Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 3, 1895, Page 4

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, JUNE 3, 1895. Tie OMAHA DAILY BEE RORS OR LNSS PERSONAL. and Omaha has recovered her old prop- | placing of this eountry on the same FOICE OF THE STATE PRESS. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. OHIO REPUBLICANS. vy o shams ncniale C .| The following screed appeared In the | erty values and the assessed valuation [ monetary basis'tha} Mexico is on—would . _— The impression has Blown into prestdential | 1e. o' ouy Star: General Dushnell, the T . ROSEWATER, EDITOR. Lincoln Journal of Saturday morning, | has reached fifty or sixty millions we |in any way RQefter the condition of Mf‘r-mflm( ‘ll'rlhu.v:\a:' n{bn:“ "..y ':l:;t hn clrclelxl that Mr. Foraker of Ohlo is In the | Lonibiican candidate for governor of Ohio, LRI e = | under the caption: ‘o Traltors Need | will be in condition to expend & round | American labog? o1t ought to be per. | Peing done fo recover the fuds wiolan by | receptive stage. | worth several million dollars. It the Bueks PUBLISHED BEVERY MORNING. Only T Blue Republi " v ex-Oll lnspector Frani on ? 10 Coln Harvey just hungers for those joint | eya popullsts can’t beat that kind of a layout e | ADDIY '“ y True Blu epublicans | suym on the old Parker tract. Until| fectly obvious ¥ every intelligent man | not be overiooked in the froe silver excte- | qebates. They force him on a wearied pub- | they will have to go.out of business. . | to Go to Cleveland: then the park board, in our judgment, | that a silver basi§ in the United States, | ment S 10, | 1,400 tend €0 awell his golden income Olobe-Demmocrat: The Ohio republicas = There was a special meeting of the ex- o verting its | which would inevitably follow the adop- | Bancroft Blade: With May wheat at €. [ The discovery of another new gas, called | convention is sound on the silver question, Daily Dee and Sund %% | ocutive committee of the republican state T e e W v tion of the fredsilve ; licy, would | we have beem scratching our head and won- | nellium, is particularly timely. Any change | ana so will be five out of every six stats e Bl % 00 funds into a channel that promises no n of the fre ver policy, would Te- | gering why silver don’t climb with it, &s|just now must be regarded as an Improve- | conventions held by the party this year and Three Mon't e league at the Lindell hotel last night. adequate returns for the next decade. |sult in great inJary to the wage-earning | it should, according to the declarations of | ment next. The republicans will not be stampeded e A [0 i | The meeting was called in lleu of & stato| ;o4 )0 yoard devote itself to the | classes of this country. The welfare | our free silver friends. Governor Morton has signed a bill repealing | on that issue. y Weekly Bee, One % | convention for the purpose of selecting i rovement d o of the natural|of American lihor' depends on nothing Minden Courier: The *State Board of [the law prohibiting Sunday parades with Cincinnati Enquirer: Perhaps it Is better, ¢ thirty delegates from Nebraska to the na- | MProvement and care b i " W Bqualization has ‘lowered the assessment [ music. But no fmpious horn can be tooted | after all that has been said and done, that Omaha. The Tee N and 3i(h 8ts, | tional leagues convention, to be held parks—Hanscom, Riverside, Elmwood [ more than upon a sound currency. bvalues of the railroads of this state; will | within one block of a church, Governor McKinley was away (rflmklnn:|| R T i o R 4 o ehic 1 - freight rates be correspondingly lowered? [ There are times when a full grown man | when the light went oul Let him get wha . g 1 Vs Jleveland o and Bemis—which afford abundant op reig ¢ # ) g1y I Chicnan e b At AL i St e " @ ,l The mulct law deciston of the Iowa | Ob. not it that was done it would be taken | yearns to flee from the maddening throng and | presidential comfort e ean in New York. f New York, It Inasmuch as it was known that E. Rose- | portunity for the profitable investment " ” e the | t0 the supreme c and get knocked out. | commune alone with his miseries. Learning | There appears to be none for him in Ohlo. P 1 ashington, water would be made an issue before the |of all the funds at its command. supreme court iy possibly close the | €, 116 FRRICEE TR B A R0t ey | 10 Tide & wheel presents one of them Setitn O oo o vk it Al ¢ (o news and edl- | conmittee, outsiders were excluded and a ———— I .'ulnm.‘, saloons, but it will u-‘»t Pre- | in the prico of wheat and sotton is knocking | Hx-Superintendent Drynes =of the Mew |chances were certainiy |lm(‘||d‘v‘|nir;»d‘ by the Riter 86 " he Edito e y e 3 rsty people Yes Moine: 4 " . oney or-| YO jolice recelves a pension of $3,000 recent eonvention ndeed, proba All business lettors and remittances sho e bt e et Mkl B L T oration at | T Ketting Tquor at thelr dealeo. | TR SO b Tt 18 teaching them that | cline to retire under similar conditions it he had never been elected its chief magl 8 The e Publishing C cret did not prevent the news escaping that | ., = moh e o They managed to get all the drinks | G0 Fo 0 ihd Is the great regulator| One of the conspieuous results of the biey- [ trate. He is much better liked as a visite ] 8, chocks and postoftice ore B. Rosewater, coming up as & candidate| GT0UL'S tomb on Decoration day was 8. o' \yyyy wanted during the prohibl- | o arices Lo and 18 the great rogulator| .