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! | | | i AL o A A 153 R THE OMAHA DALY BrE. | S e e ey | . Bditor, PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, — — . TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Bty Tee (Without Sundas). One Year.. afly Tise and Bunday, One Year X Monthe ... pirr i ree Montss . . ol B Saturdny Pee, One Year.. Weekly Bee, One Year... OFFICH Omaha, The Ties Tutiding. Bouth Omuha, Singer DIk Corner N and 21th Sts Councll Tinffs, 12 Pearl 8t Chicagn Office. 317 Chamber of Commerce. ew York, Rooms 13, 14 and 15, Tribune Hullling, ashington, 107 F Street, W CORREEPONDENCIL, All communications relating to news and edl- torlal matter should he nddresscd: To the Kditor. BUSINESS LETTERS. . All business letters and remittances should b addressed to Tha Tee Publishing Company Omaha, Dratis, checks and posioifice orders 10 be made pavable to the order of the campany THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. ——— STATEMI George 11, Tz Hshing compa NT OF CIRCULATION, huck, secrctary of The Bee T y, being duly sworn, savs the actual number of full nnd complete coples the Dally Morning, Evening and Sunday printed during tha monil of August, 1895, was as Tollaws: that ot oo, 1918 2. 19,147 El L 19,085 [ 20,040 14 10,083 I3 L7 T . 10,071 8 s 1. 19,109 n 20,180 i 190w 1. 15,068 1® 19,106 ilini e 16 . 19,060 Lesn deductions for unsold and returned Net sales ... Dally avernge........ Sworn to before this 2nd FAIR VISITORS ATE THE OMAHA DALY BEE THE DEE RECEPTION ROOM. For the accommodation of out-of- town patrons of The Bee and particu- Tarly newspaper men and women who Will be in’ attendance upon the state fair in Omaha, The Bee has established a reception room and writing room, of which all are invited to avail them- melves. The room is on the ground floor of The Bee bullding and Is reached by the west entrance on Farnam sireet, It will be filled with chairs, writin tables and other conveniences. Tl‘n- will be a visitors’ reg r in which guests will be cxpected to inscribe their name All newspaper people, thelr friends and patrons of The Iice who come to the state fair will be cordially welcome and will be expected to drop in as often and as long as they find it convenient, without waiting for a more formal invitation, SPECIAT, VISITORS' HOURS Visitors to the fair will also be given an_opportunity to Inspect the une celled newspaper facilities of The Bee. In order, however, that there may be no confusion, they will be asked to ac- commodate themselves to the following hours: The press room on the ground floor of The Bee building and opening upon the west side of the court will be open to the public between the hours of 3:30 and 4:30 each afternoon. The composing room, on the sixth floor, entered through room 600, will be open to the public each afternoon from 1:00 10 6. No one who visits the state fair should go away without seeing the finest newspaper plant in the country. THE OMAHA DalLy BEE. TO STATE FAIR VISITORS. Not even a premature frost can now injure the corn crop of Nebraska. Governor Morton is formally before the people as a candidate for the re- publican presidential nomination. Next! Now, won't Industrinl Legion 2-cent certificates bearing Vandervoort’s auto graph be in huge demand at the price of $1! Azote's exhibition mile in 2:05% on a new track with wind and dust blowing proves that the new Omaha mile track is a fast one. Chauncey Depew arrived he Europe none too soon. A republican state convention Chauncey—neve ne from ew York without All hail to the Atlanta exposition! May it bring to the people of the south a full realization of their hopes and ex pectations from it. The immigrant who settles in Ne braska will not live to forget it. e ought to be so overjoyed with the op- portunity that he would accept it at once. It 1s a mistake to permit the strect parades to drag along until the people become weary of waiting. There is no reason why the program for this cven- ing eannot begin promptly and be car- ried through expeditiousl Henceforth it won't matter what lan- guage the legislature uses in its Dbills, When the supreme court can read the word passage as the word enactment it ean read almost any meaning into any combination of words. 