Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 29, 1900, Page 6

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THE OMAHA DALY lm:} ROSI Kditor TER EVERY MORNI RMS OF and Daily b Daily Tiee Tlustrate Hur i We . Yo He ¥ at be addresse Bee, b Doy t BUSINESS LETTERS. be add pany, Omaha REMITTANCI draft The ixhing and rem Hoe | hy sstal order, tshing Company ted in payment ¢ checks, except on not aceepted G COMPANY expross Bee Pul mps ac reona astern exchar 3 PUBLISHIL STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Btate of braska, Douglas County, ss George I3, ‘Tzschuck, secretary of The Bee Publishing company, being duly sworn ®#ays that the actual number of full and complete oo The Daily, Morning Even! Bee, printed during the m Was' a8 follows 1 17 27 470 2 18 27, 10 27 r gon S BEF so0 195 700 27,570 27,54 27 650 27 690 27 510 27,550 27,520 20,7185 20 i R50,01 Less unsold and returned c Net total sales Net daily aver 37,177 Pt N TZSCHUCK 10 before me this HUNGATE, Notary Publie. ——— e e PAR L GEO. wworn 1600, M Subseribed st day of and July [ s Parties leaving the city for the summer may have The Dee Aent (o them regularly by notifyi Nee Business r by mail, will be changed s often an destred. D —— The war correspondents have not yet neluded their careers of usefulness in the Orient overnor Poynter's Labor day procla- mation is finally out seven days before the event—probably on the theory that it is never too late. It desertions continue at the present rvate the popocratic ranks in Nebraxka | Who | mers must be contracted or the line too thin to hold by election day. The first week in October is the date finally selected for Roosevelt's tour of Nebraska. This gives the popocrats who are not alrendy provided ample time to construct storm cellors How natural for the local Bryan or gan to extend the aid of its columns to digsensionists in the republican party The Bryanite organ the refuge of Ex-Candidate " will e Iways been this class of republicans, wne has started in to answer Roosevelt. Mr. Towne will have plenty to do if he | in his pur pose and have no time to worry over the disappointiment of heing yanked off the presidential ticket exists No papocratic organ will be properly equipped for the fray that does not re ceive the Des Moines obule time it is issucd. And the popocratic newspapers will form the principal part of its shadowy eireulation, « every A visit to the railrond stations at the hour for the departure und arrival the principal trains will convince any one that prosperity is the basis of the tnereased passenger travel. Those who ride nowadays travel first-cluss ticket on Johnson county populists when asked to contribute $21 to the state eampaign fund sent $12.00. As this wus in good republican money they doubtless figured that It would amount to a little more than the sum asked would be worth in popocratic currency Chatrman Butler of the popu Hist committee wanted to leave the pluce of vice president on the ticket blank in of Mr. That was a good idea. Tt might as well have mained blank as to be till th name Ntevenson fusion view Towne's resignation with of P'resent oecupants of th are putting In full time fishing and hunting in the mountains o the west, They evidently vealize that with the passing of the year they will e forced to stay at home or take these trips season ntively at thelr own expense. Governor the ex-superintendent asylum is irregular in the extent of $4,000, superintendent who v L Poyn nvestigation of affairs fon. Poynter's expert declures at the Beatrice his accounts Uhix is the sume was voafter a personal at the institn is to whitewashed wernor The local popocratic organ now admits that its hue and ery about that terrible sutrage upon the fraternal insurance so joties Is uothing but u tempest in o tea pot There has never heen any decision requiring them to pay the tax imposed on regnlar fnsurance policies other buguboo wis sprung too Thus un vly In refusing to adopt stringent ures to prevent LI Hung Chang from communicating with his government, Admiral Remey has followed the wise |of In [ the administr precedent set by Admiral Kempr this he is sustained by his government The United Stutes is by showlug the powers it will party to any unrveasonable not he demands upon China and that its mission in that [ security for at least two years and country is solely to protect Awmericans and preserye order, word and act | A much | among o the courts, opposition to th 47,6001 jished | class 278 | the VING FOR SUMMBR, | as a | | weas- | the gold st | the dectared policy of Mr. | reney, destroying the public credit, now | and putting a cheek upon our industrial of | 000,000 | thus used "HE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1900 standard n law n ind event owpwlled that of €1 \ Klony Towne, who was farthor t I nominnted by Hud t Miony 1l Stevenson Ialls view 1 tainty, in wonld 1 of silver cor his elect tion been ‘ It inti \ P ipalgn that exprossed on | this