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THE OMAHA DAILY BE EPTEMBER 7, 1890. Vashi SOLITIOAT CHOW-CHOW, THE DAILY BEE | REOPENING OF THE SCHOOLS own dignity and honor to give the mat- | comic doggerel that would convulss the | tained a lobby In Washington is ample | o candidate. Delegates to the senatorinl and POLITIOAL, CHOW-C1 ) AlL LE, | 0 { { The summer fon of the public | tor amost thorough investigation, giv- | amusement loving world and at the same | evidence of their selfish motives, The | representative conven should inquir Ihe fact that General Weaver, the gr tomorrow botween thivteen and fourteon | the fucts, and visiting punishment if it | porhaps a misfactuno that Gilbert & Sul+ | hold arid lnad until o thorough survey | (b VRO B BN epilen. o Somtiiion iy e 6 W Sy bo Ve thousand children will enter the ‘e shall be found to be dese livan quarreled! but as the result of it | had been made, reservoir loeations | - o “w.:l:uy\”,‘\”w ;"‘"\v By ““m‘m.‘ A res of the people,” as the public . 0 0 show what a mine is yot to | mapped and the area of land capable of A Scramble for Offive, | because nis candidacy i fowa will keop hi schools lave been aptly styled, the | OUR MANUFACTURING INTERESTS v lin their particular line of | being irrigated on a given stream dofi- o ik, 'if‘fzfl.f',l'iff{\x. have ‘nomt | TRt harningiag tho pecole With His At he | nated old-time democrats on_ thele tickets tho | Sense on this nde of the river, | ht 1 h X : % e democrats have endorsed them, but where | The pomination of Dr. Pete Schwenk of Weekly Bee. One Year " 1® | school work. Preparations have been | 1* "“I'l"-“' ')“"w”"‘]‘ a8 ; '””{‘ll‘w[ fortune to comgto them through their pl',:\l of the law puts an <~ml_ to it. The re- | wonyplicans have been nominated by the in- | Madison county for state sonator, shows t %th Stroe octed in adding 10 senting 4 ¢ ollars. - - & e yndicates for e a rato tickets, ofar as the democrs re s 1ot at all particalar whero they lig South Graha, Comer\ aiia ith Stroeta | pocted incrense by adding to t ating | oo o hty firms gavo omployment to | THAT SHALE, DO WITH OUR BOYS! | 1 coce tn the tillable sren, but the fact | conosrned the whe WA Nescivod| 7O nok s Rl partioilus wiero they g seventeen hundred and thivteen men. In The manner in which technieal y apacity o ¢ of the schools, bui The Fobiisae Ho stateomtral Chiengo Offiee, 317 Clhamber of Commeree, capacity of many of 3 . oo || Theait1oNs & 88 N L sod Wi he mecting of tho democratic state cont val Now Vork. looma 0,14 and 15 Tribyne Butlding | tho school authoritics nve confronted that thoss organiaations are glyen unre- | iteel ko8 sormble foe thooflods withous | .o yess “sonnoasd Tangoly of ddmodtatis Washington. 515 Fourteenth Stréct. | with the usual annual trouble of a lack | ten years the industries h_n grown to . n:l r'l;n:nl bal o lmr(.l('H u!: |:“”_.” stricted sway will prove a detr |\'|'.‘.", e:lr:‘r:qw:ffl".mn &;:VIV.I::‘!\‘I‘“.HH ,\».uwu o | oditors, dia not accomplish much, Prof CORRESION DENCE commodations, and it is certain that | 1@ hundred and forty, with an aggre- | 0ne of the unsottled questions appoaling |y, \uemanoncy of the farming of the I 1 fiud himself in the democratic | Rakestraw of Otoe, candidate for supe O T e o oo i wl k admission to the schools | 84te capital of fourteen millions, em- | for solution to every man of moderate | o iain statos e anc flud Rimeoll fn tho domocrablo | oo, dont of public fnstruction, was presont editorin watter should be addressed he | some who scek admission to the scho y o r i > bibood' ) amp. A I TR tressed 1o e | have to bo denied. for o time, This | Ploying cleven thousand men and turn- | means who desives to give his boy —— ks P R, the moeting, but ho was not called upon for 4 8 T ar NB T i to be regrotted, because thore ave few | I0g out in 1889 products valued at | mechanical education. The industrial THE colleges of America are not free INGALLS UPON BECK. speech, Other eandidates should give way pA busine lottorsand it cos ahoild | [ s beet Keenly felt, both | twenty-four millions g Fevaliion S 1iiie A K BtasHUH teR iy Hea e addressed to The Beo Publishing Comp | coenly felt, Do 3 ¥ w be made payable to the order of the som= | PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, I8 OF SUBSCRIPTION T b MW | large majority to resume their studies, | Ten years ago the manufacturing in- nent, it may be of somo benefit to | nitely determined. This important work ghirec months . % | but many to take their first stepin | lorests of Omaha were in their infancy. | the many whoave waiting for fame and | was only partialiy completed, and the ro- 3 from young men who give themselvesup — to the professor and 1ot him talk at loast disappointments more £ el AN, AT et _ young g The G Senator Speaks | onco. it ekt W Wil by ,:\]w nts and childven, thantho failure | These figures furnish instructive in- |demolished tho entire apprentice sys- |y, pyiitgof dissipation, and deplorablo | The Gifted Kansas Senator Speaks | once, ns it is unierstood that he ds wha ¢ e S TR i ol 3 by Eloguently ofa Dead Collengue, ould be called a . dor in the wa of an application for admission into tho | formation concerning the prosperous | tom, loading those who dosive to bacomo | ggunces of rockles conduct aro by no |, Kleauenty ofa Son (it Uttal | 1““_':“_“ ]‘m'“‘“ s DRSS AEG ot The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietors, | schools, and it noed havdly be siid |£rowth of our industrial institutions 1».