TALMAOE'S sermon. DEWEY THE SUBJECT FOR CAST SUNDAY. ^rnm Toit, a, \>>r«r 4. no Follow*; “jtelinld Also the Ntil-m"—A Uovlew of Our Naval llvroe* and Iluae of Olhur .'ailoim. If this exclamation wa3 appropriate about eighteen hundred and seventy two years ago, when it was written concerning the crude fishing smacks that sailed Lake Galilee, how much more appropriate in an age which has launched from the dry ducka for pur poses of peace the Oceanic of the White Star line, the Lucanla of the Cunard liua, the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosae of (ho North German Lloyd line, the Augusta Victoria of the llaui hurg-Arnerlcan line; and In an age which for purposes of war has launched the screw-Bloops like the Idaho, the Hhonandoah, the 03slpee, and our Iron clads like the Kalamazoo, the Roan oke nnd the Dunderberg, and tho.-c which liave already be en buried in the dne« thorough!?, sat d»as with a epe-d and rogsummsl* ekt.l that eclipsed all the hlstoev of naval arvhl lecture. What brilliant mhlevsmebts are suggested br the mere m« niton of the names of the rear- tdmlrsle! It all lhe? did should he silttea. every one I m >, «i tlist ms the world Hoslf t"Uld a<>t toniala the i-* hs that should Is vrllhs Hut tin •* names have received the hmet due The ■MM of them nil to their graves under the rtssasul* of nil the forts, navy yards sml m, n of wsr. Ihs B ,g* >4 all the shipping and capitals at U I mast. I re*Its to dsr the deeds >*f • I rt*rg* »ui4 l**ar uj> m>t«r it* *r lt*l tiiuut ar*U **4 f>ir ife*t uinli • « r>*«it Ul *«*ry act* *»4 |*ai« la •I*a4 of itaiiJ pan ul I r«*ur 114*411» Tt* daklHi It* \V«* lAVktA *« « ill! UUmJ I*# I lit). | ih a »r*t*ft, lit* »*• aj« >.* lire. The sea was aot rough. But ! Admiral Dahlgren, from the deck of the liag steamer Bhlladelpliia. saw her gradually sinking, and finally she struck the ground, but the flag still floated above the wave In sight of the shipping, n was afterward found that she Bank from weakness through In juries In previous service. Her plates had been knocked loose to previous times. So you have in nerve, and mus cle, and bone, and dimmed eyesight, and difficult hearing, and shortness of breath, many intimations that you are gradually going down. It is the oerv i •<> Hut Mushroom's Month. One of the storied of the lute Victor Cherhultei. the French-Swine mu«j of letters. Illustrate* I'.nely the true spirit of the publisher. Ilulos. the editor of the Hevue ilea Deux Monties, one* hud at his country bouse In Savoy a numerous company of literary people, one of whom was fher built* t'her bullea contribute.) regularly, every other year, a novel to tbe columns of tbe Itrvue. and a story of hta was at that time running In the periodical. Tbe guest* had been out for a walk, and bad amused themselves with gath ering musbrnoma, which were cooked for dtnuer, As the company were alt* ting down. It occurred to one of the party that undoubtedly s- me of the people who had taken part in gather* tug the mu brooms knew nothing about them, and that there might be pot *wuue fungi In the collection This reflection so affect* I the compaay that nil the people present elih the e«ep* lion of Ckertvlb declined to partake of the dish lie atone attached It, with gusto There up^ n I lulus showed and den and tnlenee alarm. * Vherhultea' Chef bull eg! Uui ».e » t am d‘" he • iclalined “Its member that low haven't heisto I tour slurp in the Me sue!'* tlreatly to hi* relief, the mush* rims turned out to he in a.*tt>ea do two mm o* tVdomhhn Nv I U wilt at • »stl nipeet tag ig in tweed t« nas* la tn.t n. «rdt«a I bee a-tee In s, u. ,n Uhtea M *-e lip ««rl of eUvsn Some Learn Trom tbe Kt-cord of Testi mony in tic Bartley Case. ir is that or tin rx-Govtrwion 4 Oreal I.null In the Hint* That Might lluve ISei it 4«nlil«tl I'.lliitf of 4|>|ieiil In tlie (')■>« of tlic Stale Aeiilniit tli« Hurtit) lliiiiilniiii’ti lli'ulli Seme Inter* <»tluj; I .ict*. The filing of the appeal In the su preme court a few nays ago, says u J,inroln correspondent, of the (use or the state of Nebraska against the bondsno n of ex-State Treasurer Joseph Hartley ha*, revived pubtlr Interest in the tram action;-' In the defaulting state treasurer and has caused many people to Inquire into the curly history of the case, Some rather Important and pe culiar t>- simony was given by Govern or Holcomb 111 the first trial of the case In Douglas county which, for some reason, was r.ot repeated at tins ubsequent trial of the case, notwlth* standing the governor testified at each. Th» failure of Governor Holcomb to make a proper settlement with Hartley and hie acceptance of a worthless bond, whereby the slate lost half a million dollars, Is a matter of record. Holcomb was elected governor In the fall of lSiM. Joh pli Hartley had then served two years as treasurer und there was a suspicion In the minds of some that Ills accounts were In bad shape. The governor-elect was warned that the treasurer was a defaulter and thut very careful accounting should be made to protect the utate from pos nible loan through a careless settle ment. In spite of this warning and in spite of the law, the new governor, ap parently by bin own carelessnes, al lowed Hartley to defraud the state. After a long and private consultation with tfir* state treasurer, he accepted a new bond upon which most of the old and already accountable bondsmen qualified for fabulous sums. Accord ing to Holcomb's sworn testimony no attempt war inaue to examine Into the real worth of the bond. On the wit ness stand Holcomb admitted that he knew very little of the transaction and could not even tell the dote of the acceptance of the bond. One of the bondsmen was the presi dent of a bank which held over $20(1, 000 of the stale money. Tho bank was not a depository and therefore the de posit was unauthorized und illegal. Governor Holcomb accepted this bank president as bondsman, who qualified In the sum of $200,000 "over and above all debts and liabilities.” The worst part of the deal was the pretended settlement with the treas urer. The transcript of Holcomb's ev idence In the Omaha trial is the best proof and It is accessible to the public. Af fording to tills testimony Holcomb first held a private consultation with Hartley and then they both entered the treasurer's office, where the re mained about two hours. The govern or testified that he looked over a ledg er, or some such book, in which there were some accounts. Then Hartley produced a cigar box containing some slips of paper, representing what I should have been about $460,000 in cash. He also produced $50,000 in cash. The law1 required It to be all cash, but according to Holcomb's testimony "the law was a farce and a sham." This testimony Is a matter of record. The governor aid not examine the slips of paper closely. He admitted on the witness stand that he did not know positively whether they were genuine or not. He knew that the bank which was not a legal depository was repre sented In the cigar box by a slip call ing for over $200,000. The story of the settlement Is best told In the exact words of the record. The case was tried before Judge Clin ton N. Powell and a jury In Omaha during the month of February, 1898. The following extract from Governor Holcomb's sworn testimony is from pages 617 to 02.1 of the certified record, bill of exceptions, filed with tho ap peal of the (use In the supreme court last year, testimony being given on cro.(-examination by .1. C| Cowin: y.—I ask what he was i haregable with? *;»a(j,uuu or 11 i ber lightly; that included the money In suspended hanks. Q. I understand. There was about 44T.OOO only in cash? \ in the treasury vaults; cither that or 457.000. y There was nhour 0241,000 that was tied up in suspended banks, was there not? A —Yes, sir; I think so. Q -That would leave about 1713,00'i loose money ? A.—In that neighborhood; I was thinking it was about $15,000; I muy not have the exact figures. y I will ask you again, w hat It was • e brought these paper that you rail eertifhates of de'.etslt out In? A Wall, as 1 remember It was a lit tle hoi Q <'l|ar bos? A Somethin* of that shape I rouId not say it was u ti*ur tan, but something—-It was stnoiar in idle, the general shape q Of the halanee of th *.«. outside of the $47.MO he produ 'd none of it In lash, or if it was $5T.0M> you may say It maye he? A No. sir, no different (mm what I -aid Mob-emu had tgatlffed to os« a honor Mission and the t lamination continued; y He opened this hil that •»* like a rigar hot, did he *buw you Huh paper* he had* A I do not remember that it had *».> rioer y Aa«i th«a tooh ooi paper* that he tailed rkoU and rertithates u! «i« poett did he* ■ f • po.lt lie “ have lain 4 few > He» ha y Mate fug a Itat •*# the *■* A So, air y Yon k«yl no memorandum si Mom, did tnsf A him *»r I did sot y Sow 4si la the only time yon •«er saw IImm* wa* It not* too never ggw them attefWerda* A Mil, gi , vo me knoaitdga. Here followed some questions cover ing the same ground, and the examina tion couc!'Jo«d as follows: Q.