sented trrned dowr t would have thud. But Mo curd o boet n ran the wonld finane s term. Iu by Bryanite wlues o disturh tecrease was only 159,768 3 ma particularly the three last three only 7.6 1806, a the markable In fd crease ued at 1806, w tons, after a ns July 1. Ty which has been find cittes " It w event p tial arison 1 ¢ «heme of sl i on 180 ning mocratle landed on the popu the party ould not t ket il hief enstern eks 1 pounds of comparison already el look the with the wo onsidered L ¥ undoubtedly [ « hn i national organization I Sted King AK-Sar-Ben to the game of golf and il splendor of appears on carnival week we mny clad in balf hose and ke | golf stick over his shoulder and a caddy at his hogls Wisest Thing to Philadelphia Times Regarding that open door in about as wise a thing as the Unit ould do now is to make a bolt oss ¢ precedin sales n the of late, we necepting the I« hsine 1 i e position wh al and destrt \ of and nt than As ab ampaign irdities immer period mong turing vars he the a result anee v 'l fow t m v most de eheck to | as he Yet ponding facts have Al situation glan pre four way of measuring t than by the bank various clearing hov which against w pounds, Wl fssue of whole old nent prosperity think (ques of bearing orr tual polity 0,100 o rt while o in same per was we will affairs ts nearly in July galn ent 1y \ equally tew mmer ntrod: ! vested it with When Ak during t to see him pants t for may o ver mid years ag: o tion unfettered | duliness There volume of changes of the Aside from the u sometimes T e 8 n wit trade the same Exports in 01, against fmports were $63.5 againg $53.874.700 four years ago. During the first halt of August exports at New York alone were $22438.480, a $13,608 834 and m ports $18,061,850, against $15,007.347 in 1896, Strikes are insignificant mow compared .with the numerous wage disputes going on in all branches of manufacturing in the summer of 1895 and workingmen as a whole have been so prosperous during the last few years that there Is little suffering among those who are mow laid off temporarily Throughout the whole range of legitimate business it fs almost impossible to find the least support for the statement quoted, al- though in speculative operations at the New York stock exchange there has actually been less activity, which Is no injury to men or working people. The great improve ment in feeling, however, is noticed in. Wall street as well, for the uverage of sixty rail way securities declined from $47.17 on July 1. 1896, to $45.75 on August 22, whilo this year the average advanced $80.18 1o from during the same “dull period.’ 1gn appears $100,413 nous tha sturdy oo man wit STRAWS alty the the Ben were val vietions 17,780 in on other field administration Bryunite Run streets amusing themselves call 1gement democrats, They L few people four years a Certain orguns have heen is mo better prin intended lie waning of parade the of who supported MeKinley » and who for one reason another have been persuaded to join sposition. Of course one reading the Bryanite organs would never know | that any of the former supporters of Bryan had 1 nvineed of thelr | error und lined up for MeKinley and prosperity, because such information can lardly conform to the plan of deception which the Bryan campaign is laid From all over the country, how the wind blowing toward the telumphant ve-elec cam- | tou of President McKinley through an | ‘.u.m..wl.m. endorsement at the polls n November The Chici ribune of Sunday printed a list of sixty-three names rep resenting of more than ordinary prominence who had withdrawn their support from Mr. Bryan and regard his to the country's pro This list includes gold demo rats und silver democrats, populists and | silver republicans, all of whom have be come disgusted with the Kansas ¥ platform and the attitude of Bryan on | day | whole-its 1 Among the silver republicans who have and - business security, announced themselves hack in the of spect for luw, its so- [ publican ranks are: United States s alistie tendencies and its mischievous | ator Willlam M. Stewurt of Nevad ndering to popular passions and preju- | ex-United States Senator Lee Mantle of Lven the “antiimpe- | Montana, A. M. Stevenson of Colorado, outside the democratic ranks, | until lately chairman of the state com- | American many who regard Bryanism | mittee for that W. 8, Stratton of [eral Chaffee, action will be taken greater danger to the coun- | Colorado, one of Bryaw's largest cam-|1f it is felt advisable the 5 troops there they will remain so-called imperialism, while | paign contributors in 18 o8 Bryan in re Among the prominent populists the Philippines is pronounced | Ex-United States Senator W. A by one prominent anti-imperialist to be | of Kansas, Emory Wyman, populist the stride, the most | member of the Nebraska legislature; plunge that we were ever invited to take | Rev. E. F. Jones, a prominent k in the divection of foreign complications. | minister; John Relirig ¥ populist The efforts of the Bryanite party to! member of the Kansas legislature; 1 public attention from its true char- | W. Mayne, a former judge in Kansas; P, acter and purposes by the of J. Hamble, chairman of the local popn tmperialism will not be successful. In- | list committee in Kuusias, and & number deed, they have already failed. lutelli of others gent and open-minded voters are Among the prominent democrats are giving consideration to Bryanism as a | Ex-Congressman Conn of Indiaua, Lloyd and carefully weighing its dan- | Juckson, one of the Bryan manugers in Vinst which the Bryauite | Baltimore; James Donovan, chaivman of party ur re duvolved in “imperial- [ the local demoeratic committee in Kan s They are asking themselves [ sas; General Rosser of Utah, ex-Con whether the interests and welfare of the | gressman English of Indiana, Edwar American people will be more imperiled | Abend, oue of the Bryan electors of 1806 | by putting down insurrection in the | in Indiana, and o on down the list, Philippines and establishing good gov- | The Tribune also prints a list of eight ernment there under American authority | een n pers of influence which sup- than they would be by debasing our cur- | ported Bryan in 1806, but which are sup porting McKinley in 1900, In every community there of men, particularly in the states that went for Bryan four years ugo, who voted the democratic ticket secretly b cause of the stress of hard times, with out announcing their intentions, but see their mistuke and will not repeat it Others who privately admit that pros perity in spite of the dire predic tions of Bryau and that the only way to Keep it here 18 by continuing republican ascendency do not want themselves ad vertised as changing their political views simply in order to avold the pulling and hauling political who would try to dissuade them from their purpose. The that point the politi 1 by any record issues might business ) t ng to what expee ox i by have entered an opponent of t the sole question of imperialism and forced a Jivision of the voters hetween himself MeKinley on those lines, “hut this impossible to one whose record 18 that of a shifty politician in the and whose attitude at the present that of a man anxious to show himself nough of a populist to prevent tl | sertion of his allies ln that part tryi to make sound money lieve that he really does not financial quackery he pretends to do. It is the now well recognized as which is the real eratic-populist silver Ign." This 1hie this year as they Atru W with a b of 4, extent to pecula : figures, they ately and whil the daily average learings at thirteen principal during July nly $158,758,0 against $228.432,000 this year and in August to date 0,506,000, agalnst 758,000 in 1900, Not a small or uncertain increase by any means and far from indicating decreased sales of in China, a still with that th bl i it health in this ko t swells these st nimes refle there accu ity 1896, was much act} exchange | the were and cities or the China States it, past « at for e Is a 0. 1 Dragon Mis-Up, Francisco Call bear, it appears quiet engagement dragon. The internati which is being exhibited to view the Incident one is Bear ar The Russian to play Chinese agerie, ought isfaction pesn't ome ¢ wd yot e 1s with earnings against $30 and partfal heavier gain in July were $30,282.- 93,118 by the same roads in rus for August show Tron is often held up of business. Vigor industry is considered assurance of soundness elsewhere. The production of pig fron on August 1 was at tho rate of 244,126 tons weekly and this was tler from 253,413 tons on July August 1, 1805, the oute take stock n us | on St business he composite Bryanism of the mblican out which hoid o who always 0 whipped ever, come straws pointing d care ous 18 Rendy for Trouhle. Chicago Chronfcle proposition of Mr. Wu the allied powers should with her imperial majesty tor factory conditions of well meant. The trouble that the necessary prerequisite. First catch your Pending that lesirable consummation the foreign devils are likely to insure tactory tions by assimilating or less benev olently any “Boxer” gentlemen who start hunting trouble denio of The that | rectly severs 1. Yet decrease on Ting the s, Fang af em ow | view that intelligent is cortain to voters th ixn The mask of “impe- | vialism” will not be permitted to hide from public attention those things which | are fundamental in Bryanism—the free | colnage of silver, free trade, hostility to merit war upon ests the fostering wdually but surely thought of the country to the consideration of cam [EEW ! K gresses onrse it involves is R, THERE IN ( men 1 Cincinnati Dolliver but Tribune good senator will not a good-looking empress cldents in (he 1 the Deagon. Not the least of the troubles which western civilization Is up agalnst in China is a con- fusion of tongues. The empire is & mod ern Babel of dialects A different language for every day in the year is the way the philological