Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 9, 1893, Page 4

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| EI'IIE DAI1LY BEE. £ ROSEWATER, Fditor. PURLISHED EVERY MORNING, Three Montle an Srindny 1or New York ik 1 18 and 1 e buliding CORRBSPONDENC Yool comn Mevkid. o the Editor ofiee wrders 10 Be made UIE DER PUBLISHING COMPANY The Ben in Chiengo, Tar DAy and SUNDAY Bk 13 on sale in Chteagotit the following places. Palmer lotse Grand hotel At el Great Northern hotel Gore Lot A | i Fites of Tur Ber ¢ ing, Exposition grour 7 he seen at the No Administration build- TATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Tk, wee of T Bk Pt Toes soleny culation of Ty DATLY Ti Grotey IS CneR i ot LAy of September, T80, (=il N b Fr. Notary Publle, CHICAG will he a record breaker for all international expositions for years a 1 for years to come. NIGIT 5 season of the yo has not been many a day. fons of the scnate at this will be o novelty that ‘n in Washington for A row water mark of nearly eleven millions less than the legal gold reserve of one hupdred millions is a final indica- tion of the demoralizing workings of the Shérman silver pure ase law THE scheme to raise enough paper money to bring the volume of curreney up to F6,000,000,000 must bo visionar, indeed if Peffer introduced it “by: re- quest” and refuses to fathor itas his | own. SENATOR VOORHEES scems determined to for coutinuons session unpon the senate. There has been a faint suspi- cion all along that Senator Stewart has been in continuous session for several weeks. T 18 a pity that w unable to apply our cholera quarantine to the exclusion of yellow fever from the country. The. latter is proving more serious just now than the danger from cholera” at any period during the past two years. MR. AuporT has not been heard from since the chairman ol his delegation had himself nominated for the supreme judgeship. Was Mr. Abbotta vietim of misplaced confidence or was he the willing dupe of a cunning railroad masquerade party. VOW that the New York banks are again ¢ over $28000,000 more than the legally vequired reserve the anxicty of our legislators to know. whether those banks have been con- forming strictly to the letter of the law has been noticeably abated. THE next time a republican supreme jndge is to be nominated every candi- date must ficst procure a permit at rail- road headguarters. Those who are not on the B, & M. slate, the Ilkhorn slate or the Union Pacific slate will nov b permitied to enter the race, Now it is Italy that is suspected of de- signs upon the peace of Ruropd. TLast week it was Russia, and tho weck before Austria, It will doubtless be France's turn mext. The famboyant imagina- tion of the Buropean corrospondents is untrammeled by geographical lines, Now that the administration has scored a victory' in Nebraska a liberal dispensation of patronage may boe ox- pected from this time forward, Tobo Castor cannot visit Washington too soon to suit the men who helped turn down Congressman Bryan at Lincoln last weelk, JUDGING from the tone of the dem- ocratic press the democeutic party is not greatly alarmed at the threatened defection of the Hon, William Jennings Bryan. The general opinion seems to bo that while advocating populistie principles and measures he may as well have the name as the gamo. ROACHING elections usually cause aspiritof uncertainty to pervade the busi- ness interests of the country, which always dissipated in shows what policy may be expected from the victorions party. Undor ordinary conditions trade ought to v when the first week of } behind us, ive rapidly wembor is well SENATOR ALLEN seems to be lotting no opportunity slip by which he might employ to keep himself promivently be- fore his fellow senators. In the extent of his speech-making during the first two months of his congroessional career he will compare favorably with most of the men who have cutered the senate more widely known than he. —e WE HAVE been asked to express our views as regards the qualifications of the respeetive candidatos for supreme judge. On this point we ecan ouly quote the opinion of the leading practitioners at tho bar. M. Irvine 's by all odds the ablest of the three lawyers who are can- didates for the Maxwell succession. Harrison and Holcomb are rated nearly alike. In this campaign, however, qualification is uot the main issue. Each candidate represents a principle. That fact will have more to do with the out- affuirs of