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B ROREWATY PURLISHED EVERY MORNING TEHME OF BURSCRIPTION Jny), One Your and Sunday Weekly Omnlia Houth On Council | Chieng New ¥ Washington ANl com toria | Pub aetual nur of th Dally, Mor o printed during (ho tollows: | i | 0001 | comtemplates | ment ot 1L, Publ Notar Congressman Mereor doubtless had a | pleasant tour of {he Orient, but missed a heap of fun at home. the to investi Th Nebraska delegation police troubles in this city. over. Wanted A professor to teach Stand ard Oil political ecbuomy to fill the cliair of economics in the Chicago uni versity. Professional athleties are, losing ground cach year, while amatenr sport | is making tremendons progress. Noth ing conld be a bette 1 of o healthy growth of athleties. Panpers continue to deift info Omaha from neighhoring loealities, sent here in all probability by public oflici want to get rid of the indigent not this pr de odious? who Can ctice he ms The bullionair more resolved in favor of fi at 16 to 1, but councils r fight and resolutions don't change the ratio between the white and yellow metal, silver to never Another Indian seare is heing impro vised at Pocatello, but it thing more than rumors from Jackson's Hole to make people believe the sen sationnl veports imaginary mas sac o takes somoe ion of the supreme court will 1ift a heavy burden from the minds of at least 200 men in the police and fire departments who were be pushed into close quarters where they would be damned if they did and damuned if they didn't, The prompt a Land Commissionor not yet oxplained the mood eame upon him during which he is said to have paid out over $100 for printing the report of the peniten \ppraisers which might ha been printed as a public document at the state’s expense. Russell has low generons The proposition to vote a reasonable subsidy to aid the projected motor line between Ames avenue and Florence will meet with favor, generally speaking. It has long been a erying necessity, which w cmphasized by the demand for | funerzl trains to and from Porest Lawn The Union Pa receivers taken the fivst step preliminary erection of a grand union depot at Ninth and Parnam streets, This is propitious. Conditions are understood to be favor. able for an early beginning of the enter prise. The il features of the scheme are known to all. No man inter. ested in the development of Omaha fails to realize the importance of this union depot enterprise. In boom days it would have great benetit, while in times like these it will prove a powerful Impetus toward the revival of business prosperity. have to the essent been of e Cripple ( eek, over on the other side of the range, is alb ablaze with exc ment and indignation, and Is liable to be burned jn eflig, Instigation of the Deny Humane so elety the governor of Colorado is hold ing the militia ready to stop a Mexican bull fight that was to have comt off at the Cripple Oreek harvest festi val. Down in Georgia they don't do things that way. Mexican bull fighting is to be one the attractions at the Atlanta tlon, and the governor [§ expected to occupy one of the boxes In | the arena and disteibute to 1 silver medals among the matadors, picador and chuloes, & somebody At the of exposi of i Our fly sumes i 1-the-wheel conterporary as amount of wisdom to it self. 1t all along there wonld be no troul e the police board squab ble. It denounces the reports sent out of Omaha by the Associuted press agent as being full of misrepresentation and of earmine hue. But it says nothing of the artistic work of the man who o the sensational reporting from the World--Herald office. sYestords wn Ing, before there was the slightest com motion on the st this man the wildest concelvable report of and carnage about to be pre upon the streets of this city peared in It kinew oS wired | lood ripitated This ap sociated the man ager's otfice at Chicago for news from Omalia. “The United press has badly scooped us on the rioting there! The agent of the Associated press assured the eastern papers there had begn riot here and none would be reported il it eventuated eastern cities, onee stormed | onght o to thiet poliey whieh aims at building up | produ, THE TOME MARKKET. farmers of the United from finte ¢ «t, fr 1dly + lome market, The Inerensing petition to which Amerlean stapl I ted In the it wonld wriculturists of m prod nets are being suhje mar Kets of the worl inevitably fead (e United States to \ port 1o this country trinl dey m the sup 181 which the [ thle is not very foreign wi policy o ts remard ment. The remote when there will market for our wheat undersell one chief competitors India Argentina. In all countries the produetion of increasing from year to year and Amer fcan wheat alveady felt the offect of this growing competition A years nzo the Argentine Repab lie uo whent, but shie sends large quantities to Burope. At present the shipments from that coun try and Russia the European markets, which in turn control our mar ket Another of wh supply will be opened as soon as the Siberian railrond, now in cour construction, and the policy of Russia Kiberia wried out, This the fcultural develop, that 1o, which covers more than Cuited and climate varied and well d to the growth agricultural sluets generally, especially wheat, 1t will many