Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 9, 1893, Page 12

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DATLY BEE ¥. ROSEWATER Editor PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF Dafly Bee Daily nnd Sunday Kix Sonthe e Months Bunduy Hee, One Yenr Snturday Bee, One Yo Weekly Bee, Oue Yenr OFFICES Onalin. T Iz Kouth O 1+ N and 26(h Stroets i url Street Offiee, 317 Chamnber of Cony ork, Rooms 13, 14 and 1 SUBSCRIPTION, withont Sundpy) One Year One Year 8800 10 00 b 00 erce Tribune Waushington, 519 Fourteenth Stre CORRESPONDENCE, Al communications relating to news and editorial matter should by addressed to the Editorial Department. BUSIN All business | ittances should b pwsed 10 T s Publishing Company, Drafts, checks und postoffien ordes ade payuble to tho order of the com- pany. THE BF PUBLISHING COMPANY SWORN STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. otary of Tk BER pub ‘company, doca solemnly swear that the aotual cireulntion of Tk DATLY TEK for thy week ending April 8, 1803, was as follows Sunday, April 2 Monday. April § Tuesdny, April 4 Wednesdny, April 5 Thursday. April 6 Friday. Apri Saturday, April § Sworn Lo before we and s ence this th dny of April, | N, I" ¥EIL Notary Public. Average Circulation for March, 1803, 24,1 —_— THE lawmakers at Lineoln v done The lawyers will possess the city for the next few we les. Tue legislature has adjourned and Kyner will run at large again. Will he get another railroad contract? Mi. Lo now on. If he for mayor h house rol K's cake is dough from lly a candidate voted for was re should have But THE democrat candidate for the Omaha postoffice must be patient. The president that all first-class post- masters will be permitted to serve out their full terms. 7 18 suid that more than one-half of the $200,000 appropriated for the ex- penses of the Bering sea commission has alveady been spent, and its work only just commenced. suys has SHOULD the governor eventually find it necessury to appoint new members of the State Board of Public Lands and it is to be hoped that he will find men who will not fear overwork. fail to vote for house roll 233. h it! Rush it! The people of the United States of America and Tom Majors want it bad! committee that investi Beatrice institution finally decided that the purchase of eight tons of soap in three months was not irregular. Tt would be interesting to know what use the feeble minded patients make of so much soap. OMAHA felt the predicted fall in the temperature yesterday,but not the fierce storm of wind that swept neighboring states and te wies and did damage in some localities. This part of the country continues to be fortunate in its weathor, THE propositions of the tories of Ul- ster for armed resistance to the home rule bill is extremely silly from any point of view and cannot fail to produce results favorable to home rule. In Eng- land the opponents of the Gladstone pol- icy are showing more sens CHOLERA is now rveported from nearly every district of Russia in which it pre vailed last year. This speeialists of Kurope who have insisted that it would break out again this year in localities where it was epidemic last year. ANOTHER prize fighter has boen killed in battle. This time the tragedy took place in Syracuse. N. Y., a city that permits only gentlemanly boxing con- tests for “points.” The dead pugilist's adversary seoved his point all vight, but ws it involvol the necessity of a funcral he is the chjeet of some criticism. THE impression prevails in the Board of Public Works that the asphalt men have formed a combine. The agent for the Barber company is the only bidder for the asphalt paving, and the bids ave 50 high as to justify the suspicion that a deal has been mado by which competi- tion is withdrawn. It is expected that the board will readvertise for asphalt Dids, but the result may be the same. A POOR man stole a loaf of bread in New York City big thieves who loot banks and public treasuries are the ones who got off with light bail and ave seldom punished in accordance with their deserts. [t does not pay to steal a loaf of hread, but too often there is a nice clean theft that runs up into the millions. THE only reason why Mrs. Potter was not elected mayor of Kansas City, Kun., seems to have been that she was de- ated the | much | bears out the | predictions of the most eminent cholera | tie other day and was re- | quired to give bail in the sum of $300. The | pro profit in a | | many respects this | markable body | neither | good work must | maximum | present 1 | imum | difference in THE TWENTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE After a session covering a period of more than thirteen wecks the legisla- tu has adjourned without day. In the most of lawmakers that convened in this state, tage was re- was ever and it witl onspicuous rank in th history Nebraska. Divided polit- ically into three great groups of which had a controlling majority, its as a whole, be eredited men of all parties, and < and shorteomings cannot be to the honest its biunde laid at the doo of any party Torn up during the first four weeks of the session by a fic triangular con- test, which minated in the election of Jue William V. Allen as States senator, the legislature exhibited an extraordinary tenucity of purpose and a creditable amount of integrit) While the temptations to sell and ba at the fact tha was elected to the sen- spending a dollar proof that could not promises of ter their votes were a4 poor man ate without must be taken as nine-tenths of this sislatuve be swerved by money or office, and the vulnerable members held in check by a wholesome fear of ex- ¢ favor of the contest posure and popular d The greater part the and taken up by legislation over tions id in peachments of and ex-sta ofticials charged with malfeasance. In contrast with the previous | which insisted on the straight rate law or nothin slaturve formulated law that recognized population and of traffic of Towa and braska. fications and s to condition were and the outeome was the en roll investig ofticers slature, lowa the L max- the volume Modi- rate concess| made actment of what is B which now awaits the signature of Governor Crounse to be- come a law The wreck house of the Capital National | bank at Lincoln, which involved a possi- ble loss to the state of more than 000, and the penitentiary 1 frauds and the asylum swindles 500, made | it an imperative duty of the legi | to institute a ) 1 | tution, Tt is to ment | greate sorted in the hour of need by the women | voters. She only gothalf a dozen of the 3,600 votes cast by members of her own sex. The question arises, how can the women of Kansas expect to succeed in volities if they don't stand by each other? There is a great field for woman in politics in that state, but she must be more consistent I'T SELDOM happens that a great wheat crop is followed by another equally great the next year, and the reports thus far made public in regard to the condition of wheat in several important agricultural states that this year's yield will not be very large. If later reports from the whole country are of the same character the wheat market cannot fail to improve, and in that case the farmer who has managed to get along without selling the whole of his last crop will bea gainer by increased prices. There are many farmers who have pursued this policy. leads to the belief | | of luwyers who make such | ment in know that there is some prospect of the | investi tion into the management of state insti- tutions. Although these investigation necessarily did not veach to the bottom of all peculations and frauds the brought to light a mass of corruption at the state house and in several of the state in utions that startled the entire state and by sheer for of public opinion rendered drastic treat- ment of offending « ials a matter of honor and duty. Mere the legislature would have proved ineflective to check eriminal recklessness and venality., Nothing less than impeach- ment eould possibly have brought about a thorough cleansing of the state house. Impeachment proceedings could, how- ever, not have been carried on as a partisan measure. [t required the operation of honest men of all part secure the vote of a majority of both required by the consti- the credit of the vepublican party that the impeach- procecdings were set on foot and unflinchingly supported by couragoe- ous republicans, who believed it their duty to purge the party and save the state, and it is gratifying that the great majority in the ature ranged them- selves in favor of impeachment when the final vote was taken. A very conspicuous trait of the Twenty-third legislature has been its endeavor w reduce taxation by cutting down and pruning out extray- agant appropriations. This wvolicy of id economy has resulted ina reduc- tion of the appropriation bills of fully half a million dollars over 1891, The greater number of bills having passed during the closing days of the sion it is impossible at this time to critically estimate the chavacter of the measures enacted into law mong so many bills hastily voted through in the confusion incident to the closing days there are doubtless a number that will not commend themselves to public favor. Taken as a whole the work of the Twenty-third legislature can- wot fail to meet popular approval and its magaitude will be appreciated more as the years go by. It is no smail task to keep & body of 133 men intact under fire for weeks and keep them hew: ing to the line of duty with every in- centive to go wrong, and that, too, while serving