Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 1, 1893, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

VA DATLY BEE.!| E. ROSEWATER, Editor PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. [ — OFFICIAL }:nlh- an Eix Month Month v Beo TERMS OF withont Sund, Sunday, One SURSCIRIPTION One Yoar Bee, One Year OFFICES The Bee Buildin Aha, corner N o suncil B, 1 151 Chieag Offiee, 317 New York, It Building Washington, 513 Fourteenth &t CORRESPONDENCE, ANl communications relating to news ar editorinl matter should be addressed to th Editorial Department BUSINEss Omnhn ol Or (| 26t Streots. ot or of Comy ¥ preo. , 14 and 15, Tribun LETTERS All 1y hv-mlvl order of 4 Wade payable o he THE BEE PUBLISHING BWORN STATEMENT Btate of Nel County of Do George B, Tzschuck etary of THe Pablishing company, docs soleninly swear t the actunl circilatfon of Tk DALY BER fo the weele ending December 81, follows Eundiy oL Decembe W, TZS0nU nd subseribed in ember, 1892, Notary Public. Average Clrenlation for November, — e THE LEGISLATURE. Tre Ber has completed arrangements fo printing the fullest reports of the legislatur during the coming session. These include full staft of cficient spondents at th state capital and an excl srate house, running into Tie Bi with operators at both ends, Tre Ben will be in constant re editoria abl 10 print in its seve Yeports up to the 1 press. It is theintention to print the procecd dngs and matters of interest conn the legislature more than undertaken by paper., ports wil not be confined mere procecdings of the senate Wwill include inside i can be obtained, con purposes of the rings and con Ye formed, as well the netions of rvepresentatives of ‘who may desir to pending: measure. The u news and gossip ating to the test will be given to Br paper can give For sale by all newsdealers, was eve to th nd house, bu ning the plans anc 105 that ma; as designs corpor promote or 1ders as no othel BY DILIGENT practice any intelligen person can learn to write *1893.” Crriz grade crossings. Tne London and Paris will do well to keep away country. IT wWouLD not be that Ja urday night should develop a **Crisp incident.” ver FRANCE country more champagne as she uses herself, shows that I'rance is very wise. nnually THE new Columbian postage stamps | are fully as good for souvenir purposes | as the Columbian half dollars and are within the means of the poorest. THE latest thing in the way of trust: 18 the salmon trust in Oregon. proposed to limit production and ad vance prices. it I8 strictly true. Tr 18 positively declaved by Officer Jenkins of New York cholera will not enter this country nox year. a safe guardian to the public health. It 18 hardly for divorces. In three counties of Pennsyl vania thero are now forty-six divore cases in differeut stages of litigation. THE state of South Carolina has gon into the saloon business, having official and the profits | will go to the state and the county. The experiment will be watchod with some _inteyesr. agents to sell liquors, THE American swindler aach and driving a thriving trade, THE poor of w York, who buy thei. @oal by measure, are now paying $12 ton for it, while the retuilor only pays | e $4.00 a ton. If the poor of Omaha wer proyed upon by the sume kind of shark they would have to pay about $20 a ton. Tue Yellowstone park is the nation’ great pleasure ground, und in futur years it will bo much more attractiv than it is now. [t should 17 1800t always safe to count with | perfect confidence upon the softening | influences of the holiday human heavt. An Ind who robbed his fathe season upon th ana young ma TaE Umversi of —bEXugn institution. The willionaives are doiy very well now in the way of dividing up thelr accumulations among the people— Mr. for the cause of education, and he certainly or at least a very fow of them ace. ‘Rockefeller has done a great deal could not put his money to better use. PAPER OF THE CITY. $800 10 00 6 00 ttances should : Company \ COMPANY. CIRCULATION my ive wire from the In this cipt of | oh day, the | Joment before going to | ed with | The re- | n,as farasit and atorial con- of Chicago who are not pro- | pared to die should keep away from the anarchist fiends who have soughu safety in flight from this rprising if | sonfan elub banguet next Sat- exports to this | ¢ thun three times as much which It is | This may seom fishy, but Health | that Dr. Joukins is too sanguine to be | castern people to go to South Dakota to secure e | operates as | successfully in Europe as at home. An 1stitution called the ‘*National Univer- sity of Illinois” i3 selling degrees to British sabjects at ten to twenty guineas not be de- | spoiled by railroads or by any other | means, but should be perpetuated as the grandest natural park in the world. This is the sentiment of the whole peo- ple and congress cannot fail to heed it. fow years ago and has since been a wanderer returned to the paiental roof on Christmas day, a weary prodigal, and his father landed him in jail with the utmost promptness. has received another Lift of $1,000,000 from John D. Rockefeller, making a total of $5,600,000 which he hasgiven to that STORY OF A YEAR. | Omaha has reason to fesl highly | gratified ovar the record of 1802, Tuis a story of steady and substantial growth managed, and it is producing good ro- sults, Noother country in the world is doine «o much for the education of its youth as tho United States, and the of its school sys- tom is steadily going *forward. In no other state in the unioa is it more pidly advancing toward than in Nebraska I'he harmonious and equitable Jistribution of human power,” of which Prof. Draper speaks, 18 the aim and purpose of the public | school system, and it is admirably hing that end. improvement in y branch of industry and arte provemen comm The compiled sta is ned from reliable sources which | cover two pages of this issuoafford proof that( ahead comme 1 istenaily and surely for her rank as tho Missouri and maintains al metropolis of the vallay. s ¥ compli The most conspicuous fact about the magnitude of Omaha’s commerce is the | THE NEW YEAR clearing house record for the year, | whiel | Although none of the new yoar may yive it welcome, us can know what | have in store, still 1t is but a change fter ull, and yet the civilized world has learnod to attach a particular cance to it. And this not without pason. In the financial and commer- | | cial world it means a great deal in the bulancing of accountsand the closing up of books, To a very number of people it conveys an admonition, rather impressively than on ordinary casions, of the wisdom of some reform in their wethods of living—an admoni- | fon, it may be obscrved, that only in rare cases hegets any permanent bonefit, yet not to ba disdained because not always heeded. To all it brings the estion that the tide of time is bear- ing them ceaselessly onward to the shore of that “undiscoyered country from whose bourne no traveler returns.” The American people step into the new year with the conditions more fav- orable than thoso which affect the peo- plo of any other country on earth. Thero is nothing in this republic that threatens its vence or its perpetuity. I'rom one end of the land to the other there is but one spivit, and that is of | loyaity to American institutions. While the nations of the old world ave looking | to the futuro with doubt and daistrust, there hus never been a period in our history when the American people had a heartier love for their government | thun they have today. 3 Looking out upon the industrial world at the beginning of the new year, no other country presents such a condition | of eral prosperity as the United | nd no other people as a whole are 50 happy and so comfortable. Every *tin our history is a vindication of | | during the past year is over $10,000,000. | republican institutions,and eve 11 ne [ of in 125 inaustrial establisuments, inc'ud- | PO gregates 3205,619, $6,000,000 a The s tho preceding year On 726, or noarly W increase in | 1 clenri 381,472,430, 1| one or gs o vas or nearly 40 por cent. two cities in America will be le to boast a heavier increase in | clearings than Omal Next to comes the the clearing house record great bank exhibit. With a com- bined eapital of $6,085,500, | Cmaha have on deposit at the end of the year , 510,084, of #3,010,000 over last year. Omaha's sav- | ings banks have an u of $2 the bunks of | More B i inc o an ggregato deposit | A " o | 305, a gain of $170,773 during the year. Seventy per cont of our sav- ings banks deposits are owned by wage earners, 8150 they ay Their deposits now average $18.75 than aged twelve months ago. The jobking trade of Omuha has been In 1891 the sales of 152 Omaha jobbing Rouses | aggregated $40,100,000. 1802 the number of jobbing houses incrensed to pev capita ov more steadily increasing in volume, | In o o 5 a | 169 and their azgregato o | puted at 849,710,000, That Omaha’ rapidly becoming a great industrial centor manifest by | factor The product of Oma- ha's factories, mills, smelting works and during the 35,085, of which 5,160,185 represents tho sales of South Om The | meat products | | sales are com- is 1| § is the exhibit of our mills, and ¢ | pac ing houses. . | meat packing hous year 1892 is computed at $7¢ v g i packing house products. t | increase in the value of stage | number of workmen employed our prozress | 5 is n vindication of the | tion of American | san policies. opens auspiciously for It