Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 21, 1894, Page 12

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i .. £ T i 53 LR B 0.5 oy AL 340 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1804, = S —— —————— S ——————RE BAYARD'S TRIBUTE T0O ENGLAND. enrrenc, To prevent this Secretary |meet Inerensed demands, but umlv-r'mlnr«pr«-nmuflrr of the democratic INCREASING TRE ARMY, BLASTS FROM RAM'S HORN. Hon. Thomas F. Bayard, American | Carlisle was importuned to recoln the | present conditions they can hardly ho‘lmrun and declares that he cannot un 8t 1 ROSEWATER, Editor, ambassador to Great Britain, 18 at home | unsold snpply, but he declined on ae- [expected to, do so, although i times of | derstand how any respectable 0emo- | galy (hink an erecse of i Conoing Son .T(“"T,."'.: z:'.m:::n";.'r;::?a:’»::;:.‘\:Q.a--. e on A vacation after an abseuce of [count of the unnecessary expense of |exigency tliby » not been altogethe at can support him for governor of | necessary because Huffalo Mill as canceled | mo n gmall soul & dollar always looks bigs PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. clzhteen months. He was glven & most | minting. Several attempts were made to | uumindtal of their duty to the business New York. This letter s directed | (16 engagements of his Wild West Indiane | 5"\l g biggest tres that bears the best e == il reception on his return by the organize syndicates to relieve the | public in tiis tespect more particularly to ex-Mayor Grace | “pyiideihia Tonuiar G ea S Je | frutt. b e b A people of Delaware and in responding isury of 1ts holding, but in vain, and | But in any event banking on govern- and some of his fellows of the state |argument for an ihirease in (he regular army T e N PN Datly_es ana $un One Year, Mr. Bayard had many complimentary | finally, ab ten days ago, the order | ment bond4geannot continued many | demoeracy who have announced their|!8 & strong one. ~When the eivil war was| T o deception so dangerous as selts B Tths : things to say about England. He had | was given to rogard the souveniv coins | years longer, and it 18 therefore timely |intention to work for IHIL Keeplag | po purmer v T s faigit 1t would have | option. BaTEL e, OO0 Phe: received unbounded courtesy and Kind- [as cash in the treasury and to issue | to consider what shall be done to re-| M. Pockham off the bench has not | Indians, It did not know of the white| The man who lives only to please himsel Weekly Bec, One Year..... ness there and had everywhere found | them at thefr face value in exchange place the phesent system with one | improved Senator Hill's standing with }1""5'”j that were about to come over from | has a hard master. L TR that the name of an American Was re-| for gold. By thus resteicting the fssue | equally soonfand safe. The Baltimore | the mugwnmps of democratic proctivic | B 05 e great mistake (o suppose (hat money fouth Omalia, Corner N and Twenty-fourth B | cofyved with a degree of favor extended | the treasury hopes to add a little to its | plan does not contemplate any interfer- | ties, danger of a forelgn fnvasion that we can| There ate men who help the world & great i to no other people. His observation, | gold balance and at the same time en- | ence with the national banking system = not repel There may a little more | deal when they get out of it b Mr. Bayard said, had led him to cournge the use of the coins by mer- | but simply to supplement it, and i it| Among the heavy capitalists and mer ‘“"r'“lr of ~l""v.r*'v discord, but our pre "-"! It the bass drum could think, it would CORRESE ) grent respect for the temper of chiants and others for premiums to cus: | shonld be adopted and found to opernte | CHANLS whose names appear on the bust- | FSE FCARE ARPOLES MORIEAT 10 (Grueh | probably wonder why it has to keep still s LR T A T the Baitor. | Lixlish people and their government. | tomers who will keep them out of gen- | satisfactorily we shall have a plan that | Dess man's eircular that has been mailed | gy need until tho laws and thelr adminls Freasute 14id up In heaven don't stop AMWE BUSINESSE LITTERS, He found there a great respeet for | eral cirenlation. Kven under these reg- [ will in time embrace the entire bank- |0t to every merchant, bauker and hotel | tration are altered. ; ing finterest when the bank down hers aditomat "0 8Tt A0 SCRARCES Smbanyt | 1. not simply among the accomplished | ulntions the withdrawals hiave not yet | ing system of the contry. Undoubtedly |Keeper in the state are: = ticorce 1. || DeWer Sowe: The majaty Bt ack | breaks. ; ) : Drana;, Drufis, checks and postofMce otdem, 19 | men who deliver their Judgments upon | heen very _heavy. ~ Should another (it this plan should work well the na. | ¥trvker, A, Dulnskl (ount), Bl F. | rmedy ‘than ballots and hayonets must be [ joioss at pragor meeting ihat scome reliore " B Wiy PUBTISHING COMPANT. | the Intricate cases of property and per- | World's fair be held in the United | tional banks would rapidly adept it, so | Winter, Sam MacTLeod. 