Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 10, 1893, Page 4

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HE DAILY BEE.| E. ROSEWATER, Fditor PURLISHED EVERY MORNING A . 10 00 5 0 ty-sixth strects, T the Bditor rean have T T Sl at i The Mee in Chie v SUNDAY BER DA 15 on sale in Grand P Anditor Great N re he lnnd Files of sk | ing, Exposit the Ne- d- ¥ ean be sonn At he Administration bu o Wi ATEMENT OF CIRCULATION, t of Tiy BEE Pub ety swear that the {1 DALY BEE for the week 10, 1508, wits a8 follows 20,025 1828 Wednesid Thursday. < Friday, 8oy Saturdiy Gronie i, TZ8CnreR ribed in my Lo, 1803 P, FEiL, Notary Public. 1803, 24,075 Average Cirenlation for Anz,. Do Now [ AMERICA as a valiant defend interrational yachting aining her prestige of her title to the ™ Mk another CHAIRMAN IN won bloody victory at the democratic pri- | maries yestorday, Me. Martin is always vietorious when no one opposes him, APTER lust yoar's icnce the Kansas democrats have concluded that fusion with the populists is an iridescent dream. ar they want more of it. expe This ye NOMINATIONS for the domocratic cit; ticket avo going begging. Citizens re- quire to be urged to consent to permit the use of th names in that conn tion. THI demoer assaulting t The warning in the seems to have had Strange. ts in congress are still federal election laws. Nebraska platform but little effect. o THE democrats of the Seventh ward have a splendid opportunity of electing their candidate to the council in case no petition candidate put up by re- publicans. AS ANTICIPATED, Chicago day will henceforth stand as the high-water mark of world's fair attendance past, present and for a eonsiderable portion of the future. THE best thing that can bo said of many of the compromise measures offered in the senate is that they do not include a proposition to return to the evils of a state bank curcency. THE identity of the man who ar- ranged the somewhat remarkable as- sortment of words and phrases intoa platform for the Nebraska republicans continues to elude detection., WHEN Dave Mercer read the verdict of the Douglas county republican con- vention ontho Maxwell issue he con- cluded that his old-time backers were still ontop. His conclusion was not far out of the way. CONGRESSMAN HAINER may thank his politica) fortunes that he remained at his duty in Washington instead of coming home to pr over the con- vention of railroad and corporation dele- gates at Lincoln last week. THE lamo ducks are fluttering in overy part of Nebraska. In all the coun- ties where the republican delegates were instructed for Maxwell the ro- croant ropresentatives of the people are makica painfully laborious “explana- tiona.” side A GREAT many people in this country begin to fear that Mr, Cleveland’s at- torney general is so deeply absorbed in watching the progress of the silver fight in the senate that he has forgotten all about the democratic platform promises to wipe out the trusts, NO AMOUNT of cheap talk about the “harmony” which was forced upon the recent railvoad republican convention can distract the people's attention from fact that the convention deposed an hon- est and fearless supreme judge at the behest of the railroad managers and the atate house plunderers, He York advises its readers to serateh the judiciul tickot if they are dissatisfied with it, and it in- sists that judiciary elections should be 88 freo us possible from partisunship. Good advice is good Nebraska as well as.in Now fines everywhere ew York. in THE Lincoln mouthpiece of the cor- porations in expressing its enthusiasm for the state ticket solemnly remarks that thoe republican party of Nebrasks I8 an “organized intelligence,” Repub- licanism in Nebraska will bo a disorgan- 1zed noventity if it endorses the brazen work of the corporation junta which has taken & fresh grip upon the throats of the people. — THE news that Count Fordinand de Lesseps is dying will be received with expressions of sincere regret. Despite the clouds which surround the closing days of his life he will always be ae- corded the pluco in history deserved by the man who could plan and execute so great an undertaking as the Suez canal, & monumental piece of engineering that revolutionized the commerce of tne world. THE OMAIA DAILY BEE INCENTIVES TO COMPROMISE The persistency w which the ad f freo have op- « and 'p that | voeates silver age pos still oppose them beginning have 1 by the promoters, namel the who de overy might bring nea undoubt ftect desi 10 indnee clared ‘mselves peal to look with pect for some form of ¢ freo silver « in the gibly harborad act for the coinage the exi ratio, but o signal majority by which the bill was passed fow of them have In the house the question of com- ed itself into a question of But so wedded w nhars 1e ratio of 16.to 1 that none of the distinetly ecompromise ratios elicited the rth th Ty 10 the senators for favor u have mditional 1 the pros- The house may pos- of mpromise, en have an hopes fr ng curi of sinece t Wils dared to ° raise 0 high. promise rosnl rati to stror Inth question of t might os on the atio Ablish it as law other hand, the to have been tely lost from view, and the pro- jects for compromise aim to fy the men, not with free coinage, but with some calenlated to en- large the demana f * wiile at tho time maintaining that parity in the value of gold and silver coins of the United to which all political parties are committed. Members of the senate who are active promoting may There first.those who all along anticipated a modification of the present Sherman law, but a modit would go neither so far as unconditional repeal nor o far as free and unlimited coinage of both gold and silver. These men re- gard comp romise as in reality the best thing for the ¢ountry, and they would vote for a measure of that kind i erence to thing ns com silver substitute States in Mpromise roughly divided into two are asses, prof- 1 how- ever, who regard compromise s theur else. Those, first choice, are probably few in num- ber. The majority of the members of both branches of congress are in favor of uncondition; yortion of that jority might be induc to be sati fied with compromise us a second choice in case they become perfoctly that their first choice is unatt With th the aro sevoral working to influence their present state of mind These incentives uro largoly in their nature. First, we have the dis- like of long and eomtinuous The senate is known as a deliberative body more from the fact that it is delib- erate indoing its work than that it de- votes a great deal of time to particular measur Senators like short daily sessions and a recoss for three days in every week, and they know that the continuance of tho present contest means personal discomfort and incon- venience. As a second incontive wh have the prossure of privato business. Most senators attended the sion convineed that they abie to get back to their homes and to nut their affairs in shape. These interests are suffering from inat- tention, and if the extra extends into the regular s senators will have no time to them- until the arrival of the Christmas holids Thirdly, wo must bear in mind the anxiety of a great many of the participants in the silver debate to visic the World's fair before the gates are finally closed. They know that they have but threo weeks longor for that purpose and probably teel that they should not be deprived of the privilege by the demands of public busi. ness or the obstinancy of a handful of senators, and finally, thero are those who are simply tired of the discussion, and judging from the difficulty en- countered in securing the presence of a quorum, the latter is by no means the least strong of the number. However much we may inveigh against the intrusion of porsonal mo- tives into the transaction of public busi- ness, we cannot shut our oyes to the fact that such motives do entor. If compro- mise is the outeome of the struggle for repeal, it will not bo because its sup- porters believe that the compromise measure is the best thing for the coun- try. Aswe have said before, the gre majority in both houses of co still in favor of unconditional rep but under the cireumstances the incen- tives to compromise boaring upon their personal interests muy prove strong enough to carry one of the many amend- ments that have been proposed. almost insuperable difficulty is to agree on the (ne particular plan, mn assured inable forces personal sessions, extra ses- would soon be business session ion the sel CHAMBERLAIN ON THE BRIIISH LORDS The Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, M. P., now visiting the United States, whi claiming to have left polities behind him when he departed from the British shove, has ne given to the public a few suggestions upon the pro- posed abolishment of the House of Lords that gre well worthy of consideration by those whose eagerness to take the hint thrown out by Mr. Gladstone in his Bdinburgh speech as indicating a solu- tion to be effected in the near future blinds them to a due recognition of tho situation, Mr. Chamberlain every proposition doing away Uppor House of Parliament very face. “You could only ae- complish it.” says he, by u revolution or by persuading tha peers to vote against themselves, Suppose, for the sake of argument, that Mr. Gladstone were to attach to his home rule bill a measure to abolish the lords. Hemight pass it in the Commons, but it would be of no more value than much waste paper. Of course, Mr. Gladstone would not be ruilty of such an wbsurdity, but assuming that he were, the could not become a law until passed by the lords and assented to by the erown. T only mention this to show how really absurd the agitution on this point is,” The constitution of Great Britain makes the consent of the House of Lovds oessential not only to every change in the legistation of the country, but also to every constitutionally enscted amend- mentto the constitution itself. Just as the consent of the queen is nominal only in cases which affect the gencral weMare of the realm, were an act pussed by Parliament abolishing the monarchy, it would be within her province to inter- Pose the royal veto, so with the lords ertholess believes with the absurd on its measure it were 1ally byw to the demands ¢ sstion the life death of that bly would force it to t constitutional The hy Britain can be abolished The queen 10 some the mumons, the gt of or means of Great revolution ) every ane monar in by b measure obnoxious to h only may brought to agre self by a show of force or by fear of wor but such not contemplated by th Like- wise action may be capitulation to the requirements of the occasion, but only when it is act ing freely does it porform its legitimate functions. As Mr. Chamberlain goos on to “IF Mr. Gladstone were to ack to parliament with a the lords would probably yield to the popular will they did during the rm agitation of 1832 But to expect them to give up their own auton- omy without a struggle expectin sormething for which we Lave no prece- dent in calamities, coercion is sonstitution, with the House of Lords, its remat come b large majority, a is glish history. The House of Lords may be a tempo- rary adjunct tothe British government but 1t is not to die withont The interests of lords and queen are in- ably bound ther, When the House of Lords the monarehy goes too, sepi tog SHERIPY When election cordial, ¢ BENNETI'S SHORTCOMINGS, George A, Bennett was up for two years ago he received the rnest and vigorous support of Tue Bep. He was vouched for honest mechanie, who sossed only physical, but moral stamina hence was speeially qualified for the position of sheriff. Mr. Bennett has had a fair trial and proved himself unfit for the place. ow that we are on the ove of the republican county primaries we deem it our duty to the party against committing itself to his renomination, We do this from no personal animosity, but from a sincere convietion that he could not be success- y defended against the. charges of ympetency and want of ofticial in- ty. the very outsct Mr. Bennett was lHed to call in ex-Sheriff Coburn to manage his oftice. A fairly intelli- gent man would have learned the work of the sheriff's office in three months, but Mr. Bennett has not been able to dispense with Mr. Coburn after twenty months of his ineumbeney. and we do not believe he ever will be capable of running the oftice, excepting by a sub- stitute. as un not and Dos At comy Mr. Bennett’s incompetency is, how- ever, the least objectionable point in his candidacy for renomination, been inexcusabl keepin, numbe s Ihere has negligence in the safo g of edunty prisoners. Quite a of prisoners have made their ape from a jail that is considered im- pregnable. No satisfactory explanation has been made or can be made for these frequent jail deliveries., More flagrant and inexcusable than the jail deliveries has been the Mosher scandal. Under sentence of the United States court Charles W. Mosher was committed to prison for a term of five years. The banker conviet was r manded into the custody of Sheriff Ben- nett to be kept in confinement in the Douglas county jail until such time as he should be transported by the United States marshal to the Lincoln or Sioux Pulls penitentiary. Instead of guarding Mr. Mosher as any other criminal convieted of a penitentiary of- fense, Sheriff Bennett has extended to him the freedom of the city and the surrounding country. He has not only vermitted him to roam about, but he has at least in one instance used Mosh a guard tor a prisoner whom called on to convey keeping. When aman occupying the office of sheriff shows such a reckless disregard of the law as the custodian of conv he has forfeited the right to an indor; ment for re-election, and the party has no right to assume the risk of defeat by placing him at the head of the county ticket. lose he was to the jail for safo LETMR. WILEY STAND FRUM UNDER. The electric lighting company squan- dered several thousand dollars in - the primary eleetion last down Bemis and nominate & mayor whom they own soul and body. The question naturally suggests itself, who is paying the fiddles Mr. Wiley cer- tainly has not gone down into his own pocket to have a little political sport. If his compan§ can afford to squander several thousand dollars in political boodling it is positive proof that the taxpayers and consumers are being over- charged. There certainly can no other rational explanation. And this also suggests another qu tion: 1f Mr. Wiley can take thousands of dollars out of the company’s coffers for campaign purposes, how much has he alveady taken out for buying up mem- bers of the council? Of course, there are more ways than one to skin the M oy is an adept in the bus converting councilmen to his views. is not likely to do anything rash in buy- ing councilmen at so much a vote and so much more for passing ordinances over the mayor's veto. He can find ways of reaching the same end by buying riv bottom lots at two prices. He can annex a councilman by buying wire and other materials at good profivto theseller, He van take out insurance policies when he does not want them, and he can supply tric light at nominal rawes. Mr. Wiley is very clever and very iiberal with his company's funds and chattels, and he manages to get back ali that ho lays out with intergst at 100 per cent. How much longer Mr, Wiley can con- tinue in his nefavious work will depend upon the patience of the taxpayers and their willingness to permit Mr. Wiley to fleece them through faithless and dis- honest public servants, For our part, we insist that Mr, Wiley must either go out of politics with his boodle methods or take the chances of having his con- tract tested in the courts. Whenever that is done there can bo but one out- come, and that is the cancellation of the contract on account of fraud and noncompliance with its provisions, and an award of heavy damuges to tho city for charging for 2,000-candle power are lights when they are less than 1,200- candle power. This is not all, W trying to be ele The garbage contract, in which Mr, Wiley is said 10 be the { | the republican TUESDAY, —tip— backer and capitalist, will also be | tosted and set asido by the courts on the grouna that it 18'4 rank piece ¢ and was carricd, gver the may Ly improper ‘means. Mr. Wiley has enough, gnd we caution him to stand from under, obbery veto THERE is nothing in state platform pledging the party to up- hold the maximum freight rate which the raiiroads expect the supr court to declare unconstitutional. is the vital issue before this state in the is the only issue The the republican law ne I'his the people of present campaign. Tt m the railroad poiny railroads forced i party by their hostility to Maxwell, whose opinions they h never been able to warp or control, The appeal of the stockhold of the Ne- braska the United States court for injunctions to postpone the operation of the maximum law was imply made as o means of de 1 such time as the state sunremo might be in part reconstructed be prepared to consider the constitutionality the railroads have and put up & man to run on that issue, we sug gost that the candidate declaro his con- victions with refercnee to the maximam freight rate la No one will ask of him that he statc what his judicial ca But of view. upon avo 'S silroads to ay un court and and 1o law f. Sinc made the i clection will be in public wili de- in advanco of decisi given the mand to know his views upon the para- mount issue of the campaign —the one issue upon which the battlo in Novem- bor will be fought out. lly is such declaration demanded of the eandi- date because of the widespread 1mpros- sion that he is the er most aflected by the new law, ture of the roads provisions of the — NEBRASKA * beforesenjoyed the distinetion of having one of her noble in the cabinet. Her position in spect is uniquat and as one polit- al event follows another the e of to a pog. At fivst flush, there was asense of pride in the knowledge that singled out for a s v dispensation of of the president however, the peovle of this are asking them- selves why a cabinet officor must necos- wily usurp all the powers and high p rogatives of the state's represon neve uniquencss seems grow Nebraska had been al and favor ¢ Late: wdi- the hands extr ntivos in congress, demoeratic, populist and republican alike were in Washir » cabinet off These representatives ton drawing pay bofore took up his residence there, and some of them will be sucking the public teat long aftor he has re turned to the shades of Arbor Lodge. But at present the members of the Ne- braska delegation may woll ask them- selves what they are there for. THE franchi: dow ed corporations failed to 1 George P, Bemis in the republican primaries and convention, but they suc- ceeded in turning down Councilman Munroof the Fifth ward. Mr. Munrois one of the very few members of the council who have courageously opposed jobs and fraundulent and this has made Mr. Munr the path of schemers and The city of Omaha, and wlly the taxpayers and business men, cannot afford to let Mr. Munro be knocked out in this fashion. He has shown himself to be competent and trustworthy,and deserves a ond term. Conven are not infallible. Mr. Munro was entitled to a renomimation at the hands of his party, Georg claims a thorn in ontractors. espee; ions OCTOBER 10, eannot rule in the booth,” Is the way Charlos Sk made a “to! { held, and it was 1 gations to the state convention around v candidacy for the nominati and since he has been defeated by chi- canery and boodle we hope to seo him placed on the ofticial ballot by petition, THE people of Chadron have a right to protest against the abolition of the land office. The reasons that prevailed when the office was first located there are just s potent today, while there no grounds for removing it. The B. & M. road wants all the oftices on its line of road and ordered its right of w man, Toburlington Castor, to work job. The latter pulled the wire that leads into the agricultural building and the people of Chadron were thus de- frauded. It is to be hoped that Ne- braska ntatives in congress have influence enough loft to prevent the removal of the Chadron oflice, N EXHAUSTIVE comparison of the tements of the conditions of the na- tional banks on October 3, which has just been called for by the comptroller of the curvency, with that which was compiled for July 12 will be anxiously awaited as an indication of the prospects of a further and continuous movement toward a complete restoration of confi- dence in the business world, s rep Wit the the Platte river canal Has it slipped away from the promoters or do they expeet to pull the bonds through without providing safoguards against r waste and jobbe matter with scheme? kless Tie Sixteenth pronounced unsafe treet viaduet has heen d yot no steps have been taken to have it pulled down and a safe structure erected in its place, wnship, Globe-Demoerat, veffer can point with pride to the fact that he gets more resolutions pigeonholed than auy other wn wemoers of the senate, e . Gomg w Blnd, New York I css. The poor, benighted demoeratic editors regaling their readers with delicions stories of 4 cousiitutional tanifl, of o without favoritism, of a tariff without a free list, of a rowenus tarifl and kindred nseuse, kuow about 4s much of what is ally transpiving withm the closed doors of the wiys and means ’comuittee as o blue- bottle reflectively crawling on the outside of an orange does of its iuterior, — | 1 the seize. as much as ever, Papi world? 1 Mrs. Swoely dispiays toward | T » glanci | anything for the bill.” You have il heard the stosy of Adum and With nothing How this foolfsh p Fell into disgruce and were banish And cynical But tarn up their no: Judge.” And Humphroy structed its deiegates to use nation of Judge Maxwell ocratic party is beiug rivped up the bi party cay I come & machine for the di ronage to a hur seckers without a vigorous protest from all self-respecting democratic o duty it is to tell the truth and denounc invasions ot the functions of their party. We speak of these things to show the size and condition of the animal statein the gold bug, taril robber, trusy uropean ocratic party and claiming to be the itself.” talking in getting the editors in line though complete the undertakin third term in a republicun 1593, CAMPATGN CLATTER. “Ring rule may govern conventions, but it man ¢ Superint the Plattan enden uth ournal puts it the B. & M just before sev Bign f inspec an ir ton" repab) county conventions were iceable that some of the ountics he visited sent “uninstructed Charlio Williams { Tsland is going ot for the dis- | him out 1 his f Gran th a kuife in his honorable frauds 1 m for city clerk nces that he will bury the knife to the nilt if he s permitted to live until ¢ proper scason arrives T'he mistake of vention is very Republican who s He anno the republican state con the Central City per says he plain tc that the state of Nebraska or of the renomina and moral sentiment was undoubtealy tion of that iilustrious jurist Judge Maxw to the supreme beneh, and the ropubl party should lave risen to the oceasion The Kkicking out of i cratic party has been compared to th ishing of Avistilos by the Atlienians, *“We tired of hearing him called “The Just the Athenians, “We are tived of brains and brillianey in our who does not sneeze when Grover the a ryan by the demo a v i, party Mighty convention John T, Mallalieu of the K t break ty takes snuff, the democratic wrney refor statement that he ens fr Maxwell of the pgation. Tue Bre may have been misinformed in the case of Mr. Mallalicu, but it is true that the heads of all of the other state institutions who were present at the convention were perniciously wetive against Maxwell at the behest of the state house gang of impeachables, The Lincoln member of the republican state central committee is a fair specimen of the men who held up the recent stat vention. He was under arrest when the con vention assembled and his trial for violating the laws of the state had to be postponed m to permit him to attend, He loon kecper and conducts one of most notorious Joints in the capital His initials are Bud Lindsey, and, as a matier of course, he was an anti-Maxwell man from the start Boodlors' school denie neerea the Buffalo cc con is the city a sa tus rushes mto the | to assert one of R. Humphroy Own at Lincoln Iditor Chapman of 2 y gates from Custer county to the repnblican state convention, was sent there by his o act with eatire freedom in help. make the fe the that the dele. ing to nomination supremc acity county conven to prevent it, in all honorable the renomi has a to say this when the ¢ von, after all b iste could do means in their power to secur Poor Judge Irvin h The is the campaign has just opencd and way the dem ne of its old fighters, C.J. Bowlby 10t and will not be brought to the clof the servant of corporations and be- pensing of pat- pack of small bore ofice whose such vors, roaming over our iterest of the eastern Shylock, combines and aristocracy, astride of the dem- party There arc plenty of other papers the same vigorous strain as the above, and Irvine will have o mighty job it looks now as the campaign will be too short to Wisdo lobe Demoerat, Governor Boies is secing mof svery day that he made the pre f His life when he consente Getting Experience, carly t mistak to run for a JOVIAL JABS. Philadelphia Tines A yacht beats anothd A z0od blow tells when Yonkers Guzette: A pickpo ubber who is never so huppy ot is a land- us when he is on Lowell Courler: Worn h stmply to show thel lous. who now “louk: tend sucque- Chicago Tribune: Tight-fitting gloves arc 10 longer in fashion, Small hands, however, wttached toeligible heiresses are in demand Cleveland Plain Dealer: Littlo Charlie do angels seo whit's going on in the Papa—T suppose s0; 15 weeping. they're orten ple tured = | Constitution ‘Could you oblige “with a3 bill" K ajor; “bill collector Atlanta sir, for dinght I turn out your kind per- the gus at 10 not come before that I SWh 20 Record 2 devotion s hshand Aven'ine 1. 1o what way nghs atalliis jokes™ Washington Star: Mudze—What's thag 1 1hout you calling me an educated pig? Tuis alia mistike, 1 sald you had 11 was in a Chicago dincd expensiv the bill," Lau- and Harpers Bz ant. Cadloy poorly “NOw, waiter e bl w SYou've s ovor had y bring mo 1 o “You o sald, o it ftem,” sald Cadloy, haven't chargod wo COMPENSATION. Detroif Free Press, It an first you don't succeed, 1 Al things And if you d You w Lhe glel that's w THE BUOT OF EVIL, Fielen Combes in Kate I eld's Washington, Ly Wiio (i ved in the Garden of Eden, to wear but the léaves of the trevs, Aud nothing but apples to foed on with the curious minds, Il parcats of everyt pl And, of course, 1L wis blamed on the womin, or since then, when d tter what for The people who Critic Thut wus used at the very beginiin; o1, Who @ niotive might seek, any effort Lo find it, o5 and usk With u sneer, Well! who was the woman behind ity a mortal bas S hils sinning - utter the plen Don's mike Highest of all in Leavening Power,.—Latest U. 8. Gov't Report. Yol ABSCLUTELY PURE Baking Powder | tographer himselr ——— S — PEOPLE AND THINGS. NEBRASK A AND NEBRASKANS Senator Stowart's specch consists f 70.000 | A fine new school house 1s bolng words and divers threats Venne Senator Wolcott is an oxponsive eater. | prceie business His talk is also built that way | pied and a Washington feels Mr. Rov, G T \ o, Corean minister, will 1 8¢ | pagtor of tive costume on stato oceasions okt Tho aldermen of a J munificent salary of § a monious taxpeyers that cted at V1 in Talmage m wad r Ton the is oceus society ioved T been w fonal ¢ rdained ag ch ot an ha ¥ town receive the yoar, yet the parsi consider them dear at rsc old resident and the city « the age of 65 years The tri of Wahoo il, is dead at ber i defeated office soeker there is much R R L B in the thought that it is bettor to | \yihlive wominaled Wohn 8 eht and than ntoa bbb coop. Dixon ¢ connells 1o licen noxt The drys are orgar t whisky to a tin A Grand Island s invented what ho a4 cueu wehine. 1 idicial dise Robinson ot 10 th have fo cold blufr eport that a trial of speed had arranged betweoon crack 10comotives now the World's fair is denied such triy under consideration Mr. and Mrs. Sam Al the f inotts f them ot away s BEmma Lov has Maine al descondant Lat Bunker Hill An opulent Boston banker 5 wooed a rass widow of 82, indulged fn ous \tory seances and an engagos ring, and then shook her cold. A jury has assessed tho damages to hor heart strings at £40,000 Harriet lost w0 give didy fair a Iremon first premium at tha t rooster commitied Iton a nail in his 1t is nty req ty throughout that sprin Against nnett U of Tar dark and last accounts ring beon Aid the I about 1,500 py tion in the savie or ing purposes One of the humanity county the facts are the of Que Ohtonic L Bl 1'room | Jive Now of the Tsabella society of Chicago, is ex- | g e pected to arrive in Now York this weok Mot When it has been placed in position the club will give a reception in honor of the sculptor. Justice Field will in his thirt | year of service on the supreme bench the ) moved oming term. ‘This record has boen sor- passed but once in tho history of the court and led but four times” Nothingis | (God sa last fall's report that he rrinds the pulp out clean, dried. The ind weighs work a v sced for s parates Warrey General comely wmer 1 ment incredible stories of ine wd ladison there o Hosmer's her Isabella, which will stand in n Gr He has a | ablo h wud i Borg mf cat e i chicken house n ed mother of the 1 wnd, since lasy contly L. M Borglands ving in tho woalk 1p- s return owe matter to Commis- who drove to the ind that the r in nailed together, with a littlo hay covered by an old piece of bed ticking, luy a - human being mother of tho inhuman wi owned the place, Chickens and thi wround e poor old eresture, filth and corruption was in the vory atmosphere and the ieh al most drove Commissioner Johnson from tho place. The oid lady had a stick about five feet long in her hand, and when asked by Me. Johnson what she did with it she said el ne of (| mother neh m i reported the heard now of his WIS S00N Lo retire Shortly and found the poor « ben house on 4 vude | man Grove, sioner A, | not been t itor Allen v of e 1fter the arrival of 1 Washington he was stoy the senate chamber by who informed him that no one nators was allowed on the floor, Mr. Allen smiled wly, waved his hoad and said: ~Very well, soany, I'm a senator. 1 don't look it, 1 know. but I tho same,” and he passed sacred precinet Colonel Tngersoll is ou the lookout for a SD00K wtland Palmer, tne late prosi dent of tie Ninoteenth Century ciub, was an intimate friend of At intidel, and promised that he would mnke every cffort 1o return after s death and thus convinee Ingersoll of the veality of a future tvip, Colonel Tn Il acelares that he bas veen u the alert for any manifestation of his dead friend’s presence, but has never had s : h B e i 5 ol e | 1 R ke o i LALLY the old lady broke one of her legs, A Prof. Lombroso is an Italian sei DS sictinaG | tho Urgian boLs: bt Tkt who has turned his learned attention VIVO 17 6lin Liitar B0 BRIR0 IRy LR ot o T B 0 S E Bt HoBIHE 5 ok (Rbiie b eon il Ginb mutanbiouss S oHiE around in librs Eathotlin Informabion (i rlntbii,: NauiFc Wits move Miiid ho s o mnonulos s horasMIt G SN VBRI gy an it wolli it e n et Ut sl HioR M ELAL L8 nir WalsunlLcom BRrativel Vi by cast el l6as GAID1G VAR SNEal TOREIE lately, an ontirely maternal action and not | 15 WP riphIs over siwce. On the in any way poculiar to lovers. ~He quotes | ot o lastJuly the poor woman was v Homer and the old Indian litorature to sus. | jitio (e hon house, 4 vlaco hardly il f tain Ins contention, althouih o adimits that | D% At there sh renined wail Comn in the modern Hindu pooms - twelve kinds of | FOWCT ToMMSON eotledt thete, - Ho kive are nentioned. mother into the house afld provide for her in Generals Sickles and a decent manner, or the county would tako defendants in a rathe charge of her and he would have to foot the damages. At the recent reunion at Gettys- | bill, and probably be prosecuted besides, burg & photographer attemuted to take a | Tuiy frightened the mercenary hound and victure of a group in which the two generals | ho 100k the woman into the house, but the A They objected, the pho- | poor soul had been oo long exposed to the caphet persisted and finally some one | weather and balf starved, ana last Thursday ed over the camera and kicked the pho: | ghe died and was retieved from tho curse of off the fleld. He now | uu unuaturalson. She was S0 years of ago. sues for damages done lis camera, his por- sonand his feelings and declares that he TR T will ficht it out onthat line if it takes all St 1and Pioncer Press, Now York society is allagog over the pros- | , One repeal senator has already wenkened. pective “coming out” of Gertrude Vander- | This is Senator Roach of Dakota. He now bilt, daughter of Cornelius Vanderbitt, The | 8unounces that he is not for unconditional young woman was, of course, born with a al. Ho is for that sort of repenl which silver spoon in her mouth, and’ her entrance | is conditioned unon the perpetuation in some inosqcloty/ls|to baiaigntlized: bygantenter (100w orm o fitheRdaluitious ey IlpWIiBtiEs: tainment Upon 85 muculficent a soale that | PEA! LS designed to rentedy. s This dispogy 1 will rival the bivthday fetes of royai per. | effectually of Ronch sonages. Ward MeAllister and . Frederick de Peveter sitting up nights, each en- deavoring to secure the sublime honor of leading the german on tho auspicious oc- casion. S | stinki bour made of entist o the Butterficla are the singular suit for S — AN UNDISCOULAGED FARMER, Harper's Bazar, T met ajolly far alovely westo A'wan Of fertile ¥ that was never to fail, Who, when T told of haiistones seven ounces fall in welght, Said he had seen twely cighteen sixty-« n val Known e~ Intellectunl Activity in the West, The outlook. “The significant fact in the life of the cen- tral west of today is not its materiat but its intellectual activity and progress. Few peo- vle not familiar with the history of the last ten yearsin that section understand how cuger and how contagious s the desire to command the resources of literature and art. From the very beginuing the west has been full of moral and intellectual impuise; it was peopled with men and women of in. telligence and aspirations; it has been strewn with colleges and schools; but its work has been so pressing and exhausting that the riper culture, so sreadily secured in older communitics, has been postponed to the comparative rest and leisure of today. Too Muchi of n Dose. New York Tribun Tt appears that Mr. Fitch, cna elections committee, is not satis Tucker bill, which his_absence, and -ounce ones back in A when Tsnoke of tish ['d caught, in certain forcign vills, measured twenty-seven fect from nurri- the to eills, He said, with b frank ind fre That he hia e clghtecn sixty I v unraflied and a manner iht them ~three twice as long in And then Berlin Whose mo potioes ing 5 Whereon he wishod Jim Hankinson was nlive He'd seen him hold six apples in his mouth in sixty-five. Ispoke of having met u fellow in th was lurge onough to get threo lis coustn Tt seemed to muke no odds to him how I'd ex- aggernt Py He'd wlways' goone better i Tate Hoy ith Wn. sss's Jawbono aia! the mighty Samson slay Ten thousand of his foemen he would say. rman of the that ed with the was broughu forward in proposes to _introduce a measure much less sweeping in its terms, unless the Tucker bill is greatly amended. There is no doubt that the latter accurately sots forth the intention of the southerners, which is to repeal cvery Inw designed to carry into effect the fifteenth amendment This is practical nullification. With the south in the suddle, who can be astonished at such a manifestation of southern temper? BROWNING, KING— Largost Manutasturors and Rytailari of Ulothing in bs Worl L. s0 1 thought Just to see what He lstened most intently, with an ever-broad- enin As though heard of el 1 when doi ny tile wis trud For Hamison's seif had told 1t him in oightecn SINLY-1WO. aperson that had never L he told ine that he knew What are they? That's what a good many people have wanted to know lately, judging by the num- of ladies and boys who have been D, AR ber up in our children's | department this " they ask. “What Kind They are all right and come in all the leading styles. 0f course we have others that will cost you more, but our usual good, substantial quality is apparent in every suit we sell. “What are they? of a reefer suit can you sell for $2.50?" week. We have a magnificent line of reefer overcoats that it will do your heart good to see. You can also get leathep or clotn leggings to match any suit. Boys' caps and hats, collars, neck- ties, walsts, probably the greatest assortment 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 dollasr. BROWNING, KING & CO., Btore open every evening il |8 W Cor {Bth and Duglas 8. Daturduy wil 1

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