6 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1902. The umaha Daily Ber 12. HOSHWATKH. EDITOR. vvmTmiiiij "k visit r morning. T13HM8 OF BUPSCIUPT10N. gaily Ucc (wlthout'Sunday), One Year..$S.tJ0 any bee una auifduy, Ono Year 8.00 illustrated Uvc, Uno Vcar.. Z.W Hundiiy lluv, Utiu Year.... tiatumuy Jicc, One Vear Lw Twentieth Century Farmer, Ono Year... LOO D12LIV1SKKD 11Y CAlUUElt. Bally Uco (without Sunday), per copy .... 2o Pally lleo twitliout Sunday), per week ....12a Dally Jieo (Including sunuayj, per wcck..l7o Hunuay Uce, per copy v,60 Evening Dee twithout Sunday), per week.iuo livening Uco (Including Sunday), per week ...........ISO Complaints of irregularities In delivery ehoulu bo uadressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaha The P,eo llulldlng. ... South Omaha-City Hall Uulldlne, Twen-iy-Ilftli and M Streets. Council Hlurfs 10 Pearl Street. ciiiciiHo-iow unity uulldlng. New lork Temple Court. Washington out Fourteenth Street. COP.UESPONDENCE. i CommunlcatlonH relating to nws a"rt ei1' torlal matter should ho addressed: Omaha Uee, Editorial Department. BUSINESS LETTERS. Business letters and remittances should ho addressed: Thu lleo Publishing Company, Omaha. REMITTANCES. Itemlt by draft, express or postal order, payable to The Uco Publishing Company. Oniy a-ccnt stamps accepted m payment or toiati accounts, l-ersonai checks, except on Omuha or eastern exchanges, not auceutca. TlUi BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Btate of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss.: Ooorgo B. Tzschuck, secretary of Ine Ilea JPublisnlng Company, being duly "worn. Bays that the actual number of full and complete copies of Tho Dally, Morning, Evening and Sunday Beo printed during the month of December, 1901, wob as fol lows: i ao.ioo 17 30,000 2 30,005 18 30,300 3 30,330 19 "0,880 4 30,310 20,. ...i 30,440 6 30.45O 21 30,700 6 30,310 -22:... w.30,010 7 30,ai)0 . 23 30,480 8 30,300 24 30,480 9 30.330 25 30,440 10 30,410 28. i 30.B00 U 30,180 27 30,070 12 30.500 2.:: 30,010 13 30,400 28 30,050 14 30,030 30 30,440 IS 30,300 81 .'; .30,450 18 30,400 - Total 043,235 Less unsold and returned copies.... 10.008 Net total sale 033,157 Not dally average 30,101 GEO. B. TZSCHUCIC. Subscribed In my prcsonco and sworn to boforo mo thla Slst day of December. A. D. MM. M. B. I1UNGATE. (Bcal.) Notary Public No public olllcpr ever pot lost while traveling the straight rond. j County Clerk Miller's blurt seems to have run tip npilnst the real thing. The Iccniun will bo estopped this year from charging up high prices to u short crop. A stock of llinburger cheese was re cently stolen In St. Joseph. Tho police believe they are on tho scent of the thieves. Cold has been discovered In Wiscon sin within the past week, but It Is principally within the vaults of the Wis consin banks. - Prince Henry is to bo banqueted whllo In New York. It is a safe guess that Captain Chapman aud his side whiskers .will not bo one of the attractions. Tho wireless telegraph Is being used with success 1U locating ships at sea. .Wonder If It could be used also to ascer tain where the redoubtable Tom Watson "Is at." The annual tax levy ordinance will bo duo from the council at lttf'llrnt meeting In February. The tax rate Is one Held In which the people prefer contraction rather than expanslou. It Is not safe to laugh at the weather man If his cold waves do not arrive Just to the minute predicted. Ho will likely have you shoveling coal before the smile has gone from your lips. In the eVont of Prluco Henry visiting Bt Louis, his entertainment will be ar ranged and paid for by the World's fair company. Tho managers of the 8t. Louts fair have money to bum. Wednesday is tho anniversary of the lato President McKlnley's birth. A email subscription to tho McKinley Me morial Moiuuncut fund offers an appro priate way to testify esteem for tho dead president's memory. , Tho cuttlellsh must be badly scared. Else why should tho. World.Herald llro off a double-shotted, double-leaded edi torial calling , upon County Attorney Shields to call for Stuefer? Why shed eo much dark lluld unless It Is to cover up tho retreat of Meserve? Tho authraclto minors have appealed to the recently formed industrial peace committee to settle the scale for tho coming, year, After tho committee per forms tills task It might persuade tho coal combination to accept a price sched ulo for the consumer ugreed on by nrbl tratlou. After Reading, the . testimony of the principal participants 'In tiro Northern 'aclllb stock squeeze last summer the public ,is Inclined to wonder what it was iill abbri(; aiiyw'njv Possibly neither party eared anything, about the owner Bhlp of the stock, but Just wanted to have a little fun with the lambs. Tho Iowa legislature Is being besieged to authorize the appointment of various commissions, to regulate all sorts of oc cupatlons and enterprises. Nebraska has suffered from an epidemic of the Hume disease aud has not entirely es wiped. If Iowa Is looking for some way of spending tho treasury surplus a lib oral number of commissions will solve tho problem. , , The reproduction 'of Speaker Sears' complaint hhont the Hurt county bond deal, which appeared