1t was simply indecent haste exercised by Broatch and Vandervoort in the de- moralization order No. 1, by which the police department has been all torn up during festival week, when its best and most effective work is demanded. The week just past, we are told by expert authority, was not only the hot- test of the year relatively, but also the hottest of the year absolutely. There 18 some comfort in this information. It assures us that we have not been tmagining our sufferings from the heat. The Incoming police board might have waited until the end of the we be- fore beginning their work of reorganiza- tion. Chief White had everything set for fair week and the revolution effected by the new regime has demoralized the force and greatly impaired its efficiency at a time when it is most needed, While the plate glass jobbers are in sesslon in Minneapo'is it may not be out of place to suggest that a scheme to erect a ground glass canopy over this section of the country to protect the Inhabitants from the heat of the sun might be a laudable undertaking for the benefit of overheated humanity, There is an immen e erowd, told, in attendance upon the Chicka- mauga field dedication exerclses, View- Ing the crowds in attendance upon the Nebraska State fair at the same time, one has a vivid realization that the people in this vast country of ours are sufficlent in number to make a multi tude of such simultancous gala events & success, we are M 5 0 THE OMAHA DAILY B — HURSDAY, ! THE NEW YORK REPUBLICANS. Last yenr Levl P. Morton was elected governor of New York by a plurality | pr over his democratic opponent of 156, {000 and & republican legislatu chosen having A majority In both houses of 88 in a total membership of | an | 100, It was sweeping victory, very largely ‘due, of the popular | and incon repubili nrse, to tax poliey of the demo party. It gave promise of | domination in the Bmpire state for | some years, if the party 1l prove | faithiul to the pledges of better govern { ment made to the people. The admin { istration of Governor Morion las une i bly been able and clean, The leg | it not above eriticism in all <, in the mgin kept faith with the | e, 1t e | fon in New | its plans, it law, and o some other respects s leg islation wus some factional friction, whole results have justifi Judgment - in placing the party in control of the affairs of the state. | In view of this and of the fact that | there continues to be u gieat deal of | popular dissatisfaction with the poliey | of the democracy in national affaivs it | would seern that there ought 1o be no | doubt of the 1 | bled the York provided reform admin ¥ 1o earry out Letter ballot | Leen the | There has but on 1 the vepublican | wise, opnlar | the success of republi party this year in the Bmpive state, and | there wotid not be but for a new issue | that has came forward. This is the | question of the maintenance of the Sun- | ¥ laws, raised by the the | police commissioners of New York City in enforcing the law—a law. by the | way, of democratic origin—requiring the closing of vons and forbidding | the sale of liquors on Sunday. The commissioners have been suceessiul in securing obedience to this law, but | there is a very strong opposition to it and the fact that the republican party has made it an issue by endorsing it in | the state convention will, ther son to apprelend, cost the party a gred many votes. There was a very consid erable element in the against having anything to s this guestion, but their effor(s ved- | t convention ¥ about to have it ignored were unavalling and a reso lution prevailed declaring in favor of “the maintenance of the Sunday laws in the interest of labor and movality There can be little doubt that this ‘tion will prove detrimental to the party in the election, and that espe- | lly in New York City it will be a | very great help to the democeacy. In- | deed, the democratic leaders in that city | hoped tor just such an expression fron | the republican state conyention. Republican suceess in - the Bmpir state this year is imporiant. It would make absolutely sure republican vi tory in the national coniest of next year. It may be achieved, but the chanees, there is reason to believe, are lessened by the unnecessavy introduc tion into the contest of this new isswe those voters, very York, who regard interference with numerons i New sunday laws s an personal liberty. TARDIN OF EXPORTS, | One of the most unfayovabic. facts in the trade situation is (i our usual anuual expor course go ¢ to expliin tho movement of gold. Under normal con- | ditions the export movement is at this time in the year active, but it is e paratively quiet at present and th does not appear to be any very oo prospect of its becoming active this . The Atlantic exports of for the two weeks ending last Saturday were only 2417000 bushels, flonr in cluded, lins 10,000 hushels in the corresponding weeks of last year, whi during August the exports of were loss by over 6,000,000 bushols than in the me month of 1804 There is