Part 2. MAGAZINE SECTION. BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDA em 1805. 2 Y, OCTOBER 1 Uwe Farm Notes, Choice Fiction, Current Topics. 10 BUILD A NEW FORTUNE, NEARLY EIGHTY YEARS OLD, FORMER SENATOR STEWART BEGINS LIFE ANEW. i akes his Young Bride to Gold Camps of Nevada and Rears Comfortable Home~-Still feels the Wine of Youth At the age of seventy-eight, after having seen two generations rise and pass away; a former Governor of Ne- vada, a mine owner of great wealth, a United States Senator for eighteen years, William M. Stewart for loug known as the “Santa Claus” of the Senate, Is starting life anew amid the gold fields of Nevada. With the virility of youth this robust and hearty old-timer, says a dispatch from Rhyolite, Nev., has, with his young bride started in to make another million, Fortune has played prankes with Senator Stewart; at one time he had been one of the rich men of that mil- lionaires’ club the Senate, owning one of the most magnificent private houses in Washington. In the earlier days he extracted huge fees from the law suits | of western mines; at another time he has been down on his uppers; again he has been engaged in a big dairying pro Jeet Im Virginia: at other times he has dabbled again in Western mines and has run an Eastern mule farm. Retiring from the Senate Inst spring, he was again once more a4 poor man, and with his advanced years It was presumed by the unknowning ones he would sink into obscurity but like some others, “Bill Stewart has never known when he was down and out, and he Immediately started forth a gain In the battle of life with the purpose to again rebuild his fortunes, The chances are more than even that he will although he is nearly four sCoTe years The Senator expects to reap a pro- fitable harvest from the various legal matters arising out of the vast new gold fields which have been discovered in Nevada. He is an expert on min ning law and has at least the preced ent established of having received In former years a fortune as a single fee. Not Crushed by Fallure. Whatever may be mald about the Senator politically, his enemies will not deny that the physi eal makeup of the man Is marvelous to the last degree and that his courage is splendid. He Is of the type that VIEW OF RHYOLITE, NEVADA, SENATOR STEWART'S NEW HOM. eannot conceive defeat but goes on fighting. “This alr makes me fool like a four rold,” sald as he landed In evada with his daughter and his newly-married young wife. “There's no rm like Nevada, I tell you and | that I'll be doing a big law here before long. than to rust oun 8 now | $200.000, bitterest | model dairy in Virginia which put the last touches on a financial ruin that was begun when he teed to force a real estate boom in the direction of “Stewart's Palace,” the gorgeous structures he had put up when he ‘was one of the wealthiest men there. Back Among the Boys. The new Nevada home la A one story abode, ornamented with red and white stone. It has ten rooms, the bathroom dazzels with tiles and trap- pinngs and has a genulne shower bath, “1 want to make it as comfortable as I can for my wife nd daughter,” said the old Senator, “They're not as used to roughing it as I am.” A wide veranda stretches around the entire house, and the grounds are being graded, fenced and sodded. There is a pretty stable and a quaint little chicken house, The Sen- ator has purchased two hundred fowls and in his stable, instead of thorough bred horses he has a large, sleek pair of mules, which he considers more appropriate to the country. Of Another Generation. He Is ag § arations as 1 rested in though nis all these prep- he were pixty years younger than he 12 and ecombin- CLIMATE IN MANCHURIA. It Plays a Prominent Part in the Fortunes of War. The climate of Manchuria plays an Important role in the war between Russia and Japan. Up to the present we have had but little precise informa- tion upon this point. M, J. Ross has lately given the Scientific American in- dications as to the climate of that re gion and the character of the different seasons. He states that in the months of March and April there are strong southwest winds which bring with them heat and moisture, At the end of March the winter season ends. The POLITICAL MACHINERY, WAS NEVER SO PERFECT, FAR- REACHING AND EFFECTIVE AS TO-DAY, the President's request, he conld direct | the militant forces of Republicanism in the last campaign, has not been able to even nominally surrender the reins | of party management, although the] vast responsibilities of the Postmaster. Generalship devolved upon him at the | beginning of this year. | It was under the Hanna regime that At the Same Time the Voter Has Never Been So Independent—Edu- cational Campaigns a Feature of Practical Politics. J. J. Dickinson. Only one aphorism is known to have undersoll is still frozen at this time, | but the ground can be worked for agri- | culture. April appears to be the only month of spring. At the end of this | month the sowing of wheat commences, Summer begins in May, and at the end of June or the beginning of July the wheat is cut. Up to the end of June rain is rare and the sky is generally clear, while cloudy weather is an ex» ception, The heat reaches a maximum at the end of July and first part of August, Afterward come heavy rains or storms. It often rains for several days and nights without stopping. The soil is completely saturated and inun- dations are frequent. September is the harvest month, while October gives some of the finest weather of the year, At this time the climate is agreeable during the day and the sky is clear, with bracing alr, while vegetation is at its height, At the end of the month the first night frosts