ber of fanbearer. thirty physicians and surgeons, seventy-five astrologers, seventy six cooks and sixty priest Notwithstanding and nevertheless, the new business 6f the life- Insurance compan ies of the United States, amounting to $2, 400,000,000 in 19(16, waa as large as the entire foreign commerce of the United States, In cluding both Imports and exports. For holding up a 10-year-old girl and tak ing her penny a New York court gave the youthful highwayman three years In the reform school. If this rate is followed in penallslpg crooked captains of finance In that locality an expert accountant will be required to figure out the limit. In appreciation of the services rendered the city of New Orleans In the stamping out of yellow fever, the citizens presented Surgeon J. II. White, of the United States Public Health and Marine Hospital service, with the most exquisite silver set ever given to an Individual in that city. M. E. Palr.n-do, the New York orocess server, who succeeded in delivering sub poenss to H. H. Rogers and all the other big men In the Standard Oil company, with the exception of John D. Rockefeller, looks the Ideal of the "gentleman" stage detec tive. Tall, athletic, apparently well edu cated, wltti the easy manners of a man vf the world and a face of some refinement and great shrewdness. Made From Grapes Made From Grapes mm rum i'.rST PrrsrrrT f.lV Made From Grapes Made From Grapes PMC! SAKJMO POWDER CO., CMtCAOO. MILLIONS COMIXG IX. Stream of Immlarratloa Rising; lllahrr Than Krtr Before. New York World. A million immigrants and more will come to the United States this year. Last year's total waa l.(0S,4fl, and the 190 arrivals have been thus tar Id excess ot the record. Yet even these numbers are not so great In proportion to the wealth, population and assimilative power of the nation as were the numbers that came after the discovery of gold half a century ago. The 427,000 Im migrants of 1854 and even the 788,000 of lf&2 were more numerous In proportion to the population of the country at those periods thsn this year's total can possibly be to our present population. So vast a shifting of the peoples of the earth demands our closest scrutiny. Few national needs are so pressing as the need of scanning, directing, distributing, protect ing and educating this throng of newcomers and the need of Inspiring them with the Ideals of true democracy. The wider distribution of the Immigrants noted last year is most gratifying. For the first time the south drew more of the In coming host than did the Rocky mountain and far western region. There Is no "Immi gration problem," but the distribution of Immigration Is one of the most difficult of the minor problems which the coming of a plethora even of welcome guests entails. INCREASED IDE OF NARCOTICS. Moral Degradation Brought On by the Drnar Habit. Baltimore American. Something like a general effort has been made recently to surround the sale of cer tain dangerous drugs with stricter regu lations. Before several legislatures in ses sion similar bills regulating the retailing of cocaine, morphia, etc., have been intro duced. It is cocaine, especially, that seems In recent years to have come into wide spread use as a nerve stimulant, and the wreck and wretchedness that have fol lowed the general spread of the cocaine habit in certain spheres of city life are worse thsn follow in ths wake of pesti lence or famine; the moral degradation brought on by the drug habit is infinitely worse. A bill regulating the ssle of dangerous drugs is pending before the state legisla ture of New York, and a manufacturing chemist testifying before a senate com mittee declared that over SO per cent of all the cocaine at present manufactured In this country is converted to Illicit use. He stated also that fully 130 or the 200 girls now in Chinatown, New York City, some of them not more than 14 years old, are confirmed victims ot cocaine. This most powerful and terrible of narcotics Is said to be commonly peddled by pe destrians 'in the Chinese and other slum quarters of New Tork. The terrible fas cination of the drug, once the habit is acquired, never loses Its grip on the vic tim. In the course ot the inquiry Into the probable extent of the use of narcotics by the New York legislative committee some surprising statistics were brought out. In Vermont, for instance, where the entire population is only S50.000, there is sold during each month 1.300,000 doses of narcotic drugs. That constitutes an aver age of nearly ten doses monthly to every tnaji, woman and child in the state. The ratio Is astounding, any how the total Of narcotics consumed may be