without pay censure by houses, as HAT IS NEEDED, The fact that the law provides for no recovery in the case of a successful action by the government against any patented monopoly will encourage the Bell Tole- phone company to put forth every effort that legal tacticians can suzgest to post- pone the final decision in the suit now pending at Boston to invalidate the Berliner patent owned by that com- pany. This patent, which is now practically the only barvier to competition in the telephone business, has about fourteen ye to run if it is not overthrown, and the monopoly therefore has that many years of life before it, if it d in de- justice for so long a time. The vernment against patented monopolies presents many in- stances of justice deferred through all sorts of technical interventions, and the * the interests involved the better the chance of postponement by the em- ployment of dilatory tactics on the part tactics the can sucee suits study of their lives. But while it is not best to be too hope- ful of an this case, itis gratifying to enactment of a law that may be the means of hastening such a result. Solicitor General Aldrich advocates a law that will authorize the government in sueh ses the amounts illegally obtained from the public by the owners and users of a patent which is declared invalid, and it is understood that a bill of that character may be introduced in the next congress. It would have a wholesome in such cases as the one under con- sideration. When there is everything to gain and nothing to lose by keeping up a stubborn fight and blocking the 10 recover | wheels of the courts by the various de- vices 30 well known to skillful corpora- week as to United | | the | nature ilrcad | meet this | | taken. known as | house | | different offense than the one | preme the judgment of the lower couart, and | rly vietory for the govern- | influence | THE OMAHA DAILY BE tion lawyers, it ix to ba expected that such a poliey will be pursued: but if the law provided for the recovery of all the money wrongfully taken from the peo- ple under a fraudulent or improper pat- ent no corp a patent would care to risk a contest in which it was likely to find itself beaten and heavily assessed for damages at the end of the struggle A decision of the supreme the validity of granted in this country after a foreign patent upon the same device has lapsed by failure to pay taxes issaid to be based upon a principle which extends to the Bell patents and which may be consid- 1 as practically disposing of them, ing only the Berliner patent to be contested. [f the Bell Telephone com- pany has only this to depend upon and it is finally ov court last government s pressing, it may be that competition is not far distant. The enactment of such a law as we have referrel to would have & tendency to check the resistance of the defendant corpovation if the suit is not terminated before its enactment becomes possible. 1t would also be a most useful weapon in all future suits of a similar inst patented monopolies. SEATE EXTRADITION A decision of the supreme court of the United States, handed down within the lust fow days, has attracted a g of attention from the fact that it dete mines a question never before passed upon by that tribunal. This question was whether a person oxtradited from or te to another charged with a spe cific erime could be tried foranothe erime in the state to which he was One Lascelles, under the alis of Walter Boresford, w N York lition now vigorously free telephone upon a srant of from Georgia charging him with heing @ common cheat and swindier. After being aeliv- the authorities, while in jaii ther vas indicte under his true name of I Boing placed upon trial he led that he was being tried for a ered to and for This was was con- the warrant of extradition. ruled by the court and he vieted. Anappeal was taken to the su- rtof the state, which affirmec ove then the case was taken to the court of the United utes., The federal question presented, as stated i the cpinion delivered by Justi Jackson, is whether o fugitive from justice who has been surrendeved by one state of the union to another state thereof upon a requisition charging him with the commission of a specitic crime, has, under the constitution and laws of the United States, a vight, privilege, or im- munity to be exempt from indictment and trial in the state to which he is re- turned for any other or different offense t designated and described in the requisition proceedings under which he was demanded by and restored to such state, without first having an opportunity to return to the state from which he was extradited. It was claimed by the appellant had the same night to be tried alone for the crime chavged in the warrant of extradition as if he were a tive from justice extradited