THE OMAHA SUNDAY BKK: NOVEMBEU 14, 1000. D r Business Office MAMA ID) 'imiPETiSsIhicecri. IRcD'CDinnis 3FOIR. RENT As advertised in The Omaha Boo. 1 fT!E88PflE M-CDCDinnis As advortisod in Tho Omaha Boo. ass FOR REMT As advortisod in Tho Omaha Boo. Apply j r ' " T ' ' "" 1 JTiiH 11'V ' ' ' 11 "! 'ir -'i" nil, J,rs, , ) , 1 M Ill nui I1 i' "Trail n " 1 '("'' lass FOR A.IL1IE As advortisod in Tho Omaha Boo. Apply No cards will be given to children 0 f Gossip About Noted People NCLK JUK CANNON ran across U the son of an old friend in East I St. Louis, Just before starting I ..... V. I n ... Ka VII VII "3 I 1 1 II 111 ItlW on of a man who gave him a position sixty years ago. The speaker, with Vice President Sher man, Governor Donewn and Mayor Cook, were on a rapid fire auto trip through tho lock yards, whsn they met C. C. Nesblt, an Inspector of weights and measures. Nesblt hiked for the automobile and grasped Cannon by the hand, much to the astonishment of the other member of Ms party. ' I'm C. C. Nesblt, son of old 'Slim' Nes blt," he told the speaker. "You remember my father." . . Uncle Joe's cigar lifted a few degrees and he smiled. "Tou'ro d right I do," he replied. yflls time almost chuckling. "Why, about sixty years ago." he related, as he turned to his companions, "old 'Slim' Nesblt was keeping a store In Tuscola. One day, bare foot and ragged, I dropped In to see him and asked for a job. " 'Sure. says old 'Slim.' "I was ' poorer than h and I cer tainly needed the money." Several years ago C. C. Nesblt wrote to Uncle Joe on behalf of a young woman In Warsaw. Ky.. who wanted a job. lie said he was the' eon of '811m' Nesblt. and the young woman got her job by return mall. Tke CudlMl aad tka Newsies, The keen Interest In small affairs of life and kindly sympathy for those la bumble walks of life by Cardinal Gibbons, was shown by an Incident which oocurred dur ing his usual stroll Id Baltimore, Two newsboy- were engaged In a rough-and-tumble fight near the cardinal' home. The little pugilists formed the center of a group of men and boys, as well as many ladles who war shopping. Many were the exclamations of pity and reproach uttered by those In tho crowd, but ne one seemed Inclined to Interfere. Tho cardinal attention was arrested by the disturbance, and ta'ting In the situa tion he quietly mad hi way through the crowd. Reaching the boy undetected by Ibera. tho cardinal laid hi hand upon th shoulder of one of the lads, who turned to become an aggressor at the Interruption. The took Into tho fare M tke cardinal suf ficed to tell tho lad who the personage was that had Interrupted the muscular ar gument. Tho urchin respectfully pulled off his ragged cap. As he did so the car dinal said in kindly tones: "My son, wait until you have grown to be a roan before you Indulge In manly sports." Next minute the boys were scampering down the street in opposite directions. The cardinal continued his stroll, smiling over his success as peacemaker. Mr. Harrtman'a Ambassador. "Mr. Harrtman, for all his wealth, was not purse proud," said a New Tork broker. "Yet he thought a lot of money. He used to tell, with a good deal of sympathy, a story about the Russian ambassador to the court of Louis XIV. Louis XIV, playing cards at Versailles, dropped a frano on the floor and stooped to look for It. Then Mr. Harrlman'a Rus sian ambassador, who was very rich, said with a scornful laugh: " 'Let me assist your majesty.' "And he took out a 1, 000-frano note, lighted It, and held it near the ground for a torch." Mr. Pwlitser'a Editorials. Afloat or ashore, relates a writer In the American Magaxlne, Joseph Pulitzer, pub lisher of the New Tork World, is sur lound by a troop of readers and secre taries, and when the impulse to do a thing comes upon him hi power of endurance break the youngest and strongest of them. Take hlra at sea, where most of his time has been spent of lata, it is an ordinary oc currence for hlra to rout out his personal staff it I or I o'clock in the morning to aid hlra in the preparation of an article. To think with him is to act. Let It be some political fight or principle to which ho has dedicated the World, and though ha may bo on the other side of the earth he 1 able to visualise It and live with the paper and those la charge of it through every step of success or defeat. Ue dee not com pone with facility; some of those whole-page editorials In the Wcrld, bearing the signature "Josepii Pulltser," which became so familiar during the Roosevelt administration and In the forming- of the last Bryan campaign, rep resented week and weeks of unrelenting labor. They oteant the driving to distrac tion of .those upon whom he is compelled to depend to put hi thought on paper; they meant a crying for "facts, facts," and "more facts" which it was ixileved would never cease; they meant the working over of draft after draft of the editorial in preparation; they meant countless finished article thrown away and a beginning all over again until the ear of the blind .nan was satisfied. Carpenter's Letter (Continued from Page Two.) that the opium habit can be cured. Every where pill to take away the craving are sold, and, In most of the great cities, hos pitals and refuges have been established where tho slaves of the drug go to break off the habit. In Foochow there are six such hospitals, and four of these report that they have already cured 3,259 persons. Such Institutions have been established at Peking, Nanking, Tientsin, Wuchang, Can ton and in many other places. Foreign doctor have also; com In, and profess to