practically the same state of affairs fn regard to cotton, the exports of for the first half of September s but little in excess of onehalf amount shipped abroad in the corre sponding time last year. There has been a very-large increase in corn ox- ports as compared with last year and it is thought the shipments abroad of this cereal in the coming year w s, which of | outward wheat wheat which | | e | | all past records, but it will havdly off set the threatened loss, judging fvom ! the existing situation, from the reduced exports of wheat and cotton. This situation h disappointed the expectations of the bankers who unde took the task of upholding the govern ment eredit by maintaining the treasury go'd reserve and is perplexing them as to the future. It would not bhe so serfous a matter but for the fact t importations unusually heay Since January 1 the imports of dr goods and general merchandise D been $61,000,000 more than in the corre- sponding time last year and the inflow coutinues without abatement. It is stated that the majority of the large banking houses in the east which do a | foreign banking business have large obligations for themselves and for their customers to settle abroad. and such debts will have to be liquidated in gold. These houses deferred shipping go'd during the summer because they con- fidently expected a good supply of com- merveial bills in the market early in September, and, being disappointed in this, they are compelled to make their settlements by forwarding specie, An- other unfavorable fact is that Europe has recently been a seller of securities in the American market and there is reason to apprehend that more of our securities will be returned in the near future. At any rate there is no reason to expect any improvement in the European demand for them. The tardy and unpromising export movewent is unquestionably a discour- aging feature of the trade situation, and, while it is reasonably to be expected that there will be an improvement, there is no apparent warrant for believing that it will be sufficient to enable us to settle the heavy indebtedness already contracted through excessive importa- tions without large exports of gold. It seems very probable that the next two weeks will bring important develop- | to think was | \galnst the tariff | vepublican | | eanens | populis | | i i ments affecting the immediate future of the national treasury. If within that time there is not a very decided im- vement in exports there is reason that the bond ndicate, not nding the assurance it has given atrary, will abandon the task of protecting the gold r e. In that event there can be little doubt that the treasury g Withsts ver 11 would y rapidly as (o compel another issue of honds, THE PF 1 NUCCESS Although the Feast. of Mondamin ushered In a large aren of high tem perature, the nightly parades, illuntina tions and gala pronomneed IPeast of exhibitions have been Henceforth the Mondamin will be for Omaia what the Mardi Gras festival and the Mystik Krew of King Komus bave been for New Orlenns, the Veiled Prophets for St. Louis, and the Priests of Pallas for Kansas City. The American people, above all things, like to be amused. They enjoy display pleasing to the eye, and are willing to conteibute to the general en joyment, either as participants or with their preseice as spectators. In this respeet men and women are alike. The Peast of Mondamin affords boundless scope for that display of vanity which in itselt s harmloss and makes all foel as i they were for the while trans plinted by some enchanter’s wand into the widdle of the Arabian N it The Dest thing is always reserved for the Jast. So i will be with the Feast of Mondamin, The ehmax of gorgeous anty Nar-¥ will b reached on'y with the n parade and the entrance of dimson 1o ke possession of the city nd play king over Omaha for a night. PREPARE FOR CAUCUS JUGGLERY. With primary elections conducted un- der rezulations and penaliies prescribed by law, there is neither necessity nor oven propriety for bolding ward or preeinet caucnses. Fovierly the party weus the place for suggesting delegates to conventions, 0. however, became wits ud selectin That wieldy with and the subdivision of The primary clection to supersede the canens. was ey apportunity sy st un- the inerease of population the war was introduced In the cauneus v ineentive and every W skulldug « loudest Jugalery wien who “holles and the tellers who woere most skilled in ba'lot sleight-of-hand were the ones to carry the caucus nine times out of ten. The primary clection doubtless 150 affords opportai or fraud, but the men who perpetuate such frands lay themselves