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THE DAILY BEE.| E. ROSKWATER, E = l‘| NLISHED RY \l()R ING. onwun PAPER. OF TKE om. TERMS OF 8t BEC RIPTION. aily Ree (without § me Year oaily and Sunday, O hoion i onths, hree Months,, unday Ree, One Ye aturday Bee, One Year...... Veekly B One Yenr OFFIC Bulldl corner N and 26th Stroets, Counell RiufTs, 12 Pearl Street Chlcago OfMc 7 Chamber of Commerce. New York, 13, 14 and 15, Tribune Balldine Washington, 518 Fonrteenth Street CORRESPONDENCE, Al communications relath editorinl matter should be Editorinl Department BUSINT All husiness letters be addressed to The Omnha. 10 be wade p phny THE 8800 10 00 6 00 2 50 200 150 100 Omnlin, The Re South Omihs to news and S LI Ve 0 1"1 BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. SWORN STATEMENT CIRCULATION Kinte nf Nebraska, | County of Douglas, § Geor see: umlnr’lnr Ben 4 minly swear tha }I:l-!'”n DALY BER for 1he w Tows: Sunduy, 1) Moudny, | Tuesdiy, | or Sworn o e presence this w ||l] mber, 1 I'ETL, Notary e, e ——————————————— T has not heen a new theological trinl set on foot for several days. This is getting monotonous. Trnr snow that lies on the wheat fields of Nobraska is contributing in its silent way toa bountiful harvest next year. qme veport that ex-Senator Ingalls wears ready-made clothes overtaxes public credulity. Mr. Ingalls is not running for anything in Kansas just now. I'MERE is talk of a war between Chili and the Argentine Republic. It is cer- tainly time for further hostilities in that part of the world, there having been a 1ull for several months. Ir 18 sugmested by the St. Paul Pio- meer-Press that Tom and Jerry now shuke hands across the polished ma- hoguuy. This is the first intimation the public has had that Thomas and Jeremiah were not on friendly terms. Mg. CLEVELAND may try to rotire from public view in order to throw the office seekers off the scent, but Adlai E. Stevenson stands out in the full glave of publicity and seems to enjoy it. Weo suspect that Mr. Stevenson will not know that he is living after the 4th of March. THE Sult Take T'ribune asks if, in the case that Utah were admitted to state- hood, the chiefs of the men who are in the mujority there would renew their determination to establish a distinct kingdom. There is no danger of the admission of Utah to statehood under conditions which would malke it pessi- ble to establish a kingdom of any kind. AN APPEAL in behalf of the suffering poor at Homestead says that *‘the strike has come and gone; and all the criti- csmin the world cannot make things as they were beforo it was inaugurated.” There is a worid of pathetic philosophy in this. It does not matter now whether the strikers wereright or wrong. They need help? and as sufferers thoy have a true claim upon public sympathy. THE back taxes duo tho county from the Puilinan Palece Car company ex- ceed #6,000. There is no good reason why the county should allow these back taxes to accumulate. The Pullman company is not 1n distress. It is only shirkings taxes and staving off pay- ment as long as possible. The county officials are expected to do their duty and lovy upon the company’s property il they cannot colleet otherwiso, THIRTY of the public schools of New York City have been condemned by the Board of Health on nccount of their bad sanitary condition. This is an import- | ant question in every city, and it is no less important in Omuha than else- where. At present, owing to the care- ful wspection and improvements made by our Board of Health last fall, the public schools of this city are in a good sanitary condition. They should be kept so. It 18 expected that another effort will be made in the legislature of New York this winter to repoal the electrical oxecution law. Governor Flower is op- posed to the death penalty and will cortainly sign the Dbill if it is passed. Jutsines the electrical system passed out ¢f the experimental stage and thus lost its horrors there have been few protests against it in 1the Empire state, As & substitute for the gallows 1t secems 10 serve well enough IN ABOUT & month the famous steam- ehips City of Pavis und City of New York will be Ameriesn vessels and Wil curry the stars and steipes. Under the now management these ships will land passongers at the now docks at Southampton, where a special train will be in waiting to earry them to London, thus saving a day over the old Liverpool route, Who says that the Americans do not koow how to manage the steamship business? Mg, JeuN D, ROCKEFELLER has steengthened his claim to be regarded a8 one of the foremost public benvfuctors of the time by presenting the Chicago “university with a second gift of $1,000,- 000 Tt was & most munificent contribu- tion, but the total of Mr. Rockefeller’s benefactions amounts to several times this sum, yet less than thirty years ago he was comparatively a poor man. No © greater financial success than his has been achieved in this country and he soems to have wisely determined to devote a portion of his great wealth to the benefit of the public while he lives. In this he is setting " worthy example. | has sc | of | and the | 'the treasury who is in a. | sides THE PURLIC LANDS. The time has passed when it conld be snid of the United States that it pos- scssed an almost inexhaustible area of public landa Thore are still many millions of acres gronter part of it is now unfit for culti vation and con only be made available for supporting population by an oxten- sive and expensive systetn of irrigation. Thoere is an area in the west sufficient for the seat of a great empire if it were reclaimed, but to do will be the work of generations. It means an enormous outlay of money for which the nation is not now pre- pared and which must await the neces- sary development in population and wealth. out of future states will be builded, with prosperous cities and rms, but the realization of this will o to another generation. According to tho statistics of the gen- eral land office, the demand for publ lana has been greater within the last fow years than ever before. During the present administration about 64,000,000 acres have been patented, ns ngainst 27,000,000 in the four years preceling. and certain tra of land have been re- movod from the area subject to general entry, so thaf at present roservations are being slowly purchased which | and opened to settlement as the only demand of for home- menans of satisfying the the growing population steads. The reduction of Indian resorvations duving the recent past ured the restoration tu the public domain of about 26,000,000 acres, and a large part of that aren has already been opened to sottlement, many of the Indians taking land in soveralty and thus becoming citizens of the United States, nearly 6,000 having taken advantage of the privilege. It is expected that within the near future about 10,000,000 more acros will be se- cured by the government in the samo way, and undoubtedly all the Iand thus offered for homestead en will be taken up as soon as it is opened to gon- eral settloment, The ainty that within the fow years thero will bo a arable public land makes the question of irrigating the arid lands of the west one of great intorest and importancc The next resource of intending settler. must be the region which under irvign- tion will yield abundant and remun tive har and the time is not very far distant when the demand for theso lands will become urgent. What shall bo done, in the mean- while, to make them av: ble? This question has been asubject of quite gen- eral and serious discussion for several years, and it cannot be said that much progress has been made toward reaching an answer. Conventions have been held; bills have been introduced in congress, and the subject has been freely discussed in the press, but tho difflculties in the way of a wiso solution have not been overcome. Nothing is to be expected of the congress in relation to ter, but it is not an vectation that the next congress adopt some practical legislation will give an impetus to the worl of claiming the vast arid region that may be mude avilable for agriculture. Few subjects have greater importance in their relation to the future development of the country, next ests the mat- may that ro- THE QUESTION OF SILVER PURCHAS It is reported from Washington, on the authority of a member of the bank- ing and currency committee, that the Dbill of Representative Andrew of Massa- chussets, relating to the currency, will be reported to the house with some modifications. The opinion is that the committeo will recommend that portion of the bill which provides that national banks may issue circulating notes to the par value of the bonds de- posited to secure circulation, that it will not be in favor of reducing the deposited in the national treasury by national banks, and thatit will be in favor of reducing the rate of taxation on national bank circulation. With regard to the proposed repeal of the silver purchase act, the committeo is said to be hopelessly divided. The Andrew bill provides, with re- gard to the silver law, that so much chapter 708 of the acts of the first session of the Iifty t con- gress, approved July 14, 1890, authorizes the purchase of silver bullion by the secretary of the treasury, issue of additional treasury notes therefor, i3 hereby repealed. The author of the measure, in stating its purpose, said that 5o far as the banking provisions go it was simply intended to velieve the national banks from some of the embarrassments they now suffer, and which are resulting in more or less contraction of the currency. As to the suspension of further purchases of silver My, Andrew argued that it would re- stcre confidence in the ability of the tremsury to meet its obliga- tions in gold, and stop, in a measure, the drain of gold from the treasury. An intorview with Senator Sherman is pub- lished in which ho reiterates his previ- ously expressed opinion that the law which bears his name ought to be re- ponled. It is said thut there Is a proba- Inlity that soon alter the holiday recess President Harvison will send a message {0 congress urging the repeal of the law, or its modificution s0 as to pe mit the temporary suspension of purchases. It is also said that Mr, Clevelund hus told a number of demoerntic representatives that he would like to ba relieved of the neces- sity of keeping up the silver purchases, and that he will appoint a secretary of ord with him upon this proposition. It will thus be seen that this question assumes leading importance in connec- tion with the currency legislation of the immediate future. Men of both the volitical parties are arrayed on both of the question, and as the situation now stands it is impossible to prediet with any degree of certainty what would be the result of action on the proposed repeal in the present con- gress. There is a strong element in both branches opposed to any iuterfer- ence with the existing law unless there is something sabstituted for it that will insure an equal or larger use of silver, | prevent the reper! of the law. unoccupied, but the | this | There aro great urid deserts | | said the Indian | scarcity of | | he refers. unreasonable ex- | amount of bonds required to be | and there isreason to balieve that those who hold this view will be able to It may be different in the next congress, which will be under the influence of a demo- oratic administration pretty suro to be unfriendly to silver and perhaps mure disposed to regard the platform pledge of the democratic party respecting the silver purchase law. There is mani- festly o growing feeling that this act mennces the gold standard, and there- fore the credit of the government, and its repeal or modification is not im- prol-able. z LABOR AND CAPITAL. One of the prominentdelegates to the recent convention of the American Federation of Labor at Philadelphia was Willinm Weyhe, who has been con- spicuously connected with the Amalga- mated Association of Iron and Steel Workers, having been until recently the president of that organization, His iews in regard to tho uses of cone ation in the settlement of labor disputes are thoroughly sound. “The great ob- ject of tho amalgamated association, Mr. Weyhe, “'is to get at the cost ot producing a ton of iron steel and to secure for the nan o just recompense for his Inbor. Our method has always been no of conciliation, and to that much of our success is due. Conciliation is much the sume as arbitration, though outside men are not ealled in to adjust dilfer ences. Committees of manufacturers and men meet in annual conferences prepared to talkk inteliigently upon | differences that may have arison during the year, and especially upon questions affecting the prico of iron and the rate of wages based upon that price. They simply go over the ground in a co cilintory spirit until a conclusion is reached. If no conclusion i3 reached, then the men don’t go to work.” It is one of tho most Lopeful signs of the time that the value of conciliation and friendly intercourse between em- ployer and employe is becoming mora and more appreciated. Mr. Weybe that conciliation is much the same itration, but it veally widely different and very much move cffective, for the reason that it brings employer as | and employoe into touch with each other and places them upon afooting of mutual interost, while arbitration is genervally garded with distrust and suspicion by one side or the other in the controversy, and sometimes by both. It isa matter of record v state boards of arbitra- tion have nover accomplished anything beyond the drawing of their pay from the public treasury, to which the labor- ing man is himself a contributor. It is for the intorest of both employer and employe to ‘‘gev together” when differances arise in respoct to wages. T his is w Mr. Weyhe calls concilia- tion, and it is n good general name for the attitude of friendly and fair consid- eration of disputed questions to which By this means strikes often averted, and moreover, a friendly spirit mav thus be promoted that will secure cheerful and effective service on the one hand and fair and considerate trontment on the other. be Tie population of Canada is 4,820,411 and the public debt is $280,500.230. . In the event of annexation who is going to pay the great debt? It is pretty clear that the present inhabitants of that ceuntry cannot pay it. The idea of the Canadian annexatiomsts is that the increase in the population weuld be so great that the per capita tax would be | reduced to an amount that would be rensonable. But that public debt will stand as & bav to immigration, &s 1n fact it does to: For years the Dominion government has sought to attract set- tlers to develop the undoubted resources of that country, but all efforts to induco immigrants to go to that country have practically failed. What is the reason? In the fivst place, the immigrants who come to this continent usually prefer American institutions instead of those of Great Britain as they exist in mod- ified forms in Canada; in the second place, that great public debt, constantly growing in a time of peace, convinces the 1mmigrant that Canada has no attractions suflicient to offset the burden of taxation which he must bear as the price of his citizenship. The average immigrant expects to identify himself with the country in which he makes his home. He makes its institutions his own and undertukes to share its obligations. If Canada could at once be filled up with settlers the per capita tax would not be very burdensome, but in the nature of the case tho increaso in population must be slow, and thus the decrease in indi- vidual burdens of taxation must be gradual. This is the most serious part of the annexation problewn It isreported from Washington that tho friends of the Forrey bankruptey bill are hopeful of being able to got that measure before the house during the present session. A petition asking the committee on rules to fix a time for the consideration of the bill has been numerously signed by demoeratic mem- bers of the house, not all of whom, how- ever, are favorable to the mensure. [t is probable that the bill will be given a chance at the present session, but there appears to be some uncertainty as to its fate, although a recognition of the public demand for this legis tion would insure its passige. There is practically no opposition to it iu the great commercial centers of the country. I7 15 understood that another attempt is to be made in the present congress to remove the Southern Ute Indians from their present reservation to Utah. The proposal to do this is vigorously op- posed by the Indian Rights association, and it must be admitted that it offers very good reasons for its attitude in the matter. The Indians have good lands where they are and they are contented, prosperous and peaceable. The reserva- tion to which it is proposed to transfer them is not equally desirable and the effect upon them would doubtless be demoralizing, Justice and fair dealing seem to demand that these Indians be allowed to remain where they ave. MurAT Halstead is fully for war, He says: “Never mind the luke cruisers thoy could be rawmed out of | million.” T 3 y. in all { from which they could not be v may | . but he s propared | | farming ix sight by and with the nld and consent l‘ A lnw of this sort wonld add materially to f of the forry Bints of Buffalo, Toledo, Detroit or Chiengo. Whén the war breaks out wo sibuld be ready to make two jumps—ong from the North Pacific railroad to capture the Canadian ~ Padific, and one from Ningara to seizo the Wellund canal. The regtiars should be concen< trated for the fitflroad and the militia for the canal job.. Leave the cruisers to the ferry bonts, ‘convertible in a night into ram Fiela Marshal Halstead scems to have the plan of campaign all arranged; but the question is, what is to bo the occasion of all this bloody business? Lot have some- thing to fight about before this is carried any furthor. us Consoling Reflections, Kansas City Jowrnnl, Outside of the solid south plurality over Cleveland wus almost Harrison's half o parts of the are not a farec, the much the stronger country whe tions republi party 18 still organization P U or Business Poli o York Commereial 1t does not requi Wt financial mind to at least conceive the proposition that if the government can buy cheap silver it would not be smart businsss policy to keep | on paying a stiff pric Vory fow of us would pay the barons 26,50 for coal if we could have the same _quality of the article dumped into the bin for about & Globe«Democrat, troubles in the Panama canal not, of course, be repeated by us if we pledge the credit of our government to the Nicaragua Canal company, for the conditions in the latter ¢ ould be mucl different from what thoy are in the formes Nevertheless, we must rofrain from enter ing into uny entangling allinnces with that corporation. France business can IR Party Carse, Harper's We There are, no doubt, good many iticins of high standing in the demo vty who have not yot leavied, how- ar and impressive the lessons of ex perience may have boen, thit the patron isnot a blessing, but an unmitig to_administeations, political — partic public men. M. Cleveland nly knows | it: he may be expected to act in accordance with this_knowledge, and his_predece an give him_ no better jproof of ing than by doing things which, if thity are | not done now, he would have to do himself. M T T Necdlossly A b Philadelphia Press, al Miles has set a wide civele of pers to talking by marshaling the 140 English vessels whose draft of water would | enable them to enter the lakes by the We land canal. Of these, however. twenty J torpedo boats which could cross the Atlantic only with extrer isk, and of the fifty-four gunboats at least half are on police du ieved. It is om thirty t tain could rat | true, however, that there are f 10 forty v s which Great B s up through the Welland ided it was not destroyed by troops, as it undoubtedly would be with an like General Miles on the frontier, - - Mon 's Tone High Pitched, Phitadelphia Record. A halyeon ous gentleman from niners of that state | demand for_gold L turn out $150,- ot les- d'hey ar if nece be m: 000,000 per y s much sense in thi Rocky mountain sibver to \ prove to be true, of what avail would be t supply of Montana gold! In the first pla it would require the expenditure of ne: £150,000,000 to produee that sum. And after the gold should be.n sight the Moutanu | owners of it wouldonly exchapge it for $150, 000,000 warth _of other forms of property We can get gold trom any other quarter on | like terms, SRS NEBRASKA AND NEBRASKANS. Perkins county people beli struck coal. “The Presbyterian church at Coleridge has been dedicated. It cost $1,514. Another branch alliance in Custer county has disintegrated because of politi The ence of Lon Coop was destroyed by five, causit A stove too neara wall started a c gration in the postofi Mead, but pr ction by citizens prevented extensive ve they have s o first. feed mill which ness. Some snealk humane feelin, 188 steam combination is doing an immense busi- thicf who has lost robbed Grandmother hurst of Broken Bow of N wheat, her only support for winte the old lady will have to take in wi xarn her ng, Fire broke out at North Platte frame building belonging to Pacific company and used for leeping compariments for the hotel hands. 'he fire department was summoncd and the l‘;lv extivguished before much harm was done, “We understand, the Blair Courier, “that a school ma'am in the southern end of this county has introduced a new feature. When one of the girls misses a word the boy who spells the word gets to kiss her. As o result the > gett spellers, while the boys While her childven i v strang asiced what ho w and continued 1l his Park- bushels of and now hing to ina 3 the Union Laundry and fmproving esdy w home ne: nted, but he did ot reply to try to force ‘the door open. She then secured a re- volver and fired hot over the man . This scared the intru for I « around the house he tried to enter another door. He had sue- ceeded in breaking the door open when Mrs, Dresb time the bul- R T R I on fell down and was unable to Mus. Dresby then went 1o a neighbor's informed her husband and others, who g companied her back home, wh: the wounded man_ was found in the fruit yard He was carried into the lhouse and a physician summoned, who found that the | ball had penetrated’ his lung. e is still alive, but will probably die. He gave his | namo as H. Bovink uand it has been dis- covered that he is insane and was formerly an inmate of the Lincoln asylum, HINTS FOR EAWMAKERS. nd Times: M} Keekloy's cund tox i speakershipl gecms to be growing day. Those who know his d, and eryone ought to know it, are demanding clection, Schuyler Herald - @ur comi | should, 1 probdtbility will, make some | srations and imprpyements in the Aus- | an ballot law. “H#he tickets could be | be made more simpla and asily under- | stood than th e present. ‘T | ol pstutes of having the tickets of seve arties printed ou th sawe ticket side bif @de is much more easly understood than our oyn. York Times: I¥ Tom Cook is to be the only republican candkiate for secretary of | the senate thero ara a'good many republicans | who will not die of, grief if the republicans fail to organize that body. There are various and sundry republicans in the state who claim, and say they can prove, that Tom | k has neither braius nor beauty. They | s that he is composed of proud flesh and intestines, the latter largely predominating. Of course the Times is not sufticiently posted to know about these things. and has the honor of not being personally acquainted with the gentleman above referred 10. Albion Argus: While all the political leaders are trying to see who will be able to control the organization of the Nebraska | legislature and whether the United States | senator will be a republican, a democrat, a populist, a -pop, 4 demo-pop or a demo-rep. The Argus still raises its voice | for an act of 1 that will reduce | freight rates to such a » that the con- | sumers of the state can have some relief. | “This should be done so that the hearts will | not be cut out of the railroad because that would hurt inst erests of the state and would throw railroud employes out of ewiployment. | legislature | party in Nebraska | voted { much of it was | to agroup of repor Bl | el ; s A massy, the prosperity of the state without injuring | tho railroad workmen ar the railronds them- selves, Tt should be weither highway rob. bery on the part of {he wailronds nor \]\'vMir exceution, like the Newberry bill, on the part of the people. Fairmont Signal: Although the legrislature, nind them that ou their vote for ad logislation reducing local freight s depends the fut existence of the We menn just what we say, which is based on a_knowledge of the temper of the people on this question. We mean such 1¢ tion as will satisfy a roa sonable public demand mpairing the efticiency of railroad service, It is true there are o few fanatics that would K the railways in their madnéss, but 1l of the people de snly what is renson and fair on this question, and_ that they have. The plicans have another opportunity teem th party by voting solid they know the public ids and ne Will they doit? We believe they will, and if our belief proves to be well founded then the republican thou sands who have been dviven to vote with other parties in the vain endeavor to obtain the relief denied them by their own, will re turn pin to their old love and the grand republican party will again march on from victory to conquest. It was not because these thousands of republican veterans who with other parties lov the repub 1 party less, but because they loved ju and ‘right more. Lot the republican mbers in the coming session of the legi lature, though in a minority they be, do 1 ns will be a migority in the we would railr H their whole duty to the people on this vital | question, and the future of the brask will b v before vty in Ne more briiliant and strong - SOME MEN OF NOTE, Senator Stanford confivms the President Harrison will lecture on law fore the Stanford university in California Senator Cockrell's brother, the congress man-el wvy build, ‘the senator be ing Both were distin soldicrs, n says that the and synonymous w out Governor now ms, exclaimed worst: T don't care a banana for votes ! John G, Whitti tate foots up to the comfortable to £130,00 i should not be without its cl the vast body of poets who a their gifts in mapping out a new route, Cornelius anan who, it free lunch | practicing w his dos re of Afric wve - medic country Budd Doble, the well known jockey. who has held the reins over Nancy Hanks in all he Y o wees o the trottin track this year, enjoys the additional dis- on of having been celobrated in verse by Dr. Holmes Ex cer Reed doesn't coneeal from any one his opinion thit Bourko, Cockran 15 by far the ablest man “on the other side of the house,” and Bourke Cockran expresses the same view of Mr. Reed, Mr. Reed and M. Cocliran are t ¢ closest cronies in the house. The people’s party s to establish a central telegraphic news burcau at Washington. Th © 1500 weelly nowspapers that intevested in all tha . Peffer Simpson do, and_ they L that cannot know all this unless they have bureau of their own. Karl Moreau, who days ago Moreau, » set up in that vo of t 21 died in \r*mn Tamous. Iy about 70 known to alinost eve d that he never cnte hotel. He was a rich man, money to a faithful housekeeper. The late cx-Congressman T 1 notable example of the genui leman. He came to . from Ba- almost @ penni nd is sup to have died a milliona His for- avgely acquived in trade, but de in mvestments in v mberof fiv TeSS He was It is estate. Hew Robert Ma( having | ball, sealpe the body, t hawked twic and one of his ribs choppe through h two ows, all ved Brale Sioux and ward of the would like a small appropriation 3aid James Whitcomb Riley noble and o con- the other day wish you news paper men wouldn't be quite so carcless i your remarks about my looks. 1 was 1 notice several years ago that T wasn't andsome, but the kind of delight in remindin seems 1o me that you m at least be as considerate us the old > who went to the menagerie and saw hippopotamus. She was staggered for a_moment, but her breeding got the bette didn't want to say ani she turned to one of her friends with but aint he plain Yonkers Statesman: It Is st time will toll i day p you don't I you o tell what timne it is. ithoritatiy dyet hardly u some one sk Somervills Journal: Many a wan who is let intoa scieme on the zronnd tloor gets dropped into te sub-cellar before the schemers let him ous Chie Miss Ancient vlant ily. I’ g . clinrmi Suppose Washin hie g ust he w Here is : Jung- this e d=tipped at ey call the Hght fantus- Philadelphia Re street—Brown—Wh Swith? - You look Smith—How #150 for Christ out of it is w pair of slppe arvard L s’ mny Dorothy mene Young ) d on 1t be merr «llnl wl nts, and all Sand i mpoon Tends 2 dould of the St Men's Christ Washingtc you think you are of “deluy?" siid the ditor. all,” voplied the debtor, “but T am i u your part of the trinsaction is cldedly over-dun. Somerville Jou erally comes ont right i (1 of course. thut he 15 lucky end come before he di provided, ough 1o haye the Philadelplia Records ¥1 wish tohuy a myit, suld n lndy 1o a sules Chostiut sfrect store. “To keep my hands wi roply EN BATISFACTORY EXPLANATION, rooklyn 1 I 1 did not w the o Dt earthly use would ithe? = It it we h and wide and that Why the man behind could see, 1f 1 Ald not mo y head and tulk And laugh aloud in gl e Wit i sw Dear me! I£ did not act this way. And he could hear und see, He'd get his money’s worth of the play ‘And ho wouldn't notice g S D DELICIOUS Flavoring Extracts NATURAL FRUIT FLAVORS. Of perfect purity— Of great strength— Economy in their use. Flavor as delicatel and deliciously as the fresh fruit. Vanilla f Lemon Orange Rose,sele] repub- | | candidacy | the city whose opin | tor il knew what he by | rency | tion to M for the Eixtension of University Teaching, wolcomed the delegates and short nddrosses wore made by President Jamoes MoAlister "vflllu Drexel institute and Superintendent b Adward Brooks of the city schools, The Cleveland and Hill Elements Oan Make No londing address of the ovening was mado ) resident Wade Rogers o o Northwest- Amicable Settlement, T nivemitg. o O e N ey \0 INDICATIONS OF PEACE NEW YORK'S SENATORIAL S ROOMING MORRISON. STRUGGLE o Mast Have a Cable ot Position. New York, Dec, ¢ nge Scott of Tilino Speaker Crisp. cabinet, Mr. Scott said: “The vacy of my stato asks that M on as secrotary of the | prefer to soe him at the head of the artment, but it is considered now that Senator Carlislo will get casury portfolio. When inois Ature meets it is protty | thit the democratic members will formally ens dorse Mr, Morrison for a cabinet ofice talk about the othor 1llinois cand to nothing, Al tho democr s are for Mot rison ——— Curtailed His Va “tank Devine, the w thief," wa sted a uspicion and sentenced With the chain gan Yostordny Do with a ot of other prisoncrs o that Sena- | Work cleaning up the f was talking about | When no when e declared just as he was leaving | ¢ Washingion for the holidays that Mr. Mur- | phy would be elected United States senator. Avowed Oppositic to Marphy el s Ol Dotails of the President-Elect ved to 1 ase Th ces for Suecess ssinan Owen hore in company with Speaking of Me. (Meveland's whole democe- Morcison ba fntorior. Wo Wistisarox Brrear or Tar Bee, | 513 FOURTERNTI STRERT Wasmisaros, D, ¢, Do, 28, ) Those democrats who hiad hoped to find in Speaker Crisp's visit to Mr. Cleveland an amicable settlement of all the bad rendered by the Reform cl mazed and thunderstruck t ported interview with Mr today's papers in which the opposition to for the CUnited New Y m s ury de b incident e iy by Cloveland in presider ot Mr. Mury States it oxpressos his ation, 1 known crook and fow days ago to thirty days Judge Berka, turned out and put to the city Jail Devine raised a out There are not man wk democrats in on lab worth quoti ve distinetly d ressinan Haye Murphy they boliey those who are with by the views of ¢ ine was his sottles Mr. On the who says forenoon contrary one was looking set window and jumped e he made his way to \.MV'IU and had it not_been that Detective 1 here tonight that in [ happened down that way ¢ ount of o | noon D would probably have avowed opposition to his 1 y | lberty vot wage happened to meet the Murphy jail breador fncompany with another well known Omaha crook at the corner of Twenty-fourth and N street nd tho re- sultof the meeting was the taking back te jail of Mr. Devine, ot He Was an Arist New Yourk, Dec, 25, young Englishman, g verton and the son of a leutenant colonol in rmy, was held in $1L,000 bail on a chavge of theft to the Tombs police court today. The chavge was brought by James Blackwood, & son of Sir Arthur Blackwood, the secretary of the London postoftic cousin of Lord Dufferin, Bigge plead guilty re's vietims, Claudin q [ Linnewood Palwer, the artist, W. '\ Sothern, the actor, August Belmont and Richard Harding do- clined to prosecute their cases against him, Bigre has been cutting a very wide swath in this country for the last exght years, to or porhaps on ac land's Mo Crisp's ¢ York to meet President-cloct Cloveland, the s on which the president-elect will with e liis opposition to. Mr. Cr ve-ele tion have become known. Broadly speaking, Mr. Cleveland will insist on w practical rcorganization of the cntire Touse, so thut the prineipal committces will be composed of men who are in entive har- mony with Mr. Cleveland’s views both on tariff reform and silver. The four commit tees whose chaivmen must be replaced men satisfactory to Mr. Cleveland s wiys and me ppropriations, coinagee hts and measures and banking and cur- In th ase of the ways and means M. Clevelaud deiands the re ouly of Chairman Springer, as wdy stated in the ches, but also of M. Bryan of Nebraska, Mr. Montgomery of Kentucky, Mr. Bourke Cochr York and Mr. Stevens of Massac Mr. Cleveland objects to M i m this committee hes tleman is by no means in harmony with him on the tarift re corics which to be carried out at the next session of ¢ on He objects to Mr. Bryan n's violent fre il neies, tions to Messrs. Moutgomery and are in_general, that they re too lied to Mr. ¢ and that he wants v places for more ardent Cleveland tariff ceformers. On - the appropriations com mittee he objects to Chaivman Holman and on the coinage e tto he very strongly objects to Bland because of “that gentleman’s well known frec silver views. In thus relegating such prominent free silver men as Bland and Bryan to the vear M. Cleveland wishes to indicate that the coun veno fear silver legisla ont of the banking and e v com ttee, Bucon, has not been Mr. Cleveland expects Mr. Cri Chaitman for that committee who, like the new chi \ of the o committee, shall bo recognized as a strong anti-silver man. As for the extra session in the carly spring Mr. Cleveland's principal objection lics in his fear that the on il be too prolonged. 1f congress would meet un immediately after the reorgani- would be 1o stro: s not belie treasu an extra W and, Arthur Glynn Bigge, usin of Lord Wols committe woval nof alre cling M 1L, Dec. annual session of the ing Mo associ; wuse that gen ighteenth Northwestern T m was held here to About seventy-five members woere present. The sccrctary’s report showed disburse- ments to beneficiaries of 1,810,850 since the inception of tho tion, while for the past year tho s 000 has been paid out in benefits. ary S, (. Tnamn and Pre imously re-clecte T lowing we tor: of the ons associ: tont Reed and one mem- a vice presi- ————— Senator Stewart’s Predictions. New Youk, Dec. 28.—Senator William M. Stewart of Nevada is in town. “The mone- " ho said, “is a failure. Tt won't amount to anything. If the repub- licans do not hnrry up and pass a free coin- age bill this winter they will iwi carr ite west of the Rocky mountains in 1896, If the democrats do not pass > coinage bill when they come into power the populists will ele president in 1806, Senator Stewart said he thought the popu- had come to stay. Free coinage would lists be one of their principal holds, that the to render necessary ey i End of a Perilous Voyage. Youk, Dee. 28.—The Portuguese v Vega, which today from. reports havin wountered hur- il tempestuous seas, duving which mer shipped vast quantities of water, wway the after-companion way and about eversthing on deck. ~ The nd ofiicer was badly injured and the and carpenter had their legs None of the passengers were hurt. S B AND UNCLE 5AM. Sam Walter Foss in Yankes ition. holds very Secret of Cleveland's Oppo A New York demorrat who . Whitney and who was tney's closest & confidential stant whilst he was secretary of vy and has be id today: Cleveland® ¢ Murphy is not_exaetly per: at for the last forty’ y v York never béen the floor of the of her vast comm aind financial interests the next tor ought to come from the Personally My, Cleveland prefers Cochran, partly on account of his abilities and partly because he wants to reward Cochran for the loyalty he displayed in the npaign. There ave many who believe that in the event of a Cle and anti-Cleveland fight over the senatorship My, Whitney will be the compromise. Mr. Whitney ally popular with all factions of 4 i his election be satis factory 10 all citizens of New irrespec- tive of politics. S.H > - e University Extenslo Pumaveiriis, Pa., Dec, 28 s of the second nati on university extension we audience at the Drexel institute to 1 Many prominent educators from all | E10 SO Woening froz vis of the country were present. Presi Rut though she pouts and t Hlent 1odmund James of the American Socic T walt for her to ngme the ROWNING, KING== & CO. turars and Rotuilors fu thy World, ricane: the st hoatswain broken, He holds t city of N sented on and hecat repre- senate rreial sena- city Bourke CANAD Blade. ', Stands int,—cold, bui fair— e rlesoming snowflakes in her hair, Behind her stream in f nights Tier vibbons of the Novthern Lights, Her eape the winds blow free und far 1s fustened with the Polar s The Pleindes are dizmonds fair, With which she pins her streaming hafr, And thus with frost-kissed cheek of r0se Stands the fair Maiden of the Snows. And Uncle Sam has furned his eyes ard those biushing northern skies, d the coy shivering beauty thero opening |8 vy sweet and very fair DELE But he i patient and will bide Unii OIes And the old motl e her da The nal confc held before a exercis Largest Manu of Olothi A Great Kicker. Was John Randolph of Roanoke? They say he | was so much oppos- | ed to the tariff on | wool that he would i g0 40 rods out of his } road to kick a sheep. i| He had it so bad that "I he probably would- n'LappreciaLe the benefit we are giving this week on heavy wool underwear. All heavy underwear will go at straight 20 per cent off regular plainly marked prices. If you Kick on that 'cause you've got 'nuff underwear, try the other sale. Every man’s suitandovercoat in the house is cut like this, (no special lots, the whole business included) $12.50 suits or overcoats are $10. $15 suits are $12.50 and so on. Inventory next week; that's why we are making these reduections. BROWNING, KING & CO., S, W. Cor, 16th and Douglas St Store open every evening tilo | Saturday vill 6:0,