I TITE OMAITA PAITA TnUKSDAT, BEPTEMT1E11 25. 1002. 'Fire omaiia Daily Bee. E. BOSEWATER. EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVEKT MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, pally Bee (without BunJay), one X ear. .$4.00 Jjaliy Hee aim ouixiay, uiie lent Illustrated liee. one tear ctunuay wee, one iear .w feaiuruay one Hear ! Iwenucih Century farmer. One Year...l-W UELIVEKKD BY CAKKlfcK. pally Bee (without Sunday), per copy.... ic paliy ilea (witnuut tiundayj, per .:.. .Uc ijuliy ee (inciuuing bunuayj, per wee..l(c feiunuay iee, per co4jy ec Evening bf twlthout hunouy), per wee oc fcvenlng Bee (Including (Sunday), Pr week ..........10c Complaint of Irregularities In delivery houid be addressed to City Circulation Ue iiartinent. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. fcouth Omatia CUy Hall Building, Twen-ty-ntth and M Streets. Council Blurts 10 Pearl 8treeL Chicago Imu Unity Building. New Vork 23z Park Row riulldlng. Washington inl Puurteentn Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial matter snouid be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. BUSINESS LETTERS. Business letters and remittances should 'be addressed: Xhe Bee Publlsnlng Com pany, Omaha. REMITTANCES. ayabtt il Tto'WiUmnSmJ: inly 2-cent elampa accepts in payment ui mall accounta. personal cnecks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, THE BEE PUBLISHING not accepted. COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Jltat f Nohraaka- Douslaa County, aa: Oeorse B. Tsschuck. secretary of f ha Baa Publishing Company, being duly aworn, ays that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally, Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during tea mouth of August. 1902, was aa follows: 1 2H.7U0 t S8.T70 I SsMKJS 4 2s,10 t ...SW,ttuO 2S.7UO t 88, TOO 1 28,700 . 28,0410 JO 28,760 U 28,700 12 28,730 12 28,820 14 28,020 It 28,70 16 28.MO0 17 28,820 U 29,880 lit 29,770 20 80,380 21 80.120 22 29,900 23 ao.oio 14.'.' 28,785 26 80,330 2S 29,800 27 29.930 28 29.000 29 80,070 20 80,110 21 29,120 Total 000,440 Less unsold and returned copies.... 0,877 Net total sates. I,';..;..... '..'........890,668 Kst daily average 28,921 GEO. B. TZSCHUCK. Subscribed tn my presence and sworn to before me thla 1st day of September, A. D., 1802. it. B. H UNGATE. (Seal.) Notary Public Presidents may come and presidents may go, but Ak-Sar-Ben goes on Just the lame, It Is not knockers who hurt a city, but rather those who never boost except itvltb hot air. Homeseekers' excursions are now on. The homeseeker who locates in Ne braska will have no after occasion to regret It Board of trade speculators may send prices up or down, but they will all have to settle with the farmers before they deliver the goods. Indications seem to point that the democrats are not able to convince them selves tbat.lt Is safe to hoist the tariff s the paramount Issue. . Colonel Bryan will be at large In Ne braska during the entire month of Oc tober, and no other state shows any disposition to come to Nebraska's res cue. The latest Is that there will be no meat packers' combine, but merely "an understanding" between the meat pack ers. The understanding, however, is ex pected to do the work Just as welL When there is' news that is news The Bee is first In giving It to the public. That Is why a Bee extra is convincing where those of other local papers are Questioned unless the Information Is verified by The Bee. The democratic candidate for gov ernor of Michigan has been compelled to withdraw on account of the condi tion of bis health. The republicans evi dently are not to have a monopoly of the withdrawals this season. The best balm for disappointment over the president's failure to visit Nebraska Is to be had by taking In the Ak-Sar-Ben festivities, which will surely repay a trip to Omaha even without the presi dent as the chief guest of honor. Roumanla does not take kindly to Secretary Hay's note of protest against the persecution of the Roumanian Jews. Roumanla may yet have to go through a; little of the experience from which Turkey and China have recently gradu- ated. Democratic papers that were criticis ing the president for touring the coun try will now begin to criticise him for not carrying out his touring program. It Is a cold day when the democratic ra pen cannot find something In the president's actions to find fault with. When the walls of the court rooms In Omaha's new federal building are em bellished with their $8,000 tints and fres coes. It Is to be presumed that the fed eral Judges presiding In them will be able to issue far more artistic writs of Injunction and mandamus than at pres ent , When discussing trust problems, re member that when the democrats were In control of the national government they never did anything to repress trade combinations, but, on the contrary, con tented themselves with the republican Sherman anti-trust law as the best leg islative restrictions to be devised to meet conditions then existing. President Roosevelt , insists that we must treat the tariff as a business prop osition rather than from the standpoint of the temporary needs of any political party. The trouble Is that each politi cal party professes to be the only one that treats the tariff as a business prop osition, ' but taking the barometer Of business prosperity as the gauge, the republican tariff pulley has alone proved Itself successful from the business AMERICA STANDARD OF LIVIXO. In no othpr country I" th verngp standard of living of th working classf" so high an In thp United States. The (Trent majority of American working men and