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CURRENT TOPICS THE NEWS IN BRIEF. PERSONAL, AND POLITICAL. Physicians attending James Hack ett. the netijr, who is ill at Cincinnati, have decreed that he must retire from the stage for a month. On the "8th a cablegram was re ceived at the war department, from Gen. MacArthur, telling in a succinct way the history of Aguinaldo’s cap ture, gives all credit for the brilliant exploit to Gen. Funston, whose re ward it suggests should be that of a brigadier general in the regular army* and finally closes with an ex pression of confidence in the speedy cessation of hostilities throughout tlie Philippine archipelago as a result of the capture. On the 28th George W. Thatcher, a claim agent, was taken into custody by the police at Dayton, O.. on the charge of forgery. It is charged that lie forged a note amounting to $82,000 with the name of the late P. P. Mast, a. millionaire manufacturer of Spring field, O. On the 29tli the London morning papers publisned long telegrams de scribing the capture of Aguinnldo, with sketches of the insurgent lead er's career and editorials congratulat ing the United States upon the suc cess of Gen. Funston's brilliant ruse. All recognize that he risked his life in -the attempt, and all express the opinion that the capture*will have a great effect in shortening the Filipino resistance. Capt. .T. H. Dayton, who has been on special duty in the bureau of naviga tion for some time past, lias been or dered to command the Chicago, the flagship of 1 lie South Atlantic squajL ron. relieving Capt: ('. H. Rockwell, ordered home an waiting- orders; On the 29th Rev. .1. \Y. Morris, of Kalispci. Mont., was chosen president of the Montana Wesleyan university at Helena. Mont., to. succeed .1 he late Thomas Van Spry. There were live candidates for 1 he place. On the 29th D. J>. Hanna, son of Senator Hanna, denied the report that the recent conference between his father and J. I’. Morgan in New York was for the purpose of placing the vessel and mining properties of the 1'nited States Steel ('neporation under the management of the firm of M. A. Hanna & Co. Gov. Toole of Montana and Mayor 1'<Iwards of Helena’itaVe formally ex tended invitations to President Mc Kinley to slop off at Helena during his forthcoming western (rip. On the 29th Maurice Barrymore, the actor, was taken to the insane pa vilion of Bellevue hospital, in^Xew York, by his son John Barrymore, lie went to the hospital willingly. He had nothing at all to say. and acted like a man who was dazed. John Bar rymore told Die doctor that his fa ther's real name is Blyo, and that, he was horn in the Fast Indies about 50 years ago. MISCELLANEOUS. On 1 he 2('»ih the I'nion I’acitie rail toad Co. paid into the Nebraska stale treasury i?10,000 as a fee for its 4amended arlieles of incorporation, aled with the secretary of state, in creasing1 its capital stock $1,000,000. St. Petersburg dispatches tell of the spread of disaffection, especially at Odessa,where 100 arrests have been made; at Riga, where '100 persons are in custody,and at KieiT. KliarkofT, Her pat, Tomsk and Moscow, where high officials arc involved. On the 2Sth, at Kansas City*, Mo., W'ni. PeardrufT.aged 20 years, pleaded guilty to stealing $11,100 worth of dia monds from his employers, Edwards & Silane, wholesale jewelers, and was sentenced to two years in the peni tential'. Deardruft's father, with tears streaming down his cheeks, pleaded for his son. The elder. Ilear drnff is n Kansas City (Kas.) jeweler, and the hoy had previously borne a good reputation. On the listh the Pike’s Peak cog road opened for (lie season. There was a great deal of snow on 1 he mountain, but the track was compar atively clear. Daily trains are run to the summit. A dispatch fromSalorjlea announces that nine men were scalded to death, on the 28th, by the bursting of a steam pipe on die Turkish torpedo boat Slieliab. IV. I.. Stow A Co., brokers of New York city, announce that they have bought the control of the Mexican Central railroad for important inter ests in the southwest. They decline to give, the names of their principals. .On the 29th the directors of the Cal umet and Heola Mining Co., at a meet ing in Boston, declared a dividend of $15 per share. The last dividend de clared was $20. On the 20th a seat on the New York stock exchange was -sold for $55,000, which is $2,500 more than the highest i price previously paid. On the 29th Joseph A. Conlon, the New York post otliee clerk arrested in Sun Francisco, recently, on the charge of stealing $4.1,000 in regis \ teerd mail in that city, was sen tenced to four years’ uaat isoniaent Aft Sing Sing. > The statement of the treasury nal ances in the