y of course, hefore siberia can become an important factor in the world's grain marke but this country eannot afford to wait for that before taking whatever steps may still be necessary to more cortainly insure the building up of the home market. There is quite enough in existing con ditions to impry the fmportance of this, We shall not have to realize a greater development in population ovder to be independent of foreign m, 1s far, at least, as our wheat neerned, assuming that the produe tion of that article will not he materi ally inereased, and it cannot be much enlarged beeause the wheat area now pretty fully occupied. Tt mated that our own people now con sume 350,000,000 bushels of wheat an nually, which within 150,000,000 hushels of the average yield and within 75,000,000 hushels of the estimated erop conr. An increase in the popula tion of the country of from 20,000,000 1o 30,000,000 would enable our wheat owers to market all theiv product at home and thus relieve them of the con trol, as to the pri of the Buropean markets, Given a home market for all his wheat the Ameriean farmer wou'd no longer have to o Mark Lane for the regulation of its price nor 1 compelled to pay foreign ship owners for transporting it to market. Regarding this matter, of such com- manding importance to the agricultu the Cineinnati - Comme 1 observes that in the United States there always s been and prob ably will under normal conditions an excess in the supply of food. The smaller this excess becomes through an inereased home consumption the bette) and the less influence Mark Lane upon the price of wheat and other cere in our market the better. The policy of our government. thercfore, shonld be to so regulate the taviff sched ule as to increase the employment of men in oour vi 1 industries, Growth of population with industriai crowth ahid it is this that is necessary insure the American farmer inde- pendence of the foreign markets and a continuons prosperity. 1 b unless no cin i thes whent 1Is growers hiave few exported W control sourcee of is tinish in regard to is nm itory the States a as of muech in v this look to interest, Gazette be has Is comes to APITAL ACCUMULATING. is a steady accumulation of in all the money centers Reports of the banks show ol reserves of gold largely what is required for the liabilities and they con tain only a part of the idle aceumula tions which are secking employment e and profitab’e investments abroad are havd to find, and the attention owners of capital being turned toward this country by the very of the situation. Ther e many lions e capital within veach for the development of our g matural, resotivees, says the United States Investor, it we will take the means to guarantee their safe employ ment and tieir return in standard gold at maturity. There IDLE « There idle capital of Europe. that they in exd protection s of of [ of is fore mil our At of fore ke is still some feeling of dis- trust abroad regarding our currency Buropean financiers and capitalists do ot have that unquestioning contidence which is ned 1o induce them investine I The London momist hus recently voiced this foel ing, and an expression of it has come from other responsible sources, There is no apprelension on account of the free silver movement, beeause it is fully understood that this s losing ground, but it 1 that theve Is great possi bility in our currency sy tem not be in the divection of and it is this which Porelgn financiers do not think well of our system and he lieve there is danger in it They think a radical moditication of it absolutely neeessary and apprehensive that if undertaken it will not be ac complished, owing to the diversity of which will demand considera is SEny to is s of change which may improvement, ix creates distrust are wisely views But for this there wonld undoubtedly bea large amount of the idle capitl of Burope sent to this country for invest went, and there can be no doubt it would gr Iy benetit us. What ean bhe done to attract this capital? The In vestor suggests one thing that is worthy of consideration. It says that ir clear expression should be given by congress early after its meeting in De comber upon the subject of the mone Lary A4 it would probably ac complish just what needs to be aecom plished with the owners of fo ital. A in the interest money, that journal think an excellent effect. Ther tion the next house.of repréSenta tives putting itself on record for a sound currency, though everybody fully understands the position of the vepub fiean majority in that body and it is uot apparent that a vote rejecting a g eap vote ot sonnd is 10 ob) to States | lish its position I . would have | | you never opposed the THE OMAHA DAILY BERS FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, Hocessnr to estaly Sueh an expression, harm, and might though we think the next honse action regarding the froe silver bill s wever, could do gomd brful resnlts, it will cner whother any FRANCHISE ROVALTY OR PUBLIC OWNERSHIP ordinanee requiring all telephone companies to place their wires under- sronnd within certain preseribed lmits effeet equivalent to granting a mo to the Nebraska Telephone com pany for the next ten or fifteen unless the city should within that - build a of wire conduits that wonld ble to all tele graph and