OCR Text |
Show IIP IICH SMUGGLERS oposes fo fiend a Few of Tlicin fo Prison for Several Years. 11 HAVK THK HELP . OK UNITED STATES COURTS 3 an Idea Thai diisfonta liims Were Intended Io JBc Enforced. BY KALPH JOHNSON. u..ed Wire to Thu Trlbuno. 13 W YORK, Oct. U'J.Thero ia ono in Undo Sara's oervico at Now i y;Uo hua ccrtuiul.y earned hits oal-IJ oal-IJ is name is William Loeb,. .Jr., bo is collector of tho port o Now i. For years a. iorlaiu olemonfc has idercd it ono ui its perquisites to ro tho ouBtomH lawn ou its return 1 its auuunl viait to Europe, and use cither oil ils oocial or political O.lpusuion, tho smuKgliuE has been winked t$i r, or at leant no extra effort was made 'to doloot or slop it. Whon 'Mr. Loeb WJI itook rharco ho seemed to have an Im jsrcbaio sort of an idea that tho customs s3 wero mcai,t lo bo cnt'orcod, ovcu q jgzainst those Iiich i society or poli-M poli-M tics, and or somo months tho custom 5lr' iC,IS0 "nS ',eou ",0 sourco of much news S a result of iMr. Loulrs activity. Of ITfl lcour.-;c thcro were nreauis of rago and pain from thoto who wero caught by lilr. Looh's yomig men, and ono would J lhavo thought vested rights had Jbcen 'm frulhlessly taken :iv:iy when aomo pco-jm pco-jm wore compelled to pay duty. 2sow plr. Loob has decided lo ro a stop fur-!Qf fur-!Qf -ftlicr and will try to send a i'ow rich ttoniiliiirli.'M to jail, and United States PPj STuilgi! Hand declares ho will help him. lgfif tflo holds that by sonlcnointc a few of j& v',0!:o l'-'plf to a term in prison ho will Ucah a moro wholesome and convincing jfi PSS0" '(,i'd by all tho .fines m fithat have been imposed during the pres-4a pres-4a i'ct busy season. A. man lileo tho wual-mt wual-mt gtlij candy mau who was caught with BW7 000 worth of undeclared articles jp fsiihji'rl to diitv cares but littlo for a j& Sflno. Aii'ditating in the calm solitude y !oi a jirii-on. these olTonders will have jra hi." oiiporfimitv to realize as tlic' novor tlid before that perjury is no venial I Strikes Cost Money. X Strilii'K are pretty costly sometimes. jFor iiistain-t 10. K.'.Shafppresident of gtiv ,c-ilr Savinjr.s Bank & Trust Co. jjpl' Colm. bus, Ohio, who was hero tho ollier-diiv, savs of the street car striko Jht Colmnbd?: Jt ruincil the state p.ir and cost f ho statu itself $20,000. rii- looses to Columbus it. is hard to jr jailmate in cash. Columbus lias always ifi ftbpcii grcal, shopping town of the con-m con-m lltrjl portion of Ihn slate, aud the usual M abuvirs wore sent to other towns. J3usi-m J3usi-m jsiicsh has begun to improve a little now. a jBiink clearances in Columbus have T fallen off, but I lou 'I know what part m !fof that result is traccablo to tho B etrike.' I j$ She Loves Broadway. m j " I 'annotiiuagino any one being l Wborn and bied in Now Vork ever say-I say-I "'at he has fuund any place more , Swondei ful; California has things that Ioiii can only find in that glorious state, jtnnd. being a resident of that state and t native of New York, I feel, like Bru-Stus Bru-Stus when he said, 'Not that I lovo Cae-f Cae-f par less, but Uotnc more.' That applies i! -both wavs: when I am in California j II "should sav that of .loncsville, and I iWlien I am in Xcw York I should reft re-ft fvcrso it. for there is nothing more won-ij won-ij rderful than its charming society, its musical advantages, its luro as a cosmopolite cos-mopolite city." It was the beautiful Mrs. Julius Mc-Cathy Mc-Cathy Little who made the abovo remarks, re-marks, Mrs. Little, who formerly was tho wrfc of Hoary Spies Kipp and who freed herself from the matrimonial yoke by a Ttono divorce, is a very happy and likewise a very pretty Mrs. Little. She said she wished it would bo corrected that she had deserted California .loncsville, Plumas county, Cal., to bo accurate for the lights of Broadway. "Tt's really very stupid of mo, too. this talk of forsaking Broadway, although al-though I am a Xcw Yorker," said Mrs. Little. " T wonder how many New Yorkers know Broadway?" Would Givo Up Gotham. "Broadway, as J know it, was mado for the outsiders, and wc of New York scarcely know it exists unless an cx-ceptionallv cx-ceptionallv good play or tho opera takes us over there. However. I do Jove my New York, it has a fascination that no place on the globe has for me just as one's mother is a very much moro wonderful individual than any other human being could possibly be. But T'd give up New York or any other place if my husband's interests took mc elsewhere. The papers havo it that T am tired of California of tho 'gulches' and 'camp life' and other western phrases, but it's all wrong. J love California. My husband feels that he is going lo dig his family crest, as it were his fortuno, his farm, whatever what-ever is fine and splendid iu us out of its pure, virgin soil, and I am with him in that. 1 feel that thcro is no ambition ambi-tion so beautiful as digging it out of the virgin soil." Would Make Boys Soldiers. Colonel 15. J. Taylor of San Francisco, Fran-cisco, Cal.. agrees with General Leonard Leon-ard Wood 's suggestion that every boy of the age of 13 in tho United Slates should be trained as a soldier. (and that compulsory military education iu all tho schools of fho country should bo instituted. General Wood is reported re-ported to havo said that every boy of the age of I." or more should" bo compelled com-pelled to learn to use a rifle as part of i his school course. ''Then we should havo a generation of crack marks-mcu," marks-mcu," said Colonel Taylor, "and in this connection I wish" to say that President Hartley of Yale expressed tho same sentiment a few .years ago, when ho said that side by side with the growth of technical schools in Ger man' has been the advance of the military mili-tary system. Half a century ago the Germans considered it a nuisance to be avoided Today Ibey consider it a good thing and the" central figure of their educational system. It is well, tho Germans now eav. to sacrifice two years of tho lives of the men "to military mili-tary training, when the result is twenty years of high efficiency. Military Training. "T welcome tho signs that our American men arc seeking milifarv training more readily," continued Colonel Col-onel Paylor. "I boliovo that, military training ' acts as a countornoiso tha't keeps the nation lof ether. The people must seek two objects individual advancement ad-vancement and tho public welfare. Our danger is that we develop tho individual indi-vidual aud ignore fho welfare of tho public. P.y taking to heart technical and military training, tho private and public welfare, tho end will bu to advance ad-vance in coherence, efficiency and greatness. "ft is wrong to suppose 1 hat a mili-jar mili-jar uation ia a incuaco to republican institutions. Military trainiug of thu youth of any eounlrv ia a gimrautv of the lii'o of their" fatherland. U is" tho (raim'd soldier and general who in fimo of danger it called upon tu defend his country, rf America trains ils outli in military trcinnco. as adoenled bv General Wood and President Had-loy Had-loy of Yalo it will not only fond to produce a better physical manhood, .but will iriBHII 'method, efficiency and co-heri'ueu co-heri'ueu into their business enterprises. Military 1 mining undor proper superiors su-periors is fiio host training a voilng man can huo, and it ia high Ihilo Unit vro awako to tbat fact." |