general fund, issued on the 29th, exclusive of the $150,000,000 gold reserve in the division redemp tion, showed: Available cash balance, $155,162,406; gold, $97,836,468. On the 291 h J!. <i. Dun & Co. report ed: “Failures for the week numbered 206 in the United States, against 203 for the corresponding week last year, and 29 in Canada, against 33 last year.” CONDENSED TELEGRAMS. A dispatch from Manila, on the 31st, said: “Interest in the capture and fate of Aguinaldo is wellnigh over shadowed in Manila by sensational de velopments, present and prospective, of frauds in the commissary depart ment. How widely these extend has not yet been ascertained, but enough is already known to justify the belief that they are far-reaching.” Advices from /V.isliingtou of 1 he same date cay that nothing on the subject had beep; reported to the government. The president, on the 30tli, an nounced the . Louisiana Purchase world’s fair-commission as follows: Kx-Sentators Thurston, of Nebraska; I Carter, of Montana;' Lindsay, of Ken tucky, and McBride, of Oregon; ex Represeutatives Allen, of Mississippi, and Martin H. Glynn, of New York; P. D. Scott, of Arkansas ;John F. Mil ler,* of Indiana, and F. A. Betts, of Connecticut. Joseph Flory, of Mis ■souri, will, probably be chosen secre tary. At seven o'clock, "on t he morning of the 31st, a fire was ^discovered in the sail room of the United States gun boat Petrel. Lieutenant-Commando." Jesse Mims Roper commanding, lying at Cavite, P. I. In attempts to extin guish the flames and efforts to safe the imperilled,Lieutenant-Commander Roper lost his life, and many of his crew were seriously overeom ■. The president, on the evening of the_ 30th, announced the promotion of Gen. Fred Funston 1o be brigadier general in the regular army, in rec ognition of his gallant service in the capture of Aguinaldo. He also an nounced the promotion of Brig.-Gen. Lloyd Wheaton to be major-general, ind Col. Jacob Smith to be brigadier 'enernl. Andrew Cnrnegie.has offered to give ®\ 30.009 tcLtl’.c. ni PontbcxUI, Or ?., for a free public libi/ry building-, pro vided the eitv will, guarantee a .site and an annual income sufficient for its maintenance. 'The Portland Library association row has a building- and li brary-' valued at ’S3G0,0(.0, and the nvc will probable be consolidated. The St. Petersburg N'ovosti, unlike most Kussian journals, professes to see* no occasion for rivalry between Great Britain and UuSsia for China. “The . legend of Anglo-Itussian enmi ty,” it says, ‘ rests upon a. crude mis understanding. Kussia’s natural spheres do not touch England’s in the ’.'anctse vallev.” For Ihe first time in the history of Havana the month of April began without a single case of yellow fever in the city. Maj. W. C. tiorgas, chief sanitary officer, is confident 1liar, with the sanitary measures now being in forced and the valuable information gained during the recent investiga tions of the yellow fC'Cr commission, there will be but few eases during the coming season. A heavy snowstorm prevailed ail over Kansas. on the 1st. beginning in the western part of the state in the morning and traveling east. At Burlington, the heaviest fall of the winter -v.as reported. General good to wheat will doubtless result, but in the soutneastern corner of the state damage to peaches is feared. Hon. I). li. Woodward, assistan* commissioner general of the United States at the Paris exposition who, re turning home last December, broke his leg on board the steamship St. I.ouis. has recovered and took passage on the same ship. <>u the ltd, for Paris to close up tin' work of the American commission. The St. Petersburg correspondent of the Lokal An/eigor announces tlitu an examination of tin accounts of the llussian imperial controller general shows what are believed to have been systematic defalcations between the veal's IMG and 1 sit-*. The sums not a< counted for nggreg-ate. -M.Ot.iil.OOO roubles. decent Filipino surrenders include Gen. Gon/alcs. 11 officers and !1 men, with f.