lable (o criminal prose cution for violation of the primary elec tion law, jusi as they would if they had committed frands at the regu'ar Hlection I spite of (he known fact 5 tnder no legal resteaint and its action binding upon any one, the republican county committee po sists i contining the canens juggle that o is not The democratic state convention which |10l prac Iy nuiiiying the purpo meets next week will not fail, it is |of the privary eleciion. Under the call safe to say, to o advantage of the [AUst issusd the vepublican primaiios opportunity thus given it to appeal to [0 Dovsles conniy are to be hie'd during 1 the priniry olection is to he | teipated by ward and precinet cavenses o be Leld a week b 1 or nest Friday, September 2. These republienn cavenses will, of course, merely register the already fovmulated decrees of the seevet A, I . conne in which republicans, demociats s alike s Dmbor ¥ will be raised take pari. tured the canenses by st methods the hae and « at the primary that any man who vefuses (o vo o regulai i » dealt oniy autl tuke tin nupon ate who are « pros candidates the to submit r fute 1o the cauciss The southern Mecen during the next bis will b inters » o fade whers yesterdi which that eannot dreds of attractions drnw hun visitors to the enterprising metropolis of Georgia, not only from thae section of the coun ey, but from other. Origin projected as an exposition of the re sources and the achievements in mate 2l development of the cotton sta ise graduaily assumed ainbitfous pr and all Amer- ican countries were Invited to partici pate. A number of these accopted and have exhibits at Atlanta, so that (he fair takes on something of an interna tional ¢ All accounts agree in stuting that it will be a much finer ex hibition than that held at New Orleans several and is not much inferior in its attractions to the Cen tennial exposition of 1876, At any rate it retlects the highest credit upon the enterprise of the people of Atlanta and it is to be hoped iis success will exceed their most sanguine expectations. ors fail to s of overy rtions 1cter. years ago Some over-cuthusiastic spe tsmen in have Lecome imbued with the impression that they will not live the natural terms of their lives if they du not witness the completion of the east seem {o the defaulted ra In further ance of this they are trying, Dy offers of new prizes, to persuade the owner of the Valkyrie to change his enter his yacht in a new cace for the honors which they propose to hold out. Up to the hour of going to press Lord Dunraven had not changed bis mind. To influence a man who has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars upon sporting of this kind will doubtless require something more than the pecuniary value of a prize cup. mind and t A Springfield grand jury is trying to place the responsibility for the notori- ous corruption and bribery that dis- graced the sessions of the last Illinois legislature, and a batch of sensatlonal indictments is expected as the result. If the grand jury remedy proves even a partial cure in Illinois we may be sure the same method will be lnvoked in other states, The first thing the members of the new Board of Fire and Police Commis- sioners did was to reappoint all the crooks and scalawags to the force who depleted | more | = !hml been dismissed by the unanimous |vote of thylr/ predecessors, Strickler and Smith fuclyded. The second thing the new confinfésiomers will do will be | to draw their salarvies for the month of August, durflig which they rendered the city no serviee Whatever, Owing to the erops have I fully mafured, and are out of the weh of any ffrther effects due to the weather, the wiekly crop reports given out frlom the Nebraska experiment sta {tion have bheen discontinued. These reports have been valuable, both timely nd generally accurate, T'his weekly crop bulletin has been appre clated by the farmers amd merchanis thwoughont the state, who have learned to expect it and to look for it | You hear it on every street corner ivlw:ll Commissioner Foster will hold | Broateh and Vanderyoort level and will vot permit any skullduggery in the | board. The popular belief that Broateh and Vandy will resort to any thing, no matter how reprehensible. Mr FFoster can no more curb them than he could curb the mouths of Haseall or Seott and keep them from indulging in incendiary talk and indecent language. | | | It is probably safe to say of Cl:veland | that he belicves he was born to a first term, | that e achieved a second one, and that he | is willing to have a third one thrust upon him i —— | The Coscomers of Denver. | Denver Republican. | Our police department now boasts a_de- tective bureau of fourteen men and ther is herdly oo in the lot who could deteet anything mor» subtie than limburger cheese. [Tll'n the loafers out Ne « Wl on Fear Not. Washington Post There need be no apprehension in fi cial quirters, no f h flight from fanc The credit of the United States whatsosver, and no danger to approach it. . catastroph is in ro dan will bs suffer ield Republican. Omaha are joining the A Tha negroes at | I A, in some numbers, whereat Th» Dee | quite pertinentiy asks whet they have | becn remcved far encugh from a siate of | s to be avle with good face to i lash of proserijtion over other | LA y‘ nt No Longe: al | ment with electrical equipment i 1skat branch of the New York | © Hartford road has been | ¥ ful, and the electric lines ar: to be extendel. 1t wou t be surprising | New Dnglend railroads oper stric.ty before the w century - Owns the Earth? x City Jeurnal The questian -of, who owns the earth has been ra'sed in Omiha. A water comp:ny has sued o street, rajlyay company for damages because of alfeged injury to water malns by electr.city’ which eccapes from the zocs into the ground. Perheps it 15t as wall for the water compan car company to get together the sarth between them. P A Shot at tiwe Lone Fisherman, | y New York Sun, ation lookirg into the ques »gnition of the Cuban patriots as Mr. Cleveland will soon hav nd his forelgn would be the divide u and | | | 1 ot a severe o i 1y he Judiclonsly seek to avert | e Hawailan blunder by an w98 the proba- ard Cuba? ool Senator Chandler nnd Rallroand Tarifia a4 (Mass.) Repu ler of New Humnpshirs has elf a champion of the peo- rccent attempts of the trunk rites. Ho has written to t torncy goner. | ard t.e In iztion about ‘t, w nt rstate ‘aw | wrtes a cu fudr s de o? States cou roken of i hav | ) p s pro e | ou Hirmon, Meantim>, how go>: | i S:nato bor's &g nst the ra lway | | own f New Hamp.h | sizes ) the | I | | | | | | 1 of Colonel Tvan N. Wa'ker as | n-chief of the Grard Army of | 1 sublic is a1 honor well mezited by this | | ir and by the stats. It was i ble servi rendered hy | war of the rebelli‘n should b | war 90 bravely anl serving o Cuthful'y that | i: menit wa ily recognzed by de | Served promoti His story is that of many qually brave and faithful comrades, and this cquality of service and whicl ma Indizaa of ¢ ence bestowed upon one icn shared by all St b Way Out of the Snarl Philadelphin Record, There is ope simple, clear w sim | honor distine the vetiran a One y out of the which finances of the govermen involv w interest, long-time bonds should b n convenient form for poju lar subserl with which to redeem the demand notss of the government. As fast \s redeemed they should be destroyed. Wi \ese notes cut of the way there would be end of the troubl> now experienced in taining the gold reserve. There would be no | eed of a reserve. As long as the treasury burdened with ths tas® of supplying gold | on demand without any adequate means of maiatalning its goid income there will be re- | curring seasons of financial uneasiness. The greenback servad as a makeshift In time of but it by kD @ parpetual menaca to the solvenc ihe treasury and the security of busincss transactions ever sines the war ended Rezunipfion of gold payments | indeed bezun Lwedty years ago, but there ¢ ! b2 no completesvesumnption as long as t | ability of (ke government to redeem its notes {13 @ matter of gontinuing question. it Reunion off Blue nnd Gray. @tratd Free Pross, | There secms @ ‘Spectal providence in the | fact t thellreunlon at Louisvilie . ceded the mord kolmn ceremonics that will this week attehd the dedicacion of the park at Chickamaug. *iThe biue and the gray have clasped handk under the one flag to | which they proudty give aH:giance, and the | compact of etepmat Peace will be sealed upon | ground made tshared by the best blosd of our common pecble. The nation will be reprosent:d. Bvery! state comprising it will sond its mostdistinguished men. The sur- viving generals of either army will be there and the great rank and file of grizzied vet- orans will meet to pay that tribute which the brave beatow upon dsparted herces. The sun that gilds the historic hills and valleys will look down upon a far grander triumph than when it lit up the scemes of battle and carnage. But it i3 said that the south honors the memory of those who died under her ban- ner. Of course she does. Her people would be unworthy the name of Americans if they | did not. Grant honored them when he spoke years ago for peace. Sheridan honored then, Custer honored them. Every brave soldier that met them In the murderous storm of war honors them. Their nerolsm and ga* lantry are separate and apart from the mis- taken cause in which they were displayed. It it only the narrowest soul thit partisan- ship can inspire which commands that an Ineffaceable brand of treason shall be placed upon a great section of our own citizenship. SEPTEMBER 19, 1895 ro right | | oldier survivors of the | in wal of the . | offcy in tieir orgar on upcn an Indiam | e | man, anl no better represcntative of the | 4 | yoluntser soldicry could have becn choaen | “Inthade, | than he. He enlisted when scarcely more AL ras than a bey, abandoning position and p pects tn civil lite, following tha fortunes of soldler for the flery accusationa and the claim that the war is still on, made by tho who never smelled powder. Cedar Rapids Gazette: W, THE ELOQUENT PEACEMAKER, | was the silence that greeted the German eme | peror when he drove out with the empress. never | Not a cheer was heard, though the street was attorson o fought so well for the south as now when he | crowded, and not a hat was raised. The Retorm By Povsn 18 trying to make friends In that section stlonce seomed sinister to the congressman, New Wk erld. Chlcago Chronfcle: Long may Henry Wat- | In his opinion a tour of the continent will The decrease In drunkenness has been ac- | terson live to preach the gospel of patriotism | Cause an American's 1“‘\(@ n: g'"""',’ to grow | companied by an increased use of beer and | &nd good will. The people of the United | 88 luxuriant as the locks of Samson | the mild wines. These take the place of [ States love him and are proud of him. Ty gyt | brandy and whisky in communities where | Globe-Democrat Colonel Watterson was | HORROW ED MIRTH, public sentiment against drunkanness s strong | easily the foremost hero of the Grand Army | . , AT N enough to make It disreputable. Thelr use as | reunion at Loulsville. He knows how to [ Philadelphia Record: eWell™ murmured substitutes far more flery beverages undoubt- | talk to the soldiers in the true spirit of their | [i' (04 “my shoes will be all right now, | edly contributes to the decrease of drunk- | recollections of the war and their under nyhow." b entiess, but the primary causes lie deoper in | standing of its resuits, and so he Is always d ‘u!;u ated public opinion. | & favorite among them, no matter on which 1 \»vlw r\\ hat's an epigram? le—0, H‘: | The drunkard is now regarded with distrust | side they fought | vay of siying something everybody pitual intemperance soon forces its vies | pan o i Johtinte drank. fre | Yonkers Statesman: She—That was very tim down to the lowest grades of employment | fary & YAl and Johuute ki pretty for Mr. lseiin to kiss his better halt | and 1t persisted in it makes him an out- | gl R souting thto he | After the race. He-Yes, {t was pretty; | cast. | dodged bullets or went scouting through the |y ¢ romen it was the other Haff who | > | nelghborhood for tobaces who cannot under- | won the race nt “Homan Ar nifle, stand how the *‘old boys" shake hands and | Chléago’ feca | swear eternal friendship. | _Washington Star What is the matter In the Kkilliug of the deserter, Coffey, at| Cleveland Recorder: A year ago Henry | With Scpitl T et him foday and he acted | Fort Sheridan, the United States army has its | Watterson clectrified the veterans of the war | NG, Jie's demonetized.” first practical test of the new Krag-Jorgensen | for the union, in camp at Pittsburg, by his | rifle. The effectiveness of the terrible arm | impassioned appeal for opportunity to demon- | New York World: Soclety Actress-Tn will scarcely be guestioned. At fifty yards the | strate before all of his fellow countrymen; What direction do you think my art les? nickel-plated conieal bullet passed through | that southern sentiment toward northern sol- It lies in every direction. Actress the head of the victim, through a live tree | diers was one of respect and honor and hos: AR G LUl AR AL | eight inches in diameter, and, thirty yards | pitable affection. Today the demonstration Yy : beyond, buried Itself three feet into the hill- | is complete. Never in all its history has [ Chicago Tribiine: Mrs. Knayber-Can I side. The dead man’s skull was shattered | the Grand Army of the Republic been more | have a cupful of sugar this morning, Mrs. until only the scalp preserved its shape. | royally greeted than at Louisville, the center | Ne#gsdore? I've been intending o buy | The Krag-Jorgensen rifle was designed in | of southern activity, the home of southern | ¥¢Ie, bt keep forgutting it Sugar's gono the paradoxical spirit of humanity toward | patriotism. Mr. Watterson's pledge for the { "R U BUSHL TG ooy | man. This unavoidable but successful test| south has been splendidly redeemed, and the | menthis ago. Hadn't you heard of Nt? Fort Sheridan suggests that if the | patjon iy broader and stronger and greater weapon Is to be accepted because of its clean- | y1'an it was yesterday Cineinnatl quirer: “The iden! Will cut destructivene there may be in the ) i asked me for. Kiss last night and when [ future a new di: ce-line established at " PASSING ; sa he didn’t take it. What a stupid which armies shail engage In action. The MESEARSINGEESEONYE 4 faight have been stupid,” said th { horrible shaitering effect of the bullet in L G R Coffey’s brain was due to the close range at | Willie Waldorf Astor, the expatriated \m«»x; very mana husband which he received it. It is only beyond 400 | ican, has acquired a Bullish rotundity of STLabEE CentalE - Bdni) Shekd or 500 yards that the steel-capped bullet ad- | form. 1oF. 13 RV ool hea et et ey . Justs itse!f to the effects of rifling sufficiently Humanity would be a trifle happier if Sep- McSwilligen—1 know he often has put ice to cnt a clean wound. Manifestly then, two | tember's surplus of heat was reserved for | on it. armies engaged with the Kra; orgensen gun | January. favor of human targets escaping scot free, | Scholars in America as it svon will be, we shall have equally as good international authority and precedent to recognize a state of war in the island as Spain did for our own confederate insurgents forty days after the shot on Fort Sumter, We can return to her, in the interests of lib- Lord Roberts of Kandahar London for the statue Thir! oreover, according to American pracedent, Our record toward Spain [ womat 2Pl 00 exchange for commercial concessions to cases of dislocated neck quaint and venerable gags. overboard Spain and give Cuba the aid which she nceds, and which our treaty with Spain cannot prevent? Which cause is morally ~which is manly—which is American? ¢ S TN End of a Long and Bitter War, NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—The long and bit- war between the Pacific Mail Steamship ompany and the Panama railroad was settled today at a conference between C. P. Hunt- ington and J. Bdward Simmons, representing the two companies. Mutual conceszions were nade and a saidsfactory compromise of the differences between the two companies was rif at. The Pacific Mail company \'.i]ll surrender the Atlantic ocean to the Panama |, withdrawing its ships, and in return railroad company will retire from the Pacifie. The ract, which was a per- peturl one, is abrogated and a new contract has been signed on both interests, calls Grover. The name respondingly sour. the colonel for his disrespect “Oh, because res him_ Grover? hard to drive more or with age. considerable information and slons during a three months’ t The congre a spare, even in its vices, the being tame and dreary. The guards struck him as bemg al in Ttaly and Austria. terms satisfactory to | was the worst he ever isn’t necessarily a tailored to orc a young man who has got onto himse to order suits—but he is usually a ors excel all others in at, do for the identical cloth, up to $30, S. W. Cor. 18th and Douglas. Only Makers of Really Fine Thers is contempt in the heart of every old monument at Calcutta while he is yet Eleven old-fashioncd brass muzzle-1 ing cannon have just been sent to India from y-five years ago Dan Smith, a negro went to Cripple Creek and is now fast be- fell from a hammock | *I woman is now on the road to recovery. Many have been urscives. Our obligations to her are meas- | but this is sald to bo the first case of the Ny, &n casily terminable treaty, which, | kind on record which did not result fatally. | us from’ recognialng Cuba's belligarency. s | . Colonel Will L. Visscher of St. Joe, Omaha, Lt diffeult for s to decids. beiweos) tres | Bellingham Bay and elsewhere, is sofourning Cuba and_tyrant Spain® . Why mot fing | In Alabama and amusing the multitude with The colonel oc- casionally proas a rebellious horse which he tickles the silver section of the state, but the goldbugs are cor- One of the latter chided crated one and demanded, “Why do you call rded the colonel, check- ing the exuberance of his sides. less gratifying to Omaha admirers to learn how the colonel’s humor improves Congressman Tarsney of Missouri absorbed sman found Paris a delusion and and the finest looking soldiers he saw were The European barber encountered what impressed him more than anything else to own that our label is under his coat collar—Ie's ¢ RoOWRINC KNG it tos ge tha e ohoH ol T Washington Star: “Doan fedge by ‘pear- Shice; BUILLY, (v;‘\.‘:i\lrl‘::[rh:)n b\y( [,;r" o ',",',:’:l John E. Hunson, president of tha Bell Tele- | ances.” ole Hban; “quinine & Je8 R the GhARBEE. of WaE a6 ‘perhaps greatly in | PhORe company, Is one of the best Greek | like puly sugar 'twell yoh goes foh ter tas' it - Mr. Henry M. Stanley’s assertion that for-| y,.i o1t Jres Press; Benny Bloombumpor Shnll Cubn Be Free? tunes can be made building railroads in dark- [ i when you say (here are no fies Clkience: Xty i (e Poromm, ost Africa Indicates that thore is an abund- | on anything, ‘you mean the thing s pretiy Che 3 " 7 " ance of water in that section. good, don't you VoAl Bl et Losatilall B0 01w is to have a|,.Mr. Bloombumper—Not always, Benny. The rule has its exceptions. Suppose you ary speaking of fly paper, for instance? had- Chicago Post: “Our yacht was beaten by, a despicable trick.” “Why, how?" “Woman in balloon sleeves stood on the erly, the compliment she then paid us in | slave, ran away from his master's plantation [ qeckt of the sther bont behalt of slavery. ~The Justice will be |at Grossa Teche, La. He was not seen again poetic. With all possible decorum, with a | until Saturday, when he was captured in a | Indianapolis Journal: “So you want the politeness above criticism, with a firmness [ canebrake not far from his former home. He | Defender-to win? Do you K M wholly Irresistible we should assist Spain | was naked, hud lost the power of specch and | USheqled, You of that much patrigtiom - l'out of Cuba and out of the hemisphere as | was to all intents and purposes a wild man. | pronounce Defender” = . cffectually s Lincoln anl Seward did the [ He is now 65 years old. French invaders of Mexico in the '60%. | . 8. Stratton, the indiana carpenter who | Atlanta Constitution: “What we want (n this country,” cried the fmpassioned politi neither a siate of hostilities nor the setilng | coming a millionaire, was at one time after | D O ) ahonted & WAf 1a up of a civil or military organization is posi- | he reached thers in the greatest destitutlon | the audience, “and we'll have it { tively necessary to entitle a people to bel- | and is said to have offered Senator Wolcott a —_— ligerent rigits, for before either of these | half interest in his mine for $300. Stratton | Chicago Chronicle: “It pains me to re- conditions were established in 1838 we went | is as -plain and democratic a man as he was | Pori.” sald the chalrman’ of the investi- 50 far as to issue a proclamation for “pre- | pefore he “'struck it rich. f’.'\""\“"\u‘x'(v’"‘f."":;'.-u 'L]v'r"v(m'i‘»"4.!“,‘3{\-»,1!‘"'" s ('Cf“,'é"‘,'f‘?‘.“” interference In the civil | nrigs Apble McCully, a young New York | “How?" asked several members in unison, have just learne 1" “explained the is clear, We heartily approved when | nonpr R TOH CaYE B0 e ve. Sho was | chairman rogretfully, “that there are sora George Canning invoked the Holy Alliance | ‘(“’l'k‘,,"“'.':‘"n "h;w';m \;llu‘l(y the “shattored | members of this committee who really wish guarantes her perpetual possession of Cuba | Sordy, Wis removed bit by bit." he young D e LRI Freeport Democrat. James Whitcomb Riley hus taken to the bicycle. We may soon expect a poem in this vein: treated, Now, this is what T like, A-gcootin' through the country, of a bike. Oh, ain't it real pleasant a-dodgin’ mud and rock, When thé frost fs on the pumpkin and the fodder in the shock? S STRAW a-straddle EXIT TH of the conse- — New York Evening World. And must thou go, my sutamer hat? 1 fain would keep thee still, Did I not have misgivings that You would not fill the bill! Although the one I paid for Three dollars—well, 'twas steep, For now your feilows, placed on' view: At ninety cents are cheap But still we had some fun, I think, When you were clean and new; If at a girl 1 tipped a wink, 1 always tipped you, too! Best friend of mine in many way: You've often advertised me; Though, from your most abnormal You've often compromised me! They've called you in—your day is done; 3 take a well earned rest, or.’ now the summer season’'s gone, I like my Derby best! HAT, he is fat and It will be a few impres- our of Europe. Moulin Rouge British Horse bsurd dandles, traits, But The Fly Young Man ler young mun—ITe may be If after many trials of tailored = Kle reformed young mai knows it's not necessary to pay high prices for finc wcaring ap- parel-—because he’s become acquainted with us— He's not ashamed ot over that, for there are many things about the making of a suit that our tail- although there’s one thing they can beat us They can sometimes get twice and three times as much as we We commence at $8.50 and have some o | ¥4 Omaha’s Reliable Clothiers Clothing on Earti.