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1 THE . ATER, Eraton MORNING, PUBLI OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE e . HED EVERY TFUME OF SUBSCIIP TION, Daily Bon (witnonut Sundny: Yaur Daily and Sunduy. Ono YOAt... Six Montis, 1 Three Montiis Eundny Deo, O v Baturday oo, Weekiy Bee, O OFFICER Omalin. The e Bullding Kouth Omaba N and 2ith Stronts, nt BUSINESS Ly and ran prynbie to the order THE BEE PUBL l‘l)_\ll‘,\N\; HWORN STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION trieof Nevnkn, L County of Douglna, | Goorge 11, Tzschnck, socretaty of TIE BEE Pub Jeling compnny, docs solomnly swear that th rotual elr Yon of TIE DATLY BEE fOF the week ending Sopt Taerany, Soptomber \ Thursdny. Friday. <¢p Faturday, Sept GROL B TZSCHUCK, hecribod in my pres Fiir. Notary Publie, Cirenlation for Augast 24,430 ALL tho dashes in Mr. Clevel letter of accoptanco will probably rvefor to Hill Average nd’'s T — From London comes this brief cable- gram: “Tho earl of ssex is dend,” and noono seems to eave. But that unnouncement during the veign of lizaboth ereated the wildest excite- ment, — mattor, as in tho Governor Flower of ted 8o promptly, editably ns to suggesh ns of his political IN this cholor switehmen's strike, New York honorably and « violent suspic dentinls, I should be to every sen that this has n president who shows hi so thoroughly loyal and devoted to the intevests of this country’s welfare as Bonjamin Harrson has done in this cholern erisi; source of pr nution 1sell cit . hel cution of two negroes who wero red on the flimsi I'his is the ty prompted the ofli st Corbett for viols senter fnable, high mora attempt the Sunday law, Di. GEORGE L. MILLER'S tions on wheat raising in Nebraska sonsibio and timely. This fall oug afford farmers of this state an excellent opportunity to sow a large amount of winter wheat, with atl conditions of the soil favorable for splendid returns at harvest time, st grounds imag- whose to same village to arr ob Tre condition of Omah«’s board side- walks is disgraceful on some strects, and Lt is an example of providential care that broken limbs are not nightly currences, and the city treasury stantly ealled upon to pay for the same, There many loose planks in the city's sidewalks, oc con- Froyx a easual reading of demoeratice opinions we are pained to discover that in none of them do we find hearty ap- proval of Hurrison’s latter of accept- ance. This is astonishing when we consider the zeal they have previously exhibited in applauding all his letters, speeches and mossag THE tobacco crop in the Connecticut valley this year is 40 per cent largor than over before, not because the yield per acre has been greater, but because the McKinley law encouraged extensive planting. This is only one of many in- stances in which protection huas im- mensely promoted Amevican produc- tions. NO MEMBER of the state centr: mittee or of the county commitee should be a cundidate. A man cannot serve two masters succossfully at the same time. A man whe lis an election at the hunds of the people is necessarily compelled to devote his entive time and energy to his own candidacy. His own interest will nearly alw ¢h with that of other men on his ticket und the result is usually far from satisfactory. 1 com- s el THE friends of Mr. A. P. Tukey have induced him to become a cundidato for the city council. Mr. Tukey is an old resident of the K and v largely intoreste real estate, He 15 not a politician and has no rela- tions with political cliques and factions. His candidacy should meet with favor at the hands of republicans who desire tho esented in the coun- Thuw suspensions of British ilding nssociations involving linbil ities of $30,000,000 were very disastrous to many poor people of London land whose life earnin away. Just at this time, wnen English labor is in such a wiserable condition ause of the McKinloy law. this sus- pension will produce general alirm und despair. No dishonesty is alloged, hut poor management, which, of course, does not lift the burden from the suf- fovers or in uny way decrease their mis- ery. cent ind Eng- s are thus swept —— has undertaken the task of telling the peovle whove dirt and filth most abound. Th diseuse-breed- ing holes that disgrace the city und are a menaco to publie health, They must be ubated at all The Board of Health has ordered muny of these ulcers removod but the instructions have been iguored. The police department should be authorized o enforce the orders of th: Board of Health and city councl There are many householders who do not know the dungor to health of unclean promises, and there wre many who do not care to know. This cluss particular 1y needs the attention of the police. A few well-deserved arvosts will have a sulutary effoct upon slothful und slovens ly citizons who have not yot learaed the waorite of soap and waler, re events, | man, ATTACKING T4 s in nocord with the oternal fitnoss of things for the organ of political lnme ducks and maleontents to boldly nssumo tho championship of Judge Scott in his insane ambition to becomo a congross. 