In The Hoe weeks Ago, will not explain away the deal by which Mr. Mhor.vo. drew $150 a mouth from a South Omaha bank In -which he had deposited $(10,000 of the state school fund. It will not even explain away tho profound silence of the World-Hcr jdd about tho Uurtloy pitdon. AND STILL TUB 1IATTLE IIaOKS. An eminent lawyer-politician Inspired' with an insatiable appetite to keen his name prominently before the people; n sad, solemn, melancholy editor who achieved renown by breathing the breath of political life, into brilliant Billy Hryan; that soul-stirring theme of tho spread caglo orator proclaimed from Independence hall more than five gen erations ago to emphasize the disgust of American colonists with British stamp duties and tea taxes; these are tho three Ingredients of the bloodless battlo of, words that Is now raging In the columns of a local contemporary. The embattled duelists have sum moned to their aid tho "wisdom of sage commcntntors whose saws and counter- saws are ns monotonous as the Talmud. To this Is .added the sublime spectacle of a life and death encounter In words of lire that burn like u muutard plaster on n raw chest. "Theso truths are self-evident," ex claims the Jeffersoiilan editor, "and so uro the ten commandments," retorts the Websterlau gladiator, and thus with boisterous fury tho battlo la waged In terminably from day to day. St Augustino Is. reputed to have spent three years in deep meditation over tho question of "bow many angels can stand on tho point of a needle)" And it will doubtless tako thrco times thrco years to explore tho unthinkable, region of the j wherefore1 and whereas and reach a dcflnlto settlement of tho question as to whether or not tho immortal phrase "life, liberty, and tho pursuit of hap piness" was Intended to apply to tho man with tho almond cyo and to tho men with kinky hair, as well us to tho man who parts his hair In the middle. These things arc ulso self-evident, that when in tho course of human events It becomes necessary for the, fuslonlsts of Nebraska to dlsafolvo tho political bauds which have connected them with tho democrats and to assume among the powers of earth the separate and equal station to which tho laws of na ture and nature's God cntltlo them, a decent respect for tho opinions of mankind will require that they should declare tho causes which Impel them to a separation. That stage of tho heart-burning dis cussion has, however, not yet been reached. It will take several double- shotted and double-column editorials, several more essays before tho Nebraska Bar association, and several more kegs of printer's Ink to convey us beyond tho one great and all-absorbing issue whether theso truths aro self-evident that all men arc created equal' and that governments are Instituted among men deriving their Just powers from the con- scut of tho governed. The divergence of opinion upon this question hinges upon tho unknowable stuto of mind of John Hancock, Samuel Adams, Ben jamin Franklin, Rogers Sherman, Ed ward Itoutlodgc, and other revolutionary grandslrcs, public disturbers a"nd agita tors of tho vintage of .1775, at tho time they signed tho dell to George Third, which that redheaded revolutlonsts, Thomas Jefferson, is said to have pre pared .for them. , Whllo this furious vcrbnlVbattle1 Is raging tho peacefully. Inclined aud liberty-loving people ,of .tho Missouri valley are looking on with bated breath momentarily expecting the annihilation of each of the furious combatants. LEASING TUB OIlAZtNU LANDS. ' II. F. Mcintosh, editor of tho Nebraska Farmer, ban presented a strong plea in favor of tho proposed' leasing of the public domain In the semi-arid regions in the Interest of tho. cattle Indusfry. Whllo he docs not venture absolutely to endorse tho BowcrsOck bill, Mr. Mcin tosh attempts to brush asldo the objec-. tlops raised by asking "whether tho people, in view of existing conditions, shall consume tlmo quibbling over de tails of law before they decide ou the principle of administration of tho piiblic Jands." Inasmuch as the Bowersock bill providing for tho leasing of lands west of the hundredth meridian ut an annual rental of 2 cents .an "aero seeks to establish a new prlnciplo governing the administration of tho public domain, Is It not timely uud proper that the press should point out Its objectionable fea tures? " Conceding all that Mr. Mcintosh. Mays about the menace to tho cuttle iuutistry by reason of tho Irresistible invasion; of the sheep flocks, the vulnerable point in the Bowersock bill and the .vl)Ole leas lug sysfem Is uot so iuuehthe low rental as It is tho attempt to .Oracle local 'taxa tion. State Senator Currie, who is thoroughly familiar with the conditions uuder which cattle raising Is carried on west of tho hundredth meridian, is quoted as stiylng: The bill now pending in congress which provides for the leasing of government lands In western states- Is a step In the right direction. ' There-..Is ona feature la tho measure, however, that may meet with some, opposition. It Is the lack of provi bIou for 'taxation of land leased under tho act. In somo of the counties 90 per cent of the land belongs to tho government. This throws the burden of taxation on tho