be- gin to pear, and in Nov the cold weather commences and keeps up until March, At Mukden the tempers ature sometimes reaches a very low des rir aj ember been publicly uttered and reiterated by the late Orville H. Platt, a Senator in Congress from Connecticut for a quar {ter of a century and one of the re ally great statesmen of our time and coun try. It was this: “Ours is a government of parties by parties for the people,” It was by this rule that the fine old Yankee squared his vote at the polls and in the Senate, It guided his thought and action. It accounted for his partisanship, which, though never offensive, was always robust. Insensibly the American people have adopted the Platt aphorism, Party or- gree, During however, the cold Is not ex I the middl become very utherly posit temperature | F. Abou | ye ar are dry for the nx sive wet ¢ of the wint w season only occurs dur ng a month or so. north of the gulf of Liao g. the mean winter temperature 18 F.. and the mean fo shore | | . 14.8 deg. {perature is 47.1 deg maritime provinces mean annual temperature. At Viadiv- ostock the average for the winter is 10.2 deg. F., and for the summer it is only 39.9 deg. F. F hav © The a very i —— THE RIGHTS OF MAN, They Should Include an Opportunity to Make a Home on a Plece of Land. The right to work, to employ one's elf, comes from Nature, and not from legi action, If that Is true, ¥% the Detroit News Tribune, it fol that legislatures have no right to make regulations which will permiv the cornering of opportunities for self- employment. The United States laws roverning our national domain of land ere originally designed to conform to rights of man. Our homestead cts were designed to place the land In the hands of those who would actually use it productively, and much of the land was so parcelled out to the great advantage of society. ut cun- ning lawyers and unscrupulous men who want to reap where they have not rislative WH the sown, who seek to avold productive la- ing a honeymoon with the first serious | bor themselves by controlling the op- battle in life most luxurious The house, pretty as to his Washington palace about i ff penny compares to a £20 dollar gold plece, and yet he is lmmensely ple eed with It When you see him laughing, bolster. ous and boyish, taki: the keenest pleasure In all his poor possessions, aud seemingly never giving a thought to those he had lost In his old age, you have to rub your eyes and say to yourself: “Can this really be Senator William M. Stewart who has had the world at hig feet time and again, the man who, as leading counsel for the Falr-Flood- Mackay syndicate on the famous Com stock Lode, received In one fee It Is, compares od then the largest sum ever irriages in the capitol. | revelations [the West are The mules please him | portunities of self-employment, have as much as if he had never ridden be- | succeeded hind the handsomest teams and in the | tions in the of cornering large sec United States. The the land frauds In worthy of great at tention, but they excite Jess inter est than do our troubles with President Castro of Venezuela. astonishing fact is learned that one man has acquired nearly 23.000 square miles of public land. He does not want to use it himself, and Lis only object is to make others pay him for the privi- lege of using it. He therefore makes it more difficult for men to employ themselves, and the rights of man are to that extent denied. ——— 20th Century Empire Bailding. of Great as Is the power of war In the received by any lawyer in the world | building of an empire—and the Jap: in a single fee; the man who was In his prime when President Lincoln was | assassinated, and who Is the only ly ing person that saw the oath adminis tered to Andrew Johnson In the Kirk wood House: the man who will al ways be remembered In New York cafes a8 “the gayest old Santa Clams that ever liked,” the man whose political career has had more crooks and turns than a Boston street; the man who controlled the state of Ne vada absolutely; the man who has not even great plety or overserupu lous integrity to cheer him In misfor tune and enable him to look back over a pathway of good deeds and noble endeavors—can it be that this happy, vigorous, hopeful septuagen. anese Russian war will probably make a great nation of Japan—there is an even greater force at work In the world that will in the end decide the fates of peoples. This Is the power of one nation to absorb the Individuals rather than to wipe out or swallow another government. The Twentieth Century will probably witness the greatest centralization of peoples under vast empires, that the world has seen since the days of Roman greatness. When the ood tury ends, the outlook Is that there will be a balf dozen first nations, created by assimilation Instead of war Japan will be one, with its influence felt throughout Eastern Asia, Russia will, of course, advance, Germany will nrobably have absorbed Austria. The! Latin races of Southern Europe may | have combined for self-protection. England will go on empire building. and the United States will have spread over the continent, and maybe two continents, besides having ab sorbed vast numbers of peoples from all countries of the earth, —— With His Favorite Punch, From the Washington Post, Colonel Watterson sald he would nter the political arena again in the fall, but declined to tell just how, says the New York Sun. parian 8 actually Senator Stewart? It's a safe wager that he will enter it as usual, prodding the elephant. The | | permanent headquarters of the Repub Hean National Committee were estab lished in Washington. Mr, Hanna set the fashion of the chairman of the Na- tional Committee settling