1t has heen the invariable rulo of that brokenswinded concorn to oppose cvory monsure THi Bek advoeates and SUpport svery man, no matter how un populne, unfit or disraputable he may henover he isopposed by THE BEE. What Tne Ber sald in favor of “Colonel” Scott as eandidate for judge in the fall of 1801 and what it says against Judgo Scott as a cundidate for congress in 1502 uro pnraded in parallel columns as an exhibition of glaring in- consistencios and rank injustico, Now what are the facts? In the sum- mer of 1801, while the responsible editor of T Bk wasabsent abroaa, Mr, Scott assumed tho b rolonel” and had hinself puffed every othoer day in all the Omaha papers as the leader of the movement to get the nationnl republi- can convontion loeated at Omaha, I dentally the *‘colorel” made a well-di- rected effort to mount the tidal wave of pateiotism and réform with an oye to gotting the nomination for judge. Ie ingratinted himsoll into the confidence of o W. Liningoevand other friends of Tri: Bek and worked tho paper for all the favors notices and endorse- ments ho could get at the publishers’ exponse By the first of Octobur, when the cditor of Tt 1 rosumead chavge, he found the committod to the great Heolone sandidacy,and while he doubted fitne for the bench he could not, without jeopard tho sue- of the to ana loeal tickets, change and dump the “colonel” overboard. ‘ott was electod on the express con- dition that the distriet judgeship would fill the measure of his ambition. Me was no sooner elected than he mounted the high horso and started out to grati- fy his passion for political glory and place [lis tactics have been those of the neeant demagoguo and chuvlatan He has d rod the ermine in the mirve of ward politics and a popular feoling of di t for himself by his iraseiblo and uncontrollable temper. Last fall there little known in Omaha about Mr. Scott’s career 1 war and in peace. His candidacy for the national convention and his recent crazy anticg have brought to light facts that not only lower him in the popular esti- mato and confidence but show him to be unworthy of any position of or trust, be, his ro was honor It was our hope and desive that Judge Scott would not press his claims and spare us the necessity of discussing his demorits und exposing his unsavory record. Up to this time we have ro- frained from giving publicity to many transaetions on his part as a lawyer and as a business man which bear upon his v. But if Judge Scott and his fool friends porsist in their course in as- sailing the motives of Tue Bre we shall be compelled to go still further and show how utterly unworthy he is to poso as a political loader or reformer, A PROGRAM OF DEMOLITION, For move than thirty y every policy and purpose of the democratic part ionary. Duri 1l this period that party has ant i everything which the prog of the nge demanded and publican party has accomplished. denounced as unconstitutional the cial policy made necessary in order to carry on the war and did all in its power to damago the credit of the gov- ernment during the contest for the preservation of the union. It bitterly fought the acts of reconstruction. It opposed the amendmonts to the consti- tution made necessary by the changed conditions resulting from the rebellion, It has favored every financial heresy and vigorously antagonized the re- sumption of specie payments. It has unceasingly opposed the policy of pro- tecting Americanindustries and Ameri- can labor, though it has never before gone so far in this airection as now, with its aeclaration that protection is unconstitutional. In a word, every poliey and principle ndvocated by the republican party as wecessary to the strength and security of the govern- ment and the progress and prosperil of the country has found an earnest and persistent opponent in the democratic party. The present position of the democracy has beon well characterized asa pro- gram of demolition. he protective policy,” said the president in his letter of acceptance, *“to which all business, weven thatof the importer, is now ad- Justed—the reciprocity policy, the new merchant marine, are all to be demol- ished—not gradually, not taken down, but blown up. Lo this program of de- struction it has udded oue constructive feature, the r ablishment of stato banks of issue.” Vo more forceful state- ment could be made of the present atti- tude of the democratic party and it is an uttitude in the muin entirely consis- tent with its past course. Its plan of *reform® consists in undoing everything has been done for the upbuilding of the nation during the pust thirty years. It would destroy protoction as being un- itutional; it would do away with iprocity because that policy stands in the wayof free trade; itdoss not want a restoration of the merchant marine for the reason that that would enormously increase the ship-building industry und add a new force favorable to protection; 1w would radically change the financial system of the country by restoring the *wildeat” and *“red dog” currency that eirculated before the war, causing immeasurenble loss to the musses of the people, and by instituting the f and unlimited coinage of silver. The record and the avowed principles of the party permit no doubt that this reactionary course would bo pursued if the democracy were given control of the government. 1L would not halt until every republicun policy under which the nation has grown und prospered was overthrown, The financial and business affairs of the country would be forced to readjust themselves to new conditions, and every practical wan of intelligence will understand what this would mean. It would result in such a business con- vulsion us the country has never seen, bringing disaster to millions of people, from which it would take years to re- integri nas been roy which the re- It THE cover. Kaith in the intelligence and patriotism of the American people war- rants the boliof that they will not ole- vate to power in this yonr of large and growing prosperity the party of demoli- tion, A CONNECTION WITH DULUTH, Jadoubtedly there will in time be a divect railway connoction hotween Omaha and Duluth, That such a con- nection would be groatly to the ndvan- tage of this city and to the agricultural intorests of the state is capable of dem- onstration, It would effect a cheapen- ingr of transportation to the east for the products of Nebraska., From Omaha to Duluth is about the same distance as from Omahn to Chicago. 1t is the opinion of disintorested railroad mon that a line can bo constructed from this city to the Minnesota lake port for much less thun the cost of any lino now used botwoen Omaha and Chicago. This, with the less costly terminal oxpensos as compared with Chicago, would enable freight to reach the torn murkets without having the charges consume tho larger portion of the market price in tho east. Whatever saving can bo effected in freight onthe products of Nebraska is g0 much gain to our p ducers. A railway line that would ren- dor Omaha practically independent of Chicago, instend of being, ns now, trib- utary to that city, it 18 reasonably bo- lieved, would materially enhance the valuo of all the exportable grain of No- braska, Another consideration in favor of such a connection is that it would give Omaha nccess to asplendid lumber district from which it could obtain supplies at consid- erably less cost than now, enabling this city to very materially enlarge its lum- ber trade. At the samo timoe there would be found in this a new and valu- able market for Nebraska products. There are still other practizal consider- ations which make this mattor one of interest to Omaha. The terms of the grant to the Nebraska Contral railway include the building of 100 miles of road in Town, nnd it has been snggosted that this should be extended to Duluth, The stiggestion has much to commend it, as already indicated, to the serious atten- tion of 1ocal capitalists interosted in the nr Omaha. There appears to be no question as to the practicability of making such a conncction between Omahan and Duluth, ana there are e. collont reasons for believing that it would prove to bea profituble invest- ment, 88 of THE PLEA OF THE COAL BARONS, The testimony of President McLeod of the Reading Railroad company before the senute committee appointed to in- igate the ions of the coal combine was an elaborate and carefully prepared statoment, read from type- written coy It does not appear that the great coal bavon was subjected to cross-exnmination nor that he suffered any of the embarrassments which so often disturb the equanimity of wit- nesses. e was permitted to present his eareful and shrewdly constructed argument in nis own way, and it would be an injustice to him and to h hom- ing tesin the anthracite deal to supposo that tho testimony in behalf of the coal robbers was not plausible. The substance of Mr. McLeod’s argument was that rescicted production was ab- soluteiy necessary in order to guard agninsta glutted market and low prices. he fuet is,” ho said, “‘that the capac- ity of all the collieries in stence tods is equal to the production, if kept run- ning constantly, of 55,000,000 tons, whereas the market will take but 40,- 000,000 tons, The Philadelphinand Read- ing Coal and Iron company has in store today at the various points of distribu- tion throughout the country neurly 1,250,000 tons of coal on hand to go to the consumers when they arc ready to take it, and yet the capacity of the col- lieries is so much greater than the de- 1ds of the market that we have been obliged to suspend the operation of them three days every weck for the last three months.” ‘I'his statement may be true, but it will not excite the sympathies of coal consumers. If the combine has really produced more coal than the people will buy, it should bear the burden of its own error instead of making the