-“_11: L 'h.u L bl ul'\\‘)l other | MmeaNS uncommon. But the students of | Sratas senato Aug. 25, upin tholate Sennter | province to inalst upon it, but wo beliove t 1t Wi oo B1A'e, Fasnim and Novonteonti &t | Lt Omaha should make ample |during the past decado. While the [ucation as bost they can. hebher | o Amoriean eolloge have ovor deservod | Jamos B, Bockof Kontucky, the offort of | Ltagestes stould b hotel. DL TE : = | children | numbor of factories and mills has in- [ Workmen of the presont genoration | guohn seoring ns was recently ndminis- | Senator Iigalls of Kansas i’ worthy of re- S = ywovisio for all 1ts : a - g EWORN STATEMENT OF CIKCULATION | I,; \Vh’:l ‘.(I Thoere should be | 'd only seventy-five por cont, the [have as a rule less mochanical skill | yo0q to gome Fton colleginns by the | production. Hespoke, in part, as follows: When John Shervin viewed the thirty odd Btateof Nobraska., ) of school nge. ore L . 4 g oouity ot Dotelas § 99 ‘H__ little dolny ns possible in providing wpitalization of factories hus increased | than their predecossors is a question doan of Christ chureh colloge, Oxford, He has departed. His term had not ex- | democratic editors at tho mesting of the stata. Tt rai seeretiry of The e | for every chill who eannot be aecom- hundreed per cent, employes four |difficult to determine, for the conditions | gy ojana, These students are the sons :'I"'I" Ut S0 ROl HII8 S ORtAL e ntral committoe and heard Hildebrand inti Publishine companv. doos soletinly swear tha ver) ! ho ed ) o netal direufition of Tuk DALY ek for | modated with the existing school facili- | hundred and cighty per cent and pro- [ Of work huvo boen entirely changed. If | of e, buronets, ambassadors, wnd | main in its archives, butan howored. Succos | N I I AT LT S the week ending Sept. 6, 180, was a8 follows: \”‘__ Omaha may justly boast of & school | duets five hundred por cont, oneisto judgo from rosultsalons, the | o vapiosentatives of wenlth froner- | SOF sits unchailengzed in his place. e bis g is loins and rejoicod that ho way Bundav, Avzustit..... Ry Z00 7 fow st : The marvelous growth of our indus- | mechanic of today noed only point to the vote nor yoice, but the consideration of gre not nomwated for governor, . Mondiy i o 2060 | system equal to the best J U 3 the bt / ally, butthe dean is o seve o disciplina- | measures aftécting the interests of every | Sots | and no child within its limits of triesis thus strikingly shown in the | effectiveness of his work. (e | ian whois ot to be moved from tho | cituen of the rpublic is intorrupted, with | Dictator Burrows annowncos that Purclias 2 [ uge should be denied its priviloges. great increass in the number of men | 1ut the enlistmont of new reeruits in | o formance of a duty by the uristocratic | e concurrence and approval of all, that 1o | fng Agent 1Lartley s roesived o fow mory i ¥ i & AR (AR avi ¥ (Rvelveailie ) Y representatives of forty-iwo commonwealths P ikt e Qe sk | “Some discussion has heen giv employedand the marked dncrenso fn [ the grand industrial army involves the | oonueetions of thoso under his charge. | ey reboirse the. vietaes tad oommomity | Unbroken packazos of grocerios and tho al. llquastion of eatablisiingn Hormal the valuo and volume of our products. | Problem of checking and limiting the | jro 101q theso young roystors that they | the caveor of an associate whois beyond the | lianc ,“"‘“'“\" |)u];t|||,lh 1 ‘; tha usual low 5 in Omaha, and the matter s one that | What has boon achioved in the past ten | SUpply of workmen in ratio with the do- | o\ 1ahoring undor n dolusion from :;:.Illw"lln“w‘\‘I—|111.|1».~-|v[ cnsure, in the kingc m of | .I"l,nnl.l.n\‘l;.:.l_n Mes ik.‘.” 4 ‘...: y.‘.“:.;u'-} w0 Sworn t hefore mo and suberived i my | deserves earnest attention. [¢ will be | years canbo duplicated in the present | mand. This is the problem which chal- 4 g X PR € . which they might have a very rude The right tolive is, in_ human _estimation, presance (s 6l v of Septcanior. & Do 0. | g orosting to noto in this connection | dccade. After all that has boen done | lenges the uttention of labor organizi= | ywiiconine fn eonsidering that hecause | the most sicrad, the most inviosble, thoe most | BEAL. | N. P FEiL Notary Publio. Kol o O | tho division was mude i f i s vot i W IRIGRGY G8 AR tions. 4 5 : i inalienable, The joy of living such a | U s B =it Al U I LR L In the caste system of the Fgyptis they ure the sons of nobility they ureen- | splendidand luminous day. as thisis tneon- | My Walquist, whols rannlag for auditor Ttk woekly bank statement shows the | the cadet system, by which high school | trial center. The stoady growth of [ Mt the casto system of the Fgyptians, | yiy10q 1o exteavagant liberty, to be dis- | coivable, To oxist is exultation. To live on the domocratic tioket, has (¢ fizared out reserve has decroased $864,000, The | graduates are cnabled after a short | Population and development of the re- ""“"; child followed inthe footsteps of | y3n4eq 1o vulgar liconse. He CRTL PRI TS b i i iU sl ) nks now hold 81,401,000 less than the | course of ditional stuly to sccure posi- | Sourcos of the torvitory tributury to | his father o ‘,‘1,‘.'"', e It | churged thom with courting fiorce | fiigyof daspair. To know,io loves o achiove, | Mr, Walquist s great mathomatician and 5.a legal requirements, tions us teachers. So far as appears this ‘l"”*‘"“‘"""""“"“’”‘"““1‘1 which Omahais ”;“' Sl ';‘l '-‘(""’ Lt ll;m ‘“ “;“l' and - disreputablo ploasure, ~ drink- | to triumph, to contor huppincss, to ALeviate | mad philosophier, bat ho s way off on hiy k woll as | destined to s v o race, \o Greeks and the Romans | o oxcoss. . gambilng {n | Misery, is rapture 10 groatest erime and | g sy —————— system has been found to work well as [ destined to supply. 