distributed. whether to few or to many of the popula tion. All of these drugs, tha. are so generally misused, properly used are considered by medical science to be of high benefit to the human race, and cocaine, especially. Is regarded a boon to suffering humanity. There are laws now in practically every state which are supposed to restrain snd limit the sale and common use of all 1 S3 ailiU No woman who uses ''Mother's Fricoi" need fear the suffering and danger incident to birth; for it robs the ordeal of its horror and insures safety to life of mother and child, and leaves her in a condition more favorable to speedy recovery. The child is good natured. Our book 'M ml "Motherhood, is worth itsweiehtin eoldtoeverv UUUVtaJ woman, and will be sent free in plain envelope by addressing application to Bradfteld Regulator Co. Atlanta, Ca. Y. W. C. A. - All This Week THE FRENCH DRY CLEANING WORKS will five JJi rrosi receipts to the building fund' 1903 r.rmm St Phon Dough$ 4m dangerous narcotics, but the terrible spread of the drug habit grows more widespread year by year. It is said that In certain districts of New York there are rftnil resorts pretending to .be ordinary drug stores that not only gain a llveiihond almost exclusively by selling drugs to "th fiends," but there is said to be evidence that some of these places distribute cocaine free to nnntiscrs and thus build ouimi by fostering the habit. There are few more serious problems with which benevolent effort Is attempting to grapple then Is this constantly Increasing tendency to the us of narcotics. MIRTHFIL REMARKS. "My, O my! I've got to raise J.M) for a week or so, and I haven't got a cent. Sav. lend me ten, will youT" "Sure, here you are." "Thanks. Ray or this Is onlv a dime" "Well, that's ten cents. Isn't It?" I'hlln delphia Press. PJones Do you believe that cures can be wrought by the laying on of hands? Ksniith Yep. That's the way I cured my boy of the cigarette habit. Cleveland Leader. "Do you think Methuselah was happy In his old age?" "Certainly. Nobody came at him with any Intimations that he ought to be retired ot 70." Washington Star. "So the old man married at lam. He was a hero of three wars, wasn't he?" "Yes, and I guess he wearied of too much peace." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Mr. Skrapps You women all have Hie same fault You can't pass a, shop that hnn bonnets In the window without looking In. Mrs. fikrapps So different from vmi men. You can't pass a shop that has bottle in the window without going In. Philadelphia Ixdger. "Yes. madam," said the doctor, "your htisbnnd needs a reBt." "I know, doctor," replied Mrs. Nagget, "but he won't listen to me." "Don't compel him to listen to you. That's the sort of rest he needs most." Philadel phia Press. "So you regard that officeholder ss a po litical accident?" "Ho Is worse than an accident." answered Fenntor Sorghum. "He's a catastrophe." Washington Star. "How cheerful you look this morning, dear," said the sick man as his wife hus tled about the room. "You act as If vou thought I were going to get well." "Ah, dearest," she answered, turning to press her lips upon his brow, "hope has re turned to me. The surgeon who was to per form the operation fell last night and broke his arm." Chicago Record-Herald. FOLDED HANDS. Margaret E. Sangster, Pale, withered hands, that more than four score years Had wrought for others, soothed the hurt of tears, Rocked children's cradles, eased the fever'a smart, Dropped balm of love In many an aching heart; , Now, stlrless, folded, like wan rose leaves pressed Above the snow and silence of her breast. In mute appeal they told of labors done. And well-earned rest that came at sot of sun. From the worn brow the lines of care had swept. As if an angel's kiss, the while she slept. Had smoothed the cobweb wrinkles qui'e away. And given back the peace of childhood day. And on the Hps the faint smile almost said: "None know life's secret but the hapi-y dead." So. gazing where she lay. we knew that pAln, And parting could not cleave her soul sgsln. And we were sure that they who saw hrr last In that dim vista which we call the past. Who never knew her old and laid aside. Remembering best the maiden and the bride, Had sprung to greet her with the olden epf ech, The dear, sweet names no later lore can teach. And "welcome home!" they cried, and grasped her hands. Bo dwells the mother in the best of lsnds. And many other painful and serious ailments from which most mothers suffer, can be avoided by the use of MOlDiri l-neif. This great remedy is a God-send to women, carrying them through their most critical ordeal witri saft TEWS i 4