THE OMAHA DAILY PEE: MONDAY. PEI'TEMHER 28, 100.1. 4 The Omaha Daily Bee E. RG3E WATER. EDITOR. rrnupnED every mor.vino. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily r.-a without Kundayi. One Year. .$4. W I:i I i y JJ'e and .iiiriday, One Year 6.00 Illustrated '.". O -c Year 2 60 fiun l.iy Be,., one p.ir i-M Ptttuni iy H.-e, me Year 1 M Twentieth Century Kar;rer, One Year.. 1.00 DELIVERED BY CARRIER. pally (without Stuul.iy). per copy.... ?c V" yv K ,n X Bnrd2MpV.7k::iT; Fundi v Hfi' ret- ri.r ' Evninir IJf e (without Sunday). Ir wee tc Lvnfng Ihe (Including holiday), per week 10o Complaints of Irr.-jriilifltlct in delivery should be addressed lo City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. OTinVm The Rpp Bull'llnp. South Omnhft Cltv Hall Building, Twen-ty-Mftli nnd M Streets. Council Ili'iff" 10 pearl Street. f'hlraK') i i.IO Unity Building. K"w York 2.1 N park Row Building. Washington Wd Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications rr-latlna to news nnd edi torial ti MK-r should lie addressed: Omahe Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order r,nvM)ia Th. ra Tut,liMnir Company. Only 2-n nt nt.nnjm accepted In paymmt of man account I'erson.n cnecrs, e-- Omaht or "rmtTn ejechnnes, not nrrepted. THE ItliK PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OP CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska. Douglas County, sa.! Oeorire It, Tzsuhuck. secrdnry (ii The Be Publishing company, tietng duly sworn, says thtt the actual numhei of full and com plete coplea of The Dr.llv Morning. Evening and Sunday Hee printed during the month or Auntut, rjts, was aa follows; 1 stu.fuo I Z7.SiHt t ao.rao 4 2!,t)0 I ,TUO ii ;2,050 18 ao.oio 19 2U.220 jo 2i,atio 21 M,a7M 22 a,aso 21 ati.mio 24 iitt,2H0 .... J.... .... .... 10.... a.... u.... 13.... in,750 irit.MKO ,8I,1M VI 1,(1 1U ai"MM lffl,6.iO ...... 2i,60 2o im,330 Ztt. ........ ..i"''.5''1' 27 zu.asu 2 itt,:;ao 2 2U.MOO 14 20.430 is ai.owa 30 sttt,o.ao II 2t,t70 16 24MU1U Total. vo4,h;x ;La unsold And returned coplea.... Hjwiu Net total ales , 8KS.H70 &et averag-a aales HM,IM)3 OEORQK B. TZSC1IUCK. 8ubstribed In my presence and aworn to eeiore ma iau nui oay ot August, a. u. um. ii. IS. II UNGATE. (Seal.) Notary Public. PARTIES LEAV1SQ TUB CITY. Parties leavlnii th city at Mr timet may hare The Raa eat to them rearnlarly by otlOlns; The Bee Baalaess office, la pertaa e by. mail. Th add res a will be chaaared aa oftea aa desired. President Burt denies most emphatic- ally that he has gone to New York to arbitrate anything. The portrait of tho earl of- Cork in the last edition of Losllo's Weekly has an unmistakable Irish brogue. The patched auUt sham, nonnartisan Judiciary doe not seem to be gaining much favor among the common. people. Tha machine .has been thrown Into the scrap pile and tho antl-machino has I been lent to the machine shop for' re- pairs. . " ' uunng . AK-fcar-nen week the new market bouse will be kept open at both I ends, and so. will the saloons in that neighborhood. For the present and for some time ln the future there Is no prospect of the consolidation of the gas company with the electric lighting company, The slaughter of Inflated Industrials Is still ProsrertnK, but the impression prevails in Wall street that the water Is about all squeezed out This is the harvest season of the pic torial candidate holdup Whose puffs are as nauseating to the general pubjic as couuver on to tne wretcnea conenmp- ti I meBuuanoi-iuricey nas tanen a ais- IlL'il tlx A 1 1 1 ( 1 1 1 tra ir.i n t I -v ci ' a nasn tttnavas I ---"'v- .umw;. mat me American ironeiaas may aepart m peace. If vou know anvthinc about candi- dates who have entered the lists for the primary election races, don't be ealy-mouthed, but talk out now be- fore the noils are onen. Now, if the weather clerk will giro us a large area of Indian suuyiier for the next ten days, he wit! be forgiven for all the cold water he has thrown on Ne-1 bra ska within the puat three mouths. President Iloosevelt managed to saw jand split a few cords of wood before starting uacu ior tue v mte House, i recognizes the merit system iu conuec Tbat explains why no visitors were al- tlon with consular appointments and . lowed during the last hours of his stay at Oyster Bay. The seizure of a larjre coin counter- . felting plant near Marinette, Wis., re- , calls the fact that the fabrication of 5-ceut silver dollar is the most proflt- - able Industry any man or set of men could engage ln. And now his canny Scottish country mea are abusing Carnegie for making Edinburgh university a gift of $10,000,- 000 in ehrlnkablo Steel trut bonds, This recalls forcibly the adage that you should not look a gift horse ln the jjjyutb., i i Why due not some enterprising fakir erect a stereoptlcou show with portraits of political candidates alternating with script pu.l's setting forth their marvel- ou achievements ln peace aud in war, on lund aud on neu. lhat would be a novel attraction aud could be made a paying investment. . r .... After ulne months' sparring for tlmejlaily strong among business orgautzn lu the criminal court of v Charleston I tlon directly interested in luii-rVin.; former Lieutenant Governor Tillman will be put on trial today for tho cow ardly murder of Editor Gonzales. It 1 Just