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THE OMAHA DALY BEE. E. RUSEWATER, Bditor PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF SUDSCRIPTION Tee (without Sunday), One Yea Bee and Sunday, One Year Months soviivaes Mon I Daily Daily fix Thre One Yeor.. ekly Dee, Omahia, The Bee Thullding Bouth Omahn, Corner N and Twent Councll Bluffs, 12 Pea reot Chicago Office. 317 (& New York, 14 and 13, Washington, 145 it N.W cor INDENCE Tribune Al o torial atter shounl’ recsed: T RUSINESS LETTERS Addrossad ¢ Omaha, Draf o made y t Jer ' of 11 THE Btk PURLISHING Al STATEMENT OF B, Trschuck, scoretary of T Tishing com ) duly swor the_nctual number of full and complete ¢ of The Daily Morning, Evening and Sunday printed during the month August, 1501 w5 follows CIRCULATION 1,95 0 & ErSRESeste Total Leas deduction: ples Total wold ly average rot circalition anday GROF Sworn 0 before presence this Ath (8 Wo rejoice in t the people conceriing potitical s will hold all pablic naibility and en e that the who oficors 1o n righd re (it menns pedige’) ution and Meinl trosts thorough and wnspiring, lean Platforim, 1876, unishment of all shall bo National botray wwifh, Mr., K. Rosewater will deliver the see ond speech of the the Lansing oper: Lincoln, Friday evening of this On this oo slon lie will devote the greater part of his time to o review the state I campaign hous weel of hoodlerism in We lave received many requests for copies of The containing Mr. Rosewnter's Fremont speech. A special supplement has been publistied eontaining a full stenozraphic report of the address, copies of which will, upon application, be mailed free 1o any address. We will also send pac ages contalning ten to twenty-five copies for distribution to any address upon order. 180, The equinoctial storms we on time. Throw a stone in the Seventh ward and you witl be sure to-hit a ndidate for office. Between forest fires and eyelones the people of Minnesota are certainly hay- ing a bard time of it this year. The sequel to the democratic love feast will take place at the democrati state convention to be held in Omaha next Wednes The euckoo organs make a pretense of joy over the defection of the Louisi- ata sugar planters from the democratic party. Commend us the make a virtue of necessity, to cnekoo to “The busin interests of the state demand” an honest man for governor, and if the republicans don't have that Kind of a candidate to pres \ o est man like Judge Holeomb will do. Eyery atorial cand secks an clection to the Nevada will hereafter ha pledge to hand in his ves fon in the event that decides to change his polities afte n elected who late from ve to give a The utter of the Bemis fmpeachment charges becomes more and move apparent as the f prococds. We look to see the court administer a rebuke to the impeachment “manag that will give them food for serious 1 flection. Let those who decry the strike ns an utterly useless engine of 1 look at the results of the tailors' stri jn New York and Boston. The st we are convinced, will not be disearded until something more effective is de- vised to tuke its plac Tom Majors still calls God to witness that he did not know anything about that forged return, but Tom Reed's judic committee thought attooed Tom knew a great deal more about it than he was willing to and what he did tell was flatly con- tradicted by at least two witnesses equally credible. The refusal of the prosecution in the impeachment procecdings against Mayor Bemis to introduce any testimony to support the chavge that the mayor had misappropriated money for the velief of the Kelly avmy means that this count in the araignment is practically with drawn. There not even a chance to make out a colorable offense. was Strange, is it not, that several of the ealumities recently visited upon the pe ple of the United States should fall heaviest upon the inhabitants of siates not afflicted with populist governors. This, however, must have boen a p dential mistake. All the storms, fiies and similar disasters were intended ex elusively for Colorado, Kansas and Ore. gon. rovi (Boston tailors, encouraged b eess of their New York brethr recent strike for the abolition of the task system, have also quit work, with the result of bringing the local clothing fndustry to o standstill. If they have the same grievance of sixteen and elghteen hour days at starvation pay us existed in New York they certainly ought to have the moral support of the community and eve possible assist ance o their fight for living wages. the suc n in their | than { slight discrepancies make no difference THROTTLING FREE SPEECI. A striking Hlustration of the wunre- publican methods pursued by railroad republicans in this state has been for. nished by the vindi and menda upon republicans who methods by M Jors was fo on the party s its can- | didate for n When The Bee | published @ bateh of protests from dis satisfid republieans