companies upon paying a nominal charge for use. It would take an expenditure of from S100,000 1o 200400 for any comp mduits for is in nopuly s system telephone acees its ny 10 constriet the necessary n rival t systerm within the bus. iness_portion of the ¢ity, and even then it would meet with obstacles that might b almost Insurmountable. The. con Auits of the existing company oceupy the alleys between the prineipal busi ness blocks, and as two bodies cannot ceupy the rival would be excluded from the prin From the stand nomy th ix for a more phone same space com I cipal thoronghfares point of political veally no place in Omaha teleplione company — any for a second water works company. fts very nature the telephone must main a monopoly in any ity of less than half a million population, and it uld by s be o municipal monop oly in every Ameriean city. Municipal ownership of the natural monopolie off the only true solution to th problem of economic municipal govern ment conducted on prin ciples. But long tel ephone business remains pri vate monopoly should made to pay a royalty for the privilege of the franchise. Maximmn telephone should be establishe enforced. Any company that enjoys the monopoly of telephone trattic in city like Omaha can well afford to pay royalty at least 5 cent anum of its gross earnin and not unreasonable to demand that rates shall be low as those of any other of equal population. Will the present council supplement the un derground telephone ordinance by ordinance the franchise alty and establishing a schedule of tel ephone rates within the city _limits? Judging by the promptness with which the underground ordinanc ronded the mayor's veto, we do not anticipate any such action unless the telephone managers voluntarily ae the proposition. Will they do will they prefer to hold back demand for municipal owner ir stible? ny o © second than In business the, a bhe S0 as it a of per per it is its city an fixing roy was rail over cede this, or until the ship becomes THE MARYLAND REPUBLICA The Maryland republican convention was harmonions, in this re cet the condition of the party in that state. Although there had been a sharp and active rivalry for the gubernatorial nomination it was earried ood naturedly and the sue ful man will have the hearty support of those who contested for the nomination. The plat- form speaks plainly for protection and for a sound currency. The money plank demands the maintenance of the I standard and the declaration is le in terms so clear that therd can be no doubt as to its meaning. Equally direet and outspoken is the tavift plank, which it the republicans Maryland are not behind other in devotion ciple of protection. There is a very good chance that the publicans will earry Maryland in No. ml The revolt in the democratic party against the domination of Sen ator Gorman is strong and ther probability that the factions can e harmonized. The Baltimore Sun, which is the most influential democratic paper in the state, not supporting the ticket, but still insist 15 it did before the democratic convention, which was controlled by Gorman, that the time has come when Gormanism must be rebuked, in the interest of honest poli ties and the welfare of the democratic party. The Sun represents the Cleve land wing of the party and its attitude will undoubted canse théusands of demoe to withhold their votes. Under these circumstances there is Vel to believe that the vepublican candidates will be elected. showing on shows ot any prin those of state to the is no is good reason THOMPSON SOUTH OMAHA, Aug. 15.—To the Editor of The Bee: Will you please state if there is any truth in the rumor that the World-Herald and the American are to be consolidated and to be known in the future as the World Herald-American, with Hitcheock as business manager and John Thompson editor chief in place of Bryan? P. J. DARBY. The is not in position to speak by authority concerning the internal affairs of its contemporar Negotiations b tween My, Hitcheoek and the leaders of the A, P A, la been tending toward the rumored consolidation for some time past, Our impression is that the deal is about consummated. The display of the & at the head of the editorial columns of the W.-H. in its last two doubtless the preconcerted tity all A, . As that the been signed, sealed and delivered, pradential both probably be kept running as heretofore until after ex-Governor Crounse returns from Furope and the stock can be le Ny pooled. Mr. Bryan has had no ve lation the concern for the last six months, His er ement with the metallic league keeps him in the lecture field—most of the time out of the state, World-H s final opp leg! Jo Issues nal to no compact has For papers will is ) far as the concerned, ute of ed this bill but ery we the when It w have no interest W introduced in the me contention when it became a law it ed it 2 that Ay ne and should W must be perm rid-Herald. In the of the Greeley, you lie, yon villain! yon know that you lie! respect no i dual 10 se late Ho You lie You know A D introdue language e and police bill, either when it w - or at any other time. You wmight as well claim that you opposed the conspiracy and | that | gestive agninst of. 