Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 15, 1883, Page 4

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| 4 THE DATTY REF--OMATA. SATURDAY. DECEM THE DAILY BEE---=OMAHA. SATURDAY, DECEMBER THE GCMAHXA BEE Omaha OMce, No. 016 7 arnam St Oouncil Blafle OMce, No. ¥ Pearl Street, Nvar Broadway. New York Office, 1toom 65 Tribune Baflding. .l Dublished overs morning, excepd Bunday. The waly Monday morning daily. RS RY MATL. $10.00 | Throo Montha, .. 5.00 | One Month, ne_Yoar . Six Monens. | ¥HR WKLY BER, PUBLISIAD NVRRY WRDNRSDAY. 0 00 THRMS POSTRAID, One Yoar...........82.00 | Three Montha.... 480 $ix Months. ... 1.00 | One Month... ..\... 20 Amorican Nows Company, Solo]Agents_:Newdoal- re i tho United States. conRmRPONDPRNCRS A Communieations relating to News and Editorial Babtors dhould be addromed o the Epiron, or Tuw o BUSINRSS LATTRRS. nd Romittances should be X0 COMPAXT, OMATIA. rders to bo made pay- able to the order of the company. THE BEE POBLISHING CO,, PROPS, E. ROBEWATER, Editor. The American congress to Bismarck: “Snoutrage !" E————— The Cleveland Leader romnrks that the Egyptian war is a sort of commercial affair, with the prophet on one side and theloss on the other. — e Wirnix the last few days board of trade memberships in Chicago have ad- vanced from $2,000 to $3,600. Board of trade memberships in Omaha are not worth as much as a membership of a com- mercial college, A ra1LROAD line running south from Philadelphia has adopted the new stand- ard in the measurement of time. The rain leaves at 17:55 and arrives at Balti- more at 20:45, When the Omaha Belt railway opens up, its trains will leave at 24 o'clock, and reach the reservoir at 254 Tur Kansas City Zimes has this to say concerning Nebraskw’s senior senator: “The plucky Van Wyck of Nebraska has opened the ball todeclare forfeited lapsed railroad grants, It is to be hoped Mr. Van Wyck will hold his republican brethren strictly to theissue and allow no prevarication, no squirming and no dodg- ing.” Tuz Prince of Wales has recently been investing large sums of money in Kansas lands. When Mr. Robinson, of New York, introduced that resolution, twist- ing the British lion’s tail by inquiring into the recent acquisition of great tracts of land by foreign noblemen, he doubt- leas had in his mind’s eye the successor of Queen Victoria. Tk cattle kings of the west will have some business at the national capital this winter. Senator Ingalls proposes to make it unpleasant for the enterprising herdsmen who are in the habit of fencing up large tracts of the public domain for cattlo ranges. He will endeavor to se- cure the passago of a bill levying a pen- alty of 100 per day on every man ‘who maintains a fence on the public lands, The cattle men will send in remon- strances. Tue North Bend Flail says that the attempt of the Omaha Republican to lampoon President Arthur for any posi- tion taken in his truly praisworthy mes- sage will not meet with the sympathy of republicans. The Flail *is free to con- fess that it likes the ring of the message, and it believes that the sensible people of all parties must admit that the presi- dent's points are well taken, and that his ideas carried out cannot fail to be a bless. ing to the country. He strikes direct from the shoulder on the pubtic land, the railroad and the telegraph questions, and if congress will heed his suggestions and work earnestly to effect the reforms he advises the country will have no rea- son to regret it. There is no misconstru- ing the position the president has taken, and we believe he has atruck a key note that will respond in unison throughout the whole nation.” Bue New York Sun still shouts for Holman, It is now publishing daily a half columnof “‘characteristic utterances” of Mr, Holman, under the heading of “The wisdom of a patriot.” One of these gems of wisdom relates to tobavee. Mr. Holman is credited with saying: *‘The-tax of tobacco is one which affects an absolute necessity of human life, “There is no use in talking of it simply as a luxury, asa thing that may be dis. pensedl with, Tobacco may be injurious to the human system, and all that, but itis a solace to the poor as well as a con- solation 1o labor, and, indeed to men un- der all eonditions of life.” This is a very shrewd scheme of .Dana to catch the support of smokers and chewers for his Hoosier candidate. The.support of the tobacco conaumers, irrespective of party, will elect any one to the presidency, e — Tue raileoad committee of the senate has been packed as usual by the con- federated