Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 17, 1901, Page 6

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WED JULY 17, 1901. ‘THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. | | THE SEATE ASSEssumNT standard, but there 18 still @ large | prove more dangerous than shaking a the state, knowing as they do that from o - ST T2 | The grand assessment roll for all tax- | political element opposed to 1t and {1t | red ragat a Mexiean bull . - the government they would secure better B ROSNWATER, SDITON able proparty [ the utata of Nebeaskn | will be well to so fortiry fs that it il g | Away with Populism terme And greatet consideration — ¢ e | 08 returned to the State Bonrd of Equal-| be absolutely secure, Thig should have This Is #m age of consolidation and | _Canada has only followed the ..r”.n‘,\,»l..v PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. ization for the year 1901 aggregates | been done by the last congress, but | concentration. 1t fs counfidently pre Chicago Chronicle (dem.) b '_:_'1‘_‘“":‘M":;";,"";M"‘m‘"}’"m"";' 0ok TTTTERMS OF BUBSCRIPTION $174.432,870, an approximate increase u{‘ W ever the excuse then for not doing [ dicted that this spirit, infused iuto our I do not object to having it distinctly which do violence to democratic doctrine. | hicre Foute ago and while there have boen Datly Bec (without Sunday), One Year. 360 ‘.cu:\'.un..wr the assessed valuation of there I8 none now, so that there | educational system, will result in con- | understood,” sald Mr. Bryan in St. Louis A debased currency I8 mv’l\ one of these | .. plainty, of inefclency, red tape and fateated & i A b 1 the previous year. At a ratio of ten to [ should be no hesitation on the part of [ solidation of country school districts, |’: other day, “that 1 intend to fight to th: contentions. Not much will “'I ""““‘I "“”vn k of progressive spirit on the part of ussrale ee, (e Tear e ff . hitter end eflol o force the | po I ntelligence @ KOO norals 1 Y " tr Eunday Hee, One Year 2w | one this would represent an fnerense | the Fifty-seventh congress in enacting | with f transportation and fr tter end every effort to force the aban- political Intelligence and & mora he Postoffice department, which contrels Buturdiy bee, One Year o o w. 1 dopment of the Chicago and Kangas as eoon as one populistic error is exploded |, =\ 0 citation In favor of a t Awentieth Cehitury Farmer, One Year.. 1 the actual wealth of the state of $26, | whatever legislation may be pecessary | lunches at the public expense, coupled | jiaitorms. and abandoned another is to be adopted in | i, "':l“* " #lvate compan i 8 ; ' " . aba ned s L | turn to operation by private compa OFFICES S0.000 for the past year to render the gold standard secure and | With free text books, free stationery | This was bravely said by o gent Its place b B 1 110 y ;vyyy..:;..llll‘:,)lx: |‘ ;l hfi,‘fluih““” vene While it i impossible to make a cor- | unassailable. and, eventually, free overshoes and|who has an unbounded right to Mr. Bryan's command that the plaforms ABRDU AYS THE BILL ty-Nith ahd M streets, 3 rect computation, the aggregate incrense | Our currency system can unquestion. | mackintoshes for children whose par-|10n€ and as bitterly as he pleases ¢ of 1806 and 1900 be kept at the front is S Councll Blitts; ll;vl’l‘tlzmll Htreet. W wenlth for the past year wil not '””i”"'-" be fmproved. No one pretends that | ents are unable or unwilling to ,.r..vuh-;;"'{"‘““-‘;, “'*‘; ';hw"" that may occur to not to be v‘th‘v“\ lw e ':lm "‘,fl‘.'f;;::::.‘ | Unele Sam Scores Handily as a Bill iicago: vy Ln Suildin A 2 v e plat @ d to were made his perpetual adhes o those New 1ork: Temple Court, far ghort from that figure. Estimated | it is a perfect system. Whatever legls- [ the necessary long distance travel equip-f o 0 o ‘ml h wm::-‘; :nf:rr.»rou‘ ‘: 4“»-vlvullv‘:‘\? ‘hn‘.m: n’fll |‘<‘;~ :~ ‘\T\'tr‘l’v"’l\m- of his desire to Collector \\.'h“":"‘l’;l(l‘:l“'fi‘i:":AL;J‘|’.L") l*_” at the same ratio, the actunl value of [ lation shall be decmed necessary to its | ment for their offspring. | ness in his unwavering loyalty to the . It maintaln in places of party responsibility | Kansas City Star Communtcations peloi to news and cdi- | tAxable property, real and personal, in | improvement can be adopted without —_— |1t not customary for men responsitte for the men who made those platforms and | Turkes's payment of the indemnity torial matier should e sed. Umaba | this state would be $1,744,328700, but| any dis yance to the a v o | Denver ministers have taken the lead | great errore and disasters to acknow ce Who are capable of setting up others quite | claims is a triumph for American diplo- {orial matier sbof s ¥ disturbanee to the financial or the | | knowledge 3 I v f e, ki 11“ “:‘Lv-u»lm-‘ that figure fs really far trom the mark. | business affairs of the country | in the formation of a society which | thelr mistakes and we may expect no de- A8 objectionable on other lines ;nm." 'lr-- amount Involved was not |alrxt‘. Athon 1a | The » 1 shrask . = . , » o < 3 fation from the rule In the case of Mr Beperience has shown that the demon- | but a failure to collect it would have been Business letters ‘ances shoutd | The true valuation of Nebraska prop lins for its object the ending of the al-| ¥ ) i 3 ! . v ed error of populls Il o ass- | humiliating to the ted Stat The :x':'m'r"xl:fl;] SHp B lshing Com-| erty would, if assessed on the basls of NO PRESENT CAUSE FOR ALARM leged rule of thugs in that city. With Brllx::-mz the uncompromising attitude ot ment I|.