Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 22, 1895, Page 4

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T m———— . 4 1 | | | THE OMAHA DAILY BEBE:; #HURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1805, OMAHA DAILY BEE it Tne INS TO WORRY, o THE ONI0 DEMOCRATS. "l'lu- real cause fs manifestly politieal. | foree to Omaha than it does to Chieago, ENGLAND BE 8 The battle of the sound money and | T'he object of deferving action by the | In Omaha modl [6f the men who are | Fears that the Nienragan Canal Wil Colorndo the Parndise of the Wenry Washingt stiver dewmocrats in Olilo, which | counell on the appropriations is to have [ drawing high salaries for transacting Interfere with Her Interests Senreh for Stuhis, | [ s boen waged vigorously for the last | the work held back until the fall cam- | the public business devote most of their | ”Ij"-\‘{"”‘ Aug ""y S o -‘"'""'*‘ "‘="""'“' COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, Aug. 10— two months, hos en the | pnign opens, and when funds and men [time to plotting and scheming and to | (NS afternoon publishes a scare article ask- | (spectal " " " M ing how Great Britain stands with the United action of the state convention §8 con- ean be used for packing primaries and | business which does not concern them. : A a h | States government in the matter of the vernvd, In & decisive vietory for i | cotiventions, e 2 | Nicaraguan canal and says that it will be | oy | pected to provide safeguards for the security ) Nicaraguan canal and say | tourists—people from every part of the ) hll ‘s Gire N o J “, | publie ls, so0 sure 1 f Lk B ATl well If Rt. Hon. George N. Curzon, under | United States and not a fow from Kurope. | OF "’,‘,",‘lll.,',“'.“l % ‘h'I'\:"”:'”"“'}‘fy’:"{‘“:,;:li,:‘”"vfl': . g sant with the situa- | 0o o0e wrirdr ‘Secretary Morton seems | PCTCUATY of state for forelgn affairs, Is asked | This is particularly true this yoar, owing | personal and thele official accounts. of the situation, while Allen W. |tion Knows the conneil would act on the to give some explanation on tho s to lack terminal faeHitie ; e : by 1N to the fact that Denver has been the meet St. Paul Ploneer Pross: Judge Gaffey I8 to hurmdan, the uncompromising eham- | dvop of the hat, or a wink from Mr. e the House of Commons. Continuing, the St |jng place for the annual sessions of & great | bo commended for passing AST SUMMER N SOUTH DAKOTA'S LOOTER, Tost: Tt is probable that the exporiences derived from tho Taylor eplsods will ba useful to the etate. The next legls Correspondence of The Bee)--Colo- | lature will undoubtedly be expected to pa rado Is ono vast summer resort. Go where |4 law gard to defaleations that will pro- you may you find yourselt surrounded by | Yde severe ponaltfes. It will also be ex- fr PUBLISHED 1V Y MORN 1, 80 far THIM8 OF SUBSCRIPTION. (Without Eunday), One Year and Sunday, One Year sound money ¢ ement. Senator Calvin | What other object could there I & Brice of Ollo and New York is mas- | Everybody conve t Omana, Th | | % over the section Bouth Omahia plon of free silver, stauds ontside the | Hunt's left eye. If this was an ordinary | "‘ »"‘"v'}u nr‘:' L James Gaz vl.- r‘l-m\rk« ’u'mr ,ul- an !vl | many national organizations and assoclations | allowing only a two year's sentence for em= Souncil 1viffs R [htael | . A fwauke Exening Wisconsin seen, we are heading straight for a crisis and | and the sl itne 1n | Begsiem and sentene! nbexster THY! Chicug O breastworks, heaten and rojected. The { improvenent our people might ook on | 1ye W e are heading straight for a crisis and [ nd the oceasfon of attending a meeting in | bezzlement and sentencing Ewbeszior Taylor New York, It Washington, 14 § CORRESPONDENCE burning of ' the ‘Holmes Castle,”” in | there will be elther a di ¢ deadloc! > fullest % o y ¢ er a diplomatic deadlock | penver has beon made the excuso for more | 10 the fullest limit for grand larceny. It 18 and | Chicago, adds to. the uncertainties of the | pocoonin o two countries or the English will { assumed that th eding Is leyal, or the contest between the factions has been | with patience, but when the live: | ¢ . § 3 # ; fee oG » ped extended sojourns a tings e varlous 8 DF {carmnest and bitter, with the free silver | property of oue citizens are jeopardized | peeuliar e againet a pecatiar, man. Holmes | ((UHCEE I T8 SRIRER 8 I B ST | oxtended sojourns and ontings in e VAU | judga would ot havo. (aken 1t and 1t is to B T e Lol be sadrenasdy To the B [men making, as usual, the greater [ to promote political sehemes and under- | ¢ OF the stickest rascals that ever drew |\, "'y avotded by discroet handling of | gorten. e E :T lioped Ko lidden T U fu'y"“{ - matte - b -4 i | . N ot Ayl | through which the priso ma cape wha RURINESS LETTERS, [amount of noise. ‘T'wo years ago they |handed jobs we deem it our duty to | T the facts by the forelgn office and & sur- | wip it were not for the tourlst travel this | the public will prohounce a far lghter Rens Al busingus Jotters and gomittances showld b L controlled the state convention and de- | enter a vigorous remonstrance, A ubelte. T S pid render need never occur. Should @ situation | vajiroad misht as well have stoppad vunning | tence than he deserved 4 e O naany. | clured foe the free coliinge of silver at | 3 o ———————— he friends of | ent Diaz are anxlous :“‘]"_' [‘('”‘_' l{“ "{ M,”.J ‘I“‘ “ ”"‘ “v"“’ ‘!1»M,-»~m traing altogether.” So said one of | Chicago Record: As the presiding judge S PUBTISIING COMPANY {16 1o 1. The republican plurality was | THAT LONG-DELAYED CLAIM. to nominate him for a fifth term. Diaz has | \:mtrv 'l"‘y’ "L:":‘f}‘l \.I\v“: (: ::; “I"W ;"'“;:j the train crew on one of the lines upon | bolnted out, Taylor's worst crime consisted p— ——= | nearly 1000, Last year they did the | The statement that an agreement has | never been particular about a nomination, i;"“‘”‘“ much Toss extending, our commor- | ¥hich 1 was travellng. The same sentiment | 10 _'l“”“'"\"l‘; """ at L\':uh.'nl ‘)llnllflrd“"(lv;hl\ STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. | same thing and the republican plurality | finally been reached for the payment of I'y",”'m' i arerhaeain \“"I;"‘” ity x :;|rl" 1 hold on the republics of the Spanish | With variations fs expressed by the hotel | (0™ e h® R Flled e ot only 1ok 0 t The B ub- S “ 1 ) N v { he o enticns sually M- | main, a market in which we already suffer | men, the me ts, the saloon keepers, the - . ’ atole Toing Auly “sworn. says that | was 0. These experiences, how- [ the Mora claim by Spain in September | inates and elects himself, and does inls own | framynemnkoy, wich we tlready suffer [men, the merchants, the saloon keepers, the | went on issuing more state funds_ but s o of ful wpldte coples of | N ‘ ? 10y Lo egpocted to stand at least | caucusin e did lat Consules have one | A y sha 1 arcusement providers and by the whole host |all the public money hie could lay hinds cn nd o fvoning and’ Sundny Bes | ever, did dot dismay the free silverites fmuy be expected to stand for at least | ¢ ne I ) me | Americans and Germans S0 ok, WomN ANA SHYIATSR Wb, AfFectly er | 160, (SPIENEY. Belloving tHAL. (he VbR $AIE Yo £ sy . i ty-f » Bl 1 Wy of | ferm, but thit was an extraordinary out- | The St, James Gazette then proceeds to | o aren whi dirde ed, evidently belloving that the very o printed dur W month of Ju was us |, y iinde & vigorons ‘nttoimp! enty-fo ours, thoug « 4 ) T ; ty Uolleving X sk Rl manth y, A ‘ and th made a vigorous attempt to | twenty four hour m» ugh in view ) At 4 A rehearse tho history of the Nicaragua canal, | indirectly gain profit from the tourtst traflic. | tent of his embezzlement would put the state 1 19,058 . apture the conventlon this year, They | the fact that there s - hitch as to claiming that the acceptance of the Ameri- | The sentiment crops out almost unconsclously | !l 8 positlon where it would compromise on L : lod, but nmot n very great many of | whether it shall be paid at Madrid or Nelghborly can Canal company to guarantee further | in almost every quarter. Mayor McMurray | 2708 41¥ toris provided "”‘ Gy ,"“I‘”‘ 3 3 % ot . Davenport Demoerat capl of o 4 tion of L v Y he plunder were returned. He wed the e ool e Sl 8 DosK 16 LhiE ST Mo tal for it would be an infraction of the [ or Donver, for example s addross of | J them, it is safe to say. will complacently DL DD el UL R, There will be a democr nvention in | Bulwer-Clayton treaty. The St. James Ga- | B arlinah, Wbl dhs L il T course Taid_down by a rascally New York accopt the result and vote the tieket | Will not get his money at the date said | Nobraska s week. It not be the | zette then quotes President Cleveland's refer- | Welcome to the members of the American {lawyer a few years ago, who advised a dictated by Brice. But none the less | to lnve been settled upon. In order to | genuine state conven but one sailing | ence to the canal in his message of 1894, and | Library association closed his remarks by re- | speculating bank teller to steal a million 5 " f it at g Aai T i under false colors. Last year the democrats | $3¥s: P his assurances of cordial hospitality | dollars and run away, because the bank would | the action of the convention is another | Lot it at all the claimant has waived e h LI R e S MR LR, A ‘ 0 [ h ntion Is T terest fo the Amount of several hun. | Aer meeting in’ convenflon divided, The | “These carefully weighed words were d8- | and saying that he hoped their stay in Colo- | Bi¥e 10 compromice. Five year haid Qisastrons blow to the free silver eause an everal | free silverites set up for themselves, and the | S1&NEd (0 create a minimum of distrust i | o™ \Cotk Lo dhoth picasnat tosyon and | 1abor and the name of fe punishmen and will undoubtedly have a more dis- | dved thousand dollars and it Is impos- | democrats who stand on the Chicago plat ll“,“ o the R 1 b ll‘ 81V profitable to us.” He doubtless intended the | 1o LR LR B Ll conraging effect upon the cause than (sible to say how much of it he will | form made an organization cf the'r own L AL FLLLS DRLLIA S Al A | hadn’t; whereas his own plan fnvolved that by the United States to the company’s en- | Word profitable to be taken in its broader It is the unopposed sily rites who hold their E o | \ the denouement should find im in a pleasant ¥ | the Dlows administered by the demo- [have left when he has settled with the | o8 b UIAPRosed SIVESIeS wh . terprise and the insistent demand of the | meaning, relating to the mental and moral | easy positio 1 1 S 4 A : 5 e NGECTIR BT | love feast this week. The simon-pure dem- | Auforican people that their government | iniprovement of the people of Colorado by | N4 €48y ¥ uk tat ceatle conventions of Towa and Ken- |attorneys. Notwithstanding the very | ocrats of Nebraska will meet at Lincoln on | guarantee the whole capital, come what | contact with the librarians, but I am sure the | HILARIOUS ITS. Less de s for unsold and tueky. nerous consideration which our gov :: i ‘f‘-\""l 'r(v:'-— . 'l"‘(;_rr;"aul‘ th a dis- | may, it is plain that the ultimate object is :uln-» number of his fellow citizens who n-.m; 3 o i coples . el & s " N oy > < N N Aty ction and a diffe: ce, ith this explana- | not so much the cutting of the canal as [ his speech i the morning papers took it o Pree Pross She—Y e Ol democrats made no new nment has shown to 8pain in this mat 4 A , 2 B paper Detroit Free Pres. She—-You western . The Ohfo democ i | ee PHiikre nee® GriHtalois 68~ fiaiitlse | on no)one rieed bA ofitised, tho firm and final establishment of the |literally as an anticipation of pecuniary | cowboys have a thirst ror blood all the iR I enunefation regarding the currency, ter there are espressions s S e Unitzd States authority in Central America. | Profit | time, don't, you? He (with a corkscrew) s GEOT ,'.".. ‘H‘“; l\“‘ They were content, s were those ..ri ction from Spaliish sources because "":-u l\_l ¢ Valkyrl With the canal completed wholly by the In e l-ry other direction the people of Den- | Oh, no, ma‘am. We changes it sometimes A 10th day o Aukust, 189 o saffirning tie W plank | this government has insisted upon pay # AL G e O O e e Aot b oo 8te compIaining (hib ey | o “harlie Checks—1 say, officer, ol 10t ey O RV tary Publl Towa, with reaffirming the money plank |m‘ i) ‘“'“ \:h S L, The pluck and sportsmanlike persistence | publics would b» merely nominal. It is true | have not yet emerged from the depression ot | Truth: Charlie ghecks 1 say, officer, old I8 oW Fhies » | the American syndicate lest the Ameri- [ out at Glenwood Springs preparing for a | how we can 00 It in porfect saf n government faiter in giving the guar- [ month's hunting expedition up in the moun- [ Officer Farrell (louking them but these negotiations have collapsed | tains. better hire & covered wagon. e s s s caensinid | OF tlia N8t Aol platform. Beyond n s engaged 0| wnieh has sent one boat after another L . cross | that English financial a The Camphells are coming in Ohio, but | this their declaration of principles pos- 1‘|mlll!|: down a revolt in Cuba that | the Atlantic to w | back the America’s cup | by recognized by American | C e American people to re- [ antles el us over)--Yes the chax ( DYt i o oF -4 s financial resources, [ are too generall o good (hat they will not | Sesses no great interest, though some of | calls for all her financial resources. | &6 108 Keneriy i sir preposterous clal ffor a strong | Were the matter new or had it been ; NTaT o because it is not proposed to allow the Eng-{ ‘“How can you afford to leave your busi- T rot very far, their preposterous elaims of g quire any phrase of compliment. At the time 8 ¥ A TERBS ITFIbane E 5 s HAnd ¢ i T teet——— temptation to comment, as when they |in controversy only a year or two there | of every successive contest it has seemed not | lish capitalists their due share of runlrlv! u«-fx‘« 50 }Tug l‘l:lxakml. 4 ‘,‘..Tlf' u;h‘lnl\n”v;:: J ‘“..'.‘y;. \‘"7!1'1'“1‘:}”1‘4‘.‘:.( Antorfean hotressos ad better put up | say, for example, that the people ought | might be some reason in a complaint | unlikely that it the quest was unsuccess- which is sufficient indication of the exclu: might as well leave it for a month or N | gloating over the e mtents of his strong | box, “that moves the 1 e tha ik yere " [ sive power the Americans mean to exer- | six wee he replied, ‘“‘because there Is thelr lightning rods. ‘The young duke | to be thankful to the democratic party |of this Kind, but when it is remembored | Sl hae might be the last attempt of the | isa on the fsthmus. nothing doing (o require my attention i my ot e s Por tie - & v with which it attacked |that the elaim is some twenty ye than her prodecessor. Now the third Val- | .. .The cardinal point of the whole matter s | store. Boston Globe: “You are working too wr bl At dtic sl iR Ot el i o SATH f ok 0 ! Al 1 Qoes the government mean to enforce the | Of course the people here still attribute | hard,” said a policeman to a man who was fea. the policy of protection. The people |old and that its justice was acknowl lt\lr‘l:‘r % est ;I.r i'h"n‘x‘x ‘\III v]:ulk\w h‘r.r I:x:n; Bulwer-Clayton treaty? If so, will she join .:lll this to the “demonetization” of silver, | dr Il - hole in a wafe yelock In the e indeed De in a1 steange condition | edged all of ten years ago by the Span Y RHE S SuTe Lo hEve SC0odiw the United States in making a guaranty [ They are as ardent advocates of the restora- | morning, would indeed ln. in a strang e nditi on N? e |Ii«>x|i-"} il ||||\>- g0 just as far as patriotism allows. May she | of the capital? If not, what steps have been | tion of free colnage at 16 to 1 as ever, and Whai's that of mind if they could be grateful for i . 4 S| sail her best, and cur boat a little better than | taken to secure the neutrality of the canai | insist that In it lies the only salvation of the b0l world hes Nebr from he ka has not entively emerged asked the burglar in a wild west days when It ean | o 0 most disastrous experiences [our government demands that there | her be: and_the cquality of rights and opportunities | natic Soms of them, however, have R have an old-time hold-up of an express | . A lilstory © o v shall be no further delay in settling it s ot of British subjects? It is conceivable that | shifted their positions. I talked with the | farpe Ba { this Washington train. m,.”“ st ry of the country. 5 Sholly: s nable. The fact | The ide Manin, even this may so shape itself in the | proprietor of a drug store up at Silver Plume | pie?”" he asked, d Phe candidate for governor, Ifon, |is wholls H iy Lok kel oL « ibune future that the United States will be prac- [ and he was certain that his own town was & sald she, T made It myself ality. see ave | James B Campbell, consented to accept [ that probably if it were not for the [ The record of Sunday suicides hicago | tical master of Central America; but bafore | doing betfer than any other place of like | *T don't wonder Washington was fearlesy A st fatality seems to have | i Iv after the most ur- |existence of the Insurrection In Cuba | Was most extracrdinar aven s, | wo consent, any abrogaifon of the Bulwer- | population in the United States. They were | s battle if he had ples lke this, One of struek A few more cyclones @ nomination only after the mos e g 3 five men and two women, made the attempt | Clayton treaty mu better off since the fall in silver prices than """1"_ el LR and exeursions and the $moky City will | gent persuasion. His nomination by ac- | the Spanish government would find ex- | " 0 e lives, and five of them suceasdad before because they bought their goods from | Made him invuinerd the east at prices much less proportionately | Judge: Cumso—George Washington s v than the prices which they secureg for their | sponsible for the damage to the wheat cretary Man- | own products. While silver has fallen 50 | crop. Cawker—I thought it was the Hes- ing Weds a F fxne per cent, the articles consumed have e | sian fly which was doing the damage Y, N. Y., Aug. 21.—At noon today [ down more than 50 per cent. That is what | Cumso—It is; but Washington made the pation attests his populavity and | cuses for keeping off payment of this | The youngest of the group of unfortunates | AMBERICAN GIR1 unquestionably no stronger man could | elaim still lonzer and its azveement to | was a girl of 18, Il-health was the cause of an boast a |have been selected. He is a man of [settle now is gely due to a sense one, insanity of one, demestic infelicity of 5 ! % two, melancholy of one, and liguor of twi puvention and a train | ability, a good speaker and stands well [ expediency, rather than to a desire to | 1 i< noticeable that four out of tho seven used be wiped out. Tt is not cvery state that ¢ democratic state ALBAY N N 0 i e Ci pdlr S s ocel o e | this ggist said. Hesslan fly. robhory both the same week. But Ne- | with the administration at Washington, | be just. It is very important to Spain | poison as the aency of solt-destruction, the [ In the Cathedral of AW Sants ocourod the | (s ALK BUEL L coinica, “that we | yuanington StarTierre always getting 4 4 i S e s ik tay ot e iHote o e wood torms | Posons” being carholic acid, laudanum, paris | Wedding of Miss Mary Elizabeth Manning, SREaliva ek ® | Washington Star e're always getting Draskn was thus ever in it. from which he will receive whatever | at this juncture to keep on good terim: want free silver. It is for ¢he poor, starv. s peculiar prem- | youngest daughter of the late s the worst of it,” =aid the pugilist. “People green and morphine. T cretary of the | jng people down east. We can get along | expeets us to got togeth do something - inence of poison as the means of committing | treasury, Daniel Manning, and Jules Cor- | nicely no matter what happens. It i the | when they gives up their money. The Neb a democracy, which con lected governor of Ohio in 1889 and |people. nic 4]!‘] t<]rv|r l'mflnl"l to this instance. It | pelins von der Oudermeulen, son of the | poor farmer and the poor working man in -\\yu, hl“v that et i venes in sole onclave is city | was renominated in 1891, when he w prevails all over the United States. In two- | yijvate secrotar: e ilho the eastern states who needs more mon “Naw. They ov o let us get to- Mol aih e "'IL.\' I'” gty I“‘“ = ",”,"”\'i”]‘f! II“ ,I : “Il'i" ‘»';_ Dbt A DISASTIROUS POLICY. thirds of the reported cases the pistol and “""II" |” r,l‘.:"“'y“;:lr‘“:fl"“L“‘“I‘IE'MI"'.;""_'WS: and he ought to have it even If it does hurt | Bether, pass regolutions, collect mileage, today, Will have no difliculty in agree | beaten by MeKinley, Under ordinary | o e inflicted upon the forcign oh are the renoftéd agancles In: usa. Last | Holland. 3 1 us a little.r an’ go ——— support it can give. Mr. Campbell was | with the United States government and e ailvae DINBEor tiepInte | donditons lia miBIE Do expattent A s FENThIteurS s of poiscning to | Of the absence of any of Mr. von der Ouder- | rpyp \wag a new attitude for a silver man finth Cone Bivaute cHerae | ing upon the silver plank of the plat- { conditlons he might be expected to re- [\, e of the United States by the 1PTC asere 1720 cases of poiscning 10| yoyjon's family, the principal guests besides 4 ATURRINE NS iarently, Rinoere| seort o conatitution ko are chargney form, ceive this year the full vote of his party, | Rty 04 of shooting s vear, to date, the s Manning's immedite relatives being to take. The druggist is apparently sincere | gaid the rural justice, “with stealing” two i prsbe i beer SUAPS 819 : o "W abandonment of reciprocity is not the | poisoning cases exceed the shcot AisRMAUOLIES MDELE0 AL VERLEINE in his ready self-sacrifice and can not un- | gallons of whisky. Why did you do § but thousands of anti-administration s g, beli | 128 Manalng e Ne o B 16uSE soiious; featurelof. tln democratic | L218) to} 1161:¢ PHGS extraordinary iTnorease, || ace, Andrews of New, Yofi; the by P e i s .| which has taken place only during the last e o0 in momic policy. 1t is asserted, and the | (o500 1 apart from the pathetic side of it, The street car company is putting up fron poles along Sixteenth street and e derstand how the poor farmer and the poor | “Steal two gallon “Yes™ “Cos’ T uncle, Mr. John B. Manning, and Miss Man- | \Workine man in the east can persist in de- | couldn’t git away with a barrel, yor honos, ning of Buffalo; Mr. and Mrs. Fort, Mr. and | jining his gencrous offe I never wuz very strong! demoerats will not support him. Tt is probable that the democ sarding 5 ightly masts. The igures appear to sustain the assertion, | for poisc g g Mrs. William Van Antwerp and Mr. and Mrs More thoughful free silverites in Colorado | it discarding the unsightly masts. The § 155 1oxe November will be somewhat | DEUres appear t i fon WY jhe most agonizing of all | Fred Mix, all of Albany. The bride Was | aqmit in private that they entertain grave b street car company slow, dreadfully A i that by the destruction of the reciprocity rms of -death, ~h-\\::v the ease with which | yttended by Miss Delehanty and the groom | goubts whether silver will ever go back to Bob Burdette slow, but it finally gets there. et ) 3 K treaties alone this country has been de. | Seli-murderers are able to procure poisons, | by Mr. Frederick C : there can be no doubt of the suceess of . Manning. A wedding | the old price. They would like to see it at A solemn calmness ste: PRI T DO T g § prived of a foreign trade amounting to the republican state ticket and of the If the bloody Cuban war keeps on I not and argues that some more stringent re- A dread o'ercomes th Whien I my pocket: ver brings the price And only find a hol 4 breakfast was served after the ceremony at should be placed upon their sale by | the residence of Mr. John Delehanty. Later $1.29 again, but they will be really satisfie it an enlarged use of s strict'ons e from $100,000,000. It is pointed | drugsi enths T sound section ¢ republican legislature, the t Nt e in the day the bridal couple leit for New |, snapalf the differegee botween that point | But still this consolntion’s left R DRt e rlI LI 110 SDdnlaras]| Couuon ofinsrenublipinsl out from the statistics that the exports § s York, and on Saturday will sail for Hotland, | b “HrbUE (00 SR ; o checr the (rooping soul most important duty of which will be et 5 Yok PERSONALITI When they reach The Hague a second wed- | ° s i That tho' of all things olse bereft, nor patriots left to point a moral to the } to Belginm in 1802 amounted to $18,000.- bl L “It silver should g up to 76 cents an That of uil things 3 : : to choose a successor to Senator Brice, i ishattial 3 4 E ding ceremony Wil be performed by the | ot BVEE SHOUT BR BP0 OO erads I cannot lose the hole. tale, provided always that the war news | Gy, 5 vonily a citizen of New - York 000 While dast, year they fell off to | Senator Gorman is strictly temperate, ex- | burgomaster of the city. * The bride will | ity {o me, “this. railroad would not bo DAT GAWGY WATAHMILLON, fakirs can be Induced to Join in the | mom 8 M ey all : 5000,000; ||;.. exports to ”,l‘,.,,,“m. ,‘“ cept when e compliments the administra- | then be introduced at court. e a0 AT GAWGY LLON. slany or, - ¥ ; A o ] % So2 vere 810 LLIXEUIN for the LR T Geta of e cs a g its line.”” And £ £ New rk Hun, mutual slanghter. his intarests in the former state and | X were ; i nd - for n. Qlisy Kol ralorm e ot Half Breed Gets n Windfall. f the m m' »\Iulu.“H Il\‘(- ,)M\ n‘n?. l“uu UL e |‘” u M s fiscal year ending June 30, 18! they ), S CITY, Aug. 21 ¢ Grant | told, s the situation throughout the state. | O, dat Gawgy watahmillon a at practically making Lis residence there. al year ¢ & 30, ¥ | in Pennsylvania, Quay gets the delegates and | JKANSAS CITY, Aug. 21.—Attorney Grant | 'O e R e Al ALl It was as good as foreordained that The Ohio campaign will command the | Vere only $02,000,000; in 1802 the ex- | reform holds the sack. Rosenweig returned today from Kaskaski, 1L, | ooone s at almost every turn some | She foun’ 'm an' she poun’ 'm an' he ripe Brice and his $ el would dominate | o 'Imm‘.“_‘i.m\_ b T ports to France were $09,000,000, while | It is dificult to oute Chicago in any | where he has taken three depositions in sup- | familiar face that is ordinarily seen in Ne- | onoughtta Ly i 1 tote 'm to de well an’ den me cool 'm in t he | braska. Nebraska was well represented at tha e atah is the only begotten son of the late William | American Library association conference. | An' me bre the Obio democratic convention. It is Tast also foreordained that the suceessor of i they fell off to $43,000,000, | SPhere of action. How quickly Dunning fol- | port of the claim of Antoine Gillls th 4 i lows Denver in the horror line. de Tohd foh libin’," like a The exports to Cuba and Porto Rico e S 1T CAN? There are said to be 6,200 miles of unex- | Gillis and sole heir he $2,000,000 estate ( Tho state library was represented by Mr. | Gawgy niggah ought to g William MeKinley, jr. as governor of RHATDONSH DA e in 1802 were $19,000,000, and for the | plored forest In Africs, If the Amerioan sup- | ot by mime - Gillia Jved i s sarly days | D.. B. mpbell, — clork of the su: | She pat him fiiiaalmuar AURUIRERES Ohio will be a rvepublican. More than six months ago Chief Re- | ¢ el year they fell to $1:3,000,000. | ply runs short, presidential possibilities can | in Kaskaski and came to Kansas City when | preme court 1 ex-officio state i mammysRit deichilion, dell of the fire department pointed out An' ma haht it keeps I ‘onti y time Admitting that the abandonment of | fall back on the Dark Continent and continue | it wa a trading pos e became W Ithy | brarian. The State university library was @ punkin’ e i 4 she punk de millc i = % 2 the defects of our water work tem 2 Ay 5 5 the wood-sawing act indefinitely. here and died in 1870, leaving his estate to | represented by the librarian, M!ss Mary Jon; s, | 4 It 15 some cousolution for those who | /0 S0 B0 e B essity. of en. | FeciDrocity may not be responsible for | owing to the stupidity of the cashier, 444 [ Mary Troost. Since then the property has |and one of her assistants. The Beatrico Ii- | I look into heli yalla eyes an’ feel dat I ¥, stayed, at home thnt the ocean | Lt hat : all of this loss, 1t s still unquestionably | hard siiver dollars were left in the vauit of | fallen into many hands. Antoine Gillis is a | brary was represented by Miss Robbins, and | - canwrus: m, = 00 steamers are too crowded to necommo- | MYEed water mains in the business por- | 0SS on of this great | @ Tacoma bank when the concern collapsed. | Ealf-breed Indian, who lives in the Indian | Miss Margarct 0'Brien, assistant librarian of | An" den T Tk de, B C late adl tl ioang Wl re anxious | Hon of the eity. Chief Redell’s views in S : AT | As $279,000 went where the vine clingeth, | Territory. The suit will be tried at the fall | the Omaha public library, was al:o in attend- | o, gat Gawgy watahmillon wif de sweet date all the Americans who are anxious y 48 % L €T EECEER TR L | decline in- our exports s dde o the | the oversight must be Lrritating to the man: | term of court. ance. an’_coolin’ flowin'! " to return to their native shores, and s e o aetion of the democratic congress in | agers, o5 s I ran across John D. Howe on the pets | Poke youah face deep down, ma honey, an' the city eng s well as those of expert hydraulic engineers cmployed by the owners of the water works. The ; i i i e e by |‘l under- | Yery materially enlarged and which | nis nervousness to a large extent disappears, | tion army, is organizing an expedition to In- | was here at Colorado Sprin Wy the under- y nee they are exiled to Europe for a few weeks longer. jus’ keep you mouf a goin’, ain’t no use ob talkin’, but I 'clar to Gord I'se willin® Foh to nebeh hab no heab'n ‘cept dat Salvationiats Will Invade Janan. | ot Donver, and understand he 1s now at OAKLAND, Cal, Aug. 2L—George Mont- | Napjtou, Isaac Adams is there, too, as also a millionaire member of the Salva- | Mr. Cottrell and family. B. H. Robinson abandoning a policy under which our John Morley is extremely nervous before fas I e | going on the platform to speak in public trade with forelgn countries had been | ywyon e nas once fairly started, however, | Eomery Dar yesterday, but Gawigy watahmillon! raising of insurance rates i q 1 t . S has started homeward. I met a gay party of i { oenver po p alizing o 3 s 3 he . {promised increasing and permanent | but he has admittted that the strain which | yade Japan and Christianize the inhabitants. t r a gay y Tohldsrinilad a6 " SRYOB ' ‘:‘ :l‘_“'_'”“r “";‘“i'l“‘."” ‘I .‘1’" “l I',"_‘ writers in conscquence of this lack of | EVE fe undergoes is very sevare. His pian has received the approval of Generai | Omaha young ladies, consisting of - Mrs. | I'oh dey fll Mochantianieion h ob dis criminality of p # cheap, inex- g bosgure has imposed a beavy bur- | P08 A portrait of the late Walter Q. Gresham, | Booth, who will end a few recruits from Lon- | Reynolds, Miss Minnie Chapman and Miss | . (WBBY, SRS EY SR 0oce de Lonata perienced men in charge of boilers to 5 There is another most important fact n Lon- | Myrtle Carroll, on' the traln, on their way to 1 by Frank M. Pebble, has been -on exhibition | don, and the party will sail in about in connection with this matter. Not | at the Art Institute in Chicago. The lik only have we suffered a large loss of [ i€ sald to be excelllent den upon property owners and mer- wts. The demand for relief was h Lohd! I'se done been drg A haht is mos' a breakin’, make him big ) of a | the springs, where they were anticipating a | Lohay me con- | 1011y two weeks' outing. Dr. A. E. Dickinson the risk of hundreds of human lives, but the lesson of the Denver holocaust, like amin’ an’ ess | The party will be under the comm The work is to be | native Japanese lieutenant, who bec: T 3 3 2 g e Gle a ountai An' ma lips dey is a burnin’ an’ ma - L ! voiced through the Commercial club X , added to the portraits of the secretaries of | verted and joined the army in this city. was over at Glenwood and the mountains are astomach {8 & achir 80 many similar lessons, is too likely to | o o B0 ions requesting | tHAde. but ther have been developed | iate in the department at Washington. | i 4 na’ doubt ,N.‘,;;lga with “otier Omana ,[ul‘lu‘ T e Tt e be soon forgotten. b i vals Toia conditions distinetly inimical to Ameri- The waste of good fruit in San Francisco THE GOLD! HARVES’ whom in my flying visit I have not had the mouf is jus' a fillin® Y thefcouncilitostakesstopagtoiinyoke ithai| e s Siis S o a a0t b standl antwall | this: vear: awing to (he alit tn the market —_ good fortune to meet. Ioh dat honey gal of wgy an' dat power of the courts to compel the water S Rl has been large. but the climax was reached | Kansas City Globe: Nebraska's crops this VICTOR ROSEWATER Gawgy watahmillon! cially with any of the countries | has be B L LR comme Ex-Senator Ingalls is laying his wires | wor to regain his old seat in the upper house | pecessary improvements or have its of Kansas. It is time Kansas found out | charter revoked. e wnorienced @ loss of com- | could not be sold for 10 cents a crate of | 88e. ; that tong-whiskered and sockless repre- | Mayor Bemis had during the preced- | S0ICS has experienced ]" loss of com- | Fiy Yoo melons Indianapolis Journal: The reports of Ne- 2 sentatives in Washington only make | ing yenr taken steps_to compel compli- | MCPCial prestise as well as of actual| “qye coming man in Turkey is Turchan | braska barns and granaries bursting with har- O o TR 11l & otk oflecns |La: Lt 5008 [business. This is apparent in South | pasha, the new foreign minister, who has | vested crops are far more pleasant to coms ] gadl a0 S ance with contract obligations by the 4\ a6 oal Ameriea, where Buropean | had a remarkable career and is in high favor | template than those of want and starvation ywonty dotlar gress and that men of national reputa- | water works company by vetoing the with the sultan and the grand vizier. He was | which the sympathizing public had to read A 8 last week when 500 crates of the | Year appear to have been constructed with ataloupes from the Sacramento val. | especial reference to wiping out the unfavor- they | able impression created by last y ks company to procecd with the one finest ¢ v. The United | ley were dumped into the bay becaus with which w ments as we did formerl had reciprocity reange. merchants and manufacturers, whose | M 2 Supremag; was threatened by our | Turk rare “new women.” At her hus- Boston Globe: This reciprocity policy, are now aggres- | band's official receptions she stands by his | crop that at fair pric erfing themselves to our | Side unvelle disndvantage. Just now British enter- tion do their state and country infinitely more good. appropriations for fire hydrant rental, in France, and his wife is one of | last year. but the council had been manipul; ] 1o override the veto, South Carolina is following fn the [ Lo OV 11 Yeto. wake of New York in revising its state constitution. The constitutions which were framed three decades ago are no longer available a working basis for state government. The great problems of our national existence have been fairly well worked out, and it is time that out politi genius should be turned toward the reform of our state and municipal governments, year we have a corn s will be worth over $1,- . dressed in the latest European | 000,000,000, and our agricultural products will styles and wearing eye-glasses. represent over 00,000,000 of wealth g These immense crops cannot well stay on | prise is especially active in Brazil, and, TOWA PRESS COMMENT, our hands with a hungry world outside ¢ 80 far as the United States Is coneerned, 18 The (illull(ll‘)’ !;wtelh '“::) dhf\" :‘l:ljuli“r“: d i i R ety their wind. Keep business booming and thel that country has practieally a clear w:i'.mr}‘u; ';I)NJ‘::l“"_';,“:f:‘)l:m\;ll‘::: l'("n man | 15t taint gasps will expire with the coming months seriously feels the need of sleep he [ Of the autumn harvests. azil seven or eight times s should join the police force in one of the| Globe-Democrat: The big corn crop will at Britain, yet the exports | large cities. reduce the price per bushel to the farmer, to Brazil are more than | Sioux City Times: There is nothing to [ but it will help the country and the farmer g Qepress the value of Iowa farm land—not | Nevertheless. Large crops always bring pros | double se of the United States. | even the remotest prospect of the election | Perity. Thg western railroads are expecting | There is the same condition of affairs ['of a democratic state administration. lowa is | Jarger gross receipts in the next twelve [IB% o moat of tha cobntrica sonthior s | & favared state: months than they have hud st any time In r receipts will necessitate larger dis- tailored thosdor he same re wonld doubtless have followed this y had the manager of the water works company deemed best to use his pull with the dervish combine of the present couneil. Under pretense that he wanted the courts to define their contract and charter rights Mr. Hunt allowed the couneil to su veto, thus leaving the to have been expended this sumier in w works enlargement in the city treasu Meantime the company’s attorneys | h & Cedar Rapids Gazette: Tt s pleasant to | the past two or three ye: und our commercial relations with them | Cetat, {apids Guestie’ T s pleasan 10 | 1oy are growing weaker, whereas upder | that one party is just as good as the other, | Dursements “and increase the general busi- win- | Under the circumstaaces the independents | N®S3 fl”"“-‘” - b e - i thaty ¢ the virorously (i. | ¢ inclined to the same opinion. St. Paul Ploncer Press: What a fertile ing, |myun||\|.|n-mm. the vigorously 1]1— Des Moines Register: The report of soil will do under favorable conditions is rected efforts of our great commercial | warden of the Fort'r Madison psnitentiary | ilustrated by Nebraska. Not a year ago her rivals to counteract the effects of that | shows that while the number of convicts | Sister states were sending contributions to | has increased duriug the past year there | enable her citizens to live through the w.nte has been at the same time an increase in | Farms were worthless in many sections b the number who ae Féported as “temperate.” | cause there were no buyers at any price. distinetly in the interest of European | The later increase in crime in this state is | Some owners even abandoned their homes, merchants and manuf shown to have borne no relation to liquors, | more than satisfied to begin the struggle G i S hore aro | DUt Instead & veggptptimate relation to_ the | again elsewhere, with empty hands, but with the countries of this hemisphere are | provajiing hard #A8# Crimes of theft, for- | an even chance. Now a wheat crop of 15.- concerned, while, as clearly shown by | gery and so on seem to have multiplied | 000,000 bushels has been secured, about 30,- the statistics, it was damaging to our | rapidly. It is owpg of the inevitable consa- | 000,000 bushels of oats are nearly ready for quences. £ ‘ sale, and 150,000,000 bushels of corn are al- Des Moines Caj & Judge Babb's democ- | most beyond the danger of frost. It is not racy is unexplaingile. He has been surroundeq | the money which will be received for these a statesmanlike policy, the wisdom of | by good influenc mlm his youth up. His | crops which "\;“‘*;:" l),:“")g’"h ;‘| to the f as : justified by results, | father was an fnest man; his mother a | farmers. The $40,000000 which theses pro- which was fully justified by results, | FEIer, WAS o6 Qest man bis m thodist | ducts are estimsted to be worth is but a and it will be among the first duties of | and a republica] bis brother-in-law, Judge | fraction of the eventual profit to the farmer the republican party, when it is again | Woolson, a rare Wpecimen of the salf of the | This amount will be received in cash, ani in control of the government, to restore | €arth who helped tg put down the rebellion | will be noted because readily avatlable. The . R A0 JONU by the water route, and just why the judge | greatest value of the crop to the farmers the policy, thongh it may be more diffi- | grew up to be a democrat after himself car- | will come from the restoration of values to cult than at tirst to have it accepted by | rying a musket to shoot one wing of his | the lands because of Nebraska's restored rep- ively a Suit is no better | [field. This country buys of the prod- fucts of 1 much of the 1 than ours av ter Silver is now worth only a trifle more than 66 cents an ounce and yet there : are mines producing silver profitably at made applieation to the United State court for an order to perwit the diver- sion of the funds and their expenditure that price. These working mines seem | for the proposed improvements, This able to supply all the present demand. | application w 1 So soon as the demand is greater than | hut no order has their output the price must g0 up a few |court. The del points and corresponding chargeable to the illness of Judge j mines. If t e shoulil rise tc even | Dundy were it not for facts that point ; 5 cents per ounce every mine that has | in another direction for the real cause. ever been worked would be again | Judge itiner, to whom the application ; active operation. The talk of ) sil- | for the order divecting the receivers of | ver in the near future is without an ¥ the water company to proceed with the economic foundation. | veciprocity our trade was steadily filed early last spring, been issued by the might have been policy. The abandonment of reciprocity wus (| ¥ open more cturers, so far as le with export countric European Commiercial reciprocity was necessary improvement had been = forred, declined to do so until the money k Now that Bill Dorgan has deawn the [to pay for the work shall be deposited warrant for the $33,000 which was |in court, awarded o him by Broateh, Gale and {clines to take action uniil after the fin under the hogns appraisem conneil has passed the appropriation for E of penitentiary bric-a-brac, the residu- | back hy ary legatee of Charley Mosher will sleep more comfor b .8 1n other words, the court de- frant rental, and the warrant signed by the mayor has been passed | t. Dor- fover into the custody of the Made up in the latest fashion——to look and wear like made-to-measure—The unusual good value of these ably at nigl 2 urt. N Bt Fd own party it would be difficult to tell and | utation as an agricultural and grazing suits a is cz 503 ’s lateness — you‘ve gan hus had a band in a good |why has the council taken mo action? | OHeF coUBtrl the judge Is granted further time to explain, | state, uits at $10 18 caused by .the Scason 8 laten If you've b many crooked deals, but we make bo'd | Who s respousible for the ’ " : been waiting for a bargain now's your chance~-We are A b 5 { The men whom the people have placed in 4 1o assert that he never bofore engi- | the lives and property of our | eity and county offices were put there to do g o - . | the danger of a destructive con - | the people's business, and he sooner they Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report con- | tion? Manifestly the council combine. | find it out the better. Apparently a very | nivance of state officers and state em- [ Who controls that combine? Alonzo B. | small proportion of their time is consumed o E ployes. We also muke bold to assert | Hunt, the water works receiver. What | I attendiug to thelr official duties, and this ; that when the state comes (o make its | object has Mr, Huut in blocking the | Rotwithstanding the fact that we are sup- own inventory of the chattels and Juuk |enlargement of he water mains at this | Pesed to be liviug in an era of civil service for which it has paid over $35,000, be- | time, when hundreds of laborers are | Feform: Who cares whether a city or a county ; sldes the $1,500 drawn by the apprais- [anxious to find employment and when | "Achine is represented i the offices or con- r g ers, the fact that the state has been |ov WEZZZD { 3 buncoed will be established beyond a |proved by the emple | trols the primaries? What is wanted is the ' vient of these | pess-like maaner. —Chicago Times-Herald. reasouable doubt, men sud clrculation of their earnings? | This indictment applies with greater AB”‘UTE'-Y PURE selling lots of them, not alone on account of the price, but because of their excellent value, neered such a barefaced piece of hi ; way robhe with the sanction and Browning, King & Co., Only Makers of Really Fine € sthing on Earth, vetall trade would be waterially im- | yrapsaction of the city’s business in a busi- S. W.Cor, 15th and Douglas Sts. Mail Orders,

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