Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 4, 1891, Page 4

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OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY THE TERMS OF 8UBSCRIPTION, Dafly and Bunday, One Your BIXmonths. ... ... "Threo moniiis gumlAy He Woekly Hee, One Year. ... . OFFICE Omnha, The Bee Bullding, Bouth Omnha, Corner N and 2th Streets Couneil BlufTs, 12 Pearl Streot. Chicngo Offic Washinglon, bl Fourteenth Street. CORRESPO NDENCE All communieations relating to news and editorial mattor should be addressed Lo the Editorial Department, BUKT? LETTERS, All business letters and remittances should he Bee Publishing Company, Omaha. Drafts, clrecks and postoffice orders ble to the order of the som Be add ressed { o be made pa, pany. The Bec Publishing Company, Proprietors, ; The Bee 1'1d'g, Farnam and Seventeenth Ste Btateof Nebraski. wtow for th 01 0w Ennday. Dee. 28, ., Mondav. Dec. 2 Tuesday. Dec ... 00 Wednesdny, Dec. 3.0 Thursduy. Jun. L... Friday. Jin. 2. Baturday, weex ending Januar an. 8.0 Average...... cOnar B, T2 Btuteof Ne K, iblish ing ( dally cireulation of ~Tuk - DALy for “the month of January. 1800, coples; for Tebruary, 180, for March, 180, . S0815" copies; for 1600, 20,104 _covles; ' for May, 18 for June, 1800, €0.701 coples: €2 copiesi for Aug ust, 140 stemt er, 1800, 20570 cople 2 roples; Navembor, or December, 1500, Eworn to Yefors me, hseribe presence, thisdistany of Decemer, A caloric. CHARITY bé expenses, SENATOR D Wor He liv ¥ de when he sees one. to Tits verbof the streets: ““Ah. there! Thayer!” tions, The world do move. truth in drawing comparisons. dingram of the Republican plac 3 nt $ bogus figures of the Republican, has di the last v enthus| have. saying anything to disparage mon with the jobbing interests, e THE Deadwood Pioneer R RAT R ——— In 1t would seem might be made appl indifference to this matter. In ford to learn from Europe. THE MENACE OF THE BILLIONAIRE. Thomas G. Shearman contributesto the January Forum a brilliant and forceful article on *“The Coming Billiomire.” It is a subject of timely interest, and throws a strong light on one aspect of the presont socinl movements in Europe aim to givo the masses of the people a larger share of accumulations, and espec- fally of tho annual profits of labor and production, DAILY BEE. E. ROSEWATER Lnirow. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING b L and Ameriea, Orie Year the world's 37 Chamber of Commaree, ok ¥ orklooma 13 W and 15, Tribune Butiding Mr. Shearman’s article divides natur- nlly into two parts, in tho first of which he makes it tolerably clear that another generation or two in the path now traveling will certainly bring us to the age of the billionaire. satisfuctory evidence to prove that there loast seventy The statlstics of New Hampshir which has always been among the fore- most in educational matters, show an me- tual decrenso of over seven per cent in the number of pupils enrollod publie schools, although in the last ten population This showing does not indieate that the interest of the peoplo of New Hampshiro in public education Ho presents $35, 000,000, Reasoning from eral non-speculative estates—that of the Astors is the best instance—have in- ased five-fold in less than forty years, he asserts that those now worth $200,- reach the billion point in another 40 yoars, at the furthest. in this estimate he makes no allowance for the oceasional opportunities of ex- traordinary profit that are sometimes open to men who can wield a vast Jay Gould, for instance, is ¢ with a net gain of 30,000,000 in his last campaign of two weeks in Wall st and many of the smaller fry who fol- lowed his star are said to have profited in the same proportion to their capital. Mr. Shearman counts only on compound interest and the steady riso in real es- values to produce his billionaire In the meantime he ©ight per cont. EWORN STATEMENT OF CIRCULATIUN . Trschuck, secrotary of The Bee Tublishing compuny, aoes solemnly swear that the actual eirculation of Tue DAILY Ber ) 1861, was o8 plained by the fact that while the gration from tho 000,000 will thus withdraw from the publi 1 offset by the immigration of I Canadians, the (.. 