'Mu¥ble an pd the appoint ment of a coifyry schoolmaster to the superintendency In fact you wr word in condéntig You should fool some pe youn can't fe time. You n wntil you face, the people of ponent of law can't chiang of our neve fon ¢ relember " Wy aft the cry Wol are hoarse an Oumpha and order public schools, o uttered one o that ntrage. that you ple-kome of the time, but | interests by his friends has by people all the 1 wolf!! wolf!!! | d black in the but you et masquerade before | vieer 1o the Chur an honest ex r. The leopard I kpots, even though you | Without ady ut them with a brash, The so-called queen’s vliment yesterday, | the policy government of an the as the deliverances genorally a any oxpected that would take this oppor some expression to their ing Turkish treatment ans they will e disa Purkish government wi the specel says regardi no cause for displeasure wprehend that stone urged in his adopted, Tt we the sultan can, without own time in relieving her majesty Fespoctin As t who son to proposed reforis, the new government t tains 1o intimation of e, and as it is not prop thing more at the prese provide ecertain ap will probably be some ti any developments There are few thin to speeel, read as little purposes perfunctory 1l ‘0 o the tunity views of the ppointed 11 find in what ng this matter y, nor any rea the policy Mr. recent address wald that fear, his the ministers to give regard Armeni The seem take anxiety o the policy e speech what it osed to of will Ly nt session than sropriations me before there egarding a pol gs loss instruet ive than a so-called queen’s speech. There are no less than seven sections in the utes governit cities whiel plainly « the mayor of Omaha in tions with the polic ments. The alleged I visions and the courts m it was plainly the inten ture to leave the mayor lead of those departime ways been the ease. a ne that vailed and the contestiy down from word should be passed that subordinate officers are not expected 1o pass ity of the new poli and that long and Now wiser come > ¢ it v did ot attempt to repe conusels i metropolitan ue the powers of his official rela nd fire depart wpolice hoard 1 such pro ay yet hold that t of the legisla the undisputed uts, as has al have pre i police honrd its high o down the line and patrolmen upon-the valid commission law nful on the police force shall receiye its ultimate reward. Where Mesi Chi Prezident Diaz has announ bett and Fitzsimmons pugi not be “pulled off the line at bull fights: entin i s Wiishington The president is receivin advice as to the next nom fect that it is sometimes and bluff on a small pair three of a kind. Sl e Thix Mokes it in Mexico. Draws the Line. icle. iced that the Cor- listic_contest can- Mr. D. draws n Gratis, Star g a good deal of nation, to the ef- etter to stand pat than to draw for Clear, Tirooklyn Eagle Grover Cleveland's name tioned in connection with t a single delegate to the n, vention of the ther hand, no otker there prising than the former. name Chr Senator Peffer has expose dom in the remark: “Let not to plant for one year an starve.” This proposition but is accompanied with t the farmers who entered in of starvation would be th from its results. How it R the reaflirmed (he democratic platform ats in several It naver seems to have adopt the plan invented by tucky free silverites, decl free silver platform and e disorganizers the sound mox thie platform democratic financial plax of 189 un Tributes to t Philadelphta L German veterans have b battle of Woerth in a way t union to be a reality. Mu, has been given to the Bava decorated the graves of the onists, but this is as it she rob the victor of his hon steel, well and country e and as for patriotisn the German soldie democratic The latter would be much re th Van may not bs en- he nomination by ext national con- par On the may be d'scussed less sur- nugget of wis- farmers agr: d the world would may be correct he difficulty that 1o the conspiracy first to suffer nvention in lowa ik of the national 92 the free silver ties have bolted urred to them to sme of the Ken platform a Xcommunicate as ley men who made uished en celebrating the hat shows German ch commendation rian vetergns who Frencli antag- It would aid_not ir ould be or 1 he ze vanquished as foeman worthy of h's the Ir fought neh for as flag m, r leaving his honor untarnished. Sl St Chadron Vindieates % the Law. Indianapolis Journal At last accounts the four were checked in their bicy the world by being arreste through the town of sitting under a load ether to pay the the streets. T tion of the British gover that great power gets in s praska town the four tou of a Chadron, fine or work v are expecting the protec- Englishmen who cle career around ed for fast riding Neb., w and refu out in on hay it ment, but before > to move on the rists will probably uced to take refuge from the cold inside that load of ha; - rk Wants suftalo Expre It is reported that the pre the vacant judgeship in th Frederic R. Coudert. ‘It is made, it will give 10 the of one of the ablest lawyer New York state is_gntitied would now have gye but of Mr. HIl to the nomin Hornblower and Deckba vacancy 1s filled by Coudert, however, th man than el New ¥ al) rt ms of Sapr Bu But one justice who was appoin son, appointed in year to become chancellor o Chief Justige twice ggyoint the 0ffige m of tha R the la mar® to 1 banch, resigne n 