owners of the other- property; -which Is un fair. If. some way tfnn be provided by which the leases can bo taxed tho moasuro ought to meet with very general approval. This Is precisely the point raised by The Bee In Its discussion of the Bower sock bill. At -i cents an aero a section of laud would ut best yield but $12.t0 a year and a ten-year lease of a range comprising 12,400 acres, would yield only $2,500. Would It uot bo preferablo for tho government to make nu outright sale of tho grazing lands to present occu pants rather than retain Its ownership under tho provisions of tho Bowersock bill? Ownership of tho laud would" not only be an Incentive to Its permanent Improvement, bul It would also compel the owner to contribute hs share to ward the cost of inalntalnlng public roadways and bridges, public schools, tho locil courts and court otllcers, all of which is essential to" our system of self government. All that is said about tho encroach- ment of the sheep herder upon the cow boy and cattle ranchman may bo true, but it should be borne In mind that the marked growth of tho sheep Industry is not altogether an unmixed evil. The average Britisher has long ago ceased to bo ns much n beef-eater as a mutton eater, and the British farmer profits as much, If not more, from raining high bred sheep than lie does from raising high bred cnttle. Quite apart, however, from the irre pressible conflict between the bull whacker aud the sheep herder, tho pro posed new departure In the administra tion of the public domain involves an other serious question, and that Is the menace of land monopoly, against which every precaution should be taken in tho enactment of nuy bill that congress may formulate. , Millions of acres west of tho hun dredth meridian now used for grazing may eventually be converted Into fruit orchnrds or cultivated for agricultural purposes by means of Irrigation. For tho preservation of these lauds from permanent occupancy us cattle ranges some provision must bo made at the outset before the system of land tenure west of tho hundredth principal merid ian is revolutionized by act of congress. A11EG0AHS' mvsT. Indianapolis charity associations have discovered a regularly organized bog gars' trust, which, it is believed, has Its ramifications in tho various cities of' the country. The secretury of tho Indian apolis Associated Charities had his at tention called some time ago to the marked lucreiifio In the number of house- to-house uud street beggars and a little investigation convinced him that mend icants were being brought to tho city nud after working for a whllo were transferred to other 'cities and their pluces.lllled by new men and boys under a regular system. Police olllclals de tailed to investigate tho movements of the professional mendicants discovered in due time that the beggars had a per fect organization with central head quarters where every professional re ported and received instructions. A raid made upon the quarters of. tho mendi cant chief resulted In the capture of a carefully prepared list of residences of a large number of citizens, with maps exhibiting a division of the city Into sec tions which were regularly allotted to certain persons under specific Instruc tions. It also transpired that tho beg gars trust is organized on the commit-nity-of-interest plan with a view to the greatest economy lu leg and lung power and tho most perfect distribution of tho spoils collected among the members en titled to a share of the proceeds. In the matter of llxed charges, however, tho beggars' trust has gone oven beyond tho Ingenious over-capitalization system of the 'merger Hues; it has exacted from each Individual who Js allowed to par ticipate In tho, dividends au initiation fee uud periodic specific contributions to defray tho general expenses for main tenance and operation. Tho beggnrs' trust, like all other trusts, is very much distressed by the fear of publicity and governmental supervision. Its otllcers and members have an In stinctive dread of the searchlight which the press is able to turn upon their con fidential ope'ratlons. These discoveries only go to- show that tho day of the trust Is upon us and combination even ntnong the beggars affords the only sure path to 'success and wealth. Ex-Senator W. V. Allen makes n la bored plea In his newly Instituted news paper to place all tho responsibility for the Bartlcy pardon upon tho republican party rather than upon Governor Sav age, who Issued the pardon. "If the governor was wrong, and there can bo no question of it," exclaims the astute populist leader, "It wns tho fault of the republican party and ho was tho mere Instrument lu consummating the wrong and tho party should be held responsible and not tho governor." Ex-Senator Allen carefully ignores tho fact that Governor Savage, in liberating Ba,rtley, deliberately delled tho express declara tion of his party through Its regularly constituted stute convention and that tho .delegates representlug it in convention voice the policy of the party rather thun men holding ofllce. The urgumeut of ex-Senntor Allen as to responsibility for otllclal misconduct applies, however, with full force to the caso of Mr. Me serve, for whom tho populist party was not only sponsor, but whoso acts were specifically endorsed by the populist state convention wlIch nominated a can didate to succeed him. Now it Is announced that Mr. Car negie Is being urged by United States Consul General Philip 0. Hanna to con tribute R000.000 from his surplus wealth toward tho establishment of li braries lu Mexico. If Mr. Carnegie can bo induced to devote half of that umount to tho distribution of free soap and fro dwels ho will do a great deal more toward promoting tho cause of civilization In Moxlco than by all the libraries he could distribute amoug tho greasers. Cleaulluess Is next to godli ness, and n man who does not take a bath once In six month's cnunot learn much from books. Admiral Schley Is very sly. His tour of observation to Memphis by way of Chicago Is evidently only a feeler. Whllo ho positively declines to bo re garded as a candidate for tho presi dency, there is oue ofllce that an Amer lean citizen cannot afford to decline if It Is offered to him by a convention rep resenting u political party h'avlnc suill clent following to glvo Its caudldate a fair chanco In tho presidential race. When Charles M. Schwab visited Berlin he was met by scores of German Iron workers who wanted to secure from li 1 tn Information as to- how tho great consolidation lu this country was worked. The German Iron Industry Is at present lu a depressed condition nud the manufacturers seem to think some thing llko tho great steel corporation might help them out. ' Tho Germans need not bo long finding out tho pre scription for an American combination. It Is 40 per cent nctual capitalization and CO per cent watcrj make the 40 per cent preferred stock retained by tho pro moters and then uuload tho water on an unsuspecting public ut par or any price It will bring. Tho forced mid-winter vacation of U10 High school to prepare for occupancy of the new building with the opening of tho new term is said to be decidedly dis tasteful to tho High school teachers, In view of the fact that tho present inter mission Is to tako tho placo of the ustiul spring vacation. Tho school board really ought to place regard for the wishes of the teachers rather above con sideration for tho comfort nud progress of tho pupils. If worse comes to worst, the teachers should Insist upon the privi lege of fixing their own vacations, to make sure that their convenience Is con sulted. The outgoing pastor of 0110 of our churches has taken advnntago of tho moment which leaves him frco to ox press his real opinion of somo of his parishioners to read them a lecturo that doubtless touches tho vital part. It Is to bo regretted that our preachers for tho most part nre so dependent upon tho favor of individual members of their congregations tlittt they do not daro coino out with tho salutary advico that occasions frequently call for. Tho slavery of tho pulpit Is realized only by those who occupy It Cold Comfort All Around. Kansas City Journal. David U. Illll'a advice to democrats to skato slow should not bo taken literally. Thero Is no lco on Salt river. Straining the Teeth. Saturday Evcnlns Post. Tho Ilrltlsh War ofneo realizes that it must supply falHo teeth for tho soldiers in South Africa. This, In western parlance, Is a Btrlking admission that tho British army bas bit off moro than It can chew. Thrift, llnrndo, Thrift. Baltimore American. Nebraska pays a bounty on tho scalps of wolves and the gulleles3 farmers ratso the animals and collect tho bounty. Evidently tho standard of good citizenship Is not among tho crops raised on tho Nebraska farms. A Coincidence. Philadelphia Itccord. It was a moro colncldenco that on the day tho Steel trust announced its profits for nlno months as' $84,000,000 tho cen sus bureau announced tho population of the United States and their possessions as 84,000,000 souls. Tho, trust did not fix on a dollar a head as Its profits. The Homeiitend Idea. Minneapolis, Journal. Secretary Root's recommendation that a homestead law should bo enacted for the Philippines Is a good one. There aro great areas'bf public lanlln those Islands, but no arrangement wheroby cither a native or an American can get tltlo to any part of them. Tho homestead 'Idea Is an American idea that ought to work well, even In tho Orient. 1 A Cainineti'dalilp Act. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. It Is cause for .national prldo that our government bas returned to tho Chinese government tho sum of ,$370,000, which was fcolzcd In sliver bullion at tho sack of Tien Toln by American marines. Tho act is all tho moro praiseworthy becauso it Is a con fession that A'morlrnn marines Joined In tho looting of tho city. Tho humiliation, however. Is distinctly overbalanced by tho moral courago of tho act of restitution. The Home fiunrd Pull. Philadelphia Ledger. Pulls must be powerful in the War de partment, slnco Socrotary Root can And no way to resist thoso exerted on behalf of officers who wish soft places In tho "homo battalions" except by abolishing the battalions.