‘~"u: :‘s'mlr:t“vnm They ‘."):":rrl:n:v { vultan of Ifl'lm-\"u\‘n‘«“ nx: le::\rr:nl man L REMITTANCES market value, exceed $2,000,000,000, Secrotary of Agrlculture Wilson does | the advent of the tourist season it | the tnte democratic canidate fn this mate “indorse” all past follles and move lghtly | and an arrant personal coward, 18 one Remit by drait, s or postal order Nothing has retarded the growth of |'yot think the corn crop hus as y |...n‘ would not seem to be necessary for the | ter, democrats generally will unders: on to the embrace of new ones equally | of the most astute diplomats in the werld payavls to The doe Pubishing Lomginy, | he state and prevented fuvestment of | v geriously damaged ns to give cause | 1€NE 10 continue holding up the resl- | very clearly the nature of the fssue with absurd and equally undemocratic. To | He is particularly skillful in the art of mail acgounts. Lersonal checks, except on | money in Nebraska so much ns the reck- | ¢ gentine alart, Ho regards the re dent populution, for everyone takes a|Which they are confronted. The repudia- Euard uumu‘ this sort n'l vlh\m(] 1t s um;. | pra "r\mfillnllun and fn playing off ;m ns'~ Vlnghi OF gastern exchunkes, Lot aceckied. | joes undervaluation of its taxable prop: e iniury 3 land in plekiug the tourist. 1B of The UNIERRY N KNNwk Olty Blite | Ry L a1 o ¥ o i A L S ey WY r MPANY. det ports of injury to the crop as gomew forms will Include of necessity the repudia. COMINE with characteristic lberality all | means he prevented any action by the 55 _ > Fa — | erty. This system of undeérvaluntion exagzerated and says that throughout | " tion of Mr. Bryan. In Ohlo last week the Who are disposed to co-operate with them | powers while the Armenian massacres sxaxf.‘l:.r\."("i?;;r "1‘:.'}:‘.1.}“"('!“..‘1{“:,. [ nescssors has grown from year to year [the aren of the great corn crop the The powers are debating the advisa- | jomoctatic state convention so understopd !0 the promotion of democratic principles. | were in progress Forelgn diplomats had s B e A arooet e Bee | Buck in the '80s the ginnd assessment | quouth has not been severe enough to | LY oOf interfering in the uprising I the matter and it acted accordingly should at all times be very certaln that| predicted that the United States would Publisning , Compuny, belng duly sworn, | roll of the state had reached $180,000, ’ . one of the Corean islands. The continued resumption by Mr. Bryan those principles are not modified in any| never collect Its claims | by y riously affect that crop. e points e rmloiat the actdal nymber of full 81 000, and, while there hAs been some | Lt t crop. He poin L appears to be that the powers are | of the right to dictate the pollcy of the MAnner by an admixture of populism The justice of the demand for damages EVeRing 'SA Bundhy iies. prinied. dufins | mhrinkage i the marked yalde of-lands| oo Loot MEh tempornture at this Senf o504 ypoy to regulate the affairs of |democracy is of interest and importancs Thus undetatanding seck outer thers s} UES unquestioned. Turkish oldiers had the month of June, i%1, was us follows 1 Kt et 1% | son is one of the requisites of corn de- | S0 R FCTEREEE I (v with | ¢ this ime chiefly as a warning to genuine Ro reason why the democrats and the popu- | led the mobs which pillaged and burned Loiiiiecrnes 26,000 sy | In the |’" 'l“ ar ‘l "‘l on of the state, the | ¢ 1,nent and he suggests that it i s E016H 2 ‘l' 'l- ¢ busy ) | gemocrats that there should be no halt lists and Mr. Bryan, teo, should not fight | the American mission and school ;:uud'v:n- 2 Wsvs it body of laud in the state has in-| the troubles of others there are some at | way measures in the rec this thi {—not to “the bitter end,” but | at Marash and Harpoot in November, 189 3 not yet time to assume that the corn is | Ay measures in the reconstruction of the this thing out—nol e v end," bu 1895 B 1 from 10 to 100 per cent I value | e to Lo nocalt Seeretary Wil | bome which could profitably vumml" party organization. In Ohio the conven- to a logleal and satisfactory conclusion. | The property destroyed was worth two or ... 0 the past twenty years. * ted e e “ el Lt | thelr attention tion made a clean job of it. Not a trace With “democracy for democrats’ as the m.{!hr«n times the amount named fn the ne- e The sidictlonaly Jaw, YRIBOHOD of ive | for thal Seen wiowr B think that | — of populism or soclalism was left. The spiration of the democratic organization a | Kotiations, but it was cut down to §95,000 we shall have plenty of corn in this o1 it 3 same thoroughness should be applied else- €ood many worthy people will be surprised (On the promise of speedy payment und to stock has furnighed a Justiication for P k ra in the Temple, | svet b t ext The J e reports from Kansas and | % ity 3 i where. to see how naturally some of the most con- [ Avold any appearance of extortion. Th the undervaluation of rallway property | xopiaska are, of course, discour: | ool L AR It Is to be remembered that populism con- splcuous of recent democratic leaders will| term of Mirister Terrell was about to ex- by the State Board of Equalization, the | e t)e crop in those states is not it It appears that Nebraska banks hg\c cerns itselt waturally with many things take thelr places with the populists pire, and the claims were not pushed until | practical exemption of many corpora | Ak bt Breat. fjoaned more than a million dollars to New the McKinley administration sent out Min- tions.trot g i the e t xcept in the eastern portions. ‘The | York. Alas, the “‘commercial spirit” is in- i feter Angell in 1897. But the Spanish war o uny tax aud the exemption !y e corn belt of this country s east | vading the innermost courts of the reform| prpipe oF MODERY LIDRARIA JOKE. was approaching, the sultan knew that the lf n tax of a wealthy class of money | (o) Aissourt river and west of Ohio, | temple. United States could not back up its envoy wrs who make no return wi ver ‘e n " " i | _— - — S— with force, and the minister was treated l-ob BeRdL. todstwaged. kol sfool. e I h-u; Hnl' Av-|l seen anything to indi-| Provocation for Hent. Systematie Collection and Arranges | BUl for Damages Coused by White [ oo courtesy. He could get no sat- Total B o T TTTT T I pd ol 3 | cate that there has been a large amount | A . . Lens Cumuoid anid ‘Fetured Gopien.... 