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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 2, 1890)
I 4 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , MABOH 2. 1800. SIXTEEN PAGES „ 1 „ THE DAILY BEE , H E. HOSEWATER , " Editor H PUBLISHED " every " morningC m , TKlt.MS OFStUStillllTION H , Dally and Sunday , One Ycnr 110 no f filx months f. 01 H j Three Months 2 M i Numbly llrojiuo Yrnr . , . . . 2 OJ ' 1 Weekly llee , Olio Yearn It It Iremtum . . , 2 0,1 3 oriicns | flmnhs , lira Ilulldlng M ' Chicago Olllre , Mf Ho nkrry lliilldtng 1 Now York Hooms II and f > Trlbuni Ilulldlng H Washington Nn r > l I I'otirtsonth Mlreet H Council llluils , No 13 l'cnrl btreot ? H boutti Omaha , Corner Nun I StiStraoti HI comtrstONDrNcn H Allcominunlcatlons relating to news nn < l edl- HI tor I a ! mutter idiould bo Addressed to ttio editor l lal Department 1 ncRiNras tirrrriis I All business letters and remittances nliould & bo aadrrBHcil to 1hi Hen Publishing Company 7 Omnbn Draffs , checks nnd l'ostolllco ordura H to be inncto p.tynblo to the order ot the Company I Tlic Bee PnWishing Company Proprietors H | IItg llulldlng rarnnm andHeTonteanth Streets Hj THE BEE ON THE TRAINS m There Is no excuse forafalluretoitotTiir ll c 11 on the trains All nott dcalera hive boon noti- m I fled to rarry a full supply , rrarelcrs who want 1 Tin : Her mid cant get It nn trains where other 1 Omaha papers are carried nre roquostvd to H < notify TlIK I1TK. H I 1'Ienso be pnrtlrular to Rive In all eases full H Information as to date , railway nnd number H train M THE DAILr BEE H Fworn ' • tntrmpiil ot Circulation H Etato of Nebraska , I. , m County of Douglas , f • M flcoiKo II TzsrhucK secretary of Tirr IIrk M I'ublishlng Company , dofs solemnly swear that i the actual circulation of'I iik IUii.y llGBfortho B' ' \rctk endlnir March 1,1830 , was as follows : H Bundnv Fob ! , ! ,30O < Jlondav Job21 I9.H1 ' Tunsrtav , Tub 25 ll' ' . 'lls j Wednesday Ieb 2(1 ( ID.II3 : i ThurHdar , lob 27 in.i73 : t ITlday Ieli IX . 10,418 i Saturday , MnrcU 1 1W.777 H Average 10.8 It H HEOItOn II T7.3CIIUCIC. H Sworn to before me and subscribed to in my H presence this 1st day of March , A. I > 1HT0. H LBcal | N. P. KEIL 1 H Notary lubllc | Etato ot Nebraska , I. . M County ot Douglas , f" • H Gcorgi II IzscIiuck being duly sworn , doM - M poses and says that he Is secretary ot Tuk IIeb 1 1'iibllililug Company , that the actual average M daily circulation ot Tiik Daily Hkh tor tne H | i month of March 1WO , 1PR. ' > I copies : for April , l 1HMI. 1H.IW.II copies : tor May , 1STO. lsfiW copies ; H 1 for June , 1M : > . lH.KM copies ; for .Inly , 19SI. 1H , H m \ copies ; for August , lHNt , i , B5i conlm : for Son H , tember ItW IH.71) ) copies ; for October , 1M > , H I lC.IW copies ; for November 18MI , 10,310 copies ; H | for Decomlicr , 18S ) , W.nts copies ; for January , H I 1KI0. I'I/mT ' copies ; for l'ebruary , IK ) } , l'i,7 l H j copies , HI Oronnr : n. T7TncrK. H ] Sworn to ncforo me and subscribed in my B I presence this 1st day ot Match A. I ) . , 1800. l [ Seal ) N. P. Full * Notary Public 1 FitOM a niotaorologicaA point of v\aw \ , H Fobrunry stele a mnrcli on its succoasor 1 and clipped Us cltnvs , jj Tin : papal decree abolishing the 1' Lontcn fast in certain cases is likely to 1 produce fresh epidemic of laprrippa I'j ' in a nil hi form Hl ] Misorinr.n individuals who seek to j raise the wind with libel suits should M J bo able to produce a bettor cortltlctitc M j of charnctor than the records of the fl I police court H' | Nkhuaska is iioUparticular wlinthor 1 the colonel of hnr militia successfully | | storms the Roman colossuutn She is | | contented to know the palntod Indians B9 or the wild west make Rome howl H j Dit Noiivin Guikn's : opposition to m postal telegraphy increases annually B in proportion to the expansion of the M Wcstorti Union In the expressive B languniro of the street , the doctor must B earn his saltirv H Tiik Omaha and Council Bluffs Ruil- B way nnd Bridge company iucrensod its HKVj capital stouk from seven hundred and H llfty tliousund' dollars to one million H and a half In this connection it would H bo interesting to know what becomes M of Section 5 , Article XI of the state H constitution , and what action the H auditor has taken in the promises H Tut ; misleading announcement of the H death of the young son of Minister H r Robert Lincoln wns'published through M out the country last Wednesday It is H grutifying to the countless friends of M the diHtinguishod family that young H Abe was improving at last accounts , M with every prospect of a complete ro- H . covory = _ _ H Tnus ' upromo court of Nobrasica fol- M lows a long line of precedents in doclar- B ing that sleeping cur companies tire reM - M spotiBiblo , like hotel hoopers , for lug H I ( T go of pnssongersontrustod to porters B-j Travclur * iFo-ontltlod-to-proteetiot > for H the extra price p.ifd the company and H the porter The court has boon there M and judges by oxporiouco HBV Tin : Into ntlomptod mnssnero of a B Kontuekian for being too familial with pBV the nosu of a roportcr from the same H Btato coiillrms the suspicion that the H . chlvalrlc spirit is sprouting anew in the M blue grass roglona The avorugo Ken HBVJ tuckiau can tolcrato a ronsonablo H nraouut of familiarity , but when it H comes to plucking his olfactories tit tin HBVJ EOiisounblo hours , forbenraneo ceases to H l > o a virtun in the region of hjs hip B pockol B BJ Tin : selection of Vicar General B BJ Brady of St Louis as coadjutor bishop i B BJ of the Catholio diocobo of Onnha prau- B BJ 'tically makes him the successor of B BJ Bishop O'Connor , in the eventnf tholat- B BJ tor's death Although not generally B BJ lenown In the diocese , Father Bracy is B BJ liighly recommouded as uletirnod , zeal B BJ ous and consorvatlvo mluistor of the B BJ I chuioh To Catholics hereabouts his B BJi Eoloction coulirms the roconi boast that B BjE St Loula is the mother of bishops for B HI that denoiuinutiaji 1 r A-BV\JiCATH of Yankee cnpitalibts , B BJ | headed by Bon Butler , propose to pur- > B Bjy ohaeo land at Port Said and Alexandria , , B BJl and build two hundred miles of rail B BJ 1 road through Palestine , making way B BJ t btatlous of Hebron , Bothluhom , .loru- B BJ I wdom , .leriuho , Nimiroth and Galliloo , B BJ with Datuattcus us tiio e as torn terminal , B BJ TJio construction and oporalion of n B BJ railroad in tlmt region would give a i B BJ tremendous Impetus to pilgrlmugos and BBB bwoll the hosts of sightseers to enor- B BJ inous proportions Tiio stimulus of a railroad would produce almost a mir 1 aculous rovlval lu the development of f _ , Aralty the hlost Itnaglno what a i BBB Ehoclc it would bo to the pious to road B BJ that a syndicate of capitalists wore B BJ booming lots In Bethlehem , or nreueh- B BJ lug the praises of Galliloo us a wituor B BJ resort , or heat the lusty brakeman ring B BJ the clituiges oil "Jerusaloui , twouty B BJ mluulea ( or refreshments " MKIJWAh F.m O.lT/OiY UVVOHM The staff of the Johns Hopkins lion pltal nnd the faculties of some ot the Humorous medical schools in Uulttmorc , having considered the subject ot re forms in medical education with a view tonpplylng them locally , reached the conclusion that the matter was of suf ficient importance to take a national form It is accordingly proposed to ask the modicnl schools of the United States to send delegates to u conference to ba held in Kitshvillo in May next , concur rently with the mooting there ot the Atnorican Medical association , It is suggested that the subjects which will probably bo discussed at this conference tire : Three years course ofslx months sessions , graded course , wrltton and oral examinations , prelim inary examinations In Kngllsh , and laboratory instruction in chemistry , histology and pathology Suoh a programme , embracing llttlo more than the nlphabot of tnodlcal edu cation , is certainly not promising ot very extended reform , nnd the results of past conferences called for the nur- pose of improving Jlho character of mouicnl education in this country nro not reassuring But novortholcss the movement desorvoa hearty encourage mont That there is nocosslty for an intelligent and honest olTort in this direction it is presumed no ono will question There are oxcollcnt itiodlcal schools in the Unllod States These of Harvard , the University of Pennsylvania , Johns Hopkins , Columbia college , and a few others , are highly meritorious Institu tions , conducted on sound principles and requiring thoroughness on the part of these who receive tholrondorsotnont But there is a multitude of other so- called tnodlcal schools scattered all over the country whoso mission It is to fill the ranks of the medical profession with men having only the most guporiiolal acquaintance with the sclonco of medicine - cine mon who go no farther than the primmer of medical knowledge , and armed with a diploma and an iniiuitc assurance go forth to impose upon the confidence ot a liolpless pub lic F.vory your n horde ot this class of ' docs is sent out from the so- called medical schools to prey upon their follow beings , and they are to bo found In ovcry city and town through out the country How much of the general mortality is duo tothoignorauco and mniprncticoof these quacks can not bo computed , but it is undoubtedly very largo The number of low-class schools increases from year to your , and necessarily the miiiihor of low-class doctors , for those institutions oiler in ducements for easily and speedily ac quiring a diploma and title which in sures loom a largo patronage The chief difficulty in the way of a general reform is obvious The high-class schools cannot descend from their present standard without de stroying their claim to confidence nnd for the low-class schools to attempt to emulate the higher institutions would result in killing off most of them While this would bo beneficial to the public it is not to bo supposed that the stocktioldors in those institutions are going to become bonetaotors Still it is possible that this projected confer ence may do some good , and it will not bo-wholly valueless if it shall merely call public attention to a subject of really vital importance to the public , for few things can bo of greater concern - corn than the propar education of these into whoso care all of us must at bomo time place our lives Certainly these who wouldtroform medical education in the United States need have no difficulty in proscribing what is necessary They have only to study the methods of such education in Great Britain , Germany uud Franco in order to enable thorn to lormulato a system which , if it could bo gonorully adopted here , would in a few years w 'ipo olt the disgraeo that now at taches to the American medical diploma _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tin : suvnuT sjm iok farce The newspaper correspondents in Washington were recently onablcd to supply their unpers with detailed in formation regarding certain Important discussions and votes in the executive jsossious of the sonnto , notably what transpired in connection with the con - firmation ot Indian Commissioner Mor gan and the ratification of the extradi tion treaty with Great Britain The fullness ami accuracy of the reports ot these star-ohumbor proceedings was a source of very great annoyance to some of the senators , and the result was the appointment of a committee to investl- gate the matter and report a plan for securing - curing the inviolable socrocv of executive - tivo aesslojis The commlttoo has since boon devoting itself several hours cnuh dtiy to the task asslgnod it , which liow- ever seriously it may bo regarded by senators , is vlo.vod by the correspon dents as a highly amusing proceeding The senate has periodical attacks of virtuous Indignation because the pub lic is leapt informed through the press ot what the sountord do behind the elosod doors of their oh am bar Vet it is hardly possible that any member of the senate can bo ignorant of the fact that the bocrets ot the oxocutlvo sessions only leak out through senators themselves , nnd that the information is imparted for publio use because interested sonutora dusiro that it shall go out correctly The press correspondents Uud very Ut- tlo dlfllculty in ascertaining what has transpired in uxecutlvo sessions , for the reuben that in splto ot pledges to secrecy there tire few senators who do- cllno to furnish information upon mutters - tors which affect their constituencies , , or upon which they desire to bo sot right before the people There arc and will always bo senators who for per bonal or political reasons will doslio i that executive proceedings Miall got into print , and it is doubtful if any plan that can bo devised would prevent - vent the disclosure ot iuforma- tlou lu cases where Individ- rlnl or party interests conld bo ad- vaucod by giving it publicity Never while senators differ about questions i that oomo before them will any rule Ira posing secrecy upon their deliberations i and actions bo effectual , Undoubtedly , Bomo of the senators who profess to bo ludiguuut at the recaut disclosures have boon guilty of oqtinlly grave violations of i the rule against the revelation to outsiders i of what ttikos place in the star-chambor procoodtngs So far ii4 the pending investigation is concerned it is not llkoly to amount to anything The men who could toll how the oxocutlvo session secrets are obtained and from whom the news paper correspondents will not do , so They understand perfectly the neco3- slty of protecting both themselves and the authors ot their inform itton , so that all olTorts on the part ot the senate commlttoo to got any light on their Investigation from the nowsptpjr mm nro certain to fall And the outcome will bo that the oxccutlvo session farce will continue to bo played lu the old way It is strange that enough senators cannot bo brought to hou the absurdity ot this practice , to say nothing of its unropublic.in nnd unamorlcnu charac ter , to ao aWy with it It is a cus tom that cannot bo justified on any ground of expediency or necessity , and it is wholly ut vnrltinco with the nnturo nnd spirit of our political institutions Its tendency Is to depreciate the senate in popular respect and conlidouce , and such a humiliating exhibition as that body 1b now making of itself in prose cutlngan investigation which Is a vir tual Imputation of faithlessness against its own members , casts a grave roproich on the country The sennto would gain very greatly in popular regard by abolishing ishing the oxocutlvo Bosslon Pit ICES O CONSUMEIiS An interstate cattlomon'a convotition has been called to meat at Fort Worth , Tex , on the 11th of this month , to Inquire - quire into the causes which have led to the low prices o ( boot to the pro ducers without any corresponding bonollt to the consumer The proposed inquiry is nltogothor uuiquo , a conven tion to consider the interests of the consumer boiag n , dccldod innovation It ia not on this account , hovvovor , the los3 Important or cotnino ' ndablo , and while it is not tobobxpoctod tnatlt will result in anything to the bonollt of the consumer , it may bo hoped that it will impart some information , explanatory of his uniform position as a victim under nil conditions of the market , that will not bo wholly without inter est to him Ho can obtain uo satisfac tory information from his butehor Ho may learn from the market quotations that that plauslblo individual is enabled - ablod to buy his boot at four or five cents a pound , and ho will naturally wonder why It is thai , ho is asked twelve to lifteou eonts for a steak , ac cording to the cut , but if ho lias the courngo to put the question ta the butehor ho is as likely as anything else to go away convinced that the dealer in moat is the man to ba convnisor- ated It is a act that within the last year or two the prices of cattle have materi ally doclincd , until they have reached a point at which the producers e.iy _ there is no profit in raising cat tlo Undoubtedly moro than ono cause has operated to produce the state of affairs of which the stockmou com plain , and which has been tnado lho subject of investigation by neo.ninitteu of the United States sailato , but th'd principal cause assigned is'tno manipu lation of the market and the cnutrol ot transportation rates by the allege 1 boot ring Whatever the causes , however , it is a fact which the oxporlenco of con sumers will verify that the low prices to the produoor have not cotros ' pond tngly benefited the consumer But the same thing i\ true of other com modities than rboof A Chicago < contemporary recently noted that bread mude from wheat grown ifl' the northwestern''btates ' and ground into Hour iiy the mills of Minnoapulia is sold in Chipago at five and six cents a pound , while the same Hour bhippad to Liverpool and there baked into bread is sold ut two and two nnd a half cents a pound And our contoniporary nbservos : ' • While the profits of the farmers have boon shacod away on one sidu the consumer sumor of their products has secured llttlo or no relief Instead of the low prices of products in first hands being rollcctod in the prices of the consumer the case is exactly the opposite ; prices in first hands and in the hands -of the man who has tr family to food are relatively wider uiiart than almost over before " The los3 of the farmer brings no corrosuond- luir gain to the consumer The gam i3 to the railroads aud the middlemen So it is with pretty tnueh the whole listat necessaries Such as are not con trolled by trusts or syndicates arc at the morryof apoculalors and railroad man agers , who prosper by plundering both the producer and the consumer Such a condition is certainly " a serious reproach to the American economic system , nnd constitutes a very worthy subject for the consideration of Rt-atosmen. The time 1b certainly ripe for soma manifes tation of public concern in thu interests of the consumer , and it is to be hoped the interstate cattlemen's convention will bo successful in discovering the causes which are operating against the producers of moat without any aJviin- tago to the pee plo who oat it , and will point out a practicable remedy TilK brilliant editor of London Truth , Mr Labouchoro , is not llkoly to sulTor very greatly in popular rogurd by ronson of tiia suspension from the bouse of com mons us a punislunont for his stntomont implicating Lord Salisbury in the efforts 1 that have boon made to shield certain persons identified with the Cleveland street scandal Undoubtedly Mr La- \ bouchoro understood fully the risk ho 1 was Inking in thuR involving the name 1 of the premlor in a matter that has 1 stlrrod English society to the core , and which mon high in olllcial lifo have un- doubtodly endeavored to keep ns much as possible from the publio gaze , ' but for this reason his courngo in ar raigning the highest officer In the gov- orninotit will command the greater ad- miration The circumstantial state monta ot Mr Labouchoro show that ho did not proceed without having very thoroughly fortiQod his position , and the fact of his susponsloti will not do- stroy in the publio mind the offoot of his charges , nor will Lord Salisbury bo able to silence a popular doinaud for an explanation that will refute the charges 1 BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBl against him by pointing to the tact Hint his supporters in the house of commons sent its author into retirement for a wcok It would have boon wiser nnd moro politic to have mot the chnrgo in a strnightforwnrd way nnd refuted it if it is without foundation The course adopted Is very sure to convince a grcnt many that Mior&hi ' a substantial basis for all that Mth Lahouchoro charged As n matter of interest to the editors and publishorsi of inowapapora In tlii * state , wo roproiuco Judge Doano'a very sound dollnition of the law of libel , as applied totho publication of co'U't pro ceedings and rooorts of current events The casu in polu\luvolvod the question whether a nowap.ipcr is litiblo for dam ages clalmod in an action for llbol on the ground of publishing police court proceedings that aiTect the reputation of a plaintiff Judge Uoano hold that a newspaper has the right to publish as matter of nowa the proceedings occurring in the public courts , or matter appearing In the pub lic records , providing the satnu is pub lished in good faith and without mallco Where a publication ia libelous per so it devolves upon the plalntilT to provo malice on the part of the publlshor , and in the absence of such proof ot mullco no recovery can bo had Onu of the marked olTocts of the opening ot the Sioux reservation is the stimulus given to the mineral and agricultural development of the Black Hills As long as the Indians controlled the land dlroetly east , the country was dependent on ono outlet to the 6011th. The romuval of that embargo paves the way to railroad competition through a region rapidly filling with settlers The result is to bo aeon in the activity dis played in all lines of trade and indus try , and the strengthening of conll- donoo among all classes The Bluck Hills nro entering upon a now era of prosdoritv , and are bound to boeomo im portant factors in the trade and com mo co ot the west Tim politicians and contractors in South Omaha leave no means uuim- ployod to chock the sentiment for an nexation and intrench themselves in a uormaueut job The taxpayers who must foot the extravagant debts already piled upnnd meet the largely fncroased expenses under the laws govorniug cities of the first class , niny well trem ble for the future if they permit the jobbers to have their own way They bliould promutly organize in solf-do- fonso , drive out the cormorants , and unite with Omaha Ono government is cheaper than two ; Financially and commercially SoutlUOmaha will bo the gamer by untioxntibu Tin : march of electricity into all departments - > partmonts of hifmuii ! activity has bepn the theme of countldss pens , yet it remained - i mainod for Chicago to provo its use in forbiddun vocations Instead of the sandbag the gurrotors of the fair city have adopted electricity , and in one in stance succcbsfully URod It in stuiiniucr nnd robbing a victim K perimonts bhotv that a storaijo ' , b.ittorv _ us largo as a cigar case will knock a man cold and leave no nurJ ! oj Atho victim It lsj ! ! silent and blTectfve ' and end o 'f the most dngorous weapons yet nlacoi in the hands ot the criminal classes "Si v Yitrn tv iuiV4 I" ii . New 17)i , 'c 2VHm le When tiio great bis boundless west under times to have aayttiini ; aho is turd to boat The Imtiortii ii tjupsa o i. * fiaims City Stir . 'ihexo is nu urtido iron ? nround tellini ! ] , How tojl'lant Corn " This is of iioui-i in Kansas What thov want to know out there t is Hot to Soil Corn " tp ' • While tiio li'w'it llo tin O ito Iturn " llarlfur.l Com nut It Is almost too cooJ to ba t-uu. bus hope ful pjopte are bo inniu ; mally 1o liopo that stmuthiny may ns.v bj din to win ! als euurrIiiR tiio practiuj of Btulllnj ballot boxes in Now jlursey c B tVctrkni'f in llarmnir , S' . / ' .i iMiiiibdwIVbm In rep'y to a ranirtjr Ituiull Sieasikt ; "I rofusa to lot my Uft hini know whet my rlrtht h ind Is doin , . " Yet w.ion it ciuias to ollarlii ! ! dollars botti of ItutjeU's hinds seem ta flap tojother in sweet nnd nsrfoct . unison . Ill • > • Wnnt .Nn An ili > : ijs Jmlui > ! | ! * Jiiiin 11. Tuo brilliant Alta.i tv.ia roproiouU the Mississippi dbtrk't In ttraioh A-ijf.lajn is located , huvlng upilo iziJ for tin h Willi' ' , ' of Senator Prootir in ofllity , has been no tified that lie Is now serviiu his last term I'or tiio Sitito ut IJoiMiomy CUluiwi AViitt Georgu Gould is bullaing n log nouso to live in nuxt summer Tills nniinblo youni ; man must bo trying -to economize so as to ussist his pa In buying up the rust of the " earth Ami a rini I'nlr to Draw To Iii'I/dilripiitM / Jimrnal , Domocratlo ascendency in northern cities is obtninod br conspiracies to stufT ballott boxbs Democratic useendonoy in the south is maintained by ballot-box frauJs They are two of a kind , - . Oi' .ciiL'o'm Kucirv Star C/ifdiifu. / Trftom . w- Tlio Hou Joe Bluokbup of Kentucky ronra out that Uo will conyuuo to work ugalnst ClucnKO as loniras iinj legislation pcrtuinlr.K to the worlds fair , remains to bo done " Everything seems to bo playing into Chi cages hands these days , i 5W-1 How Puthnr Kiilpk/irbnoICT Feels CMcatjo 'ir'I'UDC What church was UiWliosa conferanoe , or presbytery , or synod } or assembly , or whatever - over you call It , dooldod the ether day there 1 was notliliip this yo.ir tot bo thankful fori That's the ohuroh I want to Join Fattier Knickerbocker , ' ' , , ii 1 IjctTliiitn Ijiinlcltaoktvartl jy < ic r irll'orlil. . The followers of Edward Bellamy , author of "LnokiuR Backward , " souin to tliinU that their hero is thoroughly original They should road Prescott's Conquest of Peru " 1 They will find that paternalism has boon tried on this hemisphere • TI10 LnsHon Cnnliot lis I'iliorjd , St , LnuU Globe-iMmoer.it. It is to be liopoj that they ( ttio republican loKlslators Id Iowa ) will begin by taking proper account of the fact that the counties I which gave two-thirds of the majority for prohibition uro today controlled by the dem • ocrats Tfil meaus , obviously , that if the > republican party is to quintain its ascend 1 ency In Iowa , it must rcspoct public sontl- mont on the tomiwraaco qaeitton Hotter Oet Orrr nn Our Hide in iilpr0 Ttlhuiie Of one thing Uanndians may bo assured , nnd that Is ttint their rights or Interests will not stvid in the way of British policy Wo hnvobeon sacrlflficd before , and may ns well acciistom ourselves totho Uoa tint wo shall bo sacrificed again 1 Hon Cnn Never Kno Tlicm VhlUuUlvhld 1'rrtt. It Is to bo ho pod that the recent oporntion upon Ucnjnmiti Butlers lame ova will result In n complete rostoratioti of vlston , But oren If it does It will nororcnablo h < m to see the 4H)0 ( ) votes that were cast for him and counted for Cleveland in 1S3I In the citv of Now York ' VOICE OF THe sTATE PRESS X lti7.Eln 10 Solve lfrarnry Unit These parsons who think that Van Wyctc is the strongest mm with Nobraika f armor j will do wall to got a blnltoyo view of { } coso Xohrnskn'rt Oiiixirtuiilfy Xorfulli Ntics Now that the worlds fair has boon lo- oatod nt Chlrago Nebraska should prepare to uinko u uranJ nhmving of her industries and products Tno west lias won n gront victory in the location of the fair nnd its ad vantages should not bo lost Itnotnltiir Klitknlil C/Wptiton Cornier While Mr Horsey is at Washington devising - vising scliornos that the bankers and monopo lists may have additions ! lovers wboreby they may armeoza greater rates of interest from the farmers , it is somewhat ot a com fort to know that wo have a faw Ktnkalds nt homo who do not bow to banks when they render decisions And , by the way , wouldn't it ba a prottv good plan for the Third district to nut Judge Klnicald In Dorsoy's shoos ! Oinnha Will Trv ft iVrmont Trlbuw No sooner had Chicago coralled the worlds fair than it was given out by some bold nnd darin ; spirit thtt Omaha would put in a bid well calculated to catch the two big national politic il conventions in 1332. It would bo a great scheme if Omaha could knock that persimmon and It miv bo she can Thu west 13 having its inning Tlii y Avu UH 1 CoinnarlB > lis Kcltraihii Cilu AVuw The prohibitionists at their recent mooting in Lincoln unanimously resolved that hiifh license was a failure In Nebraska , They expressed - pressed no opinion as to the suouo ) } or pro hibition in Ktmas or Iowi Tnoy were wi o in not drawing comparisons , ns they well know prohibition Is a failure in both KtUt03. OUR CONTEMPORARIES , \ leer Outlook lor ioiuncrats t Xcw I'm k lltral I. Until 1831 It uppaars certiin thut the republicans - publicans will rotam- control of the senate 'Jhanoxt house of representatives will prob ably be democratic , but it will ba powerless Ifor reform orolunga became whan it moots in Decemuor , lS' .H , and during its two years of lifo , 11 republican sennte will face It and . bind it A president will 1)3 ducted in 1S32 and take sent Murc'a , 131J Ho iuay.be a democrat , ami with him wouU cam3 in a demooratio house ; but he and the house would both bo powerless in the face of a senate still republican und safe to ba ao until 185r * atloast - > ! * - n'o ' /ni / 'llnllot Kfif-orill. b'cw Yuri Tilhune It is rank hypooruy to pate abmt reform ' of the Australlin sart w.liio justifying nnd shielding o 'imimls of the InUot-bj-c-stuftlng tvpoln .lerspy G"J" . op cDntrh-jra of dishon est apportionments In Qliio or Indiana Pub liu opiuion i not sultlei3iitlv uroujod to do much goid , if il tuiiors the criminals who use little jo'ter" billets , or the candidates and in wagers w 10 hire ttion , bit cju loiins the loan who buvs a vote or furnlshas money for bribery I'ho tiling naaded H a minly nnd straigntforwnr.l . implication ot the prin- eiplos of common tioimty to all political work nnd public bjsmojs Tno men who ' nro not willing ti vote down a pirty so long as It gets victories by cheating hive no right to preload that tluy nr.i rofornurs Tlin Mil tm 1 nf Ohio , AV'iu I'oiK llmW It is natural that man should love the Htnto in whiCithJV wjra bjra , the county In' that state , the blue ulay ot the paternal l.irili upon which t'aoir qyo3 tlrst rested Ohio is a great state , hat thorj nro people who wera born in O lie wai f < ul auauiod of tiio dotnoeratio 11 irty In th it state njcauso it bus twice nold Unltod Stitoi sonalorsliips to rich men The tluio will conin vm fenr , v. 'bnn ( iovurnnr Ci'iininll will not foci half - so proud of Ohio as he now ussumos to be Iiiturtuitioiml • opyt-lclir. ( "iletia > Trllm ir If iongro3smon think the people of the United States will bo bjnetitod iiy u law which will make E igllsh books dear they linvothupowor to Piss the law which may stlinniHo | the growth of a literary spirit in Englandbut not lu ttiisojuutrv.but they may find Homo dlflluulty in making their coustllu- i-iits tnko their view of it The 3afost plan is to wait tiDf.ll the people unmlstnlcably do- maud the law and the agitation for It passes oeyond tbo uarrow clrolo of thosu who will profit by it , or mistakenly , hope they will Dent , try to foroa it upon the people us long uo it will bo for thim at best iinuusoous dose of medlelno udmlni9terad by quueks and empirics of doubtful boneflt to the patient nnd of no pormanent-ndvantago to these who proscribe it Mr Adams , U ho is prudent , will wait until the people call for interna tional copyright ; lie will not out of his uenltl- cent wiadmn give it to them unasked nnd because ho thinks it la for their good while they think differently ' IMMORTAL j aq < tln Mtll-r f 11Vein 1'uit. . fiilpvuleiit Ho walked the world with bonded head : There Is 110 ttiiug , " ho iiioniiliig Bald , That must not some day Join the dead , " Ha ait where rnlleJ a river deep ; A woman sat her down to weep ; A child lay In her lap nsloop The waters touched the mothers h nn His heart was touclud Ho pa < t i from land , But left it laughing in the sand Thut nno kind word , that one gcod doaJ Was as if you should plant a aeud In sands along deaths sable breafl And looking from the farther shore Ho saw , where ho had sat before , A light that grew ; grow moro and mora Ho aaw a growing , glowing thronf Of haupy people whlto and alroug With fulth , aud Jubilant with Boatf ' It grow and grew , this llttlo eood Of good sown In that day of naod , Until it touched the tar indeed I Aud thou tbo old man smiling B&rf , With youthful heart and llftod head , "No good dead aver Jolus the dead , " " Oauiand , Cal REGULATION OF ELEVAFORS An Idea of a Member of the Trans portation Board THE EVIL THAT MIDDLEMEN DO Totting * from tiio Htnto Honor H'nnH n Kcoelvcr Sklppeil Wltlt $1100 The Capital City In Hriof Lincoln , Nee , March 1. iSponlal to The Hbk ] "lho elovntors of Nobrnska ought to bo opened to producers Indiscriminately for shipment ot grain " This sentiment wan wry emphatically expressed by a member of thu state board of transportation to Tun Bke representative this morning ' 'As- they uro operated today it Is well known that they nro lu the hands of mlddlomon at the ox- ponte ot the producer The system is vvroug that puts machinery Into the hands of capitalists to be oporntcd at the exponae ot the producer of nny stnlo Now , in Mlnnosntn und Illinois ele vators nro oiieii to all cnuiors at certain fixed charges for llio foivice performed by the elevator operators for tnu storing , cloauiug uud loadluir of grain , for Bhipmont to the eastern grain markets The rates for this service are regubttod und established by a commission empowcrod by lucislntivo net , und in the two states named the duties in connection with the regulation of ware houses is made additional to the duties of thu railroad cointnisslonors The basis of rales Is similar to Unit for transportation charges , viz : Limited to a Just return on the investment of capital "I'hu oporntion ot a system of elovntors unHcr regulation , ns heretofore Btntod , bo- euros for the producer unrestricted advan tages for the shipment ot his product to the conipotitivo markets of tha country , viz : Chicago , St Louis , Duluth , etc Ho Is not compelled to accept the offers of luoal buy ers , but is In 11 much better position nffordud by the ulteruatlvu ot soiling to the local buyers ; of easy shipment lo the orincipul markets east , or ho can , it ho so doslros , store Ills grain , and upon the through ware house rocolpt which ho obtains therefor Is provided with an uuqucstlonahlo basis for credit "In the case now pending before the supreme premo court under mandamus proceedings , instituted by the attorney general to compel thu obuyanco of nu order of the statu bouru of transportation in the case of thu Elmwood Farmers alliance vs the Missouri I'aclfio railroad company , had the board docturcd that common carriers are without authority to acquire and Hold lands for granting to individuals special privileges for spec ulative profits , then ttio elevators already located on tbo Missouri l'aclllu depot grounds would bo unable to sccuro a ronownl of their leases ut the cxrjiration of the year ; nnd then if the board bad followed with a recom mendation to the legislature for the passage of a law authorizing railroad companies to execute contracts for the location uud oporn tion of elevators on its grounds adjiircut to side tracus , such elevators to be operated at all tunes for the receipt , storage uud loading Into curs of grain ( establishing a fixed maximum price per bushel for the service , with u provision adding to the power of the railroad commission the regulation aud ndjustuiont of the rates with u view of limiting the enrniugs to u Just return on tbo capital invested in ele vators would have boon an easy matter Such u measure would bo apt to meet with the hearty support , not only of the grain producers but the olovutor mon ot the BtaUs would very likely favor its passage most earnestly , for this reason : At about all the railroad stations hi the grain pro ducing Bocttont of the state nro two and sometimes moro elevators built upon rail road grounds It is perfectly natural to sup nose that their owners would grasp the op portunity afforded by the proposed law for securing a fair rate of profit on the outlay rather than uudcrirn the heavy expense of removing nnd the construction of spur tracks to a new loeatiau "Uy muny it will be conceded that such a solution of the elevator question would ba of gruitcr benefit to the producers of the stulo than the lomporuuig method of declaring that having allowed one person the use of its grounds in the buying und shipping of grain , a railroad must extend thu same privilege to all others desiring it Ibis would absolutely shut out monopo listic tendencies , so fur u < > grain is con cerned , und such firms as Harris , Woodman & Co , mentioned very Justly u few duys ago by The Uku , would not bo enabled to secure uud gain individual control of fifty or moro ot thu principal olovutors of the suite , and the great mass of producers , however poor , would always bo able to got the top of the market for their products whenever cir cumstances uompellod thorn to put thorn on thu market " THK STATU IIOIBK Governor Thayer was at his desk again this morning He returned from Juniata lust evening 'Hie Wurnervlllo parkin ir company filed artinloB of incorporation this morning Capl- tul slock , $ IUU00. Incorporators : D. P. Hogors , 10. C. Warner and E. C. Warner 'Uiu Geneva grain and elevator company atso filed articles and is uutliori/ed to trans uct business ut Geneva , Fillmore county Authorised enuitul Btook , 8 0,000. incorpor ator ! .lolin A Dempster , J. Jensen , V. C. Shiekloy , George C Clark , Gcorgo W. Smith , J. U. James , W. 11. Cooms , J. S Small and E. J. Stone The Guarantee , North America , an Insur ance company 0' Montreal , Canada , fllod its annual statement , today , lilsks , $711HID ( ; -prtMiimnis , fIt.OX . ) t0i ! losses , - iibHlW Alio- the Fidelity of Philadelphia , Pa Hislts , * 11IUJ0 ; premiums , ? 1 4'UI.TS , losses , $3,1)011. ) Hants a mxrivuit Joseph K. Wobater usks the district court to appoint a receiver for tbo property Jot II , block 11 , Urlvlug P.irk addition to the city of Lincoln , lormeily owned by Ud ward I. Starr , but now ttio property of KoDert C. Bertram Thu plainult alleges that ho sold the lot to Starr , und ullowed him to place u first mort ; gugn thoroou for thu purpose of erecting a bou e. Ho ulumcs further Hint Starr fallod to pav olT all of the uiecbuuio'B liens , and that he hud to , Starr aeuuring him with a mortgage deed Later 011 Starr sold the properly to Bertram , aud plumlift tliuroforo souks an uccouiitiug CITV NE\8 JlNU SOTCS A. C. Schiller wns given ndivorco from his wife , Luna , this morning , on the ground of desertion on their wedding day General C. H , Vim Wyck whs in the city last evening The general registoied at the Capitol hotel and greeted u lurgu number of tils old-time friends O , P. Dingus insists Hint ho must bo paid for swooping the streets und cleaning the ulloys for the two years andltie January 1 , lsiw , or thut ho will commence suit for daiu 11 uges Engineer Oardnor informed the city coun cil , in spociil session Just evening , thut u fivii-millioii-vulloii reservoir would cost the cltv $17,100 , and thatu ton-million-gallon ono would cost fj5l. ( > 0. At this meeting Clerk Van Diiyn reported thut ho had received $172 UO for miscellaneous licenses during thu mouth of February Captain Bax , ouo or the most familiar faces at the state buuse , und who has been on the sick list for bovcr.il days past , has uulMiiuh recovered ins usual health West Lincoln is to have a sausage factory , lo bo operated , by ttio packing company , shortly Mrs Bailurd , nged ninety cars , motlior of Mrs J , It Hiehurds of this city , Is re ported to boduugarously ill ut Hustings , A. Ii Smith , formerly of this citv , has been uppohitou assistant gunernl pmonger nnd ticket agent of the Burlington a\Btcin of roads , uud catered upon the duties of tils position today Miss Naomi H. Weaver loft today for a two weeks visit in the family of Judge Jaolcsou at Atchison , IC1111 , U O. .Strickland , the flour merchant , wus dona up for MOO this afternoon He guvo a t'JOJ clicoto a German who had formerly buon employed as a traveling balesmuu to have cabbed for him , as ho was too busy to Ifu to tua bank himself , The follow casbnd thu uheck and skipped out The police are looking for him 1 > Mrs Wick.viro Have you over noticed hoiv much moro graceful a woman 1b with bur bauds than u man Is ! " Mr Wlekwire Well , it is no particular credit to her blio 1 * has to be She hasn't any pockets to stick them Into out of sight , * ' KIlUOATION.YL 1 Harvard unlvomit.v lias Just Issued the 1 annual reports of Its president and treasurer 1 for 1S33- " . v ] The Methodist church will hare a now * 1 university in Washington , D. C , It present I plans are roallzcd M LMucntion Is nn important Inctor In the H solution of the southern problem Clark4iH university , Atlanta , Ga , has 405 students in / nil departments / * The polyiechnlo histltuto nt Worcester ' Mass , bus introduced a now course or elec trical engineering , loading to the degree ot bachelor of science in electrical engineering Brown hnlt , the now college dormitory nt Princeton , is 177 feci long , while old Nassau hall is 170 foot Thu litter , when built in 17H ( ) , was the Inrgcst building In thu United States 'dho John L. Lincoln fund , which wns starW by the Alumni of Brown university for tiio bonollt ot the university last month , has already rcaclioit the forty-slx-thousand * dollar mark Ttio sonlor lectures on Law nro attract Ing a good deal of nttontion at Brown uni versity It is not nil unlikely Hint n lnw school will dorelop there within two or three years Kathorlno Comau Is the professor of lih- tory and political economy at Webosloy col lege In the February number uf Educa tion aho tells how shu Is preparing her student - - dent * for cillzonsbip " What next ! Prof Woodrow Wilson , who has recently boon elected by the bnnrit of truslvos to the chair of political economy nnd Jurispru dence , Is the twenty-seventh graduate of Princeton college who has bocn elected to its faculty The twoutloth century club organized by tbo resident alumni of thu Northwestern university , Evnnston , und the members of ; the Junior and senior classes antedates the clubot the Mime nnmo recently formed in Chicneo , by nearly two j cars Tito studouts nro ahead this time The University of Pennsylvania is nbout to orcct n * 73,000 theatre 1 ho university of . the immediate future will embody In Us bw > plant n hnll room , un athletlo field , an opera house , a billiura room , a few lecture rooms , rnco truck Tor tiorses-and possibly a roulctto tnblc , says the Now York world Tliou the boys will bo educated The commissioner of education in his last report , 1887-8 , gives the statistics of . ' 1.17 colleges - logos of liberal arts , nn Increase of eleven since his previous report No wotitler that Prof J. P. MohaiTy warns Americans against chououulnir college degrees , but what ho fours lias already come to pass Dcgrcos count for nut llttlo unless accompanied with * the name of an institution of high rank Ohio has moro colleges than any other state twenty-four , und Illinois nnd Penn sylvania follow abreast with twenty-threo ouch ouch.Many Many denominations are competing for the allegiance of the students of the uni versity of Michigan 1'iioro is flobart guild maintained by Episcopalians , with its special hnll , library , and lectures ; the t nttm-iims 1 support Umtv club und nrovldo nn enter tainment for students once a wock , thu Presbyterians have recently organized Tup- pa ti guild , will build a hall uud have u course of lectures uuno 'unced for this year ; thu - Catholics are working for Kolov guild ; Methodists hnvo incorporated Wesloynu guild uud have received the endorsement of several bishops und of the Michigan and Detroit conforoucos The trustees of the Wosloynn guild will build a hull to cost ' JJ,0JH and to secure au endowment for its uiulntcuance and for lectures MUSICAL , VM1 DRAMATIC John A. Lnno has been engnged for the Booth Barrett company fnr next season . Frank McKcu has the manuscript of Hon / dorson's Gondolier company for the 3..l Hfl Amelia Glover who dances so divinely in H "IbeCity Directory is u sister of Mrs , B Henry E. Dlxev Arthur U. Chase , director of the Booth Moujeska company goes to Europe in Muy foi un extended vacation Rudolph Arousou bus couunoncod prepara tions for the production of u now opera ut the Casino in May t. " 'Ostler Joe is being dramatized , nnd Mujnrio Bonner is mimed as thu uctrces to star ia it What uextl II Gruttan Donnelly has written now comedy for Daniel Sully called "l'ho Million alro" which wPI bo produced in April Eleanor Barry , formerly of Hosiun VokoV company , is nl.tyiiig in "liio Golden Giant ut the Grand op era bouse in San Francisco Jiimos Aid rich Libbov , who pluya the , Count llivurol In The Kings Fool nt Niblos ' will savor bis connection with the company March 1 , Mr Robert Maiilcll has mot with so much success in " 'lho Ccalcan Brothers thut hu bus decided to rctuin it ns it permanent fea ture of his repertory next souson The Kendals uro to muko another tour ot the country next season They have ur- rauged for 11 live weeks cngugouiont In New "V York ut the Fifth Avenue theater - > 4 | Puubno Murkhuui who bus developed ox- * ' collcnt ability us uu uinotionnl actress , coir / templates a starring tour nf ttio south under 4 the direction of u well known nianusur The quaint ns well as plcturosquo County Fair is us popular as uver Nell Burgess is making ns much headway uu in the early run of the pluy ut the Union Square theater The work of boominc the Old Homestead - stead in London has ulreudy commenced under the direction of Aloxaudor Com stock , who has three representatives on thu ground Helen Russoil , of J. M. HuII'h "A Possible blo Case company is nut it sister of Ada Itehun ns has beau announced Miss Rohan bus u sister whose singe name Is Huttlu Rus sell Mndan.o Cottrcliy is dctoruilnod to cou- tliiuo the McCaull opera company 011 thu roud next sunsmr - Stio pays -Mccaiiirrar the inline und will manage the enterprise herself Adelaide Monro begins a staring tour of . the largo cities in England 011 Easter Mon , duy ilur repertory will Include Rosalind , " Juliet , " Lady I'ouzlo" nnd Gulutoa " Miss Monro will bo soon In this country ugalu I _ uuxt boason • V" It is said a now Passion piny will bo pro duced hi Now York on or about eustcr Mon day It Is called "i'ho Young " Messiah , " and is the work of Ardennes Jones-Foslor. Tha character of tha Savior will bo assumed by Jeaimlo Winston , 1 At the oporn house In Plnconza , Italy , n tenor was bowled down by thoofUclal claque at the instigation of the manager Inade quate receipts induced the manager to resort to this measure as tbo only wuv of breaking Ills cnntriict with the blngi-r. Salvlni will begin his furowoll ougngement ut lho Uioadw-iy tlieutur , Now York , March II These performances will bo his udlouxto this country , lhu Utst week ho will bo scon in Samson " "I'ho GluUiulor , " The Out iuw" and Othello " On the nights the older Salvlni does not appear the younger Salvliu will take his place in a play called "A Child of Naples " It was given at ono tune at au authors matinee at the Madison Square theater Word comes from Now Orleans that Tames O'Neill has purchased thu exclusive right to . produce in America Henry Irvlng's version of "lho Dead Hunrt " Mr O'Neill will or- I'uuUo a company with a view of bringing . w , the play out either in New York or Chicago . V- in June OMAHA LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY Subscribed St gunrantoed Capital , S3OO.O0O Ill id in Capital 35O.O00 IIiijb mid soils stocks ard bonds ! negotiates commercial paperrocelvc < andBXiirutea tin-its : ac-ti as Iransri r autmt und trustee uf corpora tions ; takes chuigeot property ; collects rui > ti Omaha Loan Trust Co SAVINGS BANK S , E. Cor 10th and Oouglna Streets raid in Capital , , 530,000 Subscribed guaranteed cupltuL , . 100,000 Mabllltyof stockholder * , , , . , , . , 200,000 5 Per Cent Interest Paid on Dopoilta I'itANK .1. LAMB , Cashier Orncr.iis : A. U.\Vyin n , president ; J.J.llrOwn , V vice prebldeiit : WT H'yiuau , iroMiirur , > t Illiitormis : A. IJ Wyinan , J , II Millard , J , J. * llrowu , ( luv-C , Ilartou , il IV , N sh I boa , U Kimball , ( lee , il Lake Loans In nny amount made on City St Farm Property , and on Collateral Saourlty , at Lowes Rata Currontto *