Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 11, 1893, Page 4

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THE DAILY —_— - F. ROSEWATER, BEE Faitor P PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Dafly Ree (withont Sunday) One Year Diafly and Sunday, One £ix Months Three Month Sunday Bee, One Snturdny Bee. One Keekly Bee, One Ve OFFICES, Omaka. The Bee Buildi Kouth Omnha, corner N and Counctl RIS, 12 Pearl Street Chicago Office himber of Comrm New York, Rooms 13, 14 and 15, Building Wishington. 513 Fourteent) Street. CORRESPONDFNC wtions relutin tor should be Fiment BUSINESS LETTERS. A1l husiness letters and remittan be addressed to The Bee Publishing Company Omahn. Drafts, checks and postofiice orders 10 be made payuble to the order of the com pany. THE BWORN STATEMENT State of Nebraska, ) County of Dotg W, Tzechuck, socrotary of Tie Ber conpany, does soleninly swear that ulation of Tie DAtLY BEE for ending February 4, 1803, was as 2800 10 00 ree. 14 Tribune A1l comn editorial 1 Editorial Dy nows and o the in to Iressod should BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY OF CIRCULATION | Geore Publishin the nctual clre the week follows Bunday, Tanuary 29 Mondsy, Junuary 30 Tuesdiy. January 31 Wednesdny. Febriry 1 Cirenlation for January, | for IF THE United State to amend the couple be unreco, able cnate continues | bill it will soon | ——— | 1F JUDGE GRESHAM gets into the cab- inet General Weaver will probably be made governor general of the Sandwich | islands. LOUISIANA has gone the business of highly pr Texas continues to ra or another word to th extensively into o and finds it | the meantime | the Old Harry, aising In | IT 18 believed that by putting soft coal | on the f. list the soft coal trust be destroyed and this would seri : jure the anthracite combine. It experiment worth teying under the efr- | cumstances, | OMAHA cleavings for the second week in February show the steady increase in business for which the Gate City is noted. The figures for the week ending Thursday give an inerease of per | went, a total volume of more than a | -million a day | AND now Sloat Fassett has joined J. S. Clarkson in denouncing F ident Harrison for appointing Judge Jackson to the supreme court. As the president has not yot withdrawn the nomination itis tobe vpresumed that not heard of these criticisms. he has NEBRASKA was only slightly touched by the terrible blizzard that swept over Colorado on Thursday, and there were no avalanches within our borders. Upon the whole the peoplo of this state have reason to he pretty well satisfied with the way the winter has dealt with them thus far. A CHICAGO newspaper offers to investi- gate any case in which any person has | been “‘swindled, defrauded or wronged by any person, firm, corporation or law,"” ete., without charging a cent for | the service. Well, what is the matter with destroying a few trusts and com- bines to b Tue Chicayo Tvibune declares that John Bullis not afraid of our nav Perhaps he isnot afraid of it, for it must be acknowledged that heis not easily frightened, but it is strong enough to command his vespect, and perhaps might serve to restrain him from becom- ing unnecessarily offensive, THE output of the northwestern flour mills was again increased last week and amounted to 19; barrels, against 163,055 barrels for the corresponding week of 1892, The flour men are now encouraged by improved sales, but the stocks ave nevertheless increasing and the foreign demand continues to be light. It 1S now evident that the effort to keep the Douglas county contest before the senate is designed to block legisla- tion. The populists in the senate have evidently fallen into a corporation trap when they voted to keep the contest going. The fact that the casting vote of the lieutenant governor was against dropping the contest affords abundant proof that the corporations are ready to drop it. —_—_— NOW THAT the presidential campaign is entirvely and forever done away with it may be admitted by a few candid demoerats that the tariff had nothing to do with the dificulty at Homestead arly all of the members of the house Jjudiciary committee who took part in the investigation of the affair are of that opinion. It to convict a demo- cratic ier of misrepresentation but in he is convicted out of the mouths of members of his own party not over is casy this case urning of a county insane asylum in New Hampshire and the loss of the lives of forty-four inmates was a shock ing tragedy, and it will shown by investigation needless one. The confinoment of about fifty unfortunate human beings in colls in a wooden fire trap, with no equipment for fighting fire, must bo sc little short of eriminal. How be expected that t wretches would roasted alive It