1 TTIE OMAHA SUNDAY BEK: DECEMBER 17. 1011. VV aiULllllg OlllUgglCld ell JT UI to JUl laolV U1 uni uam (Copyright. 19H, by Frank O. Csrprnter.) i EW YORK CITY-I had a bin TwT I llt lcw wks ko. It was 11 I upf'n 'nllnK line In New .iiri K MHiri inp to Europe. 1 hal btn travel inn n the continent, amt, knaning it 0' T. luu i. ..iim of the customs house ol cers, had carefully figured my purchanoa to that they d d not exceed the flOO limit hlch every traveler Is supposed to hav free. With head erect and the conscience, of an honest cltlien. I walked down the gangplank to the dock, expecting to be rushed through without trouble, I waa rushed through all right, but not without trouble. My trunks were gone carefully over, and upon the very purchase I had declared I had to pay over In duties, i Among the waa about $30 worth of "God Bleea Our Home" German linens. 1 mean the tablecloth and napkins with German mottoes embroidered upon them. They were for my own ue, and I con trued them to be on the free Let. 'i'he Inspector, however, told me that all linen row paya 60 per cent, and that on that j little Item the aum of US waa due. It ' waa the eame upon other stuff of a 81 ml- : lar nature, and at the end Uncle 8am got ' fr0 from me before I dared leave the dock. 1 That waa the aum the government col lected from one honest passenger's bag gage. It came from a recent construction I of the law, which has hut out presents and certain special classes of goods. And i i if. -J uvwimg w nun lijb BlIlUKIlia. which, in the past, has cost Uncle Earn millions. ' Tkf Iasalns; of (be Smnsicler. Indeed, the well-to-do, respectable tour ist smuggler la fast passing away. Col lector Loeb haa iim and her on the run, And a righteous fear has soaked Into the Souls of the hundreds of thousands who annually travel. In Europe. As 1 stood on the wharf It seemed to me that the ba age of the individual passenger had per ceptibly shrunk. Mefl whom 1 have known to bring back fourteen pr fifteen trunks are now content with one little steamer a.nd a hat box, perhaps, while the average woman had but little more. All the way over from Europe to New York the chief conversation on board was as to the oustoms officials, and the horrid way in which they went through your baggage. I observed them go through other trunks. The work was rigidly done, and, . as a rule, without trotfbl to those who bad made an honest statement of Just what they , had in their baggage. Some few fared ' badly, and among these wera two young ladies, who had sewed the well , worn ' labels, of New York dressmakers ' inside 4heir new Paris dreuses, and were trying-to get them in free. ' One short woman with a bulbous boSom w as found to be padded with Mace, and another, for whom . the inspectors had been told to watch out, was taken 'off to a private room and searched, from her crown to her toea, 1 ' In such oases Uncle Sam has the right to atrip any of his nephews and nieces to the bare skin, and this is sometimes done when occasion demands. Pearl necklaces have been found in the hair and a dia mond was once discovered under the little toe on the left foot of a lady, while some valuable rubles were recently smuggled Into New York under a porous plaster on the back of a man. In this latter case tie spies of the Treasury department had sent a warning to the Inspectors, and when this traveler he was an Austrian- landed a dosen red stones were found in his cravat. They wera tested and it was discovered that they wera not real rubles, I y HI?sjsjsjsjsjBsjjsai jsjsjsjj 1 sjsjsjsjsjBsfl J, Dygv Til'TTIIilTTT'T' I If ' ' c v I 1 '.'TZDi -rr:-. -( I "if tV&V' 9 It MmM I ! l$C -iv ir i i iii (r . Jj:; di Ii n K&rsh ay tss miARTss ArfznriUKx The ninn was therefore let go, and a cable to that effect sent to Europe. The spies cabled back that he be examined attain, and he was searched at the hotel. The porous plaster had disappeared, but a dosen little, holes in the skin showed where the rubles had lain. . Blr Fines for lll Meu. I came to New York this Week to In vestigate what Uncle Sam, patriarch, has really done In increasing- our custom house revenues. I have visited the wharves and have watched the big steamers come In. ' -1 have also spent some time at the custom house where the collector of cus toms, William Ixeb. jr., ha4 had every source of Information thrown open to me. With other things he has given me a typewritten list of the criminal prose cutions whloh have been made by his office in the last two or three years. This has the names of scores who have gone through the courts and have been fined all sorts of amounts from $1 to 2j,000. The total of the fines alone up to November 1 waa a little over $200,000. and this is a bagatelle la comparison with the amounts which have been col lected through undervaluations and on merchandise, to which I refer farther on. . These ilnes are almost altogether from people who have tried to sneak things through in their baggage from the steam ers. The offenders are