*> lilies, at Malabon. anil Pol. llerrara, three officers and 25 men, with riiles, at Laguna, and Colonels Pable, Tecson and Silnil, at Bulucan. With it view to bringing about a uni form German orthography u confer ence will be held in Berlin next sum mer of experts sent, by each German state. The conference is chiefly pro moted by the king ot Wurtemburg. Herr Carl Laeisz. the chairman of the board of directors of the Ham burg-American -steamship line, who died in Hamburg, March 22, left that city 1.200,000 marks foi the const ruc tion of a concert house. The National City Bank of New York, on the 2d, exported $500,000 in gold to 'Europe. Dr. Schlichter, the \friean traveler and geographer, died in Berlin on the 1 let, I ARKANSAS STATE NEWS, Fe-deral Officers in Arkansas. The long-drawn-out contest bo tween Judge S. F. Stahl, of Fort Smith, and I!. M. Foreman, of Texar kana, over the western Arkansas dis trict marshalship, now filled by the former, was settled the other day by the Republican state ventral commit tee in favor of .Judge Stahl, the vole standing i!9 to 10. Says a dispatch to the, St. hovds Globe-Democrat, sent from Little Koek: The contest was a nip-an-tnck' affair until Gen. Powell Clayton arrived. He at once an nounced in favor of Judge Stahl’s re appointment, and many of the con servative members cf the committee followed the republican leader. Con siderable feeling was aroused between the factions, but everything was patched up aid the incident was closed by Gen. Clayton and Mr. Fore man attending a dinber as guests of Hon.*H. L. Ilenimel.-Gcn- Clayton took the.stnml he did because he had been informed at Washington that it was Gie desire of the president that all faithful and deserving officials should be given a second term. Woman Homed to Dentil. Mrs. M. I). Lamb, wife of a promi nent citizen of Lamar, Johnson coun ty, was burned to death the oGier day. T4iere was no one present, and' it is thought she was in a paroxysm of epilepsy. When she caught fire she had fallen on the floor and lay long enough to set lire to the floor in two places. She had run info every room in the house, five in all, leaving a trail of ashes and burning clothing in hey wake. When found every thread of her clothing was burned except a hand of one of her skirts, l uder this excruciating pian she remained con scious and lived two hours. Workiunn Ammiiii! tn Fornnnn, Says a Pine Fluff item: Finery Jones is in a critical condition at his: home, lie works for the Fluff City I.timber Co.-and was acting foreman. A new workman, a-siranger, objected to his dictations and an altercation ensued. The stranger struck the young man two.blows on the head with a monkey wrench, fracturing the skull at, each blow . *f Hallies Hurt ti> n Knnana) Horse. ' A horse belonging to .lohtt A. Fry ant ami hitched lo a sulkey ran away, dashing down the principal street of Texarkana. At a corner 1he animal rail over two baby-carriages, which contained 1 tie infants of Messrs. ,J. N. Patterson and I!. McKinney, who were in charge of negro nurses. The carriages were demolished and the babes badly injured. .Damages for a Bloodhound. Jn the Jefferson circuit court Cltiei of Police ('. M. Philpot was awarded $_.')() for the loss of a bloodhound which was killed by a train on the Iron Mountain railway. Mr. I’hilpot brought suil against he road to re cover the amount awarded 'lint by the jury. At the time flic dog was killed she was on the track, trailing a criminal. Murderer Lynched. Georg e Shivery, ;i houseboat mail at Pocahontas near I toxic, Lawrence county, shot and killed John Norris, the city marshal at 1he former town. He was taken to lloxie and placed in jail. Several hours later a mob broke down the jail doors and dragged Shivery out. After beating him al most to death, they hanged him io a bridge. It u i I tvii v E in p ro/vementn. The Cotton licit is expending largt sums ot money in the betterment ot the, tracks and roadbed north of Tex arkana. The heavy grades are being reduced, the curves straightened and 1he 4.1-pound steel is being replaced with 73-pound rails. The Cotton Kelt will soon constrnet a new bridge over the Red river at Texarkana. Spun1} tins n Fire. Fire at Searcy destroyed live dwell ings. and for awhile threatened to de stroy the entire business portion of the town on jeconnt * f the high wind that was blowing.* The loss will reach about $<;.ooo. 1'EiireLit S|ii'iti£» Fire. Fire (lest roved, five building's in th« resilience .port ion of Eureka Springs. Thomas .1. Sullivan rind Andrew Mc Nulty from St. j.ouis, were burned. The toSs is about'$10,000, partially in sured. , Xpw V. M. C. A. Rooms. Mr. J. L. Seotield, the new secretary of the *Y. M. C. V. iii Little Rock, is promoting a movement for the erec tion of a large and splendid building foi V M. C. A. headquarters. will Serve Four More Veari. Gen. Powell Clayton, ambassador tc Mexico, announces that he has p-om ised to serve four years more as rep resentative of the United States in Mexico. Found Dead in Public square. A young man named Lewis Pear sall was found dead in the public square ut Fayetteville. Ko mark of violence.was found on his parson* FREE FROM YELLOW FEVER, For the Flmt Time Havana Besrint : April Without a Sin«le Cano in .the City, Havana, April a.