from a ign nation, thereby assuming that the states of the union ave independent governments, having the full prevoga- tives and powers of all nations, except what have been eonferred upon the gen- eral government, and the right to grant, but do, in fact, afford t)all persons within their boundaries an asylum as broad and secure as that which independent nations extend over their citizens and inhabitants. The supremo court held that the argu- ment was fallacious in assuming that supreme the states of the union occupy toward | | each other, in respect to fugitives from justice, the relation of foreign na- tions, in the same sense in which the general government stands toward inde- pendent sovereigntios on that subject. Tt was said by the court that there is nothing in the constitution or statutes of the United States in reference to in- terstate fugitives from justice which can be rogarded as establishing any compact between the states of the union limiting their operation to particular or designated offenses. On the con- travy, the provisions of the organic and statutory law embrace crimes and offenses of every charac and description punishable by tho laws of the state where the forbidden acts are committed. The court declared that it was questionable whether tho states could constitutionally enter into any agreement or stipulation with each other for the purpose of defining or lim- iting thoe offenses for which fugitives would or should be surrenderved. The ceomelusion of the court was that upon a | fugitive's surrender to the state demend- | ing his return in pursuance of national iaw, he may ba tried in the state to which he is returnod for any offense other than that sp tion fo his 1ition trying him against od in the re uisi anl that in so his objection no | vight, privileze or immunity securel him by the constitution of the Unitel States is thereny denied. There can be no doubt of the sound- ness of this decision, which is clearly based on the plainest provisions of the constitution, and it is equally obvious that it in no wise contravenes the prin- ple of state sovereignty, as that ha been defined by the supreme court. The language of the constitution with vefer- ence to the survender by one s fugitives from justice from another state is perfectly plain, and it is some- what remarkable that such a question as that upon which the supreme court has rendered a decision should have been presented to that teibunal. NOW THAT the county have r and re 0 of commissioners ommendations for ¢ounty roads them it ought not to take long to get the work fully laid out so that active operations can be started as s00n as the bonds are sold. The material recommended and adopted is stone. There are many reasons why a stone pavement is desirable inspite of its cost The original expense of laying it is ution operating under such | patents | | dustries of the countr thrown by the suit which | | peoy | out | facturer sted in | named in | that he | not only have | | amounting to : | president | as forest preseryas, but it is | superficial ved the city engincer's plans A | average of nearly fifty miles an hour, DAY, APRIL 9, large, but the cxpense of maintenance is light. Thd éflintry roads that are to be improved wilki some day be, at least for a part of thét#longth, within the city of Omaha. Thof will have to sustain the wear of & latge volume of tratfie. Tt is wise to pave ‘them with a view to the future, and i the extensions that are made hereaftor, as the people feel that they can affoffl the cost, the same stantial matgrial should be used ittt THE TRUSIS GROWING BOLDER It is reported from Boston that prices on rubber goeds have been advanced from 20 to 30 per cent by the gigantic trust that controls that industry Scarcely aoday passes that does not bring the public some fresh reminder of the fact that about all of the great in ¢, industries ven- dered groat by reason of the universal consumption of their products by the people, are becoming closed to free competition and passing under the con- trol of combinations finan- resources 8o great as to give them absolute power in their cespective | fields, Of the rubber trust eompara- tively little has been said, as there are S0 many ter importance but it is an organization of great power and controls an industry that must nec- | essarily be patronized by all classes of [t represents a capl millions of dollars and embry two of the firms that are regarded im- portant, Ever since the formation of this trust the jobbers have been bound under a striet stib- possessing others of g al of many s all but contract not to sell goods | lower than the price list furnished them by the manufacturer, nor to furnish goods to any other manufscturer with- the consent of the original mann- . This tyrannical monopoly has