Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 4, 1900, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. iR, | = | PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. | E. ROSEW Kditor TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Daily Bee (without Sunda One Year. $6 Dally Bee and Sunday. Ona Year %0 | Tl istratod One Foar x Bunday Re Year Suturdny Rée, One Yent | Week Bee, Une Ye | OFFICES | Omaha: The Bee Bullding yith Omaha: City Hall Bullding, Tw to-Ath and N Streets Council Blufte ' t Chicag aw York Cour anhington | Street Sioux 1 t CORRESPONDENCT Communica ews and edi- | torial matter sh sed: Omahi e, Editorial Dey BUSINF TERS Bisiness letters and remittances ghoald be | addressed: The Publishing Compan Omaha {ITTANCES Remit by dra <press or postal ord The ftee Publishing Com ayable | nly 2-gent stamps accepted in payme mail accounts. Personal checks, exee Omaha or Fastern exchanges, not THE B PUBLISHING COME MENT OF STAT CIRCULATION State of Nebraska, Douglas County, s& George B, Tzschick, sccretary of The Bee Publishing comp sing duly sworn, says that the actual number of tull and complete coples of The Dally, Myrning, Svening and Sunday Bee, printed Vuring the month of August, 190, Was as follows 1 27,680 1 27,510 1 27080 18 27,130 3 27600 10 20,855 . 27 500 0 27,000 5 27 1580 1 27,120 3 27 200 ) 26,900 1 27,510 27,040 5 | 27,110 ° 27,1420 ] 27 220 | 10 27,550 3 26,680 | 1 27870 o7 26,900 | 12 27 x 27,270 13 27 n 27 400 " 27,600 5 27420 15 27,240 27,460 16 7,080 Total YLess unsold and returned copl Nat total sales Net dally average 26,008 IRGE B. TZSCHUCK presence and sworn to Subscribed fn m before me this 315t day of August D. 1990 M. B. HUNGATE, | Notary Public The base ball season is about at an end, but the people will not lack for excitement, as the foot bafl season is in sight. The republicans of Vermont have an election today. There are not rugh democrats In the state to make them count. 014 King Coal may be a jolly old | soul, but he is planning to charge en tirely too much for the pleasure of his company. The braska school for the deaf secured a silver medal at the Paris ex position. The committee on awards evidently knew the politics of the man- agement. Nebraska popocrats are a little slow in vesponding to the call of their ndi date for president to organize cam- palgn clubs. The popocratic eampaign ts short on ginger this y One of the local newspapers is seeing visions of a wide-open town in Omala. These visions always come when some political contest is about to be decided, either at a primary or a regular elec tion. HA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY EPTEMBER 4, 1900 BRYAN'S LABOR DAY TEXT | quite ruin the countey, but it would ave | day of his desth. His playtime never cam LAROR AND INDUSTRY. b ! < < - < The laborer is worthy of his hire.” On | results so damuging that a gencration [ Probably he wouldn't have known wha blNlb I ‘-R bll I<N‘ E ! Yty xist_ oL onl this day set apart for the consideration ¢ ould pass before there would be com ‘ » with - ad come. Was the gam fimrrend New York, Chicago and other large citias the wageworkers, let cach one uir " ' orth the ¢ e bt also throughout the Ta Atem, an i “' i “” L) ‘" wh " 3 'h plete recovery from the effec The | ) LA L e ) ks TR At e whethe e ma o 1 enjove a fa | hiladelphia Tedg rovided f \ ol of what the law ¥ ® ot e Sl e s h O L question whieh every man now doing a | on wh Futfitted I ! v 15 pro violation of what the | o are « I of clrarmakers, shoa shara of the proceeds of his labor and if n Lo i The pre por wnounce that Mr. calls “the duty”* of the stary. Other | munifacturer thing makers and laun This is the text which William Jen. | munerative cuployment desive an an-| o o5 B0 0t o 1896 that has been | & policy on the money question | sateguacd the gold standard. Might not a | Slencral Secretary e of the Broth nings Brvan gave ont in advance of | SWer o Is, whether if Mr. Bryan 18 [ cyialied. He eatd: “We intend to stop bor- | that he would take his own time and od Bryanite alary SUPRIN RIS pOWers 10 | shows that (he organization has a member Labor day for the consideration of Amer- | elected president hie will adopt # course | rowing money in Burope.” And we h AR Bt U R Al el At L B " " 11| ThHRet 03 oltlen and 1ORNR And the nine g ore N that would destroy financinl contidence | ¥ot given to the public his formal le he election of Mr. Bryan would in all} e 0y ravalls | ' he hrot can wagework A more fngenlots | A0 o il Wasting Pr Time | af acceptance of the democratic no probab entry with it A house of repre- | erhon kalnel. In00. tembers 1 1805 & weal to prejudice has seldom if ever | Unsettle all business, stop —enterprises Globe-Democrat or the presidency, perhaps he is re sentatives in sympathy with him. Indeed, | now hus 438 Jocal unfons on made, 1t Is designed to fmpress | and put a check to prosperity. ‘There is f Bryan's spesches will be delivere he enuaciation of his policy for that occa- eve hould President McKinley be re " The exccutive councll of the America upon the toflers the idea that they are |10 assurance in what we have quoted | in ast of the Mississippl. His cam- |elon. It is true that Mr. Bryan m v cleeted, an antl-administration house s | Bederation of Labor has natructeld, fPro t wotting s share o \ Droceeds | Above from Mr. Bryan that he would | PAIRn in Orcgon last spring gatisfied h peech of acceptance at Indfanapolis, but he likely to be chosen. In capturing electoral | aficors of the International hica not getting a fair share of the procecds ) . not do this that he irnt powder in the we ontented himself with a discussion of the yvotes and congressional votes it fs not im 1 the Internatior of their labor and naturally caleulated S — | juestion of imperialism, and expressly as- probable the allied opposition would obtain | Ats asking them to uronse in them a spirit of discontent | AT ALLEOND ALLIANCE | L L TSt serted that in a formal lefter he would control of several legislatures now held by Monday 1 Octohar. o ndudl 1 cir 1o § i Sie | bk e Ive consideration to the other principles the republicans consequently ey | the controversy over Hnotyps machine “; 1 thelr lot, i, Wbl | The fact of the United States and Rus- | Kruger has changed his capital again. 