1791, alter come chilef justice of named chief Justc preme court in 1795, and § but the nomination was rej ate because it had become impaired ble of Kentucky d New York Sun as short as that of Justice of his assaciates still upon longest terms were (ho Marshall and St thirty-f thirty y thirty nine b ten and n, and ot t upon the 1863, is the ol present bench, and longest iu the history of th Assoc the o years five en fifteen and Lw ar saventeca less W Justice s ween includ bench ¥ in point for r of the rejected Rut was diseovered that 1 in 1828 8 summary s tern the Plum. dent has offered supreme court to that appointment bench the services the country a Justice and the opposition lation of Messrs, If the prese ppointment of Mr. will gain an abler appointeas. Justices. me court served Jackson Harri sam f his native stat the only suprem Justic to b He w d States su 1 one term ected by the sen his mind iate Justice Trim After two years nly Just'c terms hay 1 to the f assoclate bresid 5. says been the bench The f Chief Justic f whom rs served and tweaty-iv enty, six be b fiy five year a ar: l ield, ® ted of service of approaches court, in th the can | If there are | of | 2 his views of the | con- | 1895, LOCAL CAMPAIGN © C. L Chaffee has returned from a business | trip to the Pacif He says that he | has never nself as a candidate ation for mayor and in his without his TR, coast announced h | for the republican nom that any work that by has lone sanction. Dick Hall Cap Palmer | had hetter took to his 1-Russell ¢ 1 deal lik he never his wite always did as any wvice farmer | Cap's . B old who said did anything After he pleased hing and is not g with | ®ot her opinion he doesn't cost advice | worth more | Cap's President Hunt of Couneil 1 disappointed with the action of the Churchill | e board. He thought he had it all fixed that between the police fire departments the water works improve- ment he could get all his «dervish | friends on the pay rolls before election time. It trick Alonzo in i& very much 0 and schemes was a that shabby to disappoint way. There is no truth in the report that a soup house will be opened for the benefit of the disappoint=d and disgruntled | Ex-Policeman hard luck. Whe foree he ac Arnald he lost in the as bartender 1 up the glasses is playing his job on polic h epted a n Spoerl's saloon. He position polish yesterday, laid his d his place to pt a | the Churchill-Russell police forc | don't know just where he is at white apron and res| 10c position Now on he | Editor Hitehfake declares that the law is | always right. He's the same guy that flung his flag to the bre fe advised the smelter at a But onin order wrong side of the W years ago and strikers to defy the law v cost. pos to issul be consistently on the Prof. the action Allen is very much dizappointed with of the Churchill-Russell police board in not going'to war according to program. Like his friend in F. P, & I, C. | Ranter Scott, he says he is tired of fighting for people who lay down Not solitary contempt case was com- menced in Judge Scott’s court yester The judge was not at the court house day. There was of teeth to weeping, wailing and gnashing among the hungry horde that pects to fatten off the city when the pre- tenders capitulated and agreed to submit the police hoard controversy to the supreme court They had hoped by this time to be drawing | pay and thei knows bounds. They have been duped, sold betrayed. Already they 15 revenge and propose to make it hot for the alleged commissioners, But they may as well take their medicine. . Their chan for a home in the Eternal City are quite as ex- disappointment no ou and plati are good as their chances of securing places \in the police and fire departments. Tkey Hascall is a disappointed man. was ferninst any agrement to subm! police muddle to the courts. Al day yester day he panted for war. The war spirit runs riot in Ikey's mind. By the way, lkey w the master spirit of the conspiracy to starve out the police and knock out the poli n- mission when our first police commission was appointed in 1887 It is sald that the police hoard enlisted twenty-eight new police- men last night. Twenty-eight favorite number with Mr. Breech. If you don't lieve it, Just ask George W. Lininger. Breech-Vanderbum is a be- Senator Allen, in an address to teachers Pierce, said every article of the federal ¢ stitution Is being violated; that a voleano fs beneath the people, and if they do not guard well their rights the voleano will break forth and destroy them. The senator must have had in mind the possible appointment of R W. Gibson as chief of the Omaha police force. e IRSONAL AND O RWISE. d, ac is con powers Jonas Lie is a Nor cording to his revi stantly revealing new in tale telliug. During the thirty years Alnsworth R. Spof ford has been librarian of congress the num ber of books in his charge has increased from 70,000 to 700,000. William Penn Stedman, who was the man to capture Jefferson Davis when he was about egian novelist, rs, this Lie and wonder departments in Washington | 1f Coudert is appointed to the United States supreme beneh, it will give the funny men a hance to work up his whiskers, which are wonderfully luxuriant and curly. Rob Roy McC who is sald lineal descendant of the famous Scottish chieftain, Rob Roy, lives