4 6 as oL BVARICE tiate o el WHlh | DEL.,. o xcoss, gambling in | it o nalty known. to human law is | f8ures. A POWDER trust has been formed at | an incentive to pupils desiving to pursue Ihe great packing industries of the L 50 of slaves for RALLON L gilded 5 parlors, and associating with | the sacritice and forfeiture of life A domocratic paper up the country su Springficid, Ill., but the chances are | the vocation of teachers, while the | City offer splendid opportunitios for the | everin ing, loft no over-supply of | (o "oy e presence beside thoir And yet we are all under sentence of death, | 415 My MoKoighan was the one maa wi that it will explode, school authoritios are always bl | establishment of tanuerics —Tho prin- || i LLBLLL Ll U ')1.\"':‘ eS| pothers and sisters they would resent as TTon or - o et ol aY | macured lower ¥atas on rallioads o Iiling i to supply the schools with home [cipul raw product is abundant, fuel is [0 fill tpthe shattored ranks by the Im- | 0y i00s contact, *What husbands orant; we may be happy or wretched; but | Fle was, porhaps, making a campaign, a Tig eforts of the prairio states to | galent, The advantages of a |reasonable and tan bark can bo brought | Pressment of fresh material — Socioty, | a'fithors of the future!” exelaimed the | We all mist dic place Lumnber on the freo list were abort- | sestom of this character are ob- | om Missouri and Arkansis at roason- | CMerging from the chaos of the middle ive. Tho home buildersof the wost have | vious, and we ean soe no good reason [ablorates. The cost of shipping hides | 8¢ found itselt bound to the leaguos | i big just denunciation upon only a | s for dofonse; with o Knowlease ot s o AL D no particular vights which the pine | why Omahn should be behind other | 1O eastern tannerios and the return here | 414 guilds, which by steingent vules | 00 (o a0 Bl e seions of | Becuser, or the nature and easo of the ac. | hada hand in locating tho milky way. ¥ na [ i forcod. onch member to. piss through cusution; without being confronted with the |y " g barons are bound to respoct, | cities in provision for supplying teachers | Of the manufactured product counter- d o I hroug nglish avistocracy who are equally | witnesses agajust us, we have been sum. | There isa general undovstanding tha of its childron from among those who [ Dulances tho differencs in the cost | certain gradations of employment, untily |\ ite “und isit possible that sueh | moned tothe bar of 1ifoand condommnod to | Man who causes two ratabagas to grow Havesd their cducation in its |Of fuel and transportation of bark, |88 master, ho became own employ death Thore s mn»-l.-n.‘r.-.-m nor review. | butone grew before is a public bene SeE YOSt il A s oo [ . 2 ~ 0 | The sys « ronticeship was P pad ; here is neither exculpation nor appeal. All | This same proposition should be the council combine to protost against | o plic sehools, Such a poliey is die- | The establishment of tanneries would :v“_ Tl ol Bunient !"l‘ ws but & | o oiand? Hardlyso. Tholr vices are | must be relinguishon Beaty el duforn A s e tho carved imageson the city hall has | 4404 by considorations both of expedi- mulate othor industries such us oot | divect outgrowth of the gullds resulting | godoving them, and with every such | ity, #ood and ovil, virtuo and vice, sharo the ST AR Y heen abundoned. A brief compavison | it W SR dshoo faetorios, harmess making and | f0om the transformation of the ma s try is with the oviginals convinced the mem- The reopening of the schools is an in- [ the manufacture of 1 of every de- | Workman into a capitalist emplo; i " same rolentless fate. The tender moth exposuroas thatmade by the dean of | o passionutely for mercy for her first | neologistsshould bereward bers that the sculptor was o master in seription, few faborers upon his own account. But the business. mating that they must have boodle, Johy Average, L ST the commission would bo small by the timo he verdict has been pro- | threatened to walk unless they gave him o 3 nounced by the inexorable decree of an omni a3, Mr. MoKelgl L perv dean. This foarless and honest man has | hoont tribun hott trinl. oo opetim, | Pass. Mr. MeKeighan also supervised Tuw proposed indignation meeting of menareto continue tho ruling class of Churist church they grow lower in tho | born, but there i3 no elemency. The eraven | The Hon. John L. Butler of Harrish popular contempt. The corruption of | felon sullenly prays fora momentin which | Peun., has always been @ democerat, of . ¢ 3 to e aneled, but there isno reprieve. The o 9 the English aristocracy is a stimulant t0 | <Qul helplossly beats its. wings sgilnatitho)| | SAosonisTEsIApLibiy brand, bt hoeic the cuuse of demaocraey, which s moving | bar shudders and disappears, 5 o L ‘;'“ R on "'l"“ LS etoldl ek he inevitable at- | .. The proscription extends alike to the in- | Pattison, Heaccordingly bolted the ex fehdLy doied B0 s HHOvIabIoRn dtviotal anditho s typelaNibione 010 and|| seio st AVC6R b el soaRara barter tainment of complete control of the po- evpire. Humanity itselfis destinod 10 | puttison is @ jibwse, Of coarse litieal affairs of Englind and the vast | Sooner or later itis the instruc. | cvhson (8 8 Jibose. v Ll o) 3 5 nce that the encrizy of the earth | Vague and unsatisfucto) as00 WIS n empire it now dc will be expended, and it will became jeeap- | ficient, and a general desive to know what o —— able of supporting life. A group of feeble | jiboose is or was, grow manifost. Thon M teresting event alike to toachers, chil- % fald 3 2 drenand parents, The ample period of Possessing the ln g and silver | NOW capitalistic production upon o huge = ; L has prepared nstruetors and pupils | Fefining works in the country, we have [ S¢ale electually prevents the mochan A MOVEMENT is on foot in London to | o ocime work with zeal and relish, |an unlimited supply of the precious | With but few exceptions, from ever at- build & nonument to the late Cardinal ; melals for the successful manufacture of | t2ning the position of employer, New Newman, 1t s to bo hoped that the | o und nxicty when tho children ave | $ilver and plated ware, and manafacture [ M08 of obtiiiing mechunical instruc- ments than Americans. If theyare not, |y fer S Gt b0t Ll pnd ducts of the soil after tempting induce- | POYS that epring from the vanks of tabor. it will ben long time before Che monu- ment is completed. and pavents fipd velief from more or less VHLRE, | by every consideration of justice to render | all possible reparation to the family | the means that selence supplies to pro- [of Barmundin. 1t is pathotic in|tect the employes of railways from ! having wantonly, as 1t would soem, de- | danger. The committee on railway and | ! ; J Al Fplvadhiits " | canals in the lower housa of tho national | fitance and economy where the princi- Ll sel e e ioren DR s s and routine of banking ave taught. ) The committos shows that in the plished, there ave found dissenters in ings, between all whose privilege it is to [ ments for the establishinent of starch, That the necessity for a propor me- A BILL appropriatin hundredand | and pallid survivors in some sheltered valley | Butler definad the woed, aud gives the § ) : 0o a Mussnchusetts whaling vessel | the midnightsky. Thelast man will perish | | Ji-Doose, n. A professad democrat who Pactonies are steadily multiplying gt o munity by creating a home market, ve- | Peon realized by both employers and em- i dred icebound seamen seems lik i lifo and heat will vanish, and the planes will e principles which can never be put the commeoreial assoeiations from putting e s re | well paid workingmen who & egreat | UrEINg such o vevivalto the session of America doveloped no tragedy more Dt gmen who are the groat hour some world dies in the firma- | The mugwump will no loager be loneso ment to manufacturing enterprises. on on American- vessol in the port | Progressof the pist ten years Incp.| t0d ultimately smended in its main nd tho mighly mnazo of systems swoops | (o A BECEY EE THL EIOED 00 sWY dou 4 have boen sor vexed many times of With the disappearance of man from th | have been endorsed by tho alliance part thrown open for settlement, a grand rush | e — day and that itsflace must now be taken 3 it may prove to have been due to a ed, the institutions he has establish would seem that there were plenty of 1 by Prof. E. J. James of the university of | pamby society man doffs his hat in the | 0sophics he bas formulated —all scic jibooser. He, perhaps, does not in add that must be irrigated is worse The great globe itself, e et legistature has formulatod a bill for the | ! G 5 i » | Leave nota rack behind, cize-package prineiples which certainly can— TR et catione SR ditath o egislature hus formulatod a bill for th the Turks in superiors i he 1 prize-p prineiy \ 7 birtl 1d dea gy ivers S no more tha 5 ANOTIER new political party has 4 il e e trade. The establishment of the presenceof ladiosit I don't do so it | Jitth aud death of universes is nomore than | jp,iinq ting that ho was better and purer th y that when cars are built or rep: F | . ; with the public schools, gives the boy a stinction is an unpleasant one. And | stupendous orbs are launched in the abyss, | herather outdoos the jiboose. The appoar s mail steamer lying in the port | couplers ordraw-bars, The only objec- eranks. This remarkable party, which, | ©f San Jose. Iis surrender was d canhot boless potontial than those immuta A A ‘ e i o At e yiven four years time to oquip sir y v stulrway, as a motter of course, If a gentle- hat 4 the only object of ¢ ution, saw the light of day in St. Louis | Of the steamer. It appears that an ap- [ 81V 3 o oquip their | o supply and demand, which contin- ¥ . s . it S e 3 ! lamities, if the final cause of life s death, | the country districts. Photographs of Boyd and there will be no further use for the | Minister, Mizner,with the result that he wing an open field fer the | his hat as they walked up or down stairs? 1 0 ath, | the country districts. Photograj Boyd's Tt ] ey At i rendera veturn to the apprentice s one's hat in & passenger elevator | trophe. Tir sixtoonth annual convention Mi rundia, Atany rate they went ahoard | lotomotivesar uired to be equipped Denver, discussed the matter of in- | sisted arvestthey killed him. The case | @Pply only to intevstate railways. It 4l wasin Des Moines last weok,’ sald o | SUrvive thatus our departed associato, cou- theistage Altontly, worth nearly $100,00, “und when in abar- | during than brass and loftior than tho py Both the republican aud demo of all government employes in highly | lution has heon referred to the senate | tonds oporatod wholly within the state. | great deal said. Compared with the | byppeps was complaining of the tardiness of | ¢ Silentand uniuown future, he could rely | and great interest is being manifested in 1 pay. He works, rogurdless of hours, | under protectionof the fagof the United | tho case us it proporly should. = Rail- | ey aspiration and gratified ambi. aid Ut the Last ho had seon of his | assurance ever delivered to tie luman race, | g Wil il sneak duile for 5w i T e AR LA ) | and believeth in me i MeKin o lso_ spen railway postal clerks should receive an | Prompt action by the government for | State of New York 2,700 are killed eve yven in all thoy have, in what they may d the Omaha man, “ho man MeKinley, who will I | the authority of the American ministor The lowa railvoad reports from 1573 to 1858, nip easy enc t the same." Evanston, a Suburb of Chicago, Will . | ki Cuicaeo, Sept. 6.