1n [ 213 €0 'I’ % tos & bt R tatiomm whdri g b BBt i ”‘I |”{- . tryan points out no remedy, but leaves . N aldons | Proclaimed e Kansas Cit atform. would fnciease the democratic and popt T et velief 1o the. tnder, | M4 being in practical accord i regurd | (his sotprct e simost equals AeWmalio®| iy his xpeech at Topeka to the notification listic representation in the United States Wit A1 lie fnference that relief to the under- | ," cpiny o fatal to the Bryanite [ Fecord. The “mobility” of the Boers, of} (o, iitee of the populists he entered Into sena t is not impossible that, in the | 1) Jor cost hua been redu )m $180 vald and overworked laborer can be which we heard so much earlier in the v per L It 18 fot imp le th g At labor has been Feduced from ¢ paid and o a = e | charge of a secret alllagee between | (oo Tl g conspicuous, but in an money question and made plain his event of his election, Mr. Bryan, before e vt et b ror At an liad only by a change of ".’-T head of the |y ind and the United States. The en b . preference for the free coinage of silver. the close of his administration, would haye Yor 15 cents. 1N Poot and shoe national — government. e u¥erige | i etween this government and that X 1t ho refrained from saying what action senate and house in political sympathy with ' t 16 How $8 far turniog American wageworker, however, is not| joo o Bl ed in - England Slgns of the Last Ditch, he would take were he elected to the presi- him. Can it be doubted that, from the day [ cortuin t of work with machiners likely to play the role of the dog In the | o1y sittvor cod o tvror Bubltc: foel Buffalo Lxnre lency. The currency bill enacted at the of his inauguration, he would endeavor to | HELL“Silile ofeciiird uf the time ls re. TALL.- o’ vl ot A Nt imeat nto | Vith distav e and distrust. Public 1 The release of 1,800 British prisoners by [ last ssion of congress materially “do something for silver Is there not | quired to do the work, on an average, that 1 T k- | ing there, as voiced in the press, is that | the Boers is indisputable evidence that the | strengthens the gold standard. Tt had been warrant for the fear that h ction itself, | was formerly required by hand labor the pond and jump after the magnified | ;0% onichment that the United States | defeat suffered at Machadodorp was serious. [ hoped by the advocates of sound money months before the day of his {nduction to | it bl AR LRy o A reflection in the water should have committed itself to “follow | But 1t speaks well for the humantty of the [ that @ law would be passed that would put office, would precipitate a panic upon a | nduistry tn Maine about 150,500,000, " Bix The workingmen of Amerlea have | o ot i of course of doubt | BO¢TS that they release prisoners when they | | beyond the power of a president or a colossal scale thousand hands are now employed, with a reason to be gratifie d satistio th g e e | are no longer able to care for them properly. | $ecretary of the treasury to interfere with Mr. Bryan bides his tin declining to | pay roll for lator (salarios of ofticers not rea “uv lln‘;: atith nl“nlrflln'lul tied With| o ¢5 the sin ity of the promises of | ot proy the standard e law does require the avow his policy until he conside qh,‘vlrlhx"u”y‘] f about 5; ‘:m ‘\.ul\-‘.r existing conditions, o they may not | " 4 he number hands will be 7000 and’ t Xisting con o AL ‘;"‘ DO pussia. There is no friendly sentiment Lawmaking Overdone. secretary o sell bonds for gold coln when- occasion ripe. But no man can doubt what | pay Foll $15500 o day. The loks +onsime in 'I""’ iistatice get ”""; full share |y pugland toward Russia and so fn-| o n‘“:”"“‘l;“ ‘:'\'I‘l" ¢ overlogisia. | C1T (he treasury s in dunger of the de- that polley will be [ e veur witlcgud i nd s tne profie of the pro s product « ir i - s illustra the ot overlegisla- | pletfon of the ye A S B | will be' worth' 18 00 ext year more rl' ‘”“ ';"‘ from the |W' “L‘ i ”;‘” fluential a paper as the London Times | o which Senntor Manderson emphoeized | "0 0" VAL AL AU WA L | than £,000,000 worth of Jogs will be ne « ¢ know enoug! o oW I oMWy - e - N ey 1 o 1o pulp an :|:|' ||Iu‘.|| "‘ "”<l|u”| :,..,, 5 ,‘,‘,, ‘ I,I||| declares that neither honor nor the in-|in his letter before the American Bar as- - . - i i .| and they will be Carned nto puip and ¢ capitalist employer must assume A o rests 2l " Tt oela n 8 a as ate at | ev. Charles M. Sheldon of Topeka, ian siyks and bear all losses incident to the terests of l,llf.lillll will |~|{|5;| her to sr‘ fation in Saratoga ‘n was slated th. LOOTING IN CHINA. 011, ON TROUE “"E m!m:““{, ‘_\,’ 1dan of ‘-y', -l‘; |.'