their families are better fed. better clothed and have more of the comforts of life than the wage workers of any other land. A prominent Eng lishman who visited this country a few years agi spoke of It as "the paradise of the worklngman." A similar remark has been made by later visitors from abroad who came here to Investigate Industrial and labor conditions. The policies that have produced this must not be abaudoned. In his speech at Logansport President Roosevelt urged the Imperative need of preserving the American standard of living for the American worklngman. What he said In regard to this is so pointed and per tinent that we reproduce it In order to more strongly press It upon popular at tention. "The tariff rate," said Mr. Roosevelt "must never fall below that which will protect the. American work- lnrmnn fi llnn-ln or rYr tho 1 1 ffprence I between the general labor cost here and abroad, so as to at least equalize the conditions arising from the difference In . the standards of labor here and abroad, a difference which it should be our aim to foster insofar aa It repre sents the needs of "better educated, bet ter paid, better fed and better clothed worklngmen of a higher class than any to be found in a foreign country. At all hazards and no matter what else Is sought for by changes of the tariff, the American workman must be pro tected in his standard of wages that is, In his standard of living and he must be secured the fullest opportunity of employment" Certainly all Intelligent worklngmen will approve this, which states a guid ing republican principle through all the years of our Industrial development. For more than forty years the repub lican party has made the protection of American labor a cardinal feature of Its policy. Its greatest leaders have con tended for this and the results have splerfdldly vindicated their wisdom. The United States has been made the paradise of the worklngman, labor has been elevated and today the wage earn ers of this country are envied, by those of other lands. The republican party stands now where It has always stood In this respect It proclaims through its distinguished leader continued devo tion to the interests and the welfare of the working classes and points to what It has accomplished In their be half as giving It a Just claim to the continued confidence and support of labor. There must be no lowering of the standard of living for the American worklngman, says President Roosevelt Moreover, he must be secured the full est opportunity of employment Every body should concur in this, yet the democratic proposition - to overthrow protection would take employment from labor and necessarily lower the stand ard of living. Worklngmen at least should give thoughtful consideration to the words of President Roosevelt HEW YORK ItEPVBLlCABB. The harmony of the New . Tork re publican convention was somewhat dis turbed by the contest of candidates for lieutenant governor, but this was set tled In a way that Is probably satis factory to all concerned and the party will enter upon the campaign united and In condition to make an, aggressive fight There was no opposition to the renominatlon of Governor Odell, who has given the state an excellent admin istration and whose re-election can be confidently predicted. The platform 1b explicit and unam blguous in Its treatment of public ques tions. It heartily approves the national administration and pledges the earnest efforts of the party In the state for the election of President Roosevelt In 1004 Reciprocity with Cuba is favored and the legislation for the Philippines 1b commended. It Is declared that "the greatest national issue Is the mainte nance of prosperity," and that "the In tegrlty of the protective tariff must be preserved," aa being required "to main tain the highest scale of American wages and the supremacy of the Amer ican workshop." There la condemnation of combinations and monoplles having for their purpose the destruction of competition, the limitation of produc tion, or the Increase of cost to the con sumer of the necessaries of life, and the party is pledged to the support of such legislation aa win suppress and pre vent the organization of . such illegal combinations. The republican administration, having been highly creditable and the demo cratic party in New York being disor ganized, there appears no reason to doubt that the ticket placed In nomina tion yesterday at Saratoga will be elected by a decided majority. THE BOER APPEAL. The appeal of the Boer generals to the civilized world, for contributions to allay distress and enable their people to re store their homes should receive a gen erous response. The provision for this purpose , made by the British govern ment being wholly Inadequate and the effort to have it Increased having failed. the Boer generals call Upon all people who sympathize with the overwhelming misfortune of their countrymen to come to their assistance and avert the further suffering that threatens. There Is no doubt that in their mani festo they state conditions precisely as they are. The progress of the British army was one of devastation. As the generals say, thousands of homes were destroyed and the country laid waste. There hsve been few more desolating wars, for the time it lasted, In history than was the South African conflict Many thousands of helpless widows and children are now to be cared for and the appeal of these for help should not fall upon heedless ear a If all whose sym pathy wss with the Boers during their struggle with their powerful foe were to respond to the manifesto of the Boer generals all the relief