was only a que when such a building and of course the inmates of the cells could not be rescued. It is asingular fact that prisons in which criminals ar confined are very rarely purned, while the incineration of insane ylum in- mates is not an uncommon ocearrence. This sickening holocaust should canse in- probably be that it wasa down as could it miserable boing or later? of time would take fire, escape s00n¢ tion the cam; |a | to pension ! harbors of the eount | purehase law was e | have no other effect than to give offense ereased precautions against fire to be taken in all asylums for the insane. GOVERNMENT PENDITURE An influential part of the demoe capital in the last presidential campaign was the charge of extravagance against the Fifty-first In its liberal policy for improving the postal se for extending the usefulness of the Ag ‘ ricultural department, for up | thie and for pension vice, | building navy ing the bounty of the government, that con car th sum ied appropriations up to ver A 10 note to prec make this its ine 1 hillion dollar | it vint 18id is it wa prop pell o moet ding ¢ provizion provide which the gress did not for, but apart from tions wei la of many people to the ch ance, and the billions « denounced in the dem o nd by democratic speakers throu That it had an influence from clenct appropria 50 re in the ht in the mind ge of extrav- Har congre hout . ny is not o be doubte tic party rm to institute economy in the ex wnd thi m the redemp 2 At the osa the to divert n voter: the repub: The demo promised in its pla penditures of the promise the stump. rapr tiol firsg session of the mounted to $507,000,000, nment snstantly v b How has the present hou entative about of this pledge to the peo, present ¢ appropriations w s consider propriate t Fifty-first found « ably greater than was ap- o first of the mgress. The demo for this and they would make at the nd on, demonst wherein the republican congress had been un- xt nt and would keep ations far below the billion | point. it at this stage of the cond and within three weeks of the expiration of the present ? The statement was made on the floor of the house a few days that the made at t m for fiscal year would h the sum of $531,000,000. In that the appropriations of the Fifty- second congress, including the estin for the sinking fund, postal paid by postal revenue, and the perma- nent and indefinite appropriations, will cach the sum of $1,038,000,000 as against $55,000,000 made by the Fifty-fivst con- It is teue that this ut 50,000,000 is due almost entively the sossion 1508 that showing would nt sec They last pa the iy proj How is session congress appropriations is the next expenses '8, increase of appropr is responsiblo the 1 the history and havbor improvements one-half of which would 5 be suflicient for ever the ations, but the pr for sum of ent house priating time in river 500,000 doubtle: needed improvement in appro- st at one | for rurgently | rivers and In the course of a discussion in the house ot the appropriations and the probable revenues to meet them it was said that *‘the conclusions ave irresist- ible that public expenditures must be | materially reduced, ta or a new issue of bonds impending liabilitic fact that there s tion in congress to the people ave the prospect of or an increase of the public debt, either of which would be regarded with general popular disfavor, That some retrenchment is practicable, without harm to the public scry will | hardly be questioned, but it is evident that the country must begin to realize that a proper administration of its af- fairs cannot be had at an expenditure much less than that represented by the appropriations of the Fifty-first cor even when the pension demand has been materially reduced, it must be in time. Meanwhile a demoeratic house of representatives has failed to keep the purty promise to reduce the expendi- tures of the government. ion increased made to m In view of the ms so little disposi- reduce expeditu confronted with higher taxation as MR. CLEVELAND'S DISCOMPITURE, The political history of this country does not furnish a parallel to the nosi- tion which Mr. Cleveland now occupies i lation to a majority of the repre- | tives of his party in congress. has been no other instance of a president-elect suffering sueh discom- fiture at the hands of his political par- tisans in the national legislature as Mr. Cleveland has experiencod during the | nt week, and it is likely to consti- | for a long time an exceptional and memorable chapter in our political hi tory. Mr. Cleveland invited such a result. Wholly apart from the question whether his views rvegarding silver are wise or | unwise, the extraordinary method adopted to bring democratic senators | and representatives to the