be able to cur the opium habit. One of these who is well recommended Is an American, Mr. C. B. Town. He professes to be able to cure any one of the opium habit in three days. He established hos pitals at Tientsin and Shanghai. Ha has started one at Pao Ting Fu, where It 1 said that one hundred patients came to him during the first month and were cured. Then the number of applications myster iously decreased, and Mr. Town found that this cam from a report to the effect that, although the cure was successful. It al ways killed the patient within 100 days thereafter. This story was false, but It almost broke up the hospital. Mr. Town's Institution at Tientsin was established at the expense of the viceroy, and officials who were cured received ,a certificate certifying that fact. Oplaat Versa Morphlae. One of the great dangers in the use of many of the anti-opium remedies is that they contain the drug in some other form. The government has had to extend Its laws to morphine, and In one of the recent edicts the Importation of morphia and of hypo dermic syringes is prohibited and their sal is limited to practicing physicians. The morphine habit has long been prev alent in many parts of the Chinese em pire, and a vast amount of morphine pills are still consumed. In oertaln oltlea along the Yangtseklang the hypodermic injecting of morphine is common. They have pro fessional peddlers who go about with hypo dermlo syringes up their sleeves and give injections at tho rata of about 2 cents apiece. Such men are to be found la the teahouses, and are ready to give one a jab in the arm upon asking. In the past it was customary for the member of a party to stand up In a row and hold out their arm with the sleeves rolled up to their shoulders. The most common place for the injection was about the biceps, but many of the opium fiends were tattooed from their necks to their wrists, and also ou otbar parts -of their bodies. The morphine Injectors make their own solutions, and, as they use dirty water, thq danger of their communicating diseases Is great. The government Is doing all It can to abolish these morphine practices. It has stringent laws against them, but they are still secretly carried on in most of the cities. In the meantime, I understand that the English and Germans have been flooding China with cheap hypodermio syringes since the present crusade began, and that tho Chinese imperial custom board has now issued regulation promot ing their importation, except by the foreign medical practloner and foreign druggists. Hereafter all morphia and syringes landed without a special permit from the customs will be confiscated. As to Raisins; Opium. The greater part of the opium used in 'China Is raised at home. That Imported from India amounts to millions of dollar a year, but a far greater quantity is grown upon Chinese sol). Poppy planta tions are cultivated as far north as Man churia, and there are provinces In south ern and western China where opium is one of the principal crops. The reducing of the areas of cultivation Is causing a considerable loss to the farmers. The gov ernment realizes this, but, nevertheless. It Insists that the laws be enforced. Ac cording to them, no ground can be planted to popples, and the old fields must be cut down one-tenth of their original slse every year. In some provinces the viceroys have or dered the immediate stoppage of all culti vation of opium, and In others they have remitted the taxes for five or ten years upon opium lands which have been turned over to other crops. In Yunnan the sol diers have been directed to dig up the poppy fields, and the viceroy of Nunklng recently issued an order that his farmers must destroy their opium seeds, and that such as had planted them should dig their fields over and put in something else. All the opium raising lands have been registered and the government at Peking is keeping a close watch over the amount cultivated. The prince regent has offered medals and rewards to those who have changed their crops from the poppy to grains, and they are to be freed from na tional taxes for a fixed period. In short, there 1 no doubt about the earnest and active efforts of the officials and of a large part of the people to do away with the opium habit. Many are re solved that it must be cut out of China at any cost, and the government Is willing to submit to the enormous loss of revenue which it entails, for the good of the people. Millions of Oplaui Smokers. On the other hand, It In a question whether the opium evil is anything like so great as la generally supposed. It has beon stated that more than 100,000.000 of the Chinese are opium users. Some will tell you that the whole race is drugged and that all the men, women and children use opium dally. This is untrue on its face. I doubt whether the opium habit I a prevalent among the Chinese as the whisky and beer drinking habit Is among the English, Germans or Americans. In the first place, it is costly, and the bulk of the Chinese are poor. Again, tho amount of opium raised in China la pretty well known, and we have accurate statis tics of all that Is Imported. Foreigners estimate the total annual consumption at something like 40,000,000 pounds. If this were divided equally among the people it would equal only one ounce per year per head. Now the average confirmed smoker takes about three mace a day, or ninety mace in one month. Ten mace make an ounce, and this would equal nine ounces a month, or nine pounds a year. Dividing the 40,000.000 pounds by nine gives a quotient of less than four and one-half millions, the total number of confirmed smokers required to consume all the opium raised in China. In other words, If one-tenth of the popula tion were habitual opium smokers they would consume all the opium which China now has. If the estimate is doubled the number would be less than 10,000,000. Dr. George Morrison of the London Times, who Is one of our most careful writers on things Chinese and who knows the country better than any Chinese I am acquainted with, estimates the possible consumers at less than g.OOO.Ouu. Whisky Yersu Oplasa. In fact, opium is consumed her about as much as spirituous liquors are In Eng land and the United 8tatee. Both habit are a mighty evil, and both cause a vast deal of misery; but to say that every man, woman and ohild la China la an opium fiend Is as false on Its face as it would be to allege that every man, woman and child In England and America Is addicted to drunkenness. In closing this letter I would say that it will be a long time before the hopes of the Chinese statesmen and patriots can come to fruition. The work of repression is going on rapidly, but opium Is still smoked largely In secret and an enormous amount of underhand selling and smug gling is done. These people are Just a human as we are and the same conditions prevail as would obtain in the United Slates were we to try to abolish the drink habit within as short a time a the Chinese have alloted to the wiping out of this ter rible drug. Some of the officials are hypo crites, others are openly disobeying the law, while others, bound In the Laocoon grip of the opium, are secretly smoking the drug or are injecting morphine Into their persons behind their closed doors. The movement for the most part 1 earnest and honest, and It has already accomplished a vast deal of good. FRANK O. CARPENTER. Thayer County (Continued from Page Three.) abundant living water for the extensive tock farms located on its banks. The native timber along this creek Is especially worthy of " notice, bearing walnut trees, and oak, maple and box elder that would do credit to eastern forests. One of the distinctive features of this place is a very fine magnesia limestone, which is extensively quarried here and shipped to points east and west. It ad mits of very tine polish and gives the ap pearance of brown marble. It makes a fine building stone. It should be remembered that over half of the trade of this place comes from the state of Kansas, from which they are only distant one halt mile. Thayer county, though not the largest in the state. Is one of the most productive. Last year this county sold and shipped out 12,000 head of beef rattle and 61,000 head of fat hogs. Also 1.1D3.UU0 bushels of Coin, 1.165,000 bushels of wheat and 136,000 bushels of oats. Besides this the flouring mill hipped out 4.600,000 pounds of flour and 2T0.0U0 pounds of mill feed. The county has 261,000 acres in farm and 191,000 acres under cultivation on which they produced this year, 96,000 acres of corn, 47,000 acres of wheat and 26,001) acres of oats. The djairy and poultry industry is also assuming large proportions. Last year the farmers sold and shipped out 136,000 pound of butter and 889.000 gallon of cream, together with 159,000 dozen of ogg and 490,000 pound of dressed poultry, Thayer county, with a few others, has a history somewhat different from most of the counties of the stata, that may be ( designated as the Great Trail period. 4 Nearly two and one-half decades before it became a county, It was the great high way along which those ambitious throngs of emigrants moved to the land beyond tho great Rockies. This trail from the Mis souri river to the Rocky mountains and beyond, was white with the sails of the "ships of the desert," all moving toward the setting- sun. Horace Greeley passed over this rout in 1&9. In the same year the Pony Ex press was established along this Una from St Joseph, Mo., to Sacramento, Cak The trip from St. Joseph to Sacramento, a distance of about 2,000 miles, was mad In eight days. It la aupposed that a man named Chris tian Luth, a German, was the first set tler. He located near the government road. He was ridiculed by the pilgrim over the road, for attempting 40 farm 04 the great American desert. Joseph Walker and James Reed, from Fort Kearny, In U&9, located on the Little Blue near the east line of the county. In the same year, Isaao Alexander settled on the Big Sandy. He brought with him, from Kansas, a portable gristmill. In t i winter of 1860-61, the few settlers were" shut In by a snow blockade, till their stoo of provisions was nearly exhausted. For tunately they had raised a crop of oorn and buckwheat, which they brought to the little mill, and by hard work, ground out by hand, their Immediate salvation with that memorable mill. , Probably the first permanent settler In Thayer county, were George Welsel, John, Charles and William Nightengale, who lo cated In the vicinity of Alexandria In ItfiK. In July, 1S6S, the first postofflce In the county was established at the dugout of C. J. Rhodes, on the west side of the Blue. The Salt Lake exprexs, established In 1W8, carried the first mall across thee desolate prairies. The stations were fifty miles apart. The part of the route through Thayer county, was between Big Sandy, on the east, to pawnc. Ranoh on tho west. In lh&j, when pikes Peak rush had reached Its highest point, this route was a vast caravan of gold seekers an 'Emi grants, the latter seeking a place to Gau lish a home, 'he former thirsty with the ambition for gold. X J ? ru A 1 1 1