—[Special Central must not be called laboring men, | our part for redvess, and if it shall be | forlife 2,420, and tho r. O 133 shows | 1nq” wealkk minded. Elizaboth Stu: ing interests Tue Bee. |1 oy craze has struck | crowde estri 1p. m. when Even if it proves true that they were | plain duty will be to render to the widow | shme ratio of casualt holds as in [ leading mugaz hout the low necked | therazorstrop,confidentially, as hebesmeared | Sten reduced to practice in the suburb of | ran out of the bav room of the Madeira housy | these wen who sacritico eithor'life or limb to | and says many things that cannot bo [ 10VS0 many places lmown openly s saloons, | gER o o+ ot 0 e PR B0 VAR | panic-stricien. D, IR, Rangin was strct renow the tasks and the confidences of [ 03t mel and flour mills, all of which | Chanical education cannotbe met by a | i five thousand dollars for the S Hoiar A [Che e S s o | vowing dsHaitioR the school voom. contribute to the wealth of the com- | Mevival of tho apprentice system, has | jor of i last, | | ) i = i which claims to have rescued nine hun- | and the sun will vise upon an earth without | "jly*"""lr"‘:""\;l ll*lml*": '1’:»:‘:“"":‘_1:;"‘ .‘" i :;-1 Wil in Omahy, and that too without effort. THE CASE OF BARRUNDIA. dueing the raw miterial to a manufac- | P1o¥es. Thisis stikingly illustrated by {n bo | A0 inhabitant. Tts atmospheres, its soas, its | a ith a set of pri his fact, howover, should not provent | /oyt disturbunces in Central | tured product, and swolling the army of | the fact that the report of u committoe [ 100 by the present congress, If this | e an idle cinder uselessly spinniug in its | 1010 practice. Cf. Mrawosr, ¥ ) r ) UL g | The jiboose has doubtless como to stay B thl it L (asl arey goos through, the industry of rescuing i 3 g i \h”lhffl"‘ L'T]\)m ““-";“ fal wheels | jous and pathetie than the killing | source of prospority in every lrgo city. PR RS = L l”[”-””v’l y ”“‘lmll lcebound seamon during the heated torm | ment; some sun_smoulders to_cmbers and | because tho jiboose may be part of him,— ana extending substantial encourage- | 0" Gonoal Burrundin of Guatemala | Omuhamust not rest content with tho | 188t weel, was’very strongly opposec will be given a new impetus ashes on the hearthstone of infinite space, | [y {y painfully true thut there are many dom B — | . 5, L s : features, The belief was exprossed that aselsssly onward in its voyage of doom = £ - R R tho Guate- | getic, persistent work is essential to : Hi romorscless aid unspaving destruction paiin, and some of thom are in Nebraska a NoW that the arid lands have been }‘\'[:l;: Soe oy S ol o, Gune FTTah the apprenticeship system had sevved its fo sampmaiess snd nisparingmtiotion ¢ | T J nalan government. s serioushecause | future prosperity. & 3 1 . = late,” sald an castern busiuess man last even- | SArth alitraces of bis “existenre will belost | Many men have wondored just what f of tho landless is expected, to be followed |, "V PEOYO t0 FAHE DO FAC O & PROTECIING THE BRAKEME by mechanical trade schools. At almost | ingns he sat chatting in the ante-room of | Lhe paluces, e, (pmples O s | politician tho Hon. Bill MoKeighan is, but in another year by eries for help. It the United Statos would bo called upon The Nebraska rvepublican platform the same tine, the Amevican bankers’ | Pur B editorial s, “Kvery time 1 ties he has built, the books he has w Mr. Butler throws rays of light on the sub demands that railways shall employ all | 5#0ciation were listening to a dross | getinto a passenger elevator, some namby | ten the creeds he has constructe ject. He is a jiboose, Ho is, in fa produgtive lands to meet all demands for ¢ & literature and knowledge will be oblit i i a wifle yet. Irrigation is expensiveand Ponnsylvania, ir which he pointed out | presencoof ladies. Now can you newspaper | 1HIMEARG Knowioase, will be obittetited | tho grim pleasantry that ho is better the advantuges offered by schools of | IMon tell me why thisis done! Of course I S purer than all democrats, as Jibooses than worthless to poor homesteaders grant that a man has a right, to get down on | yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve, y do, buthe has the other characteri who come without means to plow thair his knees and rub his tose on the floor as do | And. like this unsubstantial pageant faded, of the full-grown jiboose. He has a set | The simplo story is that Gonoral Bax- | protection of railway employes whi Similar movements are taking place in | cyooses to do so, but when T enter au elovator | . Thero s an intelligence 8o vast and endur- | never be put into practice. He allied bii-. | rundin, intending to leave Guatemala | COvers this ground. The bill provides | Other branches of business und of | and threo men uncover their empty pates iu | 0% that the faming dnterval between the | with the farmers’ cause for votes alon, 11 100 | until the difficultles 2 poli itu- 08 0 the flash of fire-flics above the meadows of ; ; ; been born—the National Reform party. | Until thedifticulties of the political situ LT iopod with fuey | manual training courses in counection wily marks mo as an_ excoption, and | summor: & colossil power by whish th auy farmer in the Second district, and in th& Tt has tyenty-four planks inits platform, | Ation should be sottled, took passage on | they shall be equipped with s ) x : i e Y i 3 3 ot L > fes i ust as great g like bubbles blown by a child in the morning | ance of the jiboosa in state politics and declares against overy thing but {onible lontise s dtat : ground-work upon which the technical 8poct for thelndlesls just as groat ns Anfls bl Benia ; : s d el ) tionable {8 v thh slmeRuntelifon)| (O etony may build, Tho latter | any man's. But look at this matter a minute: | S G whose sonse of Justice and veason | Nobraska, along with the giasticutus in ¢ in the minds of those who fathor it, will | manded by the Guatemalan authorities 'l"_l‘;‘;l"!"t"*ltl-’ h:l-:"\s’u -:::lh . np\x‘)lmln‘ul-w. allow the number of laborers to be rogu- | Suppose the e n‘.(-;,‘“u . ..‘.I-rnh BEE | plostatutes that aro tho law of buing to the | PORICS: 3 hnotheor o idenco of tho thrift ani » 8 it is su rofus v the ¢ 5 ) 21 th L the co DANICS Wi o ‘) ¢ o d T, verybody wou 0 granc ¥ 05 o has il e, d vhici mpe! LOZIes: our state. sweep the carth of all sin, and all tempt- | 804, it issuid, refused by the commander | HlCe ® pompanios would be 1 1,10d by the nutural operation of thelay | PUilding everybody would use tho grand B S incly (Bxd | HICh oOmbel L = (s 4 i | ation is destruction, if infinity is the theate According to the democratic seers recent 3 ot 2 3 > cars. fter January 1, 1895, all cars, g 3 man met on the stairway a lady whom he did [ e proveohy Ak 9 LN asladdL PRl e Saturday, A few more partios like this | Penl was then taken t the Amorican A e T T ':1 ually rolegates the poorest workmen £ | o1 know, would ho bo espected to take off ) Of, @ uninterrapted scrics“of rreparablo | assombled in this city, “times are han T T i . ,{ tobe equipped with one of afoty { is an inexplicable tr and | ba) will not reliove the distress. The Salvation ari | instructed the commander toallow the i L ono of tho safety | Prosont clreumstances | huvdly think so. No, the practice of dofiing | cternityan illogical and indefensible catas. | P21 Will not reli i tho distr Lg | Guatemalan unthorities to arrest Bav- [ €ouplers, and after January 1, 1895, all stuff must be distributed. 4 3 i = : sl Now, Mr. President, this obsequy is for Bt e . tem impossible. Everything points to | is begotten of braiuless ‘ninnies and . ot i a WISCONSIN POLITICS X ot with & proper power brako, Tk ; ) possible, lu g ¥ s A the quick and not for the dead. Itis not an ASE) 2 . the Riilway Mail Service Mutual Benefit | the steamer, ahove which floated the [ With a proper e, | AHe Dro-i g mechanical trade school us itslog- | ©ught to be tabooed by men of seuse. Good | inconsoluble umentation, It is a stran of i ikm association, whieh has boen in session at | Amorican Mg, and when Bavrundia re- Visionsof the congressional bill of course | ;10 S0 ay.! tramph, Ltisan afiviation to those who | Messrs, Mills and McKinley Will Visie i i tomplating at the close of his life the monu- Jnicado, Sept. 0.—[Spooial Tologran er the pay of railway postal [ Will be thoroug tigatod by the | will beincumbent on the state legisla- HIGH NECK AND LOW NECK. Sixtoenth street. real ostato dealor who 5 | mont of good doods he had erectod, mors on. '1-:":”]!1\’:’ T B T ara s o slorks 3 srhap: ruo stato department, and meanwhile areso- | ture toe similar laws to cover rail- [here is alwoy shto say ab At o i ; HIREETTHEA G el It is perhaps true that | dopariin 8 \'I)n re :n always mml llx(»‘ ’i‘l) AUy |t ehavad T gota bit of infor- | mids of kings, might ex ,‘m,m\,”, the Roman :mn. :.m:p‘ulu\\'ln \\I‘;. Vlhlll “fx.lln’., ope i R o gk, 3 merican women, or, at least, there is a pRESRRS startled me, 1@ of the | poet, “Non omnis mor Faf: turning to | by recognized national leaders of the pa rosponsiblo positions, the railway | forcign relations commitico declaring ; llwl K m-: in h!uu of the bill deals mation which fairly startled me. One of t1 SR e i R arrandia, while | largely with the hum: rian side of : Lt : with with just and reasonablo e iR a0RInG ‘dobales ot MaBais AL postul clerk receives the poorvest | that the murder of Barrundia, while women of other nations, in morals, workman, when a third one spoke | ypon that most improssive and momentous M‘rl\‘m]““!ffl]‘,“L,"”mw e tan day and night, and is constantly exposed | States, was an insult to the people | Foads reportinerersed loss of life and tions, the American women certainly | ¢ . rit before when he wa {o vhat bulicvoth In e, though ho Wory | isiting all the prineipal cities™ of tho sta to loss of limb or life when on duty. The | of tho United States, and demanding | Lin have no just ground for complaint, Yot | s wnker'n a boiled ’ 1 yet shallhe live; and whosoover liveth | qud jmmediately following him will be ¢ B 27 4 ? o A4 N s k in the state and will devote his tine inerease of salavy if any one in the gov- | the vedressof the injury. Of course if | ¥ear by the crud y:xvlh s now in use ccomplish or what they have accom- | 4N thatbe? \“Ilu‘\ a p ition town ¢ THE BELLAN rade sophistries of senment service does, the Guatemalan officials proceeded on | and comments us follows: - “Yes," said the bavber, “*but you can get a ™ : > " show that with anaverage of only 6,000 miles | their ranksthose who oppose, and vi “How muny siloons are there in Des Soon Adopt It, TAE train wreckers on the New York | there s no ground for any demand on | of road there wors either Killod or ool ously, the whims of the strong minded | Moiesr asked the Omaba dirt deator, grow who wore dissalisflod with the rond, | shown that the minister blundered our { P StW0. Wi (50, eisanldes trom thase | o5 Bl S o Sarini Woll -1 tell you, answered the knight of | Chicagoand in a few veeks its ideas will bo [ Policeman Bdward Ja Sweeney, crazy deank, Kuights of Labor, the Kuights of Labor | and children of the murdered man such | Towa, the 150,000 miles of road in the nation § SRR . | his customer's face with lather, “thoro are vanston, W W. Catlin, the board of trado | and sent five bullets i succossion futo tho ¢ 7 droess, Marion Harland replies to h - A throng of people. Pe flodin all diree must not be compelled to bear the | reparation as we ean. would give tho number of 7,040 yearly of gniyry) ! man, J. W. Howell of the frm of Norton, | & of peoy I @ t atigma, | Tho wrockors wero merely | The conduct of Ministor Miznor in [ keep inuso tho linlcand-pin compling wnd | ondorscd among miy things hat will | Ditthero aro tomy personal enowlo firm of 1. . Hobs & Co. aro its cliet pro- | Sansesiuals hurt & hobcomas, iy diubolical cranks, who thought they | connection with the Central American | haud-brake on ght cars, ‘The railroad tween fourand five hundred places in Des I ) sommissioners of Ko, y 9 say th be most heartily approved. Marion | 3} : 3 mulgators. It consists of a co-operative com- | Sweenoy, turning hastily to flee, fell hea might do tho roud somo harm, not fig- | difficultics has been most remavkablo | {oRantucey the ntos ot meoiim ! | Tarlan, inn way, Jufends. low-netked Atcitge hsmALILIORIOL e it anathen | (CHCE wSitnata babyyion Shos and broko b et THe was the taken b uring or caring for the human lives im- | throughout, and in view of his reputa- | thet wuses under consideration in pro- | qyo. t they are to bo | i Lo b 5 Skl the lake shore, in the northern part of kv hospital, o prisoner erilled a | 3 s ol 5 1 i portion to railroad mileage is greater than in | S oo tey are 1o bo | jucluded holos-in-the-wall, drag stoves and " Amantwitl fen it iatva g = perilled. After labor disturbances like | tion for incompetenco und folly, it will | porti ¥ given the pr nce over much other | the quict reudezvoux of hootlez.zer tonisithe St amentivill Sparmprise chaly Of Importance to Credito those that occurred on the New York | not be surprising il it shall transpive | A ] low-necked valgarity which many fash- |~ This statement was made, the Omaha man | hindsome xesidences, each on 60x1- Kaxsas Cirv, Mo., Sopt. 6,.—Judis Central, there always some iteau | that he consented to the insult to the THE PROFITS OF COMIC OPERA. ionable women practice. And 50 a war | says, ina candid, matter-of-fuct manner by lots ¥aus “ ¢ "'l"" 8 “" i b il of the United States district todo the devil’s work. But in this 1n- | flag of his country involved in this ease, Gilbert & Sullivan, tho two genin v apacia o There ave been | the barbor, who did not scem to realize that | #tone cnd of which aud on th of the | Adecision today regarding the prefer. ! g of 1 3 N g of words ison. There may have b ! | blul & club house will be erceted of the | ) pivfer stance organized labor must not be | Still itis cluimed the action imputed to | Englishm who have written sov- | customs yoarsand yearsago whien the | the information ho was giviug was atall im- | {\voive houses, besides the club hiouse, w n creditors by failing corporati blamed. Organized labor had no part | him is not without diplomatic - eral comic operas which have had | Indian maiden who was dvessed in noph. | POFant in ang scnse. Do Ll ae Losiod (nn g oorutil koo 8 Serportlon (o’ oo in the wicked scheme, nor will it en- n‘I‘ nts. A case issaid to have occurr unprecedented rans in the United States, | ing but heetic flush and sun-shine was in A gentleman whose business takes himover | oo itelen and laundry, whi | . cos for the benefit of [ dorse it in any wa, in Nicavagun in 1883 involving the iden- | some time ago dissolved partnership, on | the hoight of fashion, Tt according to | the western lines of raiiroad a greater sharo | ply the necds of the ty : s uch must treat all creditors alike o eal principlo with tat in the Barran- | account of misunderstandingsconcerning | . genorally mctopted Lloa, espectatly | Of(he time said sestorlay thit thy eo Rt |l LTIl NS Y RAtBOU UL ReRahA, o 1b CES aro not wanting to show | dia ease, and Secretary Buyard informed | the divisions of th Tho oaso | provalent in'thE latter part of the nine | 1072 0fthe Union Pactlo frolght department | ZUp FLUKEY Jrfeid of oy "Wavh ; e that the divine spiritof generosity ani- [ our minister to Central Am b into the courts, * due pro- | teenth century, s dress should at loast In the first ""‘[" by purchasing four An Offer to Bondholde mAtos n fuw of America's monoyed mon, | that the Nicaraguan government | coss of law has just oven decided, por | have & walst talt. Some women maln. ucres of laud in u lump, tho costof euch lob | ~ Wasmxarox, Sept. 6.—The s Several notable examples have recently | had a right to take the man A he, “*but it fact, nevertheless, Some say | will be materially lessencd. Again, all tyeive il g R o P ) haps to tho satisfaction of both parties. | tain, those who believe in modesty s & | itis because of the st poliey the Union Pa- | vesidences heing built at oree, the contractor o been brought to public notice. Alfred | wanted from on board an American mer- Dolge, the founder of Dolgoville, N. Y., 1t vessel, were downing that roud in the hot pursuit of business, *Ldon't know why this is,” said The surprising thing about the evidence | jowel, that wemen should not exhibit | ciflc adhered to under General Freight A will nuturally figure protty 1 bid ¢ April 1, and July 1, 1591, on bonds of 4 per 5 possil vhen o hing is buil providing sho were iu | adduced was the amount of monoy re- | their charms tothe vulgar public. Mrs, | Vining, whose tariff sheets woro mude to | 1% 8 possible, aid whon ovory th N _)“_’ s of 1T 8 prominent manufacturer and one of | Nicaraguan wators. Had it heon aman- | ceived from their American performing | Stuart Phelps, holds tothis view and | ehargeall the trafic would bear, and as the | e to do the nocessary work on th mises — e tho ploncera of the profit shaving sys- | of-waron which Barrundia. took refugo | rights, which in sloven years had | Marion Harlanddoes notagres with her, | ou at that tine had no competitors in the | and two or throo expericuced cooks with un