support of his demand for the repeal of the silver tainly not judicious orial 1a | he | ov proper. His dic course o o gross own duty twenty 107 d voted self-respecting meml who have convictions and a conscientions to their eonstituenc demoeratic nocratic repres tives who against the wishes of M, Cleveland are probably not all of them in favor of the existing law. Some of them, itis not tobe doubted, would + different But they not willing to abandon the law at the arvogant demand of the president and their refusal to do so is in th ve of a rebuke to his extraordinary ‘ence in the attempt to direct the of the pesple’s representative he been eontent with simply ex- his opinion as to the c¢om importance of the silver and of what ought to be done garding it, there would have been no ground for resentment, but he was not todo thi He men to to urge his demand, and when persuasion was found not t5 be foctive, he ught to eoerca assent by threatening an extra session of the Fifty- third congress as soon as it ¢ould ticably be called after M rogant ¢course made tain the defeat of his demand and gave his enemies in the party a substantial advant The evid 3 of dem e sion have m made the past few days. The distinctly ma fi 1 dissatisfaction of Senator Iill of of of sense s con- their | of The | the senators and pr legislation were naty inte action Had pressing manding question satisfied Washington sent atic dissen be y plain within vei | upon the | the | money appropriated for ¢ | pels low rates during the se | ject recommended by President | this y | ; | being realized | be | noed | serious burden for New York leaves no doubt that the in- coming administration will find in him Thore not be a vigilant and s oritic he will rolontloss wson to believe that without sympathisors among his dem eratic eolleague blunt house s of the senate of Mr. Bland which he “_'" | in de- party made th momen dived in the last nination of a very the demoerat promise and silve ‘and up to t! had been de 1 the ¢ it of the party a majorit not to permit M to dicta the and the party All the indications adn ad to waziff the | the on tion," showe n as now levelan policy of a will Ation if it and land incoming inist troubled ¢ to dominat hat porienc the party Mr. Clev will do. IMMEL QUESTION. A bill now pending bafore the Cork logislatur 10ses the appropr tion of $238,00) the imp ntof | the canals of mount is divided up int of itoms, the th he ally available for the decpening nlargement of th suffieic y accomplish it will be 1l ow | )\ for W that I'his number and money will act the canals and the locks will not b ich in that divection, Thus 1if the Governor F and and s cortain—the real portion of the ¢om- which de vory seen that eve approved by this by no m bonefit to that lar, of the country irie canal will not be measure lower is meree 1ds im- portant. So far as the interests of the in producing only canal in N 1y consequence-is the Erie canal, It been hoped that the agitation in be- half of radical improvements in that watery would produce some effect pon the legi ure of the Empire state, but it does not appear to have nad much influence. The amount named in the | bill to which we have r can ver, spent, after the usual manner | of spending caual funds, without produc- | ing any results of appreciable value to | the commerce of the country. | Wha the influence to which this reluctance to the I nal is to be aseribed? The democratic party is in full eontrol in the state of New York | and would have the handling of the | anal im} 50 there can be no politi in the wa The influenc that is working so powerfully against the inal is one that does not confine itself to any party nor hesitate to employ any | rency than may enable it to compass its \d. In previous articles upon this sub- jeet THE b has shown what the policy of the railroads is toward the canal and how great the gain would be to them if they would foree the regulator of transportation rates to the | fate which is now rapidly overtaking it. Upon this point the New Yerk 1 Bulletin says: The opposition of the railroads, although short-sighted and mistaken, is singularly effective, and must be vigorously combated. s a matter of fact, the canal, by attracting trafic to New York dnd_contributing to the v of this port, serve: of the railroads t must be by a y of neglect and false economy by which anals are rendered inefiicient. The recogniziug in the canal and a power that com- son of navig: tion, appear to be incapable of taking an other view than that the canals should be deprived of their efficienc ppled and discriminated againt in every possible man- ner. The railronds apparently argue t the canal system, having been superseded in many respects by one of greater efiiciency, | western ave concerned | York that is of state in New casily bo stain rove- ments, obstacle Com- | promate the intere center here, and thoy poli th ruil thei losers sinds, howey only competite e | is to be no longer tolerated where it so hap- pens to still afford the cheapest means transportation It is needless to point out the various methods by which the railvoad corpora- tions may bring their power to bear to prevent effective legislation in the in- terest of the Erie canal. Nobody doubts their power nor their fixed purpose to use it for their own advantage without regard to the injury inflicted upon com- | merce. The sure and permanent remed of the people lies in the ship canal pr Harri- | men the of and sound son of approved judgment, by bat many until | time is fully ripe for that the Erie canal | must be maintained in a condition much better than it is in now, or else a vast | volume of western products must go to | the Atlantie coast at such rates of trans- portation as may be imposed by the rail- roads. The present prospect of relief certainly is not flattering. It looks as if | the railroads would succeed in their efforts to destroy canal competition. DEATHS from cholera continue to be reported from Europe, showing that the conditions which produce this disease are still prevalent there. fest themselves this season of the year, what may be expected when the hot weather comes? Something very much like cholera has appeared at Mar- seilles, France, thou the authorities ive it another name. A few years ago y was the center of a cholera epi- ic that carried off hundreds, so that | it is by no means improbable that there will The dictions of a ¢h be another obvious faet outb that nic ak there. the pre- in Europe m t5 b2 much 90 ¢ and if kept out of the p the the pestilence is United States the ccautions will have to eneral parations gun, that the y kaeping out the fully in hand when the danger ¢comes. The the | at Washington have not hown themselves to be fully alive to the grave importance of this matter to be most complete taken by and the be aly ssary f will b ought 59 means disease time of lo pl THE debt of Canala is about 000, The $2335,000, - annexationists in the Domin- ion urge that this would not a v ,000,000 of people to assuma, thongh it Is an excsedingly op - pressive one t) the 5,000,000 of Canada. Undoubtedly an additional obligation Am srican po of less than could be borne without ¢ the be upon th ! but question is an wnada ured therc bat it is country should oquiv- The in xing ( undeveloped that a Ty not practicable ann re 3 valuable, for this If they mani- | tain of | government | to | the wage carners 8 %the country by | elous trac | jurist in his cabinet | Turkey has in 13 abandonment of that | ¢ | doubte | te entatives of | gre in to get a share of the bonefits to result from the {@bpmont through jali arpangements without h ume &0 of e debt of the Do If thbe no political dim or in the way till whether Canadian anne ing toa minion wi oult it mplisations would be —~questionable ion would considering uld w J narked growing interediin the Doyminion WHAT appoaes t9 ba a trustworthy ro port is to the effebt that Judgo Gee will be ary of state under the i ¢oming ratihn It has stated ) month past that Mr. Cleve nd desired tH the distinguished but until now ther has been no information that had a claim to iability. It the unler- standing that Me. Bayard would proba- bly return t the State department, he been much in consultation the preside t, but the are that he will It it be fact that Gresham is going int) the State de ment nobody will question the excel wtion, He 1 the count ipped for the dutie state. Assuming the o three country w incur administ have re has baosn having with chane abroad a one of the abl and is w rotary of tness of this mem by f Mr. Cleve- land’s cabinet have been deeided upon the other two being Carlisle for the Treasury and Lamont for the War de- partment, rre port, THE session of the following the inau, Cleveland promises to bo decidedly lively. A cabinet headed by sham is liable to meet with a good deal of ve warm opposition from the demoer side of the Ame n house of lords, o the populists ave liable to play a vor important role about that time. OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. o immediatoly ation of Grover Reading 1 stono! tween the lines of Mr. Glaa cautious statement in Parlinment in mee to England's immediate or remote wdrawal from E it is plainly to be 1 that he does not pelieve that the time has come for the abandonment of that coun try. It may also be noticed that in all th references to the subject by the English gov ernment or the press no mention has ever been made of the interest which the sultan of pt, the foeling apparently the settlement of the question between England and France hold upon Egypt before occnpation was slight, and that time he almost com- pletely ignored. e has nained silent during all the protestations that h re cently me from France, and the die which England has assumed ov the ac. tions of the Khedivg has not called forth any ssion whateve That a conflict over possession of Egypt would endanger England’s supremacy in the cast is un- sd. Tt is cqually apparent that the beginning of such 4 struggle would afford an opportunity for Russia to advance upon the Balkan peninsula. No one familiar with the history or policy of Russia can have any doubt that she is ajming at such a move ment, although she has itiade no open declar- ation of such a purpose. If there had been no such purpose on the part of Russia there would have been no triple alliance nor Franco-Russian alliance; France and Ger- many would have been left to settle their territorial questions as best they might, and the rest of Burope would have had no fear of war. Russia would have nothing to fear from Germany and Austri if she did not contemplate further anne tion in Europe, and she would have no inter- est whatever in the question between France and. Germany. The real danger of the nco-Russi liance is th n- ly aggr Neither power fears any I; but France hopes to regain her lost nces, and Russia wishes to acquire new territory by improving the first opportunity 1 Europe in_war. No doubt the | L smen see thi: nd realize that the solution of the Eeyptian question is fraught with grave issues;and Mr. Glad- stone, the great champion of civil and relig- ious liberty, may be depended upon to a firm stand against French aspirations and Russian machinations. Servia is reported to be on the verge of ivil war owing to the attempt of the liberal nd anti-Russian regency and cabinet to convert the general election now in vro; into a radical defeat. The radicals, how ever, possess an immense majority, both in the urbun and rural districts, and hence a liberal victory cou y be achieved terrovism, force and fraud. The rad party in the head of which stands the ex-premier, M. Patchisch, is altogether Russian in its sympathics, and the same may be said of the greater portion of the popula tion, who m the czar the supreme spiritual head of their church. In view of this state of things the reconciliation botween ex-King Milan and Queen Natalie acquires peculiar significance. It is reported to have been brought about by the Muscovite ambassador in_ Parls and to be proparatory to a return of both husband and wife to Belgrade at the summons of tha rad al party for the purpose of assu tho regency of Servia during the minority of their son. Of course this would involve the ousting of the anti-Russian, M. Ristitch, the only survivor of the threo regents formerly appointed by ex-iing Milan prior to his ab- dication. King Milan is reported to ha now become altoggthar Russian in his sym pat senting iy the strongest manner possible the contempt troatmo to which he has baeir* subjected since his abdi cation by Austria, for whose sake he com promised his populuity among his former be lies The the sinco g that sul B has been Mr. Robert Giffen, C. B., the eminent tistician, has been glving mony before the Inglish Labor commis. sion. He estimates that dur the years 1500 and 18501 a sum 63 £2,502,000 was lost to sta- me interesting without reckoning the loss caused by the di rsion of trade into new channels, His tements on the subject of trades unionism ther surprising. He says that th gland some 3,000,000 workpeople by which expression he apparently means kind or another—and 7,000, while the fullest artisans of one 000 adult male laborers, hest of all in Le: ) | th report of trades unfons borship of 71,000 this, not nionist shows a only 4 | one worker As for not discourig In twenty profit-sharing fon to re vi wonld rd the systen is often ra) « sch but ¢ it is always in o ™ v portion W profit, a Al must thinks somethin 1t-ho gard to alien immiz gtan ration, ani to the it be turne has t hoesolf Parliam it B the natinal part sl of polit all far as can tary association 1 in, which has the name ¢ o ba ermpy, titod and a cal maleonte I'h m, i3 to et from the pr in *, who is to be a with his military » issued by t connection l comm eolonial and his policios. T rsof thi manife part meor h 1l ymply policy of t1 of v h economi th wnd B G military policy is burdens which the ade and indu lutely intolerable, Anti-semitism a metallism 1 sfind o place in ¢ gram o party, whose and wire-p influcn development of rinany's that the imp country sion lers owis: this new principal lieved to be Pri is genera Aspirations Swan Washington News, west is now liberally supplie middle-of-the-s0up statesmen Gt ey The Poor Man's Friends, Kansas