\ n 8 [ follow Russia’s example. This may |there were enacted in 1599 4,834 general and | - American coprespondent on. American it euterprise in which they are engaged. | oo ot to he the view of the govern local, special or private laws, making| Chicago Post: It o be hoped that | Nebraskn's Eforts to Open the Tankn | Gusirial affiire | Among other (hings e Four years ago, when commerce and | oy thare can be no doubt that | total (hardly entitled to be called a grand | the reports from Tien n are oxagger- | of the Sta It costs twice us much now to bufld 3 e No doub 8 t 9 1 o, "l »eir e house in Amer 1 'ive, as It did industry were prostrated, employers | | tetal) of 14,109 laws in the states alone. The | ated; that the purpose for which the treas Detroit Free Press (ind.) Rk By e BUtle were driven |‘,.4,I bankrupte .‘l\ fhia | the British cabinet is displeased With | proportion was as large fn 1900. “Here's a | ure was taken s misunderstood. The pic- | Real politicians must be getting some fun PR ALY r ey Becy b Ay e I‘ i 9 | the situation, although it may conclude |state of things." ture of the soldlers of the allied army [OUt Of the fact that the little gtate of Ne- | timber and stone and fron and mortar o brrldigy ']{‘ i, l'"l '“r‘ h ’l“' ¢ | that it s expedient to fall in with the | < giving themsclves up to looting and rob- | braska fs just now golng after the mam- ) ANV lest common than they sed Lo be. hit and while hundreds of thousands of |y piariean proposition, particu Good \qn.:l|-,:m-|-lmq\m,‘, bery is not an inspiring one, no matier | MOth ofl trust which could readily take o | gINER JCOUiE Hvenoas and this power to wageworkers were fdle and in want 0o e e should be aceepted by France | ¥ T ik At | what the circumstances may have boen. | feW weeks' earnings and buy the common ke wealth rapidly have combined fhelr ) “te - 0 Heonte | ac ¥ Irance | et us have a good and eficient navy, | : | wealth which has the honor of presenting | energles. They have sefzed upon the com products were turned out and no profits |y, las powsrta) st feast that of Germany, | Cleveland Plain Dealer: 1t s mot the| FO L Eh Chh 08 Mo auggestions of | Mon hecemsition of Hife—things which you shared. | Ly h i stt. o0 b | first lesson the Chinese have had that loot- | &1 o8 and 1 cannot live without und develop as Now tt ¢ \ | Obviously, if there was a secret alli-|but let us not go daft on war ship con- | Ut (B0, C0 CUame A Le e oar. | the situation enlarge when it is recalled | God wanis us to develop they hive saized .l‘v\\ that |.u.~|wl|||'.\ has be -uku ored | 4o or understanding between ”“,‘:n{urvl:m And :1- us n.;- l..wm.n.:;‘ care- | L8 o0 military accomplishment. Forty|'M8t Mr. Bryan is giving trusts the second | On thess common necesslis « nd then have ve ¢ to work has , s ul not to get hysterical because the war Y L ol lac & SRNIONAT tesiren €Ol thi 10w churged for thelr u h ey please and every man willing to work has an| y7piteq States and Englund our govern- | [21 B8¢ 10 Kot A B quired & tem. | YeArs ugo, when the French and British place in the national fssues and the eloquent | \yy i now costs twice ax much o bulld a opportutiity to eam faie wages, DI 18 | e ontd not linve Jolbed WIth Bus- | ools and I3 SEoults RAYe POguired & e | sitios occtipied Pukin, the vandai looting|¥eTAtor Thurstom is foreed by Mis pevtes- | humen dweling tn the Sta where 1 \ive ool mioney S retorn for Homest toik | I | perary fncrease of the army. 1f. however, | T | Sl ik kel 3| cional relations to defend the greatest|as it did eight years ago, simply on this B Bt b " t 8 ‘| sin in this extremely important matter, | seme of us must get excited on militarism, i ":“"’! ) pala -’ ‘mnu a ‘y-‘ tho | corsnder of them all | accof Al Bk W discontent for |y wpjen British interests are involved |let us avold proposing, as an antidote, a | FOUE SR EE (ERITECIE PRDGECE IR Bl No one conceives that any great result SAID N FUNL the sake of politicnl glory and office i (o Souet B0 etent than those | coreer of unlimited naval expansion that [ ¥OUI 4D with the burning of the summier | ()% gro trom'the investigation now belng to be deprecated, if not denounced. 1t | ool G Without first eon. | WOUld cost billions of dollars and employ palace by order of the British commANcer. { ;,oyeqyted. Even should Nebrasks succeed | Indlanapolls Journal: “Well, that's going Mr. Bryan really desired to mprove the | oy % (er BAWES it |a great army of sailors and marines | Baltimore Sun: 1t ts a noteworthy tact | fn®anott, i Shutting out the company | * Ml {92 far condition of workingmen he would desist sulting England. It would have been a | that during all this wholesale robbery by | ne jatter would not go into liquidation or [ “Why, Jook at Jacky Jones. with pearl 3 ; i et 10 b | hound by such an alliance to ascertain Mahom en Mountatu. white woldiers the Japanese, whose adop: | .ok for the appointment of a receiver. | Dlacauet pins down the back ‘of his shirt rom advocating policies that would be | oo ws of the British government re. ew York Tribune | tion of western world methods is of & com- | Thary would remain more than enough to | WaIst: disastrous to thew, as well a8 o the | o vin ' tho Russiun proposition before | 1t Was the faith of Mahomet Bryan that | paratively recent date, held aloof from e, " whole pack of wolves from the| Chicago R Thase two Boardern whole country, and he would rvejoice | o0 e fon, But thls was niot dot the mountain would come to him, and a| participation. Troops of the Mikado, whose | ;... nearly came to blows in the dining room with them at the marked Improvement | ““ . Tound 1 ;[ O1C. | haj¢ qere platform was bullt 1 extension of [ training was largely under European and |™'X(\oqy nas yet discovered a legal way of [ L.avhat auteted them =" S ey e administration found the Russian | pis qomestic porch to give welcome to that | American officers, watched the disgrace- |, i 3 = andlady sarv e peach cobble o ol col on e Xl o + . "¢ Npes . getting rid of trusts, Several conventions f their condition and the unexampled | \oGvion in the muin satisfactory, be-|expected visitor. But the mountain won't|ful plundering counived at by men who |puco™ioilt with the subject, but their| Juige: Little Eimer—Papa, what's a prosperity they are enjoying canse in essential respects in harmony | come. Only two or three small delegations I\.n.