\ M novement is general improvement ing governor than as a resident chief magi b BING . coM for a position on the delegation, was em.|Ne effort and not the least interesting | 0 "0 AP R P vty e abrges suburban roads. The Massachusetts com- | trate, apparently g S L bl i it portion of it was his tribute to the pa- cera from whisky-selllng drugsists | = York Times: If Dr. Hay would stgp down | yjecion will spend this year $300,000 in plant- | Chicago Journal: What shall be sald of g STATEMENT OF CIRCULATIO Dbl sl S e L gl e e P | and vile holes tn the wail. They might, [ and out ho would confor favor upon o | fiz"{rees alon the Improved highways the triumph of Foraker? Does it bode good ; WEolt's Aot ¥y ot TTHe three hours and a good deal of spirited ""“”“‘“- ;"'I’I"”“ “";’ "“ """,’ Y ': "“ if compelled to do o, fall back on these | 1478e number of good republicans who foel | "4 'gy. Louis firm fs sald to be trying to | for the republican party in Ohio or in the 4 : tishing company, L 1y sworn, wavs that | gigcugsion to accomplish this, but it was|union soldiers e declared that the [ 80 e ot ia o ooy | Chagrined that any republian should show | oo 240 T onteco market, and a | uation? As for Ohio republicans, if Foraker the ancusl namber and compite coples of | & IR ihe committee earned for itself | American people can mever cense to be | FSOUI ain. - The people « % | such an eagerness for offico as to hold on | oy pipe doal 1s reported from the ofl | is the kind of a leader they prefer to Shere A ring e montn of May, 1505, was aa # 3 Lidge for Whit tiis Moines, however, generally feel (hat | after he ought to let go. Dr. Hay is mak- | oountry. The labor world will, doubtless, { man and McKinley, they “are welcome to e ey | the distinction of having done that which | debtors to these men, for what the ho-| .. y4ve nad enough of this thing and | 1€ & spectacle of himselt continte to stick to the little ould dudheen. | their choice, It discredits their taste In i i 45,00 1 10074 | no body of republicans fn this state had | tion s, or what the nation may become, they prefer open and above board Aurora Sun: The railroads in Nebraska | A New York judge touched the chords of { leaders, that is all . 3 1016 Bt 3 )| Nitherto had the courage to do, but which [ we owe to them. Referring to the | o “L o7 iuln W edbh A e T have e ded o getling thelr assessment | popular commendation by imposing a fine of | Buffalo Express: The Foraker men seem 3 §40 2) v 5 y bty ey i ons to joints hidde or * | reduced ) less than it was last year, [ $14,760 on a tyrannous local corporation. Bul [ not to have been wbove accepting tha help of L} js the party as a whole has long desired, | diminishing ranks of the veterans, Gov- . $14,750 on a ty 0 n [ . 20,219 % y - colors. There never was effective pro- [ and the people would like to know the rea- | the fine has not been pald, and many days {the A. P. A This organization was chiefly [3 19,065 2 earnestly and prayerfully ernor McKinley said that the older of | oLl S e G | brer Towa | %00 Why. Their assessment has aiways are likely to pass between imposition aud |represcuted by Mayor Guy Major of Toledo, 4 ; ‘)“ ‘m”\ 4 Mr. Rose er was told by the action of them cannot t a great while longer 1 3 7 " | been too low in proportion to individual { collection’ who became a dummy candidate himself, but o 19,126 3 the committec that the republican party |, .4 w«God grant that, while they are|Cities: Instead of trying to hamper the | assessments, and there would seem to be no | «Age does mot wither nor custom stale’ | B0t no votes in the convention and gave his 3 1 39,08 7 has wearied of the long continued policy of g sl -auloy Wit enforcement of the mulet law, the tem- | possible reason for the large decrause. the charming felicity of Chauncey M. Dipew | Support to Bushnell, Just before the conven: B s B concillation and that he must show works | Still With us, they shall enjoy without | 10 qdvoeates ought to be cager to | Chappell Register: Did you ever figure |in drawing the low bow. At the “harmony | ton he had McKinley's name tora grom the i E 13, 19 007 E2 g he | Stint, grudge or suspicion the bounteous A 1 croct fts | UP, the probabilities and the certalaties of | banquet” in New York last Taursday Mr Toledo banners. . 3 5 124 H R A i B SRR M nofactions of the country they served | PFOmote its operation and to correct Its | Nojraska compared with the eastern sintes? | Depew expressed a decided aversion for after | Philadelphia Record: Until Tire Alarm j 13 L W28 o cognition at the hands of the party which L . 3 % wenk spots as the latter are exposed. |The Nebraska farmer may plant and tend | dinner speaking and followed it with an | Foraker shall die, or be struck with paralysis, A {4 o i ensig well, and the care and benediction of five crops five years running, and it he gets | hour's talk republican politics in Ohio will always be b Total . AR o A ond i v rpose here g ow all their neighbors and fellow citizens, = R three full crops and two faflures hLe pets v mera accident a discovery of much fm- | interesting. ~ He Is a free lance; and he Toown seauciions o kol whd rediried | Tt 18 not my purpose hiere and now to | al The assessors' returns for the Bext {more than the farmers east of Onio €0 wi D oo i Now York. | A boy fell | always wants so much that he ought mot to S 6,825 As to tlie pension roll the governor sald: ha mer: hio o when | portance was made in New Y . 3 coples eoved . call in question the procedure b ! PeAs 3 year's tax list ave commencing to ap- | they get five full crops. Then another thirg, | from a fire-escape, landing on the fifth floor, | have, and so much that other Ohlo states- b which the executive committee of eleven | “If the pension roll is to be diminished, },.»-n. and are expected to be completed it only takes about half the labor to plant | tumbled into the lap of a woman sitting on [ men do not concede to him, that between de- persons, two of them proxies, and five | or if displacement should occur from and tend a crop here. the steps below, and suffered no injury mand and denial the party is kept in per- ( not necessarily mean much. Pullman's victory in the fight to an- nul the charter of his sleeping car com pany is really nothing to brag about for the marquis. Nobody seriously ex- peeted that the charter would be an- nulled, and if it bad Dbeen it would not have involved much trouble or ex- pense to get anotlier one. Sugar King veling in republicans repudiated as unworthy to De their standard bearer. Who are the traitors to the republican party in Nebraska and who has fought the battles of true republicanism against the corrupting influences of corporate monopoly that have decimated its ranks and reduced its majority from 30,000 to nothing? 1 make bold to assert that the loyal republicans are the men who set their faces sternly agalnst corporate interference with caucuses, conventions Europe with 150 trunks. I}, 0 Jegislatures; the men to whom the Europe every railroad passenger has to perpetuation of republican institutions pay for the transportation of all the |, pepublican self-government is baggnge hat, he carries with him. In | goirer than rallroad patronage and America the railronds carry one trunk free. Spreckels, when traveling in America, probably carries only one trunk, When MeKinley was importuned to say a few words for the tattooed eandi- date for governor during his tour of Ne- braska last fall he politely dismissed the topic with the hint that he was able himself to choose the subjects for his specches. MceKinley didn’t say a word Does Majors want to go to Ohio to vin- alicate himself there also? Springfield, 111, will this week be the Mecea of the free silver dervishes. One wing of the Illinois democrats has Inid out a free silver program which they intend to go through. There will be silver eloquence to superfluity and a love feast that could not be excelled were it not for the fact that the whole demonstration is but a spectacular per- formance for effect only Senator Hill has recendy emitted some anique views on finane Senator ITill 18, howoever, no greater authority on na- tional finance than George Vrancis Train. The only difference between the tavo s that Hitl wants to bura up all the greenbacks and “I'rain wants to set all the printing presses in the eountry in motian to make greenbacks as comunon and cheap as the air we breathe. Major Moses I". Handy has returned safely to Chieago from the battle of Zanesville. While on the McKinley skir mish line the major made the discovery that every man in Ohio is a politician. But that does not signify that every man from Ohio is a politician. Horac Groeley once said that every horse thief was a democrat, but that every demo- cerat was net a horse thief, in his day The opening of Courtland beach means the opening of the old con- twoversy over double street railway fares. The people who find themselves between the upper and lower mill- stones of two street rallway companies do wot stop to ask which is more at Cault. Both come in for a full share of Dlawme. A little regard for the wel- fare of the public eugnt to bring the fwo companies to the adoption of a were satisfactory arrangement. When the State Board of Equalization reduced the assessment of milvoad prop- erty by over $§2,5600,000 it did not simply shift the taxes that would otherwise have been levied agalust that swount of property from the railroad corpora- tions on te the backs of the owners of other taxable property, but it also cut dowa the incowes from local taxation of pvel county and town through which these railvoads pass. The ouly way to raise the necesasry revenue wid be to vaise the rate of daenl taxation, which is higher already than the tax- paying citizens can well bear, ety spoils. Who are the traitors? The infamous scoundrels who make merchandise out of republicanism, who sell out the party and deliver it hand and footbound to corporate satraps and help to rivet the chains of depend- eney and political slavery upon our peo- ple while looting the public treasury and robbing the taxpayers. It has come to a pretty pass when a republican who refuses support to a candidate tattooed all over with blotches of corruption and debased by habits that render him totally unfit for any public position is to be made to kneel on the footstool of contrition and re- pentance. If anybody should be com pelled to show repentance and contri- tion is it the band of corrupt emis- aries whose treasonable conspiracies have robbed loyal republicans of Ne- braska of their true choice of state ex- ecutive officers and foisted upon their tickets incompetents and politieal crooks who have mortgaged soul and body in advance to the democratic Burlington railroad despot. E. ROSEWATER. ATUKAL PARKS. The park commission has wasted a ®ood deal of money in scooping out a hole for a pond, making an artificial wound and iu planting whip sticks on the flat and unattractive tract known as Miller park. It is now making ready to bridge the hole in the gronund that has been scooped out and to do various and sundry scrapings which are presumed to make the spot attractive. It will take about twenty years of such work before this piece of cow pasture will be sufliciently eultivated and improved to afford the shelter and pleasure ground which any park pretending to the name is presumed to be. Now, if the surplus in the park fund Is so large as to inconvenience the board the ex- penditures on Miller park at this time might be justifianble. But when it is borne In mind that the park fund is very limited and the taxpayers are gronning under the most severe pressure to which property owners can ever be subjeeted it is inconceivable why the board should divert what little money it has in such an unpromising fleld. It the board is bound to spend money to keep men ewployed, why not put it ont where it will do the most good to the people who puy the tax, and especially the present generation, It is not a question of north or south, east, west, or center, but where will men, wowen and children enjoy thelr plenics and outings and where will the wultitnde of the poor and the widdle class wost readily find shady play grounds and rvesorts that present oppor- | tunity for vecreation and rest? Suvely they will not find such opportunities at Miller park for years to eome. True, ke city now owns that tract and it has jutid three prices for it, vut the city has uot obligated itself to make it available as a park elther this year, the next or the year after, When times get better IMPROVE 1116 B responsible for it will hardly venture again to thus invite popular protest and condemmation. But in any event only good can come from such utter s Himself Is earnestly that of Governor McKinle a brave union soldier, he f nd strongly what is due to the men cournge veterans st whose loyalty and the unfon. The warmer or more steadf: William McKinley. preserved have no ‘nd than FREE SILVER EFFECIS IN MEXICO, An article in the eurrent number of the North American Review, by the Mexican minister to this country, set- ting forth some of the advantages and disadvantages of the silver standard in his country, is naturally commanding attention, Senor Romero urges that the effects are mostly advantageous to Mexico. e says exports are stim- ulated and imports discouraged; that there is more stability of prices, wages, rents, ete.; that although wages are low there has been in recent ye: a marked tendency to their increase; that the man- ufacturing industries are in operation and growing, and that all labor finds employment. He also says that under the silver standard Mexico has wmore money with which to transact increased business. This statement of some of the ad- vantages elaimed for free silver in our neighboring republic sounds well, but what of the disadvantages? An Ameri- can writing from the City of Mexico says that mnothing which has Dbeen promised by the silver men of this coun- try has come to pass in Mexico, and he points out that so far as labor is con- corned free silver has accomplished nothing for it. On the contrary wages are lower and living higher. Since sil- ver has decrensed in value to about one- half, everything produced in Mexico which competes with the markets of the world has increased proportionately. Mhe only products which have remained at nominally the old figure are those which are not grown for export and which do not come in contact with similar products grown in countries which have a sound currency. Even coffee, which is one of the staple prod- uets, has risen to such a point as to practically be beyond the reach of the peon and the laborer, while the only beef ever in reach of these classes is that which is cut from the dead animals after the bull fight. Cotton and whent in Mexico, says this correspondent, are continually pointed to as higher than these products in the United States, but the reasen they are so is that there is not enough cotton and wheat raised in Mexico to supply the home market and their price is regulated by the scarcity of the home product and the tariff on what is imported. The peon aud the laborer live almost exclusively on a bread made from a rough ground corn, onions, Chile peppers and pulque. It will be seen from this that the con- dition of labor in Mexico has not been improved or elevated as a result of the free coinage of silver. Minister Romero himself admits that Mexican wages are low, but says there has been a tendency to their Indrease. Low, indeed, they are, when the average ranges from 121 to 25 cents & day in the cities and on the plantations of Mexico, while all sala- ries are proportionately swall. The masses in our neighbor republie, it is perfectly evident, have not been helped by the silver standard, and such being the fact what sound reason is there for assuming that the free, unlimited and independent coinage of silver by the United States—in other words, the to secure the right man for the vacant Lip of state. There is no im- mediate necessity of hasty action. The position has always