such procrastination in the pun- Ishnicnt of cupital crimes that prompt resort to lynching. THt rASSISO OF MATHCWSOlt. WIipii Charles P. Mathewson wan nppolutt'il to tho responsible position of nK'Mit to the Omnlia nnd WinnelmKo Indians tlve years ntro, everybody In Nebraska who wns faniilinr with Ms malodorous record as a bank wrecker was amazed at tho reeklesnpss exhib ited liy Senator Thurston In recom mending n man of this stripe to a po sition that demanded moral courage and integrity of the highest order. Wliile the c-nMern proas wvwlj do- iiout!eel Matliowson's nppolntuiptit, the Nebraska npwspapprs, inchidinrf The Bee, refrained from remonstrance, content ing themselves merely with expressing; the hope that Mr. Mathewson would redeem himself In his position. In this instance, however, the adage that "You cannot muke a crooked stick straight" only repented itself. As nn Indian nt'cut. Charles V. Mathewson distinguished himself no better than he hnd as a banker and legislator. The traders and land grablwrs, who flut ter around the Nebraska Indian reserva tions like flies around a molasses bar rel, found in him a most supple tool. Instead of protecting the Indians from their rapacity, Mathewson connived with them in all the schemes for the spoliation of the Indlans'and closed his eyes and ears to the complaints and appeals that were made on their behalf. Mathewson'! personal example as su pervisor of the Indian reservation has been, if anything, more discreditable than his collusion with the combine that has systematically plundered the Indians and enriehed its members in tll(J ea8inK amj purchase of Indian lands. Thee is no doubt that Mathew son would have been ousted from ' his place years ago had it not been for the potential influence exerted by the land speculators and their allies with the Indian bureau and theoiHcers of the federal court in this district, whose duty, it was to prosecute the perpe trators of the frauds upon the Indians'. It was only' through the persistent and uncompromising efforts of men and women who believed that an Indian hns some rights that a white man must re spect that the whitewashing reports procured by the ring from susceptible inspectors for the benefit of Mathewson finally resulted in a searching inquiry that fully confirmed ' all tho charges that had been placed in the hands of the Indian commissioner nnd secretary of tho interior by the editor of The Bee and others who have endeavored to right the wrongs -perpetrated upon the. Indians. It is given out from Washington that MathewBon has resigned on account of his declining health, and it is further more given out that Commissioner Jones has expressed great regret at parting with Mr. Mathewson, whose services 8nld to be eminently satisfactory to the ,ndIan bureau and Invaluable in promoun ine wei-a " lmnans. n me latter statement is correct- an -nvestlga Hon of the Indian offlce.may be ln order. Commissioner Jones cer- tainly cannot be Ignorant of the) fact that the Winnebago Indians have been confidenced and robbed by the land spec nlators ln Thurston county. Comrnis- slorier . Jones certainly also must know that this could not have been possible had an honest Indian ncent kent the Indian bureau fullv informed concerning iho crooked methods of the combine. When the searchlight of ' publicity Is. fully turned upon Mathewson's operations after he LftB retlred froin llk(A.m, now or fttntA nf nffnlra wlP Ka nn. Mrtnp1 thnr nnl lta ,,",,, ,,; tUa recent dl8clo8ure8 of the M)mlatlon, upon the Indians in Oklahoma and the Indian Territory. Tfl liODO t VOtiSVLAB BILL, It is probable that a very earnest effort will be made in the Fifty-eighth congress to pass the bill of Senator T.rwri tra fnl rftfnrml ncr tin fxiriuu 1 u anr. Vice Thin niflRiir vena tfnuAirt( In tbe ,nst ,. ht llnt mt w the gpt, committee on foreigI1 relations, which annrovoil the hilL If ,, Iinw nnnminwi, thnt ,t ., Ua ram i . - Introduced in the senate and lu th LoU8e of representatives as soon as pos- ,IWc aftt?r tne ambling of the new wngTe-a " Is thought that tmder luo vmmve in ravor oi it tuat win be rxervju uy me oustness interes or tiio conuiry it is likely to become law I The bill has been framed with reut I care and is the result of a most thor I ough consideration of the subject to which it has reference. It conte-.n plates a complete reorganization of the consular service and the placing of it 0n a basis that will remove the service entirely out of politics. The measure would do away with some of the ex- istiug defects which are admitted on all hands to be a drawback and damage to the service. Among other things It proposes to abolish the fee system and to pay consuls fixed salaries, of course grading salaries according to th char acter of the duties. It provides for an examining board to which applications Ior uppuiuiuiciii buan be submitted and ,vhku shuI1 ascertain the fitness of ap- IUmta- The qualifications for np iwlntmeut are denned, among them l,eln general knowledge of trade 'ditlons, familiarity with the indus- trie and natural resource of the l aitea States and the country to whit h the applicant wishes to be assigned. I and a knowledge of other modern lan- t,ujg;e8 beside English. It provide for the retention ln the service of capable nnd eflleieut consuls