opens with glorious the past year aro | promise for Nebraska and for O $5,000,000. Tie Bir, in hearty sympathy wi The eulargement of the plants of the | spirit of the day, extends to all its the | ers the greeting of a Happy New next eighteen v of the conser Jrineiples and Ame The new ye the nation | ing Union Pacific e shops and South Omaha puacking houses, is 9,501 Thoir earnings for v | computed to be over great packing houses within b | year will, months, make Omul past within the cond to Chicago PRESERVE YELLOWSTONE PARK. packing center. receipts of hogs at the South | Omahastock yardsin 1892 were 1,705,000, | as | The number of hogs packed in 1892 was [ 1,520,386, as against 1,216,57 1891. | The number of and | packed in 1892 L6060 for 1801, The amount expended The press of the country should raise | its united voico aguinst the proposils, | embraced in bills peading in congr. to muke radical nizos in the bo ies of the Yellowstone park and to allow a railroad to be built through a portion of that national vessrvatio Several influsatinl journals in tho east have ostly taken up the fighvagainst | the speculators who are seeking to eo vert this great national park to the person wdizement, and the press of the which is certainly no less deeply itterested in the preservation of the park, should take an active and vigorous part in thotwork of preventing | tion. heme presented in the moas- ore congress is not a new one, ies interosted in it having been | working at it for a number of years. Cooke City is a small mining camp located just beyond the mortheast corner of the park, and it wants a railroad. The claim is that the only | feasible route is through this corner of i the park along the banks of the Yellow- stone and Fast Fork rivers and Soda Butte crec There are two bills in congress bearing on the matter, one granting vight of way for a railroad within the park and the other designed | to overcome the objection to a: railroad within that domain )y chaoging the park boundaries so as to cut off the cor- ner to bo invaded by the railroad. Both schemes should be defeated. . The truth is, as has been repeatedly pointed out, there is no reison why ty should have a railroad. y as a pork I'h g 38, against 1,460,000 the preceding year. | 1 6 for cattle slaughtered was 553,113, as against for buildings | erected and improvements made during the past year will ate $7,734,913. Of this sum 36,37 represents the | cost of new buildings cking | house extensions, factories, storehouses | and awellings; $650,061 was expended | | for public st, , including y improvements, incluling paving, sower construction and grading, | and $428,200 reprosents expenditares of corporations that operate street rail- ways, water works, gas works, olectric lighting and telophone plants. - | This is certainly a splendid exhibit s | for what was considered a very quiet year. | A fair index of the business of the y may he found in the postoflice r ¢ | ceipts. The business of the Omana postoflice | 2,000,000, during the year exceeds an increase of more than 10 | per cent over the preceding yoar. The receipts of the internal revenue oftica an incronse of $500, 1%0, during -v.'h'e ,I)M‘. 3(\\‘|A,‘ “h)fh liGaokat | proves conclusivoly that 1892 has wit- | qyio" nineral IS e e improvoment all | yot of suflicient importance to warrant the Northern Pacific in constructing a branch to it. Besides, there is a more feasible route than ths one proposed. | But the park route would favor the | boomers of town lots at one ortwo points and this explains their urgency to have tho roud take this course, The objection to the proposed r: road is not stronger than the objection to the change of the park boundary. The presont boundary, it is properly urged, i3 a natural one, presenting natural barriers to poachers. More- over, the particular corner which it is proposed to cut off contains some of the park’s greatest attractions, including, among other things, the finest game pasture. To hand only one-half of this | over tothe population hovering about the | he doesn’t know which side of a motor | park would be o invite the extinetion of to get off s, in the opinion of Prof, | #ll tho game which wintor thers, But Draper, somewhat lacking in the kind of | ® railroud without a changoof boundary | training that i3 veally usoful iu the prac- | 8hould not be allowed in the park upon tical walks of life. | Any condition, Thore nro theorists who go to ox- | hgency that would soon render the park tremes in all directions in regard to the | Worthless as a pleasure resort. ; proper scopd of the public schools and [ The duty of congress is to keup this higheor institutions of learning, but tho magnificent national plmhuru» ground | American