24,020 CHUCK Fxorn fo Tefore me nnd subscribed i my presence this 40 dav of January. A. D.. 1801 TRPAL. | N, P, Fril. Notary Publio. sed, the onvollment of pupils in the public schoo is instructivo ns which is going on in the the population. away from home in sucl that comparatively few marey and settle vo state. Therr plices ners. mainly unmar- not avail them- stem of public edue There s an instructive comparison to be made botween the school statistics of ow Humpshire, illustrating the effect of the different twork in the two. tionof New of the changre George I Tzschuck, being duly sworn, de- ores nnd snys that he is secretary of The Bee { ypany. that the actual average down in their etalen by forelg , whose children do selves of ours, 61 con many quarter billionaires. cop o8t for October, the times 1800, 22,150 enormously increase the size of great fortunes, and that the same conditions that have made the Astors from a cor- ner groceryman, and the Vanderbilts from & steamboat skipp one hundred years, will mako their de- scendants worth billions in the course of time, if all conditions remain the same. But itis when he begins to analyze the auses and suggest the remedy that his ders will differ with him. Mr. Shearman is a free trador. from the hy pothesis that all pro- with no benefits ex- n of logic by in m D, 1800 NP, Frin, Notary Publio. 1 — WiATevER is lacking in Denver's record of 1890, there is not scarcity of The popula- 6,530, and of 1,686,880, the proportion be- ing loss than five to one in favor of the Jut the number of pupils en- publieschools 12 in Wiscon- 1zland state, with 22 ry in less than rolled inNewll 0,813, against 350, sin,and the New | percent of Wisconsin's population, but 17 percent of its publicschool enroll- It is to be noted, also, that th proportion of parochial schools to public larger in the western there is a higher not attend 15 at home, and the re- forms of the new legislature should begin with keeping down the legislative tection is taxation eept to the rich, which he tries to establish the point is ingenious and misleading. middle clas 011 of Colorado speaks eloquently against tho force bill, s out west and knows a land schools is much He says the workingmen must spend at least three-fourths of their income for goods that are taxed import duties and that they pay, efore, ten times as much for taxa- tion as the rich begin to spend his income for protected s, according to the essayist, therich man’s fortune is steadily rolling up by reason of evasion of his share of taxes and also because ho generally profits, as the owner of mincs, mills, or' other protected interests, by the taxes wrung from the poor man. This theory is put forward as the sole explanation of the fortunes tod of children who THE present governor of this common- wealth is credited with a sinistor purpose lly illustrate that shabby pro- thatin proportion to population Wiscon- sin has a far larger number of children than New | tistics regarding education indic the figures for the whole country gratifying progroes beon made during the pst ten yeurs, A MIGHTY change has come over the #pirit of the Union Pacifie, For the first time in its history the company wantsto “‘consult congress” before carry- ing out contracts with other corpora- show that. ver, By this proc HOMESEEKERS AND THE SOUTH, The Atlanta Congtitution is disple with THE BEE'S comments on the sub- ject of the Ashville convention and im- migration to the south, the land of Dixie has been overboomed and that northern men arenot as sin- v welcome there asin the west, and concludes as follow DENVER'S building record is suffi- ciently large to warrant the local press in keeping within hailing distance of It denies that and free trade isoffered as the only remedy for an evil that seriously menacos pected that free trade will make direct taxation inevitable, golden era the rich man will pay most of while time will tancebetween the very rich and the very poor. 1g the value of Omaha's building im provements 21,272 is absurdly fulse. Reliable footings show more than double the Tho cry of these wustern newspapers amounts to nothing more than a vain effort to restrict immigration. by the threatencd depopulation of up their country at They camnot do y are frightencd THE Indiana State Probibition league nded, having concluded that w’s work was unsatisfactory. The failure of prohibition appears to be general, and it is tobe hoped that the honest and well-meaning people who sincerely believe in it will cease to chase the elusive rainbow, and will lend their asm and energy to the enforce- ment of the good restrictive laws we the expemse of the south. this, however, by mistepresentation, and itis Mr. Shearman leaves outiof considern- | o Tuie that thoy should resort t 1. tion all the peculiar causes which have millionaires T Ber would not willfully misrep- resent tho <hivalrous south, but it must firmly insist that it is rightin its propositions on the of immigration to that section, notorious fact that the Magic City busi- unheard-of excesses in that locality in the last few ars, Men have platted towns in Ken- Georgin and other .andrun vestibuled oxcursion trains full of northern investors and, in some i nside business prop- Vanderbilts representatives of the multi-millionaires inthis country. The Astor fortune traces back to the ownership by John Jacob Astor of im- mense tracts of land in the very heart of Now York, acquired when the greatest city of the new world was a straggling village of dubious promise. erties were rapidly increasod in oxtent as the shrewd Dutch merchant realized upon - his first purchases, and itis still the policy of the family to buy estate and rent or improve it. caso of the Astors, wealth increased not, as Mr. Shearman recicons, by “compound interest at six per cent,” but by strides of from 100 vo 1,000 per cent. The Van- derbilts made their wmoney largely in railrond enterprises, and the Goulds by daring speculation and the manipulation of stocks. TIsit fair to charge the pro- tective system, or even the notorious ovasion of just taxes, with tho entir sponsibility for the e fortunes? Manifestly the theory is fal- Illustrations definitely multiplied to riddle it. Rockefellers, for instance, became pluto- crats from a monopoly in natural oil, Pullman and Westinghouse from the exclusive ownership of patents of evtra- and all the rest from the trade of enormously enhanced val- ues resulting from the. rapid develop- ment of the country, marvelous inven- tions, or powerful monopolies, THE lato watchdog of the city troas- Those prop. | ticky, Temessce, i ury, Mr. Councilman Whecler, is sotting his pins to capture the presidency of the | hoard of trade. Tho election of three 5 now directors will take place tomorrow stances, sold orty”at 8300 per foot buildings of at the chamber of commerce. Without any diseription had been erected. The New York Herald recounts among its achievements for 1890 ‘‘the exposure of scbemes, " and illustrates it with a pie- ture of a sign-hoard stuck intoa teact of wilderness, bearing the suggestive le- *AirCity,” Why does not the Con- stituetion prosecute theesteemed Herald for Here isanother item of evidence confirmatory of THE 13 the matterin the shape of a letter re- ceived in this office from a northern im- migrant to Goorgia: ‘Wheeler’s capabilities, wo question the wisdom of making a man secretary of the board who is neither merchant nor manufacturer and has nothing in com- sues a not- able New Year’s edition, with a com- plete description: of the splendid pro- gress and remarkable surrounding re- sources of the Black Hills metropolis. No one who reads this attractive setting forth of Deadwood’s advaniges can fail to realize the benefits which Omaha will recoive as a result of the establishment of through railroad connection. Omaha extends hearty New Year's compli- ments to the lively town of Deadwood. tence of theso ATLANTA, Ga., Bee.]—In your closed siip from M.—[To the Editor of claration In omstitut ion you the Atlantic nafl at the rieht place. south during the last fittecn years, I have very state, and Iwarn i, northern and western > toany such poor, yellow ground country as this. where southern people starve theraselyes. Come hero yourselt, Mr. Editor, any time between thisand February, and at the railroad statlons you will see proplo mov- ing away by the hund reds. ing with their teams toTexus 50 you will find it In every southern south Arkonsas Is the plain peoplo and let FUik D 10 ALL. traveled over almost dinary value, AT THE recont moeting of the Ameri- | OFOirary value, can Poultry association an instructive paper was read on government lorestry abroad, from whioh it appears that Turopean governments have learned to take much better caresof their forests than is practiced by our government. witzerland the work of forest reform was begun more than a century ago and has been adhered to with the most satis- factory results, and the success achieved is of peculiar interest to America for the reason that the Swiss were confronted by our own problem of extending a con- crete forest policy over the various states of a common union. France stands with Germany at the head of the nations a8 regards thoroughness of forest policy, though the methods of the two govern- ments differ. The results obtained, however, are equally satisfactory, There are many valuable suggestions in the practico of these foreign governments, which is the result of generations of in- telligent and careful experiment, which s e Others are moy- The existing tariff system errs on the side of too much protection and lays sary and unjust taxes on the people. But it is not wholly an and it by no means