-l Ilu-vn hl;mu:ln up In the very same | gejiberations were remarkable for divisions | stock companst ol 4 R V6 sbpented. aud g s o pif preceptors, eir re rof \dhead—A stock company, my . [ with the declared policy of the United |8ve anpeared and no more are ln sight; | SECOBIE B8 Pae e BeeCemionh, e shelr re-lof opinions and a miserable paucity of | oy usunlly a small body of men entirely STILL RANKS COMMERCIAL RIVALS. | guites and » ’ 8 Mr. Bryan, therefore, like the prophet of | epect for the recognized rules of warfare | angipje results. The whole tendency of [ surrounded by water States, and it promptly assured Rus 18 tom sarch the | restrained their greed for loot While Omaha has doubtless been d la of CLERALEL e G UL il | current business methods is toward com- hile Omaha doubtless been diam- | sja of this without the slightest con-| ynmoving upland—in other words, he will| Philadelphia North American: At Pekin|pination. Labor fights against the com- '1‘)";-';‘ i x“" 'vlr yes. 1 have P w ¢ 8 P Cens| X [deratiol s to whe 3 ritis oV o a o mpl ours D e same Scenes o ory o o \ » & o8 i} agmire hin b PR, aged by the slump in the census exhibit, | sideration as to what the British gov- | continue and extend his stumping tours up | the same scenes of savagery have been re- | petition of low wages and producing capital | "Grd ! Sou ‘don't mean 1t Wh its rank and importance, us retiected |ernment might think or desire. In this, o the election, leaving his home platform | peated. ouly in a loss degree of ferocity, |against the competition of low prices. The [ his volce it uiful by its bank clearings, will compure fa-| as in every other step the administra. | Untenanted. Like his other one, it was bullt | but not of greed. The dispatches say that | motives with each are identical. Even the [ He It isn't his xinging 1 admire, it's hie vorably with commercial rivals tion has taken fn regard to existing af-| ' the.eclipse and stauds only for a waste [ millions of taels in silver have been seized | farmers have made movements aiming at | ™" Al . ’ : 8 AT ot (imber as booty by the triumphant allies, al-|combination Pittsburg Cl “The s 4 6 g Oty | MRt (T i binatio sburg Chronjcle The fighting is While Minn .umvln« unl_l Kansas City | falrs in China, the course adopted was | - though it was announced that arrange- While these consolidations of kindred in- [over in China and the work of the diplo have undisputed right of way ahead of | absolutely independent of British in v e of Good Falth, | ments had been made to police the city. | terests antagonize each other and would | Mats gun,’ sald the Observant Omaha, halt a dozen cities of much | uence, [ Philadeilphia Ledger e | “The looting at Pekin proceeds _indus- | 1ike to neutralize (he forces against which | ““Triie.” added the Cross-ved Foarder: r population are behind Omaha In| It any evidence were nesded to demon- | Fresident McKinley's response 10 (A€ | triously and openly,” a correspondent ca: | they are fighting, they are not prepared to | “0: Chin Chin now assumes direction T | 'y invitation of the peace congress to appoint | plos Be it said to the eternal homor of | : of affairs the matter of bank clearings. For ex- | strate the utter groundlessness of the | members of an International Board of Ar- | % . or advocate oxtermination. for that would AETE TebOHAHLIR WINIU T o WIAAIEN | BEYRAITe EUAYEA. oF 0 NEARAE ILIARGE TUG | BIEAH o RRNEENAT oL ANANE (OURIEWO 1106 | Gtkery o abhte etae that while the|mean self-destruction. It is doubtless be- | waahingto: Star: “That raconteur is stiil ke ;|25 ; L ane A officers of every other nation ignore the | cause of this, rather than the moral in- | telling those old stories,” remarked the over 200,000, shows bank clearings only | tween Great Britain and the United | ing ex-presidents to accept the first tWo | roprossive order the conduct of our sol- | tegr 7} 5 m o | voung man gloomily. “I am afraid that he | kit ity i tegrity of their position, that many of th g man gloomily, one-fourth as large Omaha. Mil- | States, certainly none could be more |Places in the American membership Of | gjers fs beyond criticism. Their highest | shrewdest labor leaders say that trusts are | ' £5ttnE fnto Iaw dotage s i [ 287, such a board. He could mot do more to| prajge is ‘Oh, no,”" answered Miss Cayenne; “not waukee, with a population of 287.000, i8 | complete and conclugive than s fur- [ghed & BOSTH H8 CHUE B STl With | Bre trels snarention® “11ie® ridicule them | a good thing, for organized labor is only a|so bad as that; merely his anecdotage.” " N | show he sinc §00d 'or their abstention e I o o oy P more thun $500,000 behind Owaha in its | gished in the correspondence between | which our government accepts the scheme ombination to destroy competition. clearings | than those And Buffalo, 10,000, clearings last week. The of St. Paul are 2,000,000 1 of Omaba for the we with a population of more than falls $£1,000,000 short of Omal ings; Denver, with a census population | 30,000 more than Omaha, is 45 per cent | behind Omaha in the weekly clearings table. Thes figures representing the commer | chagrin v England this government and which has caused so g that of Russia, st surprise and as to cause the leading newspapers