now gone further and has eut off the | large retai from thi former privilege of buying at factory prices The average increase in the eost of rub- ber boots and shoes to the consumer in consequence of the exactions arbitravily mforeed by the teust is placed at 40 por This combination presents some fea- tures different from those of most of the rganizations that have n formed for the suppression of eompetition, but its character is essentially that which is comimon to them all: that is, it tort money from the straining competition and compelling the payment of high prices | for its products. The trusts bave now ! become so numerous that the formation of a new one_ or the adoption of a still bolder policy on the part of any one of them no longer decasions surprise. Now and then some court decision adverse to combinations’ ishailed as a promise of velief, but 1ittl& is afterward heard of it. There are plenty of promises, but they are not fulfilled. Nota single one of these unlawful organizations has yet wiped |, ont of existence by legal proceedings. The anthracite coal combine has been crippled to some extent by mismanagement, but it has hardly been scotched by the enforce- ment of law.~ Popular indignation against it had something to do with its dificulty in obtaining money, and this may be set down as about the only prac- tical result of the great outery that has been made by the oppressed people the robbery practiced by the ms o people by r been against combine. Can it be said that any whatever il progross s being made toward accom- plishing the overthrow of these unholy | | alliances? Is it the contrary, that coming niore numerous and more powerful every day? It has sometimes seomed that they could not possibly withstand much longer the earnest and unanimous demand of the people that they be brought under subjection to the law, but they still thrive and their num- ber is increasing. The new attorney general now has an excellent oppor- tunity to show what kind of material he is made of. The express pledges of the political party in power should be re- deemed. not true, on they are bo- It 18 stated upon h uthority that the lumber supply of the United States now left standing will be entirely hausted in from seventy-five to 100 years, During 1892 in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota more than 14 per cent of the aggregate amount of standing tim- ber was cut, the Michigan output 800,000,000 feet, or more than 15 per cent of the total supply in the state. It is clear that at this rate lumber must become a high-pric modity in a fow years and that for ordinary purposes must eventually be abandoned. The Eagincering News looks upon the timber problem as one of very serious importance to the country. “Tho whole subject of timber preserva- tion,” it says, “is one of time as much as it is one of money, and the subject can- not be taken up too seriously by the peo- ple and government of the United State Congress has alveady done something in this direction and the been authorized to set aside certain parts of the public domain not likely forest praservation will command ex- has that | much attention until most of the timber has disappearci e ey ngligh journalists who are coming to this - coantry this month with the intention of spending some time in visiting fhe west and studying its will be surprised when they find how cXtensive the west is how much timg it takes to make eve exmmination of so territe It they thoroughly carr) their plan they will be able to acquaint their readers ‘& some interesting facts and cor some erroneous im- pressions. THosE F resources THE present year will witness won- derful achievements in the way of high speed and phenomenal long distunce runs on the railroads of this country One train will make the run from New York to Chicago in nineteen hours, an It may be stated with perfect safoty that it will not carry many immigrants, A CORRFSPONDENT of an Alabama newspaper who professes to have made a eareful study of the cotton question writes | that he is convineed that the south will | never again, except pessibly for short | | monoey | he doesn't know wh | fated ship has joined | at the hott | federal | upon the beneh had particy | Whe 1803~ TWENTY PAGES. periods, see the price of cotton sufe clently high to warrant the producer to rely upon it asa means of purchasing supplies which can be raised at home. This is undoubtedly true. It is also true of all other agricultural products in every other scetion of the country south will be forced to adopt diversified agriculture, just as the farmers of the north and west have done and are doing. REPORTS of causualtios giving way mployed are met with in newspapers every day. aused by the men are the men killed or seriously injured by means in the course of a year is very large, and yet such accidents seldom ex- cite any other comment than that they are unfortunate. In almost every case they the direct result of eriminal carelessness on the part of some one, and thut person should be held responsible for them in every instance. There is under ordinary circumstances no reasonable excnse whatever for the falling of sceflolds built high in the air for men to stand upon while at work. The workman places his life in the hands of the contractor, and the latter, for the sake of saving a little time and cts flimsy scaffolds that arve He thinks they not safe sure t This is a theattention duty to by the at they cannot fall. subject that should enga of employers, [tis th teet their workmen from dang » of reasonable care. CRITICISM of Se cause he did not Grant in the Austr reserved until it is etary Gresham be- keep Colonel Fred 1 mission should be known whether the wry has any authority or influe in this administration. At any rate it would not be greatly to the credit of the son of General Grant to retain a place under a democratic administration ely because of state owed a debt of gratitude to his father. PERHAPS Attorney General Olney is so confused by the rapidity with which the trusts and combinesare forming that e the se h to begin on 1t is to be hoped that his ind prove to be only tempor: will ve first. sision will vy, v soon begin 1o « out the policy to which the present administra- tion stands plec WHEN everybody has gotten through advancing theories as to what happened to the steamship N will be as impe ronie the mystery rable as ¢ The ill- the green navies m of the sea, and t is all that can ever be known about hier. EX-AUDITOR BENTON had a appreciation of the perquisite powers of his oftice. not fill n this state. ny more official positions in The Gospel of Pen Pittshurg Dispteh, Livery successful international g lessens the reason for war and era of peace. rhitration tens the pER e T tion Do i« Herald, The supreme conrt now holds that a fugi tive surrendered on any charge may bo tried in the demanding statc for any other offense The court reasons that states in this respect are not s foreign natiorvs, but that their sovereignty is limited by the constitution. It is_interesting to note that this opinion upholding national nty was written by Justice Jackson, whose recent appointment called forth from many republicau organs predictions of the i inting a “southern states rights t and ex-confederate™ to the supreme bench. v sentiment ag t his ma- chine's autocratic methods, There has not een @ day in the last five years when Mr. Hill would have i to face tho voters of his party at fairly held primaries. And now that the machine must bend or break Mr. Hill is an obstacle to bending. Therefore must go. He can no longer lead. No one ought to be so able as he to sce the truth of the situation. He can uo longer help Murphy and the rest of the pack, and thereforo, aft their natures, they will turn upcn him and vend him, But the pack will continue to be just as dangerous after as before the pass “ing of Hill B Senatorial Investigation, Springfield (Mass ) Fepublican. For the senate to extend its inquir the Roach matter to include a scrutiny of the means by which his clection v wouid be to establish au inconvenicn j dent. If the way Roach got into the senate is to be looked into there1s at least equally good reason amining the methods by which several other seuators got their seats There al who would not be likely to be in the senate had they not been million- or political bosses.” There are others ning whose election scandal was busy at the time & arges of bribery were made. There fontly wido field for several such investigations, if the senate chooses to undertake them ate, for this reason, is not likely to do. New York Sun Justice i Justice, sentence prisoncr, in whoso ¢ has participated to & punishment for the commission of that erime’ is an ethical question which Justice O'Donnell of Jorsey City auswers in the af firmative, His honor was ignorant of the theory and practice of the game of er One of four juvenile gamblers who had be haled before him offc to shake the d with him, and a thrilling game followed, in which thé court clearcd out the prisoner. The play having been brous anend by the want of coin on one side, defendunt to mpleof jud nt Roman. Tt Surely n worthy entlemun a social amusement with the gentleman at the bar did not mitigate the stern sense of duty of the former. sentenced th this is an of an ane = e IPRIL S HOWERS, New York Sun. at’s allus grumblin' an' 1 ain't yself at what I've got, un' wish for so'thin’ else But when the ) | wind's howlin' an’ the sky looks gl sour rui in wishin' fer an April shower 1 hiain’t no eddication like these colleg: Al 0 't set down my feelin's