needed would speedily be supplied, but while this can not be expected there is reason to be lieve that the response will le generous and Hint the American people will be among the most liberal. EXrtrTt.lt TO ZQVARE THEMSELVES. An overwhelming majority of the citi zens of Omaha, Irrespective of party, are In favor of home rule in the govern ment of the police and flre departments. They have been taught by experience that police boards uppolnted by state officers, whether by governors, land corn- ralsaloners or attorney generals, simply become political agents of their makers, and have always used their power to ac complish political ends In violation of the solemn oaths of office, which obligate them to disregard politics and creed in the appointment, discipline and govern ment of the police and lire departments. The most objectionable feature In gov ernor-appointed police boards Is that they are not responsible to the cominu- nit V fl nd CRtlllOt he held tO HCCOUIlt Of im- peached by anybody except the man who appoints them. It is a matter of no toriety, moreover, that nearly all the governor-appointed police commissions which have dominated Omaha police and fire departments within the past eight years have been appointed at the Instance of railroad magnates for the purpose of subjugating the people with police clubs. That was the object aimed at In the appointment of the Russell-Churchill po lice board, whose appointments were dic tated by General Manager Iloldrege of the Burlington. That Is the character of the present commission, whose ap pointment was dictated by mutual agree ment of all the railroad managers, not only for the purpose of forcing the nomi nation and election of David II. Mercer against the will of the rank and file of the party, but also for the purpose of controlling primaries and elections In this city and county by coercion and In timidation. Under existing conditions It was not to be expected that a county convention, dominated by corporate mercenaries, would declare In favor of home rule or In favor of equitable taxation of rail roads, telegraph and telephone and ex press companies. The failure of the con vention to pledge the candidates to tax reform and home rule does not however, obliterate those Issues from the local campaign. On the contrary, it will force the candidates on the county ticket to square themselves with the people and especially with the friends of home rule and equitable railroad taxation, In other words, the candidates on the republican county ticket are expected to declare themselves on those issues or take the consequences. With one or two exceptions they are reported to be against home rule. Some of them have been outspoken in favor of the continu ance of the Mercer-Baldwin commission in control of the police and fire depart ments and against any change that would allow the people to elect'the mem bers of the board as they do all other city officers who are entrusted with tho disbursement of public funds. We have yet to learn that any of them have raised their voice against the iniquitous system of railroad taxation by which the Union Pacific bridge, which earns $1,000 a day, contributes $40.98 a year in taxes toward the expenses of government of the city of Omaha, which run up to $1,000,000 a year. This 1b a sensitive subject with a great body of Omaha taxpayers, espe cially with the owners of small homes, who are compelled to bear an undue pro portion of the burdens of municipal gov ernment The taxpayers of Omaha will want to know positively where each Individual candidate for the legislature stands They will want some assurance that the men who are to represent them in the coming legislature will stand up for them rather than for ' the tax-shirking railroad corporations. They will want positive assurance that their representa tlves will help to erase from the statute books that part of the charter that de prtves the citizens of Omaha of the right to govern themselves and subjects them constantly to personal caprice, political Intrigue and corporate conspiracy Nothing Illustrates so well the public- spirited character of our citizenship as the heroic good grace with which west ern cities that had prepared to enter tain the president are swallowing the disappointment caused by the abandon nient of his trip. While the two are not to be compared, we can yet hear the ugly mutterings that were raised by the people of London when the attack of sickness compelled King Edward to postpone his coronation ceremonies. Notwithstanding their disappointment the western cities that had expected to be honored by a presidential guest are taking the untoward turn of events with an optimistic air on the theory that all is for the best They yet hope to en tertain the president at some near fu ture time and make up with Increased cordiality for the delay In the recep tion. Yellow journalism in Omaha has been subdued but not suppressed by a long ways. Our hyphenated yellow tries to attract attention to itself by glaring headlines In studhorse type which must have not only startled but shocked its I subscribers. The abandonment of the western tour by President Roosevelt and the comparatively trivial operation which he has undergone are announced In these words: "President passes under surgeon's kulfe." People who had not heard of the change of program In the president's tour naturally would be frightened out of their wits and would Imagine that the president was the vic tim of another attempted assassination. According to the reports of the police court hearing of the men charged with participation In the unfortunate