to urge a combina- tion of European powers in opposition to the Russiau-Awmerican policy, while the British cabinet hesitates to declare its attitude. Thus another false as sumption of the Bryanite party is dis posed of, but it is not to be expected of universal arbitration and endorses the | proposal for a general maintenance of | peace than to appoint the foremost cit- | | izens of this republic as its representa- tives In the Bddy established for that pur- pose. So far‘ms the United States is con | cerned its sceptance of the call for peace s both hearty and practica WANING WAR IN AFRICA, Methods of the British in Subjugating RUSSIA'S PEACE PROPOSALS, Detroit Free Press: There is nothing #0 dangerous fu connection with the Chi; situation as the jealousies and suspic of the old world powers. It each believed Able lawyers and judges have repeatedly sald that the Sherman anti-trust law of | ten years ago was as effective as could be passed under our existing constitution, yet trusts have thrived and multiplied under it. The scope of the law covers the utmost authority of congress in the premises, yet else nese ions, the others honestly intent upon doing the | where a trust is not actually engaged in fair thing we would soon have the ancient | the carrying of interstate or foreign com- empire moving along under improved | merce it has not been reached under this Chicago Chronicle As nearly as can be law. The Sugar trust, the Live Stock exchange, the Kansas City Addyston -Pipe | i methods. | | Detrolt J “We are an intensely rnal: practical pe " wald the Briton. “We waste no time (rving to gild the gold re- as the saying s “No, you simply copper it!” sald we, sarcastically Even If the fellow did not understand our American provinclalism, he ‘must have gathered from our manier that We were rebuking his sordid materialism ACROSS THE RUBICON, Denver Post i€ 10 her side the cowboy sat And twirled his weather-beuten hat < Al General Roberts has issued his procla- | clal activity of various business centers| that it will make acknowledgment of the Boers, £inde. oub ml; i '\:\‘:’“ ?‘.Il"h rhl\:]“ ‘\ll::‘:r.“!’.h:n:r':l‘r:;r :»:‘I:‘):l*h"l‘;n‘;\|”;:;“r(P::;|:‘|':‘ A desprate look lurked in his eves mation formally annexing the Trans. |are scanned closely by investors and cap-| ji. On the contrary, it is safe to say Washington Post 1 w‘:l,':ll:d 1:.l:m:":\m:|‘;'l? .,.-u;.:.km:; l;‘mlrrv‘. through without a mark. | Hix breast was well supplied with sighs! vaal to the queen's domain, Up to the | itallsts and form one basis of their esti-| that with its usual unscrupulous disre | :' \m"":g"_'_": l"‘”“':m"‘ h:fl\‘ oo | body should withdraw from Pekin. It is| S0 far as anything has been done 10| Anon he'd choke at something ripe present, however, he lLias been unable |Wate of the relative commercial im-|gurd of facts and its wanton perver- | \Fi® [hat € 2 scarcely to be wondered at that this propo- | 40wn the obnoxlous combinations it has| In his csophagusian pipe; past been resorting to methods of subju- to secure personal service on I’ Kruger. rsident Prosperity stories cover Nebraxka al most as thickly as the cornfields. Nearly every citizen in the state can make a prosperity story out of his experience of cities, and Omaha cau well challenge comparison on those portanc afford t lines, Mr. Bryan has not yet answered the question whether or not, it president, he | slon of every act of the republican ad ministration it will contiune to apj to the prejudice of a portion of the people by alleging au Anglo-American alliance. Bryan could not resist the temptation gating the Hoers which stamp the South African campeign as ene of the most fe- rocious in the annals of war. Unable with men to force the 8000 or 10,000 | 230,000 sietance, Lord Roberts is putting into ef fect methods of striking terror which are of of Geronimo Boers sull remaining to give up their re- sition excites great indignation from Kaiser, whose operations in the victnit Kiao Chou, theugh the: |are by no means near it is a sad, selfish world | New York Tribune completion promise favorably, It is well to bear in been accomplished by individual states and even they have little better than an empty verdict that cannot be enforced. legislation of the most stringent charncter can alone make any headway against the combines and they carefully see to it that there is no such unifermity. It is good to der y ot But Uniform | mind, moreover, that while the publication of this proposal may come us a surprige to see Nebraska play t he part of David Would swallow it ] but back ‘twould came, that old cat of fabled fame! He'd nometime thought ‘twas biliou That caused him such acute distr But all the patent remedies Falled to afford him longed-for ease, Hence did he know 'twas passion desp little short the savagery and Sitting Bull. The recent shooting of Lieutenant Hens Cordue at Pretorla was against our modern Gollath, but scriptural | history {s mot to be repeated in this in- stance. Yet it i a time to keep the sub- ject before the people—and Nebraska has a candidate who could wreck the trusts it That robbed him of his wonted sieep during the four years that MeKinley has leen president. A fleet of would direct the payment in silver of | to inject politics into his labor day obligations payable in coln. In his speech | speech at Chicago. Governor Roosevelt, at South Bend, Ind., he said that he|on the other hand, Kept clear of every Lad never had one moment’s doubt about | thing which could be construed as par- many, the text of the memorandum shows clearly that it Is not the result of sudden simple murder. The evidence on which he | impulse, but of deliberato judgment, and wae convieted would not have been con- | that, moreover, it is intended to be acted | upon, 1 at all, with the agreement and co- | he ranch girl let him take her hii | In hope it might increase his sand She also sighed, and tried to look Like popees of the novel book. Inglish war ships is now off 3 v Mha i ey 5 o Mba Leotibia s : ' | sidered in any court of justice. The con- | fervid denunciation could accomplish such the New England coast, but Roston |the correctness of the position taken | tisan. The trouble with Bryan i that | {0008 B G Sing murder the | operation of the other powers, and only at | () s e meed not be alarmed. The ships are on [ by the Kansas City plattorm on the | Le has only one remedy for all the ills | woiy omeers appears to have been mere | such time as may be deemed expedient by o A The speech that soon would quit his head. A friendly visit and the United States | money question and added: “Now 1[of life—the Kansas City platform. As|pciion on the part of Roberts' partisans to | those best qualified to judge of that mat- DRAMATIO SCENE AT PEKIN. e i S S squadron is on hand to see that good | find the vepublican party declaving the | the majority of the people refuse to take |bolster up his waning popularity. The con- | ter. It is emphatically no order to scuttle, Meslinb ot e aan e S To clear his throat of gathered phlesm order Is maintained | sitver question the paramount issue of | the prescription, even at cut rate prices, [ception of the plot in itself, if it ever had | _\\mnn:mn Post: The lm ord -;‘v ::.» A Rtiasad kb ths Hand he'd Sassawhe il the campaign and some of them are |t might be better to try & new nostrum | £Ven & ":’"',“:‘“‘y‘. "‘r“"‘l"‘l‘:x',l"‘;"_‘:;":‘l"”:’r‘“:""‘('_:_’ | nl::;:.«l.- '_‘r“.:‘I: “‘:‘" ‘I“:"::"h'l_"“‘l_:'_'d w'm’; Star. She cried protestingly: “'Oh, B! 1t was cabled all the way from Europe | xaying that & democratic president could | if he wishes to stay in the trade, AL M A e e have Blaved o pay e in |, Yhen the logations at Pekin were relieved | Then looked up in her liauia oves [} v 81 vears . ¢ posSiith el (AR AN Y ) Y aftel s et y rd, | A v er bunched r sighs! that & boy 315 years of age has been | ruin the country, no matter it he did not ‘A recent Pretoria dispatch in the London | the Orlent. In the march upon Pekin and |{{to :.:;i“fi,."'m'}".",.“"k:'.’if' r'lm :.fll:u' A D t unearthed In Paris who fs 0 verituble | have a congress or u senate to agree| Here is a sample heading from the | siindard says [ the rescue of the besieged Americans our |yt oAt \F AFRITE KECRY CUEIDCE SO | Then hung his head fu thoughiful way— ( musical prodigy. The boy prodigy from | with him. The republicans have heen [ Nebraska popocratic organ: “Kansas| “The Boers sniped a (rain at Bronkhurst | brave little army under Chaftes has gal- | o (OiC0Y |10 the British :nmlm""d 1:“) He couldn’t think just what o say s Nebraska who makes chin musie will| in power four years and have had un. | Popullsts—Fifty Thousand of Them As.|yesterday, on the line between Pretoria and | Iantly upheld tho country's glory. MOF¢ | yworo met by Sir Claude MacDonald, the | §1e lonked to spur him with a hope. v i P Middleburg. Two of its occupants were |than this, the handling of delicate inter- _ i But thought it best to give him rope bave to look to his laurels. limited control of legislation, and 1 can- | semble to Hear Bryan Accept the Pop-|* (e O danoe with Lord Roberts’ | nationsl questions {nvoived in the invasion British minister, in immaculate tennis flan- , not believe that they have loft the law | ulist Nomination at Topeku.” Further | Wemtted: (& RarE N red within | has thus far reflected the highest credit |y "9 Y a0 assemblage of gaily drossed Qi drtven stoors and know i€ they | Wageworkers can afford to take a day | so that # democratic president could | down in the text, however, we find the | i of ten miles.” upon the nation. American diplomacy has | b o o' it 48 1 & ":,‘,’,fw'"";::,':"n' i B R oft for Labor Day this year, whoreas | ruin the country in a single month.” | following: “Bryan's matchless oratory | News like this is flashed over the wires | been condueted with admirable tnct and f pifRee FRRREE (B0 G0N, 0N B e | Determined khe'd allow him tme four years ago they had so many days| ‘his is.simply evasion. It does not |filled the 50,000 listening ears, and 50,000 | with painful frequency. Even some of the | kil It has been signally successtul- | for some time was it noted how pale and | A yuer i timid wav he placed b of enforced idleness that they were only | meet the question as fo whether or not | hands alded 25,000 voices in applauding |less fanatical English papers are growing We may, therefore, reasonably put ab|emaciated the besieged were, and how like | A eircling arm around her walst 4 ¥ | maet the question et | b i ¢ such wets of barbarism and |abiding faith in the wisdom of the negotia- L too glad to work when employment of- | are, Bryan would attempt to take the | him” Why not apply the sacred ratio "r" "l‘ H’r"‘h“'”*“‘l‘ ’ "' r;“ ":']‘“ };‘,:y:kv ;'('"w B dstwhy a :ru!mmn- of nl\.ah‘h they sceme s S P CRIB S e ' ather it br s | A . . fin are asking ere 18 not some e. | tions dor wa he relief of a besieged city is usually | § AL, Ot GUaN O o1 fered, whether on holidays or week [ country off the gold standard by payi | of 16 to 1 in expanding the erowds, |5 o 0 poers fired at a military train, 2 (TRt E Foan & A eataaulxr alaudbnin: hen did he hope he had her cinched ' government obligations colling for [ “FFor Bryan's sake.” perfectly within their rights as warriors, SONAL