schools as they exist today intact so fur us its boundarios and approach very close to perfection, so far | B0y such ruilroud invusion as | as their mingling of the practical and | Posed are coucerned. It is the the theoretical is concerned. While it | 8ty of the wholo poople, st {5 true that no person can bo said to be | for their enjoyment, and it thoroughly educated who knows noth- | D & public outrage to nermit any part iug but books, it is equally true thug | ©f it to fall into the hands of speculators | the young mun or young womau who 10 serve their personal A;{‘_:l'unlhzeluul‘u. does not become perfectly grounded in | Af the newspapers of tho country will what the text books teach can never | UWbite in fighting this scheme there is make up for that deficiency in afterlife. | roason to believe it can bo defoated. Practical knowledge of life and its ————————— uffairs may easily be added to anequip: | THE NOTABLE DEAD OF ment of scholarship, but theseholarship | The necrology of 1802 itself is rarely acquived after school | gistinguished names whose duys are over. But it is nevertheless | was great upon their own times and | important that the eyes of the student | will continue to be felt in the genera- should be opened to the outer world and | tions to come. In literature, in law, in that some practical knowledge should | religion, in medicine and in practical be assimilated with the knowledge of | affairs the men who died auring the | text books. This is the aim of the | past year made a distinct mark upon school system of Lkis count. yas it isnow | their generatlon, which insures them a show | nessed & marked el in 9 ses of traflic Taken all the year 1802 has left Omaha several lengths ahead in the race with competing cities of equal pop- ulation. in all, WHA DUCATION MEA In his address bofore theIndiana Slate Teachers association the other day, | Prof. Andrew S. Draper of Clevoland, | 0., one of the most prominent educators | in the country, said that *the best edu- | cation is the harmonious and equi‘able | r a distribution of human power,” and his | remarks showed that he has little re- | spect for the kind of education that is ornnmental without being practically useful. Tho educated man “who comes | s0 little in contict with the worid that g | s o | o | | | is prop- apart e A 'NINETY-TWO, presents a list of g perfection | ace | | William Curtis, editor, | elevating | Prof. | most no | elective | which forms articlo 1 of our stato It would be a destructive | would | influenco | P — ! lnsting place tn the history of the times | in which they 11¥ad, In the realm of fiterature the most dis- tingnished name’iffong the dead of the old yearis that of Alfred Tonnysgn, Eng- land’s greatest poetin the Victorian era, | who has no successfr worthy to wear the lawre's he Iaid down. No less great in his department ‘of: literature, though poerhavs less widely known, was Ernest | Renan, the great French scholar and | writer whose works rank among the greatest productions of the human mind In our own land literature lost the dear old Quaker poet, Jonn G. Whittier, whose muse, though not attaining the loftiest heights, exercised a great and whole- some influeuce upon the moral and pa- triotic sentiment of the country. An- other bright star in the literary firma- out during the “‘old year” was George cssayist and ora- improving and to his countrymen. Walt the ‘“good, gray poet” of gonius, the worth of work must be ioft to the verdict of future time: was among the notable personages in literature who died in 18 Among the less widely known in literaturo embraced io the necrology of the past yeur are Dr, Shea and Bdward A. Free- man, the historians; Ameiin B, Edwards, the novelist and Kgyptologist; IRose Terry Cooke, the best known authoress of New England. , Tho legal profession numbers among ity dead several of national fame, of whom were Associate Justice Bradley of the supreme court of the United States; Daniel Dougherty, the brilliant orator; Idwards Piarropont, who achieved distinetion as a diplomat, and Theodore W. Dwight, a man of great ncquirements in his profession. The church lost soveral eminent men, perhaps the most widely known among them being Cardinal Manning of Eng- land, distinguished not less for his in- terest 1n the welfare of the common peo- ple than for his great learning and in- fluence in ecclesiastical affairs. Almos as well known to the Christian world was Charles H. Spurgeon, the leader of the nonconformist clergymen of England, whose extraordinary powers as a preacher made him worldwido fame. Cardinal Lavigerie, whose test work was done for Christin ivilization in Africa, Cardir Simeoni, and Bishop Bedell of Protestant Ipiscopal church in the dio- cese of Olio e other distinguished churchmen who died during 1892, Death invaded the political avingly during the old y An of uny pron tics who died in 1802 being Senator Bar- hou Virginia, Senator Gibson of Louisiana, and James W. Husted of New York The army lost Goneral Meigsand General John Popa. Tho tor, whose lifo work wa Whitman, strange whose al world ar, the only o in poli- of bilt and Jay Gould. The medical pro- ession parted with Sir Morell Macken e of Ilngland and the noless distin- guished Dr. D. Hayes Agnew of the United States. Of royal personages the ble who died during the yea: were the eldest son of the princo of W and Grand Dulke Constantine, a brother of the czar., The death which excites the most general regret and sympathy in this country was that of Mrs. H on. It will thus Dbo seen that the seythe of the destroyer was not idle in tho year that has just closed, and ia its sweep cut down many whoso lives had beon rich in benefit to hu- manity. ales THE BOYD COU! Y D ISION. The decision of the supreme court in the Boyd county contest, which in- volves the right of the citizens of that county to representation in the fundamental principio that there shall be no hindvance or impediment to the right of a qualified voter to exoreiso the franchiso. This principle is enunciated in the bill of rights con- clearly stitution The right of vote at uny election carries with it the right to cast his vote for every candi- date from presidental eloctor down to constable and road supervisor. The right of every ci n to a vote for national, state and county officers carries with it the right to have that vote counted as iv was cast. Concede that the citizens of Boyd county had a right to vote for presiden- tial electors, congressmen, state and county officers, and it is palpable that they had also a right to cast their votes for & representative in the legislaturo and they had a right to insist that every vote thus cast should be counted. The only point involved in the contest was of which representative dis- trict Boyd county is logitimately a part. The constitution directs thay repre- sentation in the legislature shall be ap- portioned according to the populution, ascertained by national or state census returns, The apportionment under which the legislature was elected in 1892 is based on the state census of 1885 | and was enacted in 188 Under that apportionment the’county of Knox con- stitutes the Twentieth represontati The apportionment of 1837 150 designates that the unorganized | termtd shall be attached for purposes | of representation to the district adjoin- ing said territory 'on the oast. It stands to reason that a division of territory into / ouaties does not disfranchise thecitizens of the unorgan- | d’striet. pro- | | ized territory in the matter of legisla- tive representation after it has been | carved out and ‘organized as a new | county. If the unorganized territory out of which Boyd ecounty was formed was attached to Kunox be | couuty was organized the votes cast in Boyd county for representative should | by rights be counted together with | those cast for representative in Knox | county. | of the supreme court in its ordor direct- ing the clerk of KXnox cbunty to have the returns of Boyd and Kuox counties can | vassed conjointly and the certificate | issued to the person receiving a major- | ity of the total yote for representative. | It is a grave question, hawever, whether or not the court has overstepped the boundary of its judicial funcuion in ment of the country whose light went | | there is uncommon activity in the | | had railvoad world lost William H. Vander-* lower | | house of the legislature, is based on the | proposes, every citizen to cast his | | voaa companies, for it would | do 80 becauso they have gumbled | This is the view held by the majority | ling this mandate. The court doubtless was in duty bound to interpret the statutes relating to the apportionment of representation and in- cidentally to designate to what distriot Boyd county is logally attached, leaving the legislature to determine which of the contestants, under the court's intor | pretation, had a clear titlo to a seat. The order of the court is by no means binding on the legisiature, which is made the solo judge of the election and qualification of its members. It is doubtful whethor upon a clear showing of the facts a majority of the housa would dare to goon record in favor of disfranchising Boyd county, even if the court had not rendercd its formal de- cision, 17 18 said that move grain is now go- ing 1nto the elevators at Duluth than evor and unusual preparations are being made for grain movements upon the opening of navigation next ving. Increased facilities ave being provided