consumers bear it. It is prol true that the coal barons, in their greed for gatnhave overestimated the forbear- ance of the public. They have made the price of anthracite coal practically vohibitive, and the consumption has, therefore, been greatly reduced. If another dollar per ton should be added to the present price, the combine would have still further complaints to make of the surplus on hand. Itisa well known fuct that 1n the west, whore anthracite is retailed at prices varying from 310 to $12 per ton, the people of the poorer classes are putting up with the annoyances of soft conl rather than pay such prices as are now asked for anthracite. Of course this will reduce the demand for the product of the com- bine, and will cause still further re- steiction of its production. Wiil the president of the Reading company therefore ¢laim that it is® necessary to put the price up higheryet in order to save the combine from loss by overpro- duction? The plain truth is, bine has delibe opers that the coal com- ately laid its plans to rob the people, and if the final result shall prove that it has overrcached itself, it will receive no sympathy, INDUSTRIAL DEPRESSION N ENGLAND. Reports from England show increas- ing industrinl depression, Lateadvices from the Bradford district represent the manufacturing trade as having greatly declined, while prices have fallen to ower figures than ever before. The Amevican tariff is held responsible for this condition of affairs, as it is for the depression in the plush industry, to which relerence has heretofore been made, The worsted industry is the principal one at Bradford, and under the present tariff the manulacture of worsted has been very materially in- ereased in tne United States. To the exleut that this has been the case the industry has fallen off in Log- lund, Not having the American mar- iset us formerly the Bradlord manufae- turers seem unable to find a place for their product elsewhere, but the de- OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY mand in this country for worsteds being NS grealgas over, Amorican manu- facturersdbd workers are reaping the benefit, I American eitizona, it is ronsona ¥ 1o suppose, would regard fact of this kind with satistaction, but the doripekatic party denounces the policy which produces such results as unconstitutional and in effect declaros that wo have no right to provide em- ployment for our own people in this way. Some recent statistics of British ex vorts to the United States show that in o groat proportion of cases thore has been n murkall decline this year as com- pared with tha corresponding period of 1800, Such shatistics show conclusively the effect of' tho tariff on British in- dustrics nnd fully explain tho com- plaints that come from Bngland of serious dopression in many branches of manufacture. There can be no reason- able donbt that in neavly 1o of the declino of English shipments the amount of the loss represents protiy nearly the gain of American manu- facturers and of American lavor. Asall tho facts ara feom British sources thoy will doubtless be accepted as trust- worthy by democrats as well as repub- licans. They are very discouracing to free trade theories. THE GREAT WATLR ROUTE. Althoueh the people of this regionare removed by Wundreds of miles from tho head of navigation on the great lakos they aro deeply interested in the great v coute from Chicago to the Atlan- Tt is the western farmer’s most im- viant outlos to the eastern market, and but for its existenco he would be wholly at the mercy of tho railronds. Therefore it may be assumed that there isa general interest throughout tho west in the commerce of the great lakes, I"ew peoplo understand how great it is. Let it bo remembered that the totul aren of tho lakes is 270,000 square miles, more than half the fresh water area of the world. Ourown United States coast line on the lakes is over 3,000 wmiles in length. There are cizht states whose shores are washed by these fresh water seas, and their population is more than 26,000,000, It isiess than sixty yvears sinee the first vessel, a little schooner, avrived at Chicngo, und it was many after this that navigation really nonthe Iakes. On December ‘1, tho lake fleet consisted of 2,11 ols, exclusive of small tugs, stéam canal Dboats, and sailing vessels not strictly a part of the cdherying fleet. Its valuo was estimated at $57,054,000 and it was rated at 870,000 tons. In recent years the building of large ves- sels has become an important industry at a number of lake ports and many of the ships enguged in the carvying trado be- tween Chieago and Buffalo today would compare fayorably with those devoted to froight traflig on the seas. The ton- nage of all the eraft on the great lakes in 1891 was 1,154,870 tons. The number of vessels registered, enrolled and licensed W ,600, while the number of ves- sels engaged i the foreign trade on the Atlantic, Pacifig and gulf consts was only 1,579, with a tonnage considerably less