—And then he brought out a Tv*", that looked like a cigar box, from which he took a lot of papers that he railed certificates of deposit, amount ing from $440,000 to $140,000? A,—1 do not know whether he railed them certificates of deposit or not; they were certificates of deposit mostly. There may have been some banks checks. Q.—He showed you the papers? A.—lie showed me the certificates of deposit. Q.—You looked them over and took no list of them? A.—No, sir; l took no list of them. , A.— He* had a list of them. if — You took no memorandum of ' them? A.— No, 1 took no memorandum of them. 1}.—And you turned them ba< k to him and he put them hack in the cigar I box and went off with them—is that right? A. lie put them in the vault. Q.—Did you see him put them In the 1 vault? A. T will not say positively that 1 did. Q.—And that was the end of the ex amination? A.—-Yes, that was the end of it. Cam ll«* DkIikIv tli#» l’eople. Omaha Bee:: One* of the claims put * forwiird In behalf of Silas A. Hol comb's candidacy for supreme Judge In the recent address of (he populist state cbmmlttee rests upon htu "con servatism und eminent fairness In hi > j every act, both public and private.” Aa a matter of fact no person oc i copying the executive office of Ne braska ever displayed such rank par* tlsanshlp and manifest unfairness aa did Governor Holcomb, especially from t!in time he secured the support of an administration of his own po lltical faith. In no case could he se • I further the lines of his own party or j recognize such a thing as fairness to political opponents. The most glaring examples of hia hidebound subserviency to the un scrupulous political machine In con trol of his party organization is to found in his cowardly inaction when the pictorial ballot bill was presented to him ior Ills approval end he al lowed It to become a law by lapse of time without his signature. After hav ing denounced the pictorial ballot in vigorous language in bis message l> the legislature, and Imvlng advocated the retention of the law as it then existed with a few modifications, Gov ernor Holcomb silenced his own con victions at the behest of the stat'* house gang and helped put on the 1 statute hook a law designed ns a : fraud upon the people in the interest | of the tripartite political alliance. Ho partial and so partisan was this lav that legislature Governor Holcomb's populist successor saw no other course than to Join the republicans In wiping it out of existence und substituting for it a measure fulr to all. The same blind partisanship was clearly demonstrated in almost all of Governor Holcomb's official acts. In bis appointments to office where the law required the recognition of dif ferent political parties ho persisted in selecting men who voted the same ticket under the flimsy pretext that they satisfied the conditions of the law by masqnerading under different party iubels. Not once, but repeatedly, was the law thus evaded upon such technicalities with the palpable pur pose of promoting partisan ends and manufacturing party capital. Cun a man who as governor has showed himself so partisan and unfair | be expected on the bench to be non partisan and Impartial? Can a mail who in the executive chair has played the willing tool of the state house sham reformers be expected as su preme judge to be Independent of the machine's pressure? How then can he hope to delude Nebraska voters with promises of doing better if they will only give him a vindication by elect* , lug him again to another office? (iiiiinniiil oporrMic Lincoln Journal: "Very long will b; the way. very hurd the hills to climb with Slippery Si Holcomb weighing down the popocratlc bund wagon In Nebraska." These prophetic words from ii part of nn editorial that ap peared in the Papilllon Time* shortly before the late convention of the al lied forces of reform. They were the spontaneous utterances of a man who has long been recognised as one of the foremost lighters In the serried ranks of popocracy. They were spoken before the party lush had been swung by the bosses over the heads of those who would dissent from ring rule. Howard Is silent now. because Bryan demands It. Ilut, Is Silas Holcomb any less slippery than when those i lines were written? If he was dishon