the city cond principles from private lifo two reward f had 10 string tied to him by any | tractor or «« difficult routine of the city government qualified for the oMicier his dutios ond term as joys universal confidence as enstodian of publie funds awed by thr city council—Messrs. Back, Pri # THE CITY TICR 17 smination of the entive ropibe tof 1201 should meet with approvai, not oniy of republicans, bat all citizens who desire to sec the ted on business Mayor Bemis was called to his oftic years ago, not as « sorvicus, but b 'tisal e cause hie was in position to give up his whole time to the duties of his offic and poration heodore Olsen has mastered he comptrolle office and has made himself thoroughly | conversant with the details of checkin up the cxpenditures in ov branch of now bette discharge of n he was when he becam comptrolle John Groves has had six yoars of ox perience in the city clerk's office and has given veneral satisfuction to the v y large number of peopls who o no in contact with him Henry , who is booked for a sec sded to be is ¢ on an expert in municipal finaneiering and he collection of taxes. Lle enjoys g popularity with the taxpay rs and en- rveliable Louis Berka is a model police judg He is neither swayed by | ejudice nor ats, He administors justice under the laws and ordinances without fear or favor, and for that reason enjoys the respect and confidence of the law officers and the public Five of the ca ndidates-at arge for the ned Bechel, Jacobsen and Bdwards —ar members of the present conneil and have been placed on the tick as the Choice of their respective wards. The remain- ing four -Messrs, Hachelor, Mallory, Lund and Schwenk--were also endorsed hecanse they had r: the votes cast in th The respective me dates cannot be i ved a majority of recent primary its of these candi- illy discussed in this article. It is our purpose to discgss their candidacy severally from. d ,»n. day. A majority of these eandidates wevan heartily endorse, but sevoral of them do not commend themselves to fa- vorablc notice, "he nominees for the Board of Eduea- tion ave for the most part w tlemen. The position Tre BB ways ned in favor of nonparti school boards would 1ot justi bucking them for cle rthy ger n y us in tion on the solc und that they were endorsed by a re- iblican convention. CHICAGO DAY AJ THE PAIR, With favorable weathier Chicago peo- ple wily today prove their loyalty to the great Columbian exposition, that o velous product of Chicago et entery It will be their pride to show the thousands of visitors to their eity that all rumors of apathy and lack of support among the - residents of the World’s fair city have been utterly without foundation. 1f organized effort is to count in sending persons through the numerous turnstiles at the gates the record of paid attendance on Chicago day will be one to which Chicagoans and the World's fair divectory will point with pride for al! time to come, No pains secm to ha nsure tne anticipated once the ratlroads have yielded to the demands of the fais management and have made rates within the reach of those in most moderate circumstances. They have been pouring trainlo passengers into Chi @ blen spared to wceess, For 15 of 2o for severul days, 50 that whatever may be the influx of Chi ) people into the grounds the number of outsiders who will be present will be a very material element in the celebration. ~ Allowing for the exagger ation of tho estimate of half a million strangers that has been indulged in, the co-operation of the visitors.in swelling the throng must not be undervated. The significance of the day as indi- cative of the wonderful growth of Chi- cugo since the great five of 18 fully impressed upon the spectators by the parade %hrough the White City A graphic representation of twodecadoes of progress caunot but « magnitutic of the climax of the achieve- ment—the World's Columbian posi- tion of 1893, Whether sueeess or failure attend it from a finapecial point of the fair is universally acknowledgod fo be unexcelled in every other dirvection And if it lies within the power of the people of Chicago it will also be unex- celled in the rec tendance. Chicay I will be wd of maximum at- ) day promises to be the red-letter day,of the fair in ey vy respect CONTEMPLATED TARLRE C 1ANGE S, Rumors and reports concerning con- templated tafiff changes have been so common of late that the certainty of change, coupled with the uncortainty of the nature of the change, has whetted the appetite of the public for definito oxpressions of intention on the part of the democratic leaders. Upon this phase of the prospective legislation the 6 the result | contributions of Congressmen MeMillin, Dalzell and Bryan of the committes on < and means on *The Coming Tari Legislation” in the current Novth Ameri- cun Review were no doubt intended to shed the desired light, But while their papers may deserve in connection with the tariff contro- vorsy, we are compelled to search in vain for what can be called a definite plan upon which the new tariff is to be | constructed, 2 The chief point to be gleaned from the views presented by these colmittee- 1 men is that the democratic party pre- | on the 10th, I8th and 26th of Octeber | and on the 3d und 4th daysof November, fers to adhore rather to the expressed poliey of the president than to the tariff plank of theiv last platform. Instead of regavding protection as a fraud aud a robbery, beyond the constitutional power of the federal government to enaet, the readjustment of the presen! tariff will be undertaken with every con- sideration of the interests of American labor engaged in manufacture as well as the preservation of our manu- facturers. Mr. Dalzell, the republican contributor, points out additional con- siderations which must be kept in view and which combine to maiutain the pres- come than judicial bent, reputation as a | ent perplexing state of uncertainty. lawyer, or experience om the beuch, These elements are “‘the divided senti- | With his own woney, and he paid & for reven i | from tho g knoy | | the first step will be to increase the free Chairman Wilson is said to be walking | indus | riously aft nphasize the | d { ment amongst democrats upon the ques- ! tion of protection, the eff ot of legisla tion on local intercsts, the influence of general mlar opinion, the necessity and the existing conditions which render radical or experimental rislation dangerous.” however, can be gathered ticles by the other two mem- bers of the committee und from tho i views of Chairman Wilson. that the inclusion of many of the chief matorials used in the manufactures ra resolutel osoliite ot e s state of coal despite the est Virginia vir- Iy subsists off her protected c¢ial mines. e wants to ¢ fact that b 1D 1o the standared of free raw material, and the like. Mr. MeMillin, too, grecs that, so far us possible, raw tor s should be made free “that manu- 1in the enn petition of the world and goods suppli factories may be unhampe atacheaper cost to onr people,™ while Me} Bryan adds his peophesy that “in t] reform of the tariff which will soon bhe made the duty will in ali proba vemoved from a number of an d as vaw material In addition to the contemplated free raw materials the demo ity be elas: atic members of the committee on ways and means h itlined nothing exeopt porhaps a faint intimation that in veducing the du- { ties to a revenue basis the reduction should be greater on the necessarios of lifo than on the luxuric But heve, also, due regard will be had of the prop- erty its that may be affected. “The democratic party,”says Mr. MeMillin, *does not seek to tear down or injur sour ies. Under it they flourished in the past. Under it they will flhurish in the future.” The' new tariff is to be in line with the personal views of tho president. The demoeratic platform of 1892 has loug ago been cast to the wind AT daborers generally mean to be reasonable in their demands upon employers and are willing to consider altered circumstances that require changes in the dxisting relations between employer and emp! is the lesson that is once more taaght by the amicable settlement of the differences that arose among the management and men on the Donver & Rio Grande railroad. The railvoads in the mining districts have been so cted by the closing of the mines and the stopping of local industry that it b ne a practical tmpossibility to continue to pay the es of wages previously in force. Compromise and concession on both sides ave resulted in the accoptance of temporary reditetions «in the pay rolls until the first of next r, when the road hopes to be able to return to its former schedules, This agreement ren- ders it possible v e mtinue the employ- ment of the entire force and distributes the hardship of ¢ sting finaneial and business conditions among all parties concerned. I laborers everywhere were inclined to take the same reason- able view of employers’ difficalties the wled antazonixm batween labor and capital would soon baa mere creation of the imagination, 50 ONE year ago renzo Crounse was cted governor of Nebraska upon a platform which demanded regulation of aily rates. The last I passed a reasonable maximum hy the aid of republican votes and ( nor Crounse affixed hissignature, thus making italaw. In so doing he fol- lowed the command of bis party as ex- pressed in its platform adopted without adissenting vote. The railroads have made no attempts to prove that the rates establishea by the new law ave unvea- sonable. They are simply ignoring it angd ave still defying the peopls. And yet the vepublican state convention which met at Lineoln last week lacked the courage to voice the honest senti- ments of the rank and file of the party by commending Governor Crounse for his action in signing a bill demanded by the people. It lacked the courage to con- demn the methods by which the rail- roads are seeking to make the law a ud letter. Instead of meeting the is- sue manfuily the delegates who misrop- resented the vepublicans of Nebrask went wildly enthusiastic over a few ponderous and illy-composed platitudes on national issnes that do not in the re- motest way enter into the present cam- paign. rislature Wi wourLp like very much to feel con- vineed that Judge Harrison 1snot an ally of the corporations that have suc- coeded in turning down Judge Maxwell, We should like very much to belic that he was at heart in sympathy with Maxwell and in aceord with his ded on the impeached offi strange, very strange, thatany man who is against vailroad rule in Nebraska should head a delegation to the state convention that was instrocted and pledged to cast itsivote for a pronounced ilroad lawyer and “use all honorable cfforts to secure his nomination.” It seoms incredil awfully incredible, that man who abhors the de testable methods which the rail road bosses and Lincoln boodlers pursued 1n running down Judge Max- well should lend himself to become the sion fals. But it scems consideration | chief bone iciary of the infamous and criming 1 work of political desperadocs, Surely Judge Harrison could pot have been the vietim of a plot to substitute himself for Abbott, REGISTRATION begins tomorrow. ['n- der the law registrars will hold sessions Nobody ean vote in this eity and South | Omaha unless he is duly registered this year. Last year's registration does not count. Don't fail to register tomorrow if you can possibly sparc the 4ime. If you put it off for another week you are liable to forget to register entirely. Mu, Rosewaven 18 said to have “slid” out of Lincoln by vhe firsy train after Harrison was nominated and 4 good mauy tion cormorant” republicans and rogues” would like to know just for the fun of the thing what kind of trausportation Lo “8lid" on.— Hustings Nebrasian. He slid on & ful! fare ticket, paid for Seott's defales THE OMAHA DAILY IH&!! MONDAY, OCTOBER apides (o1 thirtyatwo other tickets that | he bought at "¥& 1B, & M. ticket office for Maxwell defogates who could not afford to pay their own Way and would not stultify “thémselves by accepting railroad passos, which wore freely fur- nished to the cormorants, 1t is true, and pitye ‘tis true; that more than two-thirds of the convention were supplied with passes by the railrond mercenaries whose business’ it is to distribute these pass hribes, IT BEGINS t Yook as if the Texas au thorities have blundered most seriously in their treatment of two of Neb citizens. Ra <kn's rott Scott was a self-con- victed defaulter, and his arrest and in- carceration followed as a-matter of cour Up to the present writing, how- over, there cxists no siadow of excuse for the treatment aceorded to Dell Akin, the man who went to Mexico in an effort to, induce Scott to return, Akin may have been implicated in oas, but his guilt or in- nocence is a matter for o Nebraska jury to determine. His incarccration in a Texas jail for weeks hy men who were simply holding him for a reward was an and one that ean neither be ex- cused nor condoned, THE insurgent war pinst the admin- istration of Brazil is likely to add another chapter to the international code of military ethies. Heretofore the naval authority of any conflicting power has exercised the undispated right to bombard any city held by its opponent. At RRio de 1eiro the American, French and English men-of-war ended the bom- bardment by the insurgent fleet for the reason that the lives of the foreign re dents of the city wore being enda In so doir the noutral powers have establishod a precedent that muy work a revolution in the naval warfare of the future TiE Ford theater disaster bobs up once more in the shape of a resolution for a senate committee to investigate the liability of the government for dam- ages to the families of the killed and in- jured. In the meanwhile, however, government clerks at Washington are still compelled to risk their lives in buildings that have either been pro- nounced unsafe or are veritable fire traps waiting for the Names. Regard for the present and future is cqually as negessary us veparation for the past. IF THE railroad manag that the people of Nebrask imagine v will within the next thirty days forget the treason- able conspir: which the choice of the rank and file of the republican party has been thwarted they are reckoning without their host. This is the third time the corporations have raided con- ventions that were to nominate candi- dates for the supreme court. Twice the outrage was submitted to and condoned. Three times and out. Tir finaneial condition of the country is doubtless improving, but even the usuuily optimistic Zradstre:ts fails to de- tect any appreciable improvement in in- dustrial conditions. Tt is folly to look for permanent improvement in industrial civeles until manufacturers of the coun- try know to a cortainty the poliey of the administration on the taviff question. The administration will render the conntry a real service by showing its hand as soon as possible. HE refusal of the demceratic and populist campaigners to discuss national issies in Nebraska must be positively disheartening to the fellows who con- structed the vemarl platform, ble republican s Compliments to Depew, New York Sun. The Doctor is off his base, Dan: nous Ite Washington Star, 1f any superncated republican should ever point the fingor of scorn at democrat form th nistration can refer proudiy 1 the fact that it actually abolished an ofMice in_ the geological survey mstead of v moving the oceupint and appointing a good democrat in his place. i The Double-En Lineoln News, Mr. Hitcheock still insists on editorially diseussing the ethics of theosophy and the cause of ringworms in_poultry, but never i line does he say in protest or niherwise o the overthrow of his iuol —William Jennin Bryan. Mr. Hitchcoek has been sitting so long op the fence that we fear he has gotten his legs mixed up and ble to unwind them. Afcermath of the Op Kanxas City Timex, OMeial corruption i conne ovening of the Cierokee Stripseems 1o have been gross and extensive. Roegistration clerks, deputy marsaals and soldiers did wholestie business in bribery, and the rank est injustice was suffered by ‘worthy home- soekers, Congress eannot afford to pass suen i seanadl by without a thorough in vestigation ning. fon with the —— State Sovercigniy snd Snlaries, Cincinnati Commercial Senator Morgan of Alabama_ has served notice upon the people of the United States that he is the representative of “a sovereien state.”” The state, however, is not so soy- ercign that the eontumacious Mr, Morgan 1o0is 10 1t for his senatorial salary, On the contrary, he continues to draw it with promptitude and (sputch from the treasury of the nation. Mr, Morgan's 1dea of sov 2 fyr. but skin deep, Philaiclphia Led er It is estimated at Waghington that high wirter murk in tho peRSion business W reached July 1, 180, nearly thirty years After the war, when thera wore 966,012° pen sioners on the list. The decrease that since taken placo indicates, it is said. thut thero witl be a failing orf of 50,000 a year by deaths, remarriages of widows and the con- ing to nou-pensivuable age of minor children New pensions are being granted every da at the rade of avoub 40,000 per annum, whic would indicate a net decrease of 10,000 per annum. By W pensions grant 50 that no material ase in the amount’ expended for peu sious is 10 be looked for at preseut CAMPATGN CLATTER, Harmony in Ne republican victory in Nebrasica Wooster of the Silver Times knows what he 18 talking about when defeat of Maxwell will cost tho iha dossn't Philadelp ared tha BEaitor Chnric \ he says the republican party thous: know Pete Schwenk, Thoy will bacome bet 1t of dohnstowr councitmanie campaign is finished, phenomenai disas! they were feeling their pet candidate, Frick been put in his political grave Editor Marvin of the has suddenly deserted one of his estoemed contemporaties 1f Marvin should fail to got 18 postmaster for Bryan again Nebraska lost sevoral membe This will necessitate nominations for senator and TI'his will enablo some will be o later disastor is know population of the | names without having served the stato as the balloting Lincolu, it was Iditor Woodruft of snian who wrote and Juris is turn 1 down at the Hins 61 the description have s of tho state | Nobraska can republicans, 3 parties, were loyal to thoe g Watson sives it redinm of Ui Charleston beeause of the hurricanc which r0 did so much damago to | October 2018 Arbor day in Pennsylvania papers that he 1 fow woeks o life and property, and great storm frc suffered after winning such vietory for the wnti-Maxwell major's disgust is evidently grin was vi the top of his head whe was in progress at the republican state con- sat Britain has men, The silv artes by th Noue but Ameri to be giv sport, 17, The most peculiar thing of the | liean state convent itor Judson Giraves of the Ne from Antelope county empowered o cast tho nine votes of the dele he found himself i . n was the “split” of kd U Britain and the 1 them smelt two-thivds of the world's lose quarters It ever a man tried to be on both Graves is that > man who first made silk hats in this \d seems to bo on the ve for ho suys 15,000 democrats, also Incens honest judge, should also conclude to shove Holcomb down the corporation throat, to make a sure thing “ire in the aiv them a tesson they We know that yised us 16 vote for Weaver Editor Langer of the Wost Point Repub an has puv into writing many Nebraska ¥ ble hatter., Kastern S | nually nearly 20,00 it would wive would fiot soon forget have imported as h utly 0., tho great iron o a sentiment that will endorse. 4 strong man, tice Maxwell this particular period is to bo regretted, as represented all v to anti-monopoly and anti-boouierism. nomination, no doubt, positive streneth to the republican as few other men could have dr by option. The | under the name of tho Steel ment company of 11®sbu republicans Judge Harrison i rround tias been broken for some portions of his candidac Building operations, i other kinds of business, Returns from the Klyn, v leans, Chic Minneapolis, St. D r. Omaha and Duluth show that their aggregite building operations for the cight wn the sup- auks that Justice Maxwell could.” When John L. Webster related his pr anecdote hefor ntion the v 310 ollection of the days when Methodist Sunday school supey tendent caused him to blush, News noticed there about the g | | per cent. | Three of the immense turbine water | compri ! was something T ms are in about as bad ta. Tom Majors’ after-dinner storics. we shoild not expect too mnen of a man who will commit the soleeism of wearing a less white vestat a political convention avof Judge M nation has cause n finished. Kach cost of £200,000. and each is expected o de- velop 5 000-hor. harnessing Nia tho work of steam is looked forward to by Norfolk Journal,,one of the ablest and staunchest papers of north aska, to bolt the ticke 15 purpose the Journal says methods prevailed Just issued, the labor unknown in the N may scem, b hours and ar The veason why they prefer I to short is because they ¢ wand e ang and g ment of Nobraska republicans was throttled was defeated Harrison of turning down of Jud of the most ¢ and cannot polls by the honest men in the ranks Journal believ e Maxwell is a triumph | clements of be endorsed interests of that the rank and file self-constituted leaders, and it por? to the independent nowin conneeted with the mtrodue nery, which puts the true Dutchman out of [ (' need ear alto; and even makes him discoy | foned wages are not quite up to now-fash- | Gladden the world,and | ioned ideas. (Hence with that Dill=that bill! T BROWNING,KING > forsupreme SUNSHINE, vwyer 15 1ike cecd lo must erally fishing for fim Toxas Siftings: Fituess it wis the end of th gas went out al pianist finds his notes of SThat beats me,” ton Transeript: It is a commor ) o siy Thatt the men 1t fall in love WO i dHFCTBIee very Soon oxists be- | Dismal Dawson - Kin | is the headquarters for the | you tell nie wher poor board? £ Go rght around 1o Mrs. Hasheroft's Dowrd thit 1k thing about. Acquaintance won the hunt of Ieame wishin Ving rieht into then th folt in the L composition one wnd she iy STUDYING FOR THE STAGE Warman in Neu shirleked @ wonin, And her fat white with rag “If you cast 1 1 will g0 upon the skod the showman, SILve you ever hi F WoIan's W ABSOLUTELY PURE THE GULF CALAMITY, THE POPULIST PARTY, in Record: Itis ersatly to bo | Liscons, Neb., Oct To the i the full proportions of the galf | Tre Bee: Dean St—With your permissio t to be roveaind, if they stall over | MANY thousand readers regard Bt the broad fact has been abundantly | tatagitate the minds af tha peop Ahpatling svone of death and desola- | that party shall win: the question 0 the southc VoS seene without mind is whother wo shall have froe gove A parallel in onr national catastrophes, save | ptah iyl ki ntor ot The honest voters of v: In the presence of such | DATHCs who Vo Tty eotana converse with T8 A8 theso all s 1 bers of aur party generally agroa t 8. if they cxist, aro swopt away and | binod capital is oxercisiog too much hio feelings of common humanity re- | 1 tha affairs of ouv woverment Theve is no north or south in a time | of calamity. We ave all drothers then, not | C18¢ of power has inconsed many Knowing How soon_calamity may prostrate | thoir zoal, lave in somo cases m Chicago pspecially knows by anun- | onslan nmany t as intorest nted experience what this wmeans, | T wi it 0 be understomt wild Now Ovleans or Mobile ask for | voters of this atate that the pec will do its part | 18 a8 mach a business mon's party as it is 1 York World: This f« a year of | workingmon's party. e dosive to blend to mity for the south. The hurricane of | #etheraliinterestsof tho wh | last month, which wrought dreadful loss of | ¢an bo d nosty in politics 1S nearly avd perhaps quite matched | Ur arty by the declarations In destructiveness by the one that has just | 0verzealous worker,who is probably expre desolated tho consts of the gulf states, It | i02 hisown honest opinion, bt A time bofore the full extent of | earefuily road our platform and moas wise the | intentions thoreby. We do not | W bordors'of the gulf i | turn everything, upside down, concentrated as that of the sea | World on fire. We simply propoto to ¢ lish h y fa politics and w Washineton Star: One of those awful | S18tance to thatend. Lot me warn happenings over which feeblo mankind can | N plent yoursolves with tho tdoa that OXCPVIS0 10 control has vaused Lt mendons | O 1berties “were fully - established when lifo on a portion of the sonthern | 0ur brave forefathers successfully In rocont vears calamitics of this | the 108U battlo of the rovorution, for nfortunately beon common | WAS 10t the case. “The templo of 1itx oHY, . WHILS GRS, SUOLIonS. of | then Just bogan, and to you and ye have gene rally escaped witho in but durlug the present yoar | D Crest Diaven, lictive “hand seems to have been laid Chairman People's Party. most heavily upon the south, At this time e is much snfforing in the vieinity of PEOPLE AND THINGS. 0W comes news of a | Perpotual motion was decmed 0 the Gulf of Mexico, bility hefore the - senate bowar INDUSTELIL NOTE The 1 ) sxtraordinary sess lo Island rofor: derocratic I | Bay state. His sideburns to start a contlagrabion A Kansas' City report upon A groun composed ¢ Governor Hogg, Governor Lowell Mrs. Liease, expresses inconsolab cause he negloctea to bring his gun ‘BiM Bllison, n New York and club loafer, has been g timatc AVErgo mev earn- | your term in the penitentiary, His « he clectric immps in London is about | tion 1s hailed with much delieht in S each A year. ' senators fairly earn thoir = sweat of their jiws, an ®izons are hereaftor employment in the iv mills at United States ve sutput of ivon. of defenseless women und lias just died in the Sullivan county ork.” poor house. His name was gheat moven Barton and he was 88 years old. | women and & s ago e was Gotham's fashiona 1ey Stone,one of the chief chi-beloved woman very ill with an irvemedinble discq zerland manufactures an L000 Avorth of machin . Mrs. Stono is now over nd has e joyed perfect health hithe erics, The United States A B Bennett of N s 83,700,000 | just relinguished an vle year,and | heen the envy and ition of the nereasii land at Ashtabula, | ene consecutive years, So great ceiving port of Lake | pull that a positive refus re partly purchased and partly se- | astonished his pavty, ¢ ul was taken up | in good faith W fron fm- | The eree- | L upon. and | 1o use | | ubrof these articles in a sin S5 800118 10 b Vieo President Stevenson is not steel plant is doter 0 a carviage in the from the capitol. e is a upon a green street ear aft ment, hand the conductor ¢ ¢ th common with all 11 off materiatly in ics of New York, | then read his newspaper until he v Vashington, Pittsbure, New Or- | hotel. 2o, St. Louis, Detroit, Milwau- | My, Ge ul, Indianapoli city of Chica tropic tu 1plan®s and tlowe Al building utin Chi th Auzus, 18 inst s 43 during th 2, a falling off of nearly 40 ending ), as iod in finest gathering of seventy variet of cacty specimens *w York Comme 1 vated its ninety-sixth birthday L | sury on the Tiost. Itis the olde | journal in New Y th their an iary mechanism, b varieti lia for the concern that | valuable the stuvendous power of | 1 ndustrial purposes, | ine was built a L Falls for ¢ power. ‘The experiment of wea Falls and making it do duet. It was founded by Ale Lon to r tthe Jeffersonian school of poli s allover the world, for if the ex- | tics,and that policy is conspicuous. i ment is successful it will be one of the | conduet toduy. Noah Wabster, of tachiavements of the centu abridged fame, was its first editor, ingto a Duteh gove | | rnment report | low Weed, Henry J. Raymond, Hugh uestion s practically | ngs and others snod vhic Tusier o its ed | vherlands, Strango as it | ivorial pace. And th > Dutch workmen like lon content to live on 40 cents Like old wino, the ( s hours | has improved with ag an thus work in the | enterprise today than wely manzer that suits them of thoroughness; and & e nt with low wages because ocronenR. to make them go a long way riking and senting them Atlanta Constitulion. Weleome, October, with thy tresse «No cash (o meet that nofe!) for which his ancestors fought ath) (O, for my ove Weleome,October, where th 5 alabor question in Holland is (It boot musk have usol ton of coul!) or, forees him to work briskly that old-fash Welcome, ( (I fear I have a chill! & co fasturars ani Ty vhing in ha World, Largest M of U What are they? | That's what a good many people have wanted ; ¢ to know lately, judging by the num- | ber of ladies and boys who have bee up in our children's J (@) 7 | department this “What are they?” they ask. “What kind of a reefer suit can you sell for $2.50?" They are all right and come in all the leading styles. Of course we have others that will cost you more, but our usual good, substantial quality is apparent in every suit we sell. We have a magaificent line of reefer overcoats that it will do your heart good to lotn leg, e Sel You can also get leather or ings to match any suit. Boys' caps and hats, collars, neck- ties, waists, probably the greatest ortment in this western country, will always be found in this department If the gentlemen will visit our men’s hat department they will not only find as good a ine as in town, but we can save them dollars. BROWNING, KING & CO., Btors opey ovory sy eni s ¢ |8, W, Cor 10ta aad Daufas 813, Guestions I'lifs ox who, rOPOS o r 8ot the Ask your oft the task of completine, Respectfully mof the hoss who ex tracted 50,000 from Van Alen is named Germany can now ke papor from waste | Hopey. 1o is anyihing but a drono in the 000,000 worktng | The democratic candidate for governor of WOTKIRE | Muswiohiusotta ds th Don Dickinson of the *enough © who dropped in Governor Waite ni for equal rights of stomach at her home in Neponsot, near Bos. i years old, wich, Conn., grip thit has He has been “treasurer of the town for Bty wis his 0 run once mor Uit was accepted those stuck-up people who find it necessa rojourneys to “ustomed to Jump adjourn e ol the littly tickets that he buys six for a quarter, and aches his re W. Childs will present to tho o his mugniticent exhibit iu the Horticul the World's fair. Hes at 1go visiting the exposition tion of plants consists of palms of ant growth, in twenty-three varietiss; the fiums in the w 250 and about . besides many other Advertisor City and 1many emi uent men have been identified with its e andor H tuminous work A worthy successor in Colonel Coekerill, pmercial - Advertiser | and displays great. | ounger contempo | r1es. Tts high character and influeuce proves best and can indulge their national con- | thatblood and brains tell, 100 in the matte are cout they lnow ho The Dutchman is not fond of | gets on weil with his omployers, | state interference i his relavions witk as caleulated to imperil that freedom and in depender | s0mobiy. “The only thing that in any way golden; Phy smiles cmbalmed in song and story olden nshine dapple n of machi- | The wmipie orehards roeling rich with applos, tober, with thy store of treasure, Ve us vichest mensursy

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