874 | unfavornble impression wade by the 1oW | o¢ qumaxe tn this aren of wountey. 1 Washington Post ment of Books, Rexers, [Tatacelon whatever on the subject ol the Net tr anl Fan.a7a | valuation of Nebraska upon the nvestor | it Pl rore Shot | M. Peter Damm wants §10,000 damages bbbt idiabind B R ek i Ih'l‘:'"- ‘(’nru- Net total sates Nine SSLYS |/1n Intensinbd when compiriton s made | o, o8 to wait, therefc until 1 trom the infuriated Bostdn husband who| Not quite fitty years have elapsed since| Cousciously or unconsciously, the Chinese | signed and Oscar 8. Straus of New York, T Ay Ve . PEEGIUCK. | with th d partson 1 W00 e whether the drouth has been dis-| shot at bim. Jusi think of the dumages | the first” tree public library was estab- |are humorlste-—of a rather krim ort, it is | who hiad made & good record as minlster S BE I Ay WPCRsTics REE NWOPS 6] ) by essments of other states. [ oo ST linols, Missouri, Indi- | the fonocent public will sustain by reason | lished in an American city. It is in the | true, but humorists none the less. Until |to Constantinople under Mr. Cleveland's before 1ne this wth day of Junc, A D. 1wl. | The system of nndervaluation of taxable | [ \opiean and Wiseonsin before I | of the puns on the incident light of this fact and in view of enormous | Very recently the whole world, or the | first administration. was sent out M. B HUNGATIE, property is also in a great measure re-| oo ) | growth of libraries everywhere in the | so-called civilized portion of it at least, [ It is & curlous fact that the Turks pre- Notary Pudle, | o sible for the Insignifionnt tax col:| = orls, fonsy aariuec, | Down to Flaghting Tr Dast quarter of n century that it is pos- | has been on their backs demanding fn- | fer to deal with Jews rather than ",“" | s 4 e g ezl b I ibly the secretary of agriculture Vew York Tribune, sible to get an idea of the nature of the demnity, more indemnity, as if the Celes- Christian: They regard bellef In the lected from owners of personal prop v N r Ws. The PARTIES LEAVING Fom summmn, | WO 0T OEECEE OE B || 18 correct in assuming that the reports | And now the sword, the lance and the|task to which the custodians of public|tial empire were made of money. As soon |Trinity as & woPsib oF FaAY KOG Lo ¥ und the excessive burden Iuposed | op gyyage to corn huve been exagger- | bayonet are to be discarded as weapons | libraries are now addressing themselves. | 88 they had parcially stilled the universal rel sious fnllh”;;' ‘:.‘. o ey lock R arties ieaving the eity for upon the owners of real estate in town | . xeept as to two or three states, | by an edict of the British war office. What | In the sesslons of the convention which din by virtue of certain 1. 0. U's which, | &8 truly maonothe el R ated, I t v th ates, 1 Istianit It 1s difcult the summer may have The Bee as well ns an the farim. 4 vt elimina- | th ’ 0 ¢ y con | BY the way, were {ssued with more appar- | preferable to Chrlstianity aent to m regularly by but there is no doubt the Injury has I8 to become, if this process of elimina- | the librarlans of the country have been | W0 "0 Fo b AR R Bl (o Bt | for an Occldental to understand the work- | notifying The Dee Busines No materfal reform can be looked for |, £ | tion continues, of the traditional splendors | holding at Waukesba there has been | €Nt cheerfulness than will perhaps be man Turkish mind. But it is well I it [ been considerable, though we arve in- [ (00 00 cE O O e 3| abundant discusson of practical details | fested In their redemption, it occurred to | In&S of the Turkish mind. | office, in person or by ma upless a radical change s effected | o0 G Aprfriinigg - | ¢ ary service, e pomp. an by P e e " | known throughout the empire that the Jews | + | ¢lined to think with Secretary Wilson 2 £ 10n v we p Ve them to see how other natlons would en The address will be ged through a revision of our revenue law ROplY; ¢f RICHOUN AT oL lluraty otk and of improved methods cem to have an instinctive appreclation we often an desired. 1 Mikds RILBIGEE venue WS | e g yet there s no cause for PR iiskbades- oy S, of collecting, arranging and Indexing the | 107 the same procers, only reversed. Re- |agem ©0 St B 0 Gt By oo™ g - — — "'{" ;‘ 'l:':"';' by ‘"l“';'“ 10 “""' I FAVOr | yoynie alarm. What eafi be confi- Style in Times of Peace, immense mass of llterature now availabl 'I,"',,l'":, ,:’,“r:,.l;l,‘.?.m;;‘ x':::"',',',:l, '?:d:”' :‘:: proverblally more successful in dealing ‘ an honest and 3 aisemel 4 i . Tobe % et ! nglo- a Sauce fo SUTRTTIESINR ) TR TTOWENTA | oneet S At spbedidbats M OF| dently predicted s that the corn crop Chicago News, bat far more noteworthy was the evident{ .. goosy iy sguce for the gander,” they | With the Turks than are the other Euro- splendid shape. property and an equitable dISteibution | i vonr will be materially less than| General Chaffee urges American army | Fecosnition of the Incroased scope and im- | ¢, tho nonce transformed thomselves into | peans. Mr. Straus proved no exception. of tax burdens amoug the AXPAYOrS. | et vear's crop, though It may not fall | OMcess to employ good tailors on their | POrance of the modern librarlan's duties. | yiyoqguriang and demanded to be shown | He also had the prestige of the Span As one ot the speakers sald, the librarian | uniforms so as to et a useful example in whether or not we would enjoy paying [ War behind him There should be no difficulty in having - so far short as some estimate. Exagger- . ® ) vas contel e ere ¢ a 3 . : o di ¥ IBAVINg)| < ol T PBN G IND A rRE | AL LAY LEG .