situation there is summed up by an Oriental traveler. There not, u a matter of course, 360 languages existent in the empire. Dialects would be the plausible manner of phrasing il dia lect usually understand the torm is indicative of the manner of speech of the inferior class and not of the people of any given locallty whole he division between the superior and the inferior classes, the former speaking a language and the latter a dialect, is not known in China. The main body and staple of the spoken language of the refined and learned classes s the sam that of the coolies, laborers and boat men. A section of a province, often locality mot much greater in area than an ordinary township with us, hasx fts own vernacular, which cverybody speaks, and to use any other means of oral communica tlon would simply be as attempting it with a mere self-invented gibberish Pract! cally every man, woman and child in the place knows nothing than the one lingo to which they are born. Drop of them down in another village twenty only be a SUCCEess a8 A menace to i condi- | one as well more sys b-| Philadelphia Ledger: The nion {s that the office which ver was looking for a good man New York Sun: Mr. Dolliver will be one of the noted orators of the senate and | the faults of exuberant youth and a too factle larynx will probably fade as oxperl ence and character mellows In the sena- 1al atmosphere Portland Oregonian ward for dential ator The ne | the say something Philadelphia Press: The appointment of Congressman Dolliver to be United States senator from lowa seems to be legitimately | the step in his career. He s a fa- vorlte with the people of his congressional district, as 18 shown by six successive elec tons, with ever increasing majoritles; he Is £0 popular with the people of his state that he wis strongly mentioned as their choice for president, and he has filled im- portant positions in the lower house of con- | gress. I his new position he bids fair to | be a national leader. Kunsas City Journal: Mr. Dolliver has not only achieved distinotion in the house but he has heen conspicuously identified with big national questions. At this time he s prominent in the natlonal campaign, not | only as an orator, but as an adyiser. His | endorsement for the vice presidency by the | republicans of his state wax an evidence of popularity that doubtless influenced the gov ernor somewhat in making this selection. Mr. Dolliver will probably be a fxture in the senate for some time to come, for while his wppointment is only until March 1, 1901, he will no doubt be reappointed, pending (he election of a senator for the In 1806 Bryan . secured one of ‘the elec-|full term by the legislature, which will | Notes from. California, and. would |BOL meet in regular session until 1902, nor toral | s there any pres e o that 0 b 400 men who |18 there any present reason to doubt hiavo. BRSINIL-Sipe 1L dbout ) | the legislature will elect him for the new cast ballots for McKinley had gone the|!"® other way; he secured the four 1rnm““““- | Washington by about 12,500 plurality; he won Wyoming's three by about 600 plu rality; he carried Nevada's three by more | than four to one, and he had every other | aibtind & thinks his candidate will get even one|T00m and secured the desired relief fo electoral this year from California, | the perspiring masculines which went republican in 1898 by over 19,000 _Conmecticut’s secretary of the State|I witnessed surprised me so much,” he plurality the four from Washington, Board of Health reports that nearly all|writes from Tien Tsin to Collier's Weekly which gave the republicans over 7,600 plu- | the 400 infants who died in that state in| “as the fine appearance a Chinese of th rality years ago. The chances ure|July were the victims of unwholesome milk | tall northern type makes when he Is in a also against Bryan in Wyoming, which went | and other unsuitable food |white man's uniform. 1 expected that republican by a fair plurality in 186, 1f| Christian Dewet, the famous leader of |ho would be rather amusing, if not ridic- Stewart can the silver republican | the boers, according to the St. James'|ulous. He is the contrary, though nobody vote in Nevada, that state may also go for | Gazette, was a wrangler at Cambridge and | resists a smile when a sentry calls: ‘Who | McKinley this year, the regular republicuns | is said to have guined golden opinions from [go lere? Flend! Allell’ Their officers having doubled their vote between 189 and | all during his university career tell me that they could get all the Chinese 1898, while the silver republicans polled | General John Hewston, who died the|recrults they want at Wei-hal-Wei 5 ind po o four more years for Me. | 3070 of the 10,111 in all. The certain 1088 | other day in Alameda county, California, |that they rejected nine out oo m“.“”‘,‘r Sl LY A e i, ;1\1l||\l 1::””:v \‘\'1‘.‘1:..“‘[1:,“:‘.‘(, s 08 M| ' one electoral vote in California and four| built the first government mint in San |cants. Out of the tenth ‘Sergeant What pesldes ook debts aud chings of | 3 2t in Washington, the possible loss of three | Francisco, and he was one of the active|his-name’ has made a wonderful trans- that Kind t ent. Abov - in Wyoming, and the possibility that| members of the vigilance committee. | formation. The pigtail is rolled up under all, the HLO00,000 of deposits in suv- | Nevada's three may also go for McKinley. | progident Kruger once determined that|® regulation British blue jacket's hat, with ings banks due to 5,000,000 deposite will require the gain by Bryan of more| "Losoie of Johannosburg should have at|the brim turned up all round. He has would be reduced more than one-half, states east of the Rockles than are e0-|joug (wo days' rest in each week. He |Khaki skirt and khaki breeches with puite VobBlag S ihaneing a0 erally thought necessary by those who take | j oy g decree that no plano playing | IEBINgs of the British type. Apparently sweeping away the savings of years and his total electoral vote in 1896 and figure | o ie * SRS ey or Saturday the British had more coufidence in their causing immeasurable privation and suf- | out how many more he will need In order| "o .o 0 Takahira, the new Japanese min- | ‘PIdRIn’ Tommies than the Germans in ferk torhave (s LInEyItaIA TaNE ister at Washington, has been in diplomatic | theirs, for the Germans have brought up ‘he unlimited service for twenty-five years. He is a|0One of the native companies which they dollar would, therefore, this | graduate of Tokio university and has been | have been drilling at Kiao-Chou. Scepti writer, “benefit no one but those who | a minister to both England and Italy cism is wasted, if the British-Chinese arc 1 harles Morton Stowart, the|®BY testi for in the little action which happened to owe money when it began haries Morton Stowart, the | ihey saw in the reliet of Tien Taln they and even a3 soou ax thelr debts iiaathteplesimnes 00| feomed to enjoy fghting thelr country: were paid, would be in the same condi AT S e Gt A s tlon as the rest of the community, Cred half of his annual income during the last itors and wage earners would, on the other haud, be robbed of millions and half dozen years of his life. The proposal to observe “Sedan never get them back, While the change, day Berlin this year, because it might too, from gold to silver was going on | business would be in there | offend the French, may be put down as e bright mark for the war of Christianity would be no end of quarrels hetween debtors and and nt [and extermi fon now being waged in China by France and Germauy and some others. oven huve tinanclul punic worse than | Withdrawal under the provisic i ny which the country bas heretotore | hivd contin ot the Rloux Fulls| ¢ ) | instructions has given the place to pxperieliced democrat. The fusion lenders in the 1eh is the condition of affaivs which | A ¥ th s of the Bryanite party would ‘wpulu‘v party have traded the bicth Ay vight for u f pottage which will threaten the conntry with and whieh | FER S0 | i | be s0 badly scorchied on election day a Bryun administration would do every- | e A thing possible to produce. There cannot doubt. at witl those who believe the sincerity of | Mr. Bryan, that as president he would direct the treasury pay in e obligations the payable in that | far us it should be availab that the amount of sllver dol in the treasury that could be is not very large, but what over the the fact of the national treasury adopting the policy of puying rument obligations iu silver, at the the government, would inevit ably have a demoralizing effect. 1t would ereate disteust, unsettle financial affairs and be damaging Everybody would in of legislation overthr lurd and providing for the | and unlimited colnage of silver at 1 ip the event of both branehes | ongress belng in political accord with tion | Mr. Bryan would | taithfully carry out the gold standard while the fact that the in republican control affords consensus of found Dolll- tem in the eivil service, o out institutions and H y prejudice intelligent will be directed Bryanism \ financial tenching l dices Fialists,” there olicy In Chi veland Leader certain is this ment will not permit itself to be involved in any struggle for the subjugation of | & | China or the destruction of the territorial | ' entity of the Chinese emj The prest dent has his position clearly on that point und he may be trusted to hold th ition he taken. If conditions requiring withdrawal of the 18 indicated by Gen- a Bl Oue thing th govern | the issues of the ¢ more as e to | 8 its | 1 n Dolliver withdrawing from the vice presi race And he is better off. A A prince among vice presidents tor. moreover, will strengthen where it Is weakest. He can has his re disr ire as a has i* the h be among “e oy senate troops, are much than to to leave try o are Peffer « k of Texas Sarcasm. Detroit Journal “Wouldn't that jar you?" There been a public meeting In Texas-Texas, mind you—to protest against the uncivil ized conduct of “our sister state of Ohio,” and to admonish her citizens n Akron of ‘the pernicious example thus displayed in setting the laws of the land at deflance in | this age of civilization and land of Christ ianity.” It to say that Ohio feels | the jar and that the jolt is enough to start | seiches on Lake Erie that shall dash the | white foam over the wharves of the City of the Straits. If, in the not very distant | past, citizens of Ohio had undertaken to hold public meetings and condemn every anti-Christian act done in Texas, it Is cer tain the Ohioans would have had left little time for ordinary affairs. But it is some times sweet to say ‘‘You're another particularly if it ean be said in the name of morality aud regardless of past records “ next gard to has longest reck ) %1% forme vice of ke » else false cry a is safe could not more comprehend speech than i suddenly transported to Berlin, Paris ot New York. Some words in one place and possibly parts of sentences might have a famillar sound in the other, but while the Chinaman is of all human creatures the most indirect he I8 at the same timec the hardest individual imaginable to at tempt to muke understand anything by inference. He has to be approached with overy regard for directness of expression and will misconceive a meaning upon the slightest pretense. This, true of him in his intercourse with foreigners, is equally 80 as to his own kind. A Chinaman, no matter what his standing and accomplish ments, who could travel 100 miles in his own country and be able to hold converse with the people in the various villages through which he passed would be a rara avis surely ow | o now | those | | | | i yan's Forlorn wpil ew York Evening Post ligher than that of any other nation, are numbers and commercial progress and prosperity ONAL ROTREI The dungers involved in Bryanism it is raly possible to overestimate, Women in a prominent Atlanta hotel petition to allow the shirt waist “rederick Palmer, American correspond ent with the allies in China, discredits the general impression that Chinamen as a rule are low-sized people. “Nothing that WOULD DESTROY VALUES The able financial writer of the New e York Sun, “Matthew Marshall,” has an article in a late issue of that paper show- | ing the effect that the free und unlimite colnnge of the silver dollar would have upon values. He points out that the government bonds alone which would payable in silver amount to $700,- | 000,000; the bonds of raflroad companies | to $3,000,000,000; the bonds secured by mortgages on real estate to $4,000,000, ote is here b or two A tswing' fo of former associntes Straws 1 and of ten appli- an unknown ex Colonel Bryan's letter declining to at tend the Grand Army encampment Chicago because press of public business keeps President McKinley is an other grandstand play for the galleries, Mr. Bryan has figured it out that he ean guin more by posing as the political gul laut, refusing to take advantage of the aceldental detention of his competitor, than by making his appearance among the old soldiers, on whom he would ex a doubtful influence at best. Be cause one guest has been compelled to disappoint the reunion is no reason why another should stay away except for t purpose of manufacturing political capital. away | eolndge of dha sllves| FORMALDEHYDE 1N MILK, suys A Preservative That Imperl Lives of Children. Medical and Surgical Monitor, to be an established fact that | ation of milk by formaldehyde known instances proved in jurious to the consumer It is also safe to| assume that in many instances untoward | consequences have heen produced and the | | true cause has not bee Milk con- | taminated with formaldehyde has been glven (o animals in order 10 asc n what would be the result A in such cases the nd has frequently been fatal. Physicians | have frequently been at under i the these, It seems said the adulte has in many erelse o by | The from Chinese rian time in which would faritios o « ason why dates in iina are confusing is calendar differs from A wise monarch named about B C. revised the use before that date the it Is found at present. A volume be needed to explain all its pecul e but now that dispatches are men History | H1ODINg Chinese dates 1t s as well to have Tiob | some idea as to wherein the Celestial cal- \a | endar difiers from the Gregorian ohup| The Chinese s lunar and therefore consista of 44 days. Before the time of Yao tradition has it that the year consisted of 360 days and that confusion had result That ruler decreed time should measured by the moon and that every teen years should contain seven additionil (onths month hr 1 dispatches because the the Grego Yio some calend m in not in known contusion, 10 Nebraska populists have a chance to ¢ | see “where they are at” Mr i oy Towne's 15 of the | creditors, we i A loss to G wa ernor Roosevelt sociated with the Art club, the Rifle corps und the 0. K w0 associate member of the Glee stoward of the Harvard Ath At h duation he & day committes armies” of th Nutional Association Phili Noxt come ol the by while the wtural Financ society stand why a given course of treatment was stul among children that on cow's milk. In glven cases has shown that it contained formaldehyde a change in the diet red, and th responded Has there been sufticient thus far that formaldehyde dangerous | f00d? 15 there to sto] dealers from using this adul- | terant that injuriou iblie | health Mo An Indiana s ported three termination nsucc subsiste | the nd sociatior the ol To hte added A an analysis CUTR was ord Bl s y mesd to treatment evidence milk &r erved on as | not to be makes a £ty - that i | e ot some way LS The of we be a reasonubl loust 1 or any othe o] Thie discrepancy in the accounts of the ny pine the { course only uy in almost rs. This about an hour the Although the regulated by o5 hetwe k will the st The pre popoeratic superintendent of Army i 1o | Institution at 1 | 4 debt which he still owes to th but similar diserepancies on the part of republican ofticlals at the the fu ‘M’H"‘l K onuse e into power were heralded | | hyde. A pure quality of milk wa w0 the nature of cmbezzle: | and recos the e stance. iclan in charge of Indianar and give state v v year ve reckoning excellent military which is of the armies mberland and the ent with resented of the Tennessoc Kirk (tiempled 1| Buicide because of the disgrace he felt that | b New York policeman though crazy, and it is likely enough bt all the papers are sa of the poli true Mr reasonah mill trice is olis physi ntly it varies only which threatened a fatal ould not assign a sat he found the milk | contained f | Henry ian e re nineteer lis secretary silver whate vernment the from true time Is stute clet ot and h | 2 year Is lunar its b until used i Thi January nd uniike the Mohammedan new regulated entirely | AL any time, winter or divided into twel alled by numbers, a ¥0 on. The ginning are cause i the the new [ time Shatte who S s I coin, It s true lars now malid abtain h of one n slonists ruary | which and come The month and year as shortag 3D WAS - & s [ ry The phy orphan asylum rted deaths in on he believed foi children in the milk was the of milk that the 1sing showed it to contain It was further Auring the year might perhaps be only not enough A penalty applied. A is not kept was Wt in each v ot the moon 0 be A summe ments at ame 1ime Possibly M. ( what he when he w the v that th n had adulterant other death; institution the san The they halt be it it year is ve fir month that yoars is not adde ould suppose probably sum of n dehyde did ahont 1 not talkin last Phere will be only nd then na of n Know Wik : ten shame i ibout end anywhere An come W th il cause - sls " institution Bt this intimated that the attributed but s ling western mind. subdivided into three 0 that without within ten days o numbered option fusion’ did With field excopt the year of he in the ofthe-ronders, left without still of necessiry one o lancing pavilion | ir . i wain possibly tlonal ticket middl lists no barred that fusi The part ntl which 1 Ching m oo subtle for ¢ at m me re © not again subdiyi K of tim 0 it busi the | most to the It S man may sp Ness, see « are an event re hoie fow It oning . A nstance assurance wing to call day ho mil I rt's I Herald the Filipir Thi of 40 that exuct @ Chinan s thing. Th graduall A division long, foreigner the and amiliar with the added, incidontally about twelve hour head of New York in point of timc The Kather the years togother |18t cycles, a8 Occidentals do, but for Omalin ek ward provements pavin tion should be formulated and presented taxpayers at th ctlon Ble, will have the popular must not the If it Londs this year the pr stand matter 4 I . ¥ be seq ealer in with for keeping it i for lenc Milk asonable length of methe lost, but in its nature 1red o fre in public have 0 1o r has not ) pen want foreigners of 120 minute the X re o is low no 1o vote A and week, bu he may m, eaching 1 the facilitios condition th worthy sweet for a the adoption paltry dol will be sacrif ; try dollars will tha ditktan DonilE onal commit- | Wil be sacrif and paltry dollar ! The fuston populst uationl commit-| Jort 0o L CE U0y, Dratiling infant | The United States never perhaps four aguinst free silver legisla- | tee, us was to have been expected, has | 3 nORnee fe dosoue oo oK ark. | prosident thun MeKinley tion, Mr. Bryun would carry out the | substituted the nawe of Adlal Stevensou | ened a family circl | pected emergencics meaning hour new i th onght ' it fo not ern solid in ugain is But, say some, 1o the and endorsement coming o th and port m Gt that Pekin vote ne impres the Ch on ancient the if veasons of nese in near law, senute s bundant | or Risht ¥ for 1 ars may be le may K Demoerat It had handle % ' better unex o to Chinese . one | miles distunt and nine times in ten he | some extr ista o meth of number N AT THE PARIS SHOW 1 naily i Hoyal Cerenl St Growing in Favor AL Fre 1 the | | 1 San take Hore corn by is not exhibit humble served in yies, from uine to realize at omethin the b made southern follnw ent juK consequences that may s @ At pre I eaten to som classes in form corn is almost | article of diet in Europe | When consider that the | in this country averages about 2 ‘l-vl~|\l'|~ it 1s eaxy to see what vast co quences may follow from the opening uj new market of hundreds of millions « clvilized people. 1f the market price ralsed but 1 cent, say from ¥ (o 0 cents, It would mean an increase of §2 000,000 to the corn producers of the coun try 1t would tuke only a very slight in crease of demand extending over the con tinent of Europe to send up the prices say O cents a bushel, involving an increase | ot $100,000,000 in the recoipts of farmers and grain dealers, But the matier | that. Statistics tell us that are ap proaching the limit of cultivable wheat | lands, while the consumption of wheat in | creases by leaps and bounds | Something can be done by output of the present area tivation, but comparatively littie A di | version of some kind must be created it | the present rise in the standard of living |18 to be maintained | Corn seems to be the very the demand if only taste | be created It has about tne value as wheat and is sold two-thirds the price. To a great can take the place of wheat ‘4! breadstuff, more, perhaps, than our | selves realize, and besides that it can be | used in & great variety of ways as a veg etable, both green and mature, for which ‘ wheat is not adapted. The cultivation of a similar Italy the or et m unkn where laboring polenta s in the of an we product goes much farther than increasing the by better cul thing to sa for it can same food at about extent it rye as we | ity a and taste of corn aniong the nations of Europs [ muy be of vast benefit only fo us, but to them. To bring the Joys of reen corn uccotash and fried hasty pudding to 18 norant willions ix no small boon It by o m thing to do, but exposition are going at it | the right way. They are not pushing the poor man's food—that would “damn” it at once—but they are trying to show its palatableness and the variety of its adaptations for people of all classes People may be trusted to find out its cheapness afterward The introduction of Indian corn into Eu | rope may rival the introduction of the to n importance and with still greater for thi since it must largely carried on not the ans an easy authorities as yet | pot | con | production here country be equences AN 1 IVE Journal: “How do vou like new nelghbors, Clara they take twice as big a do Indinnapolis the l0oks of th Oh, Clarene piece of ice us we Chicago Record: “How do you fecl on the subject of imperialism 't think women ought 1o be lowed to boss us men around the way do al they Philadelphia Press: “She's determined the voung men shall consider her the swectest girl they ever kissed,” said the first summer queried the other lises powdered sugar instead sald the old tery When what 1'm Post: “Marriage. i tao much of a I bargain 1 like to s Chicago bachelor T make Retting Why not then” do your courting at the sea- wsked the sweet young thing Now at last they hey swept down he whispered softly irnal d wite m the wera tha 0 As Witar You are all the world to me!" he xaid Oh, I'm the whole cheese to evervhody today,” she answered. “Rut tomor There was a touch of sadness in all this Washington Star: “Aren't people will laugh at yoir mode of dress o answered the shirt-waist hybody wha i willing to muke himself warm laughing this kind of weather hasn't Sudgment enough to make his opinion worth considering eveland Plain Dealer wne 18 to follow close Yos “Ray, wouldn't eddy should Atens? “1 see that Mr on Teddy's trafl sy funn retrace his Philadelphia vou_ enjoying these hot day Henne Ascl Hennepeck vacation my Press Why the Ascum vacation in aren't country 1l the time I'm_enjoying here « tuking in the co Yo wife he old gentleman thaught find out the young man's Chicago Post it was time to intentions, “Mr. Guyhoy wiay, “you've my gas of la The small brother nful laugh | guess you never looked into the dad. " he sald 1y ot he waid in his blufr, h been burning a good 'dea terrupted with a B EMPRESS DOWAGER, Tn_the turbulent Of the queue and the lady rules (and y And name it fs Just wgh she fsn't the club, New womun and all that ganic She's an unadorned feminine antocrat And gets there (vou bet) Jjust Francisco land of Lotter Licamine i eve A she rules) h e tha When she realm it murder or never lack And it | Thougn up-t | And she | e wants a thing done fn her hap, e | she wir or Jo triends to he who ke the hack impert carids maids there I wiv date o much o the 1-hox tulks Appear | brother engre In trouser oo her wich little el x with t Like Whit | Norda | waoula il She's ma) ) shaula | 1Kt Kkt I 1 by the wile of a4 1.out or a sn: t there (you bet) just the same Ko And ru . And gof

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