of all classes from New York milliners and dressmakers to some of the richest and most prominent of the land. One Is the wife of a for mer governor of New England, and an other that of a prominent politician of West Virginia, Each of these ladles tried to smuggle in Jewelry and each was fined li.OuO. They Object to Itatlea. With others are the wives of trust magnates whose millions have come from the tariff protection of the things their husbands manufacture. One such case waa as to a pearl necklace and other Jewels brought In by the wife of a millionaire making agricultural machinery. This was the Adrlance affair of which some thing haa appeared In the newspapers. The madams was fined 16,000 and the goods she attempted to smuggle wera forfeited. Upon this her husband de nounced, the government for persecuting travelers who sought to bring in "a few petty things free." As I remember it, among the "petty things" in this case were some pearls valued at 1 118,000, which the lady had hidden In the folds of her straw hat. The millionaire's re mark waa reported to Mr. Loeb, where upon Loeb said that 11 r. Adrlance had made a big fortune out of the duties whloh the United States Imposed upon such machinery as be manufactured, but that when It cams to his paying any duty himself ha objected. - somewhat similar oaaa of a trust for- tuno falling to pay duties waa that con nevted with the Jeds necklace. This case came up shortly before Collector Lfoeb1 got his appointment. W. P. Leeds, one of the millionaires of the tin plate trust, had gone to Pails to live, and while there Mrs. Leeds had bought a fa mous necklace at a cost of $340,000. Bhe wore the necklace In Parts, but a part of her bargain was that It was to be deliv ered to her In Newport without duty within a certain time. If she so desired. In order to escape paying some of the duty the syndicate took the necklace apart and ahlpped it In as loose pearls, in which shape it was invoiced at t-A.-000, The tariff upon loos pearls was 10 per cent, and, as I understand It, at that rate the necklace was passed. In the meantime, however, the special custom spies at Paris cabled New York that the necklace had been worn by Mrs. Leeds before It waa shipped and that It should therefore pay duty as a necklace. Upon this the matter was again taken up and the duty raised to $122,000 or $110,00.) more than the original sum. To this the Importers objected, and the court then fixed the duty at tbe loose pearl rate of $3,000. This decision was appealed from. and, as I understand It, the case has gone to the United .States supreme court and It has adjudged that it must be re considered. . v In the past much of the petty smuggling has been done by dressmakers ana tailors. It used to bo customary for English tailors to take orders In New York and make clothes to measure, agreeing to de liver them to the customers free of duty. Dressmakers' wimple, gowns were brought In as personal effect n, and orders for gowns made in- Paris were taken th same way. This was a regular business. Only lust Junuury twenty-seven (trews makers were fined from $'i00 to $2,000 for being implicated In It, and one of the great surprises sprung by tho present administration was when It beK&n to prosecute women of this class. One of the first cases mentioned In the list given me by Collector Ieb Is that of Ellsn bet Kllgannon, who had to pay $R.000, Mrs. Kllgannon and her husband and a man named Whits were partners in smug gling. Mrs. ' Kllgannon waa known as Mine. Loran,. a nllliner, and her husband and Wblte were classed as silk Importers. Others were Implicated In the transaction, and when the suit waa brought it Is said that the lawyers offered to pay more than $2fi0.000 if the government would drop the matter. That, however, la not the wny Uncle Bam is doing business. The smug, glers were arrested. Mrs. Kllgannon was fined $5,000 and her husband waa sent to prison on Illackwells Island for a. year. White was glvon two years and went to th federal prison at Atlanta. But I might fill a page of this news paper with the Htorles of smugglers who have been fined and with thof who have come forward upon being caught and have compromised by paying the duties. Take the wife of a millionaire ship owner of Hoeton, who trU-d to snesk In a pearl necklace via Canada. The nocklare was valued at $23.0uO and she paid $.".00U fine Ex-Governor ttotlltis paid $,000 and Jules and Hugo Rosenberg gave back to t'nele 8am $J6,0O0 each. The wife of a former head of 4h Panama canal work made nil underdeclaration of the stuff she j brought In, and her husband ooughod up $10,000 to settle tho trouble. A rrominent ; woman of Wisconsin had $3,000 In Jowelry In her baggage. It was all new and she did not declare It. iha was compelled to pay $100 fine and forfeit th good. With the other selsures mude waa one of two C-karat diamonds, which be longed to Uie Princess Montylgen. ghe claimed they had been In the family for years, and were not suhject to duty. An