and for their pro- motion. The Brooklyn F.agle urge that the bill should be passed, pointing out thnt the sentiment iu favor of it 1 partieti I the consular ' service. "Thit jjs-rvice I has been too loug at the mercy of local pollt'cian who" happen to have aouie c;uun upon the federal admlalHtrv tliu," say Hist paper. "Appointment .e been iuud without any tleilulte assunnee. that the capacity of th' ap pointees matched tho requirement cf the situation. In many cnsp consul vho ure utterly unlit to represent this country have been kept in place for j tars t urolith political pull." As a non era! pt-opofiltlon this 1 true, but it Is only fair to say that for the 'at naif a d- -.en years at least political pull has l.cpii lesa Influential In connection with the consular service than at any pre vious time and there H very rood rea son to lelieve that It will have little if any effect with the present adminis tration. Aa heretofore noted, President Itoosevelt intends lo apply the merit system, to the -extent of his authority, to the consular service and his decision in this respect has met with very gen eral and heart approval. Still legisla tion is necessary to effect such com plete leform in the service as is mani festly desirable and the Lodge bill, which has been endorsed by the busi ness interests of the country, seems to fully meet the requirements. Ay lAirvHTAST TiiBATT. According to Washington advices the treaty that is being negotiated between China and the United States, and which it is understood will be signed some ten days hence, is extremely important in the influence it will have upon the future of American trade in the Celes tial empire. 1 While of co-arse nothing definite will be given out as to the terms of the treaty before its submis sion to 'the senate in December, it is stated that in addition to its provisions for opening ports it contains other stip ulations for trade Intercourse which it Is claimed make it a better treaty than that negotiated with China by Great Britain. - . There seems to be no doubt that Min ister Conger has been applying himself with great industry nnd zeal to the task, by no means a simple one, of ob taining from the Chinese government the reasonable and valuable conces sions asked by the United States and which are undoubtedly essential not only to an enlargement of our trade with China, but also to the maintenance of the oppn door principle for which our government lias earnestly and per sistently contended. This latest lnfor mation in regard to the treaty being negotiated appears to conclusively show tuat tne uninese government is no longer embarrassed by any objections on the part of Kussla and assuming that to be the ense it is safe to say that the moderate and entirely fair re quests of tho United States will be com plied with. There has never been any doubt as Ito the friendly disposition toward us of China, the delay in con ceding the wishes of this coiyitry being v, iion.r uuu ii, uuiBiue Aim ueiicu n uicu the Chinese government could not ex pediently disregard. That Influence ap pears to have been entirely withdrawn, Every prospect of enlarging our for eign trade is a source of. gratification, and this Is particularly the case in re gard to- commerce with Asia. We should not allow ourselves, however, to indulge an extravagant notion as to the possibilities of this trade and thereby be led to neglect an equally valuable commerce ln other directions. What is being done for the promotion of our trade with China is unquestion ably wise, but there are other markets that invite our enterprise which ought not to be ignored. Governor LaFollette's statement, that while living expenses have increased 27 per cent in the past five years wages have advanced but 13 per cent, , has stirred up a hornet's nest among Wis consin politicians and statisticians, but if the figures were actually reversed the main olnt Governor LaFollette has sought to impress upon the people, that the trusts are advancing prices in order to make good returns on their inflated capitalization, cannot be refuted. The benefits ami advantages derived by the toiling mass from general prosperity spring not so much from the advance in wages as they do from the opportunity to secure steady employment. It Is eminently proper for the Com mercial club to investigate the water works appraisement process, but it would have been much more eminently proper for the Commercial club to have investigated the Jlowell water , works bill, which was as full of boles as Harry Deuel' skimmer. It will be remem bered that when attention was called to the glaring defects of the bill the Com mercial club stuffed cotton into its ears. Judge Grosscup has announced his determination not to resign from tho United States circuit bench. What an awful disappointment this is to the emi nent Jurists, who had hoped to wear the Grosscup brogans,' and what cause of chagrin It is to the corporation mag nate who had hoped to get rid of Grosscup froirt the circuit bench be cause he I not regarded by them as a "afe" man. r' Milwaukee pastors are iu favor of advertising the' church as business men do their business and Dr. W. D. Cox of the Methodist Episcopal church pre dicts that this question will h one of 'the prominent subjects of discussion at the Lo Angele