est then. Is it likely that he le hottest l now, or will be by av' by? KprntlliiK l l«r >1 -him, Deputy Iat ml Commissioner I-?. W Nelson Is defrauding the state out of his salary these days, sajs the Lincoln Journal, l>y spending bis time at the headquarters of the populist state ecu- j Hal committee, ('alters at the office of laind CouimUsloner Wolfe who in quire for Mr. Nelson have to be told : that be la at the end of the political | machine instead of earning his sal- I ary which the state pays, this sub- i Jett Is considered 01 for another tu- 1 veeUgatlou when the aest legislature ; meets. If Mr Nelson were able to do any good la the fusion headquarter* it , • mild md he so hail but a emaltua on salary from the stale under pretest of t»ing able tu help reform la m along reform lines so mush preashed by | rof.esi aal tvfurmsra. Its Its eat lie | i|ri*l«i It-*, trege tlt iir llul. ofuH la ua the stump huatlag for oia for su preme )*iw It mbtht he aeii fur 1 him tu sspia.it hta lusmilua with that ta 110.04 twuutt iMMtbhia and 1 lb# * he ate to nail enough ftaudu- I l>at halted# tu seat hi* uid partner ua I the leytell." bene h la Stew of hi* , 1#tear t# it nay aoa-ter that area aueh a staunch fthsartl as Ktga* Howard I HHm of the l*i|oll.a Vltoi s 10 hi Id ta a At of tadigastiiMt salt him “lUip . p«r t ill * I TTIE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON IV. OCTOBER 22 EZRA 8: 21-32. t'rr.fnurnry In Jnrimnlrtn - "T.ic Ilmxl ttf (iiiil U tin All of Tlirm fur (iotrt Time 1‘Cfk llltn” r'jtra Till: %i.—Tbn Work of Cent. *1. MAt the river Ahava." Tin* place U unknown, but it wan jinib'ibly one of tin- < final* near Hahylon, flowing Into tho Kuphratf',*. "Then 1 proilalrnfil a fast." b acting, a* a religious .id, would stoni to havt 1 tn bn*|:< in (1) n gr lot over Kin m ileep and Intent* that nil ijeulro for food In taken away. <2) In the aid to de votIon furni^hci) j»y u body unburdened with food, hi a* lo leave ihe mind and In art In their nu> t active and frea cotidi tlon. <3i it i* the natural expression of deep sorrow fnr aim It in not enough for tin heart to feed deeply; it need* to ex t»te*H its feeling*, though the proof that (lie finding I* sincere lie* in foraaklng tho Htn repented or and doing deed* of rlght COUMPIH, I he object w;i (!> "that we might ;if f!ic t mjr.si lv»- < t)» fore nur Oo«l,M ft wae an expression of repentance for Kin, of ***** °ut all obstacles from wrong mo tive* or disobedient heart* which would lender it impossible for Clod to give them KUeeeHH in their Journey. It meant nub rub.don. eonse ration and repentance. *2) "To neck of him a right way.*’ The fant ing wan uecompanied by prayer (v. 28) and was u**ed "us the TiKMiiK of Inton*! Tying r< liglouw fervor in prayer through the restraint laid upon physical appetite." I'rofeKKor I>avldMon. It wax itl*o tha natural mean* of elurfTying their own minds «o that they could reeeivo and recognize the wisdom God would bestow upon them. 11. I* or I was ashamed to require of the king. etc. There were many danger* on that four mouth** Journey, particu larly from "the robbers and Bedouin* of the dealt, who might easily inflict dam age upon a large caravan by robbing at Higglers and harassing the line of inarch. Oavidson. For they had a large amount of treasure with them. Kara had told the king that God was with his peo ple. and against their enemies; and, therefore, to ask n guard of soldiers might seem to the king to contradict his assertions, and bring disgrace on Godcj cause. n.3. And he was entreated of us." TCzra had the assurnnco that his prayer had been heard. The Treasure 24. "| separated twelve/* etc. lie committed the treasure Into the hands of twenty-two persons, tw*1v* chief priest* and ten Invites. of whom the first l wo are named. These men would lake special charge ami bp reapon 'ilblo for ihp safe keeping of tho treaa or-' Resides. || would relieve Ezra of aH possible urnndal In regard to It. 2B- “And wriffb.il unto them the ell vor." Ptr. Up may gather from this that tlip sliver and Bold were In bars or Ingots, nrd no! in coined money. The Persians had rolr.Pd money at this time, but the treasury kept the bulk of Its stores in bars (llerml.. III.. 96).—Pulpit Com. Tho weighing Implied accurate accounting, Mi»• «••*> M<»**ik**r>*f My Ntu fut «h>«m in |4 xy Mir lint k ■* m**k N*f Ik* I w luwUHoi tUatki, Ik* irM««iu« Nutott **y«r ok In »«*»# im< tl will k*«* «*> k» |i - inUMi