than that of the lake fleet. It is stated upon good authority that the number of vessels that passed through the *'Soo” canal in 1890 wus three times as great as the number that assed through the Su canal in the same year, and the tonnage through the Detroit river is millions of tous gr than all the arrivals and clearancc Londen and Liverpool combined. The freight carried on lake vessels during the son of 1801, extending throuzh a period of only 231 days, amounted to over 31,000,000 tons. hese facts will give the reader some idea of the influences exerted by the productive west. The great lake fleet has been built up and is now sustained by the rapidly growing demand for transportation of western products to the east. The figures presonted may bo surprising, but they will be increased from year to year as the development of the west goes on. The time is not far distant when the great lakes will be swarming with vessels laden with the products of the west, and it may not be long before those vessels will go directly through to tide-water without trans- shipping their cargoes. The hope of cheap transportation must ever be fixed upon the water routes. They are al- ways free and can never be controlled ombinations of any kind. TuE articles p y Bek under the title of *'Pulse of West- ern Progress”” have awakened a deep public interest in the development that Is taking place in the west and north- west, and particularly in Wyoming and Montana, where rich fields yet unde- veloped are awaiting the day when cap- ital and enterprise shall lay bare their mineral wealth and open to the world sources of supply which are as yet almost unknown. A vast extent of territory to the west and northwest of Nebraska, though subjected now and then to the cursory examination of adventurous prospectors, is still atmost as little known us it was when Columbus first laid his course westwara from Palos. Great progress has been made in some portions of those states, but there are yet large trgets pf their rugged surface which have, ly been thoroughly exvlored, whilg but slight tests of their mineral resonureés have been made. In this region of undoubted natural wealth, lying just beyond the borders of our own state, the city of Omaha has a deep and permyneut interest. It isa region uaturally tributary to this city, and as its developufont progresses and facilities of intercourse are multiplied it will gradually coma into closer relations with this mgtropolis, Why should not its possibilities gngage the attention of Omaha capitalfsts? Why should uot Omaha entérprise develop the re- sources which, in the natural course of things, mustultimately prove valuable to this city? The subject is worthy of careful attention. lished week I 18 proclaimed with great glee by the democratic press that the recent visit of Mr. Cleveland to New York cow- pletely set at vest ull doubts as to the attitude of Seunator Hill in this cam paign and that the lattes will at once take off his coat and go to work in be- half of his inflated rival. This is no doubt a pleasant thing for democrats to contemplate, but thoss who are ac- SEPTEMBER 13, 1892 | quaintod with Me. Hill will not readily beliove anything of the kind, Ho is not the man to hold back with no other pur- poso than to bo mvited to go to work. Senator Hill is a politician, and his op position to C eveland is based upon desper foundations than mere childish sulks. The defeat of Cleveland would 1ift the c.ouds that hang over Hill's po- litical future, but the success of the for mor would only be a damage to the sel fish ambitions of tho great Tamman idol. Senator Hill may have been pre vailod upon to mako a showing of alle- giance to Cloveland, but beyond that he will do nothing, DEMOCKRATS are fond of asserting that all compurisons of wages hotwesn Amors fea and Bngland are unfaic since Bng- land cannot bean agricultusal nation, is isolated, ete., and must take up manu- facturing. In thoir ronsons lios tho ongest argument for wage compari- son. England must be a manufacturing nation, it is tho great manufacturing nation of the world hecause its working men have nothing else to engage in and this necessity makos their wages very low, thus enabling them to produce wares at a low cost and a great profit to tha employer. Ameriea will not pay such wages and by our tariff wo keep out England’s products. The laboring man of America has all the advan in evory fair comparison and ho knows it. . TuERE ave several important railroad cases on the docket of the United States court for adjudieation at the next tcrm. The jurios have not yet been empuncled. It has boen suggested that the grand jury meet and call every potit jury up to answor whether or not ho rode to Omaha, on a railrond pass. His testimony on this interosting point might be rein- forced by the testimony of gencral tick et agents of the various lines of braska whose records ought to show the namoe of every juror holding n pass Any juror, grand ov petit, in any court, who holds an annual pass or has cepted a trip pass should bo discharged. The sunject should be made a test of a juror’s qualiflcations. Ne- ommittee for 802 should be chosen by the convention that will be held in this city on the 19th. It is essential that the committes work for the presens campaign be begun at once and kept up until election day. To wait until the middte of October for the election of the new committee would be a very serious blunder. There would bo no time for the new committeo to familiarize itself with the work in hand and the outcome would be contention, confusion and defeat. T republican county THE business men and capitnlisis of Omaha are willing to taik about tho need of new industrial enterprises here, but the trouble is that everybody is waiting for somebody else. Such hesi- tancy would be natural euough if the matter were one of experiment, like boring for oil, but such is not the case. It is not doubted that manufacturing in muny lines not yet attempted here would be profitable. Tho field is lurge and invites enterprise. MAINE'S motto is “I lead,” and she led yesterday in asignificant marner. Vistble Symptoms ot Victo, New York Commercial, Evergwhere the enthusiasm of the republ cans is rising to a higher and bigher lov There 18 nothiag more stimulating than the suro prospect of victory. inishing Induostry, St, Paul Pioneer-Press. The oniy industry seriously crippled by the McKinley bill is that of casting demo- cratic votes. It begins 1o look as though this business would be utterly prostrated by cho Sth of November. —————— What Webster and Paxton Did, New York Herald. ““We are whistling to keep up our courage,’ writes a passenger on the Normannia, Such words from an American, and & western man at that, speak volumes. ' We must get those people ‘away from that graveyard. B ey Be Not Afral i New York Telegr New York's death rate throughout this period of agitation about cholera bas been almost lower than ever before and lower than that of any large city in the world, Tho rest of the country need not be atraid of New York. ———— Advantages of Reciprocity. New York Trilune, Instead of giving uway the free market and getting nothing for it the republican admin- istration has negotiated a series of reciy city conventions of the greatest benetit to American_farmers and exporters. This is not the democratio poliey. Thatis purely Eoghsh, and 1nvolves giving away markets for competing products and, as Lord Saiis- bury has confessed, getting nothiug in return, —— Written for Homo Consumption. Philadelphia Inquirer, No one expected that tho president’s letter of acceptance would please the English apers. The man that wants to please them must be thoroughly un-American, aud whatever else may be said of Mr. Harrison that charge caunot, be laid at bis door. But is seems to give pretty general satisfaction to the republicans of the Unitea States, and it bids fair to carry conviction w0 some on the demo- cratic side. This was all that any oune had s right toask. A letter of accept- ance 15 NOL 41 BXCCUTIVO iessage Lo COngross or tho country. It 1s almost the only chance which u canaidate who does not go on the stump has to make & purtisao appeal, unles ko Mr. Cleveland, he chooses to have a par- tisan notification meeting with a studied soeech Lirst anu send a forwal letter of ac- coptance aftorward. Prosident Harrison chose to concentrate his lire, and the growls from over the ocean merely brove that every shot struck the mi —_— Some Very Plain Talk. Grand Island Times. One of the first things we hoard after the republican state committee had substituted ‘l'om Mujors’ name 1or that of J. G. Tate, by reason of the latter's inelibibility, was that offorts were to be made tocul Governor Crouuse's vote and increase that of Majors’ 1o a8 great an extont as possible, 1n order to bumiliate Kosewater ana bave the puvlic infer that Majors was_much the stronger of the two candidates. We want to warn Mr. Majors sud bis incousiderate friends, rig now, that this course would prove a boom- erang and & weapon that could cut both ways. ‘Thore are many who | wore _ conscientiously oppused to | Mr. Majors but who accept his candidacy snd the slightest show of aisloy- alty to the entira ticket, on tho part of hium- self or the elemont which was instrumental in forclug his candidacy for lieutenant gov- eroor upon the peopla @gainst thelr wishes and the better judguwent of thoso who had navght but the geod of the party at heart, will be met with a rebuke at the valiot box | such as the statesman from Newaba county will have occasion to remember forever. It Tom Majors runs auy considerable number of yotes abwad of Crouuseit will be univer- sally accopted inaubitable evidence ot the fact that this schome had been put in opera- tion and Mr. Majors will be held responsible for the traitorous uction and the pon that records such a result will also record his political death. i JOHN BULL—1 say, Uncle Sam, how you have grown! Is it PROTECTION? UNCLE SAM—Well, I WESTERN ART AFFAIRS, 1 to Lncorporate the Art 8 1t froper Supyp Pl "Thore Art association this evening to consider of continuing the art school T'he sehool which has been uuspices of tho ion year hns been far from a success fin tho receipts falling about $1,200 sho oxpenses, but the directors do not e of this shortage. The only complaint 18 that the prope A4S nOY been in the worl 150 to Mr. Lininger's ques tho school should be another vear or not, the members asrociation bave deeided to continue stitution at ail events and N proposed a plan by which this may b 1 to incorvorate the o ha capital stock of S5 that the w bers, arusts who tribute $15 lowed to give tko bals interested in the suec at the Lininger anothe ass0c i, ce in work; be a payment of 10 per cent cash maintenance of the sctiool. by the o collection, ‘Phiis is the plan that will tho meeting this ovening. e consid —— EAST OMAHA'S OWNERSHIP. Plat Filed Showing the Through The plat sho; disputed territory of Cut O lake 1 upon by the oMcials of the rasica and Towa, has bean oftico of the remster of ceeds agreod upon leave Cortland Beach and the Bast Omaha factorios iu Nel Disputed Te ry filed The city eugineer and council spent several hours discussing the eity electrician ory ‘The ordinance creating the offico and fining the duties of the apwvointee is liable to come up for passage tonight, —— REFRESHING R Lay aside the tennis stock Thiaat our darling used to w Putawsy the ribboned rac And the canvus shoes with ¢ O'erthe lawn propel a roller, Tuke the snowy netting down— Dariing Maude has packed her trun Tor tho winter gone to town! A prize fizht i ise the other fellow 1s r Baltimore Amerlean amill" be 0 puip. will be a meeting of the Western tho advisaviiity held unde during the pas newally, 1 wnninained . Lininger has 000, with ing mem- 53 of tho school to be solicited to take sharos on which there shall The worl given tists will form the nucleus of an art Dividing fug tho boundaries island, as states of Tho in lowa the members of the yesterday in should smile. From Nast's Weekly. closing romar ¥ 1 Lwas on the wrong side of the door.” Juidze: Corner. Arink biek there? < Barovper—Gin fizz. mint julep, soltie y | onade. apoliinaris, Waisey, becr, g Wass il white Tab Corner—Well, 1t ¢ t oceasion iy —plosse water wil i SUrw in .t alle < me good to h Vi Ve me a g the Philadelphin Times: hix money ure soon parted is money fHes and the fool at his worst « of the | Ly lieadiong. iplain offerad shown Now York Herald 1 aver 1ot of my ver<es in my dos. t iy, and 1 founid the e 1100 08Kl anhre R e : Puek: To Sally ~The zation of microbe o atritid of ‘o, of the the in 3 done, Tt asso- yoked th wife oail it? A, but be al- others it and o all 1t puddis ew York Sun: other of two glris: 11 am madiy [ must marry for the in 1. c—Why don’t vou flip o Tom—Inppy thought—er have the cent. nt ered at provided nover ( over fis | Atelson Globe wearin: ¢ anyone, Line Ifa man e satlsil Binghamion liean 2ot 4 barrel be will huve to ‘of the | buitle. e Yonkors Statesmun The cow scts admirable example—she nover blows Infithojl0ED: lines Washington Star: “I'm sorr thermouicter o another, “hut live to trot anothier hesit easia, et Alton Democrat: 1t 1s send v man to jail for means of support, or commit without a hearing. Bostc rdvantage nverse with TS, havinzno v Pranseriy he deaf mu When he has vo other a5 e can still talk TO WHITIIER DEAD, ECTIONS. James Whitcowd Riley. Hail to theo and al! gcod cheer, Though men say thou iest hore Doad And weop ail uncomforted. By, tby talth rofioing mine, Lite stiil lights those eyes of thine k and Cloar As the autumn atmosphere, Ever still thy smile apps called As the rainbow of thy t duced O'er thy love's vast firmament. Lowell Courier: When a lawyor files excep- tion to rulings of the court does ho r bonor's sensibllities: Boston Gazette: “What were her father's s fit, quality and price. Our store oloses at 0 asp his nicest thing to own just now. Thou endurest—shall endure, Piroly, us thy song is pure. Hear Thus my hail: Largest Manufacturers and Dealers of Clothing in the Wu Sports Return “Please send me one of your $1.65 hats. I ve ¢o |got a stave-ing good suit,” was |one of many orders we receivel yesterday from dead game spor who backed old man Sullivan. [Our double-breasted ~ suits in checks ‘and stripes that can talk and modest checks anl stripes, and plain black goods are so far ahead of anything heretofore brought out that we name the price and away they go. The |fine busine ck suit the LY or elegant cutaway will please the most fastidious taste, not only as to style, but also as to the cn ”L'“ . is about A fall overcoat Qur variety Browning,King&Co 0 p. m., oxoept Satur- diays, when we close ab 10 p. w. conld not hear them: What's yer got good The reason the ( Woll, you can kiss me, then--1'n afL ) IS eharming o love with botn. the same resort with them for hardly squure o deaf man reon ta with Good cheer! good cheor!