1. H. Coclirane, | found for existing v rongs If our free govern- | ig"yol — ==————==| sonal rights in their courts of Justice, | Stutes it is safe to assert that cave will | that long before the time when there (4. We Eller, Frank J. Crawford, W. A, | et s 10 lst. - e toundations of 1681 A1) the knowledge in the world can't make BTATEMENT OF CIRCULATION i b iR e ot oF Bous | o b ¢ ¢ R A aenili Kelley., We 180 assured that in| o0 A rosts ot the meonle | 8 Wicked ‘man feel at home in a prayer George B Tachuck, tary of The Bee Pul but among the humbler class of those | be taken not to r at this disappoint- | will be no government bonds availabl reflect the will and interests of the people | .. ting tahing conpuny, belng doly aworn. seys tha | otlier officials who mingle with the body |ing experiment with the Columbian | as security for elreulation there would addition to the above several hundred :7]”:‘;{: than of a class that is exploiting the — e T rnC e o A o aday Bee | 0f the people at large. There is a con- | coins be a0 reorganization of the bunking sys. | DAMes cannot be printed for want of | people. B e an Fralddess Howl for Hiarmony. printed dvelnc (e onth of September, 184 | (iiuration by the officials for the feel [ : ; ! to 60t ¢ . Refereuce hag|ace. Tt seems to us that it fs & mean |, OIRCERAL Commercial: | denctal Seto:| = Kessts Oy str, e ' s I IS of the people: there I8 an obedience | FROUDE AS HISTORIAN herctofore been made to the detafls of | tHIck to keep such prominent business | ent’ report o congress that our standing | has almost Kot dowh o Lts Kiees Lo i B B2 | ated In the humbler official versy among students as to the exact |y, gheorved the comments made on | Fatty Thomas, Charley Unitt and [ Q5 Yo¢L Ormiom. N8 470 BI00A B ot FRtic SUPFemAcY 16 the NERE 2 n | By way of ilustration Mr. Bayard [PO81on which James Anthony Froude | o500 ic 1o gerfous objection to it | Denny Late out of the Hst for want of | with him. The trouble may be in part that mlate democracy 1s Aghting for princs n BB 0 int during his reskdence of o voar | 2CCUDIES among uglish bisoriuns | (K1 BEE SRS K iore apace whon prin paper s such | e have too many “ahouiier strapi with | i S RS i SOl Sdher B Balf in England, most of the e Of s adimivers will lusist o | ¢ine it lu nsliearuly anproved by fho|o, clienn connmodity’ and. tiieve 1s an [ SRECs S gl o raral propel SRR il t In the ity of London, he had never [ C11H0E him a peer of any who have abundance of money on hand to spread | ariy inowll parts of the country; there are | SALVE FOR LONG SERMONS, Wi 2,86 | soon a policeman with a baton or stiek [ E0Ne before. Others will object to clase Fovernment . PeNCRVAIIONS. WhieH: must. /be 32333 2 sonthern bankers generally as by the of the cast. The only criticlsm we have | the gospel of business calamity. . P} with Gibho Grote, ) | ——————————— B in Lis hand; be liad never seen a blow | NE him with Gibbon, Grote, Mucaul noted is that the plan does not make | Stubbs, Hallam 1 o recoguls “rnek by one, or heard violent lan ubbs, Hallam and the recognl o, or even seen a violent gesture from a policeman, Yet the authority | Toial o s ’ of Taw s vepresented by these officlals | 90 OBY @ Bite move than a year when Mr. Froude was proposed as the i« fully respected by the people e i i SUCCOSSO] 1o | o his aroraR Bayard also found that a str f e il 10 Birce e Bid | torian’s chair at the g st of Eng: this 1t ot October, tive principle pervades the K ¥ 4 ¢ : ol P e, Tle had observed a high degrd [1ish wniversities ..m. -.;.]v.rf,<|f»:| was of moral feeling amoug them, strong | MANIfested that the place was allowed Herr Dowe might find a purchaser mother ties, and the roots of respec for his bullet-proof ¢ over in China. | ubility deeply planted. “I have been | | | | i | guarded and coasts which must be defended. | piam Dealer: The Chinese buglers never 1 t For this work more men are fmperatively | sound retren By don L gat. 1t Tle estion is already being pub- | nee ‘\‘ Then, to the army \lm‘\lM be so L - JOR Vet Lt licly made that Pennsylvania owes some | large that it will form an effective nucl u\i “\\wx l'n\l‘;n wrettes Ilu‘l?. y \..‘m‘.- Morley to old man Jimpking, who was euts tion was raised, with some, acrimony | o 0 h ribute the memory of the late Goy- | in case of war, and it should be so widely ¥ [ objection to it but it ix one that may |ribute to LS Y distributed that it may be utilized as a | '} casily be remoyed ernor Curtin, which might very prop- | genool of observation and instruction for the | . V e .| erly take the form of a monument or | militia. | . Chicago Record: Mrs. Mallersby—I won- It is quite impossible to say with any | ¢ " der why the! ke v heate legree of cortatnty how the plan will | {atue of the great war governor. The| Kagsas City Star: General 0. 