at Buffalo for handling cos alarger le than hitherto, ana at shiphutlding ports on tho before 8 on the gront lakes anticipa- tion of enlarged shipping domands next season. Tho lake trade has grown rapidly in recont years that the fucilities have not kept up with it, and it is ox- pocted to incrense moro during the coming year than evor befove. This wonderful development of lake com- merce is attracti attention on the Atlantic seaboard, no lass vhan in the wost. The New York tin says: *“I'ho grain, lumber and coal trades proparly attach very great im- portance to the plans for the improve- ment of navigation throughout the chain of lakes and to tho seaboard. Agitation of the subject will help to bring out the expression of competent opinion on the engineering features of the various plang, and should lead to a botter public understanding of what is feasible.” cussion now going on, and while there nave been few expert opinions as to the engincering featuvos of the different ship canal plans propossd, thore has been a great manifestation of public ap- ion of the advantages that would ‘ue if the grent lukes woro connectod with the sea by a decp water way. Pub- lic interest in the subjoct has grown rapidly during the past few months, and thero is no long 1y doubt as to the sentiment of the people concerning it. They want the doep water way and the reduced costof transportation whioh it would bring them 80 acd AT relief is felt ever sequence of the safearrival at New York of the Cunard steamer Umbria. Sho was long overdue and groat anxiety was thoroby caused. Hundreds of pas sengers weroe aboard and their friends become very apprehensive as to their fate. Disabled machinery was the cause of tho delay and the great shin was compelled to lie at the merey of continuous storms while repairs were being made. Such accidents are, of course, to Dbe expected, but great speed at which the ocean grevhounds ave now driven across the Atiantic exposes them to special dan- gors from this cause. If a railroad G ywhere in | locomotive breaks cown the usual result delay, but when theso huge | mships loss their propelling power thay arc at the merey of the wind and waves, and it they happen to bo near a lee shore they are very likely to be destroyed, carrying down to watery graves hundreds of helpless human beings. But the world is ina hurry now and the fast driving of steamships, with all its attendant dangers, is in accordance with the spirit of the time. A BROAD aund liberal view of the value of good wagon ronds as feeders for rail- voaas is taken by H. M. Flaglor, pres- ident of the Jacksonville, St. Augustine & Halifax River railroad company. Iio if the projectors of good wagon roads will load and unload cars, to haul frze all material necessary for making a wagon road that will be a feeder to his line. Considered as an act much, for the railroad will more than get its money , but it shows a proper appreciation of the usefulness of good wagon roads. Public roads that would allow the farmer to haul his products to market at any time of the vear would be an advantage to the rail- make the volume ¢f their transportation business much more uniform than itis now. 1t would in great measure do eway with car famines and blockades. I'r 18 a singular fact that most of tho fools who commit suicide at Monte Carlo awny [ monoy belonging to somebody elso. That was the case with the young American who took his life there the other day. The money which he had lost had boen entrusted to his care by his mother, It would have been much more sensible for him to have gone to | repuy the loss; but the young simple- tons who get lleeced at Monto Carlo are not of that kina, Perhaps the worlais about as well off without them, Tiig brotherhoods of rail way employes who are taking measures to prevent | ample, and that the city is very ‘ such conditions | vanced on nccount of the burning of ono | clnes which do | ments, | interests, its rapid Commercial Bulle- " | “0ld Huteh” the stocic | the This is the object of the dis- | | fi | found 2 | into power the | & | the I of generosity this may not amount to | worl to earn money Ly honest labor to | project | 4 breeding place for all the w | and the r strikes on railroads during the World’s | faiv deserve the approval of the public, | Now let the railroad companies be gov erned by the same spirit and from giving any occasion for dissat refrain | tion among their employes during the | exposition year. Lot the comfort and couvenience of the traveling public be protected during a period when the lines of travel will be taxed to their utmost capacity even under the most favorable conditions, Tigk Pacific Mail Steamship company now has a formidable rival in the North American