POINTERS, When men have heen long shut up in a| He drew her closer (1l her head ) ———— " o " 1 " . (] Down on hig bosom went to bed! colu” in silver. The secretary of the| e—— {and every m house within ten miles in mine, when they have eaten every scrap tucky democrats propose to rve-| o s clenrdy and conclusively | Spaniards in Mexico subseribed lber- | every direction is burned to the ground. The Cuban teachers are now Viewing | that could be used for food and lap R e it yahehats D ALk peal the Goebel election law hecause it} o "0 0 (i could be don e | ally to make up the deficiency in Span-| This is not civillzed war but the act of | Havana in the light of their American ex-|tho water from es in the rocks, when | And she responded: “You fes’ bet! ( is unpopular. The bill prepared to take | 3 4 Chick dra te e % of | an Atilla. And yet this is only a trifie in| perience. A A e R R TR o it it its :» 2 indicates lIm:w\ v that | B8 polnted out prhat classes of obliga- | 1ah war sbips s 0 the ope f“”" s chapter of horrars which this remark Wonderfontein should be made General | ing and wetching for help, they do not cheer That sainng ,'.mlly:‘r,-:mg':ut:n'f,lf,'i biiss! J tions wight be paid in silver, My, Bryan | the United States navy, The n L L O e i Bl e LR LSl el Bl sl pai Bl e P b e o en- g0 is | Buller's permanent headqua ntrance of the relief party. The en democracy proposes to retain its grip on does not say that e would not pay | register shows no new ships and now | s not told by the Euglish correspondents | constant source of surprise to the whole | thusiasm must come from the R et e un.llw-lfl I””“'n' hungr “{w-h)p"k'h’. i the election machinery of the state just © ihe wovern. | the donors want to know what has be- | and rcaches the outside world through con- | worid g prrphas o Hesousn That _flick 1o lamp an pped . out sily at the option of the govern- | the don | | worla as at Ladysmith. The beleaguered garri lock { 85 frm AN IE dpped ment for those obligations, but evasively [ come of their money. The democratic | tinental European channels—the fact that| ) e the sixty years that Judge Reagan | #on scemed 1o look on the advance guard of | | 0L ure ehromos fair i . e t12t i cunnab bolleva the re- | collsctars o the Bogy vollaf fund might| 88s¥ly & thousend helpless Women and | o Craxas has been in public fife he has kept [ Buller's expoditlon s intruders. Their | {1 R e loving B A Pennsylvania firm i starting in to | "R b explain how such funds are disposed of children hi been turned out of house and | Ly e T je now as a fine ranch of 800 | hearts had grown sick with hope long de- manntacture artificlal itk which it as. | PUblleans left the ki seo (bt o s | SEEEE T t home by General Roberts' orders and told [ /8 I8 U o e o derson county, toferred. When, finally, the army that had | Sat wrapped in hug (il hreak ol day . evare ¢ ¢ e . ' S + CXPONSE ACCO Mooy 80 are | CTe8 ned G X b ¢ “ame 1% them 1o hrea » : cratic president could ruin the conntry | under the expense accoun to 1 the couniry. Many of theso are| & Betr o e e surronders his | been to long in coming marched In review | C4M® W4 ts is perfectly harmless and just as [ ©°' A A S AN | ‘ § which he will retire when | e » . 3 WSU AR @ single month.” This is quite char | the wives and little ones of deported | oae of raflroad commissioner hrough the streets of the city, the people | good as that offered by the family cow. | 0o e Sonoertie candidate, One feature of the musical festival not | Boer prisoners, of whom there are 4,000 in| T000 (500 T (0Ll T agal depart- | OB the sidewalke watched It curiously in sl 1t endorsements of its sunitary quality | 7 ar Biataatl nd oo | entively understood is thut which prom: | St. Helena and 3,000 in Ceylon. Others be- | | (BUeC SR TR R GC, Floiiom naw de- | lence. There was not a cheer until colonel ( are wanted, Omaha offers the services of [ A Bryunite administration and con e aqralage s the Duclous | 108K to the patriots still Aghtiog in the | Bent of & & e hevoming | #tarted one as his regiment passed before Your eves s police judge. gress could not ruin the country in a [ ises the surplus earnings o | ratiks of Generals Botha and DeWat, Their|¢ided that a man iy e | the commander of the town, General White 148 poHio Juaps month or & year, but it could do an iw- | for an auditorium fund. I¥ the prospects| ooy \wag guaranteed by Roberts in his | hirt "‘""‘\‘ '")’" Tie “”'" "';;"h "',:I‘:'.'r“""; At Pekin the siege had lasted not quite two ” o I ‘hix | for the enterprise Lold good this fund| peocjamation. Their fate s ten times| WomeN At e same Fme TL ¢ O | months and the buoyancy of hope had not ' Republicans of Donglas county must | Measurabl ':“l""":,l”“ ‘l":;'\"‘”", ”::‘ ought to start with @ neat sum which | hirder than that of the foreigners who |the N Hensl Assesiation ot ¥ire:}nsup ";"“\"r\“kl\- A R i must Iast country eannot he striully and cof i | i 8 P waukee called the meeting to o e e 18 I ¢ e not allow themselves fo be diverted by | COUBIEY canio’ Be 0CHS FIES HES CERE COUi oncourage our people to increase | were ordered out of the Transvaal by the | Agents at Milwaukes called the meetnE 49| 1o "and women there of more enthuslaatic sldé shows from the main fssue fn the | Mevcally vuined, et Al ROW B ERE TG g 60 anal consummmation the | British, who at least may return to thele | Q1R 32 Tetorm orses Atesd emperament than the self-contained Eng- | | : g primary. The Issue is: *Who [harm cau be done, what disaster can he il | native countrier. The Boer women and | 'ho IS 1O lish. 1t was an American marine who sLouted 4!1“:‘“:;‘I':n“;"“'\\.uul|“|lu :w.rl:u |In;rt.r‘|‘::l\: wronght by democratic policies, Neven | long-planned auditorium, | hildren re told to quit thelr homes on| Pudd'nhead Wilson bad & theor; that| G major general, “You are fust in time; or vears. | does (he part MupRarted DY [0 s thare - wis -6 feinookatic ad e | the ien that thelr care is @ hardship to|every man has bis pecullar and individual | 5 RS O BEATAL LEICLE, Sgn o L e the legislative delegation for United | YOAUs s A |v| ; The United States of Colombia has | (he British army. Where shall they go?