0. Howard, hey muke women's theater hats degree ertuinty o pla 0 high? be regarded in congress, It Is antici- o i o R in his annual report, endorses the view of | *y uggestion ought to be acted upon at| G ora) Sehofield that an enlargement of our | g 't pated that it will encounter the oppos tion of the free silver aen and it is also once by the patriotic poople of that | Teguar army i needed. - Genersi Howard | o | state. The part played by Governor|is a veteran soldier who knows thoroughly [RERET i et probuble that it will be opposed by the [ CUrtin in maintaining, the union was Froude’'s historical work, however, i ¥ the military needs and resources of the| Syracuso Post: Mis. Henpeck—It's no | advocates of the repeal of the tax will stand as important contributions to | *0° ! adequate provision for the protoction of | English writers of history. The ques: |y . qonaaitor, and perhaps this 18 a valld Less deductions for wnsold and returned ‘coples v £ oft the tops of some trees, “checking the trunks, are you Mallersby (with bitter significance)— they'll harmonize with the bills, 1 sup- country, but he is not a man who cares for | 188 talking bank issues. If it should have equalled by fow in the service of their [ the “pomp and ecircumstance of war,” and [ ffonpeck @eekly)=Then what do you do country. His patriotism deserved to be | as far as he s personally concerned will 2 soon se to be interested in the army Atchison Globe There {8 a sweetness opposition its chances of adoption will, of course, be small. (long time there,” said the ambassador d [ pointed to as a lesson for all genera- | Guperal Howard believes that the force [in a woman's smile at a dry goods store | | Ex-Vice President Morton's coachman | “ynd I do not remember that I have ;’_‘" history of his country His bids fair to enjoy the same notoricty | heard any onth. I have been a long piozraphies, ;ulw. while to o greaf ex as Senator MePherson's cook. [time there and 1 do not remember, [ [tent colored by his own views, will re tions to c¢ome. A monument to his | which is to maintain the peace of a country | that her husband never sees, miemory is the least return that Penn- | of sixty odd millions of people should ex ruthi=Bhe (el itEAIV)< Lol veallotHIa = G Ryl ceed 25,000 men, and he has no hesitation | mo s protiy hs o metnee? y An event interesting to old soldi sylvania ean make for his devotion, in saying so. His opinion is certainly en-| He—My darling, you are a living picture, ) titled to respect She —S8irf 11 main standavds for some time to come. N . 8 OwW foand 1 ing 8 di 1 e tninment, i the height of jest, a story | M 1 life and ning was dir vorywhore will be the unve next to preparation for work in the hist | s i Some of the members of Prof. - e Gon i that a man would object to telling to Wedng in Philadelplia, of a| ek . S hoorn O nta Constitution hat do you - h ’ ] field and for painstaking investi ! Central ehurch in Chicago are PEOPLE AND THINGS. hinK of my new ball (ress? his wife, is sister or his danghter.” | F0C 4T fO0 DIVHSCEIE i L k. It seems to me more like a hunting cos- ytoTiia AN 0 RITRRING o e BT G et R e S TSR e e = 1t sure, that T ever heard at any enter It's a poor statesman now who can't be lntroduced to his audience as the next president of the United States. statne of General George B, McClellan, PR o o 5 ) ; of disbanding their organiza- tum Preparations have been made for a M P . p A we h e & : ; tribute o ite founder, whose | Political promises are as thick as the | "% 1k to know why? ihat Mr. Bayard's associations a I grent workyontliefliistory: of demonstration that will doubtless be LHIbRteRtoA R tounder A 0BR e ko A s v biroass | - It'in;dear, nnd you are bare, sothor with the better class of the land under the Tudors. I'rom the pub- | yayopnlle, Prosident Cloveland and | personality aloue, they think, has beet | g opiffon 1s_growing in New York that| o0 . : & oles and Liat R lieation of the first volumes of this work | 1 "uipinet are expected to e present, | 1t8 foundation. Would not its continu- | Cleveland is affiicted with the writer's i et dr el IR B ; i he heeame a prominent figure among R i ance as au organization he a greater | cramp. boat the most part vestricted ! overnors of states and others prominent | Rar R had trandy 421 thuctn Varidks porttons;| oMk ut Tant dealemuny seevtn (o T abits and the )ife of that element, [N foremost histo writ HIS o public affairs will attend, and there | {ribute o Prof. Swing as showing that | o Sgy Yo ™ indications point to a large, | friend. “If there’s anything about Slip it tled (Haedly (HE snid LA IEE | death narrows still further the Bst of | ("o s Jyrge military dlsplay his work had been able to educate the [ lively blizzard in about sixteen days Pete that 1o beat he certa [ vy conkiierbli elonont ot tns populas | ETert Bux!iall isfbrinne=n list that lins | 8 E i G o congregation to pursue it still further | Considering the inflexible understanding of very. considerau’e element ol thepop f 188 be aken to avoid giving the o p | ‘ Chinese soldiers, the wonder is how they ew Orleans Picayune: Live well and live S| < too r ( YERU NS, : 138 a o S spae p? P force d t 1 tion of (irent Britaln that has no re- | SMWUNK too rapldly in recent years. casion the slightest political char ""l'| 4l I'l" ”"'“;. \‘]l' i “" l' can develop such marked sprinting ability, | long. It kills o man to shorten his days ¢ law yody so that all politics bs have bee working along tlie lines sct by the emi-| “que pauls of train robbers are few and ,. i ! dobinte Y ik <pect for law and that anybody who ik AT I Toaranoprs, |80 that all political clubs have been RN s sct by the ol | The haula of train rabbers are fow and | pyotsort Teibune: D you st like the onsly to having the event transferred to | (114 1o find immorality and vulgarity fused permission to march in the pro- | Nent breacher now decensed would be & | far ‘between, compared with the 1 | picture. you bowglit No, not since I got the senate chamber at Washington, | Nt SN The male members of the house | T L iy more fitting monument for & man of | and relentiess hauls of the New York police. | the hin of it : ShINgton. |, i thiem there i most abundant | o1 sl i Lo | cossion, and no erganization, whatever O it Claval SRR AT EH S iow | P EtaN AL motwithstanding the fact that the sixe | 110G LR e e o, | WhIc for nearly 300 years have ruled | FEERe FEU 0 SERETEHACEE W such energy and force than any plle [, M. Cleveland's welght ts now reported at) oyiongy Teibune; ™ “How long have you oLitneiAndlence there would by neces: fis"ava ihia Dulten Jingdom has | Losiw Wwere aliiost witiout exceptlon (1 o ity Hnyibut the) Aine of granite or marble. vait of New York democrats for an en- | Hved I this state?” inquired the reglsira- sarily circumscribed. Yl 2 5 large and strong men, but they have 2 b ko s e ouraging word v life,” replied the lady, with a | rull share. vt been long-lived. The present czar, | 118 OF course e attendance of | Experi Tenchos Cautlon. Ollle Sumner Teal, New York's political | glgam in her e) selohned Aharam e me the less ibute of . < ar veterans Is expected. The erectic Pty i stler, is peculiarly qualified a machin [ ejoin he offi- ,|m o ‘u. ; \n. n\ll ute o Me [ i i fmminent, 1« mot yet 50 | WA veterans s expected. The erection Washingion St hustler, 15 peculiarly quali r a machin tavird o the English people is unques tonably merited and it is one which the From the way Viee President Steven son s circulating around the country it is plainly apparent that his loyalty to Senator IHill is intended for 1804 consumption only, It will be very, very different in 1806, Neither of the participants in the re cent Joint debate would object seri Perhaps it would not be amiss for Mr. Pullman to take upon himself the reference made in General Miles' report on the operations of the army during the great strike to “the one most re- spousible for its existence.” It is sbable that Mr. Pullman son whom General Miles mind as that it was P'resident Cleve land or Bugene V. Dehs. “but you how ;i of this memor o ¢ » most dis-| Possibly the president’s failure to write | leader. Acording to a showing made in | P you years old and is a glant in stature, hay- [ 0f this memorial to one of the most dis- | | Poggibly the presitents [nle, ' U | court ‘the other day, his assets amount to | M40 ¥ in the stat ing been, until his health began to fail, | ihguished soldiers in the elvil war at-| ¢ra) precaution arising from painful experi- | $6.74 and his liabilitics $110,936. Judge: Mrs, Youngwife—You know those tests the love and admiration in which | encein the past. It 13 a singalar coincident that atter the | lovely & dining room gongs we saw (he he was leld by the brave men who Tricks of the Importers. lucid explanation of party principles (he [ Qilier Yy W marke down to $6.75, so I got three. fought under him, Whatever place his- | Thitadelphia re Atrerican people may give attention to : ! 1 d et s | 21 0f the most powerful men, physi ot Lantiseotsly ewalate the oxuny.|CMIE In the world. - It i sl that high joint debate, a tremendous fog settled | ° jjop Jyushand—Heavens and earth! what probably 1o man could have been found | X 4 The customs dutics at New York last [down upon th city. Did the heat of the de- | qid ‘you wet three for? ple of Englishimen in the matter of ve- | o0 g o pe who took as little exer- | 0¥ 1 finally assign to € * B.| week amounted to more than $2000,000, and | bate produce the atmospheric sweat Mrs. \'uum'l\\\b (sweetly)~Why, one for spect for law, and is there not oppor- | Lica and had doevoted as little attention | MeClelan among the great union com- J'::_l 3-;*‘; e o |Mr in -"ffimn :»'.’;‘ "f.flwv'\'n;: chrr;,c.‘.;‘n;;gnh “l'm;‘y‘u‘.:‘nl:;] ulu‘r:’v ';‘l‘x:l nlx:rt;hn for each meal, of cours u | cise ang devots atte o save the d to sell to Eurc R h AleteLinroseaiics s = ity for improvement on the part of |y, g deyelopment of his museulay | MANers. one thing is assured—none of | needed there. i AL AT Menine SUdbe s heTores whomi e ALWAYS GOING [ those charged with the execution of the | (oo 50 TG G Der TIL, who | them ad in’ larger measuve the affec- | AR GVeRDIvYS chronic horse thief wax convicted, could have | o e PRty i i PELEDELAC O b e b . | ) given the latter sixty years under the| Stormy skies, or weathe lnws i showing greater consideration | ,u11 surpass some of the feats of | oM. ithe. confidenfe and the loyal sup- | St. Louls Republic. (o the feelings of the people? So fai x Country's gof the rosdway cle: = port of the mén they combanded. il S L O Lt ) The bond investment swindlers the moral life of the American people statutes, but lot him offt with a sentence for | SEiime may howl, o belis by chimey gradually falling into the toils, as i ix concorned it will nndoubtedly com | ot advantageously cmulate tl - strength with which e was wont at times to amuse himsell and his int mates. Tt has heen stated that he fivst began to fear that his health was giv ing way when he found that he could no longer break rouble, & silver coin about the size of halr dollar, in two with his thumb and fingers. Yet this great strength has suc- newspaper in Omaha in an impartial way. | lite. Country’s goin® all the time! 4 man the soldiers who served under | Haif his political space I8 iven to his own | The campalgn in New York City does not | Puifin’, dlowin evidenced by the hatch of indictments | e favornbly with that of the Eaglish | candidacy and the other half to other can- [, GERIERL o8 FER 0 G TN e s, teapin’, sowin’, hrought against the officers of one people, but it is questionable whether McClellan had luplicit faith In his | §2ndldacy and the oter Lt e (o ability, his courage and his complain of an even divide. manager of the Bowery theaters, is a stellar the concerns by e l grand jury | one domestic life gencrally is qnite u) at 8t. Louis the other day. The schenie 1o the B h standard—that is, as to b attraction in one of the city congress dis triotism, Although subjected to mor Prosperity in Colors tricts. He has hankered for a seat in con seems to be practically played out and | the respect shown for parents by chil the renewed activity of the smaller en- | deen and the closeness of the ties e : Ltick 5 : gress fitteen years, and the prospects wdverse eriticism than any other union Denver Republican, gress for £ A are ag: ealizing his ambiton this year Tl msure for| The fact that Colorado raflway earnings |are against realizing general and visited with censure for| g (G anjyorcase over last vear [s an en-| Of the famous class of 1820 of Harvard failures and shortcomings for which he | couraging indication for the future. It | college there are, since the death of Holmes terprises of this eharacter is only the | jween children of the same fauwily. spark that comes before the collapse. \evo I8 probably substantlal ground E % e e | Shows that this state is gradua'ly recovering | only four surviving members: Dr. Edward muy not have heen wholly responsible, | SRS AL dDreaion cased dy the panie of | 117 four surviving members; - br. Bdward | o el uve rownz | os e iR 3 he retained through it all the unim- | 1893 Tt is evidence of the Vitality of the | Lo CunmmEhion of Rewbort, B 6 Gey 5 2 cumbed to a compli ion of disorders 4 4 & community, and it doubtless will attract | Samuel X o S8 SRurcis g Bri e RnA aired esteem nd admivation of the | p, i i S Rev. Samuel F. Smith of Newton, the authe , Brings health and m h to town. due, it is believed, to a taint in the blood | P i . fayorable attention in'the east. of “America’" and Charles S. Storrow of SIX days suffice for trade, device, 4 3 soldiers of the Army of the Poton —— 2 a Work, study, pain, d¢ of the house of Romanofis, not now for ! ; ) Compl ne Americar Boston Loty Tk Moy b o e the first time in evidence, The Listory [ 20mitted to be one of the best ovganized Kunas City Star Mss Harriett Monroe, author of the | And take God's glorious & £ this honse is that at 60 years of wmies the world ever saw, as well as| Here fs a compliment fro English | Worlds fair ode, has taken her mutilated E siilio! s house is that at G ars o 3 source which Americans Al0WA Lo | lnaike % Tate o0 Naw. York NUBDORE | There's orlmaoniin the:to 2old to Lielp him in his fight for free | countey. Whatever feeling of prejudice [ o (ot H0SE B S0 S0t o £ the bravest, and that feeling still | joupce whi ke "them e ‘a whote,” | S1'2% IS F0 TS M gen. " 10 appears ' New | A% he My find who b frade. Wiy should he bring gold when | the American people may entertaln to- |y v qritted toward melancholy and XISt e e Kindllont b o the Tace at. the | York paper perpetrated a “beat by publiah- | THere's scuriet fn, the sumich silver is Just as good and when paper | wird England it must be confessed e 4 : S S —— | eartn.'® Tn"spite of their engerness, their |in& the ode in advance of delivery. The | \ AL 10 the malfons chocks: DBl L decay, and not many of them have sur- | rpless the constitutional amendments fesire to bo In' the front rank | editor ran his blue pencil over several lines | MiThe Lhat maidens bea 18 equally good and much easler trans- | that we may learn something from the | (iooi that age. Some have fallen vie- | o be voted upon in New York earry and all s the true Amer- |and stanzes, and through force of habit, | If there's azure In the heavens, ported? Most tainly Mr. Wilson | BEnglish people in the matter of a pre tims to violence wad others have died | this fall the next governor of that state al)e according to the fair 1 lestroyed much |~ There's heaven In her ey brought no British gold with him. The | fonnder respeet for law, in a higher ve \ 1 \ = of its facial beauty. For this heinous offense, suddenly of disense, nearly all having | will Luve a term of three years o serve, | Compulsory Arbi she wants a poultice of coln to soothe hef | Across the mimic billows contributions of the English merchants | znrd for family velations and the con- can be made much more safely through | scrvation of the home, which is the rdor October's we Octaber fields are brown; —_— | for the claim that in the best home life Chairma Wilson denies that he | of England there is more affection and brought back from Europe any British interest than is commonly found in this at least 100 that ave not quoted in THE COLUMBIAN (OINS, Bradstreet's, Dun's or any other com-| TPeople who admired the beautiful merelal divectory, and fully fifty 1ot | miniature of the United States frensury known to have any occupation or visi- | huiding made out of Columbian sou- ble means of support, but they are good | venir silver coins at the World's fair enough business men to serve the pur ¥ sthloko, hat ot lite . il 4 e S Cincinnati Commer muse, and the trial is now on. A jury will| That race o'er bay and sound heen lm :\lul.n f Inln :u ‘llm' \\]h ) This means that his office will lold .nul The best wuthoritics on soclal selenc Soriodsly considor the matter of ‘dumages | The schooners break o foaming wake; men should be at almost theiv best | the presiden election in 1896 and | against compulsory arbitration for axpuriation; but thare {s nrobability e saucy catboats boune P K alread a ati e state, o i B C N sue I of settling disputes « X e And the same ind that heels them o their agents already 1 the United | foundation of the state, and n '_'“ Ul ogtate. There seems, indeed, to be @ | nearly ton months into the term of the | $Uch means of seiling disput 3 that the paper will be called upon to pa nd she sime wind: ch A - States. ffivation of a truce and heartler MOsPl- | aput n the blood of the family, so|president then to be elocted. The suc- | & beaceful setilement of difh a round sum for publishing even {ragments | Toward evening mostly steals ashore T tality. That we shall not always be i ith | i : Wolcott, chairman of the < | of the ode | o kiss the malden’s lps Among the representative business | behind the “motl o o oo tiemly rooted that utermarriages with | cosstul candidate for the governorship | goard of Arbitration, says tehind the “mother country™ In any of | 45150 of the most vivile houses in Bu- | this it raised to the presi y a8 well try to compel two mei appended to the calamity appeal ave | rope could not ¢ dicate it ‘Ii\" HUICr | tywo vy would in that case |'» :n_xlu,um o v‘nnll‘: st come through ous allianees with German families the [ compelled by cireumstances to r the channels of reason s . 1 & " pes: o Fogd ey WORTH OR YOUR MG Y BACK. Romanofts have become almost as Ger- | tha inferior office and mit the lieu- An Aduinistration ~eandal. S LAl LAY - § f What a spectacle it is, to be sure, when themselves, Indeed, it has been sald | pig position. The importance of the can- | ¢pis hum REGATIALIL I8 10 e _tuve, Fruen - :thETVOTE'l that they = Teutons rather than | » holding see Hlace » tick months seems a fortune, has the heavy hand For State Treasurer two 1 3 Tenton b | qidate holding second place on the ticket | months seems & fortune, has the heavy hand Appis nmust be interested i the listory of pose of playing bugaboo to outside peo- | (his disastrons souvenir venture. The ple who don't know them and never | jden of the souvenir coins, like that of heard of them. the souvenir postage stamps d the e | to the exposition company, it was made e | the German sovereigns.” This docs not | munity where he 18 best known, Tle iy | brogiht on now, ds before, by southern trec The people of Omaha have not | @ condition of the last congressional ap- | qppty to Alexander 1L, whose private | not a factionist, bit an earnest republi —— come to realize the wealth of art trens- | Propriation of §5.000000 that the money | jife has been exemplary, but he Las uot | can, who believes in good government. Enniohmral Fiw the Orime, ures that are stored in Omaha homes, | Xhould be delivered in Columbian sou-| poen able to escape the cons The Bee takes; plopsure in bespeakin T T e e e S e Vs manat A fine collection of these has been made | YO0ir colns of the half dollar denomina- | of the vices of his for him the earnest support of republi- | INg obscene matter through the mails has by the Western Art association In or-|Uon. The management counted that = s whitever ey be thelr position or | 154 been sentencet to elght years: imprison; der to give the public a glimpse of what | DY this means the $5000,000 subsidy AN ELASTIC 18 accessible ordinarily only to the priv '\\uvll‘l really give the exposition treas. No plan for a bank currency proposed — the utmost surprise at the extent to which fleged few. It is only through organ-|"FY & Sum not less than twice that |in a long time has received so much at 3 Trom Miuneapolis of | the mails were being used for this purpose; izations like the Western Art associa- | flgure. he Columbian coins were, in | tention and favorable comment as the | eryptographic J6tteps received from Eu | »uld to break up the practice, severity tion that the people who possess valu- | the beginning, disposed of to the higl one endorsed by the national conven- | yope by a Gerinan doctor telling all the | 5 the sentence In this fase will constitute able paintings and objects of art can | Pidders, a fabulous price being paid for | ton of baukers recently in session at | dotails of the genspiracies that ave al- | dastardly offense than the one assist In developing art culture in the | he Very first one issued to a manu altimore. This shows how strong and | leged to surrouid the Russian czar read | M (LI Slates mails can b Ka v turing concern that wished to use it al is the conviction that some radi- | yepy oh a8 4 ere made of | punishment can be too severe for those who mmmunn,\.___ 8 1§ Jrongerp. ; ral is the conviction that some ra “.\“ v much as If thay were made out of R e e S T i st s = or advertising purposes. Is needed in the system of | the whole clotly It is 8o easy to receivo | seminating immoral literature or obscene The statisticlan of the Ageiculture | When the fair closed, notwithstanding | bauk Wation, with particular refer- | cryptographic letters and to translate Gl i department announces to the American | the persistent peddling of the coins |ence to providing an elastic currency | them to suit the occasion that the pub THERE FLOWS THE PAPPIO, farmer that the early completion of new [among visitors in Chicago and their sale | (he volume of which n be readily ad railroads into Siberia promises to open | as novelties in the shops in all the lead $1,000 for his violations of the law., The views regarding otlier candidates. judge In sentencing the prisoner expressed ot ok e RS pictures. tradiction of terms, for arbitration means And sways the clipper ships men of Omahn whose names have been | lose respeets can safely be predicted friends. It won't work, for conel man in blood as the Holenzollerns | tapant governor (o exercis New York World e Slavs, yet the voyal family of Germany | iy New York becomes iherefore gre majesty and dignity of the American people, . DARTLAL e The fivst ruler of united | yas to the complication of possibilities | opinion, and are shielded in doing it by {ved the high= in physical vitality among the sover-| cql contest in the Emp raise the legal hue and cry ugainst this $30- printing the Columbian ode before it | probably advanced by a dozen different | ound 1n the contrast between the vir-| for state superintendent of public in- e censes which the Romanoffs have al- | educators in this s s man of | In the first two weeks in October the im- 1 o s h he mited reputation, It s to be feared | maintnined that the people would be | oo 2 : ; BILICOLOE.. 13y y days ago who looked as though he was s a writer, “which have made some of | lic school work. He has for years been exports decreased 10 per cent. That is pre printed without their cons their face value, and that the coins|yoqpe bearing frult, and it is gencrally devolves on a state superintendent and | re In sight” That was the condition of the latter to make compensation. This son of the demand for them as me- | yyne pretended to approach the plane of | tion to which he aspires. Mr. Corbett | SE600.00 of specie to pay J.‘f;f.|}':3},"".1.'.'11.'-7{ N The eclerk guessed he could, anl the | some of the latest and most famous of | int and staods high in the com- in_approaching that condition of affairs, A o g brous i perfect fit. It's a fact that every man style, furnishings, hats or underwear. get an elegant suil, nicely trimmed and finished by Mackintoshes in blue, black and light eolors, box lie will not be inclined fo attach any S s’ Between low grass-clad fert ‘]> hills, all that may be said in commendation | gest p ese reports is their peculiar | Divided by slow murmuring rills 1 3 &t part of these reports is thelr peculiar | Divided by slow murmyring silla, | timeliness, no similar letter ever having [ Or where the hardy scrub-oak stands, There flows the Papplo. Las been far superior in vitality to that | pagnified by this continger Tt while the Carnegies and the Havemeyers WOLFI (Pop) - Germany, the old Kaiser, had no equal | qopending on the outcome of the politi- | 1% VEEy men who pretend that thelr obliga- i icmoeriy E - | souvenir admission tickets, and the sou- | qions o the Louse of Romanoft. a-month coachman. = NN k Five thousand dollars venirs of thi leungfatiin louge of Kowaiiod, Whabis umblyn |t sl What e fraudilcds l 1 Cd Sl was delivered is setting a pretty high |persons at various times s @ mouey | yyoy of the Holenzollerns and the M- |struction, is commended by pru R nn Tnin STl om: A person came into the store a few ports at New York, excluding sugar, in- 5 o that it will lead impecunious poets to | ready to take all the Columbian coins built out of several sections of gas pipe. | ely what was predicted of the new la sponsible mewspapers in order to force | would never get into cireulation by very things under the Walker tarlff, during the he wanted to know if we could fit him. verdiet may be the signal for a flood of | mentoes of the great fair. Finally, in A (uniess he's a positive anatomical freak) can be fitted We have full dress suits like the above, and every Our business suits at $7.50 are of excellent qual- tailors who are expert workmen, Overco s at $7.50, justed to all conditions of trade. With | great jmportance to them. The stran or cape style. Prices §5.00 and upwards. Very sty- shoot out the lip of scorn at law and public BECKMAN (Dem. - 49626 tion as executive officers compels them to rdidate fors 8w off damages for that aud the other, Was| ouhess the explanation is to be| Prof. Corbett, the republican nominee [ What a scandal it ist price on a poem by an author of only | making enterprise. It was assiduously lowed themselves. “The private viees,” | superior attainments in the line of pub- | freased 46 per e endeavor to have their they could get at not less than twice | i soyereigns of Russia infumous may | in active training for the work which | That means Fold 'exports, and aiready th: | As he stretehed out his swan-like neck believed that the ¢ have not at any | is therefore well equipped for the pos| tence of which this counfry exported Doetical effuslons ouilEn Rt the LAt migh e, alely | onanct which was. been renched (DY fils, morecver, & ian of Mulmpsachablo | tif, KaVEADGH 1y He aint Tniorancy. Weo:ara table full of “slim” suits furnished a in our store in either a suit or an overcoat of latest sort of wearing apparel that a gentlem n needs in ity and warranted all wool. At $10 and $12.50 you $8.50, $10 an d$12.50. lish and perfect rain excluders. up an immense source of grain supply | lug clties of the country, the exposition | for the European markets. The fertile | company found 3,600,000 of the total | of the national banking systow, admit- | lands and cheap labor of that country | coluuge remalning on its hands. These | tedly tho best this country has bad, it will enable It to nnderbid all competl- | colns hud been sold In no case at loss | is still a fact that it does not supply tors, which, in effect, siguifies that an | than $1 apiece. The surplus, however, |an elastic circulation, and it cannot o | Jtussia for years By_biligery [S4ids of beanisd wye. equal amount of American farm prod-{conld be disposed of only by reduelng |so while the bond security prineiple —_— Through many & pretty sylvan s ucts will be deprived of a market. |the price, but such a reduction would | upon which it rests is adbeved to. Had | Wheeler H. Peckham, whose con.| 1here flows the Pappio American farmers cannot fall to eateh [ unquestionably depreciate the value of | the proposal to allow the national banks | firmation for o place on the beneh of | Where golden pumpkins roll their globes, the logic of this announcement. It is | Where grainstacks stand in amber robes, been heard of, although conspiracies without number have been going on in | Where waving cornfields lle— Browning, King & Co., Reliable Clothiers,2S. W, Cor. 15th and Douglas, those then outstanding aud would be |to issue notes to the par value of the |the United Stafes supreme court wus | Wiere shocks of corn with tafied heads There flows the Papplo. | | that the ouly market they are sure of | manifestly unfair to purchasers at the [ bonds deposited secure civeulation | blocked in the senate by Seuator Hill, Iy [ Stand bound about with cobweb threads, 18 the American warket, and that their [ higher price. To throw 3,600,000 sou- | been adopted there might be less rea t the opportunity - i anopies of wild-grape vines future prosperity depends upon the de- [ venir coins into clreulation would, it complaint, sinee in that case the esented to get even on this | the bitter-sweet twists and twines, velopment and expansion of that mar- | was expected, immediately bring all of | banks would probably have been dis- | score. He is out with an open letter | plum thickets and hazel brush - \ 1 Where sings the mottled brown wood-thrush, kob ‘them down to the level of ordinary | posed to emiarge heir clrculation to|denouncing Hill as dishonest and as | There flows the l'appio.

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