general conference pext May. Manifestly the trend of Twentieth century evangelization ia to be conducted on approved business line. "Acknowledslas the Corn." ' New York World. The grumblers who a week ago ware sure that corn was "contracted by cold" to the tune of half a billion bushelj or so are made positively uncomfortable by the con tlnued sunny weather in the Mldd'.e Witt. Men have done their best to ryln the country wltb "undigested necuri'les," but while nature stlU smiles on us wa shall do very well. ' CvoBhecles Inreallsed. Washington Star. The psopbecius that new Inventions will supplant estatflbthed lines of business are seldom realized. Steam locomotives are stul running la spite of electricity; gas and petroleum are still burned In defiance of the electrlo light, and neither the tele phone nor the Marconi system has seri ously Injured the telegraph lines. Where the Surplus Goes. Baltimore American. John V. Rockefeller's latest three-month dividend on Standard Oil was nine mil lions. Should this keep up much lnng r he will have all the money there Ii and the rest will be compelled to go without. Ilovr John Dull Uets Even. Kansas City Journal. It Is humiliating to our English cousins that the only way they can pet any advan tage of us Is by sending their bankrupt aristocracy over to capture our heiresses. They would like to beat us at something which requires brains. M ho YVoold Hesitate. New York Mail and Express. Secretary Bhaw has consented to take $20,000,000 worth of the 4 per cent United States latnds. Secretary - Shaw's differ ence from the rest of us la evident from the fact that he had to deliberate quite a while before he decided to do this. i Cheap asa Effective. New York World. ; Since the object of warships Is to carry guns that will Are shots that will hit the enemy the recent Improvement In our itaval marksmanship Is probably equiva lent to doubling the number of our vessels. That Is the cheapest form of naval oroase we can find. Traffic In Chinese Coolies. San Francisco Call. The traffic maintained by white men In Chinese coolies ln this city has already resulted In scandal to the Federal govern ment and dishonor and death to some of those who were pals ln the dishonest trade. Time after time such scandals as these have affronted the public like the recurrent symptoms of intermittent fever, and us long as the palms of federal un derlings Itch for dishonest money, scandal and exposure will Inevitably follow. Irrigation as a Wliard Aaency. Portland Oregonlan. Many people are accustomed to spgak ot Irrigation as a wizard agency, and to quote the two blades of grass sentence, and yet a concrete example of the wlx ard' power will 1 Burprlse them. In a report on Egypt Just made by a govern ment expert It Is shown that a tract of land no larger than the Irrigable area of California supports from agriculture alone J.OUO.OOO people, supports an expen sive government, and pays the interest on a national debt that Is half as big as that of the United States. - A Lowly Hero. Los Angeles Times. Another name for the temple ln w'nlch Is enshrined the record of the world's heroes Philip Ortez, a Mexican laborer oil a rail road,, but every Inch a hero. , According to advice from Barstow, on the Sunta Fe railroad, a serious' wreck was averted the other day by the prompt action of a man of that name who Jumped ln front of a lo comotive to remove from the rail a heavy lifting Jack that had been carelessly left where it ought not to have been. The ob struction waa thrown from the rail Just in time, but the man who performed the deed was mangled to death under the flying and cruel wheels It Is gratifying to note that a monument la uggested for this humble hero of everyday life. It should be raised Without delay, and should; remain forever on the desert to remind the passenger over land that heroism Is of no particular na tion, and that under the swarthy skin of a native of our slBter republio to the south ward may beat a heart ,bf as true a hero e ever, set a flag above a parapet or gave hi life ln forlorn hope. Honor and. glory forever to Philip Ortes. ' ., GENERAL GHAKT A.D THE CAft'f BEST. Forceful Appeal for the ReEatabllh nient of the Post Exchange. New York Tribune. Many officers of the United States army are anxious to have the army canteen re estabUshed. They opposed Its abolition when the question was under discussion, and they now point to deteriorations In the service which they tiace to the absence of the canteen and say, "We told you so. Among the latest recruits to the force which still hopes to re-establish the in etltution Is General Frederick D. Grant, who, like many of his brother officers, thinks that the people who were responsible for Its abolition and who oppose Its re establishment do not see the canteen in Its proper light. While the good people who wished to benefit the soldier by wiping out the places where he could procure light drink regard these places as "vile resorts Into which the poor soldier s money finds Its way," the friends of the canteen re gard this feature of the post exchange as soldier' club, a resort where he may nna wnoisome relaxation and a foil against the conscienceless rumseller who has always been the canteen' greatest enemy. General Grant Is a total abstainer, ' ac cording to his own statement, but he never theless regards the abolition of the canteen, with It light beverages, as a "vital mis roriune to the service." In his annual report as commanding officer of the Depart ment of Texas he says: In every age the spirit of true soldiery has engendered true comradeship, and in no realm of society, ln no walk of life, has the radical reformer succeeded In changing the natural disposition of man to the ex tent of eliminating this sentiment. To say tha.t the soldier as a man must be unlike his brother in all the other walks of life be cause he Is a soldier he must be denied all privileges of even the most moderate con viviality among his comrades because he U soldier he must be subjected to un usually strenuous conditions and submit to radical reformatory methods, which can not be applied to any other class of men aa a body In any other phase of life is a pedes of fanaticism, which, It Is respect fully suggested, lawmakers can well- afford to ignore, if not to condemn. While pas sion may be held In bound, nature cannot be wholly reversed or changed by stringent laws and rules, and the sooner rulrs are made looking to moderation. Instead of ab stlnence, the better will be the morale and the higher the standard of Individual de portintnt In tTieT"nlted States army.1 The earnest plea for the re-establishment of the canteen Is only an echo of utterances by hundreds of officers, many of whom have shown "by carefully prepared tables that lower moral conditions, increased 111 nees and a higher percentage of desertions have followed the closing- of the canteen. To these officers the facts which the report contain are well known, but to the people who fancied that a great blessing had come to th soldier of the United States army When the order -closing the canteen depart ments of the post exchanges was issued these words of a close and Impartial ob server will probably place the subject in a now light: "To close the doors of the soldier' garri son club and send him out Into the haunts ot Iniquity snd vice, run by moral vulture, who, degraded themselves, set up no stand ard of morality, but, breaking down all barriers of restraint. Invite and Induce sol diers to Join In all sorts of depravity and Infamy, is a wrong to the soldier a well as a wrong to the community In which the soldier 1 located." IIOIXD ABOtT HEW YORK. Ripples on the Cnrreat of Life la th Metropolis. Many curious advertisements appeAr In the personal columns of New York City newspapers. Some of them are lieht and flippant and some reveal the skeletons of evil lines. Sunday a week ago there wns one "personal" that plainly Indicated a desolate home and a heart-broken mother and father. It wns simply addressed to "Nellie" and Figned by her father no name, no address, only these touching lines: Pear Nellie: For mnny years we've watched for your returning;, For many years we've prayed to see your face. For many years with longing and heart yearnln We've hoped you'd come back home and take your place. For many years your mother has been lonely, I've tried to cheer her up and dry her tears; Won't you plense come back? We love you, and you only. Oh. we've waited now "for many years." DAbDY. The birth rate figures of New York fty, calculated by .erlods of time by Dr. Louis Haupt of tho Board cf Education, have been made public. The figures for the first quarter of this year give a general rate for the entire city of eleven babies born every hour. This Is apparently an enormous Increase over the birth rate for th corresponding quarter of last year, but la not really a more than normal Increase, and Is ac counted for by the natural Increase ln the adult population, The figures are more comprehensive than ever before, and thnt makes the apparent difference. Nevertheless, a birth rate of eleven chil dren an hour is very great, 'and shows the rapid progress of the city toward being the greatest In the world. Dr. Haupt con jectures that the birth rat tn the more thickly populated districts of the east side is fifteen an hour, and In the most con gested districts at least twenty an hour. He admitted that he thought a conjec tural rate of one baby a month In the ltra-fashlonable districts. Including Murray Hill, would be a fair estimate, but he said that lie would not want to be responsible for that estimate. On the west side, above Fourteenth street, the birth rate Dr. Haupt believes to be from eight to fifteen an hour. The sections of the city built up with what are known as apartment houses have a birth rate of approximately five children n hour. Residing In the home of a prominent and exclusive Brooklyn family 1 an 8-year-old mulatto trlrl, who up to a few days ago believed she was of white blood. In the home where she was reared as a loved adopted child it was not known that she was of negro blood until she grew old enough to take on the unmistakable physi cal traits of the African race. It was a startling discovery to the childless couple that had taken her for their own daughter to bear their name. From a home of refinement, where all had been happiness and ease, she was sent back to the cold, forbidding charities build ing where, nearly eight years before, she had been a waif. For seven days, in which the girl cried herself thin and wan, she waited for some one to take her and give her another home. Then her foster parents- called to claim her and take her back into their home. De spite the bar, they loved her and n.lssed her so much that they could not endure her loss. They took her with them and told her that everything would be aa before. She will be heir to a large fortune. Tentative plans for a moving sidewalk across the . Williamsburg bridge and ex tending through a ubway to the Battery were approved by a committee of the rapid transit commission. The olty la to bo se cured by an 'indemnity bond for the full amount of the contract, which Is expected to amount to about $8,000,000. The property is to revert to the city after a term of years, and fare on the moving sidewalk will not exceed 2V4 cents. It is estimated that the speed of the side walk on It fastest platform, where seats will be provided, will be ten miles an hour, moving continuously, making the trip from Bowling Green to Williamsburg In about fifteen minutes, without change, as com pared to the hour the Journey now takes. It is estimated that It will be possible to transport about 70,000 seated passengers an hour. There are to be station every two blocks. The Bowery' sporting men couldn't talk of anything yesterday but the luck- of Barney, the Milkman, when he broke poolroom not far from Fourteenth street, relates the Sun. Barney Went Into the poolroom and, after Studying the card on a St. Louis race ln which Crime waa entered,-shouted: "I blay Grime.' Efferybody blay Grime, Grime alvays vins ven a man gambles." He bet $10 each way on the horse, which the poolroom quoted at 25 to 1 to win, 8 to 1 for place and 4 to 1 for third. Crime won, Barney did a war dance when he cashed ln his $370. When the odds were posted on the ssv enth race at Gravesend, Barney plckel Eagle at 10 to 8 and even, playing $20 each way on him. The crowd followed him this time. Mordella came ln first and Eagle second, but Mordella was disqualified. Barney almost went into hysterics as he pocketed $230 more winning. His next pick waa the horse Frank Collins In one of the St. Louts races. The price was 12 to 1 to win, 4 to 1 for place and 2 to 1 for third When the crowd aw Barney play $20 each way on Frank Collins they almost fell over each other to get their money down Frank Collins won with ease and Barney made $W0 mora His last play was $u0 straight on Orfeo at Chicago at to 5. Barney had ao many fol lower by this time that when Orfeo won it was announced that the bank roll wa gone and the crowd had to wait while the management sent cut for more money. The poolroom folks said they had lost $6,0u0 on the day. Barney' won $1,100. With tears rolling down his cheeks, Thomas Gowan appeared aa a prisoner tn thr Harlem court Wednesday morning and told the magistrate that he had stolen some doorknobs In. order to get food fur hi wit and children." The complainant was Bella Conway. Gowan said that be was a driver, formerly employed by coal dealers, but, with the other drivers, .employed by the firm, struck on Labor day. "I can't get any work now," he told the court, "and the union has ordered me to stay out. When I went home last night I found my children crying for fcod and m wife so weak that she could hardly walk. In order to save them from starving, stole the doorknob, hoping to sell them.' Rewards of Pahlie Life. Boston Herald. Speaking of the pecuniary rewards ot publla life, they are lulling of a United State eenator who had an Income from his law practice of $2S,0iQ a year and a for tune of $100,000 when he entered public life, but toduy, after a quarter of a century of public service of the most eminent and useful sort, he baa no law practice at an, hi fortune has disappeared, his salary la Insufficient to keep him and tils family I modest comfort, and he I driven to writ ing magaslne articles during the reoeta of congress. What an awful fatel TALK. OF THE STATE TRESS. Fslrfield News-Hernld: Ha Ing known Judge Berne's fir over twenty-two years and having lived neighbor to him In the city of Ponca, Neb., several years, we feel Justified ln saying that the republican party of this state .never put up a better candi date for justice of the supreme court. Monroe Republican: Now that Bryan has prepared for the final flop Into the ranks of the reorganixers by endorsing tho gold can didate for United States senator, the fti- slonists are wondering where they are at. One element Is In favor of following the lead of the Denver conference, another will fol low Bryan and the remainder will form a new party. This is one of the results of confusion for office only. Hasting Tribune: Kearney has captured the state normal. No matter how she ac complished It, she has won out and she will have the school regardless of all that Is being said and put In public print. The Triune Is anything but a "quitter," but It nows enough to let go of a red-hot poker. and therefore suggests that the state lose no time in opening the new normal at Kearney. Chadron Journal: The Journal is glad to welcome, back into the ranks of the repub lican party this fall quite a number who left a few years ago when populism was sweeping the country and gathering up the otes of many honest men. In leaving ths grand old party they were actuated by good Impulses, but the "way that seemeth right" Is not always right and these good men having satisfied themselves that they were wrong lit leaving and heartily repenting of their misdoing we extend the right hand of fellowship to each of this class and say most heartily, welcome, thrice welcome. Geneva Signal: A citisen of this county after returning from a trip to the coast and through the northwest commenting upon the political situation said that throughout his trip it was necessary even after reading the papers to inquire the political affilia tions of the paper. It seems thnt the demo cratic papers vie with the republicans ln commendation of Roosevelt and his admin istration, all agreeing as to the wisdom of his re-election. In fact, the enthuslttsni for Roosevelt In convention and at the poll neat year will be furnished from the sturdy Impetuous west, and that enthusiasm should and will be forecasted In the big republican majorities in counties and states this fall. Nebraska and Fillmore county will take no back seats. Falrbury Garette: The general political campaign In this state Is one of the most emarkable ones ever conducted. There Is absolutely no Interest whatever anywhere, save in the eastern part of the first ju dicial district, where there is a factional fight on hand. The state and county cam paigns are unusually quiet all over the state. Such a state of affair has been un known for years. It It possible that the enemy ha decided to "lay down" without a struggle of any kind? It looks that way. Locally there Is nothing doing In this county. The people are too busy and too prosperous to pay any attention to politics The facta of the case are that politics have been a detriment to many good men and they have wisely decided to let the game alone let the candidates do their own fight ing, as they are the one who receive the benefit derived therefrom. Pierce Call: Four years ago Holcomb wa elected supreme judge on the fusion ticket by 18,108 majority. Last fall Secre tary Marsh, republican, carried the state by 13,048, Treasurer Mortensen by 15,108 and State Superintendent Fowler by 16,272. Four year ago the fusionists captured eight of the fifteen Judges of the state, in many In stances their majorities i;olng over the thousand mark. At the election last year the republican ticket, based on the secre tary of state, received a majority ln every judicial district of trie -rtato, except one, the Sixth, and there the fj:on majority was cut down to 26$. In our own ustlclal district, the Ninth, comprising Antelope, Knox, Mhdlson, Fierce and Wayne counties, the fjslon majority f:ur years ego wa 1,344. Last fall Marsh, the republican can didate for i.ecretary of state, ct rrled the district by 1,002 majority, a change of 2,841 vote in favor of the republicans. These figures tell eloquently what the fusion forces are up against this year. GOLD AMJ SILVER OlTPl'T. Government's Return on Production of Preclons Metals. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. From the returns which have been re ceived at the office of the director of the mint, he figures that the United States output of gold and silver In the calendar year 1902 was a little tn excess of $109,- 000,000 In the aggregate. Of this um $29,000,COO represented silver and $80,000,000 stood for gold. The aggregate differed only slightly from 1901, but there wa an Increase of gold ln 1902 and a decrease ln sliver. Colorado still stands at the front among American communities ln output of each metal, with a yield of $28,000,000 in gold and $8,000,000 ln silver. California 1 second In gold, with a product a little less than $17.0(0.000. and Montana is second In silver, $7,000,000. An Interesting feature of the govern ment's tabulation Is the Increase tn gold which is shown for Alaska. The output of the yellow metal ln that province ln 1902 wa $8,000,000, a gain of $2,000,000 over 1901. It should be remembered that the Alaska here referred to Is the United States terrl tory of that name. In some- estimates of the yield of Alaska the British settlements In the neighborhood of the American line are loosely counted tn. In the estimate of the director of the mint It is evident that It is the United States territory which Is meant. The Klondike region la close to the United States line, but as that belongs to Canada, It has no business to be counted In with the American territory when figur ing the gold yield or anything else. There has been but little change ln the United States' aggregate gold output ln the past few years, the gains which have been made ln Alaska being partially offset by losses In the rest of the country. ' The probability Is that there will be a falling off in the gold product of the continental portion of the country this year. Its most productive field, the Cripple creea district of Colorado, has been tied up with strikes for several weeks, and even before the strikes began there was a slight falling off ln the yield there as compared with 19U1. Colorado's lead over California will not be so great In 180$ as It was In 19u2. It la pro able. Alaska, however, promises to keep the aggregate gold output close to the high est mark ever touched. f"' ''Manual: IWiuRj J From King Samson IX "Know ye my Universal decree." Tha Dcatur i from thl day ths official hoelt to Hi Majeaty and all bi male ubjects, both lo their daily walk of life and whlla ln attendance al tha Great Court Ball, October 8tb of tho present year. Shoe for the wearer to Wear aad that make the dresser dressed. $3.50 and f5.00 11321 FarnaM We trust doctors. They trust Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for coughs. J O tinrra., Low.lI, Mu. PERSONAL NOTES. There Is a merchant In Nevada, Mo., of the name of Gosh, and it is said you can swear by him. The musically gifted firemen of New Tork found , a blazing piano ln the street and promptly played upon It. "Young Mr. McClellan," Tammany' favorite for mayor, can talk politics In four languages. This Is very convenient for one who is expected to be all things to all mm. .John Crump, a mulatto who served with distinction under Farragut, and was se verely wounded during the battle In Mobile Bay, has been obliged, at the sgs of 101 years, to seek a home ln the Denver poor house. ' Alfred Gilbert, the English sculptor, ha undertaken an art school of unusual magni tude at Bruges. He ha hired an enormous disused factory, which yields, beside grant studios, living accommodations for about 300 pupils. He proposes to do all his work In, the presence of his classes. Knowing hi own falling, a dentist In Quenemo, Kan., publishes the following card ln his local paper: "I kindly ask all my patrons and friends to not bring any intoxicant to my office. While I know many wish a stimulant when having teeth, ex tracted, I wish they would take It before coming to my office. It is a temptation that I would like to resist, and kindly warn all to refrain from bringing it to or about my office. E. F. Medearls." H. H. Vreeland. the New York traction magnate, was out for a spin in hi auto mobile recently and found hi way blocked by a wagon and pair of skinny horses. Thinking to have some fun, with the team ster, he said: "What ar these animal you are driving?" The man replied: "Them la what's called horses. Sometime they are used to take automobile driver to the hos pital, sec?" Mr. Vreeland saw and Indulged ln no more sarcasm. USES TO A LAUGH. Nell The Idea of your being engaged to him! What do you want to be married for? nptlnI don't: but I want to show that I can be If I want to.Phlladelphla Ledger. "Have you ever had palpitation of the heart ?" asked the insurance examiner. "Well," replied the young man, blush ing vividly, "I'm engaged to be married." Philadelphia Press. "So the physicians thought you had ap pend tlB? . . "Yts," answered Mrs. Cumrox. "and I was ever so relieved to learn that they were mistaken. Appendicitis is going completely out of style, you know." Washington Star. Struggling AuthorDo you think I ought to have my portralt as a frontispiece to the Pcbllshtr We can put It there If you wish. It will cost you something extra. etrugxllng Aether Well. I'm willing, If you Insist. Here'.' my photograph. Chicago Tribune. Jokey Here's a conundrum for you. What's the difference between a man and his wife? Houpeck-r None, unless the man Is so un wise as to have an opinion of hie own. Detroit Free Press. "Good evening!" he managed to stam mer. He had proposed to her by mail and had come for ner answer. "I have read your letter," She said. It Is a poem a regular poem." "Alas'." ho gruand and fled In despair, realizing the Uread Import of her words, for she was an editor' daughter. Philadel phia Press. "Didn't you once tell me that time was money?" asked Senator Borgum, a little 'rial'iliy," answered the erlou ad- viser. "Well, where Is the necessity of my pending my time arguing for votes If I am willing to put up the equivalent? Wash ington Star. , , Now know I what is love! It Is a nude nonetity that knocks Against the bosom once and only once. Then sneaks away forever, pausing only To bid a last farewell to the fond heart That felt it for a jiffy ere it weut. When love comes first, the oul bloom like a meadow. With primrose, daffodil and dogfennel. Also with buttercups and toadstools tall. Milwaukee Sentinel. HIS FIHST DAY IM BCHOOL. W. D. Nesblt ln Chicago Tribune, She lost her little boy today; Her eyes were moist and sweet And tender, when he went away To hurry down the street. She stooa there for the longest while And watched and watched him; then She said and tried to force a smile "He'll not come back again. Inside the house, her tear would, r.ome. bhe rank into a chair And sobbed above the battered drum And trumpet lying there. The sunshine stole into th place It onlv made her sad With thinking of the pretty grace His baby tresses had. She minded all his little ways; , She went to see his crib Up In the sttlc; then to gase At plutter, spoon and bib. And all the trinkets he had thought Bo fair to look upon Each one of them this murmur brought: "My little boy lias gone.", She wandered through the house all Amy', To come on thlnss hs'd loft; And O. he missed his romping play And felt herself bereftl When he came home, with shlnltif ayes, To tell of school's delight. She kissed and held him motherwisa With something of affright This to the pain- In mothers' hearts When school days have begun; Each knows the little boy depart And bsbv days are done; Each mother fain would close her ear And hu-h the calling bell . For. somehow. In Its tone she hear ' The sounding of a knell. From maker o wearer