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THE OMATIA DAILY BER BEE A VICTORY FOR LANOR . Labor won a vietory in one of the Fditor courts of New York a few There is & contost between the | manufacturers of that ity and the ga | ment workers, and the association of the Il for sd & lockout, to eontinue so long workers connection with their Fhereupon the enllir unrestricted o mpetition In all depart THE_DATL Y PUBLISHED EVERY the mhe who grontost duys ngo dosire to clothing the weleome, rreatest good [ will hoartily n MORNING, VIVING THE POOLING Thore on - JUESTION the TERMS O} Dally Ree without & Daily and Sunday Bix Sonths Three Months Eunday Bee, One & nmlnly Tsee, On Weekly fiee, One Yeur OFFICES, Omaha, The Bee Bullding South Omaha, corner N and 26th Streots M5 12 Pearl Streot . 317 Chamber of Commerce Rooms 13, 14 and 15, BURSCRIPTION lny) One Year Ono Yenr er ordol 8800 10 00 introduced in should n asking labhor workers the t The ain thew as the maintain al of inte 10 by ythe e of the the anti tion t ade pon cott the manufacturers &1 o subject to the the This was nt to pealed to the courts to rest it t f modifying law sending 1e eirenlars and | ers from 1 I ‘ obtained omporary inj { manufacturers asked that this he ' worce eommi | permanent. The conrt refosed todo this |y, done in an amendm the offered last bhu in the without Commerce ¢ iid not recommed & modific wling elanse in th last annual they desived to ob tain the power to compel the attendance and testimony of witnesses in in and =it or Inter Bullding. Washington, 518 Fourtecnth Street CORRESPONDENCE. All communications relating to news and | editorial matter should be addressed to the Editorial Departiment. BUSINESS LETTERS ATl business lettors and remitt be nddressed to The Bee Pablishin Omaha. Drafts, checks 10 b made puyable o the pany. THE ion ed the tempo s frec injunction, it the and dissol leaving th Ay o law it W not dropped wa popular liouse o test vote From a v appears that the tion of the a n passing a union s shonla ort Compny i’ postofficn orders order of the com n h ion of mann solution iz held tha n tion i i the retalintory o the Feport bocuse fivst BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY work vd to | the men in adopting th ‘it they 1 S, Was 4 con with regs BWORN STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION A sk, | of Douglas. 1. Trschuek, s said d and fore the granted and it is b s will attention to rhap pre his was g was a ve v not ssible tary of Tik BEE pub t solomnly Awear that tho JETHE DAILY BEE for the week right t faiv mear own i it they wo! min in their the recom in onding Al all p Y. March 2 : v 1 thoi Any, March 25 the Yiny. sinroh ort give mos and ati court did m of ied that 1 sueh a modi the law % yeott, simpl i S pa would ilar as has been proposed had subject and Friday. March Baturday. April | Bworn to bofore me ar Ist dny of Apr the n that congross this enlightenment § wubneribed in my pres: [ e be w eombination ¢ seiveiian obiitione: ok ¥EIL, Notary Public inder eirenmstances that the that it needs for it 1spirac men ance. Th wmost prominent railroad o hoard of the presenting ulition ¢ to take the cou | wen in this country this ot by W on e m \ and \ ans in to protect committees last con AVIGATION on the kes is ex- pected to open ina few days, when ason of unprecedented lake traffic will be bagun. merea had th wefan most of n LA a combina- | uld not me side had not in itself unlawful warranted the inter- forence of the ¢ There was, of cour nothir se that could be affected by th ons at New Orl former th a seen dec 1 wa | tion on both sides, s eourt that the fact that lar against the orate arguments to show that toa fair and ment of railroad ratos and that without it there were vavious dangors to be | prehended, not the least of which was urt | the ¢ tion of roads. All these rail wrnates agrond that it pool- in 1it should be done | joet to the regulation and supervision of the Inte and it may be remark to offer la anti-pooling pooling stable adjust- necessary mer cirg other WHEAT has been so seriously aged by freezing in portions of Illinois and Indiana that less than half a crop is anticipated mb in this recent ud o 0 woro allow sub- dicial decisi Toledo, the anti-trust luw intc ans and ¢ m the upom the ity in- It WiLL talke thirteen days to dedicate | (3] the great Mormon temple at Salt ke. ‘ ting mmission, 1 that they also to the intor- with the state Commerce ¢ and w a The ceremoni © s and the Latter Day Saints own the town. now in progre state commerce act. The di | had no objection is steietly local in its chavacter and 1 il stato commerce coption of the subject also deal of public vorable to the p law. It is har an obtain any which ox- volves no issue tl The ) 0 3 is cove uny thoe 1ply consists fact of s right ceffect a do W the latt wtion capital help. JUDGING by the way the women voted in Kansas on Tuesday that state will get all of the suflrage conventions hereafter. Kansas is constantly doing things that othe s don't do. signifi e a hof it in t possible that congre lditional information would be to action s inthe discussion, women titisa laboi self-defy tion that if cc recognition is in ts fair m of reta must not look to the conrts for stat upon of value ot likely The threatened nvestigation of the | tdY L of cortain United States sena- tors does 1ot prog very fast. DPer- haps it will bo just as well for the eredit | of the eouniry if nothing of the kind attemptod. prove more conviacing than what h veady been given it. Tt is probable that had the proposition for a regulated system of poolir brought to a vote in the last con it would have reccived a considerable | support, but it undoubtedly would have had a large majority it in the house, und it is ques- tionable whether it could have passed the where had sHme strong advoeates. There is no apparent re for assuming that it will have any better chance in tho next cor the Interstate Com- mission should strongly : recommend the proposed modification of | the Ber ) | thelaw, which they ave havdly likely to British government to_investigate the R b L S (e condition of the seal. Mr. Phelps ehat- | piqgion hitherto has been to ignore this actorized the British report as unteust- | gypjoet and the same sort of conservatism worthy, and besides it contains matters | 1040y xpected hercafter. So f a8 thut cannot equitably be presented publie sentiment is ¢oncerned it is quite to the court. Inaword, the | jyossible to determine on which side L, (oMt AR of the question a majority of the he United States in this particular, and | Joonet SCE™ 00 1000 A very r. Phelps plainly told the represcnta- | | number of business mon pe o L e of that goverument that hal he | | e p i A T Jargo accimulations. Tho logic of this | Cceh guidiug the poliey of this countey | 4 n fuyor of pooling, but those in the is hard to understand. If they had sola | \1C1 the eounter cise was prosented bY | ypler places ave very likely gencrally 1t somebody else would now have it, for | G180 Britain he would have refused 10 | gpposed to it, belioving that they derive it would not have been consumed. [prodeednithihBath sation. | benefit from the competition in rate The reply of Siv Charles I | which pooling would put an end to. Prob- not be regarded as'¢ ably jority of the people interested presentation of the 1t was | yogard the anti-pooling clause of the in- quite natural that he should express | tomtnte commorce act as surprise at the charge of injusti by the Amevican counsel against British government, but so astute a lawyer ought to have been prepaved for it and been able to offer a better argu- | ment in defense of the conduct of the i | records HURTING BRITISH PEELINGS, of the of the British government made by Mr. Phelps | Berir court of i | tion has evidently hurt British | The of the advocat American ease was very plain, not beat about the bush in the court understand that he d the conduct of the British government in presenting the counter case at the last minute as being unjust and thore i no difficulty in understanding his ob jections to the supplementary rveport of 12 sea commission by the g been ‘he criticism course Vani hefore the feclings the did ovder let I7 15 said that Sonthern California is threatened with another boom. To judge by the results that followed the one that struck that country s ago it could hardly another. The boom has entively ceased to be useful as a means of promoting prospe against nguage of 11 to a few ye sdiital it survive > <on rress, unloss THE 300 revolutionists who are pre paring to descend upon Ciba from Flor- ida are closely watehed by the United States authorities and will be inter- cepted if they start on such an errand. They are all Cubans, and the folly of their enterprise shows that they are also cranks. merce cor sent 1o g tricked A FINANCIAL journal sg farmers of the ha held their wheat in t} price would not now be ys that if the not foolishly 1l of 1891 the a west 5 oo t wssell can- particular IN HIS addr British case. day ex-Premic behalf of annexation, said: whole we owe nothing to England and we may separate oursclves from her when a majovity constitutionally decidoes 0 do 80, without any vangs of conscience and without any shedding of tears.” | Such talk as that would have made rs ago, but Montre er, 1 the other speaking in “On the Sy th od from the presidency of the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad and Coal and Iron mpany will occasion little surprise. . pressure under which this action was taken was too strong to be resisted even by a man of MeLeod's sublime as- and sel mfidence, and the same will drive him out of the vership, which, it is understood, he sently re As ment from the presidenc, ation which he has in letter for resigning belic needed financial will not »d to the s0 long as 1 continue to occu ion of president and British government than Sir Charles Russell did. Tt is manifestly useless to | attempt to belittle the attitude of Mr. | Phelps on the ground that he is con- tending merely with reference to ques- The wmatter based his very great ‘trouble in Canada a few y¢ Tk it is csmmon enough now. THE color line is still drawn with great distinctness in Alabama. The superintendent of education in that state announces a series of mass meetings in the interest of education to oe held each county., “The meetings,” he says, “ave for the whito people. At some other time I shall hold conventions | for the colored The phrase *'some other time” is sufficiently inde nite to justify the belief that the educa- tional mass meetings for the coloved people will bo conveniently prevented by unforeseen obstacles. suranc pressure tions of procedure. which Mr. Phelps | cism plainly of portance and to have ignored it or it with indifference might have iously prejudiced the American case. As to the newspaper opinion that a plain and candid eriticism might intor with the amicable solution of the questions at issue, it is ot in havmony with t British boast of fairness.” However, o B A neither the n»-um:) nor A\m‘-»u ican {“It‘lh" o0 hwonlihave ein haktas oo tho ¢ questions, hat | 1 il dad duty will devolve on Roiha entgs | cLEPAIYRULE0. 105 shithe:nubUn I8 00n: of the court representing Italy, S | and France, and they are pres quite capable of ¢Thsidering the matte in an unprejudiced light. Meanwhile the Ameri rest assuved that the case of the United States will be ably and judiciously man- d. Noman is more familiar with the | questions to bo passed upon than Mr Phelps and he has the of | lawyers of the | bility. Of course it is to be presumed that which apparently has had fleet upon the outlined to his upon eriti- im- ated to his retire- of the corpor- ruined he gnation: is in says SMy his | reason peopl I iy iver.” - trators can solve WHILE there was no increase in the number of beet sugar factories in this country last year, the production was nearly doubled, reaching a total of 2,783,333 pounds, against 15,004,838 pounds the previous year. Although it is not to bo expected that the number of factories will be much inercased thi year, owing to the uncertainty in regard | to bounties and tariffs, the production for 1893 will undoubtedly show another | large advance. The western states adapted to the cultivation of the sugar boeet, among which Nebraska the fivst, are capablo of an almost unlim- | 0« ited production of sugar. Under favor- | Vs fully ablo conditions the industey isa profit- | [ g deltvorad had ¢ ap- | g able one and there 1s ov a0 to be- | Proval, Thevo le reason to beliove that | st lievo that it will become very oxtensive | iU Was an effort of extraordinary th and important in this state within a few | action on yeavs. | S 1zed in the city of s is true exchange, a part of . St 1+ has n to s not memhoers of corned it is a good thing that his career as a Napoleon of monopoly was not che in time to prevent the failure | of the Reading deals, His snceessor in | the presidency will not be likely to emu- late his meteoric example HE New York World calls londly upon the new attorney general to smash the rust and the de- a lo hi of the trust rations, charging the monop- robb) £ 815,000, a ked le may B backs up . istance mand with | and its ope his argument, | Sen | 000 a year. platform auy Vg oly such an irri- British mind associatos be is one of | In the democratic national and Mre. Cloveland’s v in acal addres. nopolies of this char- anti- plies to ed s who stand At least ough in pract b and » we and aw of 1500 directly a AL that is needed is de the of th laws. the v 1 ! n mi and force. part to exee = = PHER A STRONG effort is being made in Kansas City for the protection of home | of whi interests during the World's fair, it |t being assumed that Chicago wholesale | g dealers will try havd to induce trades- | men visiting the fair to make one of business as well as pleasure. | able to Omaha also needs to do something | aguinst toward preventing Chicago from gotting the trade that naturally is 0 | lin wi work to the District At opportunity t) and accomplish prevent th I'his it has ma han 4 torney rinovy Olney ruish hims thing for the News declar: nines in ¢ erring t ation has & fing i} If been tting material, hereafter the trip | illegal w > | distin because A contr obtain mat the president al the exchang charging belongs here. | with conspiracy, ana a few Merchants should be made to see that | jury found them guilty. they will bo losers by transferving their | charging the jury, was very pronounced trade even for asingle order. The jobbers | in his condemnation of combinations of of the exposition city will have no ad- | capital in restraint of trade, declaring vantagos this year-that willenablo them | all such to be conspiracios. We believe to give customers better bargaing than | this the case of the kind in Omaha can offer, and there are many | this country, and therefore veasons why it is better to patronize the | cially interesting as u precedent home dealer than to try experiments in | disposition of the courts to deal s a new market. It is at least to be | with all sorts of combinations that hoped that the home patronage princi- | attempt to interfere with the public ple will be respected in this city aud | interests is one of the best signs of the throughout the state- time. It heralds an era of free deel who had bo ‘ial brought and seve un- | so blie n " suit THE Denver the v potato mine,' s that lorado is the the fact that highly profit- cecur to the but miner of metals who hange the fruits of wk with him fone m th agoa The judge, in m- of hest m 1 a days the crop of last year was It may not often farmer that his fields there is many would be glad to ex mines, a a year's w to be first it has oved iy tatives to Tue has ! estion been ma Che nly Jua Lond o 4 lin ambassadors loubled an th the and Paris shou b and that their in order that y pe will s should be keap up may ap- and ance lofty ments of human aetivity which ali mon | - " FRIDAY, APRIL 1803, HMeulty p undor loneo dignity of thelr positions. Tt does not | ulvea from our il ver mueh mattor ywiipthor thoy are ealled | 1 """”'N“""""‘ ambassadors onmot, buf If they are not N able to lve i fhanner befitting their the, snlari paid they rodm for others who would to the aple towi min the expensive capitals to whistfAhey Merely & Suggestion. Waashtin: ton Post wtrick Egan is now in a position to book on the ups and downs of & N NEBHANKANS, CHRANK A Thore is 0 building Tho Kenrney paper mas of paper eve Boom on at Crolg ol & now = o turn four hour riend mills 10,000 | twenty it d ol lamaged Broken Bow inds and st should make he e in I'he very w pt prosent rain ¢ VI Tierney of weighs 2,070 \psod I do n hto sed f ind - the paid great sn tify at the | is has a cow they may ho claims he I noarly orgar their tas v livin Alma The f Table | and M b Milling company, composed wnin the town, has ting a sot of solid officers Al iroly de M. Stover was rescued from the in time t her life Graf from \p the own ve sent | of ' n Huyw M Hon, 1 write o diplomat save conuty, stol town and sta main street of the vehicle Somebody the tw - But M ds with Us, Washington Post The original Cleveland man s not much better off these days than the original Har- FISOn man | ity them Johnson rround the buge ked 1pin a b It was a trick that aid not appreciate. 1o the authoritics broke the 1 i the outside door of the Pawnce county jail, but the vizilant discovered the fact and prevented the oners from escaping nknown Lake Water Chivago Dispatehs Kentucky never has paid the slightest at tention to the silly rumor that drinking water at the World's fair would not be free. Budge Life cyclone I workmen on the brick vault in the « 't house at Wahoo were seriously injured by the structure caving in. Mr, Newkirk his o con d fracture of the thigh and it is foaved is hurt internally and . Brown W bruised, The men we out the props, but it seoms that th 4 S oxcont | i the arch had not set overything excepb | 14 ¢or the protection of ords, Fred Schumacker of Akron, O.. T { Crowell of Codar Rapids, Ta., and Robert | Stuart of Chicago, three millonaire capital ists, visitea Lince wtion for a proposed £200,000 oatmeal factory, ‘They were offered the choice of three sites on the Rock Island, with some special it nents to 8¢ tho plant. They also paid a visit | to Fremont to view a proffered site, but | theird sion has not yet been made known A young man named Ellington, livin miles north of Neligh, while plowing left his team hitened to the plow and started to ward the house. The team became fright ened and tore madly for home. The young | man saw the team coming and attempted to -— stop it, but failing to catch the reins the Simpson’s Socks Still On, horses passed over him and the point of Indianapilis News plow eauzht him, tearing open the abdomen, A European trip for Jorry Simpson is ruf | mutilating him tervibly. It s believed he mored. Such a trip would not be unattended | eannot recover. with embarrassment to Mr. Simpson, as his | A praivie firo in Custer county burned fame has preceded hi incy Queen Vie- | over territory from twenty to thirty toria. for instance, after the presentation | in length.” A farmer named Starkey saying, “And is it true, Mr. Simpson, that | saw the five coming, and with help got out you do not wear b | with teams and plows and thought to pro | tect the premises with plowed guards, but % | his efforts proved fraitless. The men hid to | leave their teams and run into the house for | protection. This however, did not pr | safe resort, as the compelled to the house by th to save and only succeeded in_getting the children out when the roof fell in. Farmer Bayhaufer had five head of horses, house, barn and his ws, wagon and farm machinery destroyed Shultz lost 830 bushels of oats, the | roof ou” his barn, twenty tons of hay, hog ds and all his machinery, in all amount- % to several hundred doliars, John and J, Robinson lost a quantity of hay, and others suffercd smaller losses. - INT PERSONALITIES. Couldn’t 1t Stran So the L thing off your far Gloomy Grang Yep ther wosh blamed mortgzagc cleared every- s mortar the county rec- Anothe Minneap Judge Tripp fared better than Balker. Vienna is all vight as o place of resi But what did South Dakota do for land that her democrats should get sweet plum? Kick. w dowrnal 1 lookingg up a 1o Clove such a - e A Legal Oplnion, sston Bulletin 1 wish your opinion, sir, as to danghter would make me a Young Man whether your Lawyer Lars, pleasc o, sir, she would not. Five dole nad 130 Gt intc - No Der m Transeript, \ bad serape last evenin found a letter in my pocket from a How she did rave! From a woman? Brown vea My wife womar B sorry doi. Brown was Mrs mail a week their lives, Brown, you're a I'he woman in It was a lettel s case, however, at Sl Flounde Chicagn J » has ing. rual. An Towa ded that liquor which is no spirituous, but which may become so by farmentation while being | held for sale, is within the ban of Prohibi- | i ¥ tion law. It is fully submitted to his | Queen Victoria's spring vacation on the honor that there are dreadful possibilities | continent will cost the British taxpayer in a spirituous way in wheat, corn, rye and | 3 000, barley, and that an injunction should "be is- | Colonel Don M. Dickinson's status has sued to prevent the raising of these soul- | finally been determined upon. He is to be destroying grains, | the tloorwalker of the administration < ro———— | 1t Isaac Pusey Gray means to hold his own 15 Patriot. with Mexican pulque he should go out into New York Ade Kansas and spend a few weeks traming up What is this itch @r ofticcholding that in- | on drug store whisky duces a man such as;Lewis Baker, the great | Dr. Hans von Bulow has and wealth editor of the St. Paul Globe, to | mental and physical healtt close his desk, quit Bis b home and | ing himself and orchestral #o down to Nicaragua to amid heat, | entirely normal manner. vapor, gnats, tarantt f and snakes [ Jonn Dorr, a waiter it a Newark, N. J., merely to be called U ates minis- | potel, has been left a fortune of 400,000 by ters” Think of the di > dn food that | the death of an uncle in Australia, and will M. Baker will bo.confronted with when he | qil this week for Melbourno o gather in reaches Managua! But the Aretic winter of | s rood luck the northwest has probably caused thegreat | myg prince of Wales, we are told, makes editor to yearn fof biminns. Besides o | g breakfust on a slicaof bread and a sau- e D LI re five morniugs out of six, which leaves e LA R it to be inferred that on the sixth he is not A at his wurst Cleveland and Telephone Cha (PhsiehdBR oL tho New York Telegram, Ridge is No V vt has been made to transfer the | when the oftic ar against exorbitant telephone | put him charges from Albany and New York to | spirac Washington, to make this i like quarantine, a national af WHiAEM R Panty ) volve President Cleveland in it. nlorer, ataot:the coldiwel Certainly if the president can be used by 2 7 e by | Zone with remarkable br n indignant business pablic as a club with | f200 §ifered from the cold of this climate which to larrup an_ageressive monopoly, so up an, aggressive monopoly, 80 | this winter. In Greenland she wore flan much the better. That's what he is there | pojg and furs throughout. In this zone she for. The presidency must not be” permitted | o what other women wear, and. she was ) become & mere bed of roses or a holiday | iy picni S G i S : R A Frict st Joseph Pulitzer, proprictor of the niahe American Industrial loague dogs 1O | vork World, maintains a Paris residence Do6té. to uftorl tha* presldant et | @ cost of £200,000 a year, the establishment i his Salavy and_tho esteem of ail non- | icluding a dozen horses and thirty servants, sharcholding_mankind. Through its secre- | 1 hus also a handsome New York residonce W e of Now Yotk ithas | near Contral park. His ill health sti nted to the _president and the attorney | him abroad, and although there is sai general copies of a resolution l"ll'l"d by | have been some slight improvement in his fihe loaguo In favor. of the Walker bill o re. | physical condition there"is no fudication of duce telephone rates, and declaring “‘that | compiele conyalescende the new patent issued to the Bell company, e called the Berliner patent, was an outrage ALLEGEDITL: on the rights of the American peaple. Results will be observed with close atten- tion PIQU recovered his nd is conduct- o concerts in an (1 efractory Sioux ater, but he had to take some rs got after him this week and under arrest on a charge of con He should adopt Fire fora midd t Pine An effc seat of v ir, and to in: of the Arctio ex- ther of the frozen 1 league does not Texas Siftings: bieyele, Thear, other. “Yes, just for s 1 “You've been rid sald one Ha m youth t xercise, you know." ed your Weizht some, T think.” fallen off a great deal” The Ratlronds and the Pe Springfield (Mass ) I The railroads do not conceal the fact that they are masters of the situation, and thei contention is discreditable to ' American | Florrio—Perhips not, cntorprise and agaiust a sound business | night trying to Hzht his ¢ poley. We are told that under the World's | candescént auip, fair rates proposed the rods are likely to have more business than they can well at- | P tend to, and if the rates were lowered on the | ¥ wore desirable trains it would induce a rush | ' Juse what Texpeeted! When T jilted him he s reat that it would be impossible to trans- | swore e would do himsclf an injury.” porvall who desive to go. This argument proves too much, und we thus have the word of the railroad men that passc rail road travel is exceedingly responsive toa | velduction in rates of fare. That thisis true, | experience has abundantly proved. and it shows that the railroads could profitably oblize the public and o augment their reve- | nues as to preduce i net income suflicient to procure the additional rolling stock and ear uch net income as will be as 1 under ¢he policy determined upo the people and plo. publican, lie—Does young Giltedge ever | imbibe too freely? but T saw ctte him last from an in- Ke: “What do rrister's making me Plandere you say to the an offer of mar- Chicago Di between bt quisitive spatch: “What is the differenee d nonsense?” sakd the in- Lumor,” replicd the candid | i, “is represented by ‘the joke you s Yourself; nonsense is represented by th Some other fellow mikes.” Detroit P'r A1l thos He—What have you got nails along the edge of the sofa for! Sho—Papa had them put in, T dear, that you had spoken at last. the rail Dotrolt I'r if the managers | der why so ma eabinet hay Because th bris, told bim, | Thoe interest of roads is one and the same would only see it. The volum zoverns the methods employed in all lurge | nterprises, and thav is why the big con cerns eat up little ones and find a profit therein, at the same time that service is | ed to the people. Lower rates would | 30 ment receipisoas to give an income | sufticient to justify the railroads in reducing | fares to the Worlit's fair, and the fact that they de to see ib yill not pleas ereign po o Pross: Mrs, € of the ni nooth faces? shive, umpey—T won- in Cleveland's AR Old Grampey— | Brooklyn Life: Troetop for pulling one tooth! Dentist Troctop—1How much charge for that? Goe, whiz; a dollar Yes: you took a thousand do you Truth orayt S Whilo vou were man 1eft this maniseript. 106 said he wr to keen the wolf from the doov. T the sov- | looking it over)—Well, I'sh swer the purpose - Tssuies that Me. Gloyoland Cannot Shivk, Senator Henry Calot. bydge in the Apeit Forum, There are two (@@ations which now ove wdow all others spd up isi which future cloct ippgy wi is tavitf. The demovypls country upon the prof is not only inexped{e stitutional and Jor Unloss this was blackes porated in o party Pibgran A5 1 ATty 1 enbody in 1pon which thoy w es of inexpddigney for palteriiy 3 arty in powoer ful. Unless the vigirious lutely false to th whiclh they cannot be certain defeat, they from the statute books thing in the 10 which gives prot cir necessary I ich can give 1o protec other great question and th one of the two by far is that relating to sil ver. To repeal the Sherman act and ther stop the parchase of bullion without resum Philadelphia R wed, “the gr We tiust ¢ (Bl tonsfully y love with th ' cord Ella," | vy DAL i pwlee What 16 uscd | m of 1 One is the Brandon Banner the furniture u % X v visitorat the 8 u meon reptiod the »mtich 1o s ¥ U aboriein dtendant. Phen 1 Il asked ve hould Vozue: Popper—Thut boy of mine | Iar phenomenon. Bateheller (woarily what way? Popper—Six years old and dida bright thing in his1if aregu n the I n but There n there can b n which \ urnal: Watts—Ar 10 make any garden this year? Pott [ Ushalle 1 uad o garden last year that e | subplicd with ehickens cloarup il t running u eep prote must wip raising tion and by m whatever mor Indignapolis 1 you going I thi ptn no the clared to b part kind unlaw is abs | rinost | with must 'h m of Chicazo Inter Ocean: And now the Easter | - - MARCHING OF THE MULES, perilous Atlanta Constitution While they're t Washin'ton an' watin'for We'r juwin re ut L placo, hiappy hore in Georgla, whero we've got ) a livin', an' we're workin by Shan e the rules : . n' time like music to the ma il take wn ooy | have bhe suppor hie . y [fricn e You kin hear us, in the n At the very wileven | A hitch But if y Lo 1 have " an's sehool ain | 4 Geptn ut marchin' of th 1p fer business an' jest singin' on gradvated from the politl time like music to the mules! o[ SECRECY NOT TOLERATED | | The vault was | | the miles | | partics | program for sceret cave | i | | i | | | | | very, she is said to | [ ton. | Nebraskans Temporarily Deprivad of Infor- mation Concerning Fedoral Ohanges. GROVER ORDERED THE NEWS SUPPRESSED Numerous Protests and 1 Take Secured th th rents to Have the the Subject Withidrawal of Ordor senate Action on WASHINGTON BUkeat or ries Bee, ) FOURTRENTI STiEeT Wasiisaros, DGy April 6, The “dark 0 order which by the Postoflice departimont day upon the dircetion of President Cle land forbidding the pubiication ot in postmasterships, and which ST from the public all information ing to the appointn fourth ¢ was | wnter was st yestor Ve changes mised to cut lat nt of postmasters of the ass in Nebraska aud othor not states probable that it will ever be renewed. The order had the effect of depriving the readers of T Brk of the news relating to the appointment of a lary but today rescinde It is number of torday further thero is no probability that an flort will be made t mation for the pub It was learned today that the president directed the appointmer be closed agaiust the that s them have been in the habit of writing blood-curdling introductions to theie » curtail in the least in son the books to newspaper men was ne of b dispatehes each day in which they noted the cnnnges which took place in their states, and referring to “Heaasman Maxwell's bloody ax' and the “flow of gore which followed the leading of 8o many innocents to the guillotive,” ete., and ~ which furnished tho text for severe criticisms upon part of certain DWUmD news pape The president got 1t into his head that the country was coming to_ the conclusion that he “was chopping off the heads of postmasters without regard to the time they had served, their ceficiency or popularity or anything else, and that he was simply beheading republicans to give places to spoilsmen demoerats The order to close perfect storm « S the books brought a disapproval from men in il wtors especially deno 1 the decapitation and a num ber of resolutions were prepared and ve been introduced in the senate had the order been rescinded that 10 power could have kept the changes a complete seer not sstoftice Some of the Ch: % Explainod. At the bottom of the list of made today appea the changes large numbe After stating the ments for today, removals, resignatic aind vacancies created by death which were filled, the ex planatory official note observed that “twenty six of the postmasters removed served four years and over and. thirty-three served over three years.” This disclosed the point where President Cleveland's shoe pinched He wanted the mugwumps to believe that he had some regard to length of time served even if he had not for efticiency aud_general merit. 1t that the “dark lantern principle is to be introduced in other depart- ments of the rrnment Sec Hoke Smith has removed between thirty-five and fifty republican special examiners for pension oftice who are out in the field and he refuses to give the names of the men re- moved or assign any reason for his action The exact number removed he will not state One report has it forty-cight and another Sover thirty-five.” An’ intimate friend of the seeretary of the interior told Tie Bee correspondent this evening that the r there had been wholesale removals of special examiners in the pension service was be: cause it was found that out of cighty exam inel but two were democrats, and the secretary is determined to have some demo: crats in the peasion ficld Since these examiners through the civil service d to conceive how forty ts are to be selected these petitions to take the appointments danote explanatory of of removals of number republicans of ~ appoint the number of seems, are appointed commission it is or fifty demo- tho party for repub- licans if the law 1s not openly avd crimmally | violated, but it is safe to say chat all of the men who will secure positioiis will be demo- rats. 1f the civil service commission ob- cts there will be new civil service commis- nd they will be spoilsmen who aj deaf to'the law Odious Comparisons. When a St. Louis newspaper disoatch quoting ex-President Harrison as saying in an interview that there was “no dust on his trousers’ knees” came under the eyes of army of office see shington they Tookedaskauc sther, as if to say “that is inten It was the pur- pose of the writer of the interview to ascribe to the ex-president the sentiment that he had never gotten down on his knees to the men who had sought the control of patronage d legislation. The sentiment is suscepti- ble of being applied with personal force here at this time. Never in the history of been so much groveling in - Washington as now. Men who denounced Grover Cieve- land less than eight months age, and who voted for him under protest only from a sense of party fealty, are here admiring every word he utters and act he docs. There has been a great “getting in out of the wet “There is dust upon almost every democratic knce in Washington, The who were politics has there men ROW | | | praise of | W awift ind the Chicago conventic have mado thetr and fallon upon Lhoir knocs in worshii David Bennett Hill has Wi trucklin The prominent demovratic sonators wh safd Mr « tyrant and not on 1ld not be Ty 1 their b wnd fin President Clevelaud's n oveland was Ar hitts b infa Humitiated the Groatest 1t \whs win ora now on party n thi that i T the whi wnd WS n Wt 1 land a yoar ago are now fi him, The New Yor Ao dovoted & whiole illustrated mattor o the s ¢ white house. livery timo Mrs, € opeas her mouth or her little d carried out into the sunlight there nn of Jenkin sl newspapoer the p than ar te ors of 1sions Cle f vhe eas n of the facia which it pron Her which graphed it would be ir of women to exhi piy more attention t which are poured into often that the fac f more pleasar wance o 1 plays wod as tho mor his ear iy man Mr. Clove ound his than co and. 1 wi as th on who daily and hourly crowd ar and watching for their turn Nebraskn There were 1o appointed for Nebraska that there is a blockade in ‘the di the Postoftice department having ska and Kansas appointments i by o disagreement among the Kans erats and populists as to who shall v postmasters in certain localities. as Kansas is disposed N taken up, and this may bo ¢ when @ lot of ropublican | people in all parts of the state wi capitated and demoerats installed Appoint of d Appl would | the positi It is probable | W. 8 { intended to excuse the | Bradgate the | ason | | | | Jamies MeDonald of Omaha has on | application av the Treasney depart mof supcrintendent of ko public building at man, Nebraska City, | treasur | lowa plows Stafford, | tion of n wditos postmasters were named Nicholus, Muscatine ¢ vie 1. White; Parng Maggio Shnell, vice J Humboldt county, A. k. vice J. Bris All the to till vacancies created by republicans. the r | Western Pensions. The foll wted | ported | lowa: Original Underwood, Ler CGould, J. H. ( M. Jenkins, William Sl Alexander C. Kemp, Henry 1 plement-—Stephen Hest crease—George W. Pureel! erease—William Rash. William H son. Orig widows, et Agnes Deck South Dakota: Additional Samuel 1. Russell Inel long. Reissue—Nicholas Danburg wing pensions g William 1 el H x, George B Shn Add W Jorry H Miscellaneous. Joe Mo in lowa n, left this morning for th Senator Allen and his pri Wil Contributo o I Articlo Publication THE SUNDAY nblo ror The Scopo ¢ Drace a Forocast of Prolems: Gongress st fdent Cleveland, to Paramount sues Remember, it will ho Exc sivo with the next issue NING, K| & co NG Lurgost Manufacturors ant (builyed of Clothing i the World. Out on the Sidewalk. Mrs. Benson's stock is now out of the way and Lf\inqs begin to look as hole inthe wall wasabout to become turned our third floor into a most department, where among other t the now popular Hopkins hat, besides the - | who he i our prop |we are in posession of lthu store, and the wall and the hole in the The masons, the | carpenters, the the small boy | wall. plum- | ber and ps are all there in their glory, and hecy true. about the We have retail show latest complete hings we tourist hats in all colors and at reasonable prices. The carpenters won't interfere with the sale of our nobby new spring suits which we flatter ourselves are miles ahead of anything shown in the west. BROWNING, KING & CO., Etore open overy eveninztil 63k Saturday Ul 10 S. W. Cor. 16th and Douglas it the exprossions of Omaha has applied nty, k. r, H. Cutler. newal and Reissue and In- Saraj T Hotaling, The Sunday Bee claring theirindepondance before wis hwld 1nat fune anlnams before the shrine Bvon orous and boldly witoerat, W 1 could 1 their ared thow and the Gen stato that is vory o cast to Mr od with fu « World f thy ni v halt deno: of this date hag es from the having It loes he smila tly nes i waiting nts Blocke ated vision ot the n charigo 18 oo natio the As raska will by 1y now, sorvants of the L be de- ons and Appointments. tered his it rof the today a8 10, lown A. Ogle; Dickey, appointments aro moval of are roe on T, \ i itiona Sur Thom- Camp, C. Bliss, Dy John Senator Allison and his private secretary, Leir homa vitte s setary also left for their homes in K\)whr.‘ Kt EX-SENATOR INGALLS S, H smar xclusive BEE which will ome Slle M, Ingnlls puts Somo vory portinent questions at Pros= Prortaining Political Is- 1T SPARKLES wih BRILLIANCY Tu= or