been regarded as the most responsibje one in the presi- dent’s gift. Oup national pride, without regard to political faith, demands that the national hotior Ue properly upheld in all our international transactions, Most of the duties of the secretary of state performed the same whether by demoerat or republican. But it requires a man of ability to perform them, and the president should take time to find the man for the place. When rain pleases the farmer it also pleases the local merchant and business man. When the farmer wants warm weather, so does the merchant. In the matter of weather the interests of the farmer and the merchant are identical. Lofty Paternatism, Chicago Post. Canadian Indians-have discovered gold, and an all-wise government, ever careful of their interests, has prohibited them ing it. from touda- T The Underiying ldea. New York Tribune. The idea which underlies the free silver movement is that the government should go iuto the storage business and issue ware- house certificates on deposits of silver bullion. But if for silver, why not for pigiron also? R Democratic 1odging. Buffalo Express. The Carnegie company is going to start a tinplate mill. Those democrats who in 1892 refused to admit that there was a tinplate industry in the United States are now point- ing to its survival as the principal proof that thelr tariff policy has.mot entirely ruined manufacturing. Morton and the Presidenoy. Chicago Post. Governor Morton is now in his 724 year. In March, 1897, if he live that long, he will be close 10 73, Four years from that would ,bring his age to 77, far beyond the allotted term of human life. Is it possible for any man of that age to withstand the extraordi- nary pressure, the multitudinous cares and the killing excitement with which a career in the white house is beset? Those who saw President Cleveland as he walked wearily from the funeral train could see beyond mis- take the fearful effects of three years of work and worry on a comparatively young and unusuglly robust man. Governor Mor- ton may live for many years in the pursuit of lighter palitical hionors. But nelther he nor the people can take the risks involved in imposing the crushing weight of presidential responsibility on the shoulders of old age. pfr il Ll The Funeral of Grosham. Chigago Tribune. It was pre-eminently fitting that his funeral ceremanies should have cocurred on Memordal day, when the veterans of the wnion army were decorating the graves of their dead camrades and recalling merories of the duys of battle. The Grand Army of the Republic had no more enthusiastic assoclate than Gen- eral Gresham, and kis burial on Memorial day will give the anniversary new signifi- cance. It was also befitting that on the day of his funeral many of the most distinguished southern officers hom he met on tho field should have been. lere to pay their tribute of respect to thelr own dead and at the same time testify to their admiration of the dead union general, who had his victories in peace as well as wav—victories on the ane hand achieved by his strong sense of justice and devotion to right, on the other by his spotless saldierly qualities. The petty strife of partisanship eeases over this new grave “in fame's eternal camping ground''— And glory guards with solemn round The bivouac of the dead. In this bivouae rests no more chivalrous, gallant comrade sleeping his last long sleep than Walter Q. Gresham. deal of noise, but when it comes to people of the western states, they are not all carried off with the craze of the silverites. Papillion Times: The signs point to an early attempt to secure a pardon for Bank- wrecker Mosher. The Omaha papers ore publishing statements from prison officials to show that prison life is very hard on the thief, and that he is already broken in health. Looking at him as an individual it is easy for Nebraskans to sympathize with the man because of his bodily suffer- ings, but sympathy would be inore freely bestowed if” Mosher would return seme of his stealings to the widows and orphans who are now In want because of his rascal- ity. Mosher still has plenty of monay, ard money {s so powerful nowadays taat we shall ot be surprised to learn any cay that a pardon has been issued to the thief. It's dollars to cents that all attaches of the fed- eral court in this state would sizn a plea for the pardon of their pet. e MINENT AMERICAN., AN Cincinnati Commercial: Let us not dwell on these late years. Let us rather remember him, at least today, as the gallant soldier, the fearless judge, the efficient head of the Postoffice department, the high politician who died poor. Boston Globe: There will be widespread regret over the death of one who has ful- filed many public duties faithfully and de- votedly, and whose honesty and integrity as a man are recognized and appreciated by citizens of every shade of political opinion. Courier-Journal: Walter Q. Gresham was a man among men, whether in private or in public life. Big-minded, big-hearted, brave, | generous, honest and earnest, he filled nobly every station in life to which he was called, whether in the circle of his family and friends, or in the military, judicial and ex- ecutive service of his country. St. Louis Republic: Now that he is gome, the strictest old-fashioned democrat will see that he was a natural democrat who, ac- cording to the deeper philosophy of parties, well deserved the honor to which he was in- vited by President Cleveland. He did not deserve the discomforts which shallow abuse added to the great difficulties placed before him by the circumstances of our foreign relations. ew York World: Gresham'’s character and carcer distinguished him as a genuine pro- duct of the institutions that formed Jackson and Lincoln, Grant and Garfield. He was proud to serve his country and bis kind it any capacity and to any extent. But no worship of wealth or power ever corrupted him or warped his opinions. He died as he had lived, @ man of the people, a true dem- ocrat, a genuine republican, Washington Post: Mr. Gresham was a man of generous impulses, always sympa- thizing with the victims of wrong #nd op- pression. He was strong in his attachments and, though never vindictive, he was prompt in resenting injuries. He had many warm friends and, like all public men of strong convictions, he had enemies. But these will lay aside animositics at the portals of his grave and do justice to the honest citizen, the brave soldier, the upright judge, and the consclentious stalesman. Chicago Tribupe: Pbysically as well a intellectually Judge Gresham was a fearless man. There was no braver officer in the union army. He never asked his men to €0 where he would not lead them, and he re- ceived his almost mortal wound, which was the indirect cause of his premature death, by riding in front of bis fine before Atlanta to examine the ground over which he was to lead & desperate charge agalnst the enemy. He was 4 companionable mav and truly and sincerely devoted to his friends. No man ever regretted it who attached nimselt to him @s a {riend. He wore his heart upon uis siceve. His communication was “Yea, yea,” and “nay, nay.” He could not play double. He was not a hesitating friend any more than he was & genulecting politician. In the midst of plotting, scliening, Lergiver- satipg, cunning men, he stands out cos spicuous by his simplicity of life, bis hon esty of purpose, his fearlessnesa of spoech, his conviction that he must do a thing be- cause it was right and D e it was & duty. It is hard to lose such men In the midst of their usefulness and lu (heir io- tellectual prime. Highest of all in Leavening Power.~— Latest U. S, Gov't Report Royal Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE loves them for the votes he has at different times been able to command from ranks when he wanted office. Colonel Rus sell has bobbed up and down and around er the state for years, attending conven tions and soldier reunions, and always pro- fessed to love his old penred as their special champion. it was only natural to suppose comrades and ap that to be would not be guilty of dismissing an old soldier from his office. But this has done, and the old soldier element of his party is naturally indignant over the matter. The old soldier whom he dismissed from the office of commissioner of public lands and buildings had been in the office for nearly a score of years, and was a com- petent man for the place, stands high as a citizen, and served his country honorably and faithfully as a soldier in the civil war. We are led to think from such actions as this from men of the Russell stripe that the love and esteem republican politicians profess for the old veterans is neither sin- cere nor honest, but merely a subterfuge to catch votes. Such hypocrisy as that prac ticed on old soldiers by Colonel Russell should be condemned by all good citizens, regardless of party. rovoking Judge I Loulsville Courler-Journal. The_death sentence of Dr. Buchanan, the New York wife murderer, is better executed late ttan never, but there would have been rejoicing if the judge who imposed it for the fourth time could have managed to provide some punishment for the quibbling lawyers They have hunted up techniealities solely for the “advertisement they re ived in delaying the punishment of this infamous criminal. The courts of law could learn a salutary les- son from Judge Lynch, who never permits trifiing with his decrees. About half of them, left. So we are going to Tuesday. The rush Sat- urday was 8o great we could not wait on all, Awful Sorry, But came Moy day und we wil! have more time to attend to your WANTS, The same Prices Will Prevail, Jersey Suits $2,00 were $4.00 $3.50 were $6.00 Long Pant Suits $5.00 were $10.00 Reliable Clothiers. their Of course such a man as the doughty colonel has claimed he o BARGHIN SALE = ON BOYS CLOTHING WAS GREAT THEY SOLD LIKE THE Reefer Suits 2 Piece Suits Your Mosey's Wortis or will Trade Back. Southwest Cor, 15th and Douglas. L 0 i K Rt th . We presume : : : L e 0f Vast BumAne posslc | Dol hok wates, f GrORG S el - s ar cnuses, le or reasons alike | Within the next ten d: Lincoln News: The Omaha papers are for | incident is suggestive of vast humane p $ - b Sworn t hofore me und sub i my pres- | out of the six unknown to anybody in fother causes, let it be for reasons alike | ) T Co "y ) ‘done o the same | once united in & demand for s better trajn | biities during fire and other emergencies Denver Republioan: The MRinlayiNeei b ce this 1st day { Jun sary Public, | Nebraska outside of thelr own precinet, Jjust and conclusive. Then the patriotic srinciple as in previous years, with | service for that city. This remarkable fact M. Louis Pasteur, the distingyished French |80t a very bad setback in Ohio when the 1 . rrogate »maelves cors vosted | sentiment of the country will approve |! I P iy is due largely to the fact that both have | chemist, who has attained remarkable results [ 1%oraker men captured the state convention g arrogated to themselves powers vested ot > general and intentional undervaluations | 55 G0e IR \RoaA" poNEIels o | fn the prevention of hydrophobia by inocula- | and nominated an entire state ticket and took If it were not for the vetoes of Mayor |in the state convention, mor do T pro-|und the brave soldiers of the vepublic | | % i imination In favor of the | an extent that the latter have taken g0 | tlon, has refused a German decoration which | Possession of the state central committee It Bemis, where would the threatened |pose to waste space or time In stig- | Will themselves be '.'"I"k to applaud “l vorlous well known ¢nx shirkers, | buliding up the Lincoln Journal by running | has been awarded m{h,lm as o n-.:x‘nw(:f his );yl\:::”l_v:" :’.: ':;‘.c"'.'..i“"",f-‘;:f;.’f;.»f.'..".',"m(:::l.‘: f overlap have reached by this time? mativing the unprecedented and | All this'isin the right epirit and there } o o5 %, Mo o 0 St el e ave als trains o0 that the Omaha papers cannot I\‘;lI“lr‘?xsll‘:’yl‘r“"lnr:u.:r:;ul Il Frenen | convention would support Toraker instead of H — unwarranted attempt by outsiders | €an be no doubt that it voices a senti- oty et T ierey of the ws. | feach points in the best part of the stato (M. Pastcur b b grund SACE D M KU | Moiciutoy tor president. X Jose Martl, the Cuban revolutionist, | to dietate who sbould or who | ment still gencral among the American [ MO3t WA ; s ml""u e “Nf ;’.Klllly:.(."'.'g,;‘.';‘|‘:.r (,)'f morning raflroad organ | 11" 0dal by the Royal Society of London | Cleveland Plain Dealer: The Ohio candl- i3 could relieve the public greatly if he | g ‘oresent the republican | People, notwithstanding the very indus. |8essors. There s a small range of Bisindhs C ot e AR in 1856 for Mis researches relative to the | date for the national nomination expected would relieve 1 atly should not represen he republican s R Th AR e B BLE i ot | POW however, at the command of [ Wausau Times: The Nobraska state fair, | polarization of light. to get the state convention, a ticket of his would come out with an announcement | ojuhs of Omala at the national conven. | trious and persistent efforts on the part | FRREE IRREVER equalization, Upon | [T September 13 to 20, will be the grand The Massachusetts senate has ordered to | Personal and political friends, the state central telling us whether he has been killed | ion, That is as much the prerogative [ ©f the present demoeratic administra- f . K est ever held. Omaha will spare eather | 1inq reading a bill abolishing the common | committce, the declaration that he is the “~ b Hak ¥ tlio @libeL of HiisL dlataine {6 tion to create a feeling that the surviving | them devolves the duty of removing time nor expense lo make it a go and has{counctl of Boston. This action should not | candidate of the united republican party of . or not. of the clubs of this district as is their e 3 ¥ the most glaring inequalities. There |already gone to several thousand sollars of | o classed as usurpation or rustic tyranny. | Ohio and the control of the party machinery k ] = i ventl ¢ | fight to send any man they choose to soldlers of the unlon have received| . o oL oS work for the equaliza. | £XPense in securing the Mardi Gras floats | jrar from it. It fs a cold commodious bluft, | that would give that declaration force. —Hls 3 R GLIBALS (oSBT O oI Bk | e A toha Eonventon greater considerntion at the hands of S8 k 1ualiza- | from New Orleans and otherwise preparing | conceived in envy, and hurled at the | most relentiess foe took from him the con- Republican League clubs at Cleveland | the ne i - o he | the government than they deserved. tion board to do. for the Feast of Mondamin. Omaha may be | unjeipal solons because they persistently | vention, the ticket, the committee, the party A1l rise In Dis seat and shout himself | What I bave a right to resent Is the | It ) looking out for No. 1, but at the rame time | fafiad to fnyits the legislators to midnight [ machine and contemptuously tossed him & siptlinal i assertion that T sought the empty eom- | The pension roll has probubly reached e whatever is done in the way of making the | jupches which the Boston fathers enjoy at [resolution of endorsement not worth the papor loarse so soon as he hears Tattooed | Assertion that © KoWEL TA¢ MLIY MR |4y hixinum and if 1t 1s reduced from | The Colorado republicans have pledged | fair a success will result to the advantage | {ho. cxpense of the city. The aliernative | It Was written on. ~If the Ohio delegation n Tow's hickory shirt entering the conven- l‘" ":‘"1 0 I-‘I-‘ ng ":3'1“"15’ i S oh other cause than death let it be | themselves to repudiate any party that |Of Nebraska as a state, presented to the Bostonese Is “Divide or Per- | the nutional convention next yenr gives one g o, It 0 ronvention and i nsulting impu- ‘ 4 > S D ew! ! 2 b Ve 0f cKinley w e i tlon hall. 1 you don't belleve 1t, just | A conveneol S Ee O ommittee's ons, s Governor McKinley said, | declines to fnsert a 16 to 1 free silver | S News: & ey bas been ralsed by |\ lst e grace of Foraker. Afier that will come the it and sec. action. I crave mo recognition at the |Just and conclusive. No trumped-up ge plank into its platform. Even | Omaba will not fulfill her promises to build iyt el il ful cayliiat it DU N W ity Is th for two |hands of the republican party, least of all { Clarses of fraud, no unsupported allega- | at this distance from the next nationgl | street rallways to the falr srounds, Of{ , .4 Commissioner Ressell will fipd VIRTUFUL JINGLES, What necessity s there for two |ha > an party, s SRS T By oy o wo. | course such a report was not raised by mmiss D § < A 4 didized | tions against the integrity of ve us | convention it is perfectly safe to pre- | 3 o it a hard job explaining satisfac- secretaries of the Board of Public ‘l"‘;:;i'l;":"],l‘;"‘"\';I:,‘,"m“::":'n[:‘f |;‘\:m72;‘,'k":;| who ask the beneficence of the nation, | dict that no 16 to 1 free colnage plank | Omana. 1t 15 dgne only. by s 'enemy | torily to the old soldiers wh ) pAire ‘are) RaL, ke A b DaRYY i WAL OO 8 e b SRS Bonors. or gifts the re.|must be allowed to tuterfere with that | will be inscrted in the republican plat- | Omalia cannot afford to do leas than she{&fter all 'bls = antelocion BroBEss | -y act You've: Goubtless seon: © performed by one man and that, too, jman, ALl 1Ae LOPom OF B8 S0 " ansotutely ¢ar and just trentment of | form, notwithstaning the ultimntum of { rainised to do, nelther has sbe manitoated { 48 ISR S §o Iy clerioa force and | Y Jaary theY Rt Decause, you kuow the during the period when public works |publiean - partyr eolid | ter RSION | e whieh they have the bighest right | the Colordo republicans. 1t would be | {0 soe the Bost fair and the best Aceomme, | hires the daughter of an_ ex-confoleraie. | Are softest when they're green. were being pushed to the amount of a |on ]‘“; ‘;““ "h e Al a great deal safer for the republican | dations next fall ever enjoyad in the state. | He i ?“;“ “““‘!,“:":,xv"!t‘;l‘,.,r;;‘m:‘.::k::ly‘: York Reorder, apologize for the course ave - A ” R e considerable o g ¢ suililon-o apologlae for the Couse 1 e Dt | The utterly indefensible course of the | party to dispense with the electoral vote | Kearney Suns Tro convention of the state | I, Wi A, S0 Gt s, (O kRS TR Ehpd No wonder tle socond son of the i ""' '“]"l'"l" l""" o ralvsed | S0ldiers in the matter of pensious will | g states than' to jeopardize success in | favoring the frae coinage of siiver at 1q| Das made & grave mistake, that will rise{ " To talk; she's got to Haten. ameer of Afghanistan is receiving sueh [ will be palsied and my arm paralyze i N s Yy R el st ; A s 1 up to embarrass him before the state con- — zoes e [ e aittor one avord of sepent. | DrODAbly never be repeated. The popu- | Obio, Pennsylvania, New York, New |to 1. The convention was held at Portiand | U5, 1o eribatrase, pim Bove (v KA Indlanapalls Journal, aistin ..I|.‘|...|‘| « (u,,hlh-‘“(;(.:. 1“ L]'":;"”i efore ”‘_‘t P ““" Py lflny lar rebuke administered to that action | England, and even in Hlinof e ‘}“l"::;'f““y i b i A s man - Russell has long posed | ¥l ltarned to play tunes on a comb, Veais Pusl ‘orbett fote e or write one o TO z . 700 delegates, coming fre s ec- ers’ frie: o | A0d e > sucl sance 0! RERRE = usifisc Guebets fatel and din ki : | taught a lesson which it s preity safe tion of the state and from evers statig | P the role of the old soldiers’ friend. He | “irhatma spanked him, and then— almost as much when he was visiting | thing I have said concerning the can- Fainay. willHARE for i1l el latie nacis 5 5 X 1 1te, The "alive (et AkeLa °f 1 js what has been termed a “professional | “Will you do it again? abroad? Being lionized in London does | didate whom 20,000 stalwart Nebraska 3 4 ety land will take his time e, The sllver miners make a great| ;g goldier.” He loves the old veterans— | And he cheerfully an: Puek. It's a fine thing to roll in wealth— There jsn't a_ blooming doubt of 1t; That Is, if you have the skill To roll without rolling out of it. New York Dispateh, They say when Cupid aims his dart He rarely ever misses; Yet, when he shoots at woman's heart, "Tis then he makes the Mrs. Atlanta Constitution. Thermometers will have their day, Though things seem out of tune We used six tons of coal in May, But fire'll be free in June! Detroit Tribune. She gave to me her hand I _cannot help but wonder How comes it she has left the thumb, The which she keeps me under. Courier. jometimes in life a pair of shoes Will cloud our heart with doubt; Just as we get them broken in, We find they're broken out. ——— THE GARDENER'S TRIALS, omerville Journal. A_gardener's life would be more gay, 1f, when he sowed his seeds, He ‘could fee] sure that something less Than half of them were weeds. His days would be more joyous, too, And sweeter far his cup, 1f, when he got them down, the caty Would please not dig them up. And his delight would be almost Too great to be, controlled, 1 one day wasu't bolling hot, And the next day freezing cold. But lack-a-day, alas, alack! These things’ will never be, And that is why a gardener's life Is full of misery, remsrn Guess. Some splendid values still run the sale Monday and Come fin and get one of our STRAW HATS It's time to make a change now. You can get them at most any price. 25 cents 50 cents and on up. 3 Piece Suits $3.50 $4.00 were $7.00 were $9.00 Single and Double Breasted 2 Piece Suits $5.00 were $10.00

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