in Washington. His house contains many relics of the great wor- rio; Scholars and with sorrow that or, to be a the world-at-large will learn bey have been pronouncing Shakespeare's name wrong. According to Dr, Furnivall, a Shakespearcan student, the name should be pronounced “‘Shahkspair.”” A man was arrested in New York the other day for wearing women’s clothing. He says he is 21 years old, and,.with the exception of a brief period, never wore anything else than Women's garb. Then, he claims, he was ar rested as 4 WOMAN MAsquering as a man, Two newshoys of Y., have been arrested for selling papers in that city on Sundays. According to an ordinance framed by an intelligent member of the Board of aldermen, the only persons author. ized to sell newspapers on the first day of the week are licensed vendors of milk John McCullough, the Kansas boy who has been admitted to West Point, apparently pos 503328 the true spirit of the soldier. He is a poor farmer's son, born in an out-of-the-way place, with no schooling whatever, simply cducated by study at odd hours. He passed best among a large number of other appli cants in a competitive examination for entry into the Military academy. A remarkable change is coming over George Francis Train, tho sage of Madison square, New York. Ilis bronzed face and leonine head, with its mass of snow-white hair, may soon ‘be a thing of the past, for youth is upon him again, and his locks are turning black The change began about a month ago, he ays, and was noticed first by one of the youngsters who find in him so stanch a friend | Ex-Senator Willlam become nearly blind, spends most of his time at his summer home in Windsor, Vt. It is Qifficult for him to either read or write though hie takes great interest in the news of the day. Th ex-senator if he made his farm was the reply, “by crediting the everything taken off from it and charging nothing put on.” Nevertheless, Mr. Evarts is considered by neighbors (o be a model fatmer Ex-Senator Conger of Michigan | years ago was one of the leaders of the r publican party, is now a poor man. living in Washington. Two years ago Mrs, C died, leaving the aged ex-senator an annuily of $100 a month. The executors of the esta it seems, however, have not paid the annuity for almost a year. The other day he won hi suit, and the courts ordered the executors t pay the money due or go to jail. Mr. Conge is now 74 years old. One of the greates speeches which he ever delivered was that at the Chicago convention in 1880, - Enjoying a Trip Over DENVER, Aug. 15.—The delegates Amerl Library assoclation the Union today and M. Evarts, who has ay. “Yes, farm with his who fifieer \ the Gulf their ati excur: Pacific, Denver & | TRuspends | Ga., Aug. 15 | News has suspended publ | ployes entered claims for wages du. levied upon the plant. The proprietor | the embarrassment is only rary, and they says then he had to take that | contem- | the | to make his escape, is employed in one of the | other day a neighbor asked the | !S,\\':\'- SPAIN IS REAL ANGRY May Take Summary Action on Vessels Fly- | ing the American Flag. | | WANTS TO SCRAP OVER THE MORA CLAIM Mayor of Mavana Visits New Out Dark Mints Possible War with the United Stat York Gives of NEW YORK Havana, Cuba, Se the Union Square b surrection in ¢ Aug de 15.—The Alvarez says mayor who i iba is not a ser s danger ad of tr and the United States tion of the United S Spain to pay th and of the aid extending to Cuban agitators a able between ot neut growing out vers Mora claim at Am 1 filibusters. ates g this time that ricans ar nor Alvarez said It is a rising of elgners. The better noth do with well Cubans Stat who would be who have conspirators thr refused They bandits hav a outlaws, led by Cubans There visit to are the summer during the hot this year for compromised by the ¢ their headquarters herc money of demand 1 to destroy their plantations many United months they pirators Th and it known who s every have not come ar them if it is blackmallers or Roloff all, who are what you call There are adventurers like a Polish Jew and not a Cuban at B0 to the cigarmakers of Key West | other places and obtain money and away. Some say Roloff has landed 1,000 men, guns, ammunition and dynamit It may be 80, but no one in Cuba has seen or heard anything of “The people of United States_ should remember that the war in Cuba is ot a war between two nations and that they can there- fore say, ‘we will be neutral.” 1t is a diff culty which one nation is having in its own family and America should keep her hands oft. "~ Americans have n to do with any territory outside of their own limits Americans, however, not only permit for eigners, but allow their own citizens to con- spire against Spanish territory and Spain is a friendly nation Are meetings to be held in | money raised for the avowed purpose of sending war supplies to Cuba and exped tions to be fitted out and sailed under the American flag with no redress for Spa “Let me tell you this” continued Senor Alvarez, “the American flag is being used to cover every cr yanish officers are ting tired of letting expeditions escape be cause they sail under the American flag | The day may come when an officer will longer permit a vessel to go free through respect of the flag. Something will happen not to the flag, but to the boat that using it, and there may be trouble betwee Spain and the United States Another thing we do not lik Alvarez, “is insisting that the be paid just when Spain needs war purposes. The claim itself and should never be pald. Al trators have decided against it." the your cities said Senor Mora claim money for unjust the arbi- GERMANS VISIT T FATHERLAND. Five Hundred Start from Chicago to Help Celebrate the Battle of Sedan. CHICAGO, Aug. 15.—Chicago Germans will st their countrymen fight again the battle of Sedan. They marched for the seat of war today. Five hundred veterans of the Deutscher Krieger Vereln assembled at the corner of Kinzie and North Clark streets with Joseph Schienker, president of the Chicago German veterans, as chief marshal and Dr. Julius Schmidt assistant marshal. They carried side by side with the standard the Krioger Verein the American flag. The column_marched through the center of the city to Dearborn statfon. There the veterans of the “War of '70" took the train for New York by way of Niagara Falls. The steamer Fulda will steam out of New York harbor Saturday, carrying them and hundreds of other Germans back to partici- pate in the greatest jubilee of the year the Fatherland—"Sedan Feilir.”" September 23 I8 the twenty-fifth anniversary of the battle of Sedan. All Germany will arise that day to celebrate the quarter-century birthday of the “Empire of the Land” and to drink Bismarck German unity. Berlin and Leipsic will be the scenes of the greatest demonstrations of patriotism and thither the American_reprosentatives will betake them Ives. The Fulda is due in Bremen August 7. Feasting, dancing, illuminations and the pilgrims there and in assi to ons awalt Hamburg From Hamburg they will go to Friedrichs- rube, the home of Prince Bismarck. iron chancellor was voted an hionorary mem ber of the Anterican Krieger Vereln on | 80th birthday, April 1. Joseph Schlenker will tender him his certificate as a member of the Amercian society amid salvos of artil lery and the rs of the people The visiting v will then go to Ber 1in and to Lelp part in the cele brat there, although many of them will g0 (o their old homes to enter the celebra tions of their own landwehr verein. me of | them will never return to the country of their adoption, preferring to spend their d. clining days on the soil they fought to de fend ic to take Rai a SAN FRANCISCO, Von Winckler, struction of C. in Guatemala, is in the city ship Colon He says Hunt ton is putting a great deal of money into the new road and that it is rapidly developing into an im- mensely valuable property, for it is pushed | through the heart of the richest coffes and cane sections of Guatemala. He says 600 men_ are now working on the road, The road’is completed from a point on the Guate- mala Central railroad, nine miles below ¥ quintla, Los Anta Lucia, an is now build- ing to Pauplun, with prospects that it will xtended through the mountains to Metza ango as rapidly as the work can be pushed. ek of Bond PITTSBURC Aug. 15.—The law office; John D. and Willlam McKinnan have ed of $10,000 in stocks and bond gentlemen have been away for a few days and their offices were closed. The janitor of the building discovered a tin box In the base. ment of the building containing papers of g Mes McKinnan and this led to the dis cavery of the robbery. Five thousand dollars s and 600 shares of Northern Pacific stocks are missing. There is no clue to the robbers atemnla, 15.—Ricardo H. ntending the con ton's new railroad on steam Aug who s sup: P. Huntin Sto) n of been Both ways Cony Aug. 15.—J Captain W, Will Call a Wat VICKSBURG, Miss., ant, rep ing ident of*th sociation for improve 1t of western waterways, has accepted an invitation with guaranties of expenses of the ntion from the Vicksburg Board of and w'il call a general waterways con tiop. Bry Wood F B. the ade vention no | of | in | to | | wil MORTON DRAWS FIRE, w York Sun: We are indebted to the politeness of Hon. J. Sterling Morton for & | comprehensive essay on the souring of milk, printed for the administration at the governe | ment printing office. No wonder the milk soure in the nelgbborhood of Secrotary Mors ton. His hot weather sarcasm is harder on ordinary milk than six simultancous thunder showers, 1t wonld curdle nectar or ambrosia, | . Cedar Rapids (Ia) Republican: Mr. Morton I8 not in line with westorn democracy. He I8 a gold bug of the most radical type-—= whereas the democracy west of the Mississe pi I8 almost a unit in oppos to his ultra pnometallio Yiews. There are many other reasons why Morton would not suit. He I8 ne of those men who regard those who dif- for fr them with contemp He b able to dri but he cannot lead. do not 1 ve he could muster a score gates from the west In a demoeratic conyens tlon. He would find more vor in New York than in his own state, Nebraska Philadelphia Record: Secretary Morton be- lev that the fulr of the weather bue reau may b 1 by Twding in its obe sorvations Iy the changes in the weather ¢ dition but the relation between h chan and the publie health, and he therefore, placed a medical expert in ubjoct of sanitary climatology, that * waves may be as “ At Waves now are. lation between climatio and the general health is certain, and that there is also a connoction betwéen h: waves and crime waves has lon been believed, The researches of the new bureau cannot fail to throw some interesting light on the subject Chicago Tribune retary J. Sterling Mortc has who fs a “western silvorite propose to discharge the f will teach him a practical lesson. The next payment of salary due to this sympathizer with the free silver craze will amount to $175, and Mr. Morton is said to have ane nounced his intention to pay it in silver dol lars. The payment will weigh ten and three- snths pounds avoirdupols, constituting a mfortable load for the clerk to carry and affording him the means of judging by actual knowlodge how very convenient it would be to tho people to lize the dream of the free silver extremist, to say nothing of the loss it would entail to drop to the cent sile ver monometallic basi: may We of de us enlary not mer urately at thefe conditions ch as 18 & close r It is reported that See- assistant He does not lish fellow, but | TOWA PRESS comw i e | Sioux City Tribune he sympathy of t | country is with the white men at Omaha | Des Moines Leader: The lowa do not loudly claim | earry the state this fall, but they kiow that | it they could get to the support of their | tcket ‘all those who prefer the platform on which it stands to the one on which General Drake and his colleagues stand the majority in their favor would be at least 25,000 Davenport Democrat: The equalized fon of Towa is $358,985,202, which « valuation of between two that enormous amount. In of an alleged crime, the as- on was $369,124.912. Towa I8 g the calamity that friends are praying demcer that the ts ot will as- | | | and 1893, three times the year al despite ddvised Sioux City par Really on in some g democratle rts of Journal in worse condi Towa than we had supposed. At the demo- cratic county convention held at Jefferson, Greene county, there were sixteen democrats present effort was made to elect a new chairman. of the county committee, but all who were suggested declined and the matter was put off until the holding of a convention to nominate a county t'cket FLOATING MinTH. Philadelphia Record: says the Wissahickon Wise the clam contempshus; by has the virtoo of knowin' its mouth shet people,” “looks on the clam when to keep Record: Caspar Corke ad o narrer escape a w'ile Deadbeat—Wot ? e Ol Jus' 1y 1 seo de basement Chicaga (olly, [ but 1 itk ¢ I ago! k at in do fairly to knc coal pile wind | the | back yawnin! ) wid it ard, for | | _vale Recora: fore ment,” | Noah as he held the olephant back to m room for the antelope Philadelphia Record Maude. we do not think the cat’s voice is musical, even If the animal is full of violin and banjo strings. “Madan “madam,”’ 1 said the am a Indianapolis Journal pale-faced wanderer, roamer—' “Well, o) pre lady, of ¢ the , the middle-aged polite way Somerville haps, for Journal: 1t ‘. to be and ‘at the time tician, but he gets Christianity to et strain is possible, per- true Christian successtul poli= through his an awful Indinnapolis free coinnge butter I ever it ta of 1§ ™ you “This,’ the most said the kolden ful Tdiot from the And If it were mad cream ith: Dr. Kill think? Shrouds 1 me 20 per cent all the business T would his way. Dr. Pillem | (aryiy) rich man yet, Killem, 1ly) - What do ndertaker, of- (indign the on ¥ You'll be Philadelphia Record: Tirst Race He t itching to get into that rac Horse—Well, why didn’t y Horse—They scratched Post: “Th gan the evidence “Has evidence, min, interrupted the he any influen Chicago your honor— “Hang lice justice friends?” No, your “Fhen Il Detroit | Free Press: “Why sing ‘We're Sitting on the Sile they used to long ago?’ scause the style won't se days—that's why.' i po- il honor hold to the him grand* jury.! don't they Mary,’ as sat upon Pross sufelde A Massachusetts man ause - he - couldn't to be willing York tted HT O fiv! A 1 boy, and collar wide, oy, 1ed man, Journal few years hence, That o1 With chubly His ‘motl a bronzed and bes With head like W! Applauding loudly Where ballet girls kick h AND WON. TPuck A tennis court Some pretty sport The lawn is bright with gazers; And_poruing tea, So_daintily Are pretty LOST girls in blazers, “Rattling volley!” “This I8 jolly! “Good playing o cream for One lump or two For really 1 fors at the net)’ “Yes; she's pretty! What o pity She hasn't That any sense!” n don't care there! wis imr “Can Harry play? to_meet in Vicksburg, October 22 e Board of Trade will appoint a | entertain the guests and the the entire Mississippi valley. | o New Aug. 15 manufa s are for the of about mittees, a it will L by the sube full committ and 23 committee call will cov Wage Sched Subcommittees confer Arranging PITTSBURG tha glas ors' wa mmitte today on the There a differe between the two cor able that an agreem. conclusion arrived at will be ratified by th Joint conference window turers i ge ¢ o Woll—in a “wiy Too short to have much “You think my gown A_noem In brown Thanks for that pi ench!” tty specch “Jack! you here too! To stroll in on our tea “Please drop my hand! They'll understand! Dan't look that way at e, nd set forget game You won't Her eves seek h He's won the g Though, all the Hix only T \hove; Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U, 8. Gov't Report RoYal Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE,