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IHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JANUARY 27 | an ' ( " i T P— ol ver ; X i " . « WS oy e . s | ARE EDUCATIONAL ENDOWMENTS | the contest for the commercial empire | legislative and judicial powers is not %o | president, but regquiring a grant of au ESTIMATES 0F SUCCr " Frow 'E OMAHA SUNDAY BEE HARMEUL? of the world strongly drawn fn Great Britain as it is | thority from congress Sk ¥. ROBEWATER, Editor, et A< a result of the popular discussion | Sych are the cogent and conclusive | in the United States, The crown has | Altogether the report of the Philippine | growing out of the recent foroed resig- | rensons presented in support of the | the exclustve power of declaring and | commission Is reassuring and the logis | R Tribune n| e who takes all he can get often gets PUBLIRHED EVERY MORNING, | nation of several university professors|proposition to make all forms of the | making war and of maintalning foreign [ lation It recommends congress should :‘.:','fv Ly ok .r‘h'-’\:I:l;.I(‘v.-“. bkt U BBORIDTION | beenuse of incendlary or socialistic ut-| currency interchangeable and such leg- | relations: it has exclusive power to sum- | promptly provide 1o 6 B best (% o, Sebed & wmaviet of | . YOO Will 1oL n less your home Daily Bee (with, " year.$8.00 | terances in the class room, the char islation being clearly desirable it ghonld [ mon and prorogue Parliament, to dis- | S ——— . prominent ma Af h graduation from iking hon Daily 1ie 18 . Nas heen esplicitly made by a prominent | he enacted at onee, Delay s needloss | golve the House of Commons, to Initiate | Our amiable popocratic contempo college he married and cngaged in a eall-| The New Year will be the old one i lustrated Hee, Or A 2 | Bunday Bee, On ar Chieag ergyman that all educational | gnd might prove dangerous. legislation and to veto, absolutely, legis- | puts in o good-humored word for F Ing that meant a life of constant drudgery [ there be not a renewed man to live it “.m;“l;‘, ”v ie, Ong Yedr endowments are positively harmful. He ————— lative mensures passed by Parlinment. | Late Young of Des Moines for governor | 07 @ slender salary. But he did his work [ * There fs much difference botween being ekly Bee, One Year tiserienes OFFICES is quoted as saying AN INFLUENCE FOR PEACE The veto has a politieal check In the [of the great state of Towa and Nt | puey with the dutics that came ench day (0 "Xv‘ g bitewashed Omaha: The Bes Bullding, = oo | The endowments given by private In The general feeling appears to be that | election of a new legislature and could | mates that political managers ave unable [ his hand to think of finding an occupation o o outh Omaha; City Hall Bullding, | dividuals lend color to the prevalent sus- | (o fnfluence of Great Britain's new | not be safely persisted in over the will|to realize the right of an editor to|that would bring a larger return of for Council Blifts; 10 Pearl Street. | pictons that the mighty Interests of poll- | \yyne il be directed to the preserva- | of the people thus expressed. The | political ambitions because they think | “hicago. 16 nity Bullding tics and vested property rights may come | 3 New York: Temple Court. o | to exercise an autocratic influence over our | 1100 | M . | Washi, 4-.4-.»'.’\-';»“:1':}‘\' - | colleges and universities—an influence as | Of course, no foundation for the report and of the established church and the | clans into office. The same sentiment Communt e ting 1o news and edl- | deadly to the ideals of modern education | that Emperor William and King Edwa (| source of the appointing power. In ad- | applies with equal logic to the Nobraska | ; - torial matter should be addressed: Omaha | and the demands of citizenship as was ever | had made a solemn compact to preserve | dition to the pardoning power it still has | senatorfal contest, but of course the |make them g true and pure in all re- WHERE MEN SHOULD SHINE. Bee, Editorial Department | exercised by priest or king in former times. [ o T 0 C T 4 sngland, | some residuary judicial powers, which, | popocratic organ e b eXD® o | #pects, worthy to be the mothers of noble BUSINESS LETTF 11 | How far circumstances, perhaps not known | P between Germany and England, | #o! T Y PRROSPALC DIBIN CAtitiot De cxpected O]y g0 es w sitteen ud & neighbor Ne attred Business letters and remittances should fons | DUt nODE the less there Is every reason | however, are seldom exercised see it as long as the republicans con- | according to a woman lecturer, is need e e e Hea Publishing Com- |to the general public in the J 4 . 1 | SH.ERYS & cofclutics yoid of e T8 3 Doy Oang T e P 4 mentioned. would | modify such sus- | to believe that 1t is the earnest desive [ While theoretically and coustitution- | trol the situation all men. He was honest, upright, truthtul | 1688 “No &reater wrong has been done REMITTANCES, | picions, one cannot & but the sus 5.-! both to maintain and strengthen | ally the reigning monarch of Brit- | ————— and kindly to man,” she says, “than not tcaching him and all in such a quiet, matter Remit by draft, express or postal ofder | picion is abroad that ~we cannot| friondship between the two nations. The | ain can act without let or hindrance in | Having failed to stampede the army | 9F-fact way that hardly anyone ever noticed | (& €% = Al LA L altogether trust our institutions of learning K. hat's why smokes so much, Now S iblishing Company Omaha or Eastern exchanges, not acc wealth and political centers have come to | Erief at the death of his grandmother | every official act s directed by, if not f been working up a big scare in Indian | hag 1o o s he did, and the world was | think of the difference THE BEE PUBLISHI | stifte free thought and teaching in our | and the personal relations between him | executed through, the cabinet, which 18 | Territory have decided to tell the truth | right in thus thinking. So he died, and | Cleveland Plain Dealer: What woman, to R T o L ULATION colleges and his uncle, King Edward, have al-| responsible, politically, not to the crown, [ and it develops that army officers had | outside of bis family ar 11 fow riends hiy | oy -;..mm._; of the men, would really delight Btats ot M hraske, Dougias County, Bt his critic goes on to say that such an | ways been of the most cordial charac- | but to the representatives of the people [ the matter sized up correctly and nlm.vh».(h was an unnoticed Incident Dead? [ In the sight of her husband, or som, or pava that the actinl number of full and [ domain of education, if true, is a crime | also been upon terms of strong personal | new king could no more ignore the de- | suftictent to qu s The | with bis big family and no salary to speak | the club woman would be glad to know il ot e ik the | Against socfety, the destruction of so- | friendship with Emperor Nichiolas of | ¢lsions of his cabinet than the American | fndians have bad too many los- [ O£ In a similar vein was the comment | that her liege lord was thus safely occu month of December, 1000, was as follow cial obligation, and that it would be | Russia and the czarina Is a sister of the | president could proceed In disregard of | sons to be drawn into an open conflet | 0f his old chum, a man who has become [ pled duriug her absence. Club women 27,780 :7 27 7::: Netter to have no colleges at all in queen consort. Thus close family ties | the constitution or the interpretations | with Uncle 8am, especially in a country W ieo, 10| democratic nation than colleges which | connect the thrones of Great Britain, [ put upon that instrument by the|as ensily accessible as Indian Territory. | common unknown drudge after his brilliant | might be the nest bost altornative 20..000aies 10 [are bought by endowments, subsidized | Germany and Russia, and this relation- | supreme court. Not that there is likely eEm——— promise in college. He could have been | Baltimore New In addition to sewing alth and made the bond-servants | ship can hardly fail to have a more or [to be any conteution over the limits | Li Hung Chang Is blossoming out as |one of the biggest men in the country. Worth | there fs 1o apparent feason why (he me 1 fow private interests, less potent influence upon the political | within which he is confined, because | a humorist in his old age. Asked when | milllons, if he had only wanted to."" | should not also be taught to crochet. The Such talk from a clergyman, who is | relations of those powers, the new king understands perfectly the | the emperor would return to Pekin he | HO¥ fHedientiy 1t bappeus that men ace | latent artistic wste of many of them 25040 | probably drawing a salary from an en-| As to the other contmental powers, | position he occupies, but as British sov- | replied that the emperor could not think | thume ‘sueseives o' st et o vy [ MIEB 0 this way be developed to a de o| dowed chureh and living on the dona- | only with one of them, France, is there | erelgn he Is 8o more fo uame than in|of disturbiug his guest, General von | clear-visloned people nnd doubiless 1 may | Sadicion th the rowieraty oo a0 the tions of wealthy parishioners, almost an- | any danger of Great Britain having a | fact. Waldersee, who was now occupying the | things we are. - But when 1t is a question of | would help to make home happy and do. swers itself. While to most people the | serious misunderstanding and this dan e royal palace. Aside from the jest|What really is success in life the popular | megtic life a fairer dream of bliss. The fdeal educational system is one main- | ger is doubtless remote. The French BUSINESS AND BUILDING there 1 the ntimation that the quickest | J106ment 1s more Iikely o be wronk (han | man who embroliers imstead of smoking tained and supported by public funds, | people entertaln a bearty hatred of | 10 connection with the existing bus- | way to restore the old conditions in | Americans identity success with mones. | 1€ CYENIDE away might also serve to solve from the kindergarten through the | England, as was congplenously shown in | iness activity in Omaha there has arisen | China is for the soldiery of the |u|\\x-|‘.~; making is not wholly tru But they I\\:ny:‘.‘nzy‘i.’ |‘ 1 LY . Less unsold and returned coplen grade and high schools to the colleges| the utterances of most of the Paris|# demand for better quarters for instl- | to leave Pekin, as those of the United | think—many of them—that no man can be | g il every triond | ‘:...‘] ,\‘,.‘:.:;.:,',l,,:",.:,‘:',',"l'," e and universitics, it must not be forgot- [ newspapers on the death of Vietoria, It [ tutions already on a sound footing. | States and Russia have done really successtul unless he has in some way | fumily. * Bt the varying. apintn o Ned'st, total sales ten that the development of modern | is an old enmity and doubtless will con- | MUch has been said and done for the —_— or othor lifted himaclt above the mass of | doubtless extsts as to whether this 1s & B GEORGE B, TZSCHUCK, | education has been bronght about by | tinue, There are Frenchmen who pro- [ ehcouragement of new enterprises, | A New York newspaper historian has | very democracy; It distrusts the standards | g€, COBSummation or not should not betore me this a5t day of December A: .| the endowment system. Whether the | foundly believe that war between | Which the old-established —firms have | uncovered the fact that when Queen |t has set for itself and therefore it often | n spoy Lricn, O he main purpose M.UB. HUNGATE. © | oquests and glfts have been made for | ¥ and England i inevitable in the | taken thele full share, but almost noth- | Victoria ascended the throne in 1857 it | bappens that the men who loudly vociterate | it F0Ch 14 f0 give the mau some- rensous of religlous sentiment, from | not distant future and some of these, | D€ has been done for the advancement | took u sailing vessel thirty-six days to|9bout the equality of all men are most | e A UL ’ ot ¢ | anxioue to surpass their fellow men in|°nd SUPPIY an occupation that will rest his Another ealamity George Washington | vainglorious aspirations for lasting me- | among them men of military prominence, | ©F these pillars of local commerce, bring the first news of the death of her | » MATORRS Lhels mind and refresh bis Intellect as the cigar the grip morials, or from pure philanthropic love | profess to think that invasion of Eng.| AD unrest unquestionably exists | royal predecessor to the United States, | ooy sasbics syon (ne nost et o | or pipe does now. ———— [ of mankind, the results have inured to | lind would not be an impracticable un- | AMOnE local dealers, many of whom are | while the expiring moments of the late | to mako himself o personage to the multi- - may not be a paradise (""i the benefit of the public and in general | der But the wiser statesiuen of | infected with the general impulse of ex- | queen were literally watehed by the | tude it is that which is most commonly de- | ABANTRIES. man, but people who enjoy a fine [ {he tenchings have been in harmony | France understand what u conflict with | Pansion, but who find themselves ham- | entire world. Nothing could so strik- | sired s a natlon it must be admitted that | Philadelphia Pross: Tess—Mr. Phoxy climate are wasting their money taking | with the prevailing populat sentiment. cat Britaln would wean for their|Pered by the limitations of spuce, Th ingly illustrate the marvelous changes | W .‘;"“‘;l“:;':m‘"fr “”{"""\*"‘”::"’k";l‘g""'I“"‘v:_' Over Her Iaat Jolops to have hiE'wite make that are passive or types of moral heroism | qoes® N IHRIRRSIOYEr 10 0015 KB university chaivs should remember that [ are at the head of affairs Frane vacaut property down town is not mll-‘ 1 applied sclence, that are unemphatic We have read so - they owe something to society and that| will not go to war with England, |1zed for the erection of buildings in| many stories of poor barefooted country| ! "hmuv').‘m Press: He (admiringly)—You they are not free lances to steike right | unless there should be some Intol | Which merchandizing euterprises can| The English have received a thorough | boys becoming rich and famous that such a Shank yow T Dope. you sre not a and left, misusing their positions for | crable aggression on the part of the | find room to do busiuess on a business | lesson on the value of the native police boy who simply becomes a respected but c mine, Because it's otherwise en- d ¥ " unknown man, like the one of whom we personal or political ends. It Is just as | latter. The influence of King Edward, | basi force orgunized In Cape Colony to assist | y,vo just spoken, is likely to be considered | pyya " 3 sdward VII T a8 King fo| €At AN offense against soclety for|it is perhaps safe to assume, will be| Several apparently most desitable|the army. A body of police surren-|a fatiure. The fact that he performed the |had dyepepsin drendtully e e has Will Edward l“'" on ‘lm‘ 'r“‘“ these Instructors to take advantage of | exerted to prevent any policy on the [ €Orners in Omaha are standing empty, | dered to the Boers without firing a|common duties of life uncommonly well, | been siich u sufferer OreRO jeasure he enjoyed e e v I o v z & b L orry to hes e fr”\»" 'II' pl "lr” he ‘“"l ¥ et ln o the young people placed under their | part of England that might provoke war | 001y awaiting an arrangement between | shot the first time they cume iuto con that he reared a family of good men and | ¢phay Y10, 3.:»'-““\«‘).:..'