}an-mmm to the privates. The fact that| Who Was content to be a mere custodian | (o (he (rifiing sum of $300,000 on account | The sultan sent his own carriage for the some lot races at the Council Blufs ve-| 7 ation regurding crop conditions, for | the American army captured Santiago and | Of books bas passed from the stage for- | o0 ine guirageous treatment inflicted on cer- [ minister and his suite when they ar- gatta, The position taken by our government | speculative purposes, is by no weans | Manila in its shirt sleeves and without its | ©Ver. In his stead there is an official Who | iy Chinese out in Butte, Mont., away |rived in Conatantinople. He showered at: TR in regard to punishiog persons alleged | uncommon, Such reports were scnt out | boots blacked must be lived down it pos- | holds an Important trusteeship for his com- | pack 1n 1485, (o whom enlightencd Ameri- | tentlons upon Mr. Straus. He granted The weather prophet 1s as timid this | 1 bave been engaged in the Chinese | st year and it would be easy to show | *be: Dutlty, who miust not only collect boks, | cans applied Boser methods some tims be- | numorous small Taees, that the American o roung con- | Boxer movemen ol Was ‘b N bson Y 4 select with a view to speclal | foro the Boxers themselves existed as | ministers had sought in vain before, | BUMMEr 4% 4 young man about to veun ”"' 3 ;l. 4‘[ ."A".', “l“l h .‘,‘.\\ l[;.uluxt\ that they are of practically annual "n»} pier-Mache Heroes. needs, who must try to promote Intelli- | gych. | he promised to pay the indemnity. Even ture on his first proposal. he wholesale executlon urged by some | currence. The fact is, as Secretary Wil- | Harttord: Tires. ent interest in the educational agencles| The joke 18 a yery good one, as practical | after his word was pledged he put off ful- t " of the powers, Germany especially, bns | on states, the gencral outlook for cortl, | Secretary Long's skillful way of com- |8 his disposal and who has a moral duty | jokes go. and we stncerely trust tho Cni- | flllng it Other powers iusisted that thelr That most thrilling romance ..mm..d'lu-vn vindicated by the result of investi- | y¢ the begiuning of this month, was bet- | pletely flattening out a “cocky” subordinate, | (0 Perform in stimulating a taste for the | nese will get all the fun out of it that claims be eatisfied at the same time and oe Bartley's Martyrdom—a Sequel to | gation. The Department of State Las| ter than a year ago and in most of the | without seeming to censure him at all, js | D8t and repressing as far as possible the | their sense of humor will allow them to AR LM "h.“\"d fi‘:..“'“&‘&t‘! o the Hidden Trensine® has been copy.| Fecelved reports from Chinn showlDg | corn belt it Is now neariy of quite us | displaved fn the dispateh concerning the| demand for the cheap and the trashy. | assimilate conveniently, for that is prob- | the United Stated W8 Prateele CUUGL G4 righted by the v cald, | that but for the attitude of this gover: authorship of the orders to Dewey to cap-| 1he production of books in the nineteenth | ably all they ever will get. Uncle Sam | interval Minister Lelshiran wa ghted the Omaha World-Herald. attitude of this govern- | good as last year at this time, by centur; 0 Vi vanc | very nic o to Constantinople from Berne and the pay- e A 166 Alatilie: Reateaamieal Cravalaitied ury was 80 vast and the advances in|is a very nice, genial old gentleman and ——— ment the lives of a number of lunocent |~ While, therefore, a reduction from the [ gort out'a statement in which he attempted | *1€nce 80 rapid that it may be questioned | has been remarkably indulgent to the |ment was made, It was not to have been expected that | persons would have been sacrificed, | Jarge crop of lust year is certain, there | to leave the secretary wholly out of the Whether a big part of the intellectual work | Chinese in their recent troubles, but if | Just what influence caused the -unnlu'to William Jenuings Bryan would take | careful inquiry having developed the | 1s still reason to hope that the yleld of | business, The result s that the admiral s | Of the present century will not conslst i | from this circumstance they have con- | ¥ield after his A tie sty o thh o made public. celved the idea that he is an easy mark, | negotiations would doubtless make inter- they will find that they were never more Kindly to the Olilo idea. The convention | fact that some of the Chinese officals | corn in 1901 will be up to the average | on the 0-cent counter and we guess that|SYstematlo collection and arrangement of work already done, with a view to sifting that promulgated the Ohio idea did not | supposed to have been connécted w! 3 ve year: _ |18 where he will stay. i ( thica kh““y“m Mol ot m‘f“f‘l‘wx“ AR “_mtw :‘ '::‘ll nll‘uh of the lf"t four or five years m{d sufti out all but the important and bringing it mistaken in their benighted lives. When | esting reading. | M, pryan. : h v )L clent for the wants of the country. kee Notlons Abrond. under a scientific classification. It is in It comes to paying out a dollar, Uncle e e = o i ishment was demanded by some of the - Philadeiphis Ledger this work that the librarlans may be ex- | Sam Is a Miscourian also hmul one has BREKZY REMARKS. By the time the governor of Missourl | foreign ministers, huve been proved to| 1pe dream of a faction in Austria of s { pected to play a leading part, not alone by | “£ot to show™ him a mighty good and —t 3 Several enterprising Americans are now n. (o Pk N bat Ay 5w ots o YOS o - | be entirely Innocent of the charges made | . HfEan . E J their individual efforts, but through co- | Sufficlent reason therefor-—a muc etter | Cleveland Plain Dealer: Whew, how & ut his prayer proclamation Mis: y T & ¢l organizing a customs league to combat | preparing or projecting large hotels in l‘°““npenunn and organization. It remains | Teason, in fact, than China in her pres- | fluently Bodkin does "“'“x‘:,".','.'.'fl'v'\'::!":»'llur;(:m agalust them, while In wany other cases it has been shown that the offenses with s got all tha don, to be managed on the American plan 1 on our first golf links. and with all conveniences to which Ameri- but which sourians will be anxious to get out of the wet. They have already had enough the encroachments of American trade has met with a decided frost. The ent crippled condition can produce. for them, acting in concert, for instance, to determifie what should be the composi- ' vhic) ) PNE g Vel o 2O cAuS are accust ed at home, 3 J > T Yo v i ruin at Joplin to flood the mines, which the Chinewe officiuls were charged | {reuh governmeut han boen souuded | 423 47 accustamea ut home. but which | {1 G0 Jorit ™ Seuired by ‘4 s PROGRESS IN FORESTRY. o Brockiyn Lite: *¥our hushand loved you ek vt Jac iy were not nearly so grave as was sup- solled. Hiat tHe " schettieiwas ot | oo ¥ y town and how the library in a manufactur- a0, |10 cven insisted upon re- and replied t heme was movement amounts to a declaration that Yea, A Movement of Natlonal fning In the house when I practiced my ing district of Pennsylvania should differ . cal exercises from one in an agricultural community in | posed at first by the forelgn representa- Tmportance | m tives at Pekin. perets ¥ Root will spend more tirely impracticable. In addition to the | the number of Americans in England Is ex- adily Growing. | than ten minutes in Omaha on his in- g Surope: ries re | pected to be large at all times. Apparently 4 —_— " spection tour the commandant of the | 1t Was perhaps most natural that "“'l:l:‘-‘]:-l:(]ll:-‘l'lliixl;))::l ‘fi:o{::;ltnlr‘:::::: :’u‘:l; our soctal conquest of thut c““"r:"?y i to| ff.'l.vfio., l-tr“nh‘:r ‘.':,Z'J‘ml.f r:;:cr:-;“?“;;:u‘l‘; FEUSCES Latans plan Hiahaitdo Al e Salvation Army ot the resh air camy | German overument, deeply incensed | portion of thelr food supply o glunce | PFoceed eaually with our commercial vie- | (GOS8 T, G0 BRUUE SRS (21 One of the encouragiuk sigus of the tmes | ML so. He would lose his best at Fort Omahn will feel very much|by the cold-blooded murder of its win- | gver the field convinces them that the| ™ WIEnCInETnt Front ehe mmnye ASL dIAE o on.noRcori LRIV cEpopuinE it NGO NS €8 slighted. ister, should have been moved by the | ypited States Is a purchaser for a large American Money in England. orderly array of books of fiction those | wiger knowledge of the importance of the | ,,f“\“.'”l‘,'.;"";i,\!"'\'.‘.r.“v'xlun.':nn'".5:.';-"';{";"Lm[ spirlt of vengeance to demand the exe- | yyount of their own produce which can London Chronicle which ~have neither “sweetness” nOF|gyupject is having upon the movement to { You said I had made a new man out of Another French cabinet minister has | cution of all who were thought to be| e disposed of nowhere else. The| Another sign of the American conquest. light," and whose perusal ls & mere dis- | pregerve the great natural forest wealth of | Yo Gooph—That's fust it, doctor. It was sipation of time and mental force. I3Hs ehuntey been shot at by a dissatistied constitu- | in any degree responsible for the out-| s ™ 3 ey vaise o | A fruiterer in the West End is marking . e > E agalnst the inroads of waste, | ), old man who ordered the work done, ent. It the practice was ms prevalent | rage, but it Is safe to assuie that even | eut d States can raise all, or Prac:|y, "o,q,"in United States colnago—straw- [, M Carnskie's Elfts Iaioly gave o diatinct | carelessnens and wanton destruction. When | and he ought fo pay for it h L - [ ttealy all, its necessities and it can got | Bis £00ds in United Staton colnago=strdh- | siimulus to the lbrary-founding movemont | president Cleveland fssued his order ex- Buffalo News: Tom--Mary, did 1 under- stand you that your attack of rheumatism ed by Christian Science, o called? and the time may not be far distant when | every considerable community in the coun- in this country as in France members of the cabinet would have to wear steel Emperor Willlam, who inspired the pol- | ey of revenge, now sees that to have tending the area of the natlonal forest re- | serves the protest made by cattlemen, min- along, if put to the test, without the luxuries now bought from Europe. This s a trifle superfluous, for most Americans who come over here know per- | corsets and shirts of mail. carried out that policy would have put | it LA S T tectly well the value of English money L"V ?‘“l :mh"* "';"‘ ":::::% ‘1\1":‘& -:«l it jng interests and lumbermen, who were fary No. r::.m'f'.;_. n:l:.‘.l-ncaru(ur,i‘.:;mn k & % 5 o [ e St & A s g 4 : | was so strong that it seemed likely to stay — Although the Ohlo democrats were | lization. The demund of Germany was| (jme it is the Modern Brotherhood of |4k, the frulterer ls perbps only f0f- | wpich librarians must exercise, by netin | tha progress of foreat preservation. In the | Puck: “Dig little Jim enjoy that chil- non-comwittal in thelr platform as to | n shock to the sentiment of humanity | xmerica, which has its principal field |3 pew coinage, and e iEht A “,‘l in intelligent co-operation, can hardly be | meantime information about forestry nux,“‘.fl’";"‘;“:'{,,‘ He wasn't hungry until the the silver question they are still stand- | and Justice everywhere and it was| of operation in the state of Tows. It 18 [ accept the situation—call our sovereigns | C¥ererimated: been diligently and persistently spread | next afternoon at 4 o'elock.’ ing for a double standard, and they pro- | promptly met by the refusal of our| 2 - 5 ., " abroad, and the people In the districts from . . " ) . announced that the supreme secretary |35 pleces, our shillings “quarters,” our . 4 | Brooklyn Life: She—-You den't think a Ppose to enter the campalgn this fall with | government to be a party to it. We bad | jjaq charged the board of divectors and | 8lxpences “dimes” and our halfpennies PRRIONAL NOTES, which formerly the §trongest protests came | gip| ju wise to marry u man in order to re- the gold democrats In the front and the | declared for the punishment of those “cents.” against: presenving forest ands &re now | foRBIME v oL tiiug e kit 40 have: the other head officers, including the presi- #aid to be among the most eager to get | silver democrats in the rear. known to be guilty, but beyond this our | gent, with extravagance and the usur- Phintad BRatis ‘ot Teon¥ The death, in his soventy-alxth year, of | e (hrough congress extending the area | UCK Of the average reformer. —_— government would not go. This fact in| pation of powers that have caused a Philadelphta Record g:fi::: ?me;l;fl:l“:""?:' :;n(‘;‘c:'_"; “;“”' | of parks and reserves. The change Is also | Cleveland Plain Dealer: “The papers a0y It 1 n little too early to talk about | connection with the Chinese trouble 1 | donetency approximating $10,000, Com-| In the natural and. snevitable reaction | Adeluide. Eimers paper, Die Ausiralische | SPPATent In congrets, The popular demand | that, Pugilat, Juliivan be walnife sor o7 arbitration between the Steel trust ndd | not the loast creditable part of the | pured with the slump in the treasury | against the disastrous policy into which | Zeltung, Is still published. for safoguarding the national forest wealth | “UINp, Vi “that has something ta do with ) ts strikl eniploy: ¥ 4 o o ’ = M % ) ? is so strong that senators who were for- | cutting down this year's Kentucky output s striking employes, but the conflict| American policy in dealing with the | o the Knights of Pythias this Is a very Mr. Bryan led the democratic party any| The New York judges who draw § merly inclined to take the view of the min- | of bourbon to 25,000,000 gallons.” o 2208 eibly the hypoc- roble att o shybe sed k. 8 it b 1 progress suggests foreibly the hypoc- | dificult problem. insignificant affalr, but it Is suggestive m;;"wl:!"lo_‘:“ufl:(“lh:f ;[*:‘ ;m. le and h}f; per annum and indulge in vacations of three | ing camps, cattle kings and voraclous lum- [ | apiinels News: An _Indianapolis risy of our pretensions. We are al- Em——— of troubles that are llable to overtake | The democrats who protested ageinat. (ot | POMhe’ duration when thelr dackets are| bermen, do not find it expedient to oppose [ woman called up her grocer by telephc® ways Willing to arbitrate past troubles | PROMISED CURRENCY LEGISLATION. | gther fraternal orders whose officers | polley and who were ostractzed by Mr. SSRIMLE L ATeATE Are making the people | the popular opinion. With the beginning of | the ather wornihe and 40er Shn hed s and future troubles, but insist on ight- ¢ five o ve acquir Sx i Ukahnon R o | TSR AR, | the present fiscal year, July 1, 1901, the | G5G1Y ARG What's more, the next order you v | e b e It Is nearly five months before the| have acquired habits of extravagance, ryn.n and his followers for adhering to| sy . giowart marble mansion In New York forestry bureau of the Department of Ag- | w'.“ from me will be the last T'll ever give ng wh comes to present troubles. | Fifty-seventh congress will meet, but — principle ¢hould b the last to imitate | oy NGE from the face of the! Flculture went into operation for the first [ Yo’ —_— 1 0. v N Y ty. 5 ° faco AP 2 ® Arst) Y5it probab 1. madame,” sald the = — already there is talk of currency legis-| The contest between the workers and ;‘":"‘;‘“::?::1;1!:' \r\‘« st n:u' peace 1n | G 8 e wander tn. its day, buc| time, aud will-hereatter do the work pre- |yt BIOBabIZ, Wi, MAfeme” o im® vyou London bankers cannot be blamed for | latlon. It s announced that Secretary | the steel comblue s scarcely com- party If we have to fight | ;)4 Now York and New Yorkers have been, Viously confided to a division. Year before | are talking to an undertaker i v y for it. The democrats who voted for Mr bave besn decliing to make loans on Steel trust | Gage will renew his previous recommen- | menced, yet there is much talk of # | Bryan in two presidential campaigns are | 4%140ced, 10ng siuce, In the race. [1as6 the congrassional appropriation for tap: R et 15 eyl stock and similar securities until ‘it has | dations for giving elasticlty to the | settlement. Its magnitude is such that |ton numerous and respectable to b treated | AS 8 condensation of the rules of Dr.|€try was $25.520; last year it was 435350, ANRITION been demonstrated the compnnies are | monetary system. The Washington cor- | even should it not spread to any other | otherwise than with great consideration. | Fiske's life and philosophy nothiuk atands 33 fF T o Befel SSRr CORILLE o0 Ty e Niws able permanently to enrn dividends on | respondent of the New York Journal of | branches of the industry the entire bus- 15T —— which better represents them (han the . im forestry division was eleven, while the |,/ Sl the water which the promoters have in- | Commerce says it is probable that the | fness of the country is bound to be af- “Aada Aak for (ke Rwitt e e B e o i webltee: | forestry bureau now has 125 employes. AV any "ang nignt! Jected Into them. 1t Is simply a busi- | secretary will go much farther in the | fected by a continuance, while to the [ gy oo indaiebolis News: i i you expect to live forever, | There are now abaut {7,000, atrer In 1or Agleart unsatisgad that furne 4 i A ont’s proclamation opentn f A Py eserves, and the work of extend oward the ness proposition I which sentiment cuts | direction of detall than In bis last an.| participants 1t must be disastrous. Al | tndian” tands 1 Drrahom o oeriibyin® | Dr, Joseph Joachim, the famous viollalst, | fae Hrener e e o “ko. forward | Al Coflo In the aodl that yearns no figure, nual report and will present & modified | reudy the stocks of the steel combina- | has been made and it is noted with satis- | bas Just celebrated his seventieth birthday. \(th rapiaity. The anoual consumption of | o draft of the plan presented in his re-| tion bave fallen willions In value and | faction that the process s by allotment | Despite his advanced years, his skill Is but{jumper fn the United States amounts in|An inner self thAL Ages. & nisr Democratic and popullst leaders talked | port of 1897, which contemplated al- | every day idle means large sumw in | (08¢ad of rush. There is a process of reg- | lttle abated. =~ No musicin s more PP value to about $500.000.000, or as much as | iy i shows how poor a thing you re glibly for u time this summer about go-| lowing the national banks to fastie cur. | Wages to the workers. It the parties to | i tumen roiogand, Oficon with a showing | lor In Borlin than be 400 o B Y aqe, | Lo total mineral production of the country. | And blde vou BIOW! (oo ugar 10g it alone this year. The approach of | rency, under specitied rostrictions, upon | the contest will bend thelr necks and | make a homestead €ntry, No ane wils be | The frcmen of Chicago Are About to bro. | aoy - uresnrer covtatn sracts of forest And 'bids you o conventlon t.hm- is causing a change in | their capital, with & view to giving | use a little common sense the trouble | allowed to make a settlement in advance | gent to Denis J. Swenie, who was until re-' land, but to teach the importance of intel- | A hand that ever points the way the tune. Principles are no longer dis- [ greater elasticity to the elrculation. | could soon be adjusted. Mr the opening provided for and the order | cently fire marshal of their city, & gold ligently safeguarding the forest wealth. | Wo SI0FK Putire's hills, & ray cussed, but the question before the|This plan was Incorporated in one of & applications i to be determined by lot. | hadge bearing a big diamond and to cost Within recent years 20 per cent of the mer- | “T Ghines for you! ' house 15 Whether o not fusion affords | the corrency bills introduced in the last | Mr. Bryan assures the Amertean people | cations than tere et estates amt ity | 0200 He was contected with the ffe do- chuatable timber of tho state of Washing | A, ¥olce That syer scems to say: k otter b0 h s ! d e ent of t ty froi 9 until the to s bee ed. A s« estimated n L the better opportunity of securing the | congress, but it did not secure general | that the money question is not yet out | possibly In a transactlon so lurge there | Peesens yeur AMD HAb] -GS 108 AR M Rurant SRk o SRR RS B e flesh pots. popular approval and it may be doubted | of politics, because congress will-have [ muy be deception, but the method I the | " 0L L0 00 New York paper | has been wasted through carelessness to T — It it would do so now. Indeed the|to deal with it more or less at every |D°St one thus far; it has been used in s s supply the whola United States for two|BY Which your Very spirit's core ) o . - pvo e other countrie d thinks he has made an important discovery 1pp! ! h E lod and stirred, Although it has ot assumed the tm- national bankers themselves were by no | session. ‘That i true. The money | {ha"sorambla. thas ey oier than | | Anding that the soldiers of Burgoyne's | Years And by whose power evermora portance of a well defined rumor, u | means unanimous in approving it. The | question never will be out of politics el S " |army cooked rattlesnakes and ate them. | T—————— Your' will Iy spurred f suspicion is entertained that the “Spee- | fuct is there is at present less neces-| any more thau the prohibition or the Educators Necdlessly Distressed. The correspondent need not go back to nur-} STATE T0 OWN UT A fount of hope with siivery chime, ter Bridegroom" has taken charge of the | sity for such legislation than existed | woman suffrage question and many Chicago Chronfele. goyne's Sime to Aud soldiors enting sooked v i s nd '3 song sublime editortul columns of the World-Herald. | few years ago, or when it was urged by | other questions that bob up before con-| S0me of our educators in session in De. | Fatlesnakes. - Our troopers on the plains | Canuda Froposcs (0 Control Telewrabh | fyorecer wingy frics The esse! recent of 4 (8 s learned from the Indlans that rattlesnakes | " fatan % And ke 1t bids you ever climl A |lhe uulult‘ of l‘m'x;uuul:u-l;u:: might | Secretary Gage in his first annual re- | gress at every sesslon, But the money ::':r:ol:“;nn‘r"":\?r fll\::‘rln' :*d 1:--[( xvnr:r'hl.ll et hikle: | |;—:-. ) e Companies. [ A5 ke dh thingst he summed up in the words 3 b " a . B el . 4 orm system of free | The Chautauquan | . ‘! B Hia he wmid- | port, inasmuch as the banks generally | question, as a paramount fssue in the school education. One of them deplores| A Youth in Denver, Colo, whom his PAT-| Accqrding to authoritative announcements [ This 1s the fnner world I seo summer poet: “All flesh is grass—all | have more money thau they cun find [ pational campaigns of the future, 15[ the fact that the Roman Catholic authori- | ents aficted with the somewhat unwieldly | gy, “,_‘_m““wm of Canada has decided to| z\gth Jight ugleam; = grass Is h“y‘:’“«‘ are gone tomorrow and | legitimate use for, about as dead as the questions of polyg- | ties have expended $25.000,000 on private | Dame of George Washington Abraham Lin-| naijonalize the telegraphs und the tele | Apd J4 B pasD o 4 here today. Another matter likely to be considered | amy or the abolition of slavery. schools and declares that we must observe | coln Wellington Campbell, has run away | pnones of the Dominlon, The business ele- | What means the Impulse unto me? such facts with “solicitude’ ‘It would | from Lis home because they refused to pOr-| ments are #atd to be nearly unantmous in| | VNI dream by the next congress is that of making [N 8 pxclude 0| p | not be desirable, even if it were possible | mit him to abbreviate It in the way his| gunnort of this reform. The government| Within the smile of God seems br The prapoaitian to “I“ "‘"1“ foreign | the gold "’::‘"“": unassatlable. It does | Qity council meetings at South Omaha f «'cast all minds in the samo Sebool matris. | heart was set upon. body amonk the | Lounts 'on'an anmual surplus of some $7.000,-| * Bt thinks withaut i oarsmen from the Henley regatta in | not appear that the standard is likely to| gre becoming quite Interesting it not nelghbors seems dlaposed to blame him, but | 000 and it income is Increasing under the | 120k birren, as thero were a blight Fortunately it is not possible. schools, good In many respects, bad others, are as unlike as they are imper- fect, and there Is every reason to belleve Our public in | he had to take his entire name with him. President Barrows of that the “rage” for athletics will be over- On all abolit | unusual prosperity of the country. It has, | My human heart is torn tonight Oberlin belloves | theretore, become possitle to take the step With burt and doubt. ) contemplated for years but heretofore pre-| Ayt the world med the future does not meet with general approval from the legitimate sportsmen of Eungland. Though sometimes a hara be seriously assailed in the near future, yet no buri can be done by taking steps to establish It so firmly that whatever entertaining. At the meeting of Mon- day night Councilman Martin presented a resolution asking that the Red Light madly run, loser it must be admitted that the [attick may in future be made upon it/ q) o] they always will be. It churches see fit [ruled for good; that we'll form the out-|cluded by lack of avallablg funds. The gov-| By greed made blind. heater be closed ifasmuch as it was a o p “ There §s 50 much that migl sportsmen of Great Britain have never [ will cause no apprehension to the finan- | narbor of licentiousness and a breeder :2.:’;::“:’;:.,:?::,’ Xy ';:"n:;"::‘;l ,,?’;”M, ?“:rdhfim m: hyh 'I:" I'“‘“:‘h‘"; '“l' 1t ’:’ "rnmfi"m“nlrvwlv!v.;.pm""‘”“""""':’l"v'" fr'": or humankind; Wight e done il > o e 4 . pa upo o de of ad the ear of the leading business men | egraph lines and not unsuccessfu e| o much, O Ghod, that I for one been narrow in }hln sense. They real -Iu_l and business interests of the coun:| of {mmorality. The resolution was | education the fact fs not to be greatly de- [of America,” he says, “1 would whisper In| telephones, f taken over at the same time| My part would find, fze that for any country to shut out|try. It has been most conclusively | promptly tabled. Councilian Martin |plored. A purely intellectual education | it the wisest counsel I know to men over 50 the telegraph, will be placed in the |y oy fom somewh ! competition ‘from abrond 18 a confession | demonstrated In two national elections | should have known better than intro-| Wil never make good citizens, and such | years of age, ‘Golf first and business after- | hands of the respective municiplities to = jail not at fate o0 soen 10 met of inferlority, Which the Briton is not|that a .very large majority . of the intellectual education as the young get in|ward.’ This means longer lived, more suc-| be managed by them. It is hardly neces-|Those who oblain self-mastery duce such an incendiary request. The e ure great; or they shall master Destiny, Blrive ou sud wait” ¥ sary to add that the employes of the com- panies are anxious (0 become the servants some of our phblic schools will not make | cessful, happler and better American citi likely to muke, - | ena. ‘Amcl‘lcuu people are in tuvor of the zuld‘ attewpt to put out the red lights wight | them even intelligent citizens, s '

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