—For the first time in the history of Havana the month of April, begins without a single case of yellow fever in the city. Maj. \Y. C. (lorgas, chief sanitary officer, is confident that, with the sanitary measures now being inforced and the valuable information gained during the recent investigations of the yel low fever commission, there will oa but few cases during the coming sea son. JThe marine hospital service is also taking precautions .against the bringing of infection into Havana from Mexican or other ports. Ur. fflennon, chief surgeon, has issued or ders for a quarantine against these ports beginning April 15. It is thought that many cases in Havana last year were brought from Vera Cruz, which is only two days’ sail from Havana. Hereafter passengers from Yera Cruz ■"ill be obliged to remain in quaran tine for llirere days. Comfortable quarters are being fit ted up near the immigrant station at Cabanas. The immigrant station is used only as temporary quarters for immigrants who have no employment on arriving here. Under the old ar rangement they remained in Havana, and not being immune, they contract ed yellow lever and frequently spread it through the country districts. Im migrants are now kept isolated until employment is secured for them, and then they are shipped direct into the country. The number of yellow fever cases in Havana has decreased won derfully since these precautions were taken. A regular quarantine station was built by the Spaniards at Muriel. It is considered one of the best in 1he Ma rine hospital service, and will be re tained by the United Slates under'the clause in the I 'la 11 amendment relat ing to sanitation. HAZING AT WEST POINT. Sninmnry of FinttiiiKo of Court of lu <inlrj— So Action by the Ur- * ‘ pnrtment Necessary. vf-Vuskiiijf.f on. _\pril 2.—Tlic findings of the military court of inquiry which investigated the treatment alleged to have “been aecqrded to the late Oscar L. lloo/. a former cadet ;it West Point Military academy, have been made public at the war department. The findings of the military court are summed up iu a letter written to Sec retary Boot, which accompanies tlje report. This letter says: “The findings of this eourt of in quiry, which are sustained by the er i dence, show that the statements, wliieh led to ihe convening of the eourt, to the effect that: former Cadet Oscar L. liooz came to his death by reason of injuries received by hazing at the academy were not true. They show .that, at the time Cadet liooz was a member of the academy hazing was prevalent there to a deplorable extent; that the present officers of the academy have shown commenda ble energy, zeal and efficiency in de tecting and punishing offenses of this character, and that they greatly de creased the practice and improved 1he public sentiment among the ca dets upon the subject. “The testimony ami findings ofMlie court were placed in the hands-of the committee of congress charged- al about the same time with Ihe. inves tigation of the subject, and lire' very efficient and beneficial aetioii of that, committee, followed by I lie leg isla tion upon the subject, contained iu the act of March 2, 1901, renders fur ther action by the department unnec essary.” CHARGES WILL BE PROBED. The tlinrgcft \ftitiiiMl (.uiiiiiiiNsnry Oftielnln nml Olhern. In llie I'llilippilien, to l>e I’robril. Manila, April The sensational frauds, in the commissary. depart - inenl. which were dweloped Sunday h> the arrest of ( apt. Frederick J. Harrows, of the Thirteenth volunteer infantry, quartermaster of the south 1111 department of ( u/011, together with seven eommissary sergeants, several civilian elerl-.s. a prominent, {•overtime1:t contractor, the assistant manager of the Hotel Uriente, the proprietors of three of the largest bakeries in Manila, and a number of storekeepers and oilier persons will he probed to the bottom. Orders have been issued that no guilty man escape. The number of men impli cated in the frauds is undetermined, end high rank will not suffice to shield delinquents. Col. Woodruff, the chief commis sary at. Manila, said that, the irreg ularities were exaggerated, and that ihe troops were always well supplied with stores., Colonels of the return ing volunteer regiments wrote to Col. Woodruff, in praise of the com missary service. Sir John Stainer Demi. ■■ London. April —Sir .John Stainer, organist, composer and writer on mu sical topics, is dead. He was born in 1840. PROTECTION AT FAULT Changing Commercial Conditions Urisft' About an Awkward Situ ation for Tariftites. It begins to took as if the advocates of a protective tariff were to divide into opposing camps. The “infant industries” are now full grown, and are disposed to devour one another. They were a happy family as long as there was enough of the "home mar ket” to go around, and they waxed fat, if not cherubic, under