monopalies. Bawyer, an Osh- kosh millionaire, has been made chair- man; next comes Sewell, the New Jersey railroad magnate; followed by Sabin, the Minnesota railroad manopolist. Riddle- berger, the tail to the Mahone kite, is sandwitched botween Lawar, of Missis’ sippi, one of Jay Gould's best workers, aud Brown, of Georgia, whose millions were amassed out of convict labor aud Georgia railroads. Williams, of Ken- tucky, and Jones, of ¥lorida, are what might be called non » commiv tal. 4 Washington dispatch {0 the New York Zhucs says in the handsef this railroad committee the railroad interests of the country are safe. No impertinept sttempts to abridge cor- porate privileges are likely to slip through this committee unebserved. We should say not. The comuittee might as well have been wade up of Leland Btanford, Vanderbilt, Jay (iould, @iduey Dillon and Fred, Ames, THE DUTY OF CONURFESS, Sound republican papers and conserva- tive republican sentiment throughout the country have hailed with gratifieation the defest of Mr, Randall and tho organi- zation of the national house of represent- atives with M. Carlisle as speaker. They have done this, too, with a full un- derstanding of what Mr. Carlisle’s elec- tion means and in the expectation of a ronewal of the tariff discussion which took up so large a part of the closing dags of the late session. The few spas- modic attempts on the part of small-bore editors and partisans to raise the sec- tional issue have excited no comments excopt that of ridicule on the part of the gonoral public. A simple analysis of the vote was only necessary to show that northern votes came in as large propor- tions to Mr. Carlisle’s support s those from south of the .line, while the over- whelming majority by which he secured the prize so_ eagerly coveted by Mr. Randall evidenced the feeling among the democracy that the party could no longer afford to dodge an issue upon which in- dependent sentiment throughout the country was steadily focusing. ‘That the issuo of revenue reduction is as pertinent and imperative to-day as it was n year ago the figures of the treasury department boar witness. At the end of the current fiscal year we shall be confronted with a surplus within twenty millions as large as that which the last congress endeavored to whittle down. The reduction in the custom re- coipts has been imperceptible, owing to increased importations, while the bulk of the decrease in the revenue has been caused by the lapping off of internal taxes. Of these the consumer has re- ceived no benefit except from the aboli- tion of the match stamp. The slight re- duction in the license and tax on tobacco has accrued solely to the manufacturers and venders. The experience of nearly six months has shown oxactly what hon. est congressmen and honest editors pre- cicted, viz: That the tariff bill was a sop thrown to a pressing public senti- ment, with no expectation, on the part of the framers, that it would remedy the ovils which demanded the operation of & sound and effective law. It is euch a law that the country looks to the present congress to frame and pass. The cry that a renewed agitation of the tariff will menace the business interests and create increased stagnation in trade has been raised too often to be effec- tive, and recent interviews with bank presidents and leading merchants in the cast show that it has very properly lost its forco. Whatever increases tho gene- ral prosperity and decreases tho cost of living assists trado and greases tho wheels of commerce A reduction of taxation has never yet been known to precipitate a general panic. Pampered industrial monopolists and over-stimulated indus- tries which have fattened from the pro- ducers of this country naturally rebel at a reduction of their profits, but the people will not regret individual losses which acerue to the general gaiu. One thing is certain, The republican party can no longer afford to lay itself open to the charge that it is the party of mono- polists and favored interests, = There have been facts in abundance for argu- ment on this point, and they could be used with renewed vigor in case the present congressional minority place themselves in opposition to a legitime re- duction of a taxation which affects every resident of the country. Nor need a cheerful acquiesance in a conservative re- vision of the tariff by republicans run counter to party principles or party platforms. No sensible man is deceived for a moment by the rant of the absolute free trader, For a decade to come a taril of twenty per cont. will be demanded by the revenuc re- quirements of the national treasury. An average of twenty per cent of protection added to the material protection of ocean freight charges will be ample to stimulate American industry and maintain the wages of American workingmen, Our present tariff of more than thirty-three per cent has no honest reason for exist- enoe except the greed and influence of o powerful lobby of wealthy manufactur- ers whose efforts to maintain the cus- toms tax at exorbitant rates have re- sulted in the commercial and industrial depression which incvitably follows over- preduction, The duty of congress is clear and imperative. - To the peoplo at large it mattors very little which party foels the direct responsibility of execut- ing their wishe lightening the burden, Their representatives in both parties who work and yote for a fair tax reduction bill regardlos¥ of ‘the money and threats of the protected interests will receive proper credit from a constituency as wide as the country itself, Tuk council has rejected the bid for street cleaning, and his decided to have the work done under the supervision of the street commissioner until June next, Some of the councilmen are evidently laying their pipes for re-election. It isa notorious fact that the men who work under the street commissioner are for the most part political pengioners, who sub- sist on the city and do as little work as they can, Iv will cost our tax. payers from 50 to 100 per cent. more to do the street cleaning through the street commissioner than it would to have it done by a contractor, who attends close- ly to his business. But the council evi- dently cares less for the tax-payers than it does for making political capital. So far as the workingmen of Omaha are con- cerned, there is no material advantage. ne swallow doos not make & summer, The thirty or forty men employed under the street commissioner by the day will not raise the wages of 5,000 other work- ingmen employed clsewhere. On the mnl:\ry. every workingman who owns a little home is interested in keeping taxes down. Laborers who do notown a home dorive no advantage from » system that only givea a soft job to a few, while the masses are compelled to put in a full day of honest hard labor for a full day's pay. ——— UNDERGROWND WIRES. In nearly all the large cities there Is & strong movement to forco the telegraph and electric light companfs to put their wires underground. In New York the matter seems to be attracting more atten- tion than anywhere else. This is owing to the fact that the eloctric wires have killed a number of persons. Such fatal accidents have happened in other citics, but not with such frequency as in New York. The electric light wires have proven dangerous to life, and the tele- graph and telephone wires are not only a nuisance upon the streets, but they are are a serious obstacle in the way of fire extinguishment. The telegraph com- panies do not take action in this matter simply because they do not wish to in- volye any extra expense. They no longer can tell the public that it is impracticable to put their wires underground. Ac- cording to o late issue of the Deutsche Brauzeitung, a Germanpublication which ought to be well qualified to know whereof it speaks, there are now in operation in the German empire alone no less than 23,000 miles of subterranean wire, out of a total of 162,000 miles of line, France has 7,200 miles of under- ground wire in successful use. Austria- Hungary comes next with 354 miles of her lines under ground, and Russia fol- lows with a subterranean system cover- ing 115 miles. Between Berlin and Halle, in Germany, there are over four hundred miles of wire in all laid beneath the surface of the earth, and working as satisfactorily as the air-strung lines, with the additional advantage that they are less liable to injury and interruption from atmospheric and other causes. In France, the telegraph lines belonging to the raillway between Parisand Nancy, a distance of 170 miles, are wholly laid under the ground, A few years hence the telegraph offi- cials will wonder why they kept their wires above ground so long. With the wires underground the expense of poles and constant repairs to the lines, which are 80 frequently broken and interrupted by storms, will be avoided. Under ground no storm will disturb the wires, and a constant communication is insured. In Denver recently telegraph and telphone poles and wires were damaged by a snow and wind storm to the extent of §15,000. The poles and wires were prostrated in a confused mass, and there was a serious interruption to business for several days, a thing which would not have happened had the wires been under ground. If the authoritics of every city took a decided stand in this matter, it would only bea question of a very short time when we would no longer see the un- gainly poles and the mass ef wires ob- structing the streets. The only way to do is to declare them a nuisance and or- der them removed within a certain time. The telegraph and telephone companies have millions at their command, and it will be no hardship upon them. The underground system will prove as much a benefit to them as to the public. THE SOLDIERS' LAND-BOUNTY BILL. 1f there is any more public land, after what has been donated to the railroads, to be given away by the government, it seems proper that the soldiers should have an opportunity to acquire some of it. With that end in view, Mr, Hill, of Ohio, has introduced in the house a very liberal soldiers’ land-bounty bill. 1t pro- vides that every three-years soldier or commissioned officer shall have a land warrant for 160 acres of land; every sol- dier of one year, eighty acres, and every three months-soldier, forty acres. The land warrants are to be issued in con- formity with' the act granting lands to soldiers of the Mexican war. Objections have already been raised against this bill, one of which is that, like the Mexican bounty bill, it will be of a great deal more benefit to the speculators than to the soldiers. Under the Mexican bill the land warrants were bought cheaply by the speculators and located in large tracts. Any soldier's land-bounty bill ought to provide that any land taken under it should be for a homestead for the sol- dier, and provisions should be made against any soldier selling his land war- rants as a matter of speculaticn. Too much precaution cannot be exercised to prevent large tracts of laud passing into the hands of a few speculators, But comparatively very little available public land remains, and that should only be given to soldiers upon condition of 1ocat- ing upon it, or holding it in their own name for a certain number of years be- fore they can sell it. — OTHER LANDS THAN OUKS. Latest cable advices from Egypt con- tradict the sensational reports that have heretofore been received from the upper Nile. Kl Mahdi is reported as being ra. pidly deserted by his followers, The re- ports lack confirmation, While they are plausible they are not very probable, Un. less the vast horde of fanatical ragamuf- fins, who constitute his army, are suffer- ing for.the want of food they are not like- ly to disperse. But while Kl Mahdi and his forces are in condition to resist the advance of the Kgyptian army led by Brisish officers they are not in a shape to carry on an aggressive war and swoep down the valley of the Nile to Cairo, One British gunboat on the Nile can hold back El Mahdi’s entire army. People forget the shape and form of Egypt. Egypt is, in fact, more than one thousand miles long, and only six miles wide, The only habitable or traversable country ex- tends some three miles on cach side of the Nile. This {s fertile because tho river overflows it; beyond are the hills, and above these the hot flaring, lifeless des. ert. General Pasha, who occupies Cairo, has an army of about 8,500 well equipped men and will have a river fleet to protect the metropolis of Egypt against any force that El Mahdi might concentrater. The grand ovation given in Dublin in honor of Parnell demonstrates that Ire- Iand never will be pacified until the re- forms contended for by the National Land league are granted. They may not even then be pacified, for many of the national leaders will accept nothing less than an Trish republic. Such a change is not liable to take place until England assumes a republican form of government in place of & menarchy. Whatever may be the outcome of the agitation, Parnell himself has freaped a rich reward for his efforts in behalf of the Irish people, and especially the Irish peasantry. The repressive measures ‘adopted by the British government do not seem to dishearton the agitators, who keep right on with their work, whother they are in English prisons or on [Irish soil Mr. Parnell's somewhat intemperate speech at the banquet has isolated his party. The English radicals have heretofore given tho Irish ‘leader a strong support. They have succeeded in overcoming the race prejudice which has always been so marked in connection with Irish affairs, but they cannot forgive jthe so-called insult offered to their queen by the omis- sion of her name from the head of the toast-list, Mr. Parnell is responsible for this breach of the ordinary propri- oties and the intemperate statements to which he gave utterance will undoubtedly prevent an alliance between the Parnellites and radicals, which was almost concluded. The whigs will join hands with the tories against them as their common enemy. The tories fore- sce this result and are elated at the sud- den turn of affairs in their favor. Mr. Parnell apparently abandoned his habit- ual caution. His threats against the great English liberal party are looked upon as being evidence of ingratitude and treachery. He stigmatized them as wolves in sheep's clothing, and accused them of having done their best to ruin Ireland. The expressions are regarded by the liberals as unpatriotic in the ex- treme,, and they now realize that the line of legislation which they have mapped out, and for which they will be held responsible during the next session of parliament, will be again menaced by the presence of men whose sole mission is to impede or if possible nullify their efforts. Therc will probably be eighty Parnellites in parliament after the next olection, whose policy will be a reflection of the sentiments illustrated at the ban- quet. They will, as they have declared, hold the key to the situation unless their threats should cause a blending for com- mon protect.i&j; of the two English parties. b There is still a strong probability that a rupture between France and China may be averted. The Marquis Tseng, who is the plenipotentiary of the Chinese empe- ror, still remains in Paris awaiting fur- ther developments. His acceptance of an invitation to attend a banquet given by the French premier would indicate that this astute diplomat did not mean what he said some weeks ago when he served notico on President Grevy that the attempt of the French to occupy Bacninh, the key to China, would be taken as a declaration of war against China, The French chambers have voted the money to equip the army of invasion, and the naval and military commanders are believed to be under instructions to take that Annamite citadel, whatever the consequences may be. Tu this connection o description of the objective points of tho French invasion will prove interesting: Bacninh, and Honghoa, the citadel be- yond_Sontay, form the last defence of ithe Red river. The surroundings of Bacninh are more marked than the Ton- quin Delta. Bacninh is a rolling coun- try in the centre of a plain where a very littlo land is cultivated. The citadel is four or five kilomotres from the river, while those forts which the Franch have in their power and that of Sontay are at least a kilometro away from the shores of tho river which they guard. The city is surrounded with fortifications, and with a large suburb which extends on either side of the highway from Hanoi into China by way of Langson, The citadel is composed of six bastions, aoout 300 metres each. 1t is surrounded with deep fosses, over which stationary bridges havo been thrown. The ap- proaches to the citadel are guarded by numerous outworks. Bacninh, placed at the point of junc- tion of the roads leading to China, is the key of the Delta into the region of north- ern Tonquin, In going into the htgh- lands (that 1s, toward the Chinese fron- tier) these roads go through the defiles which were, a few years ago, guarded by a series of small forts in bad repair, The route from llanoi to Langson is futher- more impeded by a wall several miles in length At Honghoa, the citadal is 600 metres in circumference and is 400 metres from the river. The outer wall, made of bricks, about twelve feet in thickness, is surrounded by a ditch. There were twenty-four old cannon in this fortress last year, bnlly preserved, and its approaches were impeded by chevaux de frise. The visit of the crown prince of Ger- many to Italy is the chief topic of specu- ulation in diglomatic circles nbnnJ. It was only decided ¢n the 4th of Decem- ber, after an exchange of long cipher dis- patches betwsen Emperor William, Bis- marck and the crown prince. Nobody in Berlin seems able to explain why this journey to Bome was undertaken. The clericals are quite as ignorant on this point as the liberals. Herr Windthorst, the leader of the centre, when told of the projected jowrney, said that it was im- possible, otherwise he should have known something sbout it. The Moniteur de Rome, closay connected with the Vati- can, had a tllegram from Berlin which said that negotiations with the Vatican have remained so far without any result, and that thecrown prince’s visit was in- tended for the Vatican primary and not for the Quirmal. Had the crown prince Burdoc —— BLoob — B ITTERS Cures Secrofuls, Erysipelas, Pimples and Face Grubs, Blotches, Boils, Tumors, Tot- ter, Humors, Salt Scald Hi Diseases, and Irregularities, Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Juandice, Affections of the Liver, Indi- gestion, Biliousness, Dyspep- sia and General De wished to see the king of Italy alone the latter would doubtless have made a jour- ney to Genoa, or some other point, to moet him. The journey to Rome for this object, therefore, is quito unneces- sary. The liberals assert that Prince Bis- marck has arranged to settle the politi- cal and ecclesiastical conflict with Rome for the purpose of obtaining a majority in the reichstag by a combination with the conservatives and centre in order to carry through his scheme for the in- surance of workmen against accidents; but thisidea is untenable, as Prince Bis- marck would scarcely sacrifice a position in_which he believes himself right in order to gain a passing victory in the reichstag. There must be other and greater reasons besides this forthesudden summoning of the minister of Cultus Sa- turday to Friedrichsruhe., It would seem to point out that Bismarck himself was unprepared. The only plausible as- sumption is that the crown prince's visit is undertaken at the personal wish and will of Kaiser Wilhelm, who desires peace with Rome before he leaves the empire to his successor. One Berlin paper calls to mind the words addressed by the crown prince during his short period of regency June 10, 1878, to a homeless pope: *“Tnis visit doubtless re- sults from a natural desire on the part of Kaiser Wilhelm to leave the empire at peace not only with its powerful neigh- bors, but, what is more essential, with itself.” The Roman press, in discussing the visit of the crown prince of Germany to Ttaly, comment freely on the effect of such an occurrence on the relation exist- ing between the Vatican and the church in France. The liberal journals insist that if the pope accords a friendly recep- tion to Frederick William French Cath- olics will take offense, and that his holi- ness, instead of accomplishing any good result, will practically bo dropping the substance and clutching at the shadow. Churchmen affect indifference regnrdiug the effect on France of the prince's visit. They say that she is drifting so rapidly toward agnosticism that the Vatican must look in other directions for substan- tiol support. Events in the Southeastern Pacific are bfll? ing clearly in the directio$ of the or- ganization of & eaepdlic, came posed of all the English speakinff pro-| vinces in that quarter. The opposition of the British home government to the annexation of New Guinea to Queens- land, instead of inducing the colonists to abandon that agressive and ambitious scheme, has only inflamed the annexa- tion spirit and made it more violent than ever. A conference of delegates from the several Australian provinces was held re- cently which showed a determined feel- ing in favor of the annexation not only of New Guinea, but of the New He- brides and other adjacent islands, and the organization of all the provinces into a defensive and offensive imperial confed- eracy. The spirit exhibited was so reso- lute and significant that the home government has deemed it advisable to adopt a milder tone and even to signify its toleration of the annexation echeme, The colonists are evidently in a mood not to be trifled with. Right or wrong, they have made up their minds to seize all the islands adjacent to Australia, sub- ject them to English sway, and make them the building stones of a great Eng- lish-speaking empire in that quarter of the globe, and the home ministers are be- ginning to see that they must recognize and accept this future, or risk the loss of these rich and growing provinces as they lost the American colonies a hundred years ago. The only condition on which the home government can hope to main- tain its authority over the south Pacitic | & provinces is that of allowing themto have their own way. R AN L THE GREAT GERMAN nEE[l FOR PAITIIN. CURES Rheumatism, Nauralg}a, Sciatica, Jeada oth, AND ACIES. Finy Ceate s botta s C.E. MAYNE & CO., (509 Famam Street, - - Omaha, Neb. WHOLESALE S8HIPPERS AND DEALERS IN Hard & Soft Coal “_AND~ CONNELSVILLEEC KO! EP" Write for Prices, 1883, 1 STEELE, JOENSON& CO., AND JOBBERS IN A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. 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