I AROUND THE WORLD. Great Calm Follows In the Wake of a Terrific Storm of Three Days' Duration. A INCIDENTS DURING SEVEN DAYS. Empress" Loses a Day from Geographical Causes Steerage Passengers and other Interesting Features of Voynue Arrival at Yoko hama on Fourteenth Day after Embarking. J Sl'NDAV. How happy (hey Whcfrom', the,, toil -fahd fturriult of their ' lives, " Steal to look down whore , naught but f ocean strives. f -Lord Byron. . Were Lord Byron among the living and on board this ship, observing that not a woman has been seen either in the diner or on deck for two days, and that strong men are now stretched out like so many mummies, he would gladly change that word happy to miserable. It is one" thing- to look dbwn at,and quite another to be.ouiu the, striving ocean. The two chairs to the right of 1ne in the diner weccupicd by En glishmen from London, the one going to Calcutta, the other to Australia. Both assert that they have made many a voyage but "never were in the like of this." At 10 o'clock last night mo ments seemed to abide with us like hours. Many feared that the "Em press" was struggling in the embrace of a typhoon. The machinery ceased its accustomed motion as we -were driven, although tho pilot kept the prow toward the line of assault. One man declared that his head bumped the ceiling at one dropping or sinking of the vessel. We are thankful that it is no worse for on a former trip the good ship had her side smashed in, her smoke stacks crushed and the life boats torn loose. The deep is more'' quiet now and my text is, "He makcth the storm a calm, so that tho waves thereof are still. Then are they glad because thev be quiet, so he bringeth them unto their desired havenj" Psalm 107:: 29-0. MONDAY. The good ship now speeds quietly through the glassy waters. "Like a painted ship Upon a painted ocean." In reply to my" question . as to why she steams so swiftly, the officer re plied, "On our departure from Van couver we cabled under the Atlantic and, Indian oceans to Japan stating the precise hour we would arrive in Yoko hama, and, in spite of the delay on ac count of the storm, the "Empress will poke hor snoot around the nook of -land and be entering Yokohama harbor 'just as the signal gun fires Ihe 8 o'clock salute on Monday morning, November . 17th. She is now making up lost time." Stepping out upon deck before break fast, I noticed four sailors carrying something rolled in a blanket. "I wonder what that is," said I to the second steward, who responded, "That's nothing but a stiff, and its the third person they now-have rolled in blank ets. But that's only a common occur rence." Thus this Chinese steerage passenger went unwept to his casket. 3 They are not buried at sea like white I people but are carried to destination of ticket for Chinese will not patronize j any steamship' line ' that will' "not con J trat to carry each corpse -to land for ' burial. Chinese are usually stowed away in the. hold as Asiatic steerage 700 of them are thus stowed away on . this ship, all returning to their native . land. When an American or Euro pean dies aboard ship he is cast Over board as food for sharks. On such an occasion the ship runs at half speed, the captain reads the burial service, the corpse, weighted with- bars of iron, is then slid into the deep and is seen no more by human eyes. "White man chucked overboard; yellow man carried into port," is a sad but true saying. I understand that some steamship lines carry every corpse into port regardless of color, but with us is a passenger who says lie has witnessed a burial at sea on every voyage he has taken, hav ing crossed the Atlantic only a month ago. The followiug verse is full of meaning at this moment: "Wrecks are darkly spread below, Where with lonely keel we go: Gentle brows and bosoms brave Those abysses richly pave. If beneath the briny deep We, with them, should xoldly sleep, Savior, o'er the whelming sea, Take our ransomed souls to thee." I shall, now retire and not waken till "Wednesday morning, this being Mon day night, although I do not expect to sleep longer than usual. WEDNESDAY. We have crossed the 180th meridian, which is the International date line, where a day js dropped going west ward, and it is now Wednesday, No vember 12th. Hence this week will .have only six days for us and Novem ber only twenty-nine days. If wc were sailing castwnrd and should cross this line on Mqndav, wo Would , -rise on the following day and it would be Monday also, making the week have eight days. Going Vest a day is dropped; going cast, a day is repeated. t To be on the ocean today is pleasant. The ship moves proudly over tho placid waters. Whales ventured within 150 yards of us today in a school, playing and gamboling in semi-circular contor tions to the delight of every beholder. One person approximated their length at seventy AL t Wfe or eighty foot and . worth $5,000 each. ' " , "; THURSDAY. Today the ocean is decidedly rougher and, as we skip over the billows, my mind turns back to the scenes of my childhood'. Among the incidents which float within the horizon of memory are many in which my cousiu Will and I figured most prominently. Once I de coyed him over to my home and wo were playing in the barnyard to our young hearts content, wncn suuueniy I heard a thump. Turning quickly, whom should "L see but Will's father actively administering to his runaway son an unexpected booting. Will im mediately began a quick retreat home ward, crying, and so was I on account of the fright, whereupon I was warned that I had better look sharp as I would bo given a ditto. But space will not permit a rehearsal of our adventures, nevertheless our lives were almost In separably locked like unto David and Jonathan. When older I remember of having-, gone to ' the fields with books strapped on my shoulder to be read while the horses were resting, -If per chance no books were provided, I would utilize spare time by making speeches to the cornstalks, horses and cattle. Often weary hunters seeking rabbit, squirrel and wild fowl, would approach unknown to me, and cheer by tho clap ping of hands when the perorations were ended. 1 also rememher the censor ship exercised by my painstaking mother over my articles written at the age of 12 for publication in the pa pers. As it has always been-my de sire to smash everything that needed smashing, she acted as a brake to pre vent a too radical action as well as to prevent my sending out errors cither grammatical or rhetorical. Surely no one is so much interested in a person's welfare as a mother. No commence ment day ever brought me greater glad ness than, when at the age of 14, I was commissioned by the Daily Ohio State Journal to write for its columns. Those days have hastened into the for ever past and here I am at the age of 31 years upon tne Diuowy ueep, mis named the Pacific (peaceful), and now I shall end this before breakfast reverie by recommending the advice set f to verse by Horatius Bonar: . "Begin the. day with Godl He is thy sun and day.. He is the radiance of thy dawn; I To him address thy lay. " .. ' "Take thy first walk with God! , Let him go forth with thee; 2 By stream or sea", or mountain' path, - Seek still his company. , "Thy first transaction be " With God himself above; ' So shall thy business prosper well, And all thy day be love." FRIDAY. -One of the engineers invited me to accompany him today, promising to in sure me a sight that I -would never for get. I was taken down a hatchway into the hold where the 700 Chinese steerage' passengers are packed. I shall remember the scene "till Ga briels nnai toot." Aoout boo were stretched out in their bunks, some sick, some smoking while the other 100 were either gambling or looking over the shoulders of thpse who were gambling. Some climbed upon boxes and stretched their necks that they might see who won and lost. Being accompanied by an officer, we inarched up to the table and saw the gambling kings taking in the hard earned cash from the men who had labored for years to obiain it. One flickering light in the center of the table dimly revealed excited eyes and faces quivering under the terrible strain. Men resembled demons as they moved back and forth under the ves sel's rocking, housed away below the water line where perpetual gloom pre vails. I am reliably informed that men, having lost every dollar in that gambling den, have been known to rush upon the quarter-deck and leap into the sea, preferring to oflcr them selves as food for tho sharks rather than return penniless to China. Wo arc now three days' journey from Japan, yet the ameliorating influence of the Japan current is felt and tho thermometer rises to our entire satis faction as we havo had a medley of weather since cmbarkfng. After the s,torm of Saturday which absolutely baffles description, we were treated to rain, sleet and snow, nnd now a Warmer climo is appreciated and welcomed as a long absent friend. S ' t SATURDAY, The fire bell sounded at 4 o'clock and tho ship's crew hastily assembled bfT tho' upper deck, manned tho life boats and directed four streams (6t Water In as many directions. It was a false signal and the bugles soon gave tho call "To your places" and the ex citement was soon over. The full num ber of men (when all places are filled) in the crew is 300. Fronj'vfhaVI havo seen during tho past two weeks, I am thoroughly convinced that these fire fighters are never handicapped by a water famine. A false alarm is turned, in frequently, 1 am told, in orderto drill the men and fit them for any emergency. SUNDAY. If this day had been made to order, I am confident that tho venerable Hicks of almanac fame could not have im proved upon it. At this time last Sun day we were emergiug from the greatest storm with which this vessel ever fought. I am told today by an officer that the storm of Saturday night has no parallel in the ship's history, al though the ship was damaged much more severely in a previous encounter to which I alluded under another date. I had often read about the severity of ocean tempests and the danger con nected with ocean navigation, and for months 1 have thought about how tame it would be to made a voyage myself without experiencing at least enough rough weather to test the skipper. I now have no complaint to offer. I am satis fied, and will bo perfectly happy if the weather continues as it is today for the next sixty days' voyaging yet before me. Nothing preventing, we shall reach Yokohama tomorrow morning. Not a ship has been sighted the past two weeks; no evidence, of civilization has come to our notice excepting some rope which may ''have been the last vestige of some weaker ship that failed to weather the blast. MONDAY, NOV. 17, IQ02. is now past 4 o'clock and we are it in the Bay of Yeddo. Numerous tow ering light houses to the right and left tell us" where we are as the lights flash across the quiet water. The scenes give me a new conception of themsan ing of the verse. "There are lights along the shore That never grow dim." These great lights indicate great ex pense. But why consider the expense if they keep the ship from cutting her