Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 8, 1909, Page 14

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)

i R —- P L T DETT. AveaTra THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY MAY Prolonging Tariff Debate T Omanr DALY BEE The earlier anticipations fhat the FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. | (4riff bill could be disposed of by June VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR 1 are not to be fullilled It present | signs count for anything. It now Entered at Omaha postofffice as second- | seoms more probable it will be & iy aex B month later than that date before the IERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION measure is completed and in the presi- Daily Bee (without & 1a e year M dent's hands. So many senators have Y DR ARSD oy BARRTHR 8™ indicated a disposition to debate the Dally Bee (including Sundas), per week 13 | Various schednles that considerable l«’:?»‘.‘(u?.é"n'«:.:L\'I;'y'.nf.f"‘-alf.:“.u('f'-r\‘-“r':‘1 x "¢ time must clapse before the senate Fvening Bee (with Sunday), per week 10e commences to vote on the details of ey L, . yeur.. $.% the bill. Just/ how many more want Address all complaints of irregularities in [ to be heard in an extended way no one delivery to City Circalation Department. | g5 00r0 o know, but it is presumed Omaha=The Bee Bullding that debate will continue until the sen ;"""\]A‘:’:vl\‘1);“737;1;;\:‘\”‘:vw;v' and N ators can asgure themselves how much l.incoln—518 ittle Building support the divergent ideas on the va- M rquet e s Mo “s4 West | TiOUS schedules can muster Thirty-third_Street The debate in the senate will serve WashingLon—1% Fourteenth Street, N. W CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating {o news s its chief purpose in allowing time for 1i- | the various groups to get together and nd torial matter should be addressed: Omaha |hy a showing of strength to secure Bee, Editorial Department fin it dkond. of the Bill REMITTANCE concessions in the makeup Remit by draft, express or postal order. | When all the campaign thunder has payable to The Bee Publishing Compar 5 e i e BTt tcomt St rervnd i Spayment of | been manufactured and the groupings mail accounts. Personal checks, except on |are complete the senate will vote and Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted.) .0 y544) then. Present Indications STATEMENT OF CTRCULATION are that it will be some time in June State of Nebraska, Douglas County. #3: ' |jefore this is accomplished. Then George B, Tzschuck, treasurer of The : Hee ibl\Shing company belr duly | will come the tug of war, which, while L and SOiRDiets coples of ‘The & | 1ess spectacular or extended, will be Morninz. Evening and Sunday Bee p the real making of the tariff bill, so during the month of April, 1908, was as i | far as points in controversy are con- H e 31 41939 | cerned. The conferees of the two 3., "' 40380 | houses will thresh it all out. and this 4. 40,620 | work expected to require at least 4. 40410 |\ weeks, for it is certain there will 6. 40,460 | N 7 40380 | be many and radical differences be- 4 40,640 | tween the senate and house ideas kbl 12450 Those who are inclined to find fault o . 45,880 | G 11 45,530 | With the delay in the passage of the 2 ' 46,850 | bill and to charge the present con- 2 48350 | gress with dilatoriness have short 16 Sy memories. The uncertainty and agita- 8.0, 1,236,410 | tion incident to a revision of the tariff Returned 11,303 | i undoubtedly harmful to business, Net total B 1,225,207 | but if July 1 sees the bill enacted into Daily average 40840 | 1w it will have broken the record of IZSCHUCK Treasu er Subscribed In my presence and swarn to befare me this 1st day of May, 1909, M. P. WALKER Notary ~Public. GEORGE B! | fecent years. Previous bills have been enacted at regular sessions which con- vened in December and the passage was in each case delayed by the inter- 7 v ‘fl-‘)'i‘mv of regular business until [YHEN ouT oF TOWN, { month after month had dragged along Subseribers leaving the ety tem- |00 only the advent of midsummer POFRrily;l shoull: have ‘The: Bee ‘[hn-m compelled congress to vote and — s et ::"::"l‘:":"'." b (g0 home. Allowing for the greatest | probable limit for a vote on the pres- - | ent tariff bill, it will have been a dis- turbing factor for a shorter length of time than its predecessors. Omaha’s whist players captured the Philadelphia cup. Not so slow nator Depew announces his can- Motor Wagons for Mail Service. “IMtacy for re-election. Is this one of | The Postal department is soon to the senator’s jokes | receive bids for the transportation of S | mail in New York City by means of A prohibitive tariff on tornadoes | automobiles. The motor cars are to would be approved by people in this |pe ysed between the main postoffice section regardless of politics. Refined sugar has advanced 10 cents per 100 pounds. Must need the money to recoup for that $2,000,000 fine. and the substations and depots wher- ever the pneumatic tubes do not per- form the service. The plan has been tried elsewhere with success and found ———— to be approximately as speedy as the Russia also has a cabinet crisis. pneumatic tubes, much maore reliable Kurope befng without base ball must and operated with only a fraction of find something to interest the publid, | !¢ cost. 7] This isone branch of the postal Why should the democratic World- | service which has lagged somewhat. Methods of handling mail between cities have been perfected until the | 1ost time is reduced to the minimum: | train service has been accelerated and | the time consumed between the sender | and recipient reduced except in the sin- Herald rub it into Lincoln when Mr. | Bryan and his associates claim credit for the jobh? That democratic holler about dis- placing the voting machines evidently does not apply to displacing the street | gle one of transportation within the cleaning machines. cities between the depots and post- SEm——— office. Here the horse and wagon still Pennsylvania has set a vecord for | reign supreme and in many cases the speedy punishment of kidnapers which | game is true of communication be- should be a wholesome deterrent in-|tweon the main offices and their fluence agalnst similar crimes branches, though the street railway ; has been utllized wherever practicable. There may be an ingurrection in the | T i s Just why the government has been Nebraska Sch . ) | 5 e M plid ‘:; :r'"' a0d | 0w In trylug out the automobile is By © Insurgents | o apparent, but if it proves success- are not making much noise about it he city of Portland, Me., i strug- | gling with a bill for $46.14 for beer consumed at the councilmanic picnic. | y And Portland is In a prohibition state, | !® most Important one in commer ful in New York with its congested streets it should prove much more so in other places. The adding of a few minutes to the closing time of mails ial ————— centers, often meaning a whole day A contractor has picked up a mas- |0 time between the writing and de- todon's tusk at Pittsburg, which is the [livery of a communication first pickup recorded in that city since the Law and Order league got busy. | Tariff on Blooded Stock. The west particularly will be inter- Wheat is said to be a fashionable | ested in the effort of Senator Burkett decoration for women's summer hats, [to have blooded live stock, imported Do the women ever read the market | for breeding purposes, retalned on the free list animals come in free Under the Dingley bill such and the pending reports or don't they eare what their finery costs? S ———— | tarift bill as it came from the house A scientist has discovered that a Ay | retajned this provision The senate will survive an electric shock that [ committee, however, has inserted a would kill a horse. Electrocution is | clause for a 25 per cent ad valorem not likely, therefore, to be adopted in place of sticky paper duty where the stock is sold by the im- porter, but is duty free when used by |him for his own purposes. From tle A Seattle burglar fooled with a slot | (opo nature of things the business is machine music box, which started WP |\ \ne hands of men who import to “Then You'll Remember Me.” and the | o1\ wew breeders require enough police caught him. More truth than | warrant them their own stock, and even where they do the necessities of the business gen- erally require a sale after a year or so, animals to music in that machine A Chicago clerk who has been keep- ing two families on a salary of $16 - B \ per week is to be sent to prison, | YheP ”“z ||;‘(j 2 m('r; «‘nn e pro isions, w ve to be p Plenty of men would sign his petition | ¥/310n%, would hw 8 P The tmportations of this class of for a pardon if he would only tell how he did it live stock are not sufficient in amount to be a material factor in revenue pro- duction The total imports of live stock of all kinds is about $4,500,000 annually, the greater portion of which is animals from Mexico and Canada for slaughtering under all the bills are subject to duty The value to the blooded animals imported for the pur- pose of breeding up American stock Is out of all proportion amount of an import The federal $250,000 a vear for rubber bands and Is endeavoring to find a substitute While the inquiry is on some method might be evolved for eliminating the more expensive fed tape government spends country of the The p eace congress delegates might | try their hand on the Daughters .of he American Revolution. If they suc- :eed in quieting the belligerent spirit which has developed there no one will live the tax to revenue would produce question their potency in the interna At the present time the meat supply tional fleld. of the country is a vital one. Prices are high and the reason assigned is Chalrman Mack of the democratic |that meat production has not kept national committee has sent the first | pace with the increase in consuming three coples of his mew magazine to | power of the country. Many compe 'rs. Grover Cleveland, Mrs. William | tent authorities hold that meats,’ on irvan and Mrs. Alton B. Parker. |the average, must go still higher for © trust that he was careful not to | the same reason » far as mere num- get the addresses mixed bers of animals go, the great store- fmporting | purposes and which | v [ house, the frea range, is rapidly being | the Deat, wonder what he would have [ | absorbed. Relief, if any, must come been up against if he were to have from the breeding of better stock. | been continued as the source of au | Animals of this class not only weigh | thority for all our Omaha police com- | more when ready for slaughter. but it | requires less feed to produce a pound | of meat. With high-priced grain the | growing of mongrel live stock Is un profitable and any tax which hinders the breeding up is a burden out of all \‘yrnpt‘rllnn to the revenue ured missioners? Another Daniel has come to judg- | ment. A Baltimore justice has de- cided that rival lovers have a right to | settle their differences with their fiste and that no appeal will lie in the case except to the woman. And this right on the heels of the peace congress ! Comparative Power of Wealth | Prof. Ferrero of ltaly has been writ ‘mg a notable series of articles to the Let the people rule. The Anti- ! Paris Figaro on his observations of | Saloon league exhorters say they are | America and American life. He has | &0ing to ask the court to put in office | shown that he comes as a student with | their defeated candidates who re an open mind and his writings bear | celved 3,000 votes out of 19,000. In other words, they want one-sixth of ndid man. The time | the voters to rule the other five-sixths at his disposal in this country was 8o | e — | A Philadelphia has limited, however, that it Is not strange | be has beén led into occasional error | ban upon fancy names by refusing to |and drawn incorrect conclusions. recognize them at christenings. Never [ In treating the subject of the rela- |Mind. it she marries a fortune the | tive power of wealth here and abroad | *Pelling can be changed later in life. | Prof. Ferrero has plainly overlooked i« pertinent sociological fact. That the | { the impress of not only a trained ob- server but of a priest placed a Hear and Heed. Chicago Tribune power of wealth, as such, is greater in | Mr. Aldrich will have to pay some at-| thie United States than in Europe is a |tention to the strictures of the senator | conclusion with which thoughtful men | from lowa. Mr. Dolliver's credentials as | @ republican are as good as his own. ——— Everybody Made Happy. | will not be inclined to take issue with |him. In searching for the reason, | | rade from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Royal does not contain phosphatic acid (whichis the product of bones digested in sulphuric acid) or alum (which is one-third sulphuric acid), unhealthful substances adopted for other baking powders because of their cheapness. while he has not gone altogether Boston Herald 3 AR 1 G TR OB CRBTHG aT Ok 6. |- From | e SonPROUF: kibNG 48" to- (i S bbrebesemt reeareing vyl S} CHEERY CHAFF. power of wealth in this country is not | Practical effect of the supreme court's de- | I SORCEUILEE DUIYNE OUT S8 ROMA TR - A cision on the Hepburn act among those n ther L.ands and costliness of bullding and maintafning | -Bangs is o faker. His claim to the | because of money worship, but because | who seem to be most directly affected by & great navy, the Kreus Zeitung says Ger- [ SUthorship of that work hasn't & 14 to {Hl(r\('rnuu'm here does not exercise the |it, it appears as if everybody was bound Side Lights on What is Pra: many is not in financlal position to do it Oh, v his foot notes.”— Baltimore supervision over financial and business | to be made happy in the end. | piring Among the Near and and argues that an arrangement with Eng- | American | 3 " ——— Far Watio of the Earth. l1and for naval limitation would-be proof | «pgesessio said the reddy-me b | affairs that it does in Burope and it is | An Opening for Jinmoes. i R randiSuds e 4] ROL: ST WRlERAE Ut oF WibdbI. - T KRy R ins Bediie o8 e o | from this freedom of private Initiative | Baltimore Amerfcan Vomlsdoie et Miculss - Germis { _“Yes,' answered Mr. Dustin Stax; ‘but {and conduct that wealth gains its| Admirals Evans and Ijichi agree that| BY @ Sweeping turn of the taxatfon | V0SSissche zeiunk vidicues tierman where my Interests demand what some | " : i | war be N screws the British ministry diverts at.|aUest of England, or Canada, or Aus-|one else possessos, my skilled attorneys | power The American millionaire, he tween the United States and Japan v P e tralla, or India, and adds that the naval | ¢n prolong the game to an indifinite num i, " 18 both ridiculous and impossible. This | teNtion from the phantom fleets of the 4 h | ber of points.'—Washington Star | declares, assnmes responsibilities " 5 propaganda In Germany has overshot ¢ 5 ! ‘ : will be satisfactory fo all but the jingoes | GETMAan invader and centers popular inter- | Propaganda ermany h i : Hs which in Europe are exercised by the |or both nations, who might sooihe. tha |8t on the proposed attack on the Eng. |mark nat BeRvy oaoukh forse vkt han . We |state, and with responsibility comes |ruffled feelings by emigrating and joining | UShman’s home by the English taxgatherer s want men who can ride sfraight over any power. the Young Turks. The bill of expense and the means of rals State ownership of railroads s the rul ’(In\nr.] necessary 1 : 3 e iled in the budget s v brings u for some time past the ue- prilicant hat's all right, sir; 1've been This view can be only partially true, _— {Ing it detailed in the budget sharply brings {In Russia. Foi me. time pa he' R maotor car driver for four years.—Human i i An Error in Philanthropy. |home 1o the jingo element the fact that|s&ian minister in charge of that branch of | Life ‘I(H‘ with us the state is less a factor New York V 14, | Increasea armies and navies means In- | the public servi tried to discove some - the restraints upon all phases of pri- |Pists Must iearn is that it is not always|revenue must be had. The pressure of | road running between S8t. Petersburg and | he was the first man she had ever kissed? Vals 1ita. hBFE 14 an wbomomic: and lnl:lr; good. T ‘ e 15 a perversity in human | Popular sentiment, systematically worked | Moscow. The line was dolng a very sat-| Madge—Yes; Eve.—ludge ire, even when inspired by oS . , forced an increase e arn and sfactory senge K | sociological fact behind our conditions .Pl d t the best in 1"]‘ d v reuse in th Army and | fsfactory passenger business =0 far | M Kawle And just as 1 was about to | A 4 tentions, which sometimes, seems to operate | the «fear of invasion almost drove the |pumbers went. There had been no restrict- | ~~%€6ms to me I smell cloth burning: | Which Prof. Ferrero fails to recognize. |invincibiy in favor of wrong. If the mis- |Bovernment to doubling the number of |ive legisiation ent rate Taws were ! MrS. Homesome-My husband won a_box | The great fortunes of Europe are with |chief that is done by those who mean noth- | Dreadnoughts deemed necessary 0 main- | enacted. But the revenue 0 fot oo | e oot (e 1010 Yosterday. He's smok | ing but good co enacte \ e revenue did hot keep | INg one em. Go ahesd with what vou [ few exceptions of slow growth, the ac- |!"8 bul Eood coud be eliminated from une |tain the two-power standard. Last vear the | pace with the fnereased busiess. Finaily | #oT¢ %308~ Chicago Tribune ¢ orld the sum total of error would - |army and navy budget tot 248,000,000, hrepelistisn mend b il | cumulation of generations of effort by [grogy, fT S | al rror would be no: 1:_' my and navy budget totaled $208.000,000.( the minister demanded and secured from ‘Why do you run your car so slowly | the families which possess them. With | gl TR ICE NS on years before the total was &I000. | the raiiroad manager 2 list of passensers | s davs | ! n average annual increase of about “With everybody carrying home gatden [veen born a conservatism to which the | ., =~ New Vork Pres [ this year, divided equally between the|JurinE the sear %A This has fust been | Fisking & puncture.”Pittsburg Post \e recent intervention in Cuba co ublished makes a showing surpasain man who has accumulated a fOrtune | Upited Siat Mgl iie pRLoe “““ needs of old_age pensions and Increased | f bl ‘:"” i ‘\ wing SUrPAsKIng | rd ke to horrow vour lawn mower A v States some $5,000,00. 0t , Cubs:| gmmasments.LRe (s p { the deadhead list of an American rallroad You're early, this ve ‘e haver 3 g . . ' the §the additional revenue Is what jolts those i) W0 deadhe Ik v N ressiveness and strong initiative have | terms are easy. The pres iy amippwe: > | were carrled dur . ¥ now that. 1 want to use it before & g [ by congress s ranr, résident is empowered | wio huve property subject to tax, and pro- | Ve" rled during the vear. More than | you get it out of order. —Cleveiand Leader | been the means by which most of the | ey Fecelve from the “ubun £ov- | yokes widespread wrath., The ministry | PRIf Of the number had regular passes, the ernment “‘from time to time sucr ST 3 sy Y | others were g large American fortunes have been |y "lith T Hime to ¢ 1Ch AMOUNtS | cundidly admits the measure fs a ‘“war | theTs were given transportation, presum- | SONNETS BY A REUBEN. | built up and naturally, when acquired, | consider the (yian L M‘m\ ve h'{ NAY | budgel.” Existing forms of revenue rals- [ 8PIY At cut rates, by collusion of train- | o A | | iban treas en able to e i men, scores o om are n ) P “hicago News | thelr owners are not always consider- |pay without seriofis embarrassiont » | 5, 21¢ continued. increases made in sev- e o Afun i SR * | | The assient.” Leral, and new forms of taxation created, | SIberia under guard. On fhis line. here- | ate in the use of those fortunes, It is | There is a chance here for a uitferenca of | Ineome taxes 1 all | after, possession of s y | T seen vou at the sociable last night | with this, as with all other affairs of |PIN'on between the Cuban recretary of *he | highest rate heing 551 mov cent e corng | holder an objeet of Sttt 1 e e R OUIGRkRE Ay purty haniiL wiads oy | iy AN (BRY B e, Mecrety 0 | Bighest rate be 3 per cent on fncomes ject of suspicion, choke lite, the radicalism of youth as dis- | g’y =" ‘:‘ s ”’ "*r- ,"v:w‘..r $100000. Inheritance taxes are advanced . And then, when you come up to me and tinguished from the conservatism of |gix words of the condity LR {in \proportion to the value of estate, the| A slgnificant sign of the times in Pruscia | Your Tace all smilin' .and your eyes so s ) top rate being 15 per cent. The new forms | & the marked drift of the people from i e en of revenue rafsing strikes automobile | ARMCulture to manufac o me at first I'd die of fright |1t the professor will scan our his- | Look After Vour Property. B b b G o e R wiactures “ut” o | he At irat Ld'dle of fright, s 4 2 - A i . prokers, takes X per cent | merc e/last twelve yeark 16 per cent | 1lor,\ .a‘long with his study of present , . WEARTA S POTE 0 Ch1n wilelt o 1o k‘ur the increment of land values due to!of the population haye “,.m.hxm,. agricul But when 1 ssen that sloppy city bloke conditions he wiil observe that the | curetuny after the ey ? 100K [ the growth of a community and 10 pe nt ture for other indugtries, gl "r.l‘m‘,- cdgin’ up 1 hankered for a fight o he d of ¥ oWn | of the value e de s L ctond | 1ate that teeter-Kneec 'k, or'n' [ apld growth of the nation has in the property. e sure vour Gt orms o | OF the Valle of expiring lenseholds. Two- |of the agriculturiats mumhering anomis ot fo ecter-kneed, slick, or'n'ry | past given rise to many problems just | Fecordad, that your inmurance fs kent o x‘)mn:: of the m;mnn falls on the well-to-|all. they are now only about one-third | Who “never done a ek of decent work | pa ; dqe the remainder. ds ‘to be squeessd out | . e ; 4 ut comes round with his b a8 wertous hafthis anu that they have | thal ¥ou mione have the kev (o your| ot the liquor: trade. In its politicat et | e same time German, and espectally and his smirk b 4 i (e il quor- trade. Tn its political aspect | Prussian, ye b : s sinir | been met and solved as they have pre- | h’m‘l : ,: in ot alary vault. Do not budiat”soareh-Hanvily By tie Hots ofil Hed r.".- .Iulnuxn and administration | And thinks becuuse he's rich he's better'n { . ) ’ 4 our securities with your broke: 1se o ® heen largely directed toware ! s, sented themselves, just as this one is | I he is doing a conservative businees o 5. and the privileged classes it repre- | agricultural lfe more atipaci | N ptni | Dad-bilike his hide! Who lef him all his e j ent. BAN' 10 Bard. b " e gents It puts the load on entrenched | gble, ye ctive and profit | dough? ¥ on 2 im to handle your property s are | falled conspicuously in checkin t know | ; PR e B L not permitted to amend, and by gn in-|g ing the drire i | ol L ith all the c¢o Ay rom country to city | Self-Convicted. fidence reposed. in financial matters, (oo | CFease I lquor licenses accomplishes by | 3 Oh well. they ain't no use in gettin' het! One of the planks in one of the plat- | 4, H atters, there | |ngirection the reform embodied the | S s { To Jest be born his way Is hard enough { ® 80 few defalcations. There is no use Ay e | POLITI( Ir [ was him hisself, with all b [forms on which our demo-pop EoV- | in making it easy for some ona (o gat ven CC7SINE DIl rejected by the lords last | CAL DRIFT. T'd think Tt pUrty tough on mes you pett | N Our | year. —— er rode se | property. In this worle N Baid ra If he had saw your look when you two i;lnu: :nd la‘glslal(u:‘e rode into office pm'mm 1o :”u ”1 »: v“ hard r]‘. mos e Symptoms of the fall muniei ampaign | met y ast fa reads as follows cauire anything. AN hey T e | are becomi a arent W < ! ues 1é wouldn ) up suc r | | should be careful to the The voung Turks learned at considerable ming acparent In New York. A| 1 gues hé wouldn't put up such a | We call attention to the tremendous in e D, 1ast degree in|cost the lesson that a reform administra. | °C8) Judse declares the city has a fine | ks {orease In taxation under republican rule, | "¢INE that they are fully protected in it | ¢ion must put reformers on guurd, T | 't O Aldermen who ought to be hanged e ToRastss s, slliv: Argh of | The appropriations of the republican leg- e ————— Whishs th [ ames L The governor of Texus about to st It makes me kind. ' r | | g s \ich the progressives failed to do las exas is about to start na ne kinda sorry for him, yet [N ARDEOEHA AR QL She e (9 i ann. 08 JUDICIAL LEAKS STOPPED, A Lot b i Bt Felpenitl Ely errion ot Tha sirblied. wenaca it T Reate i WDATE AN, Kot (oM aleinly : e ’ e now doing with astonishing 5 : him airs | 0, while under the populist administration Saran Y air 11a | VIBOE. Followers of the fortunen of Abdu | "% he Texas legisiature will keep the, And v a farmers daughter liyin' here {they were but $2,000,000 4 eeps Its AUl executive pantry stocked | G SAUAR b | Al Hamid are going with a vengeance. The d uniil the trees! And only been away to school two year During the campaign the demo-pop | *‘mlnxm‘:‘:nl.:-h'u xS B el ”"“ bear And vet the finest Jady anywhere! i E d Republican " 0 e three | dog-gone my luck! It's enou o lorators and organs constantly harped | The Unitea States suprome court s | TEMLETS of Nis private cabinet met violont | | SCYCN Mmen convicted of graft in Pits- Dog-gone my luck: It's plain enough t ‘ supreme co hus "' burg were sentenced to |on alleged republican extravagance again proved its capacity (o keep its coun. | 0*!1* the third Is hiding in London. The :."""“m: pont '; |<l :' prison—terms vary- ! The chance of gettin' you Is slim for me. % . o a6 Tah Swant ' sy & from one and half to three and n ha and promised that if the republicans :«luv n;m until ready to publish the out- ' P ac 1,' been swept clean of reactionary | o5 00 Ens . xm’ ‘vn“‘v;“m 1 a ||<‘1r e ome. Fol ks Ihe ¥ Tubbish en the shefkh-ul-Tsla o | YERTR e d 10 ey a money penalty | (i ars B WA o en o Aen o boteene | 00 r many weeks the commodities | r helkh-ul-Telam — who | yoating 34,500, L And yet. T can't forget I knowed you | or coal railroads case has been under the | 5/81ed the order dethroning Abdul has been when ipu( in their places the cost of state (consideration of the court and erormoys | SUPPIanted by one who will sognize the |, 11IN0I8 and Texas are rivals for a prize| We two was only happy little tots | government would be at once materi- | speculative interests have been hanging on | ™1 0f Allah when shown by (e re.|[P" 10ftY statesmanship. Law makers of | And gatheréd cowslips and forget-me- ‘-n_\ reduced. Ithe reault and striving 1o obialn some in. | formers Mehmed Vs assertion that iy | e fOFmer state would Himit the breadth | g DO fands when we passed fhe wiid E | imation ot 1t in advance. But Wan pdi e e Lo BB gl | of women's hats. Texas would restrict the | cat's der d The official compilation of the ap- | g iqanii g 0 100 R ataet | il . but to render| ongtn of the. bills to s, AN el S AR 1a th | 9 & W rgion d no idea of what the decision | 8ervices to the nation conveys an impres- | o il ot though there n ny wildcat then { propriations made by the late demo- was to be untll it was bulletined to the |aive truth, borne out by the fact that ati| TN® Superior court of Phlladeiphin, | Y04 used to tell me that you loved me | pop xe,_m.muru in comparative pthu}wm«o 'me other day The first guesses | Palace functlonarles, from guards x.,;"“‘““"‘! for its judicial alse and | And when 1 went to work at Old Man | alongside of the same items for the ‘:\mkt agO were that the court would sus- | 8ervants, have been chosen by the young | PeRe!ration, declares that a candidate who | Scott's e lower co 0c y " ’ “Rets v & Povi e g <l ast, you cried, » preceding republican legislature shows | 14iP the lower court in knocking the | Turks committee, Morcover, the estates 4 oM UK for the Boyw ‘on thescale | At NS it oting,: KRN NN, was i | statute. But the court's long delay finally | bitherto controlled by the co | 1@ Was accustomed to before his nomina- g 4 la grand total for the demo-pops of |brought the sue 3 | he suitan have [ yion"s goon oy d I felt as big ax any man that day las'bas o . S e 1ght the guessing around 1o the point |been taken over by the state, the palace S008. Rt Viglate the low And thought 1'd earn & whoppin' farm 185,203,754, as against $4,367,257 for |that the law would be upheld, probably |revenues and expenditures are to ba con. | Khode Island tiis week colebrated the for yQi | the republicans two years before. | wth modificatlons, and this proves to have | trolled in like manner, thus making the | 434 nniversary of the day when the king's Aud SR BARE. for. Yau in G lYeat or | This exhibit of cold figures ts the | JeC% TIEUL gt r'i'l was only a guess, never- | state supreme and the sultan a !l;nr,..:""""’ was stricken from the legal papers 1 see you mow ar when 1 drove away, | ’ | or hardly any one expected the | head of the colony. At the same time members | And, somchow, though since then you've ilnd!wulnble proof that the complaint | court would be #o unanimous in that or | ”e |of the United State's senate handed «| .. ETOWed a sight, | about republican extravagance was en- |any other position. So the consolldated gn% | D storrisan. 1 tent of the|Fo48t to Rhode Isiand's kingly successor. | " g, U e AUl that lite girl in :"!‘9 v without foundation. Instead of |rate decision fell upon the street last ll ndc l‘i 'I'lyl\ s kl\ v;h\lm:';ly.yl .,‘ the e Bigiioeia | London Times at Peking, says that the re- | reducing the cost of state government, | FT\er Without the firat Inkling In advance | port o the workings of the impertal of ] as coming. The great tribunal | e 9 | -] Vv .| y nese stoffice 19 a the demo-pops have made appropria- |4 washington is showing a rather remark. | C"°™ toffice in 1%8 shows an unpre- | tions more lavish than any of their |able capacity to protect itself againat leaks. | CrO°n'¢d expansion. The Improvement of | redscessors and. so f A3 ] e S SN | the organization, the facilitation of inter- | | Pred d, 5o far 08 the pledar | .o\ o L FPRREGR SHOCKED, | provincisl communication, and the accel- | {to cut down s concerned, they stand i " |eration of delivery by a courler servi | self-convicted of insincerity and them- | Wh He | selves exposed to the same arraign- § | ment which they made against the re- hinks of Demoe & for Proteet ats Boost- on. Courler-Journal of the allegation th um !pnnllllrnm ber tariff is a revenue tarlff is ridiculous. 1% . The vast lumber industry of this country Collier Weekly says that while |1s almost entirely a domestic industry | practically every member of congress |the taritf on lumber being virtually pro hibitive, and only ylelding aboui $4.000 | has made a long set speech on the | | Payne bill, the best four speeches de- whereas the revenue tarlff on coffee, wh was first proposed by the Payne bill, we ‘llvervd in the tariff debate up to date | yleld ten times that amount. Nobody denies |are those of Sereno E. Payne of New |that a coffee tarift would be cssentially a | York, of Champ Clark of Missouri, |Y¢Due tariff, and vec these same demo- | B i | Francls W. Cushman of Washington | e taritt because, according to their pre {and Claude Kitchen of North Carolina. | te | Collier’s is prejudiced or it would not it weould be A revenue tariff tarift on coffee will nof listen to a revenue | leave out our Nebraska members, each “ N\nl urm:‘l recently (n.lkn.- have the sp: | ., |tacle of democrats making any b flis |of whom delivered the very Dest honest plea in behalf of the lumber speech that was made. To say nothing of lumber's inclusion |raw materials freedom from has always been & cardinal democratic | trine, free lumber has long been expr a democratic demand. Even so fn whose Now that the Water board has been authorized to issue $6,5600,000 in | ! bonds, what is it going to do about it? | perfect a democratic measure as the Wilson bill ob |Is it in any better position o com- |gerved that demand and placed lumber on promise than it was before, when it |the free list, while lumber was made free | was authorized to issue $3,000,000 of [b¥ the democrats in the Canadian r {bonda? It is up to the Water board | "TN0 Y auy on lumber we re. | to demonstrate é[\\‘lvl cans did expressly on the gr nd | —_— that they proposed to protect the American | The tornado which struck Oklahoma [lumber intercsis againat foreign lnpor The state has Goy- | t#tions. Thos mocrats who wish a | did little damage. ernor Haskell on its hands and it little use for a common, everyda yet d but, on ion and not have th " | ot that protec Wi rage to confess it LOT- | attempt to justify themselves by the absurd he contrary, | nado to undertake to disturb things. |plea that they wish the lumber (ariff be- | | | cause It is a revenue tariff. cut sorry If Governor Shallenberger has all | Ures in comparison even with the greediost : of the republican protectionists v this trouble over one little Omaha Juh‘p““ icans, at least, are not false to the rty principles and are no |of superintendent for the School for |; nypoerites. | working day and night, are all noteworthy features, The postal routes now cover 8§ o0 miles, of which 68,00 are courler lines It is plain that the postal secretary and | the small body of foreigners scattered over | the empire who are training the Chinese | ! clerks have been doing efficlent service. Por the xake of his large family and his job, it is hoped that Mohammed All Mirza shah of Persta, shadow of Allah, king of kings, ete, will make note of what hap- | pened to Abdul Humid when he attempted | A surgical ation of the Turkish cor stitution. The shadow of Allah recembles | his extinquished neighbor. He regards a | constitution very much as an American | vallroad views rate regulation—an assault to adorn a junk pile. Abdul entertained | siiilar seniiments. Where is Abdul now? Al Mirza dumped a constitution some and (hougn he has not heen swiftly as Abdul. he has ¥ p his majesty appears to b n the lead, | approach of the Rus stan relfef expedition is ex ) ha vards - | upon which Germa entering command the gencral approval of the Ger- | man press 4l is notable fn man quarters. The conservative Kreus Zeltung maintain an at o o s England's w which are clearly for | We will place one sale Saturday morning 70 child- ren’s suits in sailor and Russian styles that sold up to $7.00, at— $3.50 These suits are all light weight materials, in beauntis ful shades of gray— just the thing for the little fellow this time of year. These are all broken lines from the season’s best selling styles. If the little fellow needs a school suit, now is your opportunity, Here are the sizes and quantiy of each size: Size Number 25| 3|4]5(61748) 9410 69411 2 70 SUITS On Sale Saturday Only. Browning, King & Co SB:RZ 15th and Douglas Sts, /4 R. 8. WILCOX, Mgr, NG/

Other pages from this issue: