Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
: o et PPy wor s e e T o ———— Gt = roop~ e A o B e S e e ey . e ¥ p 1 0y T v \ OMAHA DAT % SUNDAY, JULY 1, 1891 u G Y i —————————————————————————ee et et e ettt ettt o RIS B ML o SR o NN i e a0 o - —_— 4 " v . g ' i . = - THEOMAUA DALY BEFR CHEED IN TIE PURLIC SCHOULS. 18 there any reason to wonder why the aver- | well understood that_the United £tates would [ distinct influence in modifying its forms. PEOPLE AND THINGS. “" ]g IS MM“VG TROUBIE — “ ] Within the past week the Board of Bdu- | Age student’s expenditures reach a sum ol- | not permit any int€fbkence on-the part of | The only education that avalls to prevent Yiie 5 i 20 I o B NORBWATEN, iy ention has been foFn By ovet the action ft | most appalling? Yet it Is unquestionably | nations of BuropSwwWat they muyt kcep | crime In any substantial degree must be "'r“'"x"':l”“":":‘" few files on several sugartorla ot [ 17 ) MRS | Waw taken fn the election of teachers for | true that students able to spend money | thelr hands out of the civil conflict in the | education that fs as much physical and | “poyiiaily speaking Governor Walte Ia i v agn r | the tigh school. Two of the teachers have | 1avishly are generally mors actively sought | southern republic '4nd they respscted the | moral as intellectual, and education that en- | tarred with the same stick Demcorats in the Senate Have a Hard fion . 4w | been dropped from the roll for rellgious | After and more lenfently treated than are | woll known sentiment of the American peo- | ables the individual to play a falr part In | 1t Mr. Debs Is wise he will keop oft the Time Keopiog Him in Line. S A ’ 199 | vansons. One of thase beeauss sho fs a pro- those who are compelled to work thelr way | ple. The course of the United States tought | social life. The proportion of criminals, | grass in Judge Caldwell's preserve. ! 18 | fessed Catholle and the other beeause she | through college. As the number of the | Brazil that the Monroe doctrine is 1o empty | says this authority, with some Intellectual Nfw s the summer of royal -;h\gwu;-‘m {2 | ie presumed to be & nonbellover in the di- | former class of students increases and the | theory, but a genuine source of help for re- | life is now becoming vory large; the pro- "“'\*';'JI':""(‘"“; by the rieing SO o wd ou. | PETERMINED TO HAVE FREE SUGAR " % | vine inspieation of the scriptures. The case | number of the latter class decreases, it be- | publican institutions everywhere fn the west- | portion of criminals who are acquainted with | jgbienh, AACTH LAFERE JUCHE Toraceeds % FIee, of Miss Crowley has not been discussed in | comes comparatively more difficult for the | ern hemisphere, anll this teaching has given | any trade at the time of the crime is very | ings. & [, ’ | Speaker Crisp Talks of the State of Dasle . \ Fwontydoarih At | he prints by friend or foe. She s an | self-sacrificing student to endure the odious | to that republic, agjt pray, to all the repub- | small; the proportion of criminals engaged | Mr. Pullman graciously permits the rail- 08 In {e 1 v Rynet iy 1" “real, Omaha woman, a graduate of our High | comparison that is made between him and | lics of the south, a stronger sense of security | in their trade at the time of thelr crime is | Foad managers to enjoy a monopoly of the "5e_atid Ekpredses Hime L4 " ke - worrying. self as Belng Well Ploased With o' Viw {5 b Wil mae hool and has been a teacher In our pub- | his richer fellow against possible Barapean agsression. The | smaller still. “Wo are now approaching a | i St ; i P W wningion. 19 ) { Mr. A. Co oyle is p o 6 oress ) B AL O lo schools for mors than twelve years To take another view of the same problem, | American republic Witt*not meddle with the | point,” says Mr. Ellis, “at which it will be- | lvr'lm‘h;vh_”:f.‘vluf‘" hf‘"‘;“‘y““";“‘m Sivasent . Ll o ' g L « and sdi | Dneing all that time nobody has ever [ who can point to a single college president | political affairs of its sistor republics ond It | come obvious that every citizen must be ed- | things of this country. g s 3 af piph o et harged her with offensive partisanship for | who has not been constantly making appeals | will tolerate no interference with them by | ucated to perform some soclal function. Colonel Breckinridge is righteously wrath- WASHINGTON BUREAU OF THE BER, Al S N shenid be | Mer creed and the pretext under which she | for additions to the daily growing and al- | other nations. The friendship hetween the | In the interest of soclety he must be en- | ful against upstart political hacks. He pre- A 1407 F Street, N. W, R goeed 0 dubiiehie emiany. | has been dropped Is very flimsy. Partios | ready unwieldy endowments? It is seldom | United States of America and the United | abled to earn a living by that function. It ters the closed varioty. it 1 WASHINGTON, D. C., June 30. made g the order nt (h " lave whispered to members of the school | that he makes a public address without | States of Brazil will be made stronger by the | we close the soclal ranks against him he rv{“"nlvlr”:‘n‘lt\? qulr'l‘,"':lv'\:{lu‘!::;-rh;vlrw‘:M\‘\ n:vlv”l::: S Tflx»mlvu ;hn belief and expectation ot A " FUNEII R COMPARY. | jarg that Miss Crowley had attempted to [ deprecating the lack of funds at his com- | honor which the latter will show us on the | will enter the anti-social ranks, and the | in tho graduating class at Smith college U8 | qomocratio membr of e bory o Yery AR OF Cift make proselytes for a nunnery in one of [ mand. Ho regularly deplores the fact that | coming anniversary of our Declaration of | more educated he is the more dangerous he | term $EwC B, ‘WHTTYObe Tor the £ Lt ;"""‘““‘ worne 11 Tas A her recitations. It turns out that this is a | the alumnl of his institution are not more | Independence. will become." Congressman Curtls of Kansas spent sev- | e e revenue bill. The Hemin ¢ i oFil p At _ ckey. He | COUNLTY I8 well aware of the fact that Sena- i g ompany, iy A repetition of the fable of the three black | wealthy and more disposed to share thelr Among the principles acceptod by all [ OFAl of his earlier vears as & T aatest | tor HIll of New York has harassed ank Lintiar i, wn g . " i i 3 o 5 claims to have ridden some of the fastest | O of Ne o as harassed a P iy Moening, Meaning and” Suniay tes | crows, ‘The so-c lled attempt to enlist re- | wealth with their alma mater. For the ILARY. prison reformers not the least important | o B8 GO LR In the west, annoyed the democratic managers in every e orults for a nunnery occurred in the road- | same reason he welcomes the rich man's 800 | myo fronosed fncome tax schedule of the | I8 that in all prisons moral and religions | ge.United States Senator James W, | conceivable manner. 1t is not generally ar e 204 | ing of Walter Scott’s “Marmion,” in which | as a student because his arrival may 1ead | ;0w tariff, as amended in the senate a few | Culture should be the leading reformatory | Bradbury, who Is 92 years of age, delivered | known, but it fs nevertheless a fact, that H n the author, who certainly was not partlal to | to a sense of obligation terminating In & [ gove e “oer ot FOC T i the opera- | influences, and a prison school, with com- | the cration at the laying of the cornerstone | Senator Mills of Texas has privately causea n r ‘W | Catholics, represents that a nun had | handsome donation or bequest from his father | ¢jon of 1ts provisions the salary of the presi- | petent (instructors, should be an indls- i‘v’r(.flnu Lithgow library bullding, In Augusta, | 1no friends of revenue reform almost, It 717 | attempted to cscape from the convent had | or perhaps later from the student Mimself. | gont of the United States. The amendmont | pensable roquirement. Productive labor, as ho guardian of the star-eyed goddess, re- | 1Ot GUite, as much anxiety and solicitude as " " 3. | been walled In as a punishment. of | The colleges prefer rich men's sons as stu- | po wpich this was effected was doubtless | & moral and hyglenic necessity, as well as [ forring to the situation in Washington, de- | Senator Hill has opealy and aggressively : : 130 | tho girls, we are told, asked Miss Crowley | dents. Such students give promise of making | i oduced as a mark of courtesy to the | In Justice to taxpayers, should dominate | clares “The confusion Is radiative; its' dis- | done. 1 1 whether nuns are walled In nowadays and | the colleges themselves richer, The more rich | (hiar oxecutive of the nation, but it was | €very prison, and as a reformatory influence :n:u.;w epldemic. Henri is unduly agi- ator Mills, In the finance committes, ; ation, ated. sl jon . differe ’ ofine B sho rosponded that the only convent she | students the higher the necessary average | agopted without dissent, probably becauso | Industrial training is deemed to be indis- | gl ) exeSecres :"‘m"‘; 'M”“:‘ a I“I’: 5 ""r-'l duty on refined i had ever visited .was the Sacred Heart in | expenses, but likewlse the richer the col- | yho wonators voting upon It were convinced | pensable. tary Evarts are all related. The latter two [ o th Ceommittee. that 1t wo ing "atine this ecity and that had mothing but coal in | lege that the president's salary would be ex- T === are double cousins, both on their fathers' | G U8 FRT i ‘; ’}'\ was the desire oaiwt | s basement. Incidentally she is sald to = x AR empted from such a tax by the constitution It has been just seventy years since a | and on their mothers' side, and when Mr. he president that this should be done and 1 A MONOPOLISTIC SCHEME DEFEATED. 3 ruler of France has died while occupying | Evarts was a youth Senator Hoar's father | an absolute necessity in order to secure the & tor inwnid" and’ Fetiiened have pointed to the commentary on whether or not an express stipulation to ¥ Wan-hie, guaralan ERaga,0r the Bill. SeNN oA VST i 1531 | L\t irmion” as it appears In the text book. | The republican governor of Massachusetts | ¢t omoot were tncorporated into the bill, | the Position of chief executive of tho govern. | Was his BUATGIAT. | passage of the bill Senators Veat, Jones Potat i | g has, by the exercise of his veto, defeated . L DL A G b e b Lt it [ 20 DAL LU A B O UG LU LU Bl LR Dally g 304 | 80 much on that score. » The words of the constitution on this point | (& S hie the other day, near where W. T. Drake had | ously, but consented finally to the placing i dropping of Miss McGee from the | @ scheme of the Bell telephone monopoly [ o oe el § 8 (R NOR® BECRE S0 FRENCCCC | King, made his exit from the throne in | hung his coaf, and the animal managed to | o ofe SRR TERER T (T BECCHE ARORAT N TZACHUCK. has caused some discussion in the | Which ought to Increass his popularity With | ooniruction, They say simply that “the | 1524 peacefully and naturally. ~Sinco then fehow up $2.116 in notes checks and babl | mainty becau R iR (RUTato R e 1 il L inm . ks e the people of that state, though he has L YSEnY/ not a single French monarch or French | bills out of one of the pockets. Another ar- y because of the insistence of Senator t pinge "' n Piblle. papers, The charge against her originated i » president shall at stated times receive for president has been permitted to retire I gument in behalf of hard money Mills, ” ey Pi with Rey. John Williams, pastor of Se. | Of course incurred the relentless enmity of | ). gorvices a compensation which shall s 0 retir® In & ) O ev. John Jasper of Richmond, Va., the | After the bill was reported to the senate manner ordinarily to bo expected. Charles | ;. \gt00 of all slave preachers, Is now [ and was being discussed Senator Mills pre- X was forced to abdicate under stross of the | over 80 years old and belloves a8 frmiy a8 | pured an amendment striking . out the July revolution in 1830. Louis Phillippe | he did in 1878, when his famous sermon was suftercd a similiar fate In the February | breached, that “The Sun Do Move." He re- 7 cently gave an outlino of the celebrated dis- revolution of 1848. Napoleon I saw his | cUL% ST AR GEME 00 s composed In | this amendment to Senator Berry of Ar- S ———————————— e 3 Y Patrabas HOIDAl ohEWEN, the men whom he has thwarted in their Rev. Mr. Williams declares that he does | attempt to more than double thelr wealth by a simple act of legislation. The not care to meddle with the teachers’ con. troversy, but he does meddle with it ana | Massachusetts legislature passed a bill giving nefther be increased nor diminished during the period for which he shall have been elected.” Those who argue for the abso- lute inviolability of the president's salary The Industeials seem to have almost com pletely disappoared in the shufe duty of one-eighth of a cent and placing refined sugar on the free list. He showed All the other states are getting 1 0f | 1 uddles it up with his high church notions | to the Bell Telephone company tho privilege | 1yaintain that this clause protects it against 7 Nebraska with thelr congrorsional nomina- | 4o 4 narrow-gauged tleus of the fune. | Of Incroasing its stock from $20.000,000 ts | gucronchments of evory kind, particularly | POftion and his fortunes wrecked by the | order io set at rost somo doubts which had | kansas, who became very much alarmed and : tans 50,000,00 ’ S . 2 Franco-Prussian war. Thiers, MacMahon, | arisen In the mind of a young member of [ agitated and endeavored to disuade Senator [ S, tions 'of the publie school system. The ,000,000 without any of the restrietions | yno navment of an income tax. A similar n a AR A60K b Mills from his radical course. Senator Mills, Grevy were all forced to resign from the however, In a dictatorial manner, told Sen prosidency. And now Carnot makes his [ The fineat A e o Amer- | ator Berry that nothing could induce him exit by the assassin's hand. The recora | i M Y08 S0 H LY C. Hannor of that | t0 change his mind and that he was deter- Is certainly not attractive. With but ons | city, whose painting, “The Bagpipe I Loy q;.’,n:mr\nl.r i S ey, m“: 4 s D L, ould fig Senator Berry, In grea exception the public carecr of every Fronch | was shown at the last academy exhibition | fomg pem 06 P PEGEOR R ST Imxlm l:l lu|-<lm similar issues by rallway | copetitutional provision protects the salaries and kindred organizations. - The obvious | o feqeral judges from diminution during purpose of the company was to distribute | (o terms for which they are appointed this new stock at par among the holders | 413 some of them objected to the imposi- of the present share capital. As the stock fdea that in this enlightened age any man, whether nan or clergyman, should ask the Board of Education to exact from teachers a confession of faith in all the A fow moro base ball games between the Pats and tho Leans in this weather will place the fat man among the curlosities of the prohistorie age i miracles of the Old and New Testament tlon of the income tax levied during and e o s Afri- I ; ot hemounce. as.an nndol any. teachés | Of tho company is now quoted at about 3200 | urior “tho. war, but the lssue was never | FUGT Slnco the great revolution of 1780 has f therey The, boarg B BASHERS B LIS AL | situation, and th Titte giant teom Missourd t wers not for this succession of ] ¢ g S X an Methodist Episcopa have en’ ) walked quietly to the desk of the Texa per of $100 par value, this Would | y5ineq in the courts, The proposed measure | O™ to an untimely end. It is to be hoped | gaged to pay him $1,000 for the picture, and | i He e ‘o Yl hded fo force such that does not believe that the world was created in six days of twenty-four hours that the future occupants of the executive | will sell reproductions of it among their peo- | /& UL b B TBIERERER TR T hat atrikes how would the merc office in Franco may be attcnded by better [ ple. Mr. Tanner, who is in his prime, Wil | g on \us his intention, and he showed the be able to explaln with plausibility the slow: ntile agencies amount to a stock dividend of over 100 per *h the public wouid be requirea includes them among the expressly ex- each, or that the sun was crea after empted classes. rther study. ness of our recovery from the financial de s ot % ' return to Paris for further study. writtanicopy: to: Senat o ot the earth for the especlal benefit of Its tn. [ to pay returns. In other words, this leglsla- | o the other side there is room for the | 2USPlees- it e R e Aveat)s J Lat pr s T i St rehension. Rev, Mr, | tion meant that a stock which now sells 2 s T MILLS TORE UP THE AMENDMENT. - - uabitants, passes comprehension. Rev. Mr. contention that the ramers of the const- | Some .ot the fllustrations of substitutes SECULAR SHOTS AT THE PULPIT. 16 900 bifer that Wineadment di N on the market at $200 would be put out at par, thus enabling the holders of Bell Tele. phone to reap $30,000,000. Here would be a total of $60,000,000 on which the people would have to pay charges. tution nover intended to give the president | tor slecping cars to bo used during the con- [ oo TN Gion Theologieal [ 4107 Vese VL il voto for it ”“‘Tw"i sas Star: U Mills, before I vote for that amendmen any specfal advantages over his fellow cltl- | tinuance of the Pullman boycott are almost | seminary has changed its constitution 50 as | [ \iji tell the senate and the e zens in the way of evading taxation. Tak- | ag ridiculous as the fllustrations of substi- | to give the board of directors power to em- | gooupred fn the committee room so that ing their language in ‘its most literal sense, | tutes for coal for use during the late coal | PIOY others than ordained ministers as | thore . nny sall). 3 coal I here will be no treachery nor deceit prac s members of the faculty. This has been | ticod upon the public.’” ¥ LAk This (s the first week in July and the | Willlams might as welt denounce as infidels ARrift bIil i <till undisposed of in the senate. | all teachers who do not believe in the The conference committee and the accept- | divine inspiration of the doctrine that the of con- | earth has four corners and is as flat as a ance of I *~port by both hou: Wress ar \ come. There is still scope | pancake. If his peculiar notions were car. it means simply that the statutory salary | miners' strike. It must be remembered that i ofer o Sov Ireent 3 or that the seminary may retain it S prophets to exercise their [ ried out in the High school and university | ‘l" "':;’”‘ to the action of Governor Green- | o¢ the president shall not be altered dur- | slooping cars are not yet fifty years cld, and S rvioca ot Det Btiggs, whosa cHlet valia SR OLE IR I B QD (o iht all text books that teach tho theory of | Balge. the Springfleld Republican, which I8 | g hig term of office. It probably was cal- | that the carly railroad travel was entirely | to the institution consists in his refutation | Sontorence. with Mills, Vest narrated. the ubls 3 LERELILG, AU (RO RO Gl of dogmas which are regarded essential by | gor TG, ity TS, West marrite culated to cover any attempted confiscation | without special accommodations for sleeping. the suprema deliberative body of the Pres- TRt ; nfl'll added: al e a see hat M s Is tearing up that amend- :Y':'I:Tr ::":”:"; :‘:'!'":;:::”l;g’r;"’"’:s;‘"n"": of that salary by the imposition of a spe- | In European countries the Introduction of | hyterian ehurch. (s the face of an extremely strong party Kres- clal tax that would hit the president | sleeping cars is a thing of only a few years | Springficld Republican: Rev. Mr. Mur- | *Thig Incident Is but one of many of the sterious secrecy | scriptures. 8 ¥ Pl alone, but it offers no; excuse for the presi- | back, and both in this country and abroad | doch of Rome, Ga., has been deprived of | o5t annoying and harassing kind which me m urrounded his silent de- | If there Is anything that should be ex- | Sure "; ""'9 other direction, and he may be | gent to shirk the'‘burllens of government | the great majority of railroad passengers | IS pastorate over a AT r]'::":"“'»; hampered the work of the democratic manas vason will probably appear | cluded from the schools it is sectarfanism in | Sure of the approval of the people. Regard- | which ordinary citizans are compelled to | do not as a rule resort to the patronage of | hememuper. His nowspaper was reputablo | b gl o revenue L o spectacular porformance is a | any form. It teachers are to be catechized | INE the contention that the Bell Telephone | pear. Carry the opposite doctrine to its ex- [ slceping cars or parlor cars. It would be | and honest, and only the bishop's notion | wien Mr, Mills, upon the floor of the senate o fully developed. as to their individual conception of biblical [ cOmpany is not a public corporation, but a | (remo and it at ohce becomes absurd. It | but an extremely small percentage of the | that newspapers and ministerial duties don't | gonounced the bill as a protectionist measure — teachings we might have a clashing among | Private manufacturing company, and 50 not | would prevent congress from decreasing the | world's population that would miss the ac- | MiX caused Murdoch's dismissal from s | and sneered at the work of his party col- Eplscopalian low churchmen and ritualists; | Sublect to the regulation of the state save | appropriation for The: maintenance of the | commodations wore every sleeping car in | oo rking ra the mowspapor, which Is. the | lcugucs Senator Mills has called tho pends among Christians who believe in infant | Dy a stretch of precedent and authority, the | white house because ithe president might | existence blotted off the earth. But that | larger pulpit of the two, and gives him by i,'"f,,x‘f,‘,,“o, l,’;éf"g.",,’;\':,‘:‘ .fffl';"fi:"}",",’,,.m:; jans who deny that | Republican says it fs essentially unsound, | feel impelled to expend part of his own | small percentage would miss them badly. | far the wider hearing. to do with the preparation of the revenus evolution and all works on geology would does not shroud the an- | be expurgated as heretical and tending to s return to the United | Weaken the Delief of the literal text of the Yale has about determined to abolish the | formalism of Its commencement exercises " o.and In the future to grant degrees without | damnation and Chris ] permitting the students to inflict long-pre- | any soul can perish; among the Seventh-day for not only is this parent company behind | compensation to keep up former pretensions. Boston .Mv\-rnsvr; \'l;!‘u'n'0 ’l;?'w'('lm:r-l‘g: bill, and believed absolutely in free sugar, pared orations upon thelr enduring friends, | Baptists, the Ascensionists and forty other | &l the other telephone companies directly | It would prevent -congress from ousting Looks 1hat Way. E”y‘"f\fiiiii Frot. Briggs can bo tetained as & ;\‘::‘“\‘;\‘L‘Kll}\:.'l(5|x75l;‘:x:\p£ n:‘l-'Lrlle‘.:'lnx‘:fi(rlhlr‘::rm:: Wor all of which both students and their | sects of professed Christians. serving the public, but the company asks for | the president from the white house alto- Philadelphia Times. member of the faculty, even though deposed | protection because he was induced to be- Occasionally finding petrifactions in our | "3 tying which has not yet been done—trom | Yave that it is the proper thing for him to % % z at | 1ts increase of capital stock 5 e 5 - friends have cause to rejoice. Rev. Mr. Willlams assures the public that Incre pital stock in order to | gother, because compeling him to pay rent | giger cemoteries suggests that some of our e inistry of the Presbyterian church i . [ R he does not care whether Miss McGee is | embark in the long-distance telephone busi- | diminishes his incéme in a greater degree | fogvish citizens may be fossils before they | M€ YorOLSnno . : | 0 as a democrat in order to aid in securing 5 s ival of Vi 7 are burled. The trustees have taken a just and Wise | (1o enactment of a revenue bill. Senator 0 Just In order not t Jlay | punished for alleged teachings of the Dar- | Ness as a rival of the Western Union Tele- | than taxation. It would exempt the presi- 2 course, the only ccurse consistent with duty, | ¢ et 0 o dlplay undue dis- | P A - ourse, y ¥+ [ Gorman is primarily a democrat, an Intense eslmination the authoritics at Washington | winan doctrine of evolution, but he ought [ Braph company. The lines of the American | dent from increased taxation on taxable The Epidemic Threatens Ka honor “andthe welfare of - the reatest | yiiian, far above the sncers of cansure of have had a few Wall strest brokers indicted | to care it he is a true disciple of Christ and egraph and Telephone company are to | property which he might hold within the Chicago Herald. selicolotsnal red learning under thell cite. | Mills or ‘any other democratic member of the extended wherever the Western ULl 3 Ao T ~| From the fact that a terrific cyclone has ¥ b - | senate. extend ) e Western Utlon | jurisdiction of a state, because if that prop- | o VRO (B TREGANAL . ferrife veione has |1 Jt" Sho™ interests of the Presbyterian | S 0 0o U WELL SATISFIED now penetrates, and it is to seek to do the | erty were unimproved such increased taxes | inferred that William J. Bryan has trans- | church itself, which stands much in need | 257 BRYAVELLS ferred his free silver propaganda to the | of more men of Charles A. Driges’ charac- [ am much gratified,” sald Speaker Crisp, along with tho newspaper correspondents [ his teachin He should have been the L for refusing to answer questions propounded | first to protest against depriving a helpless by the senate bribery investigating commit- | woman of her livelihood just because some | business now done ECRELACHER shil rectl| SpouidinayotoRcomeligutiotenisfotlalalimatl| i fowerdatate) e enliber to train up young men for | “at the expert use and satisfactory manner in & {se. Tho newspaper men are really the ones | busybody has represented hor as lacking | means of the telegraph service. The odds | ary. L e 3 which the present house of representatives whom the senate wants to get at, and if | faith In the divine Inspiration of the Testa- | are With the telephone company in such a | Look at the question from this standpoint Possibility of a Gold Premium. e has dispatched its public business. fow brok 4 e rivalry and it is reasonably urged that if the | and this exemption is itselt a violation of Ghicago Reoora? BLASTS FROM RAM'S HORN. In view of the near approach of the close A fow brokers suffer at the same time it [ ment. It he was a broad-minded Christian | I : : ‘exemption L mherotintiot fat o ENOI AN kTt o ot o of the session Mr. Crisp has been asked will make little difference. The dignity of | he would direct his efforts to her reclamation | company is to give the best possible rates | tho constitution. The constitution not only | the government, but there is danger of | g ove sends out no mis:lonaries to outline the general features of legislation 5 s he s z | to the public the cost of its extensions should | protects the president's sala T - | & préemium on gold. ~That this danger A LRELII s L accomplished by the house and what will re- " the senate must be preserved. to the faith as he sees it Instead of casting v L RDEeBICY alary rom aim- | &, BICOLT, o ountry furnishes the reagon | A temptation yielded to is a step toward | main'"to " round out the work of the ses~ o e the stigma of infidelity upon her and seck- | Nt be enhanced in any way which legislation | inution during the period for which he has | why the New York banks are not break the pit, mal Superintendent Byrnes of the New York | ing to circulate injurious reports concerning | can prevent. been elected, but it also prohibits its in- | thelr necks ‘wetting ;'r\"“f';u‘;;"" other w| We are on trial ourselves whenever we | “We have been singularly frée from cx- The action of the legislature in this mat- | crease during that time. If the president is s SR condemn another. asperating delays, and the great questions . police Is the author of an article in one of | her and revamping old woman's gabble [ this month's magazines entitled “How to | about what she is alleged to have uttered In Protect a City from Crime.” From the | the presence of her pupils. As a matter of The true herc is the one who has the | of tariff and finance have been acted upon courage to do right. with promptness, considering the vast busi- , e inds his own business | ness involved. And yet there has been ne feditor/a duty) | e man fhop mins curtailment of reasonable debate, and I ter is another illustration of the great in- | subject to the same measure of taxation Facts Refuto A fluence of the Bell telephone .monopoly in | as other people then the remission of his San Francisco Cl e Ly . B 3 Senator All Massachusetts. It has more than once dem- | taxes is nothing less than an outright git | (Sehator fller % revelations of the work of the metropolita act Miss McGee Is ber i o " : 4 politan | fact Miss McGee Is a church member in good on left a bank- | will always have business to mind. [ Bolios now being made before the Lexow | standing In the Eplscopal church of which | Onstrated lts ability to reach the courts | to him. The sum which he saves must be | rupt freasury when he left the white | mne At o a1 is WEOR faapn ona) | a1 heardiyery) it rcomplainy QEMLRS 3 o * el ouse. s 'the met cash balance on the S I % score. On the other hand, huste \ Investigating committec people will infer | Rev. Mr. Mackay is pastor. and its latest manifestation of power with [ made up from the taxes which his fellow | yQUTE \ro DR "RG0 four days before Cleve. | thing at a time will soon know much. practically a thing of the past and the house 4 that Mr. Byrnes could have written equally | Miss McGeo 1s mot personally known to | the legislature, in faco of the fact that the [ citizens are compelled to contribute, and in | land’ took oilice, ' was $123,000,000, Senator [ There are men who hope to got to heaven | oxperienced littlo delay. | intelligently, and certainly more enter- | any member of our editorial staff. She has | Privilego granted it was distinctly hostlle to reality constitutes an addition to his salary. | Allen must be a trifle mistaken. ;mlx]nmy because they have never been in He was mum{ ‘m ‘]-nu;xmrnm the leading “How to P y 5 j % vs | His compensation is thus di 3 T ail. measures passed by the house. :nlnxly. upon “How to Protect Criminals | made no compiaint In person or through any the established pollcy of the state, shows A ‘,Cl "”’l b "“u "“ ‘ “I‘ ”f"‘y‘ ingieased, Kentucky Jealous of Her Fame. It is not necessary to have a gun in the The tarift bill naturally comes first,” m Detection and Conviction." of her friends. But we deem it an outrago | that it still has influence. In defeating the | despito the constitutional prohibition. oty 8 hand to show that there is murder in the [ said he. “Its passage by the house per- —_— that any efficient teacher should be deposed | Scheme of aggrandizement of the telephone Either the statutory exemption of the The scientific experiments which the | heart. mitted the organization of committees, £0 man who gave the | that the ways and means committes was learned savants of the Eren much to say in | well along on its work before the date when have been condueting in sear *h academy It may be that the w h of a cure | ywo ifes never had v case of flat paper is com- monopoly, which would have compelled the | President’s salary from the income tax fs on the tattle of women and second-hand re- DPrised in the corner which sta ollectc B! . B4ve manipulated In the on |::;"‘; I(' I' TS | [orts of orthodox bigots without giving her | Public to pay returns to twico the extent :“‘":Lm-‘ry and vall‘ffl"""a or is abso- for snake bites are o waste of time and | {10’ qilure congress was usually assembled, andthe: bill od e one-dc ‘olum- & ST q utely unconstitutional. alent. ut for its habit of always go- : was actually presented early in January, a chance to deny the charges or make a | Necessary to raise the required amount of Hopt gty cansitsch oTalNg L e oat would | Was actually presen y X . blan postage stamp, now worth ten dollars. ’ K —_ Ing the long way around, scionce would [ The one who sets a scandal afloat would | ()0, “ag usual, the committees aro just bes = know the only sure cure for snake bitd | go in for lynehing the man who would turn EDUCATION AND CRIME, has been distilled for years in Kentucky. | a wolf loose in the street. We presume these iconoclastic gentlemen, defense. The Board of Education should be | money, Governor Greenhalge did a most com- above all intolerance and bigotry. They | mendable service to the general public. ginning to organize. In e debate aleo there was no wasting of time, and I thlak The government simply ordained that the ~ paper should be worth its face value e A i * tho speculators have h'u"l: lr;:«m b:;‘i"r‘;m lf"i should exact moral rectitude from teachers How to check the increase of crime S0 rodigal’ of tme and " boole 'learning e Chairman Wilson wiccceded In - satlstying R Moo D B e el (ath Tt ises v I TR T throughout the civilized world is a problem | will be tryinis next thing o discover a new SALVE LONG SERMONS. both sides of the louso that he desircd to 8Fal Hmes bettor and fix their price at | 10 N T worthy of the most serious consideration of | KN Of Al o s, be fair and yet to satisty tho wishes of the e * 8L ] fightness and all the cardinal virtues. The : wth: Father—That young ma jours | people ; YouE :" l"’"" the face value. This is proving o lektar of the T exeludos trom | | Brasil has made prepurations to cclebrate | statesmen and those who are seeking gen- Ammunition for Kepublics Southi EatharaTHat JOUnR AR of JAUTR || RatRle B0jNaF the RilL"could b ibrou il L ghly profitable to the speculators, but the the coming Fourth of July in honor of the | uine social reform. It fs a fact, though to Philudelphln Ledger. Daugl at's what he proposes to do | © «py {he financial question,” also, he_sald, United States and the people of that republic | many it may seem almost incredible, that | man ton T i aY (Pident of hlerars: ko SHemN G Mt “we have avolled irrltating dolays, When lave subscribed liberally for a monument vall ratrogresy A an, but he is a student of historye &% | Sittings: A novel under the curlous | thd business deprossion of last summer Y 0 moral retrogression has been keeping protty | his arvalghment of Bis party, for weonsist- | 5o "6f* epjie Wasp s just published. | brought on the widespread public ‘demand able indictments ever | It must have a bad ending. for repeal of the purchase clause of the man against the leaders Sherman act, the house met in extraordinary { farmers and artisans have not been made | O PuDlic schools all sectarianism and re- aware o what extent they benefit by it liglous training. Creed should not be a test e el il either with the teachers or their pupils. | L) RIS e Rl e M e ames Monroo, f(th president of the | even pace with material progress. The | [ i RS the fact that P Salis aMentlon o} 4,0 sonools would destroy the publig sohood | United States, in: gratetul recogaition of the:| splendid advanve of .clvillsation and the | made by s congr ! o fact that Philadelphia 15 not only the | " Ve would hay ; famous doctrine assoclated with ais name. | wonderful development of material resources | Sr, B, O PRt o WIth respect (o the pasion and quickly. Rorformed, Ite payiin City of Homes, but also the Gity of Afarriey | SY5tem: We would have the Ol Testament Tevision of the tarif, It s entircly incon- tho repeal for which President Cleveland y 2 No more signal courtesy or marked evidance | have been accompanied by a steady growth | sistent for the democrats to refuse to lum- ; ! 3 ke Gouples. According to the returns of the | "o 'he New, the Catholic verslon and the | ,\'y\o qunip nag ever been extended hy on . ‘. Lawl et U berand *wool ‘the broteotion “they "extend | uoinapos Joupmal: She—vou have | "rhose opposing. } SR At census that city can bonst of the small. | L otestant version. We would also have the 1 th r been extended by one | of immorality and lawlessness extraordinary | toconl and iron ore. Similarly, they placed | 1 Hirioitiedr Wi x., Shave Vou ot? | the propricty of Aljowing the house to reach : can boas mall- ) X nation to another, and the distinguished con- | in view of the many instrumentalities for | themselves in an awkward positior et the bed Miss ave you ne o propriety of allo 50 to rea B e ic"kinas’ Deroors o Mormon bible and revelations of Joseph 3 ong Its oI an Income . which wis recoms, | What do you' think of hor? o a vote without delay and an agreement to Young o % k. 3 443 He—She s one of that sort of women | 4 oI R total population. 1t is not quite clear whether :“:"l"r ""‘\%"""' ‘l‘:l""T_“"" the Latter Day that effect was made and extended. Philadelphla attracts married people or re. | SO/ W would havo the Trinitarian Buffalo Courler: *Does Brasher exercl: his authority much since his promotion “Exercise 1t? Why, man, he works it sideration which Brazil will thus show to | the prevention and correction of vice and ) 5 mended only in the popullst platform, and | HewShe 18 one of ihat sort 6F women “Another measure of great importance our country will be heartily app-eziaed by [ orime. It is almost startling to read the | by defeating the repeal of the state bank [ Hhat S tax, which ‘was called for by their own 3 S passed by the louse was the repcal of the i version, the Unitarian versions and we | 8! American citizens. The Drazillan renple | statistics of the United States census fn | K%, WhICR, Wad SI€E, 00 BE 0ROt | omrons o : ik ) ] n’:':::nn":‘rf" m:ple m] NTHI““ marriage | it Lave the unique version of the Ry, | WHO are In sympathy with republican insti- | respect to the increase of crime In propor- | powertul ammunition for republican cam- | o EAER R pTR R e e e A i (G N 0se who are already resident with- s 7 y Y 35 igners, I r con oustruction period. ce . o already resident with- { " \williams, It s very unfortunato for | ttions have good reason for enterta’ning | tion to the population. In 1850 the ratio of | PaIEners sl leaked ..,',l.'i"“"v..!l'l htnlent he was | Avizona, New Mexico and Utah, have beem oush. ; 4 gland. R e gimmer vesort hotely— | admitted to the United States as far as Is that so? Well, just charge him up th Charles Russell | the bill with an extra shower bath, remains only for the senate to complete P i tho work. The appropriation billy have alt Detrolt Tribune: As 1 was_ sa "”‘“)-w been passed by the house and mast of the in the eity. The fact of its large percentage Of marrled population, however, is clear, and = the Record invites all marriageable young 0 Iadles to set their faces toward Philadelphia. our public schools that this contentlon has | Sentiments of friendship toward the United | prisoners in the penitentiaries was one out B arisen. The board has made & grave mis. | States. This country was the first in tbe | of 3,442; in 1860 one out of 1,647; in 1590 take in permitting It to enter into its coun. | World to recognize the cbange from the im- | one out of 767. In a few states this ratio | % he, BoDol N gnt Of B e of b perial to the republican sysom in Brozil, | does not hold, but upon the whole the in- | land to succeed Lord Coleridge, whe louse can accomplich that end and is Glob b cils, and it is to be hoped that it will rectity i < E Lt death occurred recently, trates the ox- | resumed the corporation agent, whe o o on( Wers. DAS b {naight Into masasine merhods 1s iven | (1€ Mistake it has made under a misguided | thereby extending an encourasement to the [ creaso of crime has been continuous. Jeath ocouEr e Fe ot N0 oo | fioor had been looked, 1 Nave somo con- | Most Inpartant “cnes were pa sad. 8t (K5 "“‘“ 8 s given | o0 supporters of the republic ‘which was of im- | At the recent meeting of the prison reform ken down in that country. Russell is | siderations to suggest e o Aol plate s i@ postseript to Charles Dudley Warner's . . . one of the greatest lawyers in the United “You said offer bef: Interrupted the | remains for the senate to comy B e Atiis o e n portance to them, since its was to | congress the president, General Brinkerhom, | &0 of the wreatest lawyers, i e URCH | garman brusquely, tirming to go. FRCtOTS T 2 he Senate,” In RICH COL, B STUDENTS. lead to the early recognition of the pew | presented In his address some highly inter- | Roman Catholic. This is the highest ju 5 4 RIS Altogether,” added the speaker, “It Is dicial office in the country, and it is not Washin n Star Don't you think it ), rocord of ‘work done and done quickly the current Century, in which he explains that the article in question was written over tWo yoars ago. It forme onme of a series Several eastern newspapers have been serl- | form of government by other nations. Had | esting suggestions on' this subject. He said ously discussing the question whether our | this country been dilatory in acting or had it | that if society would deal with its children larger colleges and universities are not fast | manifested any doubt as to its duty in giv- | as it is possible to deal with them the pres- A iven to an Irishman, St less | 18 rather cowardly,” gaid the’ bald-headed \ 14 It bestowed on & Catholle. ~Rus- [ Drofessor to the fly, “for a six-footer like we believe, 1s the first man of that | vou to jump on me in this manner who has held this which must prove satisfactory to the hou and to the public as it does to myself.” ost since the Ref- Mr. Crisp was asked to outline the more 5§ INSOMNIA. important work yet to be done Dby the ~ that go under the title, “Prese il ; j » How any editor can h':\e "‘l“’ becoming institutions exclusively for the | Ing countenance to the overthrow of Imperial- | ent swelling river of erime could be reduced atio The i nint n"'r' {“"\” ,' A Cleveland Plain Dealer, 1 [ audacity to publish a present day paper rich. The impetus to this dizcussion was | ism and the establishment of a republican | to a rivulet in a sifigle, generation. He be- | fRREATS 10 GROFE B o ted, and all He closed his eyes “There Is a general desire,” he sald, “to R hich he has been holding in the plg glven by the publication of the class statistics | form of government In Brazil cpportun'ty | lieves that the public school system begins | classes seem to have thought it would be a But sleep came not— take up the bill so widely discussed for % wl he pigeon- decidedly appropriate one to make. With weary sighs choosing senators by direct vote of the peo- of the graduating classes In two or three of [ would have been given for creating an oppo- | too late and that the first great advance hole of his desk for over two years Then he got v er two years must ———— ien he got up. 1 i bable that this measure ese college m whic Y o vame : 4 otlo e ple, and 1t is probable tha be compreliensible only to the magagine | 1'¢%° CONCES, from which it appears that | sition to the republican mOvmeat that night | must be made in the difection of the kinder D R0 Bl ploe ARG 1k AL IERRATS _HiN S S B Sditors themselves. For up-todate ters. | !¢ 8Yerase annual expenditure of e have rendered Its success far less ccsy of | gartens, supporting. this conviction by the Washington Post At b portant bill known as the pooling bill, which B RS dally Daper Is the caly re student during his college career Is consider- | attalnment. European influences hostile to | work which has been accomplished in San | Looking over the democratic field at pres- To go to bed glves mutual advantages to railroads by B e only rellable ent is a confusing occupation. Two years Without the score.' lowing the roads to pool thelr earnings. The _ resource. ably more than what the son of the average | a republic would have ben given a chance | Francisco by private kindergartens. These, | uuo ‘the party was 4 compact and home- L "‘.“"‘\* A e amittoe has several Dills oftR a 8 i i udiciary committee has several b = comfortably fixed citizen could afford. The | to exert themselyes, and whils the result [ it is sald, have practically reconstructed and f okencous organization. Democrats - kiew ITLESSN. 8 ', Judicial” character which will- be glven J Recelvers for the Northern Pacific have | highest year's outlay reported for a single | would doubtless have neen the same it Is | clvilizd some of the dirkest wards of that | Wht they wunted and wpoke thelr minds — hearing, These are the maln house meas: Y lvll:lll‘tullflnl |l\;:hlll‘u I the courts for per- | studentat Y le was not far below the $5,000 | entirely possible that it mlsht not rave been | cosmopolitan city, It is the opinion of Gen- lhered to the .|.w|.nl..~l 4.”‘11 traditions ot | | II‘ ';\-m‘"l l'l‘-m“ !r’ml;- e ures sr‘l’ lul h:; lui""‘l-““:‘“'wn"J'“]”‘.;‘(‘"fon';:g ogate existing 2 :lo pant, They believed bimetul- e brigh s were tearful, on by the house I thin 0 @ | mision to abrogat Isting trafle con- | limit, while the Aigures all around displayed a | reached without some conflist ard ‘rouble. | eral Brinkerhoft that more can be done in | i Siorious past. fhey belleved in u bimetals | "hhat siyly” looke 5 ¥ Uy oyngratulations as well as an ‘adjousns § tracts with & number of rallroads that have | noticeable Increase over what would have | The prompt and unequiso:al sction of the | the formatlon of character before six years the woverelgnty of the stat nd in ‘the | Half ';“"“"'\-’:"){;"( """‘ fearful ment." B proved unprofitable. This means that tho | been thought a very extravagant allowance a | United States government, however, was an | of age than in all the other years of life | thoeriPutlom O Bl e ok | The coitly vase had tumbled PREFER AMERICAN GOODS. Northern Pacific wants to get the ben of | few years ago. In other words, the fact | foreign powers. It did not nced any formal | combined. Doubtless all enlightened human | and achieved ](lu- |ml|ll1‘| re uIM‘ ":l y \‘Il-“\\‘:n I: Illlul”!hr‘“lu\n ‘\Y‘M £l ),u:]l’n‘l':. 1 Replies lruxlll '.'\HIII‘“’AII ship owners as 8 o o ere an appreciable educ o0 < i oppose bopulism, soclalism, and pater- A the pouting lips b urmured: - e nalyad . 2 Ms contracts where there is an appreciable | that an education at these larger colleges is | declaration by this country to assure the | experlence will endorse this view. He re- ..f.h\..“ i A1l thelr misonievous and n'u.‘.m. “Please! Please! I didn't fink!" ’,;r .":Tur 'I::-:laur.j ”Jx..‘.'u"fi.’I.'.‘c“,.."' lil‘.,"v’,“‘{i,".'i e benefit to be derived, but when there is any | becoming more and more expensive is the | assurance to the world that the symp:thies | garded as one of the most encouraging signs iipls 1'1'114-3 1:\111\‘-|x i '|I'H|* px.)\\“.n‘;- _:.m: e e L R e P, I 108 o be sustained It prefers to repudiate | startling poiut; the discussion undertakes to | of the people of this groat republic vere [ of the times the increasnig number of chairs e O R TN [ A B eant DLt o yaars four steel or fron steamships, of 197,108 gro B0 Iis obligations. This seems to be a pecullar | explain why this is 5o and to suggest the | with the Brazillans who had overthrown | of soclology In our colleges and universi- | in name, but they cherished the true tenets | That shatiered vase i laden tons, In transatlantic trade. There are forty Wi for the courts to preserve the oblig: remed: o and observances of democracy. Today we With lessons through thy tears, under the old registry law of 1792 to fly the L way I he obliga- | remedy Imperlalism and that its nfuence would be | ties, “for every branch of sociology is a | find the parly committed to the single | They think not of the morrow American flag, and are accordingly subject B tlon of contracts. It practically allows bank In connection with this dicussion a con- | used to sustain them. It was at least sufi- | part of the prison question.” He sald that :'luhl‘flv‘ll-'f money, o the popullatic inc ome | At '":‘“,"“"[“ Saunt who I",”'v'f » to foreign, chiefly British laws. The Amej ake experimel . x, to the monstrous theory that wealt ;'Stem the wave of KOrro! 5 4 o B rupt concerns to make experiments with any | tributor to one of the papers participating | clent to discourage Europsan Intilgue, it any | the churches also have & duty in this mat- | & crime And thit capitnl 1s the Tawful wiee | = Because they do not think can aieel or Iron-vieel tonnage, in trasate e ol n agreement they can secure and | seems to hit the nall " e d el CO| i d 3 ol ! ve nevel el d tim of national legislation. We find 1t ADtio trade under ho reglstry law, = oon- 3 kind of an ag A e nall on the head when he |"'were contemplated. ; ter which they have never yet taken hold of. | B0, 00, B#COREY SEELENET 0 ‘it most | Poor manhood's trembling weakness sists of elghty-two steamships, of 176, B I8 16 turns out well to reap the gains, while | says that it reminds him of @ remark of a | Again during the Drasillan rebellion the | One of the most careful British students of | grotesque and dangerous forms. We fiua | Hath found a refuge here: gross tons, of which nineteen steamships, of B pefusing (o share losses in the opposite | stud made to him within a few wmonths | policy and influence of this countrs was of | the phenomena of crime, Mr. Havelock Ellis, :;ml:"“ ..)f.’.'f-'u'.::l “':f'_)j“';- ‘C'.f“nf,‘.l'.'.'- ang, the “H:u:"m;i.'ff:; o |'.|'Jl.'» I';‘;‘“[‘:j"".*" 42,821 gross tons, including the New York 8 Svent. The need of statutory legislation to | that his college president “toadled” too much | great value to the goveramsnt of Krazil. | holds that the more intellectual rudiments | wronged by the Industrious and the thrifty. | Before the solemn altar & and Paris, were bullt abroad, and have been 8 Y P : ¥: | Bafe l, iR AN ink permitted to fly the American flag by spes d obligations of receivers | to rich men's sons. When college .| w consistel o ducatic o o e find [t astray from wholesgnpe and The gullty soul will shrink d Lo ~ deflue tho rights and r b men ns. When college authori- | While consistently maintaining a neutral | of education have very little influence in [ W& AC ““‘wmmm“ R G '\“'llmml"‘f] A'"M" nwxl‘ taltess :m'ml_: of a“;"m“ or s wrecks repaired eash with demagogy. “Alas! I did not think!" n the United States. e dailly beoming more and more recognized. | tivs cater to the sons of wealthy parents | position in respect to the revilitlon, it was | preventing crime, though they may bave a | | | | | | Y | i A ¥ p & ”