|thumb-mark. This theory is being put tof o e B stratio ¢ ngress you | sh | / 8 LHSORVC IA il b k could neve ome from To s . States seuntor?” 'The only way the ;'”}" by ““ B ""I A e iy | Just finished up the job of suppressing | Bereft of thelr protectors, and with their | lest ont o lowi where: the exprest | GG "*'G0 1 Pekin the rencued shook the I'o do this they must be wonce o o effective efore it came into power the col ¥ 3 iama g 8 to the hands of this | authorities are trying to find out who stole [ ' preference can be made effective is by o W rebellion of more than usual magni- | homes falling as loot in hands of the rescuers and the missionaries 5 Pin sjoyed a high degree of prospe o G 0] Lt 4 s §20,000 from a package on the road from Ay are 0! OWwW. reglstering it for delegates to the county | eujoyed o Nixh degree of Jga :“\ “”‘ tude and while it hs its haud in the | chivalrous English afmy of: baseansern | B 11200 A AAKIRR 18 (L8 SR AT | gaihering about the bell tower kank, “Praise properly cared for NOW " COrt » PO Austries were active aud abor wel by S they must turn their faces to the African hicago to u RIC 6 2l God fro hos al! lessings flo: . N . SRRYRRHDE tararaWp o e sopdilinte nl\“l'v|1| ‘\ml 4 tarif law was enacted | NEDUNE game proposes to engage In i yygergess or appeal to the generosity of | fmprint of his thumb on the package, and rom whom sll blesslnge, flow Our examinationsare scien- desived. b sy 4 4 § | limited round contest with Venezgeln. | ihe Kamr tribes fy man who is Liown o hase nat the | gauo0l OF MARINE MONSTERS B i ! which reversed these conditions, 1t : ] the Kaffir tribe o T T P e P tific and entirely free— h ) "of atroo Wars are the fad at present aud South [ Yet there s no evidence of yielding on | package 1o hand h \ requ give | =™ U g 0| g ) ) ! » dustrial stagnation and e 2 {up mpression o I3 umb ax. | . The stories of atrocities committed by | brought about industrial stagnution and | G0 05 000 ford to be heliud at|the part of the Boers. Everything else | up an impression of thix thumb in v | six arear amerioan mactesnios sn || Factory on the premises the allles, and particularly by the Rus- | created a great army of idle labor. This |« gl T e taited, 1ord Roberts not long ago| overal descendants of the poot Longfel it Amapiean Battleshine tory TH sians, in China, it true are certainly no | country was not ruined, but the injury | I8 own zan opened negotiations with Botha and other |low have been enjoying the hospitality of the 8 VR SRE-WARRY % i " 0 Y0 - eaders o Boer cause—fc all— | OJibway Indjans away up at Desbarata, Ont cins o credit to the white soldiers and it is to | suffered by all interests was heyoud . leaders of the Boer cause in 0j | 3 A 2 LAt A The Open Back Boor offering them princely brives to lay down | These Indians are doscendants of the Saga- | FAR HARBOR, Me.. Sept. 8.—Tie United be hoped they will prove untrue or|computation. Hud that not been a sound Philadelphia Ledger thelr arms. Botha was assured of geper-|mor S:turesquel treated in tes beitleships Texas, Indiana, M b oxaggerated. 1n refraining from loot- | money administration the disaster| Russia may lead the allies out of COINE | o "\ pogiment 1t ho would surrender. The|“Hiawatha. Miss Longfellow, the poet's | goita, Kearsarge and Kentucky arrived here “ teson &Co and unealled-for assaults upon non- [ would have been infinitely wor hut it is in & position (o #lip in AEMB ditions were that he should not be|daughter, hus been formally adopted in\o the | 4 lock today and anchors two co A ll . ha : | botls | through the back door conditi g 2 P bt oty P ! combatants the United States and Japa- The Bryanite party stands for both R taken out of South Africa and receive a|tribe A select corps of chiefs, braves oo west of the flagship New York nese forces have laid the foundation of | war on the policy of protection to Amer \ Pertinent Question, pension of £10,000 a year from the Britisi [ squaws and papooses gave in presence of m-; o — s Manufacturing Opticians ’ ) o stries abor and unsound Cleveland Plain Dealer. government. Similar propositions were | visitors and heneath the primeval trees of | New nor Man 3 future good will of China, but in alcan industries and m’_‘:‘ ;"d OURM |\ ritor in an eastern journal remarks | made to others. It is one of the brightest | Desharatas islands & dramatization of the| WINNIPEG, Man., Sept. 3 —Hon. Colonel 1520 Douglas St. Omaha. measure all countries must suffer from | money. It wouid reduce the opportun that the late Collis P. Huntington was old | tributes to the partriotism of the Boer|famous poem he performers were garbed [ McMilzn has been appointed to suce 4 5 8 the prejudices the excesses of the Rus- | ties for labor and puy the wage-earners | " o yever had any real boyhood, in|leaders that these offers were scornfully |in buckekin costumes, with headdresses of Patterson as licutenant governor of Factory on the Premises. slans are bound to create, in depreciated dollars, This would uot | et It was all drudging with bim to the | rejected, teathers, province. {

Other pages from this issue: