'1HE I'KONTIKk. rt'Ill.ISlM'.K KVKISY TIlrKSIlAY ItY TUB l lldN I irn I’inM'IM! CO.._ o~ x k ill, - x !■: 11 ii as i< AT Max O'Rell Bay* that everyone except kings and the prime ministers of a few great powers, likes to be interviewed, hnd he considers it a compliment to be asked to give a novvspaper his ideas. The earl of Rosebery, doubtless Great Ilritain's most eligible widower, wears his face smooth and looks moro like a decorous young curate than the political and social personage he un< doubtodly is. Less than thirty years ago President McLeod, of the heading railroad, was a rodinan on the Northern Pacific. He Is now the head of a 2,000-tnilo trunk line and the employor of 100,000 subor dinates. It is reported in Augusta, Me., that Mrs lllaine and her daughter-in-law, Mrs Kmm >ns lllaine, were exceedingly anxious that the secretary should be come a candidate for the presidency, but thnt ho declared to them that un der no possible condition would he ac cept the nomination. The anomaly a woman hermit may be found in Glynn county, Georgia, in the person of Miss Ann I’lper, who has tpokeu to but three persons in the past sixteen years Although she lives within two miles of a railroad, she has nevor seen a train. A graceful though untimoly tributo was recently paid to Christine Nilsson by an admirer who had heard her sing “The Last Rosa of Summer.” At 1 o'clock in the morning he rang her door bell, and when the door was opened threw in a box containing a rose in gems inscribed “The Last Rose." George Du Mnurler, society artist of Punch, has been lecturing on “Social Pictorial Satire." He declares that his favorite creation is the “pretty woman,” and that a plaster cast of the .Venus de Milo has been the silent com panion of his work for thirty yoara The more he looked upon her the snore he saw to worship and admire. Alexandre Rtbot, tlic new French premier, is just two weeks over fifty years of age. He is sometimes called a youthful Theirs, and he has had a meteoric career in politics during the last ten years, though previous to the time of his appointment, in 1800, as minister of foreign affairs in De Frey elnet’s cabinet he was but little known outside of France. . Dr. William Everett has been lectur ing on “the Saint in Literature.” lie thinks we are all greatly indebted to Aeschylus, ‘‘the second father” of the drama, who made dialogue on the •tage possible by introducing a second actor into plays, and who in his “stately and tenacious” versos teaches the doctrine of retributive justice and the duty of submission and modesty. Old newspapers are said to make valuable anti-moth wrappers for furs and winter clothing, the ink upon them being nearly as repu lsive to all kinds of vermin as camphor or coal tar paper. They are likewise good to lay on carpets for a like purpose. Being Impermeable to air they also form ex cellent envelopes for vessels contain ing ice and fresh liquors. Eugene Wolf, the correspondent of the Berliner Tageblatt, who was re cently expelled from the German pos sessions in East Africa, has called upon the relchstag to explain why he was expelled, and to prove that his letters did not give! true accounts of the condition of affairs in Africa. He also asks that he be allowed to return *0 Ainca. Air. woll continues bis at tacks upon Freiherr von Loden, gov •rnor of the German provinces, and (Wes certainly no flattering picture of that official. ' In Singapore the bridegroom must seoure his bride in a race, and this cus tom of bride chasing is quite common throughout southern and eastern Asia. In Singapore a circular course is marked out, half of which is traversed! by the maiden—encumbered only with' a waistband—ere the word is given fori the would-be possessor to go in pur-1 ■suit in the hope of overtaking her be-, fore she has thrice completed the clr «le; that achieved, she has no choice but to take the victor for her lord. Honey could be immensely improved by the planting of the flowers known to yield a fine-flavored nectar. Every' one knows the difference in the con tents of the comb contents in different* parts of the same country and in dif ferent regions. The Narbonne honey obtains its fine flavor by being har vested chiefly from libiate plants, such as rosemary, etc., and though it ap pears that the Maltese honey does not, as often stated, owe its flue aroma to orange blossoms, the latter undeniably perfumes the Greek honey. Oregon fruit growers say that Ore gon is to be the greatest fruit-growing state of the union. One fruit expert says that Italian prunes grown in the Willamette valley are superior to those grown in Italy. The climate, he says, is like the great fruit region of Asia Minor. One grower has planted about 15,000 prune trees in 150 acres in the Willamette, and it is said that prunes and other'iruits are being planted in thousands of other farms. That part of the state promises to be a vast fruit orchard in the negr future. PURCHASING POWER OF WAGES Kept High by Trolsetlnn — t’nilcr Free 'I mite mill I.ower Wages the Articles ■ 'ought by the Klch Wniilit l-*aU In Trier, Hut Nut Those Tseil by tbe Tnor — Illirlier Wages, Not l.uwor Triers, Is tVliut the \t orklllgiiian should strive for. We often hear free trailers claiming that tinder free trade prices would fall so much that, even admitting wages would fall, their purchasing power would not be diminished. "Suppose wages do fall,” says the “reformer,” "is it not true that, if prices also fall correspondingly, the workingman will I be just as well off as before? We an swer “Yes, undoubtedly he would.” If prices would really fall correspond ingly, the workingman’s condition would not be changed for thu worse, lint this is a supposition which is op posed to all experience and facts. It is true that if hand labor were the only factor in production, lower wages would, mean correspondingly lower prices, but under present conditions, with the age of improved processes, with many articles made almost en tirely by machinery, this could not be so. Let us take an illustration: When a rich man goes to a shoemaker in this country and has his feet in ensured for a pair of shoes, which arc tube made to order and exactly fitted to the peculiar shapo of his foot, he undoubtedly pays more than lie would pay for similar work in England or in Europe. Our shoemaker gets two and three times as much as the shoemaker of other coun trios, and it is but natural that, even allowing perhaps for his greater skill, the product of his lnbor should be dearer. lint take, on the other hand, a pair of shoos made by the wonderful ma chines which can be found in any one pf our great factories, which cut the leather, sow the shoes and finish them, almost entirely without the interven tion of human hands, one machine turning out hundreds of shoes daily, fan it be for a moment supposed that the mere fact that the wages of the workingman who tends to such a ma chine are lowered would make iF.iy ap preciable difference in the price of one of those hundred pairs of shoes which that machine turns out? Certainly not. And yet it is just the laboring classes who buy this kind of shoes. Rarely, if ever, does the workingman go to a high-priced shoemaker and have his shoes made to order; that is reserved for the millionaire banker and the im porter. The laboring man buys the factory-made article every time, and it must ue said that it is just as good, just as substantial as the other. So it is with the whole range of articles that the masses of our people buy—cotton poods, woolen goods of a substantial quality, collars and cuffs, tools and hundreds of other things, aro all the products of those wonderful maohines, themselves only made possible by the inventive genius which protection has stimulated. * That this is so every one knows. M any a free trader has unwittingly ad mitted, and even that rabid ‘‘reformer,’' ex-Consul Schoenliof, has given invalu able testimony on this point, when he said that all substantial articles of “the whole sale process of manufacture” are cheaper here than in free trade En gland, but that things made entirely by hand are dearer in the United States. So we see that while lower wages would undoubtedly mean lower prices for the splendid raiments and luxuries of the rich, it would not make much difference in the price of machinery made articles purchased by our work ing men; and thus lower wages could only mean diminishing purchasing power, fewer comforts and a lower standard of living. Hut this is not all. Cannot the work ingman see that wages have not the slightest connection with the cost of the liund red and one things that go to make up his expenses? Will the thou sand dollar mortgage on his home be pome less than a thousand dollars be cause he earns lower wages? Will the debt he owes be smaller because his in come is less? Will the flve-cent car fare be reduced, or the price of a newspaper, or the admission feo to the lecture or entertainment? No, these things will cost iust as much as before, so that lower wages simply mean more labor to purchase a smaller amount of them. The intelligent workingman cannot but see that higher wages, not lower prices, must be the watchword in the battle to better his condition. As Wen dell Phillips used to say: The mainspring of our progress is high wages —wages at such a level that the workingman can spare his wife to preside over a home, can command leisure, go to lectures, take a news paper, and lift himself from the deadening level of mere' toil. That dollar left after all the bills are paid on Saturday night means education, in dependence, self-respect, manhood: it increases the value of every acre near by. tills the town with dwellings, opens public libraries and crowds them, dots the continent with cities and cobwebs it with railways. The one remaining dollar Insures progress and guarantees millions lo its owner, better than a score of statutes. It is worth more than a thousand colleges, and makes armies and police superfluous. the Tariff Again. The anthracite coal roads, controlling a cap ital of KUO,000,000, have combined. Free coal would enable the people to escape in part from the clutches of this monopoly.—Kansas City Times. Will the tariff editor of the Kansas City Times please refer to his copy of the McKinley bill. Paragraph 536 says: "Coal, anthracite — free.” This is a sample of the kind of arguments (?) ad vanced by the “reformers.” mg To the Kescue, Free Traders. The English (tin plate! market is firm at trices which are in most eases as low as the owest on record, and in some cases below the owest on record: and it is the fact that prices ire at such a tow basis that has led to the busi tess that is being done in future.—Official Or gan of the Tin Plate “Consumers” Association, lauuary 30. This piece of information should spur “very free trader to renewed efforts to ibolish the tariff on tin plate in the in terest of his British friends. Tuk free trade “reformer" is sure that if the president by proclamation imposes duties on the products of those countries which will hare refused to jrant reasonable concessions to Aineri ::in products, the whole of such duty wi 11 come out of our own people. Just wait and see this free trade theory go to smash. jJ ■ • ¥ PROGRESS IN INVENTION Is stimulated by Protection—Machines are the Product of tlie (lentils of Mechanics, and tVe Never (’oulil Have Had Any Alechaulr* Had It Not Iteen for tlie Tarll! —Nuin her of Patents Compared. When, in tlie midst of his dogmatic assertion that the tariff is a tax, the free trader is confronted with statistics showing the cheapening of articles un der protection, does he ndmit that he is wrong, that his argument is not sound? Far from it. Instead of honestly con fessing that he was mistaken, he drops the •’tariff is a tax” question altogether, and attempts to get out of his dilemma by answering: “Well, machinery cheap ened these articles.” The Cobdenite does not see that he contradicts himself by this answer, for if goods are cheaper on account of inventions in machinery, how can they also be dearer on account of the tariff? The fact is that the argu ment that improved machinery is tlie cause of the cheapening of commodities is merely a cloak to hide the discom fiture of the free trader, when con vinced that prices have fallen under protection. Hut is it true that the employment of machinery has, to agreatextent, caused the cheapening of commodities? Un doubtedly. The protectionist does not attempt to deny it; nay, he even claims this as a direct result of the protective policy. Inventions in machinery are the result of mechanical skill, the product of the genius of mechanics: and how could we ever have had mechanics had it not been for the tariff? For free trade would have kept us a nation of agriculturists. Wc do not claim that protection is all powerful, that it can kindle inventive genius in the brains of men not born with that talent; but we do claim that by diversifying industry, by giving every man a chance to earn his own living in his own way, and by thus affording our Yankee ingenuity an opportunity to assert itself, protection lias created the conditions favorable to progress in invention. That this is so is proved by the records of the United States patent office, which show, that the number of patents has always l^een relatively far greater in times of pro tection than under free trade. NUMDKR OF PATENTS COMPARED. Number of patents Number of patents granted under w anted und^r men ue tariff. protective tariff. 18KM880. 1881-1875.127,815 1875-1889.286,955 If any other proof of the fact that protection has stimulated invention is wanted, we need only quote the words of Mr. Ueorcre Carlvle. the inventor of the improved machinery in use at the new pearl button works at Detroit, es tablished by the McKinley tariff: But for the passage of the McKinley bill my Invention would he of no value, and there would have been no incentive for me or any one else in this country to make further inventions in this line. Hut all this should not lead us to for get the main point—namely, the false hoods of the free trader, who first as serts that the tariff is a tax, and then disproves his own assertion by saying that under this very tariff, which he claims raises prices, prices have fallen on account of improved machinery. American Boot! Cheaper. The London Times of February 8 quotes from the testimony given before the labor commission by Mr. J. Ingle, secretary of the Leeds Boot Manufac turers’ association, the following state ments, which were alluded to before in these columns: “During the past thirteen months thirty-six firms in the shoe trade in Leeds had faile^. He knew one place in Leeds where thousands of pounds' worth of machinery was not allowed to be worked owing to the trade unionists declining to work it at a profit to the employers. Ever since 1874 they had been importing from America men’s strong boots suitable for workingmen, and selling them at 4s. 2d. a pair, orSd. less then they could sell an English made boot of the same quality. Wc were twenty or thirty years behind the United States in shoemaking. They employed more labor-saving machinery, the men were more expert, and the leather was cheaper. In the United States they could make up £100 worth of material at an expenditure of £17 iu»., as against Jtau in ungiana; and in Leeds the unionists were so strong as to prevent the American machines being used. Two firms had taken their busi ness from Leeds and were uow working the American machines with non unionists. In reply to Mr. Burt, wit ness said that probably the persecution of the Russian Jews had brought them over to Leeds, but the people of Leeds thought it was unfair that the bread should be taken out of their mouths by foreigners, and that there ought to be a tax upon them. The houses in which these foreigners lived were in a most insanitary condition.” Two Questions for Irishmen. Every Irishman in this country knows that if it was not for his vote and that of his compatriots the democratic party would be without hope of success. All also know that the democratic majority in congress, a majority elected by Irish votes, proposes to build but one war ship. The two questions that should inter est them are: What power is helped, placated or in any wise pleased by this reduction of work to be given to me chanics and this cessation in our prep aration for a defensive as well as offensive war except England? And, what are you going to do about it? Keep on voting for men who serve En gland, and not either this country or Ireland? Ask a lawyer if he would like all those engaged in other occupations or professions to become lawyors and com pete with him, and he will quickly answer, No. Ask a merchant whether he would not be glad to see all those who are now manufacturers or import ers change their business and become merchants too, and he will speedily ex press his disapprobation of any such scheme. Yet the free traders want tc make us a nation of agriculturists, and they ask the farmer to hail with joy a system that would transform all those who are now his customers into his competitors. NEBRASKA. A ladies’ athletic club is a new venture for Geneva. * Table Rock Methodists have paid ofl their church debt. About fifteen houses are is sonrse o! erection at Wayne. Fillmore county republican^ wilt hold their convention at Geneva April 9. Red Cloud merchants have agreed tc close their doors each evening at 8 o'clock. St. Edward citizens have raised a bonus of $1,000 and thus secured a plow factory. The farm house of Alexander Sullivan, near Schuyler, wus entirely destroyed by fire. Several alliance farmers have a move ment on foot to establish a bank at Gib bon. A Falls City enthusiastic horticulturist is putting out 100,000 apple trees this spring. Bertrand suffered from a coal famine for a few days last week and cobs fur nished the ouly fuel. Burglars made a raid on a clothing store at Fairmont and made away with $33 worth of ready made pants. A $10,000 stock company has been organ ized by the citizens of "Dawson and vicin ity to rebuild their mills. At a town meeting at Allen it was de cided to have a town well and about $100 was raised for that purpose. A farmer near Norden, Keva Paha county, killed a bald eagle which meas ured nine feet from tip to tip. H. harris, who lives just west of Super ior, cleared $1,300 off of his eighty ac ■ e farm this last season. Farming in Nuckolls county pays. The commissioners of Dawson county have decided to put in a new iron bridge across the Buffalo, east of Jewell, 16x80 feet, to cost $1,200. Charles Harding, of Norfolk, recently received a draft for $800 in payment for a carload of butter which was wrecked while enroute to New York. There are twenty b -chlorido of gold cure institu es in Nebraska, says the Tecumseli Journal, and it will soon bo as easy to get cured as to get drunk. The farmers' organization at Trumbull and Bromtield have leased the Ferguson elevators at those points and will com mence the grain business at once. Miss Clara Snyder, rne of Haynes county’s popular school teachers, made final proof on her claim near Estell before Clerk Gowing at Hayes Center Saturday. Rev. J. E. Brercton. for nearly six years pastor of the Ashland Congregational church, has resigned to accept the ap pointment of field secretary of Doane col lege. A special election will be held in Ran dolph on the 16th of April, for the purpose of voting* bonds to the amount of $5,000 to aid in boring an artesian well at that place. HoUlrege will put in twenty-five acres of sugar beets and Red Cloud twenty acres for the Grand Island factory as a test of the adaptility of the soil for raising beets. There is talk of a stock company being formed in McCool for the purpose of put ting up a brick building with a hall over head, fitted up and equipped for lodge purposes Harry Simpson, a Pender painter, went down to Bancroft and drew a check for $15, signing M. Emmington's name to it He then disappeared and hasn’t been heard from since. The Ewing creamery will open about May 1. The management has already se cured 2,500 cows and expects to have over 8,0J0 when the fires are kindled and the churns begin to revolve. Lieutenant, and Mrs. Trout, of Fort Robinson, were out driving when their team ran away. They were thrown out and knocked senseless. Mrs. Trout had her shoulder badly hurt. State Superintendent Goudy has issued a circular to teachers of the state. The document contains suggestions pertaining to the importance of observing in some fitting manner of Arbor day, April 23. Lizzie Groner. of Plum Valley, Knox county, met with a painful accident while driving some cattle home from the reser vation. She was riding horseback and the horse becoming scared she was thrown to the ground. There will be a meeting of the York County Horticultural society at the court house in York on Saturday, April 16. York county is now conceded to be one of me uusi ior iruit raising- in uie central part of the state. Frank Bull, of Weeping Water, while riding in a wagon last Thursday seated in the rear of the bed, was jolted out owing to the horses getting scared and making a sudden turn. In striking the ground his knee was dislocated. The Beaver Valley Tribune says: The cattle along the Sappa bitten in February by a rabid dog have since developed evi dences of hydrophobia. Among others, A. E. Dawes has found it necessary to kill a valuable male bovine. A 10-year-old son of Frank Kobo, of Lib erty towship, Franklin county, was acci dentally wounded in the leg by another boy while the two were playing with an old revolver. The wound, while serious, Is not considered dangerous. An exhibition of the work done^ the public schools of Crete has been lield at the city hall this week. Work from all grades has been placed alongside of that of previous years, and the improvement is very striking and pleasing Wayne business men have already com menced the erection of several fine brick stores in place of the frame buildings which were burned last fall, and a num ber of others will put up brick structures this season The walls of the new nor mal college are steadily rising. The Gothenburg Independent says: It is estimated that over $30J,000 has been paid out for farm produce at this place since last year’s crop was put upon the market. This is a pretty good showing, both for the business men in town and the farmers in the surrounding countrv. A number of citizens of Arapahoe have organized a company and taken stock in ft lake north of that town, made possible by the water power and improvement canal. It is the intention of those inter ested in the enterprise to stock the lake with fish and convert it into a summer re sort. Thursday last some small hoy* aet fire .to a bay stack belonging to tho Rev. John Berk, of Hickman, and which was stand ing near his barn, but by the prompt and energetio work of citizens the fire was ex tinguished before much damage was dona. TWO FIRES IN NEW ORLEANS Four Million Dollars’ Worth of Property Destroyed. 8iitjr-Flve Thoufiand Bales of Cotton and Eleven Blocks of Buildings Go Up in Smoke — Started by a Cigarette. New Orleans, La., April 4.—New Orleans was visited yesterc- y by two of the worst fires in the city’s history. Eleven blocks of buildings were de stroyed, involving a loss of $3,600,000. Both fires were the result of careless ness, and would have been trivial but for the extreme dryness, which was 'the result of a long drouth, a high wind and the inadequacy of the fire department. The latter was reor ganized in January from the volunteer to the paid department system, and the number of firemen was reduced about nine-tenths. The first fire started in a pile of cot ton in front of the fire-proof compress at the corner of Robin and Front streets. Someone threw a lighted cigarette in the pile, which in a few moments was burning fiercely. The flames soon made their way into tho compress building, where 12,500 bales of cotton were stored. The air was soon full of sparks, which soon com municated the tire to adjoining build ings. The Orleans compress, with 25, 000 bales, was the first to go. While the firemen were combating the flames in the Orleans compress the walls suddenly gave way and Captain Dupee and Lieutenant Shaw and Pipe man Bordeaux were buried in the ruins. All were seriously and possibly fatally injured. The Independence cotton yards had been engulfed and the fire covered an area of five squares. The Baldwin ag ricultural works and the Louisiana rice mills, four squares distant, were ignited by the masses of burning cotton, which tilled the air, but after a hard fight both buildings were saved without serious loss. A panic prevailed in the vicinity of the fire which was close to the resi dence district, and people living many blocks distant began fleeing for their lives, carrying what few belongings they could gather up in their haste. There were also destroyed in the cotton district several minor buildings. The New Orleans vinegar factory was destroyed, involving a loss on the stock of $10,000. A frame bar room, oviv-vyK, uaa id^u. t 321 South Front street n two-story brick building was destroyed. No. 333 Front street, a three-story brick resi dence, was damaged considerably, as was 333 and 337 Front street, build ings o 1 the same character. A three story brick bar room, No 2 Thalia street, was damaged considerably. The cotton loss is estimated at about 65,000 bales. This would mean a loss of about *3,225.000 in cotton alone. It is claimed by some that the fire was the work of laborers who wished to avenge the purchasing of the presses by tho trust. The fire proof press is owned by the trust in the name of the Penrose Brothers, managers. The Or leans is also in the trust in the name of Adam Borch, manager. The Ship pers’ press is owned by Boyd & Her rick, who are not in the’ trust. While the firemen were engaged in a hopeless struggle with the cotton fire, another blaze broke out at the corner of Laurel and Third streets, a mile away. .Mrs. Valentine tried to start a file with coal oil. An explosion fol lowed, and the house was soon in flames. It was reported at the time that two children were killed by tho explosion, but investigation failed to confirm the report. For half an hour tho fire was a small affair, but no engines arriving it finally spread to the surrounding buildings', which were all wooden cottages, and in two hours the flames had swept bare an area six blocks in extent, reaching from Maga zine street to Constance crossing. In all about 185 houses were destroyed. The loss will approximate $500,000. Althougth the cotton compresses were sold to an English syndicate, tho formal transfer had not yet taken place, consequently the loss will iall on the old owners. The cotton and wiu miuamg-s ana machinery were fully insured, mostly foreign companies Several local companies here are hard hit, however, and it is believed that two of them will not be able to weather the storm. A careful estimate of the total insur ance on both fires fixes the amount at >3,300,000. Th i llna«PH Destroyed. The following is a list of the houses destroyed as nearly as can be learned: Dan Dioderick’s butcher shop. George R. Bovolo, two-story house, oc cupied by himself and Dudley Selpb. Double cottage occupied bv Ed Craig. One-story frame occupied' by Ed Bor brais as a bakery. Single cottage owned by Mrs. Potter x oung. Cottage owned by Mrs. Lester. Double cottage owned by Mr. Lally, oc cupied by Mr. Holt. Single cottage owned and occupied bv Mr. Nestor. ' Two-story frame occupied by Mr. Du gage as a butcher shop. . 1 wo single cottages owned bv Mr Blacksmith. 1 Double cottage owned by Mr. Boach. Grocery store occupied by Mr. Demitrv J. B. Ballard, residence. y' Two-story vacant house. Mr Geis, two-story tenement house. Mr. McMeade, double cottage. Mr. Vigers, grocery. Mr. Stats, residence. H. B Mctta, residence. M. C. Schenck. frame building occupied by John Hortgoller. * FIREMEN «.VEHCOME. Incendiary Blaze at Montreal Nearly De stroys the Honzcours Market. Montreal, April 4.—This city was beset by a number of fires which in four instances were of incendiary or igln. At the last fire an attempt was made to destroy the Iionzcours mar ket. It came near being a success and before it was gotten under control eighteen firemen were overcome bv Bmoke and had to be taken to the hos pital, while thirty others had to be laid off for a short time. The loss is about >100,000. Buying Right of Way. t W ausa. Neb., April 4.■—-A representa tive of the Yankton, Norfolk and Southwestern railroad waa here Saturn day and is purchasing right of way from land owners along the prospec tive line* The Six Stater. Who Robbed Co, Salmon Fall,, (,llkllo "■* Boise City, Idaho, April 4 _Th tectives who went to the ranch near a , mon Falls of the six women suspect beiny stage robbers, have placed a women under arrest and report tha! there is no doubt of their guilt Th women who claim to be sister,,** said to have committed many hic-hwn! robberies in that section of the coui try. They were dressed as men whiU engaged in their Crimea The belief was strong that old man Harvey and his family were responsi. ble for the numerous stage robberies that have occurred lately and the of. fleers by a clever scheme caught the women in tin act There were certain spots along the road near Harvev', ranch where the robberies were done and,at one of these places the sheriff with ten men waited while the stage stopDed at the house, the driver being previously instructed to hetrar fear of robbery because he carried 1 money box. The bait took and whet the stage people were ocatins dinner the girls disappeared and sdon the sheriff and his party in ambush, saw six young men sneak into the little canyon and hide themselves close to tho road. When the stage came along the bandits went forth and stopped it at the point of their (runs. But the sheriff was also there and took in the whole gang, which proved to be composed of the girls who had left the house. When the arrest was made one of the girls weak ened and told the whole story. She said she never liked the work and was glad they were caught. They were trained to it by their father and the proceeds were shipped east for sale so as not to awaken suspicion in the coun try. The arrest of the old man is ex pected. OPERATORS WIN. The Santa Fe Ratal-. Salaries All Along tlie Line. Topeka, Kas., April 4.—The tele graph operators succeeded in bringing the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad company to time and salaries have been readjusted for the entire system. The new schedule increases the wages of the 900 operators em ployed by the company $80,000 a year. Under the old schedule there were s number of offices receiving $20 and $3j per month, and the petition of the tele graphers to establish a minimum sal nry ui per man mi was granted. Operators receiving over ¥45 per month were increased $5 and $10 each, ex cept 200 offices. In these minor offices the committee asked for an advance of S3.50 per month, which was compromised at $2. Train dis patchers and chief train dispatchers were allowed an advance of $15 per month, making the salaries of the former ¥120 and the latter $145. The rules regulating operators and train dispatchers were also revised. At stations where there are more than two operators ten hours will constitute a day’s work instead of twelve, and eight hours will hereafter be a day's work for train dispatchers. All opera tors and train dispatchers will be paid for extra time. Grand Chief Ramsay left for St Louis to confer with the superintendent of the St. Louis and San Francisco. A strike had been ordered by Ramsay on the ’Frisco April 6 unless Operator Groome was reinstated, but on receipt of a telegram from the superintendent, Chief Ramsay declared it off until after a conference was held. A CHEAP CHAMPION. John Jiurns Gets Only S10 a Week, and That Comes Hard. London, April 4.—John Burns’ wages committee has issued an appeal for funds to help pay the famous labor leader his modest salary of £2 a week. When Burns was elected three yean ago to a seat on the London county council he was earning £2 a week at his bench as a fitter. He stipulated that, as he would have to give up all his time to municipal matters, the workingmen of London should enable him to live by raising that sum per nrnnl, 4__t_t -, f'r-.nep. quently the John Burns wages com mittee was formed, and Burns has since received his modest stipend. As a mcmbr of London's municipal par liament he has rendered incalculable service to the cause of labor, but labor has not shown much gratitude to its champion. The committee has raised the necessary money from week to week with great difficulty, and several times, as at present, the treasury has been almost empty. The fact is. the older and richer trades unions object to Burns because he is a socialist, and only the dockers' union, which he es tablished, has contributed to the fund. THEY ARE OfcTERMlNED. The River Men Will Not Work Until Their Demands Are Granted, St. Louis, Mu, April 4.—Contrary to expectations, the strike of the river firemen, roustabouts and longshore men is today more determined in character than at any time sines the beginning. The men who deserted from the ranks of the strikers have been induced to quit work, and at noon there were scarcely fifty men at work on the river front. A present there are fifteen boats waiting to load or to unload. Meetings are constantly being held and the men ex press determination to remain idle un til their demands are complied with. Distributing Million*. Chicago, April 4.—Pension Agen Clement today commenced the distri tribution of the enormous sum c SO, 500,000 to the pensioners of this trict Of the total amount $150’ , will go into the pockets of the na veterans, and the remainder to army veterans, their widows ana phans. _ For Shorter Hours and More F*y. New York, April 4.—-The ca 1D makers and varnishers of this city we in a strike this morning. They sight hours woru. a day an, r establishment of the old rate o y - One-third of the cabinet o( have granted the request and one-fourth of the varnish men. a thousand men are on strike.