the pam pering. The American people in dorsed the brand of food and its wholesale administration, although certain unpatriotic, impracticable and objectionable people called atten tion to the dangers of letting infants have their own way. Tn obedience to the warning, the brand of food was changed a time or two, but the petted darlings raised such an outcry, that they not only compelled the foster parents^ to yield, but also to grant them an increase of diet to compen sate for the temporary deprivation. • Is it not an ironical outcome that protection’s civil war should break out during the administration of a man who has been looked upon as its high priest? It was really a great day for the beneficiaries of protection when McKinley stepped into power. Ilis selection was taken as an indorse ment of the protection principle and as a final disposition of the contro versy whether individual enterprises should have the support of the gov ernment. Hut if the advocates of pro tection would learn nothing from maxims at home, they were com pelled to consult markets when they went abroad. Their first lesson came when they discovered that alien peo ples would only trade on fair terms, and in no event would they yield all the profits. Our manufacturers then began to understand that it takes two to make a bargain, and, what was more singular, a trade could actually result with benefit to both sides! Hut in compliance with a long formed habit, our tariff beneficiaries were disposed to hold on to a good thing when they had it, and they adopted another plan in lieu of deal ing v. ,h nations on fair terms. They would use the tariffs protecting**fhe home market as so much bounty, and. with the atl^antage tints gyinjed. they would undersell by a good figure, their competitors abroad. But this very result is defended by tariff ad vocates. and is pointed to as a vin dication of their policy! If the con sumer here, at the very doors of the factory, protests that lie has to pay more for his goods than people across the sea for the same products after the cost of export has been added, he is pronounced unpatriotic and a hind ever of his country’s great and beautiful expansion policy. TTp to the war with Spain the pro tection advocates stood together, but that conflict brought about a change in conditions. As it happened, the soils of our new possessions were especially iuli.pted to the raising of sugar cane and tobacco, two articles of production which premised to form two new industries here, to the glorification of the country and the “protection of American labor.” The first shock to the protection theory was give'll by the 1’orto llican tariff bill. The sugar trust, the sugar and tobacco growers, after a fierce con test. won their jvint in the principle that the bill embodied. Certain “pro tectionists,” who voted against the proposition to levy tariffs on I’orto Rican goods, reconciled their action with their old time principle l>y wel coming the suggestion that I’orto T’ico was not, after all, a foreign ter ritory. Their consistency was there by preserved. lUvt the colonies and Cuba may be expected to add further trouble to the protectionists when syndicates, attracted to them, shall want the baited States for a market. The recent edict of Ku..sia added another disturbing factor to the situ ation. The managers of the steel and iron industries have not recov ered from the blow yet. but they threaten, in their da/e. ;o go back on the principle of a lifetime. Shall this nation, they ask—note tlieir unselfish ness a!wax.- ."tin the danger of dwnf ing its foreign trade hist for the sake of benefiting a few tobacco and sugar growers and the sugar trust? The proposition is an outrage! Moreover. Secretary t age was not the man they took him for if he could not stretch the provisions of the law f»>r the gen eral good. Hut, unfortunately, to these objectors tire opposed, not the innocent and helpless consumer of the “home market.” but a sugar and tobacco trust or two, which have also bad the benefits of a long v»*ieriencp in looking- out for their own inter ests. Here at last, then, ensues aii instance ill which patriots and the flag are arrayed on both sides of the controversy. Mill they fight it out? The consumer has no objections. Wil they compromise on reduced tar iffs? Ag;y» the consumer will be benefited.'---Tndianapolj.s Xews (Ind ). -—Some republicans actually seem to be afraid rffiit ihe various schemes for looting 1he treasury may discredit the party. After that $1,300,000.00') congress it would not seem that any thing could discredit the party. it. ought to be immune-—St, Paul Globa, IMITATING SPAIN. American Troop* l!»ed to Keep the Cnlmn* I nder Complete Subjection. I Throe or four years ago, when Wey Ier introduced his reconcentrado poli cy into Cuba, Ihe people of the United States were horror-stricken. The tales of suffering were at first not believed; the inhumanity of it all was incredi ble. But as one after another of reliable newspaper correspondents .joined the ranks of those already in Cuba it became apparent from their reports that even the sensational press representatives who had pre ceded -them had not exaggerated. They told in awful detail the suffer ings of those compelled to leave their farms, already devastated and yielding but the most meager of crops, and move.into the already crowded cities, where absolutely no provision had been made or could be made for tlieir reception and care. From privation bitter enough in their own homes they were driven to the torture of death by slow starvation. As stories of cruel ties added to cruelties came to our knowledge, indignation wraxed hotter and hotter until it burst into flame, and Weyler was driven from Cuba, shortly to be followed by the Spanish army. How sentiment on this subject has changed! How familiarity with tlia suffering of others has bred indiffer ence! That same policy is being prac ticed in the Philippines to-day by our own army officers. Tbe latest report from the island of Marinduque de clares that “Maj. Smith, commanding 1he American garrisons on the island, has issued an order requiring all na tives to live in the five principal towns where American troops are stationed. Those natives who continue to live in 1lie country' will be considered insur gents.” That is Weyler’* policy, pure and simple. Try as you may, you can make nothing else of it. In the as sertion as made that the inhabitants of the Philippines favor a “drastic pol icy” the officers in charge of the re concentrado operations but add an other Weyieresque touch to their work. If will be remembered how Weyler said that Ihe reconcentrado policy was ordered a* the request of i i he C ubans f homseh • ;t Will U.lso bf_ remembered what an unmitigated liar Weyler was shown to be. Ts it prob able. then—is it human nature, which is the same the world over—that these Filipinos are imploring the American army officers to drive them from their homes to starve in the garrison towns? Is it less of an outrage to inflict such things on the Filipinos than upon the Cubans? Is starvation more pleasant at tiie hands of our soldiers than at the hands of those of Spain? Is life less precious in Marinduque than in Cuba? How comes it that the horrors of 1807 were potent enough to drive us to war, while the same course of pro cedure in 1901 fails to arouse a pro test?—Utica Observer. COMMENTS OF THE PRESS. ——--The tin-can manufacturers have formed a trust. and after we had been nurturing them so carefully, too! — Indianapolis News. -Senator Hoar's renewed talk against imperialism would be more effective if in November last he had voted as he talked.—St. Louis Bepub lic. -President. Harrison showed hi.s impartial justice by condemning alike jhh* injustice to the Filipinos and Kng land's oppression of the liners. Kan sas City Times. (twine to the enormous war debt, and army reorganization expenses, which have been placed bv the re publican party upon the sh^hlders of the taxpayers since Hon. Tliomas B. Ib cd left Washington to practice law, the price of Filipinos (ins advanced considerably lievond his original ■ftrs tation of two dollars a head.—-Kansas City Times. The report conies from Washing ton that 1 he big American steamship company chiefly interested in the sub sidy bill is distributing free passage tickets to any senator or represent I at I’ve who intends or can be persuaded ] to make the iourncj to K:trope this ! summer. The 1.111 v. ill be htard i f again in the next cottgress. Kpring fiehT (Mass.) Uepttbli -an. .-There is rettson 10 suspect that i rtenator Hanna's interest in ihe. sena torial matter in Nidtraska h not due soielv to a philanthropic desire to have the state well represented in the sepate. There is the ship subsidy scheme which is coming up again, and life senator would probably not be averse to having- support from the Ne braska contingent in the senate.—In dianapolis Press. ■-John Sherman, the greatest financier in the republican parly, re pudiated the Philippine policy of his party; Benjamin Harrison, the last republican president before McKinley, repudiated the Philippine policy of his party; Thomas B. Heed, the most dis tinguished republican out of office, has repudiated the Philippine policy of his party. These things might dis turb the president, but for the fact that .Mr- Hanna is ever near and keeps the finger of destiny pointed toward t.ho ortenti—'The Vemmomsr,