throat on the rocks and from sending to a watery grave a thousand people? We are anchored outside the Yoko hama harbor waiting the approach of the quarantine oiheer. His boat ar rives and every passenger is examined before being permitted to land. We are at breakfast !as 'the doctor enters and one look at' us is sufficient for no symptoms are present except in creasing appetites. The steerage passengers aro exam ined thoroughly for among them dis ease is most! often found. The exami nation consumes one hour and a half. The words, "all right" are spoken and the vessel creeps into the harbor, where boats from the hotels meet us. In ten minutes we are ashore in a foreign land, ready for the customs examina tion of baggage which takes only a few minutes. Then come tho jinrikishas, each ready to wheel us to they care not where. A jinrikisha is a two wheeled baby buggy intended to carry grown-up people. Here men do the work of horses, over a million men be ing thus employed in Japan alone, a country of 45,000,000 people, and hav ing an area equal to California. The jinrikisha rate is 10 cents per hour, and the rate at which those men run with a heavy man is a surprise to strangers. At 12'0'clock tiffin (lunph) was announced and it surprised me more than even the. rikisha men with their running. Lunch consisted of seventeen courses and I am frank to admit that I never saw its equal else where. Three other Americans join in the same verdict. The room assigned me is princely. 1 was never assigned a superior, and the total cost per day is three yen, or 1.50 American. Those who have followed me thus far observe that I avoid generalizing and present particulars. I have read the writings of travelers for years and all were given too much to generalities to the painful exclusion of particulars, hence I desire to strike an unstruck chord on the liter LockwoMd's Art Display I At these prices ALL can Our Furniture and Houso Furnishing stock la THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE STOCK in tho city. Our "Prices and'tTcrins" aro so rcaBonablo that any can afford to have NICE FURNITURE? Call and sco our SPECIAL SfOOK of fine Furniture and Knicknacks that are arriving daily for our Holiday trade. After inspecting OUR Furniture closely and getting OUR Prices you will readily say . "It Pays to Trade" dl LOCKWOOD'S wspwapw ature of travel. "An honest confes sion is good for the soul." I propose also to write more about the people than about cathedrals, temples, etc., yet those creations of mau,'tt , genius shall not be slighted. Surrounded by scenes and life totally different from any I had ever dreamed of or anticipated, I slialUialt'juidj'wrta more fully when I have completed my survey of tho city and its surroundings, and have accustomed myself to actually believe that I see what I see. "Pass not unmarked the Island In that sea, Where nature claims the most celebrity, Half hidden, stretching in a lengthened lino In front of China, which its guide shall be, Japan abounds in mines of silver fine And shall enlightened be by holy faith dV vine." E. C. Horn. Yokohama, Japan, Nov. 17., 1902. Half Hates to Lincoln. On January 18 to 24, 1003, the -Bur lington will sell tickets frotnanypolnt in Nebraska to Lfncoln"and' return y'at one fare for the rountt trip, .ucuep good returning uuttl February ijAjk tho Burlington agent. Low ltntcs forthc Holidays. To points within 200 miles round trip tickets via the Burlington Route will be sold at greatly reduced rates on December 24, 25 and .11 and January 1. Good returning until January 2, 1003. For further particulars ask the Bur lington agent. Half Kates to Lincoln. December SO and 30 the Burlington Iloute will sell tickets from any point in Nebraska or South Dakota to Lin coln, Neb., and return atone fare for the round trip. Tickets good return ing until January 3, 1003. Ask the Burlington agent. Dray and Transfer Line. i ." w them The only spring dray Phone 139. &. fcooototiottootoa;oiioKoKoHo Unconditional 3 o o Surrender . j. LUl J VIIUVI o o o 4 o o o It's an unconditional sur render ot dirt in bundles left with us. Improved methods and machinery enables us to do this with out injury to the cloth no pounding, b a n g ing, tearing or ripping in our work. Immaculate cleanliness, desirable finish, satisfied customers are the results obtained. o X o o X o n o X o X o o o o X o X o X o X j tjfc 2& Alliance Steam Laundry I o o X ooo-frooooooooo Takes up one large room to Display their in oils, water colors and pastels. The LATEST thing in ART is the -BURNT WOpD WORK called PYROQRAHY." "It makes a hit with all." Our prices on these d 00 to C OO Pictures range trom P I WJZ5. afford Beautiful Trimmings for the Home. Our lino of Musical Instruments is comploto. Guitars, Mandolins and Violins range in Price from $5.00 to $50. Remember wo carry in stock the celebrated George Washburn make of Musical Instruments. Staple and Fancy $ B ERIES Li The Best of IWERYTHING .- Our Prices are Right. Sfwe Ms a. 5t& Grer. Jas. Graham. PHONE BO. rne herald $1.30 yearly. m SUPPLIES HEN YOU GO TO LEAVE TOWN, don't worry about what to do with your Househcld Goods S. A. Miller will take charge of them; store then" in a nice, dry and cool place and pack and sbir wherever desired. Charges -easonabK line in tho'city. J. Miller. Contractor and Builder. Turning and Scroll Work and all Kinds of Shop Work Estimates Furnished. geo. o. gadsby; In U. A, AnUer&on's Uluckvmlth Shop. Alliance, Ned. :0C lTS.e &. Tfttvce. Fire Insurance. 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Teas si