restricts its benelits to the millionaire: forms are needed and are bound to come. Direet taxation and a doubtless be other reforms there will be some that will prevent the evolution of more Van- derbilts, Goulds and Rockefellers from the unholy system of trusts, combines and reckless speculations that now exist, No reformer yet vrescribed a single panacea for all the evils of a complex Shearman has not done it with his suggestion of free trade and direct taxation, but his articlg is provocative of thought, and that is & great virtuo, — INTERESTING SCHOOL STATISTICS. The census bureau has just issued a bulletin giving advanced statistics as to the educational conditions in several of the states, which, while too fragmentary to allow of general comparisons or the approximation of the results to b shown in the country as a whole, still presents some interesting facts. One of the states whose school statistics are embraced in the bulletin is Louisiuna, and.it appears that in the last ten years the number of pupils enrolled in the public schools has increased over fifty-three per cent, s0me unnec notice, you northern enouzh alone, Thiscommunication is from a stranger and was evidently ealled out solely by the truth of Tue I enthusiasm of our A tlanta contom porary for the south is natural and proper, but it cannot be accepted by western and northern people against the mass of con- evidence that is known to lower tariff will 2'S romarks. It is equally untrue that northern men receivo the samoe hearty welcome in the south as in the west. There is a differ- ence which goes down to the ver, of society inthe two sections. possible for the southern arfistocrat to believe that a northern man is just as good as he is, or to forget that the dream of a southern republic was shattered by northern bayonets. talist and manufactuver is welcomed—as capitalist and manufacturer, but not as neighbor, friend and fellow- the west it is wholly diferent. noinsurmountable noembarrassing recolloctions, no prido of The avenucs of society, busi- ness and polities are and as free as the eternal sunshine. men have equal priviloges and oppor- tunities and work shoulder to shoulder tomake the history of this section & civilization, 0 a forest policy in this country, but the dificulty is that it scoms next to im- possiblo to arouse congress from its The Yankee capi- European countries the preservation of the forests, or their protection against reckless destruction, is a matter of vital concern to governments und people, but it appears impossible to create a like sentiment on the subject in. the United States. It will undoubtedly be de- wveloped in time, but the danger is too late to accomplish much good. Thisis one particular in which we can well af- fors of traditions, while the population of the state shows | againof only ninateon per cent. isgratifying evidence of the develop: of the echool system of a state which untila few years has been very educational round numbers thereare fifty thousand negro children in the schools of Louise iana, and if that stato continues to pro- gress us it has done in recent end of the decade now entered will find it occupyinga front place among | the states, at least of the south, important matter of promoting public This | In | | | | ) TANUA prouder chapter than that of any other RY 4, 1801.“-TWELVE PAGES wo hiave every reason to belleve are in [ VARIOUS VIEWS ON THE WA R, OVERLOOKED OBITUARKES. complete harmony with the opiion of the president and sccretary of the inter- fory a8 well as with the intelligent senti- The country is During the Tast weok of the departed yeur thero passed away four notal wore morely And yet, in yours gone by, at varlous tims the newspapers of the country had groat space to reounting the deeds of jobrities whose d oux trenchery telling for the Konrnoy Hub: that the telegraph had be ys-atroclous, foolhardy aslons no surprise to any person who 1s familiar with the westorn Tn- dian, and particularly with the Sloux affalr on Wounded Knee The south s improving and will con- tinue todo sd,'bit the west is to bo the seat of the groalest future developments inthe United States, ment of the tion with the Indian problem, but per haps it will not be wholly without™ eom- pensatory results. ademand for earnest, rational and un- prejudiced cons rek ereated o great yurse, but it was what might have been expected, niso attractod su somoof which startied the whole conn- try, but they nd prssed away almost Such Is the the frony 1l lives, but someot the nstan of thelr carcers are Intoresting. Of these four known to the pros Every newspaper reader for yours news columns, but among the advertisements, on account of the little Julstana lottery o The annual reviews of the growth of Omaha, Kanstia City, St. Paul, Denver! furnish v, terial for comphrisons. ch in population, as shown by al constis, wus as follows: J1. Minneapolis ., l 2, Omaha . . rate it makes Wounded Knee will go down In history as one unhonored and un blondiest Indian b nother example of the t with savagos, of tho redskins, horribie, but now that the Indians have con- menced, the soldiers should them and never stop until they are subjeoted AND THAT. one probably best bush right over o paver a fow tempt to tap & race wire in nd a story told by an alor 1n this ity some time Tt was olght of ten yoars ue nd there ore fiveof us in the ol rooms had to de- Fnessigo sorvl companies for their intormation from the raco tracks, and 1 was an easy mat- 11s opirators wo heat ther. Ad stand at Siratozn, an- u braneh offies in Broad St ek elty, Twas i the ma i offi another man hing ar oA Fremont Hernld: Big Foot, in spite ot his Wl to get his foot in it when he Thiswilldoubt- weoping by fender sentimentalists, but there will bo much more ity among the The reeord of building improve during 1890 makes a radical change in the order, s is shown by the following: rmyof Uncle Sam, ause of moro dimculty in wh e Involved, mbed to the In those days the p afeeling of s 0 years of a Minneapolis, president of the lot frontier lite to buikdup houses for thensel vos Bull is anotuer acefully adorn the hunt- oty company for twelve and familos, . Kansas City,"" " The number of permits foc buildings issued and tho average cost of eich | were: do tly auestionabl; the doctor, personally s Nebraskan: are receliving lavelo n con number of the br the Tndiuns a only way to ¢ 15 to kill them The murderc taste of the medicine they wring, ana although n large boys 1n blue have fal de to suffer, djority of the Indians So far considerable sympathy nifested for th government has 100 much so i the coun- eharitable and was said as wollas largoly d oveasional cha six Innguages fluently; was fona of {ntelln nd, whilo essentially domostie 0 SUPport sco; atributing to es- Our fifth man the betting fn the pool room. “lawyer,” who did finish of each stand, who was an expert, gave the nunber cort whiner to them Omaha......... tual pursuits man and the ut with them 510 one wiil know to whom to write for tickets, and the lottery comp: addressed direct. Kansas City.,.. While Denver's building record over- shadows all others in the group, sholags in the rear in commerce The value of her manufactured product M0, or 10,000,000 lesg Lquickly reached ove and wade the figy tie L mustgive in or be exterminated. In Journal: ment not meddied neral Miles' or s on the wire to advertise who auphin as president. Had the interior depart- ave the information o U General BB, $pinner's signature was better Douht the pools Known a decade 020 than that of Dr. Dauphin, s was no similarity the twomen or Lo BuiTalo Bill Of course, In orler to suspielon, the pools, but in howover, bety A no act of the gencral's either public or private, was ever consider troasurer of the 1 Spinner gained fools up $44,07 than Omaha, Paul, and equaling the one itemof pac ing house products of K The value of the jobbing trade the cities in the following order: . . 8140,1832 850 weeks ago, that busy-bod, oncoet mischief, by the Indian police might not The desperate o would have had selionie e of wd over #i0), Everythingwent swi stday, but on the see ances that Big Foot idonitable band took at Wounded Knee was doubtless the outeome of the | passion of revenge that was stirred up by the of the old medicine man, If it hiad been the pol- ernment to troat the sked to sur- bore his shenature, and slgnature was seionsly drunk turn back upon its ndend with General Spinner used a pen of 1t was he who first brou the employment of women fn the various d. s of the government. atter portion of the war whon hundreds of widows und sisters woro 1to find o meansof support. wonderful flour to the superintendent ended our little sel It was asliek job thoug the pool room rendoerand lay down thoef used to do so, But instead of thi In municipal improvements, exelusive of the amounts expended by semi-public ol the winner befor alds or ten to fifte fore they got the win 1t was durin t thesotdiers went ind undertood to take their would handle a The Indians were followed and the soldiors were for- m,and when the Indians deserving women, arms from theni, a8 a pareat $051,518; Kansus city, $047,010; Sf Minnoapolis not known. transactions houses of the five cities place them in the following order in the amonat of in- about and conxol, bid to fire upon th their fustness in th opened up the fire whipped, but at what cost ? been completely ey now have st before the Jockeys have at problem was how to provide for them 1 8pinner suggosted that much of the alworkof the depart rooms all over t alighted frow t) uld bo dono Places were wury department While Stane story printed In Tie Bk o tlon camp and the faituro fish for food when the ri called tothe gentlon was in Chieago last wook, t ning Starva- £ the explorers to ws close by, A fow in the tr They did so well that p. in other brane Goneral Spinn, without the loss Kansas Clty.. s of the gov- they should hu v : Such papers as the sentimentalize know nothing of the real mutter, Lot the olitor of the Wor for a time with his elemployment for wor official, General Spinner was somowhat bump- He had hisown opl bornness in fnsisti himinto conflict although in his ninctieth yoar at the timeof s death, he kept up his intere s, estimated at wealth of each explorers of this The relativ ons and iis stub- them often brought ly not ina situation 15,1 he knew not erty would he ¢ family (ifhe had most tervible death ho could concelve or | Kansas City., .., st in public af- tripas we had befor it find something in the woods (o help s, butsurely not casion ono ot ny Nin five hours. mareh on such a stoek of provis- natural for men ¢ ammunition to huit ols which they had totraverse than to sit Morcover, n St Peuli... 0., oue), suffer th recognize the Hull, yet about s 20 Hull helped to b oustros by which sot half the world by the Huil died at Bingha scencof his success und su garmaker by t soowned o furm in the town of Cardif, Onondaga county, N. Y. low workmen was a_gonfus, who could turn trek in addition tragrant weed, making agiant of stone, p the carth and then “discoverin flod man of prehist rajive statistics Omaha second in population, into existence ture, he would say with the moasures i certainly sho 100 severe, and have boen deliberated value of public of buildings value of manufactuced products, third improvements, third in would a white mun? evated, are his feelings so fiae that you are by holding him respon- down and fish, ipally composed of & h dlet as a mea theu fishare simply regular food Wemight have round plantation fouror five miles off or twe or fifty miles distant, No, siri fishare not among the possibilities of provision for an African trip, unless t rps was prin- | afraid to hurt them Among Hull's fol- sivle for his orimes? amount of rolling up_ thy This gonius struck the id iting the figuro | 2 sort of s t g0 to make a commercial and industrial center doos third rank, The O'Neill Ttem hasstarted inon its elghth with fluttering prospocts. she go below nl is steadily pushing for With the possible excop- tion of Kansas City, none of the group can appronch her in miles of paved graded - thoroughfaros E These essential improvements, which have borne heavily on payers, aro now practically at an end so that the energies of the people can be divected to other pr gressive channels, Ono of the most’ gratif, of the record is the splendid condition of A’s public finances, apolis and St. Paul are stag gering und apublic debt of $7,050. respectively, Omaha’s outstanding ob- ligations amount to only $1,9: Omaha points with pride o her splen- five leading But thegenlus o cash tocarry out hisseh andhe wis forced t take hisemploy nto the secrot ender Times entered Lust week with M. W. Murtay at the hel The Nemaha County Cox put up the ade aftoru ye bor, and thon Huall was made The fizure was box from Addison, N Hull's farm d there it was burrried deep | > next spring Hull “w It was then that the was “discoverel.” over the find ranger was eighteen years old last weok and is as lively and chip- y aredricd" agzency tho other day, the war ety al paper wired the “After sevon orrespondent [ The Brownv'lle News has suspended publi- s thesupport given by tho merchants was not adequate. agan Sun and Alma Beacon have e ed and will run under the name of the latter us an allinnce orzan, uf, which fell before the stor of winter, has been succeeded by the Oitizon, active ongagement [ lave just sont an Tudian courier to the tront." ment” in which tho correspondent has seemed to be participatin This statement is zraplied by the s soldiers had ponies forsatety “just back of ‘active enga for afow yours, Is in keeping confirmed by t ana seientist visited the curious ing featuros placed thelr the house [1ive in.” > owners wers coining money, when suddenly the £ amo a drug on ors,” howe ver, camoouteven, but they falled o make tho fortune which they had fondly The genius who spent pores Into tho | dead, Hull s d. Postmaster Warren has retired from the editorship of the ked Cloud Argus Knight hayve assumed controf of ‘While Minne- the market. udopied by dendb, motor car conductor toa reporter the Nuckolls county, will soon have un- in splte 6 the fact that the ed by R, K. Hill other newspape ar with o needlo Wy ably cove many well-to-do men, who never give up their fares until they are sk i bly trying to be fares are the mid Thelr easlest L and Cox the third membor is eking out an e: Jacob Horn has retired from the Broken Bow Leader, leaving W. O, Chapuan in the paper has been reduced in men of the plan is to stand corner and wait fora crowded car, and and mix in with the Is kept busy and fails cities of the northwest. Hernellsvilie, Smuggler, the famous stallion whose fe © thé wonder POLITICS AND THE INDIAN SERVICE. We print elsewhero a communication from Mr. Herbert Welsh, correspond ing oretary of the Indian Rights tion, in which he stutes the position the association re hould rule in the the Indian s Welsh objects to the in selecting agonts, that is, ap- the states or ter- servations are located, on the ground that it virtually commils thoir choice to the local poli- He urges that the politicians asan alhance paper, the wde 1ts appearance last sthers as editors, kes the fifth paper for the eity of York. wzette gave all its readers o 18 present in vthe shape of a fac simile of The Citizen, publised on wall paper July 1863, at the city of Vieksbvrg, two days bo- fore the surrender to Gene MeDonough, the turf in the miration of thesporting world, died The story of S I8 sensationnl version from i thr king of the trotting turf was the mes into prominence who is nov th Independent, which weck with Worley I inside with the crowd the deadbeat is ugzlor's card tor does not know who b o, and his con- inute pacer t the then seven people nd only collected six f; a red-faced man ding the principle appointment of st Palo Alto , being bred by an of Columbus, O. 4% any horse not of blue blood would 1y editor of the i1l Tribune, but now a reporter on meup into the his paper and furnish lo for supremicy between the reds and whites. : C.W. liyatt of the Fremont Fiaii, Dodge county’s veteran editor, enjo straight tnthe f; Ho roplicd tha the curat Harnoystreet thatthe only et was an old lady red-faced mar country to r them from vy for him, 5o that the ho Mr. Morgan's possession Morgan put 1 atripto the train, and after d and his face grow st Juctantly put his hand inhis poe Mr. Hyatt asserted that thouzh some Kre- mont editors scomed t troubled with bile, as for himself o was in the best of health and with all the world. 1ventr was Issued by th News on New Ye front pago of which was in November when In the following u sonsational enmpalzn k anda record ot 2 st stallion reco 1 2:17 ut Belmont park, Phi appointments about the of the service, or the welfare of the In- dians; but simply to pay obligations to backers, and that must flow from such a system, There 15 unquestionably o deg this objection, but it Tho female deadbeat 15 the hardest sot ave W deal with, for I never pata woman off the car in my life. lot them ride for nothing. method employed by wom way onthe motorea rsis to comes around It they hav r'sday, on the pnin, muking In July of the sume yoar he defeated tho hitherto invineiblo n afive heat raco at In the follow- e most common in beating their tuntilthe con- n suddonly put r dress pocket and proclaim, 1. that they have left Ul bad results e democritic ade conspieuous the Outsidoot its bour- headline, “A bon proclivities the News is all ri . Sedgwick of the York reecable Christmas surprise by ployes of his office. trip in the stat roous, the floors nicely earpeted, and fif cor newspaper were gathered It was a ples © of validity in annot bo accepted against the *‘home rule” policy of appointments, unlessit be ad- mitted that the policy necessarily in- volves theabdication of all responsibil- ity by the authorities which is obviously not the case, would manifestly be unrensonable to that qualified persons for the Indian se cannot be.found in the states or territories lowering his re month at Ha with alook of alg pocket book at hom 65 was glven Churter Oak f in whreh he met Goldsmith Maid and ullerton, u r but Smuggier o ras did the Maid, was the stallion re horse broke down In California, and twe ired to the stud b him, and sold retuming howmo STATE P found his editorial RESS TOPICS, at with about as muck ord o mado Consldered simply THE OMAHA BE braska newspape Ka renders; and this is true, not- withstand ing the jealousy of some editors or the 111 wilk of sonie re Republican: tike Jay Burrows attompts to pick upan - tellectual glant like ¢ tho slack of the trous ors and throw him bod- whe trausom, it dos g todiscover that ho has undortaken the biggest job of his life. Plattsmouth Journal: at Washington, | asa nowspape yors later was re Russell did not su a few years ago to M owned him at the tio for all con- The Plattsmonth sentative of the capitol of ¢ 1sion (o remark that new year with last dollar of 1ts been paid off and that or linving come into our posession sevel The Journal s ready to ro atulations of its fr 55 county, takes It Mstarts in with t Abolish th, St. Paud Pion When the nation voted to treat the surviv- with unbounded Van Wyck by corded debt having the most natural thing to look there for such persons, ‘regavdless of the principle recogaized by both of the political par- ties, though faithfully observed only by present adwinistration, thatnone but residents should be appinted to places in the giftof the federal govern. Woshould' expect to find among the people livingin proximity to [ndinns, presumably/ familiar and hdbits, tholr management than could be found''elsewhere, and wo be- lieve thore ncod'be no trouble whatever from the *‘home rule” policy if the Wash- ington authorities will exercise proper care in ascertaining the fitness of candi- The fact that mistakes have ap- parently been made in the case of one or two appointments hardly warrants the conclusion of Mr, Welsh that the policy he condemns is inherently ineflicient and tng soldiers of th Liberality it did not vote or intend that shouid go to attorneys. Lions of thismor Itis ridiculous that give & pension to any him to employ a lawyer before ho logal services to ho ron somotimes are, the govern The Lincoln € Rosewater all kinds of u Rosewater testified t torprising editor of the the brightest tite the editor of th prubibition ame in sum of wouoy. papers the € tasty unnual number of bis also sent out s souvenirs photos of the ature, showing f weekly editions, e proud of his work, 1o b appreciated. dered. as thers ment should furnish them water was not OMAHA. LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY. Subsoribed and Guaranteed Capital. P’ald in Capital 4 Buys and solls stocks and commerofal papor, Lrtists; acts as transfor agent and trustocof corporations, sakes churge of property, oul- ) haas o be se Ttis very oasy ale frandsin clo much more dificult to prove th such frauds existe fraud of any kind has been dovelop testimony in this stat wind, the nea action of the prohibition lead Niobrara Ploneer: left ts office with a better record for th He has stood lies of Neb Though he b nds in viow, raph, in his lust issue takes oo “It s over fifto nowspaper work slon to remurk writer commenc North Platte, 1t was ali prohibition ch to fraud being the ceident to u singlo ploye whose subseription to the Telegraph Itmay not be genorally known, dup newspaper subseription 10 be better than appears Lo p Tho Grand 1s bonds; negotlutes ney general has | was pald up. ent the aceldents Omaha Loan&Trust Co SAVINGS BANK. S, E. Cor. 16th and Douglas Sts. ald in Oapital A Subseribed and Guaranteed Capital. .. Lisbility of Stoekholders. 6 Por Ceut Lntereat Paid on Deposits, FRANK J. LAN Ofocers: A. U, Wymun, president. J. J. Brown, vice-prosident, W. T. Wyman, treasurer. Dircctomsi—A, U, Wyinun, J. B, Millard, J.4. Brown, Guy O. Barton, E. W. Nasb, Thenas L Kimpall, Georse B, Lake master of the situation. erippled in brin hisefforts have nevertheless brought “tuward ness™ Daily Independent was Foar's duy, and the nearly a quar- says Editor Hedde, “this woekly was twenty-four, ter of a century,” Iroad vadues Nebraska City man Who was not this state, has written open lotter” to Mr. Rosewater in which Lie whines like a bear with o & glvos Wug Bes credit intimated that y other man wrds is polit wrtem outburst will wot tend to help As to the position of the Indiun Rights jciation that onlymen of capacity, \d- experionce should be ap- pointed to the Indian servic: e should be divorced wholly from politics and spoils, Tie BEE is in full accord with it, cuoted with approval the views on this s t of Commissioner Morgan, which It has wept wh n the people governor ot slom to rejolce endured the privations and ou to all ulong the and reapod with thy nd has grown to feel Itsolf an osseutinl part of & community of waleh it 1s Hedde's hoart and hana ure with the people, and the people seem to appreciate 16 in turn suffered and human oxis- Rosuwator has in the state, We have recently

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