as 1'd ov Jut tho Thain't no hand there he p s O poetry a-lurkin in t showers! chaps, hter do, rhymin’, still, somehow + thought of April s the workin's o' Dume Natur When I think owe o dike thirsty cnlldren dri ' pinks an’ daisies, an' all the Kin' in the Lain't called sentimental like thing Butit allus sets me falls in the spring, O'fifty yeurs 450 an’ wer, 1 kissed Mandy—ax il shower! I'm too old for sich thinkin', when the rain more, out luthe rustic Just then we had un The | have it we hope it may prov parties concerned and work hardships on no of scaffolds on which work- | The number of | this | | fought for may stand, | | but he does not take the trouble to muke pro- | { who | satisfactory nd that he | Yok | extent | tem of | railroad keen | The chances are that he will | s secuved, | which the sen- | Donnell | P T ———— HOUSE ROLL THIRTY - THRER, Genoa Banner: All Tecumseh Chieftain (rep.) is a wise measure or not, the been elamoring for it, and one, Wayne Herald (rep.) house immediately acquiese ments by senate, will certainly sign it proper railroad freight rates People's Rights de to make the { ght ng the next two years, securing its repeal, but failure in this dire we Wayne Democrat to the people or not, a t for, and the bat after it will be much easior Republican istless and stubborn histor, of the newspapers, the senat the bill by the vote of eighteon teen against tortionate freight rate of the railroad-ridden § state, Beatrice Times: Tho m ernor Crounse this week, is stitute for the road committee s the one that passed the years ago and met with eruor Boyd. The railroads vitter fight against the much on g unt in rate for the re The bill is law. But only way rea by legislative ena Tek experience ment mah Burtonian (rep.) rate bill has passed all hone to the cighteen nained faithfully forty-cight hours. The'y is n'viotory for the pe Nebraska. The failure of legislatures to pass the porate greed and influenc of distrust that anything 880 ing of the oihe musses is me wise would have been is por 1t was not to be any rate law could be to both rarlroad managers and republicans all supported it can truthfully be of the people which s| sage of the bill West PointRepublican passage of the N have but themselves to blame For ye: by bribing the people’s d patience of the taxpayi exhausted and they in the corporate bribe: lobby “was of Secret” rooms w n the cappers would acte dined and otherwise enter innumerable were issued by roads, while the people paid tors' mileage. mention open pu sorted to to place the re methods h it availed little, The ine law —0v ratker as soor ernor and goes into ¢ e FROM RAM BLAST motion s fly low, but they fly al to begin is i the 't preacher is somehow and somewhe! The devil f who is in love with himself sometimes_little troubles on ¢ y big windows in heaven Human nature on the throne is than human nature in the gutter. most noise in ound asleep. full of people who want to do re o hurry to People sometimes make the chureh when they a The world i good but they One of the angeis have to 100k 1 the child. “The woman who pain man who dyes his whi one person. saddest sights Not as Dangerous as o I San Francisco Chronic honor to the brave men and true who stood so nobly by the peo- plo in this great fight for justice, Whether it now b a benefit to all | ! ) The maximum ehit rate bill passed the senato and 1in the amend Crounse are to have Governor At last w An effort bill odious dur- with the hope of predict Gov is no doubt 2 In the passage of the bill, whother it be of groat practica i . fon. Tha Crounse will sign the bill there benefit won, and her to 'secure road legislation than it has been in th After opposition sure by the opponents of the the most to the bill, the of which is well known to the readers finally passedi to four. thus lifting the burden of ex- m- the shoulders ple of this great ximum bill, which will probably be signed i r freight Ality a sup- ure offered by the not so radical legislature adefeat from Gov are making a bill, not pert of the reduction it son that they like the idea of having their rates regulated shows that mable rates can be secured is makes do not : “The long and bitter fight is over and the maximum freight The Burtonian faithful senators posts for > of this bill state of different at their ple of the the feeling ever be done, and as it has passed at last, the fe e exultant I'he Burto does not for a moment contend that the expeeted that devised that would be shipper Populists, would i the democrats the bill, and it was ke in the pas said that (vep.) wherry bill the o the ilvoads to avery | B s they have maint | lobby in Liucolu and intimidat inec legislation until 't becan ight sned from their throat the clutches monopoly carried on unique maintained inveigle they would