The Omaha Daily Bee. THE OMAHA DEE Is the rmt owrrfl bunlrtrM petlcr In the tmt, because It Roe to the horue9 ol pour and rich. U EDITORIAL VGZi TO II. VOL. XXXIX-NO. -7U. OMAHA, TUESDAY MOKXIXd, MAY 31, 1010. SINGLE COPY TWO I'KXTS. f X 1 We say by all means buy land! Don't wait. Some temptin offers are made in the Farm and Ranch columns of The Bee. You can acquire it on liberal terms Every young man should be a land owner. The Bee can give information about all of the land listed in its columns twill MfMpf ' rate M ' 1 . ; - t ; Hie.. S(Eiiii real Buy it now! The day may come when there will 'be no bargains in land offered. Read the land ads in today's Bee. Don't hesitate. Do it! Wouldn't you be rich today if you had bought land ten years ago? There is no possible way for you ever to regret it. 1 te paper ofi ttie west. ' fyD TIMES OS THE RIVERS , When Business Boomed on Missis sippi,, Ohio and Missouri. 1 1 PILOTS WERE THE BIO CHIEFS ' Recollections of Great Rim rirarr.qa Traffic .( Half a Centary Ago. Noriiiat Mark Twain It con thr. la a , treat' telling aver of old steamboat yarni out on th bit river which gav. him hla name. Old daya on the Mississippi and thfe Ohio had a plctursquenes which can nntf be duplicated anywhere today. Th. lev. In thoa. tlroea resembled a tnod .rn union atatlon In an Important railway center. Dally packeta were constantly I arriving and departing for all points up and down th. river. Fin. boats ran be tween Cincinnati and New Orleans, but St. Louis waa th. center of th. steamboat If IVf'o. 'I I. ''ally packeta ran to Omaha. Sioux City. Council Bluffs. St. Joseph. Kansas City. I 8t" 1UDU1U. Chester. Cairo. New i Orlc Kaahvllle and. all other Important river iiwm. In IK there arrived at th I levee J siesmboaU. in 1R41 there was a lncrl to 1106. while throuah th. month j (t .!, ism, tber. waa an average of twelve arrivals each day, not Including the regular packeta almost dally from Alton. I'ilols at thla time were of special conse quence. Every rourtesy waa shown them by captains and crews and extreme defer ence by th. negro barbers, waiters and roustabouts Their wagea were high. As general rule the acal. was about $400 a month, but during the flush Kansas trade on th. Missouri river a good pilot received a much as $900 a trip, which amounted to 11,800 a month; but a pilot only mastered his trade after long experience and close application. lie had to be well versed In his vocation, for In those daya there were no snag and dredge boata, beacon lamp or powerful searchlights to play ahead of the vessel, Th. pilot must have a mental map of the river, remembering th location of every snag, sandbar, shallow and other danger. not only on clear days and nlghta, but also In th. darkneaa, fog, sleet and anow. ' S Reeklesaaeaa mut Disaster. No danger must b. considered. In fact many of th. steamboat disasters were due to sheer foolhardtness, l"p to 18W) there wer. 678 steamers lost on the two rivers. In th. year lSttt there were 119 steamboats partially wrecked and 130 wholly lost The explosion on th. Sultana in 1S64 killed 1,647 soldiers .and civilians. Although at first It may seem an un reliable statement, tho great steamboat races In those days were less dangerous than during ordinary trips, for during that exciting period greater precautiona were taken to avoid an accident, and besides only a certain number of pounds of steam was permitted. Racing was never popular with the public at large, but to the people of the valley skirting the river and the steamboat men themselves it was a great event. The advance advertisement of u rare between two popular boats set the entire river country talking. Cotton and the tariff became side Issues, betting began on the favorite .and th. rare was snxlously awaited. While discussions and wagers were going on th. captains of the rival steamboats made contracts wl.h wood boata and coal flats, which wer. to be stationed at various points up th. river with th. crews ready to lay alongside and transfer the cargo of fuel on the move. Also th. ateamera must be completely overhauled and all spars re moved, as well as all dispensable weight and equipment. x If a boat ran faster at a certain ballast It must be loaded to that depth. The ser vices of a good pilot must be secured, for his knowledge of the stream and manage ment of the vessel meant the gain or loss of valuable time, and perhaps of the race. Few passengers wers taken and only short stops made. A Famow. Race. The greatest rare ever run was between th. Natches, a boat built In Cincinnati and commanded by Captain T. P. Leathers, and a New Albany boat, the Robert E Lee, under Captain John W. Cannon. There was spirited rivalry between th. two vessels, and when th. Natches made the fasteat time on record between New Or leana and 6t. Louta (l.TTS miles In three days twenty-cne hours fifty-eight minutes) Captain Cannon resolved to beat It. He engaged th. steamer Frank Fargoud and various fuel boats and arranged for them to meet him at varioua points up tho river with wood and coal. , Then he had - his boat cleared of all Its upper works likely to catch the wind and mado the vessel heavier. On Thursday, June 20, 1970, at 4:45 p. m. tho Robert F. Lee.atcamcd out of New Orleans. The Natches followed five min utes later. The race had been advertised In advance and -was now . awaited with gathering interest at all tho liver towns. Large crowds were assembled at Natches, Vlcksburg, Helena and other large places. Telegram reports . were sent out from va rious points, some even to Europe. Between Cairo and St. Louis the Natches afterward claimed to have lost seven hours and on. minute on account of a fog and broken machinery. . The . Robert E. Lee, however, was not delayed and arrived. In St. Louis thirty-three minutes ahead of th. previous record established by Its com petitor. Fifty thousand people' from th. housetops, tho levee and the decks of other steamers welcomed the winner ss It steamed Into port. Captain Cannon was th. Hon of th. hour. The business men gave a banquet In his honor. Soma steamboats like the John Stmonds during th. busy season did a 110,000 busi ness every round trip. This, however, was exceptional. ' As a general rule steam- boating was not a paying Industry, th. most fortunate owners making but per cent on the money Invested. Many a hungry mouth did th steamboat business fill In those days. In 1S33 the number of men earning their living In the various department of 'th. trade has been estimated at 90.000; ten year later, count ing only the laborers, engineers, pilots, re pairers and others of actual crews, there were about IHO.000 men employed. In 1S30 there was $3,000,000 invested In steam boats, with a yearly expense of 1,671,M0 for , wagea, $1,393,200 for wood, $835,S30 for provisions and $743,040 for other expenses. In 1S39 almost $2,000,000 was spent for wood alone along tho shores of western rivers. The steamboat age began about 1S21 and flourished for fifty years. As early as 1834 tho number of steamboats Is estimated at 230, and In 1842 there were 4S0 vessels, with a value of $25,000,000. But the golden era was from 1848 until the war, Never did the valley and steamboating prosper more than then. Thousands of bales of cotton were annually shipped to southern markets, and the wharves of St. Louis and Memphis and Vlcksburg and other large ports were stacked with piles of mer chandise and lined with score of steam er. But the war cam. on, cutting off com munication between th. north and south and sweeping th. trade away. Ironclads built from former packeta policed the mighty river. It waa a period of storm and stress that chloroformed prosperity on th. Mississippi. When peace was finally declared the surrlvort of th old steam boat daya wer. dead or engaged In other industries. Travel Magaxine. Foreigner Catch It. AMOY, China, May 29. The price of lice ha risen 50 per cent and the poor are II unable to buy food. Aa a consequence of this an anti-government demonstration look plac today at Ctiajig Chow, London's Social Set Gossips Over 'Frisco Widow Engagement of a Bich American Woman to Lord Innesker to Be Announced Soon. l LONDON, May SO. Certain circles of in ternational society are gossiping over the evident attachment of Lord Robert Innesker for Mrs. Miller Graham, a wealthy widow of Ban Francisco, and It Is said that an en gagement may be announced shortly. Mr. Graham 1 reported to be worth over $1,000.- 000. Lord Robert Is th. younger brother of the duke of Roxburgh, who was married to Mis May Ooelet of New York. Three years ago the duke's other brother, Alastair Robert Innesker, married Miss Anne Brexe, also of New York. Lord Robert went to America last year and it was freely gossiped that he went In search of a wife, but hi quest was fruitless, Mrs. Graham entertains aumptously here. She rent the houso of Lord Nunbufcnholrne on Grosvencr square, not far from th palatial new mansion of Mr. George Kep pel. For several years she enjoyed the friendship of a number of King Edward's social circle. She was presented at court In February two year ago, and was the j guest of King Edward at Marlenbud last lias youthful son and winter. She daughter. One of the features of a recent dance given by Mrs. Graham was the rolling of a huge watermelon Into tho ball room. Tho melon was cut open and a little pick- unnlny Jumped out, throwing flowers at the dancers. The small negro, however, was white, with a complexion of burnt cork. BANK P0RTERUNDER ARREST Man Working; at .10 Per Month Handle Thousand of Dollars! Rome Sticking- to Finger. MEMPHIS, Tenn., May 30. Charles Swank, a negro 29 year of age, porter at the Central Bank and Trust com pany, drawing a mere salary of $33 per month, was locked up Saturday morning at Central police station by Detectives rihea and Masoney, on a charge of larceny, to which, he admitted guilt. In Swank' ar rest a systematic theft of money was un covered. How much he ha stolen is not known. It Is not considered possible that the sum Is large. According to th. negro's admission, he had handled aa high a $5,009 at one time for the bank people and the temptation to steal wa too great. "You know how It Is to be poor and working for a little money, and seeing all that money every day," (aid Swank to the police. A I.lfe Sentence of suffering with throat and lung trouble Is quickly commuted by lr. King' New Liscovery. UK- and $1 oa For sale by Ucaton Drug Co. . ,-r f rtt.,, 1