- His frank acknowledgment of this fact, supported as it is by bis order to discontinue the system, moro than con Arms all. that has been said about the In fluence of politicians In the military branch of the government. TO DISCOURAGE POKER. One State College Frowns Upon the Feiitlve Game. Milwaukee Sentinel. The rumor that some of the students at the University of Wisconsin have sub stituted poker for foot ball will intersit parents who are worrying over the dan gers Incurred from too much brain work on tho part of ambitious sons. It Is eald that the athletes that bavo won tho ap- plauso of the flcklo publlo now find re laxation in (drawing to a royal flush or a full house. The Jackpot has lured youths from their books, If the testlnony of prying landladies is to be believed. The midnight gas Is being burned while small and select parties bet their quarterly al lowances on tho turn of a card. The faculty is preparing an edict, the gossips say, that will cause a premature discontinuation of the quiet llttlo games. It has been hinted in significant tones that poker bas no place on the athletic, scientific and classical courses of the fa mous seat of learning. It a young man must play poker tie must acqulro profi ciency In tho American game at some other Institution. -This Is as it should be. Collego students who intend to fit themselves for million aires or famous politicians can find oppor tunities to learn the difference between three of a kind and two pairs after they have taken their degrees. Tho real need of a knowledgo of poker will not be discovered In the beginning of the bright and promising careers that, all young men aro supposed to have before them when they leave college. It Is only when for tune has smiled on them that they need awaken to the necessity of learning how to play poker. It is admitted that no self- respecting millionaire can cross the ocean with any degree of eclat unless be Is ablo to take a hand in a big game, and what would a famous politician be If he could not employ his moments of relaxation in losing some of bis money upon a "short" hand? In view of the fact that In tht common order of things, few of the students will be millionaires or famous politicians, It Is manifestly wise that poker practice, which Is damaging to morals and to pocketbooks, should be stopped. Tho prying landladies obviously are acting for the ultimate good of the students. Thero may be some ethl cnl question concerning their methods, but results are what count. Tho results of poker aro bad; tho results of spying ro good. Therefore, It Is to be hoped that the landladies will keep their eyes to the key- Jjele until the Jaet Jackpot tiu vanished, nitlRF HITS OK STATU POLITICS. Kcarnoy Hub (rep.): Tho rumor that Frank Ransom ot Omaha will tako a turn for the luslon nomination for governor has not created any particular couslornatlon out this way, but In eastern Nebraska, where tho politicians reside, it is said to bo thu latest sensation. Hastings Trlbuno (rep.): There Is but one way to dlvldo Nebraska Into two Judi cial districts and that Is tho north and south division, using tho Platte, river for tho dividing lino. Hastings Is tho most centrally locnted nnd certainly Is entitled to bo mado ono of tho places for holding court. Alnsworth Star-Journal: Somo ot tho Savogo-Dartley admirers aro protending to predict the nomination of Savngo for gov ernor by tho republicans this fall. No, thank you, the republican party has n suf ficiency of that sort of fellows In high places and this fall all such will havo to go way back and sit down. Columbus Telegram (item.): That's tho verdict of Judgo Frost regarding cx-Sccro- tary Porter, who was charged with con verting $1,000 of stato money to his own use. Tho attorney general regards the de cision as farcical and will appeal to the supremo court. Pending tho appeal the Telegram begs Porter to quit acting llko a republican nnd put it back. Pawneo Chief (pop.): Horry Lindsay has a notion that ho would llko to bo governor. Harry, however, Is not tho only Pawneelto who would llko to warm tho big chair In tho governor's office Colonel J. K. Hcnln- gor, tho traveling man, Is letting it bo known that ho Is a warm member In tho race and whllo traveling over tbo state Is putting up tho sweetest talk over. North Platto Trlbuno (rep.): Tho list of candidates for tho republican nomination for congress in tho Sixth district next fall Is growing so rapidly that it is probable that when convention tlmo arrives each county in tho district will havo a candi date to present. And thero aro Just as many aspirants for tho honor in tbo fusion ranks. This Is evldcnco that many states men llvo in tho Sixth congressional district. Lincoln Post (pop.): Tho suggestion from tho Fifth district that Hon. R. V. Sutherland of Nelson will bo presented ns a candldato for governor is ono which will bo received with satisfaction over tho state. Mr. Sutherland served four years In con gress and then gave way to A. C. Shallen bargcr. Mr. Sutherland's record was that of a clean, ablo man In congress nnd If ho should happen to bo mado governor would provo an executive with a clean-cut busi ness policy and ability to carry It out. Edgar Post: Unless Governor Savage lists htmsolt among tho Infalllblcs he must commenco to havo a suspicion that ho mado a bad break In tho pardoning of Hartley that Is, It ho reads tho papers. Unless he figures that ho knows more' than tho rest of tho people of tho United States or at least 90 per cent of thoso who have heard about tho caso bo must be convinced that ho -mado a very serious mistake. Some call it by a harsher natno than ralstako, but In any event, whatever tho unknown history may bo, it was an egregious mistake. Thero Is very llttlo dissent from that opinion. Broken Bow Republican: Tho statement made a few days ago in tho Stato Journal that the Influenco of tho United States cn ators and Bnrtley'a friends would nominate tho noxt republican candldato for governor may accord with the past history of tho politics of the stato, but the Republican Is here to say that tho Influenco of tho United States senators combined with Douglas and Lancaster will not control the next repub lican convention. It thoy do they will not elect their nominees. Senators MHIard an. Dietrich may understand that whllo they control tho government appointments the party will not submit to their dictating ot state pontics. Mlnden Gazette (rep.): Hon. Peter Youngors, ho nurseryman of Fillmore county, whom nearly everybody In western Nebraska Is personally acquainted with, Is due of tho republican candidates for con gross In the Fourth district. Thero may bo other aspirants, but "Pete" Youngers 1 tho only real candidate, nnd tho Gazetto is only sorry that it Isn't in tho district to do what it could to help nomlnato and elect him. Ho is not only a loyal repub lican ana a good politician, but ho Is ca pable, "straight as a dlo" and one of (ho very host citizens in tho stato of Nebraska. Tho Fourth district doesn't need any out sldo holp, but they do need a good man in congress and this is their opportunity. Fremont Trlbuno: Persons interested In having a denial of cortaln Important facts concerning the efforts to havo Joe Bartlcy pardoned went to ex-Governor William A. Poynter a few days ago for tho purpose. It Is well understood that great pressure was brought to bear on Mr. Poynter to lnduco him to set Bartley freo. It was reported that he was offered $30,000 to wrlto a par don that would liberate Bartley from the state prison. It was considered desirable to get a donlal of this damaging runrer. When Mr. Poynter was approached for that purpose be did declare the- reports to bo untrue, but It was false, ho said, only tn the amount named. Ho was offored $35,000, ho declared. Thla statement from Mr. Poynter may not furnish any clue to tho reason moving Governor Savago In the matter, but It does throw suspicion on one or two other forces nt work. It indicates either that Bartley sill has a goodly portion of his embezzled funds or that, thoso who wero partlceps crlmmlnls with him are now ready to supply funds on condition that he. do not expose them, Orantlng that no money has been used to porsuade Governor Savago to pardon Bartley there must bo a good-sized fund avallablo somewhere to ap ply on nis shortage. What tins become of tho $35,000 offered to Governor Poynter? Why can't It bo used to help pay up fhe deficit or to lndomnlfy McNIsh, Paxton and others who signod Hartley's bond? YOUTIIPUI, SPIIIIT J1KI,I,()WS A fill. Vcnr Do Not Count If the Feeling of Youth Itemnlim. February Success. Pcoplo grow ,old by thinking themselves old. When thoy reach the age, of 40, CO or GO, thoy Imagine that thoy look llko others of the somo age, and that they soon will be usolcss, unfit for work and unable to per form tholr wonted duties. As surely as thoy Iblnk this It will come true, for thought is creative. How many of us can say with Job, "The thing which I greatly feared is come upon mo." The tlmo will come when children will not bo nllnwod to celebrate their birthdays; when they will know that, by thinking thomsolves young, they will remain young, and that they will cease'to grow old when thcy.coasp to bellove In old ago. The body is built up of beliefs, and our convictions are stamped upon every fiber of our belngi. What wo believe, what wo think, that wo aro; bo pcoplo who remain young in spirit never crow old. Not ono of 11 hundred students, of whom tho writer wan one, under Oliver Wendell Holmes, at Harvard, ever thought of him as on old man, although ho had then passeJ his eightieth birthday. His spirit was so young and ho was so buoyant, so fresh and full of life, that we always thought of hlro as one of ourselves. His vivacity and Joy ousness were contagious. You could not be In his presence five minutes without feeling brighter and better for It. The genial doc tor never practiced medicine, yet ho did more to relievo human suffering than many practicing physicians. His presence was a tonic; it ws a perpetual delight to bo hear pltsu- j JIM llll.I.'S TALK. Chicago Record-Herald: "Jim" Hill candidly admits that tho great northwest wouldn't amount to shucks wero ho not pushing It along. Minneapolis Journal: Mr. Hill's Inter view with the Intcratato Commerce com mission suggests tho Idea that It the su premo court decides to tako Jurisdiction In tho Northern Securities caso and appoints a commissioner to tako testimony, n skillful attorney ought to bo nblo to dovolop some very Interesting facts In oxamlnlng tho president of the Northern Securities com pany. Cincinnati Enquirer: The remark of James J. Hill that competition docs not tend to lower railroad rates Is not accom panied by tho diagram which tho averago citizen will rcqulro to comprehend tho force of tho observation, and though Mr. Hill Is probably a very nlco man It Is doubtful If thero Is enough confidence In him to prompt tho public to tako the statement In faith. Thero havo been plenty of men who could flguro victory out of defeat at nn election, but that is a matter ot arithmetic and not of railroads and prices, Detroit Free Press: Tho truth Is that President Hill has been Identified with some of thoso railroad ventures of tho west that anticipated futuro development. They al most Justified tho exaggeration of Proctor Knott when ho said that thoy wero built whoro tho cyo of God never saw and tho foot of mon never trod. Two or moro lines operated In a torrltory where either of them could have met the demands for trans portation. Thoy aimed to pay dividends, meet tho interest on tholr securities nnd lay by a surplus for redemption purposes. This was mado Impossible by genuine com petition In a restricted field. Combination was tho most dcslrablo alternative', and It Is nn easy matter for mon of sophistry to raako tho worse seem tho bettor cause, but no ono knows bettor than Mr. Hill that his contention Is buncombo In nn economic sense. PERSONAL NOTES. President. Schwab wns willing to chat with Francis Joseph of Austria, becauso he felt su'ro tho emperor would not pester him for r. Job. Slnco Mrs. Carrie Nation's husband se cured his freedom ho seems to bo sowing bis wild oats, but they aro likely to get frostbitten nt his season of life. Henry Watterson is a fairly good musi cian, and it was at ono tlmo a serious ques tion with him ns to whether ho should toko up muslo or Journalism as a profession. "Dan" Emmett, who wroto tho popular negro melody, "Dixie," which served fre quently as a rollylng song In the civil war, Is living, nt tho ago of 87, In a llttlo cottago near Mansfield, O. A movement has been started In Toledo, O., to erect a monument to tho lato Chief Justlco Morrison R. Wnlte. It Is proposed to erect tho monument on tho battlefield ot Fort Meigs, near Toledo. Dr. R. 'il. Hoyt, former membor ot tho Detroit Board of Education, says that nt tho present rato of Incrcaso of Insanity in this country tho entlro population will bo crazy tn less than 300. years, Tho Ocrraan emperor has consented to tho croctlon of a statue in front ot the Berlin university by tho late Professor von Trlet schko, tho historian, who by his Indiscrim inate admlrors has been called tbo "Ma caulay of' Germany." Herbert L. Cromwell of Bath, Me., has Invented a telegraphic typewriter which, tt is claimed, will revolutionize tho whole telegraphic Idea. It is to send messages upon a typowrltor-liko machine which will bo recorded in a printed form on a similar machine at , tho receiving office. SIGNS OF CONFIDENCE. "No Kenson to Donbt the Continuance of Prosperity. Philadelphia North American. Men who own nnd control ratlror-.ds, as we'll as thoso who draw from tho public and furnish to tho corporations the vast sums of money necessary for construction nnd maintenance, tako measures to keep thomsolves well informed as to tbo outlook for business. If there aro well defined indications of continuing prosperity and in creasing traffic thoy are ready to engago In extensions of their lines and In furnishing Increased facilities. If, on tho contrary, they sco signs of financial stress ahead, bottermonts aro postponed nnd expenses cut down wherever possible. Their channels of Information ho ramify overy section of tho country and nil classes of trade that they seldom mlsjudgo tho signs. Evidently these men, whose fingers aro constantly feeling tho financial pulso of tho world, see no reason to doubt tho continu ing prosperity ot this country. Contracts already let and bids asked for by tho rail roads show- that there' will be something like $200,000,000 expended by tho corpora tions during the coming year and that at least thrco-fourths of that sum Is for new track and additional equipment. With nearly every rolling mill In the country running full time nnd tho railroads preparing to surpass all previous records In preparing for heavier traffic; the people of tho United States would seem to have reason to look forward to a continuance of the prosperous conditions of the past two or threo years. Other indications are found In the com paratively steady, though slow, advance In wages in various lines of Industry. It Is gratifying to see that in many instances tho concession Is n voluntary' one oa the part ot tho employer, and even whero It Is given only in responso to a demand on the part of tho workers the change Is made with but llttlo apparent friction. Don't, frt JouWill 1; If you don't want to lose your Hair, you will have to do something, that's certain. What shall it be P Use Ayer's Hair Vigor. It gives nourishment and strength to the weakened hair-bulbs, and the hair remains tightly in place. It does other good things, too. It restores color to gray hair, keeps the scalp clean and healthy, and makes the hair grow heavy and long. "My hair' was falling out very tut and rapidly taming gray, but Ayer's .Hair Vigor stopped the falling, of the hair and rejtored lt lo It, natural coin' Mat. . Z. Dsxe&UB, Cohow, N, Y. fl.M. AUDnokU- PLIGHT OF SUItSIDY GRAnilERS. Mont Untimely Combine of Ocean StrAtiifthlp Linen, Philadelphia North American. It makes no essential difference what name is ofllxcd to tho alliance ot the At lantic steamship lines, whether it be desig nated a "merger," or- a "trust," or a "con solidation," or a "pool," or a "community of Interest arrangomcnt," Its purpose is to put an end to open competition In tho ocean carrying trade. Whether tho parties to tho agreement contlnuo as separate concerns, each taking all tho business it can secure, nnd make a pro rata settlement nt tho end of tho year, or whether they plnco them selves under a central management and operato as branchos of ono company, Is chiefly a mattor of form. A compact cither as to freight rates or division of oarnlngu is calculated to have tho somo genoral effect. It will do away with competition as It now exists nnd render futuro competition by outsiders unprofitable, It not Impracticable. Viewed from any standpoint, this Inter national steamship altlanco defeats tho al leged purpose ot tho Bhlp subsidy promoters In tho United Stntes, They .can no longer maintain even tho nppcaranco ot honesty when thoy beg congress for bounties to aid them, ns they havo said, In building up a merchaut marlno with which to drive other nations out of our foreign trade. By, their own nets they havo refuted tholr own arguments. Instead of promoting compe tition on tho ocean by Americans, as has been tholr professed ambition, thoy provo by their present policy that thoy no longer think It doslrablo or necessary. It tho ship subsidy nehemo survives the blow It has received at tho bands of Its old friends its defenders will havo to readjust their arguments. Hoiict'torth thoy must discard high-sounding appeals to patriot Ism, pleas of poverty and promises of great flcots to bo built and candidly admit that they aro "after tho monny" and that they proposo to get It If thoy can Hue up con gress. TAUT TIIIFLKS. Chicago Tribune: "Anyhow," chuckled the somewhat fastidious horsethlef, as tho regulators adjusted tho nooso about his neck, "It Isn't a rcadyinmlo tlo." Yonkors Statesman: Patience .Really, hulf tho tlmo ho doesn't know which end ho's htnndlng on, Patrice Oh, uotiKciiHe! Ills feet certainly can't scctn ns light tin his head I Boston Transcript: Qrlmes Funny about soma women I You rumcmbor Mrs. Man ning married her husband to reform him? Youks Yes, I think X heard somothlng of that sort, Grimes Well, now sho complains that' ho Isn't a bit llko tho man sho murrlod. Cleveland Plnln Dealer: 'The German emperor wants his new yacht named Meteor." "Then why not call It 'Tho 'Wiener wurst?' " "Eh! Why Hhould ho call It that?" "Why? Becauso It's meatlor, Isn't It?" Pittsburg Chronicle: "A man In Chicago cnllliiR himself tho Count do Neufchatol snys that ho has killed nine men In duels ,' said Squlldlg. ...VN.0.uf9l!ul,-'IJ" repeated McShllllgcn; "that's tho cheese," .Tllflfrn. 'tUrt mo. h.mhh ( 1 a . young doctor, "but I don't exactly llko tho tone of his letter." "What's tho mntter?" Inquired tho old practitioner. .i."1.0.1.?5,' xh.?. undcrtnkcr, writes and says that If I wilt send my patients to him ho will guarantee them satisfaction." Washington Star: 'I don't believe- you will bo nblo to deliver nil tho speeches you havo prepared." "Oh, yes, I will." answered tho congTcsn mnn. "I may not be nblo to deliver them to my colleagues, on tho floor, but I'll de poHtofflce"'' mi' ns,lluen,a through tho A YAWP FOR "US." " Oh, say, Ve nre the pcoplol Wo aro they The constitution wns meant To represent. "' Wo stand As tho bone and sinew of ' the lnnd; Tho great Moral onglno of tho stato; And our word Is law. ' Hurrah For the American Eagle. ' . Tho Fourth of July . .. And thu Star Spangled Banner ' That touches tho sky! From lake to gulf, From sea to sen. Wo stand together Ah tho Freo. The mountains bow their heads to us. Tho valloys crouch 'down low, ' Tho rlverK bear our load for us' As on their eourso they go. - . Tho mills grind out their wnrcs, Tho fields produce their stuff ExcltiHlvely In order that The Peoplo havo enough. ' -.' The roses blossom fair, Tho breezes gently blow, ' The sensons come, because r , The Peoplo wnnt them so. , , Tho sun nnd moon nnd stnrs v Are ours by right of birth -' - As free born sovereigns, nnd. Ave likewise own tho earth. Wo also own nnd control The Palladium of the Natlon's-Llbertles, The Constitution and By-Luws., Tho Fourth of July, George Wnshlngton, The American Eagle. Tho Declaration of Independence,. Tho Stars and Stripes. - - And all adjacent territory. ';.7.,, We .- '.V Are the, Pcoplo becnuso. we havo torbe; And when wo got tho drop ' On a snnp, do wo stop ' ' VJ To consider whnt ?,SL Tho. Peoplo are or arq not? 'J?, Not If we enn bo IT. 1 IT'S the thing That painters paint, That poets sing. . '- iuosi men lose; t 11 Tho ono thing no man - ft . ...... .... ....... .....,u .u., - .. , Becauso that's what we're here for. We, The People In hoc 'slgno, K plurlbus Unutn. B'gosh, Hoorayfor US. J. C. AYERCO.) IwweN, MM. 1