OMAHA tem, has constructed o superh academy | the protection would have beon unques f o | field it held undisputed sway. Otk y | skillod ussistants will sttend to tho cuisine of reached the snug sum of thres hundrel | But the kickers are on carth,and they f tho community. Even a greater saving LA N A i and libravy and presented hoth to his | tioned, ns war vessels earry evorywh thousand dollars. It is safe to estimato | will nover all bo satisfied. Some women | 't ComPetie Bues T 14T tato aromore | antigimtcd in tho auniey. “ho. ehub hous TRUS mative city. Equally genorous, not to | the jurisdictionof the country whoso | the revenuo on both sides of the water of | woar drosses longrak ihe top andibotiom, | 413wy aza teliag bualuess away £rom the | Law i oo pad 08t Sad boab house. bo- COMPANY. sy lovieh, 1s the deed of J | flag thoy fly. Onthe other hand, when | these two writers athalf & million @ol- | some woar. abbrivinted. droess at both Union Paciflc to somo extent. Possibly the | in the pic and will lead taany to tal sh J. Hill, president of the Great | Captain Wilkestook Muson and Slidell | davs or . Northern rafiroad, who has presented | from the British steamship Trent, half o million dollars to the arch- | against the protest of the cuptain, on diocese of St. Paul to found a theological | the demand of the British government seminary and a quarter of a million dol- [ wo surrendered them, and fn lars for an endowment fund to maintain | the case of Martin to take sh " ' s " Subsorthed and Guarante Capltal 500, {most fifty thousand dollars u | extremes, and the world frowns in one | oficials of tho road can tell you a better rea- | 0 It 1o compuny lias wecurad " vips PG S AL ] AUAFRTINAA SRR ;0 O .I\ ar, l‘ his shows that comic opera muy | place and applauds in another, ’lhullnn_\' son for tho existing state of things, 'r" making aquatics a very prominent m.y".., |I...,1,...U..,..‘,‘,.(}x ond pesctiatcy o made more remuncrative than any |Imv|l’ to do isfor mankind to subi nit Tust Show Their Colors ‘“A "“'“1‘ thos ”’1 u:”m‘l\lvw ] u.’.‘x” X ‘x h\ ! Il fuattpaa R O other branch of literature, Learned | patiently and let the geutle sex fight it Wayne Gazetle 50n Invheting his EA000 becotmes a puriner | SOTROTUI, takes chargo of ‘property, coi- and claborate productions have boen | out among themselves. The day is past whon tho bosses lash oan | ond twollth owner o the schomo. bostues | 1071 18508 Koszta | turned out by the thousands of volumes T e huving his own lotand and & good Gnine - By .- 5 . ) sands 08 - control oters, 5 10 o party but | ving A ® that institutlon, The munificent dona- | the' government refused to rocogniz | in tho past ocloven yoars, but the | LANDCOMMISSIONER GROFFADNOURces | o plitform, tho principlo of the party that | bered deod to it “Like any othor club, 1o Omaha Loan &TrustCo tions made by John A, ¢ reighton toward \’l\u demand of the Austrinn government | profits have reached notling like those | that the act of 1885, withholding arid now attracts and commands the votes, One | gihor momber of the oreaization, wid. 1y SAVINGS BANK. the eruction of the new St. Josoph's hos- | for his surronder when the captain of | enjoyed by theso prolific thestrical au- | linds from entry and settlement, has | in politics wust & 2 pital Is oqually worthy of commendation, | the American vessel onwhich he had | thors. While it isof course apparent | heen ropealed. This action of congress | tentions known to the people, that they may | wianimously favored by the company | 15 EIC?NH"" 16th and Douglas Sts 1‘{"1‘.\ be said that these monuments of | taken passage refused to give him up. | that all men and women cannot w opens wide the doors for ireigation ditch -'““’»'"}:"" ‘li"" """“‘I’ ’L: 'I‘ »"”' »“-’1‘ “"” | New York I rs Organizing. @ | Bubseribed wnd Guaranteod Capital ':”:’. o0 philanthropy are local or sectarian and | Clearly, therefore, precedent is not all | comic operas, the astonishing revelation | monopolies in the west. Much of the | SUPPOr it this must expressed pub- : Ry i R ALmny, N. Y., Sept. 6.~The w York | Lisbllity of Btockholders 200,00 therefore restricted in their power for | one way, and it may be discovered that | of the success of these two clever Eng- | clamor raised for the repeal of the re- - hedhgs BOVORE WAy 0 Whis be s prohibitionist andan wutiat the same | OMeors: A, U, Wyman, president; J. J. lirown, their object is to educate and elevate | ner tothe captain of the Pacific mail tention to librettos, and see If it is not | ing government regulation of water | against prohibition and one who doclares in | 1) seeure the fedoration of all farmers op- | Pirectors:—A. U. Wyman,J. H. Millard. J. J + L4020N-NiKe:. Bt 0 ® | state farmers' loazuo was Incorporated by 6Por Oent Tutorest Fald on Depoilts - ! vy iy £ H . o nan her way to that. A man can no o A . LANGE, Cashior good. Grunted, Tobrond minded peo- | the best of it is against the instruction lishmen should suggest to those who | strictive act came from syndicates and 4 the secretary of state toduy, — The objoct for ol ¥ O ple, howevor, it is sulieient to know that | said to have been given by Ministor Miz { are of a litorary turn, to give thelr at- companies vitally interested in prevent- | e The democratle platform declares :‘I‘ln nhr”:vf‘l":\ e iy "m_ x“l_ \“7‘_:“‘ “:{j*"““ 'Hwh vice-president, W. T. Wywman, treusure r mankind and to alleviate suftering, steamer. The governmont owes it to its | within them toturn out a few pagesof | rights, and tho fact that they main- | favor of probibition cau not staud thereon as | ganizalions in the state. .‘x','im\f:flm;fl Tion, = N Nash. Thon,; @ his couvictions and in- [ member can sell his property to o prson not