fray that resulted in the killing of one of the Union Pacific strike breakers, the county I attorney was assisted in the prosecution I by W. Ft Curler. Why should the county attorney need outside assistance n a case like this? Who does Hurley represent? Is lie retained by the Union riiclflc to represent their Interests? Or is this simply one way the railroad has of paying Hurley for the olltlcal work he has been doing' for the Baldwin-Mercer alliance? rrobably the only sigh of relief that the president will not coine west will be raised by the police officers upon whom would devolve the duty of safeguarding the president and handling the crowds anxious to see him. The magnitude and exacting character of the extra work Imposed on the police by special events of this character are scarcely realized by the public. Many words of approval have been re ceived by The Bee on Its protest against confetti-throwing ruffianism In connec tion with the Ak-Sar-Ben street fair. The confetti nuisance is without reason or excuse. It should be abolished once and for all. It Is not too late to Issue the order of suppression. Apprehension Is felt because a few public school buildings In this city have not yet been supplied with coal and may be caught unprepared for a sudden cold snap. Several private dwellings In the city are also without a coal supply and will have to take the risk of premature visits from Jack Frost President Roosevelt Is said to have received a large number of messages of condolence. These messages must have been misdirected. The messages of condolence should have been sent to the various communities that had to suffer cancellation of their engagements with the president Wise fMf n Versus Foola. Indianapolis News. E. Benjamin Andrews says that as trusts increase general conditions improve. Mr Andrews was once a supporter of the free sliver ticket, which suggests that every body changes bis mind except Mr. Bryan, and he would rather be wrong than be presi dent. A Vavln Search. Indianapolis Journal. General Grosvenor is looking for the man who can sell a steak for the same price when .cattle are 18 per hundred that was demanded when they were $3.60, but his search will be as fruitless aa would be that to find a farmer who Is anxious to go back to $2.60 per hundred tor cattle. Where the Oldest Inhabitant Shlaea. New Tork Tribune. The prevalent opinion in New York has been that the summer of 1802 was pretty nearly the coldest on record, and the stock holders tn the Ice trust have suffered an al most continuous chill. But the oldest In habitant, always-a killjoy, rises to remark that In 1816 there was frost In every month from January to December Inclusive. And what are we going to do about It? A Pair of Ticklers. New Tork Mail and Express. Having been tickled by Bryan, Tom Johnson returns the tickling by saying: "I have never been a free silver man, but I have always been a Bryan man." Tbeae Alphonse and Gaston proceedings are pleas ing features of the-circus performance, but the real "after you" business will not begin until the chase of 1904 delegations Is due. What Extinction Wonld Mean. Brooklyn Eagle. Combination has become the breath of the business life of the country. The greater the tree, the deeper Its roots. Imagine a power great enough to destroy at a single blow the steel trust, so-called. Imagine the consequence of Its exercise for pur poses of destruction. Thousands of fires would bo banked immediately. It Va the age of steel. The demand outstrips the supply. With the extinction of the trust would come paralysis such as would beg gar all power of description. This Is the sort of thing that the demagogue says ha would Invite and It Is against thai sort of thing, against anything likely to even remotely resemble It, that the president set his face at Cincinnati. Tricks of the Plro Cnderwrlters. Philadelphia Ledger. Tho recent test of the new flre main service demonstrated that the system will be exceedingly effective In extinguishing fires in the congested business districts of the city. The test was so far convincing as to Induce the exeoutive committee of the board of firs underwriters to make a re duction of 16 cents In the "pink slip" rate of 25 cents, but the residue of the onerous pink slip" charge will not be removed until the completion of the pumping station, No immediate relief from the "blue slip" charge of 25 and 60 cents for the conflagra tion district Is promised, notwithstanding the success of the flre main testa It la urged by the flre underwriters that no movement has been made to comply with the conditions for the reduction or removal of these charges. President's Safety First Consideration Indianapolis Journal. The New York Times doubtless expresses the feeling of the thinking people through out the country when It says that the death of President McKlnley and the narrow es cape of President Roosevelt "have gives rise to a certain nervousness, which is en tirely natural and springs from the beet motives," and that "the risks Incurred In travel and in the crowds to which the presi dent is exposed have been considered with due care by him and by his advisers, but multitudes will breathe easier when they shall have been safely passed." No doubt all the possibilities of accident are fully realized by those who are charged with the oversight of his movements, and the direc tions which have been given from Wash ington for the reception and escort of the president have unquestionably been inspired by public solicitude for his safety. Competition-Stirling- Contracts. Philadelphia Record. A contract not to go Into business