quarrels be tween warring factions, threatened so to disrupt the party Ix tween campaigns as to seriously darken its prospects in intervening State, Con gressional and city ele The Democratic National Commit- | tee's headquarters are nominally in the | offices of Chairman T., T. Tagg ! Indianapolis, though much of the work of that organization is still New York by August Belmont ar F. Sheehan, the leading member | Executive Committee : paign., As the Democrats | eral patronage to disper that falls to Messrs. Tage . and Shechan is of a purely a | and supervisory character | without saying, of course, t! William J. Bryan has very ence in th ] even though he cial authority. The organizations next in Import to the N nal Con ttee State Committees, In five States both of t} tain il ire, ore 18 10 d with : € Qed is clothe are nu At Ninchwang, on | the sum- | The mean snnual tem- | Russian | low | HON. GEORGE B. CORTELYOU, | Ohatrman Republican National Committee, i | ganization was never so strong and { carefully nurtured as at present | party discipline was never so rigid; party leadership was never so placidly recog. nized and implicitly obeyed by party party pri ie, n, won for the De: ries In Re ng victor nd w wt d i? Oe ©] » party sw an s ng! ® iris ng se of hen appeared the t from his business fmpul within his ¥ to a movement similar to that h., under the tutelage of Tilden, ad brought surprising victories to the rats, control, "I » Marcus A, Ham ter and gave 1s animates both of the great parties is not indolent or lukewarm campaigus, In an important sense, it is as active now it was when the lines of battle were drawn after the national conventions of last summer had done thelr work, The difference between them is made conspicuous by reason of the fact that the Republican party Is in power and its central or- ganization-the National Committee Is necessarily more in evidence than its counterpart in the opposition organiza- As THOMAS TAGGART, Chairman Democratic Natl nal Committee The spirit of organization which now | between | ts its office: wrs of the conn mm) Hi committee i ant secretaries City, ward, mitt Sta each district of the Stats trict committees, not to mes n the myriad host of political clubs of mush- | room growth and others of stable life] and permanent habitations, complete a line of political organizations that | ramify every avenue of our activit i and are in the woof and web of our na- tional life, Nearly every candidate keeps always in } cour av veils A hine, usually heade alert and ent onded by “8 Hees Congres for President 5 4 5 rar Of Ww ng in the » E : resp table much-al vale mac { lose of one the open political machinery, howeve worthy of note that at recent history of the | American voter she | pendence of thought. one of the reasons labor and } To test public } lar sentiment in the making forms and the nomination of ca is one of the importa: t funct ganization. The American v telligent, alert and independen party machinery of today ated for the purpose of drivis like sheep, to the polls or in the ex- | pectation of bhoodwinking the voters It exists for the purpose of crystalliz- ing and making effective a particular political creed. It can do nothing more | than this. ue iriioy Onin . or is k | CHOnge | A quarrels that | Te Wa men, | ANCIENT AND MODERN JEW. Peculiar Customs in Blowing the Rams on Jewish New Years. The customs of different religious bodies many changes inauguration, and these are as marked among the ww are other religious bodies jent customs, however, are still followed out, as they were in the lays of Mos by the strictly ortho- (lly in certain parts ng those orthodox persecution at erica to make home, where » undergone pinee Jow few an OF BLOWING THE 11herty. ish New ne of Jew, gotten, with his g obese rved on: on the ye have ile work ng the cor- Numbers Ory ¢ differently reform Jews, the bible i and Is nown nn Like wa "and Is used in all Jewish synagogues ou this New Year's day ar £ horn, . MODERN VING THE RAMS JEW the sir In shaved his Jew never \ committed | bar him from n he is ready wns the “tal takes his the rabbi, the service ’ ; Wi far he wl 1k n : i oa h 't | the alt le certain places in the solemn sounds, ar, bes Illustrated by Ernest Haskell tion—the Democratic National Commit tee. These contral bodies of the two great partied have lines of subsidiary organizations reaching down through the States, cities, Congressional dis tricts and counties to the voting pre- | cincts, i Between campaigns, the National | Committees are neither idle nor une watchful, The permanent headquarters | of the Republican National Committers are In Washington, and are under the te supervisivi of Elmer Dover, the committee's szoretary, and former. Iy Senator Hanna's private and conf) dential secretary. committee's headquarters occupy rooms in one of the finest office buildings in the Na- tional Capital. The Hon. G B. on, who vacated a seat at . oosevelt's Cabinet board to sue at the Court of Maximilian in Mexico, where with that of the beautiful Jacqueline. The Lest romantic American novel of re cent years. 133-137 Bast 16th St, New York. coed Mr, Hanna as chairman of the National Committee in Lvery reader of this pap Cut off the coupon and mail lo us with $1.50. sourian The romantic adventures of John Dinwiddie Driscoll (nicknamed “The Storm Centre “Hae what so few of ite clas possess, the elements of reality, wrought by infinite poing of detasl, verivimilotsde, mpgestion DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. & ww should have this book. By Eugene P. Lyle, Jr. Published August 1st 18TH THOUSAND ALREADY All Bookstores, $1.50 his secret mission comes into conflict or . Sx s » &