." :rr“nk] HAC B of Wales of setting the fash care, to distort their educational vision, | with France, the owner and a prospective tenant. Al- | fact with the burghers, Every day .‘A‘,“”I“'I'l‘m‘(";‘","‘f”“"" l:‘]""ll"":‘,"'i’" "’:“““‘:" Datkott Wiea Brosst Ne-SLarrisEe | as It i3 for the authorities of the uni-| So far as the United States is con- | ready on onme street a reaction has set | demoustrates more thoroughly that Eng | auie of noble manhood 15 forgotten or | 101ery i versity to put mental straitjuckets on | cerned the new British sovereign can |10 aud property owners bave announced | land can hope for no assistance from | ignored and it is only remembered that e | Ehe yae't o R BT TGS ety N m“,"“"" : contidently expected to do whatever | 40 intention o replace undesirable | the Cape Dutch, even if they are not ,Y,‘.x,l,‘\’,;;‘,v.w failed to get his name before the (010 SOh. no it isn't. A lottery is forbldden o | Educational institutions should natu-|he may to perpetuate existing friendship | Puildings with modern structures, pro- | actually hostile Lok York, insists that the fees of uls office| ., " 000 b RIS The men who have written their names| phijadol NS P take all | FAlY conform to their environments. A | between the two nations, He has viding all conveniences for the carrying hiadeiph North American Wil dto t00 Thrge and e will not on the scroll of fame, as the school readers | nothing induce you fo changs rour mind 7" he asked. of them. That register need expect no | UBIVersity professor persisting in teach- | ways shown the most cordial good will | 01t of the business in which their tenants ‘The railroad passenger men are get-| jue'i dogerve to hold a place in the regard LR o . _ more favors from Tammany. ing that the earth was round fifty years | toward this country and there is no | 40 »ull[:mn'll, In these days of special-| ting together already on excursion rates | of ‘the world. This country has produced Another man might,” she replied before the voyage of the Magellan would | doubt will continue to manifest it, un. | 1Zation it is s essentiul to success that [ to the Buffalo exposition. It IS to be (mony such men and will produce many | Harper's Bazar: Bashful Lover (timidly) Prosumably, the witnesses in the haz- doubtless have recelved his dismissal | derstanding, as he must, how much |the quarters in which the particular [ hoped the railroads have learned by this f:lr“‘d |l.:".. l;;‘l.dl-l:':::{.;rrr?; wl;ll]: fnm: "H:Lfi:".’:-.‘,h' "L'x‘h‘fr".V“.'Z‘J‘.".‘}‘"‘;;..!}!.‘3?’,3;. fug Inquiry are all coming in for per without ccremony, and should an ob- | there is of mutual interest between | Pusiness is located are adapted to it as | time that their concessions bring BAVE], G Sikte Ale Kot iWavs Py l"‘:‘"l.",ht:“‘;‘_ nl;;;:]:v:‘:;-rfl:‘!p:“:,;:Iu“l’l:!‘mm‘ SN diem pay and mileage. Under no other | S0lete political economist rise up at the [ England and the United States and how | it is that the manager is qualified for | eral times the returns it granted Defore | pon whose names are on every 1ip because | Of am ’ ; theory could the prolonged duration of | Present day to defend and justity human | necessary and important it is that the | hi$ position. In Omaba to a very large it has happened to them to work in the [, ddy, (astily)—Wan minnit, Pat. Ye've the investigation be explained. slavery, iu his lectures to the college | English-speaking nations should be to- | eXtent business has been carried on sight of the public. The real strength of el =l it students, he would be called down with- | gether in promoting the cause of cly- | merely within four walls, enjoying tone anh .8 Rignsre L el L el B UL I bl IR Ul L No criminal bas reached that degree | Ot Lesitation, although that was a com- | flization. o the advantages of special construction| . WeW Nork WORS, o oo | 200 women, few of whom can ever nope for | e gs: dear?” ubked her friend, knowing of desperation to form a lobby to head | Won practice in southern istitutions of | King Edward is essentially o man of [ a1d sufferiug all the inconventences of | SUCEFCO G RO S o iq ™ O¢ sev- | wealth or fame and the great majority of | 1 made Iim & Jovely palr of Sofa pitlowa off the threntened inundation of anti- | learning before the war of the rebellion. | peace. There Is uothing of the “war | being compelled to conform to the re-|enty-four rulers on the earth twenty-two | whom must be content to lve lives of uu- | {6 Worls ko, and o daspt” oven Kidnapiug legislation as a means of pro- l“ “v:“ be conceded that there is a{lord” in his makeup. His life has been | Strictions fmposed by conditions. Grad- | are ;.,»euulm_nl:;_ fitteen nre; l'«‘lnxv:hn‘::!nl:hn:r: herolc drudgery and toil. I feel sure.” \ et I in b itereuts place in soclety for radicals and ex- | passed in performing those amiable so- [ ully this condition has been modified | emperors, This is one of the ) e TR TR detrolt Free Press: Sid didn't ge Bggdo b bl e | tremists, in education as in religion, but | cial functions which devolye upon a |50 far as possible within the limitations | Wil not “be the same in 100 years. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. o Mgy inen Treaat, Midnevolidian't set Just wait until the Cuban constitu- | it Is not in the established universities | British prince, 1is ambition now will | 0f original construction, but the process | Quaint Ge 3 | 3. B. Burton, the new senator from Kan- | Bidness Not bt th firet e she bhene tional convention encounters an old- | an, than in the established | be to do what he may to promote the | ©f remodeling has not been altogether | Indlanapolis Journal sas, is long on shape and short on whis- :v nm suth she usked me 1f 1 was Intelle time capital-removal project. Its pro-| churches. The saving clause of our|material welfare of the natlon, now a | Successful or satisfactory. Telegraptisompsnlan Wil ARAL L0 DEOD- [ KOS, ek f A ceediugs Will ot be up to date unless | universities Is not to be found i their | matter of the greatest sollcitude to il | Omaba’s business long since passed | 000 t0 1Y, § BIEURert BOAL TR s bl fs o Cincinniul audionco Sould | i v bt auti Yo g sine of some such seheme is Sprung soon. sources of Income, but in their suceess | Englishmen, tha experimental stage and has assumed | govornment give them the means to lay one | in case of emergency. crowt] 't ehe Just sweel eoukh G Kiss? as educational factors. An institution —_— an advanced degree of permanency. In|for themselves. That sort of generosity, | Lsked. Scientists are reported to have dug up | which throttles freedom of teaching is THE BRITISH SOVEREIGN. the future the change will be that of |however, is mot monopolized by telegraph | A street procession {n the ruins of Baby- | sure to injure Its standing in the edu lon. It has not yet been definitely de- | cational world and to lmpair its intiu Diverse cter You can never teach a toad to trot Souls are v wved by slovenly service ed by | more than he preacher’s oratory in the sanctuary must fail unless prayer has its oratory fn LA e ity AR The preacher who thinks only of pruning flowers of rhetoric will pluck little of the | truit of righteousnes of the world's peace. There was |crown Is the head of the army and navy fan editor's sole duty is to hoost politi- | °f DOYS and irls tn honor and honesty. H B t some of the boys to college and put others in business As for the girls, he| seconided all the efforts of their mother to | S Ut — Indianapolis News: 'Ennui amobg men famous, wealthy and powerful in the world. [don't, as a usual thing, have infants that ‘Poor fellow! To think of his dylng a|need a father's attention, and embroidery 20,005 a trip to the south y winte Professors discussing subjects from | country and as long as such men|Men are wondering why some of the | wrought during the last century by mod- The late Hon. John Marshall is an other great man whose greatness has grown more upon succeeding genera tions than upon his life-time associates. men's attire throughout the so-called clvilized worle Icemen can draw some comfort from the | "N he replied thoughtlessly; “not report that the mercury climbed down to | P Aibout, sixteen or seventeon vears.” = The death of England's queen and the | §rowth. For this more than for any |corporations. 78 below zero in Alaska the other day. [One's wife s %o unreasonable at times ascent of the throne by the new king | other reason should the builders and the Carnegle's Bargain Counter. e, Olapp, Successor of the late Senator| e, ooyie qournals He-Going shopping termined whether the band was playing | ence by driving away its students. It re- | oo started inquiry afresh as to the pre- [ tenants get together. With —excellent Chicago News, Davis, is something of “I"“‘““lll A;:viljb! Ifl o | Miss Vandervelt? “Rocky Road to Dublin” or “A Hot|quires students to make the university | s position occupied by the crown in locations unoccupied and with well es It anybody happens to have $200,000,000 | mirers he is known as the ack Bagle She-Yes. I'm going to buy some pretiy . . > 4 . day that Kansas does | PICtures for my. room. Tiwme," and students will soon be wanting | (e British frame of government. tablished firms desirous of enlurging | handy he can learn of something to his in It is a mighty dull day that Kansas d BRI aor YO0 e e & haltidbRan — terest by addressing Mr. Carnegie. This |not break into print with some freakish [ mirrors? Then you would pretty Where the Instruction is shaped to suit| yyifle the king or queen is popularly| thelr quarters and increasing theie bus- |, creciing gentleman wants to sell out his | caper. The blceding commonwealth is a | picture whichever way you tu I'he king of England does not """“I:“ the arbitrary whims of 'wealthy bene- | yorerred to as the “sovereign,” it is well | Iness, it seems that a solution should be [ gieel business and invest the money In Ii- | shining example of strenuous 1ife e T Y S be sworn In before exerclsing his ofl-| factors to whom it is under obligation | kyown that the British realm enjoys | €a5Y. braries, and the general public wishes him | Congress has agreed to order a surv d ! clal power, nor does he have to take | for endowments. constitutional government und that the| This is another point on which the [a ready buyer. of Salt river. Accurate information about John G. Whittier outh that he has not expended any t Lindd ¢ | Real Estate exchange and the Commer- A T at. the famous stream may prove to be fnval- | Still sits the schoolhouse by the road, money for beer, clgars or refreshments ’ telgning mouarch is helged about by Yol ey o 2 uable to members in the near future ragged boggar sunning ; v + B PARITY OF THE SILVER DOLLAR. limitations which no one vested with|clal club may get together, to the end Clneinnati Tribu e sty hatedn und {t still the sumachs in order to sccure his position. 4 that both parties i interest will be sat-| Prof. Wiley, chicf chemist of the De-| Rowland Blennerhassot Mahany, halling And blackberry vines are rur prdelsod ik 8, oo i It begins to look as if the currency |absolute sovereignty would recognize. S P v from Buffalo, is to contest the seat of Con- = = sfie S Ebhan ¢ the ciy |PArtment of Agriculture, says he has found g s ‘ Wit s B IR John Swinton has been trying to |10\ of last March will be amended at| Sovereignty is supposed to be the Isfied and the general goud of the city | Bl RO 0 (T ohner In one can of green | Eressman Ryan. When Corkman meets Ahin, the moster'sdeic iy e . & ) anst Thurs- | s sme power o e state. While | served. Several magniticent howmes for | o o0 oat Jocketknife with the metal, | Kerryman, then surely comes the tug of [ /he warping floor, the battered seats, classify and enumerate the people who | thiS session of cougress. On last Thurs- | supreme power of the st ST Dol ERGuoont NOmaN ToF | peas o sont 4 pecketknlie with (e moiak| Bart he warping floor, the battered are afflicted with the iteh for newspaper | 493 the wajority of the house commit- | the British crown exercises many func: | Whe i I e A L s e R N o re Py " 2 Po. PO oy v Ore| v, ot us see some palaces for retall trade ngdom makes drafts upo e m . ore e baro ol ot The charcoal frescos on its wall; uotorfety. e would have a smaller | t0€ on colnage ordered a favorable re-|tions generally attributed to noun!xm_), L R tl«-l el s ghd q TSl fo0 maL's xikew: consin have been rendered speachiess by the T e el e Gl and easier risk if he confined himself to | POrt on the bill of Representative Hill [ expounders of constitutional law dis- [ 89 Up during the coming summer. BAD'S UMM, BriD. Thia accounts for their dnabilty o Th et (Hat Crecy g B0 school, thase Who are. not so afiicted, of Connecticut, which provides for the | tinguish between the position of the ET tead e L R respond cheerily to the demand for a down ent storming out to playing maintenance of the silver dollar at par- [ crown of a constitutional monarchy lke LEGISLATION FOR PHILIPPINES, Ahehlaa WM" e vice preal. | WAFd cut in prices. on vears ago @ winte Messenger Darton hay started for| ity with gold. This is one of several | Great Britain and that of an absolute| The reports from the Taft commission | yoney g roported to be seriously alarmed | Cabltalists avxious for au investment |y f00%E Vostern ‘Windowpanes Washiugton with the official cortificate | bills, having the sume object In view, | monarchy like Russia. From the his- | transmitted to congress in regard 10 at the prospect of being filed by a man | f0F thelr surplus will find on andy Carne- | “And low caves” icy fretting of the electoral vote of Nebraska. While [ that have been introduced at the present | tory of England it is readily gathered | conditions in the Philippines show that | who goes out nmrmr‘ms‘ t;: ll'hnn((llnns ll-y | scaled down to $200,000,000 for the bunch It u..‘..h.u the tangled golden A 4 . PTG DR T e X 2 , ok 4 com | way of amusement. It is face to face with 4§ Bt i And brown eyes full of griey Mr. Barton is not a lost sheep from the | session and it now appears very proba- | that while the earliest kings were sov- | some of the statements sent out from m:«)« e s B b Andy bas cne of his liberal streaks on republican fold, he will undoubtedly re- | ble timt it will pass, favorable action |creigns in the true sense of the word, | Manila by newspaper correspondents | Long years ago a winter sui who still her stops dela ation of a precedent in the shape of an| Having disposed of a double senatorial vall the school were leaving. celve sultable recognition as the dily | by the house of representatives being | the evolution of the nation has trans- | were very much exaggerated or base- [gotive viee president contest in Minnesota, the Twin City papers ar her stood the little boy, nuthorized representative of the estray, | practically assured. ferved the real power to the people, | less. The allegations, for instance, re are encrgetically grappling with this grave Her childish favor singled; - There I8 1o good reason why this pro- [ through the electorate, to almost as | specting soeial conditions at Manila are Aoy hini 1o RNIe RAnS: D e an the mine: | M\Where pride and shame were mingled. The constitution of the United States | posed legislation for fortifying the gold | great an extent as in the Awmerican re- | shown by the commission to be very | The bieycle should be placed next the [ month be a twentieth century product? requires all revenue bills to originate in | standard act should not be enacted by | public., much exaggerated, the fact being that | sewing machin It is the poor man's car- the lower house of congress, but that | the present congress. It is approved by [ The tenurd of the present branch of | there ix less vice and immorality in that Hage, 1t ookt necd to bo miabled and does mot prevent the senate from trans- | the financial and business interests of [ the royal tamily dates from a Parlia- | ity than iu most American towns of “‘"“‘l ;';”"“:u'm"”' “‘“h“;"““m‘l‘;‘;":; oy oA forming the house revenue bill into an | the country and there s nothing to be | mentary statute enacted two centuries | equal population. The commission de- |{ai o (ha laborer to his work, permitting entirely new measure, So far as the | gained by leaving it for the action of | ago, passing the succession from the | clares that the general moral coudition | him to live several miles away, and brings ssult goes the bill might just as well | the next congress. As urged by the ad- | branch to which it would have gone, un- [ of Manila is greatly maligned, that him back at sundown. Here's a bumper have oviginated in the senate, vocates of this legislation, the only way | der the then existing laws and cus- | erlmes of violence are comparatively |for the bike. high, a conspicuous me ent hm sorey SHatL ggolt & to make the gold standard unassailable | toms, and conferring It upon an euti fow, that gambling has decreased and Sias IR & Saw ; It published pletures of the projected [ Besmuse’ e brown oyén lower foll— One house of the Oregon legislature | is to provide for the free exchange by | different branch. The commentators | that actual druukenness is not much, it Philadelphia Rec Kansas memorial at Arlington cemetery e d " has passed a bill stmilar to the law in | the treasury of all standard coius issued | point out that while no act of Parlia-|any, greater than at home. These au-| The eMcacy of the American climate as|aro correct representations, tho state i | Sl memory to 4 gray-huited man effect in Nebraska providing for the by the United States, for each other,|ment has ever undertaken to do more | thoritutive statements effectually dis- |® sterilizer of the anarchlstic germ 13 in- | carrying Its fads to extremes. A marble |, B RN riGues on her grava ¢ ” i t stanced in the case of Ellas Masuras, a | reproduction of a fire hydrant on top of a 1ave (OFLY VEATS boon BFrOWINE pression of the popular will on United | without discrimination, at the option of | than this, yet, it Parlinment could do | pose of the charges made by NeWSDADCT | Greek who came to this country under con- | noble column |8 scarcely appropriate for fgates senators at the regular elections, | the holder. This will insure the main- | that constitutionally, no reason can be | correspondents that a most deplorable | tract and promise to slay a prominent pub- | the locality Kansans do not take water H‘”’l‘l\\\V\ ?:"‘:.J.T';‘.‘L‘i ‘1‘.:, N‘h\ll’l‘lll school, The law Is all right so far as it goes, | tenance of the gold standard, because | adduced to prevent it from electing an | state of affalrs existed at Manila and |lle man, but who found life so pleasant and | if a drug store is within reach BB A R JO R but it should carry with it the power | the holder of any other form of money | entirely new royal family, or, in an|that the military authorities were mak |Prosperity so prevalent that, instead of | pispatches from the seat of war fail to Like lier—becauss they love him to put the will of the voters into effect. | can excliange it, at his option, for gold. | emergency, abolishing the royal family | ing no adequate cfforts to improve the | €118 anybody, he went to Yonkers and | show any marked activity among the Hoers opened a peanut stand The cause is not far to seek Recently It will insure the parity of all silver|altogether. situation, P 0, A8 the raiders captured a convoy of British The chances are good that the Indian | money by making it as good as gold, 1t| The king, it is true, is accorded cer-| The reports also show that a decided Logk Out for iitm. AL e b e A e e GOl4DEN war down in the Iudian Territory exists | will make no disctimination against si)- | tain royal umunities and royal preroga- | change Is taking place in popular sentt- | 00 SRR SO G L pumber of dainty rocade corsots, hand | ROD o chilefly in the imagination of the news- | ver, because it can be obtained, on de- | tiy He caunot be brought to an- [ ment respecting the authority of the e A3 rection that seeks: publicity. | PAIRted, and with fancy silk strings. 1 AN HA paper correspondents who are unloading | mand, i exchange for gold or paper. | swer for auy of his personal acts before | United States, There Is no organized [ An Atehison man and his wife attracted a | 4 DAL T SRIGE forapes. BPatned OlL SNk ATi08 thelr stories at space rates. A perlod- | It will not add any burden to the treas- | the courts or any other body, beiug pro- | resistance and almost every duy armed | great deal of attention by their aftectionate | ©00 0 tcal Indian war is as necessary to the [ury beyond that imposed by Its present | tected by the legal fiction that “the | bands surrender and swear alleglance |attitude on the streets. His manner ot | o 00 00T 00 G S0a marketing C()M PANY existence of sensationalists located in | obligations, because ull forms of money | King can do no Wrong” But bis per-[to this government. The —comumission [POMINE Rer arm was next dach 10 & BB | o000 leads carnestly for popular favor the vicinity of evesy Indian reservation | belng treated alike, there will be no dis- [ sistent disregard of the laws, violation | urges the passage by congress of the |(hai he couldn't kiss her. The wise “looked | DY @nBOUNCINE it purpose to b econc us 18 cordwood in the winter time, crimination in the presentation of money | of established constitutionul usage or | bill iniroduced at the last session by |out” for him, and were justified, for he has | Just ke ""“‘ LR “‘l“ cut - ex- | O N Calttornta ol business | — for redemption. 1t will prevent any |conspiracy with the enemies of the | Senator Spooner, which gives authority |deserted her pe to bone and share profits with the — consumer. Jobbers in shoes and shoo HE PREFERRED STOCK Ope unexpected consequence of the | diserimination In the payment of money | country would lay him llable to im-|to the president to declare the insurree- CLiTRIas 6t 1ka Daasa. leather will find food for thought in this [ of this company, which offered now at Pushing with restless foet the snow The bronze statue of General John A To right and left he lingered By | As restiessly her tiny hands Logan, the great “volunteer soldier,” for The blue-checked apron fingered which congress appropriated £0,00, hus | it s cached Washingto) A will soon be e saw her 1t her eyes; he folt reashod Washington sud wiil . The soft hand's lght caressing placed. The statue was cast in Rome and | And‘heard the trembls of her o 1s in one solld piece, double life size As If a fault confessing When placed it will be about thirteen f 1l arey (R AT ATt e e Not the oldest, nor the greatest, but one of the SAFEST INVESTMENTS offered in abolition of the cauteen threatens the [ into the treasury and will therefore pre- | peachment for treason and dislodgment | tion at an end and to establish civil goy Springfield Republican declaration of the company's president: |® low price, subject to advance on comp p 5 < " h ' 4 on of well N which is now started bars in the hotels located on various | vent the dryiug up of the stream of [ from his throne. The deplorable fate | ernment. Without specitically referring The criticisms of the manners of the he alm of the Natlonal Shoe company ‘\”w character d business standing of governwent reservations which derive | gold in times of panic which fidws of previous British monarchs who have (to this weasure, President McKinley [ Boers may need to bo revised uftor thelr | b6 eliminato the Johat wn the distributon |y, v Omaha and four Los Angeles di- their patronage exclusively from the | tween the banks, the cleariug houses | disvegarded the laws is the ultimate de- | urgently recommends legislation under | POIte considormtion m deatitk Lo e | o e sole it Fbuting e of | FCCLors assure wise aud carcful manag commissloned officers iustead of the pri- | and the sub-treasuries in times of bus- | terrent in keeplng the crown within its | which the material conditions i the | paceo boxes, with & thistle and “Seots wha | the shoe mant irer At present there | ™° OLR PROS " vates, This comes about because of the | fness activity. It will establish the gold | constitutional bounds, islands may be promoted. The secretary | hae or something of the sort, on the|are five manufacturers in the company. It| o of ofticers and directors, maps peculiar wording of the caunteen section | standard so firmly and plainly that in-| The general functions of the British [ of war points out that the development | covers, which had been sent by friends at | Is 'ln.l' ‘\;\‘1; m‘.u'u m.ulmlu' the number | Ly pui particulars, will be sent you for of the army bill. Before loug no mili- | ternational transactions will be at-|crown are similar to those of the ex-|of the Philipplnes now requires the ex- "";"' :M "I';"‘“‘"Trm ‘tl:lfllf:ll-:““}'r--k'ln‘l':mr’w! :*'”\'; althc "K.A :."::.»". Nhr:mr‘;”;n‘n:n‘:' the asking. tary post will be complete without ln]trurml to the United States and this|ecutive in other nations, although the | ercise of powers of elvil government o 0 bacco, but they chivalrously left the keep- | facturers will predominate in the make. JOHN G. CORTELYOU, Pres. ofticers’ club and club roows, country will take ber proper place in|line of demarkation Letween executive, [ vested in the War departmeut or 1o the | sages, | up of the company. 1011 Davenport §t, Omaha, Neb,