Navigation company, which has rocently been formed with a capital of $3,000,000, That isthe kind of com- petition that the American people like to see, IF INSURANC are raised on ac- count of the Continental block fire, will they be lowered again after the city has enjoyed a long period of freedom from And if not, why not? It is a poor rule that does not work both ways, It { is & well known fact that the average of “ fires? | of prosecution will be approved fire losses in this oity Is small, that the protection afforded by our splondid fire department and reliable water supply is soon have potted eovery fish to ba found thero The Star-Eyed Loutsville ConrferJournal There is no office whatever, either eloctive or appointive, to theaceeptance of which Me. Watterson would give a mor . ation. He has the vanity to beliove that it lie wanted an offico he would not need to go away from home to get it But he long dismissed from s mind the thought of such \ thing, having never had the desive for it, He expects to die as ho has lived —ajournals ist puve and simple, unpurchaseable and un ambitions, except to render honest service 1o the people and to edit & good newspaper liboral in the expenditura of money for the pur- | pose of preventing fire 103ses, Under rates should not be ad- block ' citizens of South Om now earnestly dis geha-te monts hesitate about making certain changos involying increased oxponse e bocause they think that the logislatura, Lo bid Rl ey fnfluenced by othor citics of the same | i wim that hath shall be given Me not wish to pave the Huntington had sent ta him a8 & ChElstmad way to such changes in their own char ,,. et o hatural nuggetof oro. containing ‘\ 000 worth of gold and &,000 worth of sil- tors, will dofeat the proposed amend Tho donor Bl There ought not to be uny 1 ¥er. The donor was Mr. Damin of Durango op- § Moxieo, who owns winiug propertios of fabs nof that nature. of the Magic City, by all [N If the pooplo | WOUS Fichness. Mr. Damm would have dotia oople and free discussion \ ' who like to see law business [ is stiff an actmore appropriate to the n had aftor wish to mako carried on ina businesslike way. A “full hand® v who are ass amends positi thorough subject, for s to lasure the so in oficos of growing they should ba allowed to No other city of its size in this ds upon exactly the same foot- I ha W vice of good men doing s - importance, BLASTS FROM RAM'S HORN, do so in Pl who think too littl e to talk too nuich \ When y Its groat business od meeting don’ growth and its prox- imity to Omaha are to bo seems to bo a disposition to mako the new charter a good one, represent- ing the wishes of the people, and it is 10 be hopad that when the awmoendiaents re agreed upon they will meet with no opposition from any source. i pray for take your dog to chureh Givea lie the vight of wreek the univers For u steady thin is better than that ¢ A law-breaker i no matter how brave he may look The smell of tobacco on & Christian's breath never does the Lord any good n toll much about the prayer i 20 of the church steeple a sermon is heard without re vil gives his fire another stir, Tho man who loves his neighbor as him- self is not the one who smokes on 4 street. ar platform. A good way to find out how much_ religion people have is to watch them when they can't have their own way 1t you want to have ph own cellar, do somethi bor's fire from going cl e THE DAY W way and it would considered the light of a tallow dip v rockot ways a coward in heart! an't It 15 reported from New York that has ngain been caught in market and has lost several and dollars, The old man ought to have stuck to the restaurant business. “When a man begins to go down hill,” said Josh Biilings, ‘“‘everything seems to be greased for the oceasi time pentance the « thou ity of coal in y 10 keep your ne W out DUNDY'S summar aw doclket of the federal court by dismissing a lot of old cuses that have boen dragging along for years for want JUDGE clearing of SWEAR. Put away Remember ur “sleates.! you made a stagger at it last t make any Ccalls” unless your hand luwyers may cost he converted the silver and gold in the nug- of the aries of suflicie you more than a “tick full got into pesos and distributed them among SRR the wretehed who work in his mines, _brovision and Mr. Hun m as o sensible man would L sizo no doubt have thought more of him for 1f you feel without a stick ar resolutions. T Januaey output of tho anthracite that aching void take aqua conl companics, a3 fixed by the New York agents, will be 230,000 tons greator than that of Decomber. If it we 1o veduco the output to by prices up the combine would do it. young. So do many New sales ndofY in ol Whits for inst Be is desirable. Bad necessary L 3 cautious in turning over a fall 10t to apply f ic administration Lare determined to swear off, put it and date it S 18037 Too many place new leaves, = n office under the WL Repeat Lselt, Domocrat \t the 1t ng wdwinistration Slooked over the books,” they 'nts missing out of the thousands of miliions of dollars which the republicans had handled and guarded since they went with Lincoln in 1561, and “the 3 cents was found subsequently ef the when the democrat eat all, resolve amite to the » with good mtentions. 1T you are compelle stomach's sake, don't your friends a chanc - SENATORIAL POTPOURRL not to con- a little for the take a load. Give Step Ast Globe-Democr Ljoes protest agi st the invasic an Juan country by the white men acted by the stories of gold dis. 1t nobody list s Lo Loader: Majors’ friends to make Crounse scnator, thus Majors on the throno of the state, but the supreme court saved the state from further disgrace. 1t is well. Fremont Herald: It is announced that Tom Majors has a full-fledged senatorial hee in his bonnet—that he is willing to enter into a combination that will make him gov ernor if he ean’t be senator; but he wants o be senator fivst, and let Crounse look out for himsclf. There are few th that Tom wouldn't take, if they were lying around loose. Papillion Times: It the republicans clected to the Nebraska logislature arve in harmony with the member from ¥ nator Paddock will not be th aucus nomince for the s i >are many Nebraska L more deserving than among them is Governor umstances, 1 to get n when the afo gold is alwa pathof Aid Caucasian brashed Philadelphia I s This is an era of magnif] ast imposinz of which 13 the proposed 1to connect 1 Srie, Montreal Vessel of twenty-two this gr such triffing obstruetions lls, the Lachine Rapids Adirondack Lills arve to bo surmounted by means of steel locks of eigh feet lift., mates of cost have not been furnished, these will naturaily be on the same stupen- dous scale as th t of the detailsof the worlk, to e sup- an cnterprise might desired: but private | ¢ Anture as yet upon an aking so unique and cont schemes, not lll‘l\ll'hv are and republicans mor Paddock, and chi Croun Crete Vidette: namo of Judg nection with the One frequently he Crounse mentioned satorship, and it is gen- 1y admitted that he would hea strong ndidate. So he would; but Mr. Crounso was elected to serve as governor, and if* ho should accept a seat in tho senute all the ood accomplished by the republican pavty this year in this state would come o naught The party has been pulled out of the old rut, and let Governor Crounse stay by it until it gets well under way on its new road. Plattsmouth Journal: The latest possi- bility for senator, by a_combination of popu lists and democrats i Judge B L and it is trong probability of its winuing, Broudy is vecognized s i strong man, of cellent character, great learning, consc tiye spiit, bro: al and mental vi with views of public questions in harmony with the more conservative independents and democrats alike. He is a po) man with the masses, chiefly becans his rugied honesty, his firmness and decision of ¢h uscter. As district atto 5 judge ho has shown qualitics of eha and fituess that have won the confidence ported by state ceomplish the cnds pital could international peculiar, Protecting Salmon Ifaunts, Philadelphia Ledger. President 1a ssued a proclama- tion which, though attracting little atten tion, may have a great effect in the near futuve upon the resources of the country, move especially the supply of food fishes The fishermen of the Pacifie coast are exter- minating the salmon as rapidly as possible, leaving future generations to take care of themsclves, after the usual manner of fisher- m everywhere, But the sident's (pro- umation ves for timbor and fish culture purposes the island of Af Alasl djucent rocks and territorial w This great veservation is so well stock with salmon and trout that it may be made ters of Alaska s, ers of the United § if it had been left open the canneries would Largest Manufacturors and Retuilors of Clothing in tae World, Tail End Is not always the best to get altached to, for [you are liable to need }hl’lp when you want <L0 let go. Thal's our flx now. The tail end lof '92 found us with ;muny tail stock to dispose of. ETucsduy we begin to Ilet go and want a | |whole lot of people to help us. We'll pay 'em all for The boys’ suits and overcoats and the same habili- ments for the men will all get a slice taken off the price. The slice we take off will be given to those who help us let go the tail ends. BROWNING, KING & CO., 8. W. Cor, 16th and Douglas St ends of their assistance. Store open every evening till o, | Saturday till 6:a),

Other pages from this issue: