Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 18, 1894, Page 12

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IN THE ROLE OF MEDIATOR. ' worthy of “respectful consideration un- Readers of The Bee are not Ignorant | and if the statistics are eapable of sup- [ qualifiedly affiean that electrocution does of the deplorable conditions which exist | porting any general deductions the ten- | not kill and that the victim is actually in the western part of Nebraska. They |dency for city to gain at the expense of | murdered in cold-blooded fashion by the have been fully informed of the distress | count will be maintained for some |succeeding autepsy they should be given that prevails among the inhabitants of a [ time to come. Nor is this process any- | all proper dpportunity to show whether large region of the state, where, owing | thing to be deplored. It means that|or not theké 1y anything in their as to the prolonged drouth of the summer | mankind ean be kept alive with the |sertion. The public mind should be re FOR THE DROUTH SUFPERERS. degree In every other clvilized country, THE B. ROS e , PUBLISHED — TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Daily Beo (without Sunday), One Year. Daily Beo and Sunday, One Year.. BIX MONUNR . covecinissesnnasnsasnnis Three Monthis. A s Bunday 1es, One Year. Baturday 1 Weekly Bee, does The proposed marriage ay of Kentucky, aged ung girl of 16, is one of thoss social it to be probibited by law. idea in itself Is monst nd one only to Fevorss th 1 picture a boy of an m's T OF CIRCULATION. ccretary of The Dee D'ub. | duly “sworn, number of full and of The Dally Morning, Evening printed during the month of Oc sk 16..... b 1. i causes roses t aton BTATY George 13, Yiahing comp i the_nctual and. be unday Bee 1694, was | | to izens ¢ we of Total Lt Lesa deductions for unsold and returned coples 7 Ty 641,407 Total sold Mihses 70 Dally average uet eircuiation GEORGE It Bworn to hefore me and subscribed in my pres ence this 3d day of November, 1504 (Seal.) N FIEIL, Notary Publlc, possible ries who are thre When fi ing from life. “True love never runs smooth For W the latest verification apply to Cassius Marcellus Clay. SALVE FOR LONG SERMONS, 1 you suppose price for my Jolliem—No. ng, then, " T wo The great American turkey 18 bravely preparing to go the way of the late dem- ocratic candidate: sy » turkey now s filled with doubt, And like | with fat, But when 7T ving's past he will Not wonder « he's b PEOF legs are resuming their normal Indlanapolls donrnal: “Felier in 27 has let hisself down de fore escape an' skipped,” nake 1 the clerk of the “lappy Home' lodi- facts, football ale me Is a of bunk-ow slghed the son offices, ad be- accept The | Yonkers Blade: Sibyl—Wien Steve pros i | posed to. me i fish out oF water. Tirpie in't he? He knew he was caught Why shou Mt why dream? | always goes Vernon Kchoes: Dr, Brush—I wonder Bargnet alwi wks of Lis wite as u Mrs. Iirush -1 suppose because she by contrarie What if the new steamship St. Louis should make the record for ocean speed! The world wouldn't be large enough to hold Chicago's grief. New York critics appear to agree that the horse show in progress in that city would be just as suceessful as it now is were the horses loft out. is a “What possessing Galyeston News bulld g is that than he can bit The trouble with the he sometimes chews more 8- shows Buffalo Courier: This much is to be sald in favor of the tattooed man. While a great many men hiave designs upon others New | his are all upon himscit. rge Y1 puck: Powe tion with Short. Bowers—Did you give him odds? Powers—Same thing. IU's an even be the chances are two to one that he pay if he loses. I made a bet on the elec- Nothing but a sense of modesty pre- vents President Cleveland from telling the people exactly who is responsible for the great r n landslide. but won't Kate I7eld’s Washingtcn: ' He—1'm prepos- ing a retcrmed theater, wherein the men will sit In a body togethér at the front, with the ladies in i She. hav i"or ». man who has lost all recognition 1HE URBAN UNEMPLOYED. as a member of the Kuights of Labor,| Bvery little while some one makes Mr. Powderly looms up pretty big at the | the wonderful discoy that the rem- cdy for all the evils of socicty is to be found in depopulating our cities and sending the surplus population out upon the land to dig their lving from the soil. This advice to the unemployed been more than common during the past year, when so many idle men have congregated in the principal urban centers, and it is once more laid down as (he one thing to pros | perity in the address upon “Conditions Precedent to the Revival of Business in Cities,” delivered last week by Pre The medical service of the late Rus- | dent A. B. Stickney of the Chicago slan czar during his fatal illness is said | Great Western railway before the Com- to haye cost 600,000 v A poor man | yereial exchange at Des Moines. Mr. in America can and get well | Stickney, who has some standing as an cheaper t withority on the railroad question, serted that the present hard times are traceable to but source, the over population of He: main- tained that the great panics of 1857 and IST3 were caused by the same urban overpopulation. He urged all unem- ployed workingmen in cities to go to the country and get farms, and stated that he did not ot @ revival of business until after this shall have ¢ done, The trouble with Mr. Stickn with the numerous others who hold the same views, Is that he fails to distin guish between the individual and the mass, Partienlar workingmen who find themselyes unable to get work in the dties might, perhaps, Detter their con dition by migrating to rural communi ties and applying themselves to agricul- tural pursuits. But if all the urban uncmployed were to attempt such a An exc , but you'll have to the cafe chestra pit. mangates might have had emerged from the on before precipitating an- r upon an innocent public. The waited until wi foot ball se: other cruel w ot general who was be- cowardice during the en- Ping Yang seems to have ble experience of twice o The Chines headed for gagement at had the rems losing his | L BOY. men Bugene Field, Up in the attic where I slept When T was a boy, u little boy, In through the lattics the muonlight crept, Bringing a tide of dreams that swept Over the low, red trundle b Bathing the tanglcd curly While moonbeam: pliy With the dimple cheek When 1 was a 1 necessary heéad, 1t hide' and seek each sun browned Dles. L little boy! be 1 that. sicl dream the dreams I dreamed a little boyl through “the lattice Nebras! in nomin time. This is not sidered authent as The strike commission ought to make a test of the abit ion theories by in tervening to settle the strike of the cloak makers pending now for some weeks in New York one 15 secmed phecy, cities, LOES ELECTROCUTION KILL? There is a difference of opinion among ‘minent authorities on this question. Edison answers it unqualifiedly in the affirmative, and the verdict of a board of medical and scientific experts who investigated the infliction of the death penalty by electricity in New York Is in accord with that opinion. On the other hand, so great an electrician as Nicola Tesla declares Lis belief that elec- trocution does not produce instant death, and that a man taken fmmedi- ately from the electric chair can be re susceitated. The French scientist, M. D'Arvsenval, is said to lold the same view, as do other electri mong T'd_like to slexp where I used to sleep When 1 was a boy, a little boy! For in at the lattice the moon would peep, Bringing her tide of dreams Lo sweep The crosses and griefs of the years away ‘rom the heart that is weary and faint toda And those me back since then, Mr. Russell ought to have the most profound thanks of Mr. Majors. 1t is only owing to his self-sacrifice that the latter had company near the tail of the ticket when it came to casting up the | total vote received. ex1 dreams should give aguin The peace 1 have never known When © was a boy, w little b Senator Brice says that Vice President Stevenson is now the strongest demo eratic candidate for the presidency. This is no reflection, however, on the strength of any of the democrats who have presidential aspirations. The Energy of Lightning. mon Globe-Democrat It 5 ed that the energy the ayerage ning stroke is equal that generated by a 100-horse power engine In ten hours of constant work. This looks formidable, but the number of lightning roc to be run for 1896 will be found to Keep pace with the growth of the country. noy's worth or of to President Cleveland is bound to keep Secretary Carlisle in his cabinet until the end of his administration if it is only to spite the newspaper correspond- ents who have been insisting that the secretary was soon to be supplanted. Doesn’t Cost a Cent More to dress in the vory latest style than to dress The Bulwark of New Hampshire. New York Sun. Hon. William Raton Chandler is the sole hope and bulwark of New Hamp shire against the waves of Blair. Hlair 1s trylng to break into the senate again, and every crank this side of Bedlam waves or howls encouragement. Mr. Chandler is the lightning rod of sanity, and the uncrazed part of mankind locks 'to him for defense and shelter. now A feature of the real estate market ed, the past few months has hesn a growing demand for residence property. We are getting more home bullders. Cities hay- ing the greatest number of home owners are best governed and most prosperous. in old style duds, or toggery that is unbecoming to you. e Eccentricities of NSogar Cane. Kansas City Star. It is one of the eccentricitles of the elec- tion that Loulsiana, where the republicans were most confident of victory, should re. turn a solid democratic delegation. It must be remembered, however, that the em of counting in Louislana Is the most rfect in the country. The motto on the state seal is, “Union, Justice, Confidence.”” The union A physician’s certificate accompanies the announcement to the Chicago public of the inability of a circus rider to ap pear Iin a performan advertised. The manager is evidently well informed as to the usual reception given 1 amusement seekers to the excuse com monly known as c dodge. There are several styles of new hats—select the one most becom- W ing to you. A splendid fur hat like the one shown for §2.50—good as he sic urier-Journ tral committ contest th s returned U esolved to let “Whereas,” they fugene Debs professes to” read the report of the United States Strike com mission on the great Pullman strike as lots of §5 hats—a real good hat for great Amerienn agriculture, that It I8 not 8uf- | g reqeral government of the United States | trom Waybaek, but this last affale Indieate 5 Journal: The laws of Ken- {on the State department that has departed | iy erage American farmer not 1 treatth 18 Jeparted | tucky, it seeins, em- ge, and Cassius is more than 80, months, the crops have been a complete | mere necessities of existence at the cost [ lieved of éyen the slightest suspicion us. ! his business. All this may Japan's rights, the rights of the victor Mzl S Bouth Omaha, Corner N and Twenty-fourth Sts ]‘m have them verified, and, satisfied that | provide the comforts, conveniences and | claimed aceompany it. There is a very | respects Is manifestly needed, and what | Kuerded, T 0 L L o dictate terms and ought n o be deprived | . Washington, 107 1 Street, N. V. ! § for the unfortunate fow | Many penalogists oppose the infliction | statesmen. So far as our own country | by the mediation of the United States, and e andator | The Nebraska State Relief commis- fand more of the act n Ny y : produce such a result, to compel the accey e — > NS for them and increase the home market. p o R LR TR S e P : : a more humane and cerfain means of | been enlisted the services of several of Aslatic. Here's to love anyhow--white or gilt, rose or THE BER PUBLISHING COMPANY. ‘ {homa, has made the most remarkable | not infrequently is a process of strangu- | DY the present tariff law, is a policy that |y, international entanglements, | 1t Shiete Toses L O R the drouth sufferers four years ago, has g ; withstanding the bLard times the ter-|to the opponents of capital punishment. | tries must be fostered by a reasonable of the oriental antagonista of to en- | p) ensge when he dickering for & | pponents of eay I clined and of seeing that the supplic | THE FREE PASS BVIL. ot arbitrator in settling the terms of in ! ¢ | | with the general admiring the pretty of ble for future progress. It has such remuneration as will not compel | gp o ¥ to ask for a settlement. If Japan, on recely 11 | commission N | beauty is one of the marks of a civilized be: people Nebraska who are able it not up to Utah is but little behind. | bers of the logislature and all public | been forced to do during the past two | the terme. thore 15 nothing in the past or oo e yme men and women. On the other hand 240 ! BEXt] “phijadelphin Ledger: China having re 20,81 wlous appeal for help, and are | ditions that make for the greatness of terms that it will be difficult if not im- | thirty years at the rate minds. So we must admit that General Clay | s ) 5 : | dent Cleveland, it is reported, has declined ¢ pride for Nebraska to provide, for their wheat or corn. They will liave | returned by the county clerks last Feb- | evil to thus provide against it in the | is young women who have provoked such say= recommendations or suggestions unless in < of the bare necessities of am of school age, showing t it is a place | this constitutional provision in the con- | tnined in the report of the strike com- | "y Jigi e Neice among the nations, it can g0 | Japan, which has had, to date, all the|No.'d have to winter promises {o he heayier than ench family, the real value of property | clusion as to its effect. Consequently | ticles of incorporation that a member AND THINGS, | ion that cannot by a small extra ex- | of its fertile soil for its future growth, [ ment was with them. It could not be | OF violence against persons or property : 4 a Budd about to bloom those communities whose members [and climate favorable to great diver- [ incumbents of state and loeal advisability of such legislation scems to | gorgeous bill boards overdid the job, of literary skill. 3 ularly true of Omala. As the metropo- | of less than five years, that Oklahoma | This evil is not peculiar to New York, [ ber of a labor organization than when he whereabouts of Adlal Stevenson is part and parcel with the prosperity [ that helong to an enlightened and p road company gives free passes to men in the trade it would prac-|por poetic temperament no : . atgra ] "¢ | fore the returns came in. the earliest possible moment she will [ Oklahoma went republican at the late | they place themselyes under an obliga- | Stould be some discipline few will The usual hospitable remarks between the Brown block in this city. Contributions | cation for admission to statehood. A anter such an obligation is pretty : to enter Into such un obligntion I8 pretty |y 4o coppaiuly to be hoped that there Although Kansas buried woman suffrage, it ise of its Dbeing passed whenever it | tious man will avoid, yet thousands of > place upon the federal bench. When | nation, is’the first occupant of the office able Indianapolis Journal. olitieal standpoint, to confer statehood ave i wholesome influence i i because he condensed his Thanksgivin 1 | ought to have a whole ¢ influence in b i hG sta (e mentithnt My W glving And a palm leal fan worth pennies three campaign expenses at §3,359. This is one of within the next year or two they would | governuient and o » ‘welfare e s thin the next year or t 3 governtent and even to the welfare of | © GO o0 ® COh G ame, M As o sultable Christmas p i : ot o eop. | Isists upon selecting his staff from that there will be strong democratic op. THE AGRICULTURAL PROBLEM. to colleginte work, as teacher and col- the of the voters in the territories it iy |nest attention in nearly every civilized | vide for him he ought to do so without | Dahlgren, a brave son of the Quaker city castern world, are running the wrong way | | volume and intensity. The low prices = lihoma's claims to statehood are now invaders. For the g 2. republicans will be more careful of those engaged in it unprof 44 ! J Reprosentatives' hall, Montpelier. It was| Aod soCpine Bt for admission. AN ¢ When it was un- | Al wiis (he sweetest dream of all contempor s that In New England St. Paul Globe. veiled the other day the usual courtesy of minority representation on | yet some of his lines show remarkable beds grown wild and weedy, and gen- spend most of his time in the machine shop. ease, In New York, New Jersey and the in- oserat No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds, shareholders. This vast business is con owns a farm is the owner of a debt. {ion as much as one strike of a few hundred are sold on foreclosures of mortgages they are far from satisfactory. The minke ends meet, and a great many of worst panie we have ever experienced. [ opinion that the electrical shock stmply i outlook not by any means promising. while the new recruits in the field of [assertion that the men electrocuted in |sharper:competition in the world’s mar- agricultural products, already great, | terious lethal current which killed, but| If attention be turned to Europe it country are already supplying more pro- | of these divergent opinions is o be ac- [ countries of Europe there is widespread and the justice have been occasionally a bit ace with auy growth of the consum- | cuted persons, is to make a test on the | from India, the Avgentine Republic and == Maryland, afte olving have neither the knowledge nor the 1t deal of Interest by elec- | tural class bitterly eomplains of the sit- agriculture the world over. It is easy " AND DECEM BER. to say, especially with reference to R — Chicago Herald It Japan shall send to Minneapolis Journal: He was a “fighter | ficlently diversified, that too much at-1a curt or even caustic refusal to permit | that he is get(ing & little weak In the upper { tention is given to certain products and [ American meddling in ber affairs the people | works | not enough to others, and that the of the United States will waste no sympathy Kansas City ‘ do not forbid the marriage USe | from our national traditions In seeking to in . his Iand to the best advantage o terfere in forelgn affairs that do not concern | 35 voon of ase i Ghos e LA ‘ ploy the most serviceable methods in U 2 One is in her first childhood and the other and irretrievable failure. When the re- | of the labor of an ever decreasing per- | that in the infliction of this mode of ¥ be true, but | New Tork Ykt de il nt tolls in bis second. One Year ports of probable suffering first made | centage of its membe It menns that | punishment thiere are any such barbar- | it does not suggest a complete remedy g, ot A , their appearance The Bee took pains incrensing percentage is left free to|ous and lorelble conditions as it is|Something more than change In these | combatants, will no doubt be caretully | o O Omaha, The Des Tuilding gnarded. The Japanese have won the Mt | ayrocition ey o e, e, o Chamber ot Commeroe. they were but little exaggerated, made | luxuries for all. It means a differentin- | considerable sentiment in this country | that something is presents a problem | oo 4y Ber 0 0 0 E T et oment i New York, Ro 13, 14 and 15, Tribune BIdg. repented calls for the inauguration of | tion of labor and increased production ‘ln oppostion to capital punishment. | Worthy of the profoundest attention of |of this character cannot be secured except 188 ACrying & woman of 85 to get an acoens CORRESI'ONDENCE. some plan of systematic relief. less real mis - ¢ d tuation of the unnaturaln ud monstrosity nications relating to aews sad od al’ enjoyment for the great |of the death penalty in any form. Elee- | 18 concerned, the first requivement n ([t I8 the duty of the United States govern BUSINESS LETTERS, sion, which has been organized under | body of the people trocution was advocated and adopted as | the interest of the farmers is to retain : 1 ; Chicago Post: Here's a health to Cassiug All business letters and remitinnces should be | ¢opy i gfficial auspices and in which have = ance of Mr. Gresl proposal by all the ‘:"\Lv“"*,“‘l”,‘ s 16-years n“mux-“,\l oup BeTaus, Drafta, checks and postoffioe befets ' A VIGOROUS YUUNG TNRRITORY. lllnnlnvln: death with the least possible | Subjecting their products to the com- | Powers concerned, Buropean well as Ine of thy nata 0 thee, old buck. Lo dl T RN R T ANY. [ the men and worhen who were active in | The youngest of the territories, OKIa- | physical suffering than hanging, which | petition of foreign producers, as is done | FEC © 0 pollcy of this country | SfIron, love in a ¢ r love on crutches, distributing the supplies contributed for Avolbng. it It the starkest progress of any of them., The annual |lation. If this should be shown to be a canuot be justified. In order to incrense | however, forbids anything Iike voluntary fn- | (e8P PoIeh: & L mong, YRR begun the work of collecting funds, food | report of the governor shows that not \,..i,“.k.. the discovery will add largely | the home market manufacturing indus- | tervention either on behalf of one or the | yo i = o iory who thinks of and clothing from the charitably .n- force a peace. What it may do—and what it ritory has advanced during the past i —— degree of protection, so that the labor of | now seems likely to do—is to accept the rola | MonuMeEnt 5 ; Gt ,,‘ Hie ' ¥ Moy b well ediploved at Brooklyn Eagle ne can find fault secured are employed to the best pos d that the conditions are highly the country may be well employed at o Frh China is evidently decidedly sick ble advantage. But the work | One of the new provisions of the con- v ° war and would be more than willing | Young girl whom he ha o1 for the honor g must depend upon the dis- | gone far ahead of Arizona in popula- | stitution of the state of New York that | the masses of the people to curtail con of becoming Mrs. Clay. The admiration ot Lty e GBIt dulit: il 16 Feii o i oo 4 Sl Ty s (8 A umption, a8 1 very large proportion has | N8 notification of this request, should join : position of the public to assist. The |tion, has overtaken New Mexico, and |is to take effect January 1 forbids mem I ! vy large props With hse in asking the UBiice Blates to nane | te. We Bive ha proof that DabSoats et ai 21,037 of | their wives because of the beauty of thelr 2599 share with their unfortunate fellow cit- oming and Idaho are exceeded in | officers from accepting free passes from | years., If the progress of the United svrvw-‘m policy of this nation to prevent a | faces nor do we know that dogs admire hand- 20,586 - costloR ok isth e ot lon and #oil & > 8 | vallte * {H T < | States in population g indtstel ». | Compliance. The United States can arbitrate, s mall portion of their abundance | population aud solid wealth by this | railrond companies. The provision is | States in population and industrial de- | SRS The FRIEE SE A LU e 2 have never failed to respond to a mer- | young territory, as well as in other con- | very stringent and so explicit in its [ velopment continues during the Vkatatan, Whsthes it be: homNRAEES 20813 | 1 the past | quested the United States to join with othoer | arouses th entiment of admi n in our confident that they will not now be ap- | commonwealth. | possible to evade it. That the constitu- | thirty the farmers of this country will ]""‘"l‘ll:u\[‘m:u;u’m I‘n:..;;vm; ‘.».um‘“ settlement ] . . o7 | Pealed to in vain. It should be a matter | According to the report of the gov- | tional convention should have deemed it | 1ot have to look abroad for a market 0 R Ol SEe (GRBRA EH CAs B et (b woeiny b oarh 28 ot st ernor of Oklahoma the population as | necessary for the cure of the free pass | to interfere, holding that during the progress | admiration as a beautiful young woman. It 80 far as is under the cireum- | 1 lome market for all they produce at | of hostilties the ‘United States having no stances, for those within her boun uary was in round figures 212,000, but | organic law of the state is the best pos- | profitable prices P SoH LGRS o SiEd o teay Y. | 1nge w thig o the ¥ e tened with actual suffer- | the governor says it is not now less | sible evidence of the dangerous propor vited by both the belligerents, While in a ahb Slanthed Upon. iy SR than 250,000 There are 74384 persons | tions it had reached. The avdocates of | Among the recommendations con- | general way 1t fs the poliey of this govern ment, and should be that of all governments, know that every community has|of homes. The assessed valuation of [vention were fortified by such testimony | mission is that of a federal law requir- | be readily seen that intervention by this e R et [its own poor to attend to, and that the | property in the territory is nearly § 15 to the extent of the free | o] AL Gl N LA A U0 LU R T DRI R e Digger burden of poor relief during the coming | 000,000, an rage of almost 500 for [ tem that there could be but one con- | Orsanizations to provide in their ar-| 7 HIEE S hRRe ERA i ate T oive .| pudi/Lf Ty iv honors in the contest with the huge but would wish and than it ought to be. | being of much higher. The | they encountered no serious opposition shall cense to be such and forfeit all |unwieldy Gollath of the Celestial empire. T But there is not a community in the | territory is essentially agricultural and | to the provision, and its ifiention by | vights and privileges of membership by T TS state outside of the drouth-ridden re- | must depend chiefly upon the products | the people attests that popular senti- | participating in or by instigating force - s = Political “.‘l,:,l.l‘:,“,' AT ;" ‘1\ i"ll'l”ml'{‘_"“v 'r’; "“(‘,:‘ ertion do its duty by its own poor aud | but ther encouraging signs of coal, | otherwlse when the people were made | QUring strikes or boycotts, or seeking to | length. of any TR bt bt ra | BIED some contribution, however | gas and ol among its resources. It is | acquainted with the when they | brevent others from working through | New York has its faded Flower, California sl small, toward tiding over the cold sea- | an excellent farming country, with soil | came to know that the law makers, the | Violence, threats or intimidation. The | = 5 0500 G0 = . modifieation of a bargain After all that practice at letter writing X ! b % 1nst summer “,1 president’s new "“"mf‘l have, almost without exception, been |sity of agricultural products, and there | and even judges on the bench, b be open to serious question. It would | High art is on the decline in Chicago A2 ol rondered absolutely destitute through [is every reason to expect, in view of [ come accustomed not only to make the penalty for a erime much message to congress ought to be a model S e Tl . 7 | B 'a Bavere swiiel mitted by a mem-| Thoe letter that never came to Dave Hill ; 1o fault of their own. This is partic- | what has been accomplished in a period | such passes, but to ask for them. more kevere when committed by a mem- |1 T G oG T S vty days. | lis of the state Omaha is looked to to | will contain at the time of the next fed- | Indeed, it is national in scope. No- [committed by the ordinary man. Again, set a laudable example in movements | eral census not far from half a million | body misunderstands its purpose and | should a national trades union ever sue- | Solomn a mystery as the democratic of thig kind. The prosperity of Omaha | people, all the conditions | effect. It is a form of bribery. No rail- | ceed in its purpose of including all | ™. ' has claims on popular sup- | of the agricultural portions of the state. | perons commonwealth, for long before [who make, interpret and administer the | tically depriv man who violates this (symptoms of eruption. In co-operating with the relief commis- | that time the territory will have become | laws except that it expects to gain by pniot allopportunity. to} snin e« ETat MRy THsnkegiriag procimationy sion to restore state-wide prosperity at [a state. |it, and when such men aceept passes |livelihood in the future. That there 1 democratic executives were written be- The Seabury-Johnson company of th a I rt be consulting her own | election, as did all the other territovies, | tion to the corporation which they are | deny. But the penalty suggested by the | York celebrated the republican victory interests. Headquarters have been es-|and it is a question as to what effeet | sure to be, sooner or later, called upon | Strike commission scems to be drastic in | restoring the wages reduced a year ago tablished under President Nason in the | this will have upon her present applica- | to meet, and any man who is willing | the extreme governors of North and South Carolina are now conducted by long distance telephone, to the drouth sufferers should be im-|bill providing for givlug the territory |sure to make rome return to the corpera- f = © ORI & S0 POR RS (EU0 | One woe doth tread upon another's head mediately fortheoming. statehood was introduced at the last ‘hen exflle g s a position [ 5 NOUI UK T g 2 S bt ¢ ' 5 L L L y refused to return him to congress, a ok A James Bigheart, the new chief of the Osage should be reached, but it is at least pos- W vould Stoutly resef v L TR T me s LR :‘I'“ “""]]‘ f;' i I‘f,'_[ eatynuy Mr. Wilson was mentioned as a possible |to talk United States. His predecessors | = 2RI B party in power may con- | putation upon their integrity r 3 succossor 1o Attorney Genernl Olney |stuck to the native tongue. THOUGHTS OF COMING BEVENTS. clude that it is not expedient, from a . The ex: N New York | 3 % 20l 2 Jover: SRR bVeEi D St (s atitilas | into it, The example of ew York in the cabinet the announcement was |, Governor Pennoyer of Oregon is criticised ““'“, SH Par AR NG *"“”“i"‘ Hons 5"“'"; (,," hl‘]“.']”;;'." f\.:u;:“flm\lfl ?:.“.HM.]T L ‘,]"”‘.“”"‘ Hi5ps 10 l_"‘ ’lf"‘ BEBINSt | Lol not a lay This is not st has the governor to be thankful for v e Rl Le GG e g st Ll el R this evil. It can be suppressed and|, o U p G studied law and has been | Mayor-elect Strong of New York puts his | 1s all {hat it man werldng on a salary need be were to come into the union as states | every consideration relating to honest e . think| { saving up his mobey to orery admitted to the bar, but he never had | foMTeE! Sxpenses & BLIRE This 16 cue of buy for ler s ? 4 office was not squandered to get there. » pretty corts o send congress e politics ! s demands tha = e i ) 7 o l.”pnfll‘.‘li“]ni( |"| ltll::l '”N;:: ll"““ “n‘n‘l“:: ;:(lnlp;]ln'n Al institations demands that Wilson's activity, outside of public life, | Cecil Rhodes, who rules over the destin WHEN I WAS e AN Se 'S represent: Ves, El e, el Lo of South Africa, is not only a bachelor but e ) px (] pl pstricted y and for this reason it is highly probable has Deen almost exchisively. restrl « who have no matrimonial incumbrances, position 1o the bills already introduced | What can be done to improve the con- lege preside n{ I!lx \\_nll has not nnluhu::::l l'phl‘l' is v“\ ‘[“, Baltimor ¢ 2 diti f the agricultural interest is a|Such as to fit him for a judicial po. hume city. aving honored General providing for their adm on. If a dition ol e g it : g £t TS T 4 McClellan’s memory in bronze, it now pro- anger of this kind entered the minds | question that Is commandir tion. If the president wants to Pro-| joses to erect a statue of Admiral John A, f 'y o United St 3 - aking use of the federal courts for| The uncounted hordes of China whoy greatly to their honor and credit that [country. In the United States the com :n;:!lu.:“.\y::“‘ Terenciied thorine Ha M Onlus R liom they did not permit it to influence their { plaints of the farming class grow in | thit purl ") any o’ — to accomplish the task. Still it is much | political judgment. In any event, Ok- Consldered Aat AR, 3 And oh, the of wheat and other cereals make the Eioaes melbines safer to show than to give the cue to the | When' I AtRelLisstabliphed fuatiot ‘any ot Rk of AulNIGIS (0L U R0 Ty iting & candidate for governor next | The Vermont Historical Soclety has placed | o, SHCHHSS the tervitories, and she will stand at : official, but may be con- | life-size portrait of Semator Morrill in | y rast a squal chance wi o ops | itable, and the depreciation of farm A bring th es to be least an equal chance with the others | it e IlI b — presented to the soclety by T. W. Wood, | miilioo d to call— values naturally follows. An eastc The High-Lonesome Snap. the artist who painted it. venerable senator I was a boy, a little boy! there are hundreds of deserted farms, If that lone democrat who was elected 1, [ made a happy speech. e Michigen legislature is granted the [ 5 ATt 9 with the buildings in decay, the flower | 1S, Michigan lesiel B Tom Hood was not classed as a political the committées, he will accumulate wheels s o i at such a rapid rate that he will have to|POWer of penetration. For instance eral desolation pervading what were No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthtul | tormerly scenes of plenty and comfort. 2 e . formerly. scenes of, A Vast, Noiseleas Business. No comfortable feel in any member- . No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees, terfor of Pennsylyania, says this journ:l, | The whole number of building assoclutions it is & common expression that he who | I this country Is 835 with nearly 5,00 November. ducted without noise or friction, m]\d in a Census statistics show that 1o the New | hole vear does not attract gen el England and middle states more farms | men. than in any other way. The condition arve less unfavorable in the west, by western fi as a class have found it very difficult for the last few years to ourse of action simultancously the re- | them Mr. George Westin, jr. Bm- sult would be more disastrous than the [ inent medical men have expressed the | them hayve not been able to do so. The struggle is still a hara one and the Phe vast capital that is invested in the | suspends animation and that life may plant of each of our large cities would [ be recalled by means of artificial res-[The wheat producers of the United be in a large part practically destr piration. Some have made the startling | States must hereafter encounter a agrienlture would be forced down to [New York really died not from the |kets, while as to other products of the a plane of civilization from which they | clectrie shock, but from the operations | farm they must meet a larger competi smerged decades ago. Our surplus [of the autopsy—that it was not the mys- | tion in the home markets from Canada. would show an increase at a bound for | the knife of the surgeon, will be found that the situation of the which there would be no. present ef-| An experiment is to be tried this week | farmers there is even worse than it is fective demand. The farmers of the | that may perhaps determine which one [ here. In Germany, Russin and other duee than the people of the United |cepted. A physician of Syracuse, who | distress among. the agricultural popu States can consume, and their output | has invented an apparatus with which | tions. The wheat producers of Russia “xunlx‘lr-- N M‘l:‘ lh‘u --':.nux;! -;»»‘;‘lu.|x;«|;::.g |‘-Ix;1:— will be readily enlarged at an equal |he claims he can citate electro- [ are subject to, the same competition .-n’.‘.';n»,) Anshg "kOp 9 b b . The Reform the population. Of y of Charles Wilson, who will suffer | other countries producing a surplus of Nk is the fact that the \th penalty at Auburn prison in a | that grain as five the farmers of the [ The republican state c body of the urban unemployed The experimeat is awaited | United States. :dn Germany the agricul- [ Maryland, “after, resolving congress fmn; thiat state, al necessary to the successtul pur- | tricians and medical men, as well as [uation and is urgéntly demanding of | them hay air fouis a g1, stiff or Fedora, a vindieation of himself and the Amer fean Railway union in their participa- tion in the struggle. We feel confident, however, that Mr. Debs would appreci ate much more highly a vindication in the form of an acquittal by the federal eourt from the charges hanging over him under geand jury indictments, The most astonishing thing about the defeat of tlie Princeton foot ball team suit of agriculture under modern condi tions, and if furnished with the capital would be as likely to meet with failure as succe The facts of history are also against this fallacious philosophy, and if they indicate anything it is that we may well give up all expectation of seeing greater proportion of the world's popula- tion devoting its energles to agriculture as by that portion of the gemeral public which can feel an intelligent concern in such a matter. If the test shall prove successful of course that will be the end of the death penalty be electricit and the Empire state will return t hanging, unless there should be deve oped a popular sentiment against cap- ital punishment strong enough to abol- ish It. As to the probability of the su the governmentsome sort of relief. The impoverishment ‘of this element of the population in Austhia-Hungavy is gen- al, and while France is somewhat bet ter off thaii’ “the oth conti nental countries, much complaint is heard there also, The farm- ers of Great’ Bfitain have never been in worse condition than they are reported to be at present. In all these declare, “we have whipped the life out cof our_opponents, It would be both cruel and useless to Kick the party when it lies flat on its back.” Oh, go ahead and kick. A dem- ocrat who wanis to take & Seal in the Fifty-fourth hove deserves to be kicked out, anyway. \ —_— Rough Times for Albany Journal. The year 180 will pass into history as a bad year for cuckoos. Never before in the history of the country has the slaughter of these feathered friends been so great. The season began with the brightest pros- pects. The alr was mild and balmy and koos. Erect, good black cheviot, $ro. square-shouldered men always look well in the square-cut, double-breasted sack here shown— Better the tender green sprouts on the free trade tree were shooting vigorously. The cuckoos basked in the warm rays which radiated from the white house and their volces were heard in the land. Thelr piping was loud and continuous. It filled the ears of men. Each thought his own song was best and some of them almost strained their voices trying to sing louder by the University of Pennsylvania team this year Is that the vanquished ac knowledge that they were beaten by the superiority of the victors alone. It has been seldom, i ever, that any of the larger colleges have been defeated than now. The growth of cities has been a regular feature of the industrial era. efore 1800 their growth was not without temporary retrogressions, but during the present century it has been steadily progressive. In 1790 only 3.3 countries the governments are seriously considering plans for ameliorating the situation. In Germany the agrarians in- sist that the government shall help them by putting high duties on foreign bread- stuffs, provisions and cattle. In Russia cess of the experiment lay judgment can be of little value, yet we do not hesitate to express the opinion that the acuse physiclan will fail to demo strate that his apparatus can accom- plish what he claims for it. While It is grades at $12.50, $15 and ¢20, Overcoats and suits at all prices at foot ball without trying to invent ex cuses. Fraud or mistaken judgment on the part of the referee, or adverse en- vironment, or accidents of one kind or another, have always been pointed to after the battle in explanation of why the result was not different. This time Princeton comes out squarely and says that the other team was the better team. Burely the foot ball world does movel cont of the population of the United States was classed as urban. Since then each succeeding census has dis- closed an ever Increasing percentage, and the eleventh census makes the ur- ban population 20.2 per cent of the total, In other words, the rural population has been decreasing relatively although increasing absolutely. The same phe- unomenon is visible in greater or lessor true that the first trial of electrocution was so bungling that it failed to pro- duce death at once and the victim must lave suffered unutterable agony, ther is not a reasonable doubt that Instant death resulted from the subsequent trials, and that, therefore, the subjects suffered no such agony as Tesla says comes from an electrical shock. But when scientists whose oplnious are the government 18 asked to come to the aid of the great land owners by pur- chasing the forests that are held by the money. other countries, and everywhe in Eun- rope the clamor of the agricultural class for rellef is loud, intense and urgent. It is not very difficult to point out causes for this unfortunate condition of banks under mortgage for advances of | Other plans are proposed in | than the others, 30 that the people listening might say, “Behold, that is the boss cuckoo of the lot.”" Never was such singing heard before. But the people, who had with the cuckoos' Song two yvears before, grew weary and took counsel among then selves. Still the cuckoos piped on. " In the rly days of November the balmy air grew cold and the wind blew from the north, The cuckoos left their perches in the lofty branches and ceased their singing, They sought shelter in the low herbage and long grass, close to the ground And one day came a great snowfall and covered them up. been charmed every late style, $7.50. $8.50, 10, and some at $25—worth it, too. Browning, King & Co., Rellable Clothiers, S. W, Cor, 15th and Douglas,

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