THE OMAHA DAJLY MONDAY , AUGUST 21 , 1803. Ir- THE DAILY BEE. E. UO."KWATRIl , Kdltor 1'tMlUSIIKD EVEUY MORNING. TKU.MS 0V 8UIISCUJPTION. , . , Hen ( without Simony ) Ono Year , . I 8 00 Jnlly nni ] Hunclny , Uno Year . 10 00 HI * Month * . , , . . . . 6 00 Thron Months . 3 C.O Bumlny lire , Ono Yt-nr . . . . . . . 3 00 rlnturdny HUP. Ono Year . . . . . 1 50 Weekly llci' , One Year . 1 00 OI-'I-'tCKS. Onmlin.TlinlloO lltllldlne. Foiith Oinnlii ; , corner N nnil 20th Streets. Council lllilffdf 12 I'enrl Strnot. Chluiiffo Olllcc. 317 Uhnmbor of Uommorco. Nmv York , Itoonu 13 , 14 and 10 , Tribune ntilldlng. ' Washington , 513 Fourtormth Strcot. COURICSI'ONDKNOR All communication } rotating to now * and rdllorltil mill tur should bo addressed ! To the Editor. IIUSINESS LETTKHS. All InitltiOKs hitters nnil remittance * should lie nddresM'd 10 The Itnu Publishing Company , Omaha. Drafts , checks niul potofllcu orders lobe made payable to the order of the com- imny. I'lii-tlr * louvliiRtlin city for the summer cnn liuvo Tin : HKK sent to thulr uddrcsa by leaving on onlur nl this ufllce. TIIK KB 1'Ulir.lSIlINO COMPANY. Din llro 111 < 'lili : ; > co. Tin : DAILY mid SUNDAY HER Is on Bale In Chicago nt tlm following places : I'lilliirr IIMUVO. Grand I'nclfli' liolol. Auditorium hotel. Oivnt Nort burn hotel ( on ! liotol. T.cland hntul , Kites of TIIK Hun n.in bo snon nt tbo No- liriiHka building and the Administration build Ing , Exposition grounds. SWOHN STATKMKNT Of CIUOULATION. Ftnto of Nc'hrnKlin. I County of Iouilav f ( inoiTTO II. T7.Hc-huck , nocrntnry of THE Pr.n Pub- llttliltii ; company , ( lees Holciuulv Hwnar Hint Ilia nrlimiclicnlHllon otTiiK luii.v IlKii for the week ruillng August It ) , 1HU3 , wan IIH follows : Hiimlny , Ainriiil 1 ! ) . , . 2(1,035 ( Jloiulny. AtiiriiHt II . 2.1,7:11 : TiH-Hclay , Alitfiisl I. . _ > : t,7'tO Wtiliiiwlny. AiiffiiBtlO . -3,7(50 ( . . . ' . , Tliiinulny. Aiicust 17 .1,7-l-t Friday , AiipiiHt 18 . . ' 3,700 Balunlny , AUidiHl ll < . . ' 4,733 QKIIIIIIK II. TZSCIIUCK. i i SWOHN to before inn and mibncrlbctl In j BK.M , liny imiMoncutliN lOthdnynf AiiRtist , 1R03. 1 , ' N. 1' . PKII. . Notary I'ubllc. ircill.itluti lor .July , IHI ) ! ! , U4U5K TltH Now York populists liavo ndoptud a plnlfonn which is composed in the true calamity stylo. DilKKNDKits of Sniultiy opening at the World's fair are now moro difl'mult to find than needles in a haystack. LK Chicago is titllclng HO much of the Columbian museum , Omaha might bestir herself in hohalf of her proposed museum. IOWA clomocuuts are now looking1 ( era a gubui'imtorlul candidate who is willing to he sacrificed with the least manifesta tion of disappointment. IT is now clear that cither the at torneys for Hie plaintiffs or those for the defendants in the railway injunction pro ceedings have been making some tall misrepresentations of fact. TODAY should see the tennis champion ships for the state of Nebraska decided. The winners will no doubt feel more olatcd than the successful candidates in the forthcoming fall elections. TIIK maharajah of Kapurthala and his party huvd gazed upon the beauties of an American congress and are re v. ' - ported to have been greatly pleased with it. What a pity that they did not buy it and take it homo with them. REPIIESENTATIVE citizens in various largo cities are mooting together and arc discussing means for securing work for the unemployed. Would it not bo advisable for business men in this vicin ity to show a little moro interest in the wolfuro of the unfortunate laborer ? IP TIIEKE is anything in the petition of the railway attorneys praying : for an injunction to prevent the members of the State Board of Transportation from en forcing the maximum freight rate law that 1ms not yet boon denied , now is the time to call attention to the point. THE present French elections correspond spend to the election of presidential electors with us , since the now parlia ment is to choose the successor to Presi dent Carnot. Hut Franco this time has not equalled the general excitement cus tomary during our presidential elec tions. PAWNIHMUCEHS in Now York nro not allowed by statute to charge moro than 25 per cent per annum on the money ad vanced on pledges. Some pecuniary ad vantage could bo secured by them in those times if they would but give up the pawnbroker's business and loan money on call to the brokers on Wall street. THE oldest man in Iowa is said to smolcochow and drink ; to swear like 11 pirate ; to bo noted for gallantry , and never to Icwo an opportunity to Illrt with the girls. If there are any young men in this vicinity who wish to live to a ripe old age , here is an example which they ought not to bo averse to follow. THE free silver advocates have boon making a great dual of nolso. To coun terbalance this it is proposed to hold a national convention of representative business men at Washington in the in terest of a prompt repeal of the Shor- mini silver purchase law. The lines of battle are daily becoming moro sharply driiwn. WllKN the Burlington ollloials ot stockholders are called to tiio stand tc testify in the injunction cases it will be n revelation t-j the pooplo. They will bo compelled to explain by what process of approved financiering the roads wore enabled to pay a not annual dividend oi from 20 to 25 pur cunt on stock watered to the extent of over $ -15,000,000. THE Burlington road , since its advon Into Nebraska , has boon the recipient o nearly 3,000,000 , aeros of Nebraska lands This vast domain , in connection wltl fully 3000,000 , in Iccal bond subsidies , aggregate grogato in value tin amount equal t < half the cost of construction of all tha torapany'u lines within the state. Ii viw of tills unprecedented donation i lily bee 'iiios ' the Burllntrton to centos the right of the state to impose reguln tions for fair and reasonable froigh rutoa. Nebraska has treated that roui with great gouoroalty and it ought note to ho netessury for our people to tmo fo fair treatment at its huud * . AN VXSOlWl'UlMnX I'AHl.rAMKNTAtir SCHKMti. It is now stated on reliable authority that the senators who aro. exerting night and maUi to prevent the repeal of the Sherman silver purchase law until after they nro assured of legislation still nero favorable to the silver owners than that now on our statute * books mvo hatched a Bohomo by which they will bo nblo to soeuro n test of their strength without risking a vote upon unconditional repeal. The plan as out- ined in the dispatches hinges upon the Voorhces bill , which has boon reported , o the senate from the finance commit tee , nnd which it is understood will bo nishcd forward in advance of the Wil son 1)111 , which is to come from the 1O11SO. What the silver advocates in the senate - ate are aiming to accomplish is substnn- .iiilly . this : They will transform the Voorhoos bill , which provides merely for the issue of national bank notes up to the par value of the bonds deposited vith the secretary of the treasury as security for their redemption , that the author himself will not bo able to recog nize it. Aa it now stands it does not efor to the Sherman silver purchase aw and consequently contains no pro vision for its repeal. By offering an amendment providing for the free coin- igo of silver at whatever ratio seems nest likely to obtain n majority of the votes in 'ttho house the silver senators vlll bo able to discover who are acting vith them and who ave opposing them. Such a move , If successful , would send to the house a measure for the free coinage of silver at an agreed ratio and vould leave all existing monetary logls- ation unalToctod , except in so far as it is opugnant to the now act. The advan tage which the advocates of silver would train would bo that the men who are for mconditionul repeal first , and bimetal- ism afterwards , would bo forced to show at once how far they will go towards favoring an Increased use of silver money. Tliis scheme , if carried out , will no lo'nbt servo as an illustration of un scrupulous parliamentary tactics , but -hat the silver men in the senate have their opponents at their mercy has been evident from the very beginning , Whether it is not more advisable and expedient for thorn to show a disposition to be fair rather than to take advantage of every technicality which the rules of the senate place at their disposal , is a question which it will bo well for thorn ; o carefully consider. Legislation ob- .aiuod. by a trick is not apt to be popu- iar , and they themselves have boon .oudost . in their denunciation of what they have claimed to bo such a trick. Although it has often boon dis proved , the silver men have never ceased to refer to the act of IS7I1 in the most opprobrius terms. To "romonotizo" silver by a scheme moro roprolionsiblo that that which they have claimed "demonetized" silver will scarcely receive popular approval. Lf the silver advocates prove to bo the stronger in congress on an open vote the people will either abide by the result or when the time comes will elect a con gress that will moro truly represent them. What they now want is imme diate action looking toward the relief of the present financial stringency and that action must bo open and above board. EUOOATIXO OJhUHKD .YOUTH. Those who are interested in the eleva tion of the negro race will find much that is encouraging and gratifying in the report of the National Association for the Education of Colored Youth. According to this report the number of pupils now enrolled in the colored public schools of the country is liOD,2.jl : , and adding to those the number of colored children in mixed schools it is estimated that the total is at least 1,503,000. This is certainly a very excellent show ing , particularly when it is con sidered how short a time age the race was enslaved. Since 180i about 2,000,000 colored people , or aboul 28 per cent of those in the United States , have learned to read and write and arc now actively engaged in the 'duties o : life , a fact highly creditable to the race , But the otTorts of the colored people dc not stop at primary education. The } have forty-seven secondary schools , with 11,837 pupils ; twenty-live colleges with 8,300 professors nnd students twenty-five schools of theology , with 75. ) students ; five schools of law and live of medicine , with -120 students , and fifty- two normal schools with 10,042 students A striking illustration of the progress the colored people are making is fur nlshed by the recent school census o Georgia. That state nas 4W3 , ( white schools and 2,1130 schools for the blacks , and of the 001,072 , enrolled school chil dren the colored numbar 28,0U. ! ) , ; In illiteracy the two races compare as fol lows : Of the whites between thu ago : of 10 and 18 years 11 per cent annual road and write , while of the blacks 2 ; per cent are illiterate. This in a show ing very favorable to the colored race when the relative advantngosof the tw < races are fairly considered. Georgia , il is to ha remarked , has boon oxcoptljnallj liberal am.mg the southern state * in providing - viding fjr the education of both races and the results denunstrate what mlghl bo accomplished by the colored pujpk if the other states of the south wore equally liberal and considerate as t < that race. Those who reject the impraotlcabh proposition for the deportation of tin negro race from this continent and In sist that if It ha given a fair opportunity to develop it will amply vlndicato it : right t' ) remain here and share tin privileges and advantages of free gov eminent will find strong warrant fo their faith in what the race has aceom plishcd in the last quarter of a contur ; and may very properly urge this as tin strongest pusublo evidence that wlthii two or three generations the colorei race in America will bo quite as wel able to take cave of itself a * are some o the accessions to our population froi Kuropo. THE percentages of increase and dc crease In the weekly clearing house re ports are calculated upon u oompariso of business done this year with that c the corresponding week of the year pre vioua. That accounts for iguro.i in those cities which have had clearing hotisoj but n short time nnd vhoro a percentage of increase may bo shown notwithstanding an immense do * crease of business. This fact must also jo berne in mind when wo como to ox- nmlno.tho . reports which will bo given out next year , and which will then make comparisons with our current clearings. It will then appear that those cities which have boon doing best luring present hard times * will show a comparatively small percentage of increased business , while those cities n which clearings have dropped to al- nest nothing will figure out an onor- nous increase after they have again re turned to normal conditions. If wo should judge by the clearing house per centages alone that will bo calculated , sny in a year from now , wo should bo wonderfully misled. Those limitations upon clearing house figures must not bo overlooked * THE QUHSTIOX OP SKCTIOXA.MSM. One of the ablest and strongest speeches made at the present session of longress is that of Senator Hoar of Massaohusotts , and no part of It is wiser and stronger than that in which ho points out that there is no question of sectionalism in the financial issue. Any man or party in the eastern states , said Mr. Hoar , who should doslro to have the value or the purchasing power of the dollar increased in order that the value of debts , or that assured and perma nent incomes might bo increased , or in order that speculation in gold or in credits might bo rendered more profitable , would bo liurlod from power and buried in in famy by the swift nnd righteous indig nation of the whole people of those states. "Tho prosperity , the power , the hupplnoss , the rapid growth of the northwest and the south , " said the Massachusetts senator , "are as dear to the people of Now England as their own. " Ho declared , and the truth of the declaration cannot fairly bo questioned , that the merchant , the manufacturer , the builder of railroads In the eastern states , is a constant and perpetual debtor. The wage earner , the depositor in savings banks , the holder of the policy of life insurance , the widow and orphan who are living on the spare savings of the husband and father in his lifetime ifi-o constant and perpetual creditors. They are alike interested that the obligation contracted today shall bo precisely the sarno obligation , no greater and no less , when it is to bo discharged , five or ten or twenty years hence , or whenever its annual or semi annual interest is to bo paid through out that period , nnd those people are not peculiar to any ono section of the country. Senator Hoar said ho did not believe that any largo number of the people oi the northwest desire the destruction ol property , impairment of credit , or any injury whatever to the people of the northeast. "Their ambition is to ac quire property ; their hope is in the es tablishment and maintenance of. credit. They always have depended , and for n long time in the future must depend , for these things on u close alliance nnd an interchange of advantages with the people ple whoso children they are , with the states whence they came , nnd with com munities from whose -institutions they have modeled their own , and with whom in the great and glorious future.thoy must live or buar no.life. Chief among the resources of the west is its alliance with a wealthy and prosperous oast. The wealth of the cast must perish but for its alliance with a wealthy and prosperous west. " Tliit is the position of all intelligent and fair- minded men , and those who attempt te raise a sectional question and to nrrnj the west against the east arc enemies ol the country and particularly of the west , STA.TK H.IXK ISHUKS. Senator Gordon of Georgia has intro duced a bill to repeal the 10 per cent tas on stale bank issues and the subject will probably bo debated in the senate during the present week. It was remarked when the bill was introduced and ro ferrcd to the finance committee that ii attracted very little attention , but il would bo a mistake to conclude from tills that the proposition will not have 11 very considerable support in congress , The circumstance of there having boon little manifestation of interest upon it- introduction in the sonata was simply due to the fuel , that it hud been antici pated. No demand in the democratic nationu platform is made in strngor terms thai : that for the repeal of the tax on state bank Issues , and it was endorsed by tin unanimous vote of the Chicago convention tion , Not a single objection was made to it In that-body , and it went forth tc the country as the unqualified desire ol the representatives of the democratic pt.rtj. There is excellent reason to believe liovo that the democratic members o congress from the south are practically unanimous in favor of having thedemani complied with by the party , and they wll have liolp from the roproscntutivoa o the middle anil western states , thougl not all iho democrats from those sec tions will support the proposition. Tin roprcKontativos of the eastern states wll oppose it and the republican vote ii both branches of congress will undoubtedly odly bo solid against it. The proba bility of the passage of such u bill a that of Senator Gordon's is therefore bj no moans good , and there is oven a possl bility that it may never bo brought to i voto. voto.What What the attitude of the president i toward this proposition no ono appear to know. The newspaper that Is pro sumod'ta know moro than any other re gX'ding the views of Mr. Cleveland Bali some time ago Unit ho had never glyoi the question of repealing the tax 01 state bank Issues any serious confident tion and therefore at that time had m definite opinion. It Is , doubtless , Hufo b assume that ho has not slnco given tin matter more than passing thought , bu at any rate it Is doubtless u shrew < guess that Mr , Cleveland will not fuvoi repealing the tax and opening the wuj to a restoration ot state bank currency He Is old enough to have had some per sonul knowledge of the currency of th ante-war period and that the case ho „ ( „ may eafoly bo counted in opposition to the proposal to again Hood the tountry with that kind of money. Wo op vo that some of the advocates of the repeal of the tax sot tip tha claim that It/'ftMtnconstUutlonal . , Aa .ho supreme court lias decided the tax to bo constitutional ) this argument will tot help the case of itho people who want to got rid of It. , to greater financial nlstako could ha made than to again lornilt atoto banka to Issue currency. Cheaper tlmn Metnt. The house debate , on silver furnishes a striking illustration of the fact that the tarlft Isn't the only thing that men can talk tbout In n lluont fashion without imparting any Information. Looks thntVay. . y.ouUefitj Cowffr-JournaU Oh , no , the tlomoonUlo party iloos not moan what it said at Chicago. It was only diking through Its whiskers. For narttcu- are road the president's moasauo. Thou in- torvlow Larry Neal of Clnlllcotho. o 1'erlmps. Central Cltv Kanparttt. TIIR URB Is rustling to have Omaha made an Indian supply ilopot. with fairchnncus of succos.i. If the other Omaha papers would work as hard for tlio upbuilding of Omaha as Tun URG docs much would bo accom plished , V . _ .w _ l Ilnrmnny Sum to Win. Jvebnuka Cltu J'rcs * . There Is no uncertainty In the atand taken by Iowa republicans against prohibition as n state issuo. Republicans of prohibition nnd anti-prohibition tendencies agreed that pro- lilbltlon as no test of party foalty. That is a hnrruony which will win. There'll llo n J-'lKlit for Victory. Ketini Journal / The political campaign in Nebraska this year will bo short.-sharp nuil decisive. Ho- mill Means should buckle on tholr armor ami got ruady to swing the republican column tea a decisive victory. It Is ours If republicans but do tholr duty , not only as a state but as a county. Prnachlni ; mid Pructlco. ffew York Commercial. Wo expected it. The Ute llullans nro nnnoylng one corner of Colorado and the dauntless Governor \Vaito erics to Washing ton for hulp , When r > r.yilon wrote , "Is feeler or coward writ on my f.ii-o ? " ho little thought that from the virgin west would emanate an order to claim ovcrytliing. Turn of till ) Tldo. iVciti York Commercial. Whou this snow melts there will como a Hood. When the doors of vaults begin to swing backward there will bo so much currency - roncy that business will not know what to do with it all. Money will bo a drug and the currency broker will llnd it difllcult to make his salt. The beginning of this end ought not to bo far away. Tliu Ohurokeo Strip. l'hniilcllili ( ) ) : Record. The hungry speculators who have been waiting to rush intO' ho Uherokco Strip to seize upon the most eligible townsltcs will flnd that thu untutored savage has learned a thing or two. Undp'r the terms of the cession of the lands to tno government the Chcrokoos nro entitled' to nn allotment of 1H ( ) acres each. They have just completed tholr selection of lands , alid1 wisely they have all chosen tracts adjolnlilg the railroad that runs through thn atrip. The Indiana will got the best lands. ' and the townsito com panies will got loft ; ' The Ucnt < KIiiil or Ncnrg. ' Sem'Vtirk Sun. There is not any moro pleasing news in these days than are th'oso items from various parts ot the country , -which toll of the fac tories and mills thiit' have resumed opera tions , the banks thav have opened doors which wcro' ' temporarily closed , the mines in which the shutdown -has- como to aii'encl , the business houses which have got over their troubles , the foreign demand for Amer ican cereals , the heavy business of railroads , the releasing of eurroliuy-lu private hands , the assurred strength ofnil our savings banks , the arrival of gold from Europe and other such things. Th w y to Win. Ilduci Cnnniu Republican. This is a good year for' ' the republicans of Hayes county to stand together. They should meet the common enemy with solid ranks. Good , clean and thoroughly compe tent mon only should bo permitted to mid a place upon their ticket , and it Is a duty which every true republican owes his party to see that thi is done. Hayes county never had a moro competent sot of ofllcials than the republicans in ofltco at present , and if an equally good list is nominated at the county convention there will bo no question us to their election by old time majorities. I "or Mo < llllcitloii : , tituiuc Cltu Journal. The republican party of Iowa lias entered the contest this year on impregnable ground the ground of absolute honesty , candor and fidelity to its highest purpose. That pur pose is , in accordance with the declaration of the uarty in this state , year after year , to bo loyal to the will of the people on the puz zling and serious question of liquor legisla tion. It has dellnitely put Itself in line with the will of thu pboplo of Iowa. Since ISS'J there have Ijoen multiplying In dications , especially durlne the lust year , Unit the judgment of Iowa was being pro foundly affected by the results of the ox- per'ment ' which has been in progress , under the present liijuor code , durini , ' the last de cade. The election of 'last year , following the election of Governor Holes in IBS'J ' nnd 1801. and in connection -.vith tlio expressions of sentiment of the last eight months , made it clear beyond doubt that the conviction was tit hist formed that the present law had upon full trial failed in material points ami that moiiillcatlon was necessary. If any ono had lingering doubts.thoy were swept away t > y the mooting of the repub lican atato convention. In the preliminary exchanges nnd Intercourse of the delegates and visitors to the convention , the fact which towered above all others was the al most universal acknowledgment that moditl- eation was uoeosaa'ry. What made this fact moro notable , significant and obvious was that the acknowledgment was made with such emphasis , not moro by anti-prohlbl- tlunlsts than by prohibitionists , by tlioso who for years have stood by the present prohibitory cede , and who would today bo only too glad to stand by It uncompromis ingly if them was longer a shred of hone , and if tholr Judgment did not admonish them of tholr high' duty to move forward tea a moro olUciont inoth'itrt. " Thu convention itself ; In its formal pro ceedings , afforded crowning proof of the al most unanimous desirtxilf tha party for mod ification , The vote on vbll call on the mo tion to strike uut thn concluding clause of the temperance plunk as reported from thu platform committee , 'wns in no sense a test of the sentiment of Llie convention with re gard to change. As already remarked , that was almost unanimous. ' ) In the debate on this motion , which udoutlnuud over three hours , and in which thu freest and fullest opportunity to bo hoard''avor given in a state convention In this staUliwas improved to the utmost , tlioso on onu'Mdp as well us those on thu other candidly proclaimed on thu lloorof thu couventlonKhut they recognized thu necessity of modification. And the most powerf Jl uppoatTJif behalf of thu plat form us reported aiM , in Dually adopted , was the nmgnillcentlfe'peecli of Air. Tomplf of the Klghlh congrewilonal district , which tie declared the strongest prohibition dis trict in the state , himself a prohibitionist ol pronounced typo. The platform ask adopted under all these circumstances , and In har mony with the ether towering proofs , de monstrates how definitely and conclusively thn * judgment of the republican party ol Iowa and of thu people of thn state ha a been rosolvoit to the conclusion that modification is no-'essary. The republican party hud the courage and the patriotism to moot the fact. It had the candor In convention to wear its heart upon its sleeve , to open wldu the door to the amplest expression and to take thu people ol Iowa into Its cuntldonco. It has kept its word to the pOopIo , mid they will bellovt that U will keep its word now. There art iiu secrets , no ambiguities , no disposition U play with this great subject and to nub ordmato It to solflsh partisan interests. Thu republican party U with the people o Iowa. unvAX'3 ii Norfolk Now * ! Now that "tho grout lender" of the domocrntio party lift * deserted It , who will tftko his plncof Mr. Mrynnl Glebe Democrat : Congressman Ury.in of Nebraska proves himself to bo nn orator by showing that ho cnn inako n good speech on the bad sldo of an Important public question. .Nebraska ( Jlty Press : There is said to bo danger that the capital dome nt Washington will hurst. Urynn has his head in It , and the swnlling has crowded the sldoi quite out of iwsltlon. Should this great head bo re moved now the whole structure would cer tainly collapse. FromontTrlbuno : When Air. Hrynu figures that national banks , If they were allowed to Issue currency to the par vnluo of tholr bonds , would inn KO n wrollt of 12 > per cent on their circulation , ho displays nn aptitude for juggling with figures that ought to warm the cockles of the .hearts of his populist friends. Minneapolis Tribune : Tom Hoed will probably make a speech in the house on the sldo of repeal. If ho does , young Mr. Bryan , the infant phenomenon from Nebraska , will wish that ho had never opened his head. It is ono of Mr. Uoed's chief delights to lot the wind out of the sophistries of sophomore statesmen , Detroit Free Press : Mr. Bryan is nn elo quent talker ami a brilliant word palntor. Ho roaches the throng with nn almost Irro- sistlblo power of nnpoal , but * in all thnt ho said ha wa appealing- most strongly for n section nnd a special interest , llo showed hlmsolf n great man restricted by the wishes of uu exacting constituency. Philadelphia ledger : When Hcprosonta- tivoBr.vun , In attacking the "gold bugs , " remarked that "tho man who said the people plo could despoil the government was called nnnnnrchl.it ; but the man who maintained tbo right of government to despoil the people plo was called a patriot , " ho was greatly applauded. Nobody appeared to notice that the man ho was knocking down with sar casm was a man of straw , having no exist ence hi the flesh. Kearney Journal : Mr. Bryan showed his Ignorance of the national banking law and statistics relative thereto nnd was beauti fully called down at Washington the other Uny. When ho was brought face to face with the fact of his Ignorance and mls.itntc- mont on the subject , ho acknowledged ho got his figures from the World-Herald. The explanation wns sufficient , nnd to avoid sim ilar chagrin ho will doubtless bo careful of going everything on the demo-pop organ hereafter. Plattsmouth Herald : W. J. Bryan takes the Omaha World-Herald as authority that the national banks are now making 12J4 per cent on their circulation , and says that for this reason ho will oppose the bill introduced by Senator ' \roorhecs , allowing banks to increase their circulation to a par value with the bonds deposited , which Is sup ported by the president , Secretary Carlisle and othnr prominent mon , when In fact , the national banks today nro not mailing a per cent on their circulation according to Comp troller Eckels' statement in his oillcial record. Bryan is rattle-headed enouuh nt best , but when ho takes the World-Herald for authority well ho ought to bo ashamed to mention It , especially under the roof of the capitol building. Chicago Hor.ild : The silvery Bryan closed his declamatory onslaught upon the silver purchase repeal oill with a eulogy of Jeffer son. But Mr. Bryan did not say when Thomas Jefferson advocated the piirjhaso of silver by the government. Hu did not say when Joft'orson proposed to coin CO cents worth of stiver into a dollar and force people to take it as the equivalent ot n IDO-cent del lar. He did not even allude to the fact that .TofTorson stopped the coinage of silver dollars lars uy executive order without consulting congress about it ai all , nnd that not one such dollar was coined thereafter for thirty years. If Mr. Bryan had stated these things probably ho would have found sonio difllculty in making the house understand what a eulogy of Thomas Jefferson had to do with the 16 to 1 free coinage scheme of repudia tion. Chicago Tribune : Representative Bryan of Nebraska made what is called n pretty and glittering sueech. Ho had a peed voice , ho gesticulates nicely , awl bis rhetoric is florid and imagination vivid and exaggera tive. It is easy to understand how ho pleased the galleries and the girls. Ho strewed the fioor of the house with flowers of speech and with poetical quotations. What should have been n cool , careful financial argument was a denunciation of what he called the ' 'merci less decrees" of the money interest which "brought case and plenty to those who fawn and flatter , " followed by a description uttered in the theatrical , pathetic tone of voice of the "mute appeal of the work-worn nnd dust-bogrimod" masses whoso battle- hymn , it appears , is "Homo , Sweet Home. " And yet a short dollar , which will buy only half what u sound ono will purchase , never made homo any sweeter or Its owner happy. After skimming the froth nnd foam of ! Mr. Bryan's declamatory plea for a workingnmn , whom ho says ho "would like to help , " but whom ho is soaking to hurt , there remains a sour and nasty residuum a "demand" that gold bo expelled from American circulation and that silver monometallism bo substi tuted for honest bimetallism ana that there be unlimited coinage of ! ( T1 Brains fractional silver dollars , with no gold support. This is his recipe for making homo happy and that Is all there was to his eloquent harauguo when boiled down to its substance. Silver mining never has boon one of the interests of Isobraska. It has raised \rucat , corn , bogs , sheep and some statesmen like Bryan , who are sillier and absurder than sheep , but it has produced no silver. Why then should Nobr.iskans run their legs ofT to glvo the silver minors to thu west of thorn more for their metal than it is worth in the world's market t Since 1873 tlioso miners have boon paid by the government a certifi cate convertible into gold for every dollar's worth of silver they sold. They have sold n gold dollar's worth of silver for a gold dollar , but now they "demand" frco coinugo with less than ( Ml cents of silver in thu dollar , and they dub that fraud on thu public bimetallic money , and Bryan supports their fraudulent scheme. lo Nebraskans think that sort of skin game is honest or feasible ? Nubr.iskans need dollars whose purchasing powtnIs 100 cents in gold. When the farmer deposits ono In a b.ink or an old boot it Is dosir.iblo that when he takes that dollar out n year thereafter it shall bo worth as much as when ho put It nw.iy , not merely for paying debts , but for buying dry goods and gro ceries , and lumber , nnd farm Implements. If this man Bryan of Nebraska had his way his constituents would have r 0 and IJO-cunt dollars , whoso changes in value they could no moro kenp truck of than of the move ments ef "thu wicked flea whom no man pur- suoth. " Mr. Bryan can talk moro woopfufly and wallfully than Mr. Bland. Ha can make a "swcotor" spooch. Ho cun groan moro pa- thutlcally. But he ban not us much mule sense as thu Missourian. The latter has learned something , Hu has found out that the Hi to 1 ratio will not do ; that the people have found out. that 111 to 1 ratio is a mossy old "stilt , " hollow and oovarod with green mold , and that it doesn't go as onn leg of bimetallism. Mr. Bryan lives so far west of thu Missouri that ho has not found it out. As Hip Van Winkle , waking from bis slum- bars , thought Cijorgo HI was king , so Mr. Bryan , coming out of the remote wild wast , near the Itocklos , docs not knoiv that thu 10 to 1 ratio is playu.1 out and has been thrown on the ash heap where ether financial follies have gene before , Hu should advocate the ratio of 127 to 1 or drop tha cheeky pretense of being a bimetallism Mr. Bryan may have some Inllucnco on the stump talking u flit Aophistry to simpleminded - minded people. Ho may bo able to bogulla sonio of the farmers of his own state. But unless bo changes bis tactics ho will havn no Influence nt Washington. Among the trained and educated mon who find their way there fulsome flattery of toll by a man who does not toll himself nnd abuse of boards of trade -and chambers of commerce bv ono who U Ignorant of tholr functions do not count as arguments. The speakers who have real inliuonco at Washington In shap ing legislation , nro these thinkers who deal in facts , not froth , nnd in tUntlstles Instead of poetry , on the floors of congress. Wlinrn Kuiiunur Huiart * * Sun Fnineltea Chruntcle , Wlmtovar may bo tha real results of tha exploring expedition which went down thu Colorado from Yuma to thu gulf , there is no question that thu members will bu able U bear testimony to the heat along thu river at this season , The sun bouts down ou Una stretch of territory with a power not ex celled in any other part of thu world , Suez nnd Aden aru notorious for thulr ovcnlikt heat , but to the man who has ever traveled about Yuma in August not oven the shore ol the Hod s < u has any terrors. Konrnoy Journal : Whiln the tnanufnctur- Ing Industries elsewhere have closed down , Kearney's factories nro running on full time with increased forces , nnd still advance orders are not ranched , Sc.hu.vlcr Herald : Fine hones in Nebraska nro becoming numerous and. nro nttr.ictliig the attention of lovers of pooilhorso flesh nil over the country , A line collection ot horses was shipped from Fremont , destined for ex hibition at the World's fair. Thus does Ne braska loom up ! Nebraska City Press : Boar constantly in mind and toll every acquaintance In other quarters who may bo looking nbout nt sorno time for a location , of Iho enviable record of Nebraska City this year. Ask nny casual observer of ether parts of the state bow favorably the city stands. It Is nt the head. Alusworth Star-Journal : Wo have ob served during our seven .years residence In Brown county that farmers who stuck to their farms , good years nnil bad , nro all well fixed. Sonio who have sold and gone nwny hnvo done well , but nil who have remained , with the oxcrclso of common Industry niul judgment , bnvo prospered. Let us all keep right on in the middle of the road. North Nebraska Kaglo : Dakota county is to bo congratulated on having passed , so fnr , through these panicky times without n fntl- tire of any ulnd , moro especially among our banking Institutions. Although slight runs have been inndo on some of them at different tlmos ami they have boon looked upon with a good deal of suspicion , their last published statements show them , ono nnd all , to bo In first-class shape , nnd unless something un foreseen occurs they nro niul will continue to be as snto as nny oank across the rlvor. Norfolk News : The corn stalks In the Nebraska Holds nro groaning iimlor the heavy weight of woll-llllcd cars. The rccont rains have assured moro than nn average crop for this year. Nnbrnsicu , proud of Uor position in the corn-growing belt , hopes soon to roach second place in the list. The crop record of Nebraska in 18'JJ Is going to be sur passed this year. While she now occupies fourth plnco among the cereal-producing states , the fact must betaken into consider ation thnt her rivals are older and were dotted with farms , und in some localities thickly populated , when Nobrnska was known as a howling wilderness. There yet remains a vast area of uncultivated land for thu homusoukor and the plow. When this land Is under cultivation , Nooraska's showIng - Ing will far surpass these now In the load. AVnkjIluld Republican : Immigration Into northeast Nebraska this fall nml next spring promises to bo largo. The big crops raised around here this year , nnd every year , nro the means of bringing in the best class of now suttlers and keeping them when they have located horo. A country where corn makes from sixty to eighty bushels to the acre , us this does , is exceptionally good. Thorn is still plenty of thu best wild land ami some Improved land to be had hero at very reasonable prices and on easy torms. it is really n fact that thoru Is no hotter location anywhere for a man of moderate means than this part of Nebraska. It Is hard to find a man who has settled hero on land and gone to work , who has not steadily Improved bis financial condition , and had the advantages of tbo healthiest climate in the world , good society , churches , schools and the very best of nil manner of privileges besides. Fail ures are uncommon and a foreclosure Is a very unusual occurrence , so rare that it at tracts general attention. Washington Post : , TiHt ut the present , time thu most dt'sliable Immigrant Is thu yellow boy. Itoston Transcript : Tliuro'.s onn tbliiK to bn .said In favor of HID Minimor. Uno has warmer friend ] than In winter. Philadelphia Ledger : To what , basn uses wo may return : i ratio , as Hamlet observed , Is ap parent by about 10 to 1. I'itlsbure Dispatch : A man named Trump Is In jail In I'lxyollo county for koeulng a speak-easy. The sheriff's high card was a gun. Iiifllannpnlls Journal : 1'orhnps the man who snatched 30,000 from tlio window of a St. Paul bank nnd ran off with It Is following tlio iicl- vlcu of tlio newspapers to put money Into cir culation. Naturally enough the ralamltlsts continue to howl with dogged determination. Boston Courlor : Whim 11 innn pots Into n ppi'k of troiihln ho Is quito content to hide his light undur a busliul. Drowning , Kins & do's Monthly : Junk I hope you liked tlm last , box of candy , Fanny dear. Sweets to the swi-ot. Kunny Why , you Impertinent thliiK. It wns all nuirroii Kluces. Do you mean to Insinuate that I'm u chestnut ? Philadelphia Itpcord : "Ah mo ! I wonder why It Is thut tlmu goivsso swiftly ? " Perhaps thu spur of the moment urges U on. " Kronlilyn Llfu : Tom Yes , Molly , I worn out pretty lain lust nlKht , but the tldn was BO stroni ; It was hard to como buck very fast. A lieu Yes ; I remember In physics It says the lunpcth of the spark Is proportional to thu Hlrongth of thu current. Washington Star : It was ono of the locali ties wlicro soda water intemperance flourishes , Hu was very sloupy and remarked : "My dear , I llilnic I shall lie down. I haven't luid moro than forty winks today. " "John ! " him uxclalinud , "do you want mo to uut you In an Inebriate asylum ? " TIIK 001,1) IIUII'H DAUUIITKU. "My fntherownnd a silver lode And now 'tis inlnu , " Iiu cried. "Oil , take n load from olT my heart And say thou'lt bu my undo. " "Unload thy heart elsewhere , " hliu said , "Thy lodu's a llcklu storn. Lnvu laiiKlis at silver wliun 'tis ' down As low UH fifty-four. " PKU1T.K . .l.Tllt.VG.V. . After the bawl Is over In controls , whUi : Corn Is so high ( n Kansas that the volco ol calamity Is smothered. The ratio of Imagination to Information in the silver debate Is nbout 1,000 to 0. Twilight holdups may bo regarded ni ft V protest ngnlnst the hoarding of money. Mrs. Henry Wnrd llocolior Is rapidly fall- IIIR In health. She will bo 81 years old August SO. Mr. Yung Yu , the now Chinese minister to the united. States , who has Just nrriycd nt Snn 1'Vanolsco , brings eighty-two people la bis suite and eighty tons of IitgRngo , Llghtnlng-chinncd mother Lease Is carry ing reform nt a cyclonic gnlo. As president of thu Kansas Hoard of Charities .tno is bouncing offensive republicans and hiding pops. It Is n mistake to think congress has dona nothing to Increase the circulating medium. The house resolution pitying members mllo- nge for riding on passes wont through with out dobato. In thcsn times of doubt nnil illsi'ord , n man who Insists "I'm n democrat , " should bo re quired to furnish plans uiut spoclllcntlons of bis platform , "not necessarily for publica tion , but ns nn ovldcnco of good faith. " Mr. Jnramlnh Webster Flanagan of Toxns , who achieved an nfllco bv oxolnlmlne nt a national convention , "What nro wo here for ! " Is In condition to symp.Ulilzu with the nuthorof "Wheronm I nil" Both nrolout of n Job. The Philadelphia Lodger throws nn olcc- trlc.llght on an Important piscatorial point. It explains that n peliiglo tUhorman is ono who , rou'jhlngn considerable distance from shore , iimUlonly discovers ho loft his halt flask on the Imnk. I'ostmn&tcr Wills of Nashville. Tcnn. , hns got the newspapers of that city on his trail by Issuing nn order forbidding the loiter carriers , under pain of dismissal , from com- intuiting on the financial situation , "as sen sational reports are at this time mischievous and dangerous. " QVKSTWSS .4.V/J AXUH'KIIS. 1'ir.HRB. Nub. . AUK. 10. Tolhe 1'dllor of Tin HKK : Will you iclndfy toll nm thu total number of paid admissions to the World's fulr up to date und oblige ? Yours truly , llKlimiAN K. dl.KI.ANl ) . From May I to August 11) ) , 7,8o7,351 , ; for week ending August It ) , TlHMitt. KXKTUU , Nub. , AUK , It ) . To the Kdltor of TIIK HKK : Onn you toll mo If thn Oklahoma or Choroki'o Strip has been duclnrml opun or not , and oblige , .1. J , Uoi.i : . No oillcial declaration has yet been made to open this land. OMAHA , AUK. 18. To the Kdltor of TIIK linn : Whlrhot tlinso suiiii'iices Is correct , or tlm hi't- ur KnglHIi "So ! > uun as possible , " or "as soon u.s possible ? " Oo.NsrANT HKAIIKII. ' As soon as possible" would scorn to bo the bettor. "As" and "so1' have nlmost common uses , the Ilrst being used us n conJunction - Junction nnd un adjective ; the second as an adverb , conjunction nml Interjection. As denotes o iuallt.v ; so n dcgn o of relation understood. So is used as a demonstrative correlative in conjunction with us. In the sentence "so soon as possible , " the dcgreo Is expressed in "possible. " and thus thu cor relative so. should give way to as. denoting that the action must bo ni-complisbod within n time equal to that expressed by "possi ble. " H.IM'Hu .v. The ronl wlso man never makes the same mist.iko twice. The right kind of a smllo never hurts a prayer meeting. Fine words on a tombstone do not moan anything in heaven , If a woman is over merciless It is when she gets a mouse in a trap. There is such n thing as trying to live on blessings and starving to death. The man who rides a hobby is always com plaining that the world is too slow. I'eoplo who blow their own horns seldom furnish good music for other folks. The prayer meeting is moro than half dead in which no song of praise is heard. A.self-made man spoils his work every time ho opens bis mouth to praise himself , Atlanta Constitution. O , It's Jolly tlmos a-flshlnu In the ( summer or thu spring , Along tliu crooked creek whore the redbreast purch bus hod. And yon watch tlio minnows skipping where thu speckled trout. Is king As you listen to thu bluebirds that among the lirancliossliig , While you choose an I'ddy current nnd pre- naru to hoiivo your lead. And thu balu Is In thu bottle and thu worm's on thu string ; . O , It's jolly tlimss n-flshlng when tlio ' kuulor' on tliu wing And thn salty nrosplratlon from yoiirblht- nrod noMi Is dropping ; And von liathu your parching thirst In tlio bosom of the HprliiK , AVIillu thu rednuKs are u-borlng with uxaspor- And dreamily sit watching , fondly ll.st'nlng for tlm popping Of the cork that , ' H In the boltlo or the cork that's on tliu xtrlng. O , It's jolly llmus a-llshlngwlion you hoar the welkin ling And tlio watering pot of honvun Its rufrush- liiK showers pour : Anil you think you' TO caught n moccasin , u turtle or : i lln . As you jerk your tackle up with nconseiiuon- tlal fling And land him In thu troolop Instead of on the slioru And the .smikohltu'H In the bottle and thu oul \ non on thu string. * " ea T : Lurxust ManiifacturnrB : in I Ilat&Uori olOlolulnKlu thu World. i Touching it off That is to say , letting it go , and if you had been in our store Saturday you would have thought Uncle Sam had brought back the good old times we read about. Oh , but wo did soil lots of suits. Wo have taken off from $2.50 to $7.50 on each suit , making such an extra low price that even if you do not need it now , it will pay you bet tor than savings bank interest to pick out a suit now and put it away till spring , This is not a broken size or broken lot sale , but a nice clean stook of the finest suits over brought to this western coun try. If you hesitate you are lost for they will bo rapidly taken up. BROWNING , KING & CO. , Blow open , till MX | g _ fo an ] DMjaj | Stj ,