who desie to re deem the stute and party from railvoad th letters wepe de- | nonneed fabrications because the | of the writers were withheld teying 1o it m o mercenaries around in the for parties who lopalty to the rail 1 several fnstances partios wection with the offen u subjected fo os ive assnults | th which Tom stes domination s s names While municati began at different were suspected of dis dis these L Corpo! onee o t conmuniti romil ez who lad lttors 1l o« sive have e plonage buise, n one or the letters authorship two localities the writers of voluntarily admitted their md have since then lnn-n| wented and libeled. An t was the case of Henry persistently e i instance | €. Richmend, @ republican residing at I Clond. whose letter was published lis initinls. No ad Mr. Richmond admitted the fact that e had Jerter than e was vicionsly assniled Inmpaoned by the Wundington Jonrnal and other papers | written the and mercilessly of the zebia stripe. free country and the vepul tiean alwiys has upheld free speceli, free press and a free ballot, In othier the republican party atfiris the right of every American cit- 1o think, s k and write without on all political erecd words, izen vestraing issues and to 1< liis conscience dictates paper that would abridge this God-given right ab opublican faith and turned traitor to rundamental It has to 1 Nebraska when men are to e maligned and persecutod for possessing the eour- enst his vote Any man o1 iy las jur (i its principles. come pretty pass in free convictions on issues that are if the state, and es- pecially on the fitness of candidates for positions of onor and trast. [ the republicans cannot elect | Thomas Majors without resorting to the methods that prevailed in the south during slavery times they have vepudi ated stige of true republican the 5 ever sub- theit coneern the we every v ism and forfeited the right to ask support of auy man who l seribed 1o republican pringiples. For tunately for the state and the party, The s abundant assurance from every scetion of the thou sands of republicans hay nined to save the party and bring it back to its starting point as a party of free- dom and of equal rights by repudiating the candidate who does not represent republicanism, but railtoadism in its most offensive and dangerous forui. oe D A CAMPAIGN FAKE FACTORY. That Omaha is to be a great manufac- turing ter long ago be con- ceded. We may not always have the raw waterials on hand for ting articles that ave in general demand, but we have the push and pluck that ms bees buzz and wheels hum and whi Within the past ten days another new industry been established in our midst that is already doing a land office business. 1t is nothing more nov | iipaign fake mill. The capital for the factory has heen seribed and supplied by the Burlington raflrond and the motive power and raw 1 is contributed by the State . ofticial organ of the B. & M. and distributor of campaign fakes for the railroad republican mac The quautity of ecampaign roorbacks that have been by the new factory within week would take all the r in twenty editions of The Sunda, to contradict. A few specimen of the hogus information factory suffice. The people who depend upon the B. & M. organ for their political guidance informed Friday morning that “Editor Rosewater's interest in the sue- of Bryan and the endorsement of Holcomb was in assurances that in case of Judge Holcomb's election a fire and police commission would be named that vould he entirely satisfacte to the edit of The F nd guarantee the continuance of the publication of the saloon license notices in that journal” That is strietly origi and would be interesting if it were true. As a matter of fact, the ingenious fake has no more basis than has the downright impos- ture perpetrated by the eampuign fake mill in the same issue of the Journal in dec ing that “a singular feature of the contest was that atleast 80 per cent of the federal office holde in Omaha and South Omaha were working for the Bryan-Holeomb ticket.” It is an open secret that the present governor of Ne- braska owes his nomination, if not elec- tion, to the efforts and influence of the editor of The Bee, But he es ot truth- fully say that he was ever asked to appoint any member of the police com- mission who would be friendly to this paper. The Bee does not ddpend upon the good will of the police commission for its privileges in publishing applica- tions for licenses. Its rights are defined by the mandate of the law, which re- quires publicity to be made in the having the largest circulati The attitnde of rfederal office holders in the democratic primaries was the same in Omaha as everywhere in the state, With possibly a ception, every federal office posed the Bryan ti board Saturday's B. & M. Journal dishes up the absurd fake that a combination has been between Bryan, R water, A, Holcomb and the church, This is decidedly original. Boyd