other was thirty trunks of rarls finery, which ws valued at $:.W, and a third was one of sleeper trunks which contained t;i0.000 more. The sleeper Trnnk Treads. This sleeper-trunk game Is one which wn.i worked very laraely before the ad vent of Collector Ixieh. H consisted of leaving trunks on the dock and of sneak ing them off afior the inspeotors and other custom officials had left. Some of the custom officials were In this con spiracy to defraud, but when Mr. Loeb ramo in he appolnlad a new set of watch men' and reorganised the old force. He now has the docks under Inspection day ami iitahl, nnd any . one attempting to hike away a trunk uninspected Is ar rested. Tho business has been probed to the bottom und una of th chief sources of i iiiuniiliiia stopped. Another means of passing the customs w as by sponging off and changing the ImIkIh, and others got goods through by bribing tli officials. Not many years imi I am told that one could lay a $10, u $J0 or even a M bill on the tray of his trunk and the Inspector who examined It thought nothing of putting the bill In his pocket and cloning the lid. Even now checks are sometimes sent to the Inspeo tors by passengers who have been well treated, but such checks are Invariably turned 'in to the collector, for If the man did not and It waa discovered he would surely be dismissed. Oar Ilia Castonts llaalaeas. Let us here stop a moment while I tell you how big the customs receipts bulk In the treasury of the United States gov. emment. I hava been looking up th figure and find that last year they amounted to more than $31 millions of dollars. That waa more than $1,000,000 for very working day of that year. Indeed, the customs 1 the biggest gold mine that Uncle 8am haa and aver since the be ginning he haa relied upon It to pay his employes. Th total amount so far re ceived slnoe 1TH haa been something like $11,000,000,000, and this is equal to more than one-half of all the taxes which have ever been collected for the national gov ernment. In this statement I Include the Internal revenue and all sorts of direct taxes. , Collector Loeb tells me that 70 per cent of these customs receipt are now coming Into New York, and that this port in Its tariff duties ts now paying about 40 par cent of tho working expanses of the gov ' eminent Proro this It will be eaen how Important it I that we have an honeet man at the head of it, and that that honest man have the nerve and ability to collect what 1 really (rue to oup own Uncle faro. I believe this to be the case with Collector lieb. He Is running th customa as a business Institution and hi only renulrem nts of his employes are efficiency and honesty. The t olleetnr and Mis Job. louring mv talk with the collector to day 1 asked him an to his work. Tin replied: "All I hav attempted to do Is to take this place out of politics and administer it on the nlane of honesty. ood govern ment and In accordance with the liwi, I did not make the laws. I am here only to enforce them." These are remarkable statement from a man who holds an office which In the past haa been one of the chief political plums of the president. It ha beea one of th best paying office under th gov ernment, and the one most fought for. When Garfield became president It waa the appointment of' th Nw Tort col lector of custom whloh caused th break, between blm and Conkllng. and It that which drove Conkllng from publte life, and which Indirectly caused the assassination of Garfield by the villain, Dulteau Twelve Tbnasaaa vs. a Mlllloa. The collector of custom now receive a fixed salary. He get $1,000 a month, or, as a whole. $U,W a year. In th( past he wss paid a commission of 13 per cent upon all compromises and fines forj tmder-valuatlons. Blnce Mr. Loeb took office the mounta collected of this natum have footed up more than $7.M.000. and at the old rate his commission therefor, would amount to more than tl.009. I This represents a wonderful lncrae. ami also the detection of many fraud that have been going on for year. On waa that ef the sugar trust, where, In round numbers, about $2,900,009 worth otl dutten were collected, and for whloh enn of the Investigators received a fee of $100. J 000 from the government for hi exposl. tlon of th frauds and th detection eC the criminals. i The story of that fee wi published I and lno then. Mr. Loeb tell me, many; people hsrve aent la Information a to other frauds, hoping to be paid for aid-, Ing the government In that way. The total flnea and penalties for fifteen year preceding Loeb'a appointment avrac4 only $fil.000 per year. , f, The Caatora Hvema CaJea. , I asked him whether th purchaaea ef American- traveler In Europe had fallen off In consequence of the rigid ceUectlao, of duties. He said: . . , "I hava no flgurs or statlstloB twlatlnsj to that matter, hut front many of the leading merchants ef IDurop wh hava been accustomed to sell to American traveler I understand that their euslnesa has fallen off enormously, and that sora of them hav really been closed up frenk th decrease In uch purchases. Th pro, ability Is that an enormous amount el good which was formerly bought abroad 1 now bought at home. W know that the purchase are surely much lesa tham they were and - w also knew that tha duties paid are vary much greater. la 1$0T the number of passengers who eame In from Durope waa a little aver ZM.000, and tha duties collect od wera, la round number, $488,000. In 1909 the peesenger wer only a few thousand mere, hut th duties collected were more than doubled, and In lOld.wltH k paseengar list of about) 830.000, th duties war mor than $1,778, 000. This year they will prekably run Over $2,000, 000. , f FRANK a CARPENTER. Omit nun Calendar' Set Ak-esid. Insofar as time affects prices, beginning Monday morning, the prevailing prices in our Piano Department will prove to you that two weeks ahead of time we are starting the greatest quality-giving, money saving piano sale in the history of the piano business. We expect a successful sale, and if expectations are realized our Pre-Clhiristmas Piamo Sale will be an annual event that all Nebraska will look forward to. We always sell higher-grade pianos for less money than other Nebraska houses, and during our Pre-Christmas Piano Clearing Sale, by calling at our piano rooms, you will find that never in history have such High Quality, Low Prices and Easy Terms been offered. We have about three hundred pianos to dispose of between now and Christmas Eve; AND WE ARE GOINO TO SELL THEM in the time stated; if price is any consideratioln you should buy during this sale; if the matter of payments has been causing you to delay, we assure you that we are in a position to make them so easy as not to worry you longer. Accept this invitation. Call Monday morning. The first come will have a selection from the grandest assortment of beautiful high-grade standard pianos, at an actual saving (when compared with the prices asked on like qualities at other stores) of from thirty-three and one-third to sixty-five per cent, which means a price reduction,-and a saving to you, ranging from $60.00 to $225.00. . CAREFULLY READ OVER THIS LIST OP PRICES, THEN COME AND INVESTIGATE THE WONDERFUL BARGAIN OPPORTUNITIES THAT ARE PRESENTED TO CHRISTMAS BUYERS DURING THIS THE GREATEST OF PRE-CHRISTMAS PIANO CLEARING SALES. 1 large, Handsomely carved mahogany Uepular l beautiful colonial style in golden oak Rcirular V medium size plain mahogany Ketrular price price $750, Christmas sale price ........$375 1 handsomely carved . mahogany Regular price $725, Christmas sale price $3G5 1 beautiful art style figured mahogany Regular price $350, Christmas sale price $250 1 art style mahogany Regular price $335, Christ ' mas sale price $245 2 large colonial styles in beautiful walnut Regu lar price $450, Chrittmas sale price ....$325 2 large colonial style in mahogany Regular price $450, Christmas sale price $325 X mission art style in fancy mahogany Regular price $400, Christmag sale price $280 1 art style in fancy mahogany Regular price $375, Christmas sale pric $275 3 handsomely carved mahogany Regular juice $350, Christmas sale price $250 price $300, Christmas sale price S225 1 Corinthian design in beautiful mahogany Reg ular price $365, Christmas sale price . . . .$285 1 Corinthian design in mahogany Regular price $350, Christinas sale price , . t. . . .$275 2 semi-colonial in mahogany Regular price $300, Christmas tale price $225 1 small mahogany colonial design Regular price $500, Christmas sale price $400 1 massive colonial design in flemish oak Regular price $300, Christmas sale price $200 1 plain colonial in Circassian walnuts-Regular price $400, Christmas sale price $300 $300, Christmas sale price $200 2 plain oak cases Regular price $300, Christmas sale price $200 1 art style in burl walnut Regular price $350, Christmas sale price $250 1 art style in figured mahogany Regular price $350, Christmas sale price $250 2 Louis IX in nice mahogany Regular price $350, Christmas sale prico $250 1 colonial design in English oak Regular prico $300, Christmas sale prico $200 1 small size colonial design mahogany Regular price $300, Christmas sale price $200 5j p4lh) airs Every Piano Shall Go! In order that our floors may be entirely cleared by Christmas night we have made ar rangements to deliver pianos anywhere in Omaha, South Omaha and Council Bluffs, if necessary, as late as six o'clock Christmas night. We have made these arrangements be cause we feel certain that every visitor to our warerooms will become a purchaser. If the greatest piano bargain will make you buy a piano, you will here find the inducement. To obtain a real piauo bargain you must first receive piano quality; reoond, you must receive the best of piano quality at a very low price; third, you must receive the best piano quality at a very lew price and ou, terms that are suitable to your income. This is the de scription of the piano bargains wo offer m our pre-Cliristma3 piano clearance sale. 31 1Z