Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 20, 1894, Page 4

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OCTOBER 20, 1894, k) = S ————— . = T THE OMAHA DAILY BEE | 7770SF FIFTEEN HUNDRED ALARMIST Ise. The great factor is not free raw [age appolnfmams per month are: Stev- OTHER LANDS THAN OU [M UORSB\CKED B\' MOVOPOLY |rr- dition, and no state s able to show more o Sl b iy mat Fifteen hundred representative firms of | materials, but the price of labor, and [enson, 1.405; Clarkson, 1.540; Maxwell W Ui UL {pr mising commercial conditions, That - Bior, | Omihia Bave ben enrolled in the Business | yntil this s hrought down to the stand- [1,834, The comparison fn both classes by Great Britain, and for that matter by the | —— o 18 ‘hereusing ls demonstrated et X e 1en'a assoclation, ofganized for the purpose gy of the labor employed by our com- | s, of coursd i favor of the demacratic | whole world, as the key to Indla. Russia | ikt bk i DEY P EVERY MORNING ot deleating the slection ot Holoomb. THe | iivau i {1 i ph f the world we | headsmen. Iy s 2 " | has n 1 | Combined Corporations Irrespective of Party | teasion of ousts Pk VEERY ¥ wetite arke e world we | heads . An the corresponding time | has steadily advanced in Central Asla, until nbined Uorporations Irrespective of Farty engaged In tals movement represent | : : " h » s ik FoA iall continne to be at a_ disadvantage | President Cleveland has during his pros- [ now sho has an almost unbroken Hine o | Seeking His Election. At Bl e ande and Gult lines. evory For years Afghanistan has been considered SRMS OF ELNSCRIPTION: lone of capitai; many of them have always | * | R CIlRE Gty Oonk Yot ted tho democratie ticket and are democrats | 1 ANY effort we mny make to get con- fent term ajpointed 661 more postmns. | Possessions until within a few miles of the ® and Sunday, On iy, but when the eredit of the state is at | trol of t e markets, There I8 reason | ters than Tl during his first te |in“"""‘ of Herat; and it has only been by | R " B i i they are patriots enough to rise above | to belleve that a large majority of the | the white hoise, More | wetenfulanea e | threats, by her constant | HAVE DESTROYED PARTY ORGANIZATIONS | her iy, Sus and forty-one watchfulness against intrigues and the ex- adjoining ¢ s ) Springs and o, Of dresen ¢ and do wlhat they can to keep out of | American people are not anxious to en- | than President Harrison appointed. The | istence of a strong force that uctual war has | Puebl Weekly Iee, One Year v . louse a party that has driven | o jnto a struggle for foreign markets at OFFICKS from Ka 8, ralsed the rate of in Omaha, The Bulliine t o St ot Soutn O 3 | Twenty-fourth Sts ind aim % a g their normai present hoxdsman for the fourth-class ’}‘l':vh‘u;v "’ IHM ;~rm'~w~r’ vlr’v 8 wm:‘]»v r.nn: y : Tonches Up the Associn- f i e history of territorial aggrandizemen the t of degrading American labor | offices may nfso’ point to a greater Work | (hat autoer, Russia, an any other | Ik N and living to the Buropean standard an any of his prodecessors. European power, has succeeded wherever she Crests of Omatin® wnd “olorado Springs Gazette have | rlolk News, | has gone In winning conquered peoples to her | Voo " brightening latte ¥ of Commerose, | & ¢ . 3 — It w be remembered that when [ I peog her | s Volers to Beware, brightening prospects, the latter Soma 1310 and 15, Tribune BId, { Fifteen hundred firms, indeed! There - t will be remen side. She seems to have the facully of read | s such 1 Protect the Busie | b ns as the Pueblo Chief- ayed the eredit of the ot | 9 ™ vevalil stuinstors " eing | i1y 5 al rices of T T F Str N W ave: just BIATHaos. of ‘&llasod Ak ob ANOTIER LIE NAILED [ republican - postmasters we belng | ily assimilating them, and today the noma 1 CORRESPC INCE. i FONT. 2 eb., Oct. 18.—~To the |appointed to succeed the democrats [and warlike tribes of Central Asia ar | on " Al rommunteations relating to news and edi- | the published list. Many of these nnmes | FONTANELLE, Neb. t. 18.~To the|appointed to ‘sw | obedtent to her as It they had always f The Omalia Cultivator The News fias aiveady dlrected 3 5 4 Editor of The Bee t the republican meet- office during r. Cleveland's 4 THRH - SR ity ol o BUSINE LR " el g held hes sday e d € 0 i clevation to the presidency | emissaries av work in Afghanistan secretly | 8ave a political address in Omaha recently . ¢ FimA e sent fiems or even Individual business 7 & | o the Ninth Setsl WA business tatters remittances should b i . s e e suotias . Mhjore deeluved IRV Une enly oy gonocoats , ‘wera “loud i thelr| 400" aBestvely, and the Gesth of (he Amesr| e Biads s sacher SHking & $ertion: | yegembly ik “‘ ¢ Mdtemsed o, Tha ng ¢ e There are railroad lawyers and |reason why Edward Rosewater was spending | g nclation of the changes. They | ¥OUM 81ve opportutity for incitig vivil war. | pusiness fs polltics, and politics fs busl- | & ot wehiments and tax Je prvabie to £ e compan professional petitioners, There 'C [ his money to defeat him and_why The Bee h 3 b 0 ARAER h an act would be looked upon by Great | . Ui o KTk ARG, BAVS s fhe| DLW " Tliere are hun- THE VEE PULLISHING CO 1mes of men who never saw the list | trumped up so many lies against him was | Claimed that the spoils Sl | Britaln as a crusade against India which [ f i e b . i dreds of mer W doing business, and 40, | was being practiced to a greater extent 4 be resented by all the force at the |Spiration to certain business men of this |y, 1 com of their financial dit- e . 0 . \nd names of firms that are not in ac- | that twelve years ago Rosewater had sent L E gt R T AL 4 i s STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION nam ms that 4 4 p t wver before and objected to it most | Sommand of the imperial government. Add | city or whether the said acute business men | pouiios ANl righty. who wetld'AVERINGS Tachuck, secretary of The Hee Pub d with the manifesto. The National | °0° of his emiczaries to him and asked him | thun ever before and objecte 1o | L0 this the possibility of a rovival of the old | inspired the remark we know not. What ; i 5 Iig, oty awermsjbayh SAL | yiinite oF Cloni ek Yo, fhuta ap- | 10 subseribe for $1,000 of stock In The Bee, | stronuously. Now they are taking pride | hatred of the English throughout India and | closed up and rained If these laws had not Dty Morming, Bven 1 in their suecess in going much further :'h ':\ .’w. v ”, " l\w 3 1 lwnw hang upon | it ity, for tKe t Balis s : 1 pa i 3 m‘hu t money e des f an Asfatle rule ¢ 8 city, for the time being, are KINg | oaners show that s can b d and they are holding up the record of ‘ aner had (n this city the same as usi if the would-be bor- sl the month " o |1 IS 88 Cikows tion of ealamity foreboders. Its presi oves A | spoils stribution 0 co end em- sorts of expori: s belng In Fhere ha . ananize i £ dent, viee president and several di-| What have you to say to this? Answer | “P0IIS distribution to commend ther All sorts of exy nts are belug tried In| There has been organized FoWar LN, tha ool linmt § 2 g selves 1o democratic support. It was [ Austria with a view to finding some ¢ e | sociation to protect ti " H Do | rectors are pronounced Holeomb men | through your paper if you see fit to con- | SCI¥e8 10 democrati i view to finding some effectly lation to pr bu tradict th AN OLD SOLDIER. |Only to be expected that so long as the | antidote to socialism, The latest of these is | of Omaha.” The organization wa which he refused to do, and because he re. . 4 : A i b sl | \rs on the list as otie of the combing- | fuseq 1o do so he had been hounded ever | o P politics business There is n single fact to sustain the calamity by the republican press ar The state fs slowly B BT Ll make no seeret of their preforence R 15| T'rue, there are several millionaires on Ihere is an ada s Pt Lt th s fine { v of AT war, we and in polities, o vice the democrats would not 2 | the Tist, but they cither have railroad | WAt i love and in polities, and th e bEndi e A S DT rs. The members in each [the Lumber Dealers’ a n and th H e B L (tachments or other corporate i hickory shirt warrior evidently is fight. | tate A e gt © | parish are to appoint officers, to act In con- | gtandand O conpeny ation pro 7 sts that are closely bound up with the | the npaign on that line. e | theit opportunity. But it was hardly t cert with the local elergy, and a newspaper is ‘ I . and soclal conditions, no matter which party 1 ; B railronds and compel them to co-oper- | tkes 1t for granted that he Is privi- | D¢ expected that while profossing ad i e 440 OLlctn OF Lin tat.| OMERE AE. the ‘polls fection dny, and| o ——— L e iR Clate with the Burlington ezar. Other [ leged to fabvicate falselhoods to com : Y i the achicve. | Lq0¥ Are to forward the enlightenment and | the method of protection s not to sce that PEOPLE AND THINGS, Total Vrgvy ssiit 8 | inoneves W o s st a bat the trath, even when his own state. | form they would ry In the achieve- | education in a Christian spi of all the|we have a “free ballot and a falr ji R T noneyed men m thi li r e A e et working classes, as well as to advance their B B e i RS heir nowar |, Corporal James Tanner of Washington, D, cop es iy s 3 tre 1 8 are contradicted by himself _— material welfare; further, to spread among | "™ Sstell bl ol L neif POWer | ¢, has been ted national commander of o nrer or the present state treasuver, | fitst explanation Majors attempted con The eity couneil will sit for two wecks | them a know ® of their constitutional [ 10 secure the election of particular candi- | the Unfon Veteran Legion of the United et cireulation and thele interest i getting gov- | cerning the hostility of Rosewater and | rights and b nd how to use them [dates to the offices of the state government. | States as u board of equalization to corvect ot [ logaily, “to. encourage Cathale feolins ) # 2 Jurtin's wil The Bee [ BT Yohid 4 L 1 Uhrlaacourage Catholic feeling, o de-| To believe in and to work for the elec-| Ex-Governor Curtin's will fills less than GRORGE B Tzseruek. | UTHOr who would Tielp them to avert the | The Bee to bis candidacy wos at the | oeg n the valuations put upon property | fetd Christian mo to strengthen the at- | 1,0 of particular candidates for office is a | ONe 8ide of a sheet of legal cap. He be- e m subseribed Hin - my | calaiity of paying the bond rises sev- | Stafe convention ou the 220 of August. [ 1o (e differont assessors. The errors | tchment of the peopie monarch and qucathed everything to his wife. The es- e A Stuabsa Ll the throne, and (o assis w y | privilege which belongs 1o every American | oot (oS " early 100,000, 15t of O 1804, | st datvae wove thelr pateiotism or | He declared then and there that for fif. % et 1 L an assist all works of true tate is valued at nearly $1,000,00 jeral degrees aliove their pa kil s i Which it can correct, lowever, are ouly | patriotism.” The laboring classes are called | citizen, But when the president of the| Justice J. M. Harlan, who is “mentioned” [ their pretended dread of the with- | tecn ye ‘“\l e | l:nl[lw‘ll hounded by Tose- | toopnical errors, it being beyond its legal | upon to unite for the purpose of agitating in | stock yards company, a lifelong demoerat: | for the republican presidential nomination wal of eastern i id much- | Water and The Bee because he would STUBBORN FAC s . ¢ 5 g i ared raise of (he fnte . One of | not do the bidding of the “little die power 1o raise or lower the total valua :“\“r ;::.K:v‘;md;xN\I.?“mn II";!' all '";;‘}" - | when the president of the Nebraska National | in 1896, is a physical giant, being the largest zens over 24 and in co cases 30 years | and next to G e tailest man on the tion. Baqualization remedies many - [ of ‘age, on the basis of elass sepeesateimr [bank, a dyed-in-the-wool democrat (the B v e e GRS B Pt o T ol to_sondues Ban- | tlie. moat promivent factors 1o getting |t SRR L '\l'"'l‘\n-'uv:;lui.w but it does not reach the root | for Just wage “calculated on Christian | & M. railroad does its banking through the | bala and in fine health He is bluft, hearty ator lnlllm out ur‘l\h« State whilo the New- |\, )iy terrible scare has a near reln v had not materialized in his fo lo® thie ovil, whiell §s the absurdly low | Princh which shall enable the average | Nebraska National): when the cashier of [and”very popular and gfeatly in demand at ey DI was pending? | 3 E X Ofeluls of the Burlligton railrond. Who pald Seth T. Colo for staying with | it worker, “without 100 great an expenditure | \pe Merehants N. the §\ d s tive who holds a contract for 1,000,000 | It would not stand to |, cessmonts Placed upon the property [of time and ‘:hm“ VR I*]!Wzllllflhl::‘ he Merchants National hauk (the Fremont, | dinner parties | venson. that Tosewator T Taoti ¥ i i Nekuaih 3 - 1 £ 3 i Elkhorn & Missouri Vailey railroad does its The Pennsylvania state commissioner ap- i tosewater would soliclt 8 | ,¢ (he great corporations, particularly | for himself and eventually for a family, L ot s Natlonaly: | ointed 1o secure possession of the Valley that hie fulfilied bis conteact | 0f Which Tie s reputed to have already [$1.000 stock subseription from & man | 1oz i enjoy valuable privileges at | 4180 permit of his laying by something for | ban ug through Lo cereants Natlonali| porgo property for a state park s making s | T o8 £ TE0/000 tor ChMEATEN R 4| LT il DA ATL e E oo S tee e | v hany day. the regulation of he hours of | when Willam A. Paxton, democrat fit to| favorable progress. The site of Washington's ( 0. ? made a cool $150,000 ‘f‘ himself and | L, i Ct unding fov three e punds of the city. A complete reor labor and the legal prohibition of work on | pe made a “eolonel” of ex-Governor Boyd's |famous winter camp comprises 200 acres, The Burlington ralivon his frizhtened assoclates in the calamity | years. An ordinary lar hns a g00d | oinisation of our assessment system can | Sundays and holidays, together with® an ex staff (Mr. Paxton s a large sharcowner {n|Which the jury raised at $28,532. The Who kept tho senato In deadlook white | (pyande. It is porfectly natural for this | memory, but Majors' memorys is notork alone remove these glaring nbuses. No | (oofon and reform of the laws for the pro- 0% 00 “AE 00 8 & AT o I state appropriated $25,000 for the purchase, lor was being spirited awa; ; b % T T (T e G A 3 alone remove these B " o | tection. of workingmen in the directlon of fthe stock yards); whon those men andfgiq” (ha difference’ must be made up by class of patviots to feel deeply con- [Ously defective even in matters th ! more importaut subject awaits the ae- | insurance a; fllness, accident, ald age | others of like assoclation combine to “pro- | public contributions in order to secure (me corned over the prospeetive eleetion of | are of publie record. Within less than | gon of 1he charter revision, committec, | and death, teet the business interests of Omaha" by | mediate possession q e The si ' i electing to the governorship of this state| The largest plow in the world, perhaps, is The situation of the Armenian people has ‘ i blic: ot :, . it l, oW 2 o | owned by Richard Gird of San Bernardino L ! taxation is to he obtained only by hav- | for many centuries exposed them to the per- | TePublican Ry e YIOWE, Weosunty, Cal, This immense 8ot tirnep 78 which was pald out of | live of the 218 firms and buosiness men | fifteen-year hostility story in the lead ing the assessment made on an honest | secution of their fanatical Mahometan neigh- | “*M0t €scape the be "f" the business | gtands’ eighteen feet high and weighs 36,000 fraudulent voucher? | jiave joined In this movement of their [at a public mecting in Premont by call- [ 1oy equitable Dusis bors of Turkey and Persia, and the history | /"{°rests of the people of Nebraska demand ekl S AL T T et ora’ private secretary, Walt M. Seely. | qwn froe will and accord. The others |ing aftention to the fact that I of the scet, the easternmost of the C 1..\»mu“"_“ il I‘ . Ak Vil it [ pable o plowing ety aures ot Inn Dt diy " | 4 3 7 - mily of nations otie: of ‘cont T og e blisher of the Cultivat helieves | P . . o e Theso uro stubborn facts and no amouant | .o efther (| oned, bulldozed or [ water wias not hostile to him up to| Judee Holcomb is to spend the two | fmily of nation ne of continued strug 10 puOliEnEE JUvelor DelBVaR fijior s naimensfront: e to ons anii K half tons of cuttleflishing cun befog the people. B et bt R e e e e # 3 4 ha | 5/, and, until & comparatively recent pe- | that there is only one fssue in Nebraska | of oal per dor. aad pons Iy teayélii nbaehs) | weatened into signing e whole | W i _yea LIC i ks just preceding election in Omaha | riod, of continued, unsparing persecution and politics. That issue is to protect the people | rate of four miles an hour. movement was conceive Burlington | The Bee supported him in 1800 when P s county. The business men | oppr The tale of pillag: nd torture | prom tne extortion of money lenders, the ————a | oL 1o vy . o ime r " 3 ity | @nd massacre which the sect has endured | % = | | eadquarters and pushed to the front by | he ran the first time for lieutenant gov W ave e oppor ‘ | railro and the stock TG T ] A Western Man or Bust. I to attend to that important duty uarter 1 front by & ¥ will iave ample opportunity | Lo through its entire history, and its sur- | failroads and the stock yards. Those in- St. Louls Republic. vival amid such conditions of unchanging | terests which libel the e of Omaha by But whate the New York democrats do hursday, October 3 . | organettes that play any tune like so | fention to anether fact, that in 1891 te for gov W and to judge for them nd m\|(‘L|<.|M\- hostility, a handful in the | arrogating to themselves the title, “the busi- | or leave undone, west rn and southern dem- | midst of a e § i | rind of foes, justifies its con- . crint 1 have Y v 3 7 TORE T s tHanifosto)l v & tlie contos ks i gorGrhos B y . Jus s - terests of Omahs ave obliterated | 0crats will not have a tremor e time o prople of the United States are | MANY Phonograph boxe I'he manitesto [ 4 u '“’,. he contest over the gove ric whether le is a man who would | gyos, ©0 0 supporting power of the faith | 2° a in r‘ f Omaha,” have obliterated | QCrats Tk wetn frlghtened: 17 o0t Moy Yom havin iother foreible schooling in the | M8 fallen flat in Omaha and does not | ship, The Bee had taken the position | o or permit to be done the slightest | which has been its staff and rod, But the | PArtisan prejudice and have destroyed party | friends win we shall be glad. It they lose great eampaign of edu ',,”i‘," X serfously alarm anybody that under- | that if Boyd was ineligible the lieuten- thing that might redound to the injury | Armenians have not always taken oppression | organization to compass one object, viz T'""‘\:.}:u(»:'.'.".ulf.‘:.‘;,,-"nii:n:” 1896 we are to have & i 1 ¥ i basic s RO, p AR Majors, wis this tegitl . P A meekly nor made the precepts of ‘humility | perpetuation of the privilege to extort money > 2 tands the mainspring of the movement. |ant governor, Majors, was the legitimat of the state’s credit. and sufferance their sole guides of conduct. | from the people by excessive charges where —_— sucral Weaver in all probability —_— successor to fill the vacancy, and not —_— News now comes from Erzeroum, a city of : l ok ML A & \ A MODERN HERO. O IEe i i o Ronic! n TN Shrka | PRES RAW MATERIALS. Governor Thayer, A thing that Will give the calamity [ that territory on the Turco-Ruaslan frontler, "‘y‘ ‘r’"“’ 4. monopoly Hot“the avenues ot 2 o Nel . 2 b y > £ R A \ i Shis commerce. Tna speech to his constituents a few | The truth is, and Majors knows it, | masqueraders litgle comfort is the re.|of & Christian uprising, in which severai | commel : He is having all he can do to attend to o R Lo W fi iy L) hundred Turkish and Koordish soldiers were| Tho publisher of the Cultivator is not in his own fences in the Ninth Towa con. | VS #50 Representative Wilson of West | that the opposition of The Bee to his port from Bradstreet's that Omaha's [ slain. Whether the incident was inspired by grossional district Virginia reiterated the declaration made [ nomination and election for governor Dhusiness is bettorethan at this time religious or political zeal, or by a prejudice in congress and amain at the time of | was brought about by his disteputs vear. In the bank cleavings the inerease of natfonallty, is not yet reported, but ex- : i i : D ¥ planations are likely to be forthcoming in a [Party discipline. He does not hold the a A e Vel sani e sete | N8 renomination that the work of the | conduct while holding the position of | 1. small, but still an in- | few days, and perhaps in the interval an- | personal character of this or that candidate | Never sald nothin® ter no one; Fignreatively speaking, the Hon, Pete 3 ut, » Y ¥ ! Allus refused a drink. Sturdevant is suspended by the bosom | T reformers had not stopped and | lientenant governor during the sessions Crens ion of what might | other |Ih\K:4M;'rn'! will have taken place as a|for office up to public view, nor plead the Jes' saved ‘ia cash wind o s of his punts to the halyard of the state | ™M It was still thele purpose to put | of the legisiature in 1591 and 1803, be if the bank! parlor crusaders would | gaifoetion of {he former, after the manner | cyuse of any clique or class. But he feols | An' wanted ter sit an' think. house dome, while Tobe Castor, forlorn | VW1 they call raw matevials on the | The $1.000 stock story which Majors | 1ug up on their prossure. rences there it is o be remarked that whilo [t & sacred duty to advise and warn the | Nover could it excited: and disconsolate, Is weeping for Ab-. | "¢ Hst. This leader of the tariff re- [ Las concocted as a counter charge to his they are quite likely to be religious in their [ people of Nebraska that the forces of ex-| Fur even the night we b ear Ry formers in congress asserts, in common | awn blotted record isa barefaced fal A DI for trdescence, T peinegs et St il eocusn e monoaly SinieileRatate) dlrves | Sl RS SEL BE oA S e with Mr. Cleveland and other demo- | hood. Majors began to cirenlate this I aFRINE T RS aq) Hon: | 7oyt | (Eroelbyk anteiatingbith ataes, STl aitima it (015500 4 C ARTLY. oRacL anmiic ey e oamy [ Sis ot L A R i manufaciurers i attendanee | AU leaders, that with free maw ma- | story during bis tour among the whol Wi ars ehgaged I pyrotechmic A G ST G PO Rt ol copriOi it o Toa et e el i can Gastight association at Washingtoy | Mve no ditfienlty in securing slm!‘l"lnu we did not deem it worth notice, | enough iridescence ","", scintillations to | may be compelled to regard them as the ag- s "“'““‘: ;_M 840 But Jim simply sauntered away. ought o throw a flood of light upen |[°F the markets of the world. Mr. Wil-| 5o long as he refrained from repeating | form a eorona an e T B st s e O e P o ruora i basslans Uasasrlioni s | AT e ApIngflaneh ncame tenital all the questions that tating the | 00 told his British free trade admivers | it in public speeches, What if They Should Die ? to them. been made In this campaign than that the | An’ we Knowed thet victims wos in theis people of this country that it was in this way that American | The Bee Publishing comp s or w York Tribune. i populist administration has blighted the busl-| . track— =5 0 P tariff veformers proposed to enable our | ganized Februs 8. Edward | One of the Massachusetts Russells—Wil-| The political history of Madagasear is briet, | ness of the state. In common with all other| DCthers. children an® wives mn. the Hon. Buclid Martin, heard the | With those of Great Britain in the | trolling interest, and two of his brother Gatm o e O ARolICealeretEemant, (C:::“"";Yrmfi"":m":w;“::r :i":;:‘::‘;ly (:l':rl“;""*! I CorteRy o SReL S ol allvar D S | i the ‘\1‘.u|k:. blew high through a reds Hest news from the supreme court” s markets. It was all a very sim clind, O, who had advanced him | thryse into uncomfortable publicity o ISR Eamounger s prcannL 79 ST | ity it Lbaving inallis an Sleatl L denin ity G e his Lewlldered followers and that is to v of the West Virginia congress- | lication, were the only pers considercd, young William Russell seems to | states and to have worn fine lineaments "',:.‘.‘:‘»‘;;5 ;““:‘m‘l:“ "P‘H'""‘ ‘!’::"F“(“‘,"‘"“I'{””‘-fi T e Y L AR (A E ; fuse with the prohibition party. ! . Give |Iy~-. Awerican manufactorer | (e company was organized, that owned f::):‘v: got decidelly the bette nd of the :l“)]’Yll,::::!tlll”i:‘ll('““’l'sl5:;‘1’1.‘::::"Ilyrllwfililv‘; ‘t:‘y“v\:\“{’l:vl‘ Iml"i")“m‘" res:lwl mm: He eiaie ul‘hfr.}”}.fl"..‘( .','I““J[“..fly’\“’J‘fxllf" loafin' there, free raw materials and he would do the | more than a siy of stock. The ST - R into & tolerably harmonious confederacy, With | the Indian mints. The bank exchanges, D - a " 4 iy 3 Vell ald For. Congressiman Kem las finally rost, only parties out of Omaha in Ne an ”':;‘.,I,A.':“.-‘.‘w: Ailiiontabed himself as suzerain, and gave to the state that all Is fair in | postoftice vemains outside of the civil [a plan for the establishment of a Catholic |by a combination of national bankers, hosi- | Workingman' ty, which is to include|road managers, the stock yards company emmmnanen but surely its prosperity, and will continue prove in s industrial poses to protect th s int ot lerence to the cause of clvil service re hondsn for the late st vitilroad ties on the Burlington road, ont omins J. Majors. W ho certified to a fraudulent voucher for | e 3 Taylor's puy after he had abducted? | 1dze Tolcomb, & month after e was nominated he |\ juet apportionment of the buidens of s J. Majors. As o matter of fact, less thau twenty ;l'v-lm':uhv-lmi himself and knocked the If you h lected to register do | the Burlington Journal and the railvond |ernor. He » have called at- |t pocome acquainted with their candi- " queer; politics. He does not profess to mold pub- | An’ the boys sorter laughed when any one lic opinion on matters of party creed or spoke r ¢ 4 Of Jim ez an engineer, Thar ain't much ter tell, e jes' done it to rousting The Bee in his campaign A most important part of the produe- | praska that were solicited to subscribe Some idea of how much it costs to keep a :{'.l". U\:‘:y”du““. {”xru’:v‘ t'::t:t; I\'nrh:::l-;:uh‘ll‘ ::A.; “:fm;l::sll:l':\:\‘»{‘!x):\\:\'h |r:n.lr ul:‘.::d,r‘:-'uluy" fi“l‘l:le: : A:x s "nkhu‘x!»lf “v:“khlxlm 'nli:"'r'xn-«s SEoscuen \n the Stxth district. The Beo | tons and the commerce of this country | were parvonnl and political friends at | family of uble-bodidd Inalsne may e guined | Since wors. It s not been inhospitavle nor | o' Mizhelt: a7aw luces and siow S R e e e has weathered the opposition of othe riis raw cotton. It Is in the broadest|(he state sital. None of these w paid and to paid by the United States | tions, though it naturally resents the attempt | from the production of silver to the produc- R UL thnty vou - Ihdlirean congressmen before Kem and hopes to [ sense free raw material. We sked to subscribe for more than a siy Vernment S Aoundaltion o e (vaatiduie rance to supersede Its authority and|yon of goid, and the value of the output| WhH ¥ 1 AR r buried f plied for this purpose since the act of 1799 | practically treat it like a conquered power. SO I e Nt aine be able to survive the attacks of the | large quantity of it annually to Gr gle share of $250 face value, and if |z tled by, Varlous acts of CONEICSs | The real reason of the commotion which now | Of the yellow metal will not fall short of Say. stanger. you ketch on slow, | brilliant nonenity from the Sixth. Britain and we use a great deal of It|ajors had Dbeen cither a personal or | J1c8 (A% G U ACReR AL SMIRHSINE 12 | conters about the island is that it has sud- | $12.000,000. The crops were never more “weck. j —_— in our own mill it s produced |a political friend he would not have | 1891, aggregating in. valy about 310,000, | denly become a m,l.ul\:m»”,:n;u of the high- | abundant; the cattle industry is in excellent | A’ I'm ‘a-boomin’ the show. o 3 in wi ‘ . Al things considered, the lands taken from | est importance, and he possesston of a Perhaps Euelld Martin will now have | liere our : 1t would | heen nsked to snbscribe for move than [ i Tafluns tn ane ey ans anoiher ahuia | Seval mowes oo the Airet class oo meaten = time to devise additional ways of sub- | <eem, ou ght to have a very decided ad- [ ope share. Even G al Van Wyck, | Columbus landed, and about which so many | (g entire commerce of the eastern seas and SiBihe hite i (& ‘ i i1icq) | fears have been shed, have been pretty well | tho integrity of all existing European au- weribing himself on the Railroad Busl- | vantage over the British manufacturers | who was a warm personal and political thority in the eastern lands. The questions ness Men's association that already | i the markets of the world. But as a | friend, never subscribed for a share a0 Bins Hevorsnoe: involved will very likely be settled in coun- YOUR MONEY'S WORTH OR YOUR MONEY BACK. tains the nawmes Parlin, matter of fact they do not have, and | Does it stand to reason that Majors w York Tribune. Sl sbRousR.thany AsbEimBOIEIREC enough 210 it 5 Martin, and Parlin, Ovendorlf & Martin | not only do we not control the markets | who was then identified with the Union i !'rl .\:.“l e w.lnlm-dny u‘n-ln.;,.iu SRt ar, Prpas o, 1 o . : (oG AR 4 onely man on earth s own state his y * ©o. These names can be arcanged in | of the world by veason of having this | Pacific railrond faction and held no office | I,“”L“ it s i SR RN GRS GRS The missionary in China is always in bad & great many wmore interesting com- | free raw material, but foreign manu- | a that tin should be asked to sub- | ter enemy for e is heartily de-| cage iy time of war or civil commotion, and i R | tested throughout the east for his free trade 2R | 3 binations. | factured cotton is freely sold in our | seribe for $1,000, or any other sum? and throughout the west and south | his position now is less m\.;un;hl than that | H - ‘ ,YO ays) = avkets, ‘Dhe statistics show. thi s Eada it opposition. to free s coinage. | of his pr sors three and a half centurie 2 . i 2 T R R A ”“‘,.‘.m. markets. Th rm:l;g 3 .lm“rum Ax alveady stuted, the story is an im- | vhere (e talnt of the sugar and | _{,Iey Ty b p et erie A He 8 agd nIST) we exported §10,853,950 of cot- [ pudent e, but it is only on a par with | whisky monopolies elings to his adn tra- | @ an ram g y L ke nuisance ey Shicng A 2 4 | o A fon, Targely because he had not the nerve | Khan's western wars of invasion, and during had the Smoke nulsance evil. Chicngo o | ton manufuctures und that In 1893 we | the dentals which Majors has made in | Hom Iarsely betause he hadnot the nerve | ¥han's Wwosiern wars of lnvasion, and durine Some say that with Bryan he wiped up parently troubled much and more | 1,0 peen able to Iner the exports | the present campaign concerning his | through the senate. In favoring an income | well treated and their work on the whole en- s than Omaha by the violation of city or- | | | of cotton goods only to the extent of | conduct in the Taylor abduction and his | Gisisy e, 4 his demand for free | o AGited ek ailie . ances in relation to this subjec | Franciscan friars, visited the country as dltncos In relation to:this subject, but | go55405, .notwithstanding the fact that | relatlons to the . ralivonds and. s ore and coal has Kindled the hatred of o[ " %550 and both bave left records of FOR CONGRESS. his body the facts by namely, that her authorities are not al A ring » s pe =E i % i |e r industry. So it com and social customs of the people. ‘)'llvy years ¥ e lowed to relax thelr efforts to enforce | e DU the same period of four- | respect and would not tell the truth If | (U an probably Telp his party | later came Friar John of Monte Corrino, also ‘ the score. While others | tax he made a host of enemies at all com- | gouraged. Carpini and Willlam of Rubruk, Gl RN floor, and he heaped on o o aha S AraR Ak | miners. The wool growers everywhere r b 8he is abend of Omaha in one respect, | wo had the free raw material all the ligi 58/ LoofLlare. s Hih e b A hn £ Voo ‘aiol 0 4] nET 5D s wool message Started the | it which are yet extant, describing the habits teen years, on the other hand, the in-|a falsehood would serve the same pur- | most by refusing to help it at all a Franciscan, and after much obscure prop- their provisions. The vote in this (the Sccond crease in the fmports of cotton manufae- | pose. agandist labor among these interesting pa- are certain that Thurs- R JABRER, gans obtained a following and was appointed R G T R .= by Pope Benediet XIT archbishop of Camba- 0, or over §12,000,000 in increase of AL 3 Philadelphia Jagwell-How much | lue, known to later gazetteers as Peking, | been able to declave its regular quar A BLACK EVE TO CALAMITY. ! | doas -4 dellar welght Hardup—You can't Afterward, as the faith spread, numbers of terly dividend of 2 per cent for the last | \»I|||ur|'lr~l, u‘.« ||)|II|':IVI'|'1| with l.l'.w-f llu.lfl g (e raise one of them With a derrick. suffragan bishops and priests of his own | $1L.000,000 incpease in export The dif L Oct, 16, 1894, quirter, as well us to add a couple of | millions to the n surplus that has been accumulated in previous » Al this, notwithstanding the large num ber of Pullman passes outstanding. The only question s, what would fthe Pullinan surplus have been by this thne if hard times had not intervened, The Pullman Palace Car company | a8 bolow:— on was thrashed, and | | )Hll'l-\ was from $G.576,253 to $19,031, i - | ‘ | | o'er the arena was man- MERCER, (Rep.,). DOANE, (Dem., ; gled and mashed. It 4 ' 2 ‘Il be ready order were sent out, and missions were es- | much greater but for the decline in | :dently pretty good, notwithstanding : | haVe time fo run down town and get shaved | favored and protected by the great Khans 5 f the populists. : | before we start, ove, who succeeded Jenghls, Kublal among them, sold in this ecity yes! . Plain Dealer: “Fhis” sald the bichelor, as lord of the pleasure dome of Xanadu, as W HEELER, (Pop.,) . all depends on how _you rought over 90 per he paid for sewing o o button, *is what 1s | %Il a8 many ,”',::,',f' Rabia fahesdewhinll aw materd our hauds the forelg EeRea SOy e e of the line of Jenghls the 04 £ raw waterial at our hands the foreizn meant by @ s ) B e e re ot i look at it. Everyone wanufacturers, who had to buy this T per's Bazar: Tt must be strange for | missionaries was entirely blotted out, and | waterial of us, were not only able to Spaniards t3 feel that they are ruled | only resumed after the accession of the by a mere fifant'" “Why?' “It's %o | Marchy emperor two centuries later,” This will judge according to his previous opinions. Good | keep us out of the world's markets, ex THE DEMOCRATIC SPOILS RECORD. Y Uncommon. ™ ~HUmph! 1ts plain you never | Masohi smpatie. two, senturier Jater. 1 fipee ~feept to a very limited extent, but to ime of the democratic newspapers | Bad an infant.” o [ SmAAMARELEA TONR 1A A HDO: AL iudees are those that investigale for themselves: The women are displaying \{ll:mml in- } bring the manufactured cotton back ,..‘ ing to their readers the ve Irdianapolis Journal: “Is Timmins going | ing in the country with varying fortune and | Judg g terest in political matters this year, if | onr own market and sell more of it here | interesting figures of postoffice appoint Yots (op youstl s | tavor ever since, their power and influenco kil Jin was. and the n ol y 4 5 ican voter. Its a good thelr attendance upon political meetings | et A0 s, and the next min. | hoing greatest in the early perlod of their oc- That's all we ask of the Americ: g than we sold abroad. ments under the three latest presiden- | ute he asked me WHat business 1 expe e e s Yaavaro | 18 to be taken as u criterion. Whethe ont. I to go into after thé election,' this interest goes further than merel, prices. Can anybody mistake the plain | teaching of these figures? With the fr ; In the meantime, however, we were | tial .:nllml‘ni-I' ‘|--5|~.[ "'I'ivlul‘r obie .-v-mr“ \ndidate y o mARkia (o' axiend hrotastitacte sl sisstod rule to believe nothing you hear and only about half Mstning to the dbcussion of publc en ;::.‘;:“:“;‘u-(ll"(‘i;;rllsl::l: e S 'xl.‘:.:l.."l:,‘:'n“;.:m ]:1‘»11‘:‘;;1‘:'.;;:lllll::n:H‘):“in e | SO nli"c\?';,‘.' i A e :I,“ili AE:E(;I :lflll.j:”:x“vg’i;l:xll.lxl:‘l‘:ll‘;“‘\:ij\Il;;l;\vr\“t\h"l’l:l:j-} what you see. We'll have a sale of suits Saturday number of women who avail thems 1\»-"\1‘[:“‘} ;,'IH;:"...,T ‘:;l‘d ,‘I\“,h _“: ,'::”.m' ;}::,“,l::""m ‘.‘:. I,:-,',‘,'\"‘,:',"” . ,mu“::;i | Tamtas |18 en mamasious oounse) town on that day. We meet any of 'em on prices’ of their limited franchise to participate Philadelphia “Mars signaling | . o ritis! dmiralty is of obstinate con- 000,000, The exports of cotton goods in | previous records. The figures are, in | to the earth siid the boy on Arch siree | The British admira i the el ction of school officers, 1000 mare taas' (1 veia - then 15 186 | sutSianio: (haxe: T Mureh 4, 1585, | % his mothér slipped on a banana peel servatism and distrustiul of outside devices quality and style considered. Suits from $7.50 up, e with free raw material all the time. | to March 20, 188, were appoluted | | Chicago Tribune: “This, 1 supposc.” sata | I% 7S sud armar uwatil 1t s Brged o e How sad It is that Mr. Euclld Martin's | Could there be any better test than this [ 1,185 presidential postmasters; from | pae i e il Mukden, Jening pensively | : Bickering political light has been suuffed | of the theory that free raw materials | Mareh 4, 188, o Maveh 26, 1890, 1,765 | © et e e Sonslve youns man went | It oPosed the theory of the pn ubtle i out forever. His contemporaries did [ will enable the American manufacturer | presidential postas ppointed; | away from the witering place next day and | With 1ts usual stubbornness, but has finally left her blooming alone adopted It and will soon have batteries of mot or would not recognize his com- | 1o capture the world's markets, or any | and from March 4, to March 26, these formidable instruments distributed manding ability nor concede the wis- | more conclusive evidence of the fallacy | 1804, 1.806 were appointed. Under the . \'”;.‘f.ekx “::rh[;; ¢ ly':lx‘_":‘g:._ .A.ff(':,.'.( among England's coast defens It is prob- dom of his leadership. In the fullness |of that theory, standing by itself? | first sixteen months of the fivst ¢ an he s0pport You? Daukhter—Why, papa | 20l spurred to this work by the success of BI’OWDlng, lng Oo, of hope he hus been cast down. Per- | Given free raw materials, improved fa- | land adwinistration 20881 fourth-class | o MUst know”that it wasn't nis Coitl thas | the recent experlments at Sandy Hook 1o 4 ey s haps future generations of men will | cilities of production, our own means of | postinast were appointed; under the S aim o r‘:}h:mv‘:’;“"‘f j-;l'rlv',f:rf ::::hm..;.:‘;!: Reliable Clothiers, S. W, Cor. 15th an ouglas. read on history's page of the virtues | transportation and a reduction of Amer-. | first sixteen months of the Harrison ad ikt Bopdedolily [ (aniarh 'ha’ Mreikdsat (Rritiah! marakic and prowess of this great statesman and | ican wages to the forefgn lovel, and we | ministration 20, nd under the first| Young Mother Hubbard at, It In quite time. for the admiraity 1o accord to him a place on the top shelf of | shall be able ta successfully compete | twolve months of the present ndwminis-| WEnt to the cupboard take heed of a service so important, and to immortal fame, But people of this de- | with European manufacturers for the | tration 22,012 fourth-class offices pass |'| Quite toothsome he found it | ? §ot the hove. Lramp 8. plo; atone for its delay and negligence by hurry " And rapidly downed it ing up its pneumatic batteries, It I8 pow Jenerate age won't. : warkets of the world, but not other | into the control of democrats. The aver- about the business with remarkable vig Then crawled io a boxcar to di busy in the work

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