id Rosewater had not seen each other for interchauged views by letter or wire. Boyd was in Chicago on the day of the primaries and had been absent from Omaha for two w The Bee does not favor Boyd for cougross. man wor Bryan for senator. But those has new sub- ine shops. and out akes turned the bricks will were coss paper single ex lolder op ket open and above formed 1 nths or | the injection of the religions | The fake mill in connection Degotten by to taken fake for mean dnpes the assured the day was due to judice. which soliditied the entive Catholic vote the anti-fusi ticket This fake is o patent to everybody in thix community that it 1y worth while 1o refute it Many the prominent Catholic democrats were en with the administr: f: working hard for their ird of the deleg anti-fusion ticket were Catholies. n up all roorl the fake mill omits to eall attention to the fact that the railroad vepublican forces, baeked by railvond hank boodle ook active part in the demo- cratie primary in sapport of the admin- fon. But the combine w ronted, horse. foot and dragoons, because public sentiment overwhelmingly opposed to democratic railrondi is to railroad republicanisi, paign fake mill fool part of the time, it cannot the people all th chnreh pther genius fabricating must the Cafholic chuvch. Tl who tuke their inspivations from B. & M. Journal oly that clement oy in the democratic the with a the falsehoods, same ar the which Primary in opposition to i Ty of host fon ticket, the listed and Fully one-t tes on conjuring these neks very isteation i wils iy but tim ATION IN THE I The daily papers of this st some people fool all st OUTH DISTRICT and of to task mbled at week to devise ways reliel of the desti Arouth-stricken district for Ssuppressing” from eastern people the true situation in ebraska in wd to erop f: account of extreme drouth. In matter the daily press us from the beginning been between (wo fives, the people who have suffered loss maintaining steadily that the Talf lias not heen told and the peo ple who have not heen seriously affected constantly that the misfor- tunes of the dronth sufferers were he ing grently exaggerated. The Bee | all along endeavored to et at the real facts and has printed no veports except ble author alch as came to it from reli i still believes, I that mo havm can result from telling the teuth, and that the truth is bound to e known seoner or later in the east 1ax in the west. It has been crit- for spreading information that alirm eastern iny and it criticised for not making out a for.eastern velief con other have been taken Ly the convention which as; North Platte last and means for the tute in the state western to il on this asserting ities 15 helieved, a8 W icised might is now ors stronger ¢ butions. The Bee has tematic effort be made, first, to learn the act fae i second. to. meet the demands which those facts, shall show to exist. The attention of the g ernor has been directed to the drouth situation and he has taken some steps toward investigating the extent of the emergeney, He has, however, not yet come to any definite conclusion as to wh should be done. On the otlier hand. the convention to which we have referved hax been of some service in improving our understanding of the si nation. Reports made by delegates from six ecounties represent that some 9,000 persons are in need of aid of some kind. We take it that only a small portion of these arve in. utter sitution, but the urgency of speedy action should not be underrated. The convention further appointed commit- tees to request free transportation over the railroads for prov and fuel contributions and we understand that the railroads are inclined to aceede to this proposition. It also recommended that all relief be distributed through the county commissioners of the different counties, and this recommendation will commend itself as timely and wise. It still remains nize some assocl tion of citiz , who shall riain Just what is wanted, what s of articles and what amounts, and who shall take steps to solicit aid from all who are in a position to assist the drouth sufferers. It is uscless to longer pretend that the destitute in the drouth district arve able to help themsely through the winter. urged that some sys- to o f18¢ ANAL AND TRAMW While the county commis wrestling with the Platte viver eanal proposition The Bee ventures the sug- gestion that the promoters of the canal be induced to include au electric tram- way as part of their program. An elec- tric railway from Omaha to Fremont would not only be a great card for Omaha as an advertisement, but it would prove of incalculable advantage to our loeal traffic. It would place this ¢ity in hourly communeation with Mil- ard, Blkhorn, Waterloo and Fremont and thus premote more intimate trade relations between the suburban towns and this eity. It would enable the dairymen and truck farmers all the way from Seymour park to the Platte and Elkhorn valleys market their cheese, butter, eggs, milk and vegetables in this city either with commission houses or the consumers. It would build up a line of suburban manufactur mall farms and suburban residence all along the entive distance and it would euhance the value of every of land within five miles on either side of the canal. The construction of this way on the line of the canal would not add to the general exp ndiiure more thax 250,000, possibly less than that amonnt, There would be no need of buying a right of way. The dirt excavated in the construction of the canal would form the embankment on the: greater part the line, and all things the power for operating the line would be procured at a nowinal price. On the other hand, the tramway would enabl the canal company to maintain its re- pair force al a very low expense and reach any point that requived fmme diate attention within a couple of hour at any time of the day or night, principal ontlay for the tramway wonld be in cross ties, rails, poles, wires and equipment. This outlay would be de ferred until the canal is ready to be foners are lectric tram of bov torence made by the campnign [ operated, The when the last part of the subsldy betoios payable, There s, therefore, @very Incentive to make the tramway apiirt of the general scheme, while thelobitacles fn the way of its consummatic ur insurmountab In fact, thie ehances ave that the tram way will pdy better than the canal as n investment, both for the company and the cotmtry at larg not The data. goncerning the ownership and operation/of railronds in different wntries ®hich have been compliled by the interstate commen pursuance of a resolution adopted some time ago by the senate will ot throw new light upon the railrond ques- tion. The commission takes pains to disclaim any ginal investigation whitever and confesses that the report lias been simply made up from existing of information. Any opinion which it expresses on any conclusion to which the facts seem to lead may there fore arise from the prejudices which the original fnvestigator brought to his The report as outlined in th dispatelies exhibits an unmistakabl toward the endorsement of private ownersh govern ment ownership of 1a Many of the nts and comparisons, Low: misleading, e e the different ¢ comnission in sonrces tendency stater ever, are not keep in view tions of trade and transportation in the different countrics. We certainly have successtul examples of both sys of lrond management, but one system ot the other is bet- ted to it country nse tems the cireumstances of a such as the United States is not to be demonstrated by mere generalizations such as the int state commerce commission veport I 10 offes The onening of i rond to Fort Crook i eertain to be followed by the construction of an eleetrie line connect ing the post with this city. This is not only 1o be expected, but to be desired Eyvery one who wishes to visit the new fort will not be able to drive there with a carriage. The object of opening a rond is to facilitate traflic, and the same ob ject will he still further promoted by an electric railway to the point Whether such a line should be permitted 1o occupy the middle or the side of the proposed boulevard with its rails is a question that will depend upon the ¢l “ter of the rond, its width and how it is to be parke That question, how- will wait for its answer until the proposition to build the voad shall have e made. | The first work is to secure the road. The electrie railway will then solve its own prob The patehwd reets that have re- sulted from the repairs made by the clty to the decaying wooden pavements a far from befng i thing of beauty and should not he permitted to remain for- ever. The greater part of our wooden block payement' ought to be torn up and replaced with more substantial ma- terial not later than next v To do this will reqiiire (e co-opcration of both hutting property own nd city. The city will be ready to defray the ex of repaving Intersections and the prop- erty owners should up their minds to do their part promptly. The ched pavem are mothing but porary s s Let us have little to do with them as possible. same nse mitke IS The Good ducational league is attracting favorable atten- tion in some of the wards of the city. To its work in the IPifth is attributed the defeat of Jim Kyner's gang at the republican caucus. The object of the leagne is decla to be the education of public conscience and to secure a more generous support for all munici- pal movements which make for the public welfare. It is significant indeed that the league hit upon Kyner its first object of attack. Its promoters claim that the leagu 1 the strictest sc to any man of whatever party w forfeited publie confidence, Fan the Campaign. Loulsville Courier-Journal Mr. E. Rosewater, the fiery e Omaha Bee, is adding inter publican campaign in Nebraska. bolted the ticket and will take th against T. J. Majors, the governor, charging him with other crime: He stump nominee for forgery and —————— No Military Soft Suap. Kansas City Star, If Japan should keep up her Ping Yang lick ‘of 20,000 Chi per day it would take sixteen years of steady slaughtering, at a moderate caleulation, to dispose of the present adults of China, and by that time there several million more of military pan's present job s no soft military snap. Bad Yea) ant Peary, has returned discon solately home without having reached th limit of previous explorations. This seems to be a bad year for Arctic expeditions, somehow, or else the femper of the ex plorers who haye undertaken to reach pole during the last twelvemonth ‘i3 of that sterling auality which made predecessors famous. i Hewitt | malntes Asfor. Hosten Globe. Hewitt of New in some respeots the is the best in existence. As Mr. Hewitt hus just salled for Rurope, perhaps he intends to follow ' William Waldorf Astor's illusirious _example and become a British subject. Of cougse,(if Mr. Hewitt prefers to exchange cjtizépship for subjection, that's his affait. But he will not find many Americans timbling over one an- Cther in their eagerness to follow his ex- ample. v not heir Ex-M York says that British government e —— A Meryy Smashing War, Philpdelphia Ledg The battle betweei the armor ers and the makeis of N goes merrily _on negle's Harveyized steel plates proyéd their resisting power last week, and of' Thursday the Midvaic Steel company’s (11#l{zer sheils were driven through the Harveyized plates and ro bounded uninju It the improvements in_ plates and prejectiles should continue long enough the ordnance officers may some day be able to tell us what will hap- pen when an irresistible force m an immovable body plate mak- tiles Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U, 8. Gov’t Report o ABSOLUTELY PURE POLITICAL POTPOURRE The campalgn in Lincoln will be wide open | long before (he arrival of Governor McKinley 1t will not take the whote force of the | state militla to put down the “popular up- | rising” in favor of Tom Major: Tt is sald that, harmony or no harmony, the Tom Majors democrats will put up a dummy for dupes before this week is ended Central City Nonpareil: Rosewater may be a bolter, but he tells a fow plain truths all the same. Sc. his reply to Richards and Thay West 1’0l showed his camp and d t Republican: BEditor Rosewater erve by invading the encmy's ivering an anti-Richards-Majors speech In Fremont. He was tendered a big | audience. Richards refused to meet him on | the platiorm i The name of Bechier is evidently one conjure with in Platte county. Th publicans have nominated Gus Becher the legislature, and the democrats have lowed suit by naming Dietrieh Becher fc the same office. Miles Zentmyer red candidate welfth district s sald to be Jim North's for the state senate from | but he {8 pledged to sup port Bryan “as long as he shall be a candi date for the senatorship.” This statement fs o little strange, but 'tis said to be true. Madison Reporter: Republican papers are busy quoting precedents and declaring that Rosewater's opposition to Majors means the latter's Therefore, those papers ought to rejoice and leave Rosy alone. Peo ple are not likely to ery out when their toes are not tramped upor The success of ticket in threatened by anti-monopoly of the nemination county cent election the republican county Franklin county is the defection of the clement of the party beca of Tattooed Tom. Th | committee has lssued an ap- peal for “every republican in the county to play fair and do a little work.” It is evident the delegates from Franklin county to the re- publican state convention overlooked a bet when they voted solidly for the nomination of Majors against the popular sentiment of the county. O'Neill Fronticr: Republican papers of the state are doing Majors no particular good by dlling their columns with trash about his former proclivities. Simply because he is a farmer i no reason that he should be gov- { ernor, The state s full of farmers who would not make good governors, and, on th other hand, it is full of farmers who would fill_the gubernatorial chair with ease, dignity and credit. Let the supporters of Majors be candid and tell the truth. Say that he is a farmer who does not farm, is a man worth 2,000 or §3,000 and a professional politician I they wish to add that he is a business | man and that they believe he will make & excellent exccutive it will do no harm. This slogan of ““farmer’” has been worn threadbare and s ro longer soothing to the ear. Noth- ing s permanently gained by misreprescnta tion It is evident that gome of the republican papers of the state think that a lie per- sistently told is as good as the truth. The charge has been made and reiterated that Holcomb was a B. & M. attorney before he as elected judge of the district court. This has been denied-time and again by the judge, but no notice has been n of his state- ment, At a public meeting at Lincoln Friday night Mr. Holcomb made another plicit denial of the charge, as follows have seen in that organ of monopoly State Journal, and its various imitato subsidiaries throughout the state, that the pops did a bad thing by putting at the head of their ticket a former B. & M. attor- ney. 1 believe that I have heard something ! ot ‘a sermon being preached on that subject. 1 have never read that sermon and [ don't Kknow as I care to, but I want to say that I have never been a B. & M. or any other railroad attorney." Silver Creek Times: the and It is scarcely worth one's while to read much of the campaign literature in favor of Majors. The B. & M { Journal very properly takes the lead in dis- seminating it. It s all about of the same stripe and the reading of a paragraph or two will answer for the whole lot. If we were to sum it all up in one short article it would run something in this way: “Tom will get there. Damn Rosewater. Tom has always been a- farmer and. wears a hickory shirt Damu Rosewater. Tom swore he didn’t tamper with those census returns—didn't know anything about it. Damn Ros:water. ‘om will be clected by a great majority, you bet. Damn Rosew Tom ed out the troops to put down the laboring men of Omaha, The moncybags are for him. Dimn Rosewat:r. All the machine politicians for Tom. Damn Rosewater. Rosewater's speech at Fremont made sixty votes for ! Majors. Damn Rosewater. Hurrah for Majors his biue shirt, but damn Rose- | wate Nem markec and Lo Granger: “Farmer Majors!" r a Peruvian a few days since, “I have known Tom ever since he came to the county, and if he ever held a plow, bound ndle of grain or wielded a corr knife I od to be present at the exhibi- act is, he never had time to farm.” And then we remembered that the first lime we met Tom he was an officer in the Nebraska First, and was drawing a salary of $128 per wmonth. Later we knew him as a_member of the territorial council on & moderat> salary. Afterwards he be- became a classmate in the state normal, but was soon lured from his books by the siren song that told of official honors and ofiicial salary, and he was returned to the legislature to receive but $120 for forty days work vote for United States semator, which vote he did not throw to the birds, bui held on 1o until he was promis:d the office of reve- nue assessor in return for sald vote. Aftr he had held this office until it ceased Lo b he again went in search of legislative amd congressional offices, and if we remember rightly the only time the public feat has been from between Lis teeth was when the | congressional committee exposd the frauds of Si Alexarder and Dr. Schwenk and s him home to play peek-a-boo with h Howe. Tom is not to blame for not b.ing a farmer. He has not had time to till the soil, hie has been too busy farming the voters and a history of his dariug as one who went into the army when a mere boy. £ - —-— The The American Grocer, year anniversary numi prices of leading article Prom its market reports for twe The prices 0 are w and the clanges are quite remark the following tak 189 Prices. its twenty-fifth publishes th of foud comp! Fal pr able as illustrated by per bbl......... per 1 Butte Che Cann 5 Canned corn, 50 Canned peache - 59 1.20 Canned salmon, e ATD 155 ftem which is higher now tha s coffee, and this article has, duri the twenty-five years, fluctuated betwe 601 and 19.72 cents per pound. froe market I8 just emerging from a h prices and is now tending dow ry products have also fuctuated e now aboye a parity with tes of fuod, but the tables of American Grocer wh siven fo the nty-five years ilustrat quite as 2 tendency toward lower ¥ all yarieties of food us i Yeen In other lines of production. The_only in 136 Stness Bevival, Philudeiphia Rtecord, edented | demand il bills 15 not wholly ex plicable on' the crop-moving theory, sinc there has been larger activity in - that respect In former years unattended with {he scarcity in question, 1t seems )ikely that the general tevival of busin had quite as much to do with it . the demand for the smaller nites m ntinue through the winter, as treasus ficials declure that they cannot be printed | fast enongh to meet the call for them, and ihat will be ant to imcrease with thé im- | provement of general business Evidenc he unpre upon the treasury for s Baking Powder | Bditor of The Bee T T { PIECE OF IMPERTINENCE, NORTH PLATTE, Neb., Sept Inasmuch to be a republican, [ publish this a wrong Impression by an article in a recent Under the head of you publish a letter you state statement in that you issue How from this was written by a this city you have n regular by the name of Dr. T. M. § pathic physician, and in me this morning he stated wrote the article referred his name thereto, and your office twisted the it themselves. Dr. publican, but one of populfsts 1 ever met to the last populist county the Second ward in this city present county coroner by vi ment at the hands of a { County Commissioners, and not in the least voice the s city or county Somers the He that you will in all fairn; lish this in full, 1 remain HARVEY W Editor (Note by the lish the above Somers are an made at printing the letter from correspondent, written in following fnstruction Interview leading ant cans of your locality state thelr opinions of the publican state convention Bee suggestions as to the thwarting the railroad eftort to control political to encompass the elec road candidates Dr. Somers sonal views, North fitor Platte impertinence mpt to mislead and aid but those of Lincoln county who resent the which the vote of thelr county over to Majors under fulse pre 99 out of 100 republicans in were for MacColl e editor aves the selection of his to sub-editors. He did not know sented the paper at North as ignorant as to his politics, ¢ the school of medicine s he was of his name received at this o ndence, and therefore why he should be in - JOKERS IN CONVENTION, p News: It om. JUsL agree to Galy lly ter =0 much if wood if they wil Hamilton 1t vers that a | ) good-looking toes by looking ster: A A 16 Colehest that she mash 1t them Buffalo C qualities have much to do wi incomes. The blind beggar makes his money because he of sight. urier An hus Yonkers Statesman Atus company nly! Why 1o failed What ribune Torchant for a_salesman, How 10 you know ? 1 ean talk and city hall Chicago verits Indianapolis Journal ‘I Kkind of people live in Mars? hical girl hey're out of sight,” nd confident young man. Iveston after they ar orced. In they never divorces until find themselves badly sold York Mrs, D reading Weekly: S sxtdoor Wants vo matter suitable oW mum, some ertalnly. Give her Record in_ the smokin' room, sah place, e Passenger—Why The P Theah in there, sah. and i the conversation's jus’ presidency Oh Iriftin’ Indianapolis Journal Mabel's father, “if vou don’t go here I shall call the dog.” “Phat would be proper “1 raised the animal If you wart to." COULDN'T T Atanta ¢ un_ him for him v run | next for couldn’t git him there; y run him next roner turned him down then ¥ called run him-out o town! fons Are a Tr Kansas City crop of the Unite the past ninete, 9 bushels. 'This vear the timated at 1,200,000,000 something of a faliing off productive country lke the 160,000,000 bushels “of corn more a mere bagatelle the ¢ An' Dass St The corn ed for VOUR MON s presume that you will order have of The Bee. to Beat city, republican. In correspondent | smers, conversation plainly to above, that s initials is not a re most enthusiastio | a delegate me around to was conv and s at e of Dulist his article does | of' pe iment The request and the strictures anybody in ity N response Lo monopoly Request work of (he re best managers conyentions ou of pre method of reprosent republicans of | sell-out was that eon who rapre Platte. in which he & omplain there Is nd vidually ! it doe Colehe has Humanity's good humanity’s i simpl artificial cooling in HBost would th with attificial cooling concerns in English, wonde said the phil- replied the slang- In Siam wives are sold this after rvant to e for thase med the ind you can eall him 1SR E, ngres sherif again they irum in an' He wa States has 1y bushels. but Unite or less in a1 LICENSE ON WHEELS, %.~To the ouclaim Timely Warning for Daug Ocean ors Chicago Tnter ous question it parents o gracetul sport run away to rectify are not and a with their judg to the finement of th extraordinary It created nt as to Majors" | hecessary moral care and r daughters, We ty which that 1s and young women in the rding. By degross th proper restraints tha this practical sport have been almost there is a freedoom say t it a hood The American peopl the self-relia American girl, wh “perfectly truly it matter a home with that he | signing in | were ol was 1y put asi permitted first one Tl broit independent spirit may be said that represents a wonderfully fine confident, capa womanhood. appoint- Board of L Amer Wnd worthy youns reason to be proud. Bt after all, not much different from of inexperienced humanity fn sus to influences that are not for | ment of character, and 1o pub- | o guidance, restrict Dr | that may mold thelr minds and Bee respect of conditions that honsively by the (erms ing and tight conduct It left to herself amid casual that, to the youthful and ignorunt in pleasant and fasclna Ficter observances of the home lif that th ihe in this 88 pub HILL legraph th Platte the it is by n independence and American character tamination. Paronts much to what t nable moral tone of | sibly tuke sufficiently tion flects of ass not so admirably temp irls with bieycles are and where they please, their p entirely in ignorance of the ¢ they form and of the acqs and unmindful where taken or 1n what they terminate would not be permiti-d to walk after nightfall are nevertheless | to take evening rides on their whe Al parts of the city s from home, and it of any fmportance if these racted that the girl may home until 10 or 11 o'clock Tt s well known to riders of he estublishes betwoen riders. A acquaintances there is give The L, n their and red rail nowadays his fations with turned when | county pondents 1 was atlon, or uated has about hi is not aker whey f Fre sorts of are wade in this disguising an indubit the whe 1 is the means 10 ma s that wonld horrify they but fuformed of them. Jf the bicycle has led nerease of immorality it not b cause ng dtself i other than a beaut port r Uil hecause the privilege of where one pleases on a wheel spportenity and the temptation to loing that do not exist within limitations of interco not mat saw nothing ree e ng going out bieycle tends to bring riers of and separate of the other. that 15 not convention that any 1 ship altogether good girls.” 1t sur‘ly is not good for hey are out ail hours of the one knows where;” and pa indulge their daughters wheels and persistence of which they This is a matter worthy mildly as we have urged it rezponsibility hire that they 1o ignore, German what “out Brave country they 5 rtisan Buffalo Express ep) Plea address of the committee of 1 her W York expressos o sentims slek o the abolition of pariisan from municipal rule which s more and more popular every the adoption of this tiew, rather the restiiction of suffra for the evils of corrupt which is troubling so many o simists. And that idea, ik ggiylce idea, e bound 15 be Ablished. but the unrestricts people can find a cu muni FATE OF THI Young man, = iway fi Mrs. M. L. Rayne in'f rec They buiit a fine church at | He waso't in it him a scheme for vouth b Ak They told e them work wasn't for in it Let themselves sk hielp from g If they wasted wasn't another but they in it Bo he passe He wasn't Andihe soarnedt the in it 't in it When men in the He saw their goodness without re Too high th He wasn't A carriuge ¢ He in it was in it. ars 1616, 118 This s The He was in it | 8t Peter recel . | "ty triend, Sta - “well is § Your clevator goes down in o He was in it WORTH OR OUR MONEY BACK We move We arise to make a motion, It is our firm, ~ | fixed, frigid and dzep-rooted con- [ vigtion that the sun has been working overtime for tho past six months, and his continued cussedness in keesping at it late in September is additional cause for comment. Faect is, he's act- ing scandalous and getling himself talked about. We move that he give us a rest. s not suffering much however, TARIFF suit sale Our big LOW though there is no doubt 'twould be better if it was cooler. h undred. We Friday and Saturday we sold several keep it up till all are gone: Every one our own make, well and handsomely made in latest style, long cut, single and double breasted sacks and cut-a-ways; blue, black, plain and faney eheviots, plain fancy and cassimeres and latest patterns ol tweeds. very cheap. Reliable Clothiers, S, W, Cor. LOW TARIFF SCHOOL SUITS. Knee pant suits, $2.50, $3.00 $3.50, $4.00, $5.00, jong pant suits $6.50, $7.50, $8.500. All these are strong reliable and stylish and Browning, King & Co., 15th and Dougzlas. S D T T N o i A e the need 1o be subjected s and beneficent right Dikes' prom wa as he 1y one ach golden minute. hallg of virtue me Parents of Wheel There fs a very setl- permitting healthful exercise to what 18 soclal re- reter to the allowed to girls of ble wholesome rved ntrodu until now that © 10 young woman- W s, 0 fond of boasting of the lought always to be of herself,” and an girl hig and of which we have Amerlean girls are, the pUib ity type trust- rest better- care atures to covered think- surroundings mind, are ast and purer efrcumstances ns cortain self-relfance of will protect her from trust ¥ believe to be the | daughters, and do into_considera- persons 1 qualitie: allowed to ride to the hen cing 1panionships ntances these rides are Girls who the streets rmitted Is, travers golng to great dis- thought a rides not they are arrive that confiding_parents That to an alurm- i folly to deny the thing and exereise, but when presents the Wrong- the ordinary rse botween the sex s As one rider of a wheel has declared and The © (W %ex's to & com- { mon level and breaks down many of the bar- usualiy two and secure (0 one the def:r- 1t establishes a com for them when evening ‘ents who so freely with are trifling with a peril the extent little fmagine. attention Parents have a will do well not no their Iy in Muuleipal Elections, seventy Wt in re nolitic: becoming year n n | lies the remedy pal the the me There 50 rule pes- civil firmly great free UNFRATERN AL, ving the kad the poor with haughty tread; sood with averted head; mark for him to win it,— pt down the street one day,— funeral trappings made a. display,— ed him with book and bell; you have purchased u ticket to