City Journal, In California, Wisconsin and Kans populists have el salthy democ the United States senate, with severa states to hear fr The plu must go—to Washin Another Kn Chicago Dispatch v religious sect out in Kansas all diseases by the laying on of If ever attempt to cure the political itch they will get along muct if they will try layiug on of clubs —— Why This Dodging? Denver News. The democratic aational platfor manded protection for the life and of railrond employes. It is interest notice where the opposition to the car coupler bill comes from in It would scem that platforms been used, like molasses, hav iprocity. ork Trihune, Let it be conceded that ths reciy convention with Hawaii has built up ican interests there and imvolved a nec for annexation after a transition pe commercial dependence. What o The reciprocity policy is shown tc powerful lover in dealing with foreigr tries which are brought within the « cial orbit of the United States. T Cuba, for example, which is even mor sary than Hawaii in order to perfect t itary de s of the American unic long 4 ty polic the Uni es will have complete of the future of the island. 1f the p wdoned the lever will be broken s department will no longer hol destiny of Cuba in the hollow of its | — The Party of Plutoc Philadelphia Press. The outcry of sdemocrats made & “plutoerats' in the last campaign and strength of which they carried the was like a good many other things, enough Morgan until after e evidence of this is the choice of Mr, J Mitchell to the United States senate Wisconsin, a gentleman whose chief « cation is his immense wealth and the ality with which he spends it for part poses® Mr. Mitchell, like Calvin S. B Ohio, is a shining example of the hostility of the democrats to “*plutoc hostility that lasts long enough to the votes of the unwary and then its sleeves over the shick gamo it he When the yelpers begin their plut ats again it will Mr. Mitehell to take tin the Globe-Demoerat, The Globe-Democrs to the very singular of the U ats. De act that the pre nited States is the only ofticer nent who receives official notifies result of the el ofticially declared in joir sion at Washington yesterday, but the no legal provision for informing Mr. land of the result. Nor is provision by which the chief justic formed that the man whom he will into the presidency next March is the ful incumbent of the oMice. Suppose body should ask the chief justice on th of March how he knows that Grover land is the person to whom the oath be administered, what would h would have to reply that he read aboul the ne wspapers of hi tion of & ————— neeited Swashbuckler, t. Paul Pioneer-Press. Careful observers in the political fiel have noticed during the national camy tendency on the part of Mr. J make himself too numerous. He ay prior to the Minneapolis convention invaluable mentor of the republican and in that body as the one knew better than all others combine what it ought to do. No soomer wa convention adjourn: having nom Harrison in spite of the gloomy foreh of Mr. Clarkson, than the pross were simply burdened with daily tions as to whether Mr. Clarkson could not b2 induced to retain the ci ship of the republican national It was fectly evident to every one thes on e originated with Mr. son himsel inspired by his betng lost to the pu blic o concentrated in self would the propriety or possibility of ¢ chairman of a committe thut conduct @ national campaign a tleman who had been of th terest opponents of the nation But the advertisin Clarkson's AcC sy co i m have ect Serve finall a plain \ from the president that s would be more satisfactory in it Since that time there has been los: vescence of Clarkson he has ju broken out in a new place. It has L served for unne stand und upon the of the United § who both his country and his party we time, when the battle is over and the buried, and nobody who is either vening Power.-—Latest U, S. Gov't Report, ADSOLUTELY PURB Mr., fabl Abli the sona ‘to cateh flies.” is main tion.” has frequently alluded ther 3. Clarkson to | person dispatches was me oth mom- ing to is o Qi foclines il there f capital nd the il do er em have o vory irs day has just adopted ppear ats re m Vin ob rid of ssailed fal, h the is now 1 com had 1ny's s abso nd bi he pro- | sinator be d with 18 the rats to 1 othe toc claims hands. Kansas 1 bette rm de- limbs ing to niform azain procity Amer ssity riod of | llows? ) he 1 coun- mmer here is neces- he mil . So | aned | control licy be ind the Id the und. p\zainst on the mtr, rod One ohn L. > from Ju : lib ¥y pui rice of esident, of the ommis- s elec- v No- \L ses- C SW right- some he 4th Cle sh tit in | | 1d may paign a | speared as the party, who 1 just 1s the nated »dings cula- ald or nittee, | that Clark fear of considered | ing as to ron bit candidate’s nomi- | d M y W intim s ¢ st now | heen re- | ary, un esi ved At this » dead | wise or iy gonorous desires to raise the question of e sponsibility of lnst vear's dofest, but rather to forget old differen and set_all faces toward the success of the future, Mr. Clark SON OMETEes onee more his obscurity to make & maliznant wtack upon President Harrison himsalf intor viewed to the oxt A pagge of the Chicago Tribunc ponsibility for tha defoat of Mr. Har profes 1ch weaker than | including the sapiont remar publicans would have won easily with Mr. Blaine but with Rusk or Alger as wdidate instead. This is as objectionable from th party as from the personal point of view; is bad taste and bad politics appears Mr. Clarkson on f-appointed consor of t o of appointment of Judge ckson to the supreme bench. Ho has, ap parently persuaded Senator Cullom to act as tail to his kite, and again pursucs Mr. Har rison with his venom. The ground h is the lowest possible aud th defonsi ble. The whole country has approved the \ppointment made by the president. Re publicans and democrats havo joined in ap plauding the broad and patriot duty that named for o est " tribunal of the picuous fitness, and jection. It is My Lpart to take up the a i nsupremo be prosident for what bette he rogard as o wssumo that the is should deeide to supreme judge. Al this caliber of Mr. Clarkson doubt, that it will from oetting that of wi wo confoss t danger. 1t would be a ple with a due sen Clarkson could be cox shortest possible par smallest possible ty e from N has pers He o 1 placin Novembor nt ey all r n mor esident in vacane land o P! partisan kson's ungrate 1 behalf e n than or fi weraphs to the ited in the LGITATED MOUTH, 1y New York Commorcial: W ask for a suspension of judzment of Goneral Clarkson unti ating and his pu in th News It is d-politics, rule-or-ruin in by General Clar ber, that has bro into its p th w-down policy, persisted son and men of his cali cht the republican party rsont unfortunate plight St, Paul Pioneer 1 A very tendency to invite Mr. Clark and take a half-Nelson hitch discernible with the nuked ¢ casually read republic s general 1o sit down in his jaw s ye by th who nnews SCRE —— ED SPic Balthmore American out dynamite is being generally but one rep The oard o who thaws from. There is Rochester Domocrat A violini cessfal must keep ap with the tin he Should always hive ing 1 string, tto e sue That I, on the Washington Star Ldentist,” sald Mr Why ot “Tod eisy for him to draw and 11" “1never oker with Kortir Indianapolis Journal Teaninz againsi the bir That is what he speaking, ho i Life: Lady floorwalkor hought ye De you 10 iy th or Dy tho Lady the Who is that 130t e 2 pu calls himself, but an oralist.” it ictly at large dry I wish {0 exchina rduy. Foorwalker mber whether you w it entleman with o dar st gentleman with the lzht e Gl neither! Tt was the nobleman with ud Kead. s store to something 1 Yes, madan I nded Kate Field's Washington: Dennis—I see dey | played base bawl in de time of unciont Romc. Mike—THow so! Dannis—1 wuz down at a book st duy an’ I see a book called de do Roamin® Umpire, yister- n' Fall ov Truth you we paper. “Doctor,” said the 1d do some advertising with our “Couldn’t think of The idei S preposterous. 10 against the othies of our profession. By the way, hero's an item about a man Laitended this morning. Take it down to the office, will you? And be sure to sco that my nanie Is mentioned.™ solicitor, “T wish Smith, parl sho en Gray & Co’s Monthly riS quite dark?” said Mrs sred the room whero youngz Mr. Sparks were sitting. “Yos, manima, but I am Just going to play some Light music,” replied Miss Bunting os sho lof ot and Seurried toward the piano. the 1S and “Why Buntin her daughte LET HER COME. Washington Star. gentlo rain; thy soft caress, Thy many kisses wirm Will'wake the wood to love Aud bring the spring tin Come, arm, Come, gentlo Of ev'ry tu Come thiw the pi And sive the plimi we'll hail the sight BIRTH 0 By Mare. The bliz d loved the south wind And swore 1o make her his, But the south wind fled, because, she said, He gave her the rheuma.iz. But fast on her he And puffed like a wheezy stoor, Till he ran her down in a valley brown, Aud whispered in her car 15 he followed u chilly blizzard, foar your icy bréath; alr is white, your hug is tight, You'd hug me unto death.” But the blizzard Hed and flattered and Icbsscd and ealivd ber his; nd ero the day hid passed awi, She called i “dear old biize And out of this misalliance Wits by monstrous thing, wet alr that made men'swear And'curse the “gentlo spring BROWNING, K| & Largest Manufacturors | are | that — e PAT POLITICAL FORECAST Coming of the Populist Dark Horss Fore. shadowed Last November, NEBRASKA'S SENATORIAL CONTEST TIPPED Prodiction il Made nths Ago Conve In Washington Thres Suocessor to Senator Ve A ifled by Now Amply tho Rtesult, Washington Post Rosewater, aditor the member of mitte Nov. of s republican national coms for Nobraska, is at the Ebb Now York ws on the Afraid to t @1, Hon. 1 ac Pue Ovaie Bre, and tt house, Mr. Rose- tion, and meotn’, 1 of this election,” said he, nt I itable event, “is anythin clse to the of the the cam ntion was of the w kne any- ought to own of you 1 on his way homo from water hus v roed o is no think speak out i discussiug due more imbecility nat paign direetly in pail to anything that we yegested than of the committen membors haa No att we mal who hand when, it uation at all, v something about the will show Wi w0 fore Why and ke mat that how v managed thin mn pop ! rot it until two weeks i o 1at that tin N we thrown it in th guttors. If h gon whk and prepared this ourselves we would lave done as well as we did. We had little or no advice and encouragement from the ¢ mit tee, and costions we made were ignored We kaew, back in September, that the democratic candidate for governor of Hlinois would be elected, but we did not bel th could defeat our candidates for clectors, The committee was . the situntios in time to done somethii they? We Also the peculiar condition of af- in those states where there was a rie preponderance of German votes and fally tho Lutherans, but no attempt was made to placate them and bring them back into the fold whenee they had wandere The only wonder is that we did as well as did when one msiders the policy that a ated the members of the national comuit We lost the couniry by inattention to busi ind a total neglect of the votes of thosy tht have always, up to this eled fated with The natior s told of the exact situation and 5 it the Vwithont New Y the advice have sult shows n members of sowator says the el as it expocted, The to Mr. Paddock is thing is cortain, senator will not be sition, M Ro; On ind that is that the next Mr. Paddock. The water says, has a majority of three on joint ballot, and there is a possibility that a e publican may be selected, although it hardly amounts to a probability. Ot the opposition the populists have three-fourths and the democrats the other fourth, ‘The democrats divided, and may not vote solidly with the populists in the senatorial —contest Local matters would actuate a few of thesq democrats and might lead to the seleetion of a couservative ropublican. M ewater is inclined to think, however, that the end will be that a senator will be chosen in the person of some one not now mentioned, man who is fayorable to some of tne views of the populists, but who is not a pronounced democrat An Extra Session ¥ Boston Globe By a very decisive vote the United States senate, which at present has . republican majority, refused to adopt Mr. Hill's pro posal to take up the measure for the repeal of tho Sherman silver act This action makes it mo (unless, inded senate should recode from its attitude, which is scarcely likely) Mr. Cleveland will summon the next congress in extra session Al signs seem o indic this session will not be called the muldle of September next, new administration will be well and its financial and economic policy clearly obible. > than probablo that carlier than 80 that th nder wa . however, indicated before the newly chosen law makers of the nation take up their import- ant and most responsible duties. o, VOTH AGUINEA A BOB { e e g%l LLS s (Tastelegs—Efiectual.) BILIOUS ‘and NERVOUS H DISORDERS. $ Such as Sick Headache, Wind and Pain in the Stomach, Giddiness, Fullness, Swelling after Meals, Dizziness, Drowsiness, Chills, Flush. ings of Heat, Loss of Appetite, Shoriness of Breath, Costiveness, Scurvy, Blotches on the Skin, Disturbed Sloep, Frightful Dreams, All Nervous and Trembling Sensations, and lr- regularities Incidental to Ladies. Covered with a Tastsless and Boluble Coating, Price 2% cents a Box. nal St Of all druggists, New Qork Depot,ats C > 200008 Ratailars &y co. of Ulothlng fo tho Worll hats will get building. chestnut. but hat that is warranted not Underwear shares in the general reduction. BROWNING, Store open every avenin g ti)l 6.0% Saturday it 10 Everybody Else Can See More than a dozen reasons why they should call at our store and find out ing the surprising things they hear of. The time is getting short and when the workmen get possession the snap- piest of snap sales will be over. have to tear out all that part of the For $1.50 splendid good style stiff hat. if we are do- The the worst of it as well you can get a No old a genuine properly made to rust nor look dingy. KING & CO., 1§ W. Cor. 16th and Douglas St

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