be wined a ained t their Many other method ase of votes, resentatives und lasting obligations to the railr not to were “Their frequently been exposed, but table was anti ted, so today we have a maximam freight signed by the gov- always preaching no fault to find with the man better life of l WHISPERY OF FUN, Noste atrimony to divorce The carly ot prewonli Pittsburg Chron entehes tho first case huve they Troy Press: The season Is rapldly g \ the fee man 18 cool and Roch thing for an engine the | good for the en Chicago Tribune: One of the lat and visitors are « titioned with him will Washington Star LI tell you nothing I{ke 1ness i the preser Juggins. plicd Jageins: “that's people from belng sunstruck.” sad rnor villo Journal: Thoe man b Atehison Globe {0 put his overcont on 1t 15 a sign that she doesn’t back any more Defiance News doux to i malden aged thirty pressed inclination toward, she telegraphed: “1'ni you 1 toux DOMESTIC 11y Woishington Star Sho made a loaf of bread one morn 1 Was i it ek TETOf e family ail forlorn Lo see it fall and break e But soon we patc Like other bric-a-brac, Aund now it hangs whe A most artistic placqu L PERSONALITIES, two ps S0 many 000,000 Theodore Wachtel, tenor, began his car is now 70. Judge R R dis on the district civil war. Maud Lorillard the the famous Nelson of the suys bench , which cor- Stonewall Ja with a kson has prig of ivy her hush Carl S | | revolutionist in Germany in look much older than he " did the interior an it 1848, when One of the youngest army is Wilt Wallace, son of the master at Indianapolis (General 1 first law partner) and a nephew Loew Wallace Mrs, Greshman, the wife of the sec of state, said at a tea not long ago the newspapers counts of my extraordinary alonts, for 1 haven't ar like extr women,” New Y the the By now enter! Roland Bonaparte, grandneph: He has come ¢ rehwology, boing tist who has written twenty-thre the subject of anthropology Mark Twain has come Turopean trip incog. He witha small hand sachel, w noticed to a_hotel, registered as *( Gibraltar,” but sent a telegr sys the char home the open commence which lonely her cheeks and the fool but iz0 Fight. With bulletproof uniforms the soldiers of the next cent ger from missile: knights in full in prote than rmor. it do to discurd fighting at covert to the primitiv combat, hand to hand 50 mi and skill would ve far bette will be inlittle more o the med This new departure ng the body will probab lowed by new plans of warfa ! long method of personal There would not be killed or maimed as u present system, while the test of str i STREET COSTUME, what wnexation, ounloun.” cd it up with glue, Al inay view asa cab driver, daughter of P Lovillard, is to marry T. Suffern Tailer at ich " date happens to be a heen from Martin vo and intends planting it ou Jourter: A turn of the tled-from bicyelist Vpproach his Bills are tor Democrat: A headlight fs n good butw Hight head 1y not rrivals at Jackson park s an orang-outang from Juvi, nonkey there! » ot dan keeps who nover )y thing disagrecablo about other people in his 1ite was probably born deat and dumb When o girl allows a fellow without assisting him, want hin 1o come Tle sont a portumed billet Tt oxe and Heve Krupp is the largest taxpayer in Gor. He pays $2.400 on an income of §1, nan Ho United States t court of Minnesota, is the only man ppointed before the pre . who was old enough to be a doesn't he was under President lieutenants in_ the late post erison of Giene al otary 1 trust ill not, begin topublish ac abilities and "o judge doesn't Princo polcon to study 1 scien » worlks on from his landed Monday de his way un forgo m led his ideutity, in i two toned effect of pink and is the material of this gown. apped with gold sout passementerio is of bronze bead wles on a foundation of gold. velvet capote light t yoke i the ngth BROWNING, KING Lurgost Manufacturors anl Rytulazs of Clothing tu the World. Got 'Em in a Box The tailor no longer stands any show when it comes to turning out nobby wearing apparel. We make | up so many suits that fit as | | well, look as well, and are as well as private tailored gar- | ments, that we can afford to sell them at hall tailor prices We have never before gath- ered around us so fine a line of spring suits for boys and men as this year—Our children’s department on the second floor is the largest and most complete in this western country—Boys' suits from $2 up— Men’s suits fron $8.50 up. The hats are tempora- rily on the third floor, and we are selling lots. of them at lower prices than hat stores do—Meantime they are working at that hole in the wall. BROWNING, KING & CO., Etore open every evenluztill 63k | Baturday vl iy §. W. Cor. 16t and Doujlas 3 The che, and the il span Wood brown

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