again for a specified period of ttme may be en forced by a trust aa against persons bought out In order to acquire a monopoly, ac cording to the dictum of the supreme court of Maine in an application for an injunc tion to restrain certain individuals from re entering the sardine packing business. The court held, briefly, that a contract to stay out of business la reasonable, valid and legal, and the fact that such an agreement would tend to regulate or limit competition could not vitiate Its binding force. As to the effect of s combination upon the public, it was affirmed that no Injury need be ap prehended, for, said. Chief Justice Wlswell, "the moment the price of the product should b Increased beyond a sum that would afford a reasonable profit, new capital would rush tn and new competition would prevent the accomplishment of the purpose of such a combination." This potent con sideration is undoubtedly a great safe guard to the people against Industrial mo t Bopolies. STORIES OP STRATTON. Persons who are fond of discovering the dramatic element In things have often pointed at W. 8. Stratton. the Cripple Creek millionaire, as the most remarkable example of luck In the latter part of the nineteenth century. It tins been thplr way to say that he rode out of Colorado Springs almost penniless one summer morning and came back so rich he himself couldn't tell how much he owned. Superficially, there seems to be some truth In this picture of Stratton's sudden change of fortune. Actually, however, it is most misleading. The fact Is that no man ever worked harder, thought .more earnestly or overcame more difficulties to attain wealth than did Stratton. The great merchants who have built up vast businesses from small begin nings have had plain sailing compared with the long and stormy voyage that finally brought the Croesus of Cripple Creek safe Into port. There Is a tradition that ss s young man tn Jrffersonvllle, Ind., Stratton was wild snd unamlable, and that when he went west in 1872 he left a bad name among the Hooslers. Be that as it may, he had learned to be s good carpenter and when he struck Colorado Springs he found plenty of work at his trade, which lasted as long and came as often ss he rsred to have it during the next nineteen years. It wasn't many weeks after Stratton struck the Springs before tho gold fever marked him for Its own. It's a lingering disease at the best or worst, according to the way you look at It but there are many who catch It suffer aoutely for a while snd then recover. Not so with Stratton. The longer he had It the more malignant it became, until along In the 80s folks got to calling him "Crazy" Stratton. That was because his faith In what other men regarded and aban doned as worked-out pockets snd barren claims persisted and led him on through multiplied failures and disappointments. The first Investment In mining property which has been laid to Stratton was the $3,000 that he planted In the Yretaba mine at Cunningham Gulch. It Isn't likely that he had $3,000 to drop there all at once, but whatever he bad he began to put Into the Yretaba In 1873, less than a year after his arrival In Colorado. He got a lot of good schooling In that venture, but nothing more. For ten years he spent a large part of every summer working the claim for the gold that never came, and in the winters he plied the ham mer and the saw to earn money with which to feed himself and lay In material for the next warm-weather campaign In the gulch. When the Yretaba scheme had petered out Stratton made up his mind that he ought to have more scientific knowledge, so he took a course In metallurgy at Colorado college, and thereafter he carried a blow pipe tn his wanderings among the bleak hills that were to yield up their treasures to him. When ho wished to test a specimen of ore he had both the Implements and the knowledge with which to do It. Years afterward when his ship had come In he gave Colorado college $50,000 as a mark of his appreciation of what It had done for him. This college training Is a point that the exponents of the luck theory ought not to overlook. Certainly a man who will pursue a forlorn hope for ten years and then go In for a scientific education to help him In the fur ther prosecution of the same purpose Isn't altogether a child of fortune If after years more of patient toll and careful thought he finally oomes to his reward. His college course completed, Stratton set out again on the old quest The Yretaba was a vanished dream, but there were other fields to proepect, snd In some of them he was sure he would find the means that would enable him to put away the carpen ter's kit forever and a day. In the meantime, however, he didn't despise his trade. Colorado Springs saw him intermittently and gave him work when he wanted it. Then when there was a little money In the stocking It saw him no more for a time and the neighbors knew that the carpenter had become a gold hunter again. A good part of the ttme Stratton was spending his own money In the quest for pay dirt, but whenever he could find any one disposed to grubstake him and divide with him on the chance that some day his dream would come true he took up the part nership gladly. It was under such sn arrangement that he set out for Cripple Creek In April, 1891, Samples of ore which had lately come down from that region led him to believe that It would give up a great store of wealth to the man who had the persistence and the know! edge to examine it thoroughly. He had been working on the grubstake contract for a month or two when the man who was putting up the money concluded that It was a bad bargain and quit within striking distance of millions. Stratton went back to Cripple Creek, re plenished his store of necessarlea, and on July 8 rode out of town on horseback to resume his prospecting, thla time on his own hook, with no one to stand the loss or divide the gain, as the case might- be, The next day he did something which showed that, like nearly all persons with sufficient Imagination to do great things. he was a man of sentiment. He staked out two claims, and, as It was the Fourth of July, he named one Inde pendence and the other Washington. It was a happy thought for the greatest day la 8tratton's Ufa. Out of those two claims so patriotically named Stratton accumulated a fortune estimated at $14,000,000 and other men also grew rich beyond the dreams of avarice. An early assay from the Independence showed ere that yielded $380 to the ton; so Stratton wasn't long In making up his mind that he would hold on to that claim and get the money he needed for further operations from the Washington, for he did need money, never more than at that moment, when millions lay Just beneath bis feet. Ha sold or leased the Washington for I sum that is sometimes stated aa $60,000, sometimes as $80,000. At sny rate he got about $10,000 In ready cash out of the deal, and later, when the buyer or lessee failed In the required payments, the Washington reverted to the possession of its discoverer, With the first $10,000 that he got out of the Washington Stratton set to work on the Independence. He was never In a hurry about taking out gold, even in later years when he had the capital to push things to the limit if bs choss to do so. "It's Just as safe In the earth as any where else," he would often say to those who were urging him to work faster. In 1894 $60,000 waa all he had cleaned op from the Independence. From that time on, however, the product of the mine wss fabulous. Stratton was taking put not less than a million a year when In 1898 be sold a controlling Interest In the mine to an English company for $10,000,000. He some times regretted this bargain, snd his faith in Cripple Creek never wavered. The bulk of his money when bs died was still la vested there. Illiteracy la the Lost Caste. Philadelphia Inquirer. The lncreaae In the number of students a all the principal universities scarcely bears out the theory that higher education Is los log casta, COLD CHRF.R FOR COAL CONSUMERS. New York Commercial: If It lasts much longer the coal strike will have merged Into cold strike. Philadelphia Press: With coal at the pres. nt high price warming up on campaign peeches ourht to become popular. Washington Tost: Never judge a neigh bor's financial standing by the amount of moke that comes from his chimney. It may not be coal he la burning. Baltimore American: With coal In Its present condition and the prosrect ahead, what would not the fickle public, that never nows what It wants, now give for a prom ise of warm waves? Boston Globe: The coal trust has now aken a contract on its hands that will prove the toughest It ever bad to grapple with if the strikers hold out much longer. As soon ss the frosts of autumn begin to pinch severely and all industries are threatened with an embargo, the only Issue will be as to whether the trust Is master of the whole people. In such a crisis the de- Islon will not be difficult nor long post poned. Philadelphia North American: It the coal combine is mining 164,000 tons of anthracite coal a week, where Is the coal? The Read ing company has only 4,000 tons for sale, the price of coal Is still going up and dealers cannot get any to supply their customers. According to the operators, they are produc ing at the rate of 8,000,000 tons a year with out the aid of the miners, and yet the mar ket Is bare. The story Is not a good one even for the marines. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Taking tho world as a whole SS per cent die before they reach the age of 17. The population of Damascus, reputed the oldest city In the world, Is calculated at 225,000 souls. San Francisco leads American cities with the largest ratio of suicides, or 89.1 per 100,000 of population. Tasmania's senior coroner and justice of the peace is Captain Edward Dumaresq, who Is now In his 101st year. Louis W. Thomburg of Ottumwa, la.. Is the oldest settler tn that stste and his wife wss the first white child born In Iowa The two American cities In which the number of colored Inhabitants Is Increasing most largely are Washington and Phila delphia. The fine residence of the late George W. Chllds on Walnut street In Philadelphia was sold the other day for the third time within a year, the price thla time being $83,000. Austen Chamberlain Is not the first son to sit in the same cabinet with his father. In 1856, snd sgatn In 1866, Lord Derby was the head of a cabinet of which his son. Lord Stanley, was a member. A remarkable family passed through Kan sas the other day enroute from Iowa to Oklahoma. It was composed of Michael Streckendorfer, with sixteen sons, two daughters and grandchildren enough to al most fill a car. Slgnora Mayor des Planches, the wife of the Italian ambassador at Washington and new acquisition to diplomatic society there. Is described as a womaa of remark able beauty and as a charming talker. Slg nor Mayor Is the youngest of the ambassa dors. He and his wife will entertain on a large scale. The names of two women are still on the British pension list dating from the time of George IV. One Is Lady Barrow, the adopted daughter of John Wilson Croker, Lord Macaulay's "bad, very bad man, I fear." The other Is the mother of Sir Wil liam Anson, M. P. for Oxford university and warden of All Souls. Ex-Senator Carter of Montana has pre sented to the university of that stats his private collection of congressional records, giving a complete history of legislation from the beginning of the first congress to the close of the last. 'This, Mr. Carter says. helps to "fill up" the library of a struggling educational Institution and ssves a great deal of space and rent for himself. Albert Chase, who died at the national soldiers' home at Togua, Ms., a few days ago, was ons of the numerous characters who figured In the John Wilkes Booth tragedy. He was sergeant of the guard at the navy yard bridge at Washington on the night of the morder of President Lincoln when Booth passed. Chase held Booth for some time, but aa Booth gave such a good account of himself he waa allowed to go. Chase received part of the Booth reward, however. WESTERN CORN AND CATTLE. What the Bis; Crops Mean tor the Parmer ana for the Consasnsr. Philadelphia Record. The record-breaking corn crop In the western corn states means a revival of the cattle feeding indetry, and this, In turn, means a forthcoming decline In the prices of middle grades of beef. Last year the corn crop did not come up to expecta tions and stock coming In from the rsnges In the fall could not be fattened. A com bination of meat packers took advantage of this untoward state of affairs to mark prices up and discover, if possible, the max imum figures that the traffic would bear. Domeatlc consumption waa sharply cur tailed, while foreign export trade shrank In volume under the Influence of arbi trarily advanced prices. Public discontent was rife snd found expression tn demands for legal restriction of huge combinations of middlemen, who - controlled practically the entire meat supply of the country. Beneficent nature has stepped In with potential energy to aet aside the schemes of traders In public misfortune, snd to encourage an industry that needs no syndl cats to assure prosperity. In five cattle feeding states Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Oklahoma and Colorado much of the huge corn crops this year will be put Into fat cattle for the general market. Experts In the trade estimate that not less than 1,300 000 cattle will be fed In these states alone during the ensuing ninety days, together with nearly 2,000,000 sheep. The concentra tion of channels and sgencles of dlstrlbu tlon has had no effect upon the enormous and practically Independent Industry of the western cattlemen. High prices for beef and mutton have stimulated production to extraordinary activity; new stock yarda bave been established; new capital has been attracted to the business and conditions of supply readjusted quickly to the In creased public demand. Thus additional employment has been furnished to thou sands of enterprising men, while a larger domestic market la assured for the leading product of the western agriculture. What has been accomplished Is, In fact, a restoration of the economic balance be tween two Important and vital factors of American Industry. A 2,000,000,000 bushel corn crop will no longer mean a nominal export price, with western farmers burning their corn for fuel Instead of sending it to market. A higher level not only of pro ductlon but also of consumption has been attained, and both agriculturists snd cattle raisers may face the future with confi dence undisturbed by fears of crop failure Such spprehenslon, moreover, should be largely lessened at this time. In view of the rarity of lean years and the Instructive experience and heavy profits of propitious seasons. With a fair field open to corn and cattle growers, they and the American people may bid defiance to all trust comb I nations that seek to engross the food of the populaac. direct rniM tnii.it in mixnksota. Oeeeral Satisfaction with the Result of the Reform Movement. New York Tribune. The new primary law of Minnesota was tested last Tuesday, when nominations were made for congress and judicial, legislative and county offices. Tassed by the leslnla- ture of 1!01. It had never been tried In any general state election, and judgment of lis effectiveness was awaited with considerable nterest. even outside of Minnesota. Tho most Important provisions of the lsa are ss follows: The primary la held not less than seven weeks before election day. All parties vote on this primary day, each party In a sep arate ballot box, the officers of the primary being the regular election officers. When the voter at this primary appears at th polls and demands to vote his register number Is looked for, and if he is not reg istered he cannot vote at thla time, but he may register for the next primary. If he is registered he receives an Australian bal lot of the party In which he la registered. If he refuses this ballot, announcing that he has changed his politics, he Is not al lowed to vote at this primary, but may re register himself for the next primary. It the voter at the primary la challenged be may vote by taking the oath that be voted that party ticket at the last general elec tion. The primary tickets are made out and printed by the county auditor. The regular canvassing board canvasses snd announces the result. The candidates announce them selves by a petition of a certain percentage of the voters of the party, snd this petition, In case of a congress nomination, for ex ample, must come proportionately from all parts of the district. The law applies to all nominations except those for state offices and municipal offices In cities of leas than It Is somewhat early to pass final judg ment upon the merits of the Minnesota plan, but the principal newspapers of ths state have little except praise for Its oper ation thus far. In an "off year" Tuesday's vote In Minneapolis seems to have been as large aa In the primary election of 1900 (Minneapolis adopted the plan for city elec tions before the rest of the state); and the number of voters who registered their pref erences in St. Paul was well up to the aver age strength of the electorate. Of the re sults as shown In the choice of candidates the St. Paul Pioneer Press says that the republican nominations in that city are the strongest that could have been made and commends the makeup of the democratic) ticket aa well. Some defects are noted, however. The Minneapolis Tribune and the St. Paul Pioneer Press sssert that the declaration of . party affiliations Is unpopular, and that many voters are kept from the primaries by this requirement. The large number of minority candidates Is thought by some critics to be a serious objection to the new method of making nominations (in five , congress districts, for example, the repub lican nominees are the choice of a minority of the votes cast). But the Minneapolis Journal thinks that these minority candi dates sre, after all, as truly the choice of tue people as the compromise nominee of a hard fought convention, and that lesa bitter feeling, leading to "knifing" the ticket on election day, is likely to follow a lively primary than an angry convention. DAILIES SUPPLANTINO MAGAZINES Newspapers Swarm Over the ' Field Once Ocenpled by Pictorials. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Publlo attention has been arreBted by the . recent announcement of one of the month lies that It would no longer attempt to com pete with the great dallies In Illustrated articles on current events, but will turn Its attention exclusively to fiction, essays and poetry. The reason given Is that the dally papers have advanced so far In their art departments that pictures in the monthlies are belated, and as for news It Is presented every morning from all parts of the world with a completeness and skill that leave nothing but small gleanings for other periodicals. A necessary result of this situ ation Is that the magaxlnes must narrow their operations snd the period Is probably near when they will represent some special field of thought or particular line of social effort in order to preserve a practical toot-, Ing. As matters stand, with a network of electric wires and cables covering tho world and the dallies expanding their art and literary feaures In every direction, the . monthllea must look well to their reason for existence. Upon that necessary consid eration rests their margin of profit, the de cisive point in the end, for periodicals can not live oa self-esteem alone. AID TO DE KIN NY. Washington Star: "Do you think the color of that conspicuous girl's hair Is natural?" 'Yes," answered Mlsa Cayenne, after a moment's Inspection, "to some people." PhlladelDhla Record: Hoax There's a bird called the pastor bird. I wonder-why they call it that? Joax on, l suppoae its Decauss ivs a bird of prey! Baltimore Herald: Heryl Who was that young man that Just tipped his hat to us? Sibyl I can't Imagine. Iet's see oh, yes, that ia the man 1 became engaged to last week. New York Herald: He Your kiss la like Chinese tea. it has an exquisite flavor, but It's not very strong. Bhe Ferhape It man t a raw long enougn. Juds-e: "Mlxem. the chemist, has made his fortune at last," says the friend. "But I thought he coulrtn t nnci any sale t all for his cough mixture," answers the other friend. "He couldn t. so he labeled it -genuine maple syrup' and sold every bit of it the first cool duy we had. Now he la rushed with orders for It." Yonkers Statesman: He You say you spent your summer over on th Bound? Bhe Yes, and 1 was engaged to three different men while there. "Oh, yes; I read about the sham en gagementB over there thla summer." Baltimore American: "Love Is blind." murmured Mr. Meekton. regretfully. "That a nonsense, repuea nis wire. "Whn a Klrl (alls in Inve with a man she sees magnificent qualities In him which none of her rnmiiy cao maae out ana whii h become wholly obscure even to her In the course of a year or so." Pittsburg Gaxette: What do I think of the signal service?" repeated TJncle Hlllv Harlow, in reply lo a query. -wen, 1 think that a weather prediction, well stuck to, is as good as the truth." TUB BOY THAT lot) ISED TO BE. W. D. Nesblt In Baltimore American. . Would you know Mm again today, , If he somehow should coma to you, , If he halted you on the way. Would your memory servo you true? With the air of the old boy-days. With the smile that waa glad and free. Would you know, If he met your gass Just the boy that you used to be? Ho! The boy that you used to be, Kre you wrinkled with rare and fret! What a wonder If you could aee That boy! Isn't he living yet? Does he never come back In dreams, Made of memory's witchery? Straight and fair In its rosy gleams Just the boy that you used to bel Do you never hold speech with him In that past with Its afterglow? See his figure, though blurred ar.d dim? Ask him why did he ever go? Do you never go hand-in-hand Wander back, till ag.'iln you see All the charm of the old boy-land. With the boy that you used to be? Does he know you. when oft he comes Where you're dreaming your dreams alone? ' Is the melody that he hums But the one that to song has grown? Honest-hearted, and white of soul Do you know sui-h a. one aa he? Th'-n you're reaching the Rreatest goal- Just tho boy that jou used to be! standpoint' I I