t r IT ur.'ts. . . T7 1QfVQ1 THE U. ItOSKVVATKIt , ftlHor. "MOHNINO. _ TKU.MS OK SHDSCntt'TIOM. Dally ! ! < iwllhtml SillnUyi Ono Yonr $8 | > 0 lallviiiiil.aiii iiiy.Oii < Y iir - n > "JJ Six Month * g Tltnti Jtoiith * . * J Siimlnr ! . Ono Year f " ' S.itunitlV Ilm.Onn Ycnr ' ; ; ' Weekly HoeOut - Year 1 "a YearOKKICK9. . SmitliOtmiim. rortiiTMnnitTn-piily-Blxthstreets. Coiitirll IIIIIHH. IB 1'cnrl Btrwt. Clilcncn onicr. : I17 Clinnilwr of Oomincrco. New York.rooms 13.14.1' " ' IS.TrltounnliulMlnif. \Vnnhluirlon , flli : Kmirlccntli nlnit. COHHESI'ONIIK.S'CK. All roiniiiimlcatloiis ri-latliisr to IIPW " } > . H- . torlal nmltiT slionld ho nddreNRcd : To Iho Mltor Ilt'SINKSS I.KTTKUS. All IniKlticKM letters anil rnmltlnncpii " " o"ll'.r1o ' ! rwl < lrHhnl loTlnIlf I'ubllHliliitfComimny.Omnlia. DraflH. ehcckn anil lioHlutllci ! onli-m In to inaao payable tr ; thn order of llii ! e'oni | > ! ny. I'nrlli-H U-nvliiif the city for tins MHinniprc.in lia\c TiiKllKKHPntloihuIr nddress by loavlnir nn onlor . THK HER 1' HLlalUM(1COMPANY ( riic lc ( III iiilfiiii ; > TllK lUlf.v nml { 'UNliAY 11KB l on sale In Chicago tittlio following places : 1'alnipr bouse. Ornml I'nclllcliotnl. Atiilllnrliliu liutul. ( Ircat NorllivinliutoL floro liotcl. l.elaml liotul. . , . . Flics of TUB 1lr.r. ran bo soon nt the Np- brankn buildlm ? nml tlui AtluiliilstniUcin bullil Ing , Kxiioalllnii grounds _ . _ . t = SVrCllN STv'fKM KXTW c'lUCO hATION. Stall ) of XcbrnHlci , t ! " ( < Vluii'k , Kccrrl.-iry of Tnr. Ilrr. Piib- llBhlt'C romiiany , linen milPinnly mvrnr Jliat tlio ncttial i-lrciilatloii of Tin : lun.v UKK for tlm week rmlliiR September 1(1 ( , IHliU , wax as lollowHi Sunday , .Sciitninber 10 . K-2 ! ! ( ] ? Monil.iy. .Sriilcmbi-r 11 . X'J'Zfi TtiPtuliiy. Sciiti'inhprl1- . . . Hi'S'ir W lnpMlay.Ht'iitiMiilMTii : . * -S..5 Tliiirmlny , Si-plPmlH-r 14 . Hii'i.,1 , , Friilny.'ptcmlK-rlB . 2- ' . ' < > Saturday , KriituinlH-'r 10 . Sl.aJo . . . - i Sworn to iH-foninieanil mibwrlbi-d In my ! HKAI , IpruHiMiviitlilM lilili ilayof Hi-iitP-mbiT.imM. I . I N. I' . I'-KII. . Notary Public. Avprnso Ulrrilhitliin for Atur. , 1HIKI , ! Mf)7fi ) IT is un olT day whou wo do not hear of ti now revolution in South America. EVKK slnco Huby Esther put in un up- ponrnnuo thu rumor thut President Clovolnnd is ulllieted with a tumor bus entirely died out. THK courts of this district will resume - sumo grinding tomorrow. With more than 2,000 cases on the docket the lawyers will reap a bountiful harvest. WK WOULD not mind the Brazilian revolution or the brmibui-dmont of Rio Janeiro by the Bra/.ilian rebels , but wo shall have to romonstrutoiLthis rumpus rinses the price of colTco. politicians who arc stating' to their friends what the attitude of THK BKK will be respecting certain candi dates and public measure ; ) will confer a favor by talcing this paper into their confidence. BY THK time Chicago gets through with her religious parliament most of her people will bo lit for the lunatic asylum. But most of the Chicago people ple are not so much concerned about the ! hereafter as the heretofore. THK Sallno land grab bobs up once more in the shape of a ridicuously COw assessment. If the act authorizing the sale is valid the state ought not to have its land appraised at a time when heat bottom has fallen out of the market at give-away prices. THK latest bank statement from Now York is very encouraging. With ten millions and a half in their vaults in excess - cess of their legal requirements the banks are in position to resume loans to mercantile houses .and discard ng house "certificates. IOWA democrats are beginning to feel very nlwky about electing the next ) legislature. A prominent Iowa democrat crat who was interviewed at Chicago the other day concedes that the senatorial torial contest in Iowa will draw out b a very heavy republican vote , and insure u majority of the legislature to the re publicans. OMAHA has reached seventh place among the interior customs districts , having become in the past three years an important port of entry. Surveyor Alexander claims that the cost of col ! lecting liu.sTjecii ' less than at any port 0lin the union.'excepting alone Chicago and Now York. Tnis is a straw which indi cates the steady strides Omaha is mak ing commercially. SKVKNTY-FIVK thousand men and women in a mad race for land at $1.25 an aero in the Cherokee Strip ! What a discouraging incident forllenry go ! If these people will light for the pos session of wild prairie , how much more of a bloody struggle it would bo to dis possess people who have spent a life time in Improving their homos and make tenants out of them with Uncle Sam us landlord. TRAIN robberies are beginning to bo about as common in the cast as horse stealing has been in the far west. In fact they are becoming more common be cause it is loss risky. A horse thief , when caught out on the frontier Bottle' ment , often llnds himself hoisted to the top of a telegraph polo , but train rob bers , if ever they are caught , manage obto got oft with a light uontonco an-1 got out of the penitentiary very readily. THK people of the United States are very patient and long nattering , but when they get mud they got real mad. For live weeks or more congress has kept the wires hot with frothy rhetoric and the prospect now is that there will bo no lot up on eenatorjul courtesy ; gabble. But there is u day of reckoning in the dim , but not very distant future , when a good many men with senatorial dignity may find themselves burled under a landslide. AND now it Is proposed to extend the World's fair up to New Year's by reso lution of congress. If congress could by resolution turn back the dial and extend the period of warm weather on the frigid shores of Lake Michigan there would bo u fair prospect of keeping the big show iroing. But the chances are thut the ice will bo two foot thick in the Chicago river by the middle of No- vemlwr , and the admissions to the fair would not pay the expense of heating the buildings , if they could bo heated AtalL M/.ir/0/Mrro.v. The medical c.mgro. recently In scsr Moil at Washington recommended the temporary suspension of Immigration , which the president is authorized to do under the law providing for national quarantine In order to shut out a pos- slblo invasion of cholora. A great , many newspapers , particularly in the east , are urging that this ho dona. They point to the fact that Uussla is full of cholera and that reports from Europe- toll of the spread of the disease , Immigrants continue to come to this country from nil quarters , and It is said that a great many of them are of the class that may couVey the seeds of diseabo. It is true that those immigrants - migrants are subjected to a much more rigid system of Inspection than formerly , and that under the quarantine rogulu- tion.s as they are now being applied there is comparatively little danger of anybody - body bringing cholera into our ports , Yet such a thing is possible , and the argument is that wo should avoid all danger , however slight it may bo. Wo have numerous ports and a very extended Bcaeoust. Wo have also very extended northern and southern frontiers. So long as thorp is Immigration there will bo danger that at some of Iho 'ports o points of entrance Into the country inspection will bo defective and people will get into the country , bringing disease with them , cither do- velopc'd in their persons or harbored in their baggage. Our northern border Is not now adequately protected , and it is noted that since the immigration law of 18- ! ) was enacted the number of immigrants coming into the United States through Canada has largely increased. It is said that persons - sons who have been refused entrance - trance at our Atlantic ports have HUC- ccc-dcd lu gutting into the country by way of Canada. According to a report of Dr. Bunks , who is stationed at Quebec , in the three months ending on .Inly 31 the number of im migrants who passed the St. Law rence quarantine was-0,550 , and of these 17-loU were on their way to the United States. The quarantine service at the Canadian station is said lo'bo very satis factory , but ought wo rely altogether upon this ? Is it not expedient that our own government shall adopt such a policy as will render the country abso lutely secure against a possible invasion of cholera ? Self-preservation is nature's first law. It is well known that this paper has no sympathy with those people who want a restriction or suspension of immi gration on the grounds thut wo do not want any addition to our popu lation from abroad , that wo should keep what land wo have for the natural in crease of our own people , and that by allowing an unchecked immigration , ex cept as to certain classes already inter dicted , wo are in danger of suffering economically , socially and politically. Wo have never been ublo to see any force in arguments of this sort , believ ing that there is still and will be for 'muny years to come abundant oppor tunity hero for the industrious and thrifty of the old world , while as to their inlluenco politically or socially it is a poor compliment to the American people to .assume that there is even a possibility of their not being able to protect their political institu tions und maintain their social charac ter against any assaults likely to bo made upon them by emigrants from Europe. But the question of keeping out the cholera is a very dilieront mut ter , and if the authorities should believe the danger of an invasion of 'thatscourge to be really serious they would bo justi fied in temporarily suspending immi gration ; indeed , it would become their imperative duty to do so. The season is so far advanced , however , that it n s highly probable the president will ot find it necessary to exorcise the author ity which the law gives him in this di rection. It is interesting to note in this connec ! tion , for the relief especially of so people who arc in a chronic state of ar that we shall bo overrun by ts from Europe , that for several weeks l more people have been going out of this country than have been coining into it. This is the report of the immigration commissioner at New York. There is usually a considerable ofllux of foreign workmen in the autumn , but this your the number returning to Europe is 'un precedented. The explanation is in the business depression hero. The ex istence of this is known throughout Europe and this knowledge chocks the usual movement of the emigrating popu lation. At the same time it operates into send unusual numbers out of the country in addition to the inns try customary exodus at this Benson. Except the possibility of a cholera invasion , which grows less every day , there is nothing in the pres ent condition of immigration to cause anj * alarm. HOUSRiriVKS AAI ) SRHVANTS. Philanthropic women in some of hove New England towns whore mills have , recently shut down have endeavored tote assist the dispbu-'ed women workers to Kocure positions as domestic servants. ) The experiment , however , has not been an unqualified success. Notwithstand ing the fact thut places wore at hand waiting to be lilted , places which de manded Joss work than is required aeof factory operatives and which ottered much higher compensation , it was found i impossible to induce many of the idle women to accept , oven temporarily , em ployment which was denied them in the closed mills. In this wo have but an other Illustration added to the hundreds that have previously boon noted , that domestic service has acquired in mere way or another some quality which re pels the woman whelms been accustomed to u precarious existence as a factory operative. Opinions in recent discussion of the servant question have differed widely on the point whether the dlUlculties encountered - countered are to bo attributed to the em ployed or to the employer whether 3inUs the servant or the housewife who is being abused. The extended investiga tions undertaken by Miss Lucy B. Sal mon of Vossar college have led her 3alto point out in certain magazine articles the various advantages and disadvan tages under which the occupation of > a domestic servant labors. The results of her study Boom to bo that the main hln- drunco to nn ample supply of servants In the obstacles which are put lit the way of n rise In social station. And she baon brought tj think that the Hm- Hationa us to going out , receiving company - pany and devoting her lolsuro to her own purposes are the real causes of. the unuttruclivcncas of domestic gorvlco in the eyes of American women. On the other hand , there are numer ous writers who declaim about the slavery of the housowlfo. Instead of seeing anything like oppression of the servant they can find nothing in her situation that justifies complaint. If any one Is entitled to complain , It is the mistress of the mansion. So one woman who subscribes herself U3 "nn oft dis tressed housewife" insists that things will go from bad to worse until legisla tion is appealed to. She thinks the so lution lies in the strict enforcement of the law which imposes penalties for ob taining money under false pretenses. Professional' men and skilled laborers are liable for damages in cuso they rep resent that they liavo the requisite skill when in fact they fall to employ it. Why not , then , she asks , compel cooks or housemaids to choose their profession because of aptitude or lasto for thorn ? Why not line people who undertake to cook or sweep without knowing how ? There Is certainly something amiss when the discussion of this subject draws out expressions so opposed to one another as these. It is evident that \ve are not yet able to judge whether It is the housewife or the servant who is abused , and the view which is taken is apt to vary with the position of the critic. No solution to the problem can bo expected until some effort is made to reconcile the many divergent opinions. A'O CHKKl ) IN TltV I'lllll.lU SCHOOLS. Every patriotic American citizen looks upon our public school system as the strongest guaranty for the perpetuation of civil and religious liberty that form the corner stone of the republic. The trainers of our state constitution sought to forestall any possible Interference hy religious zealots with our public school system when they embodied iu the Dill of Rights the following provision : All persons have ti natural and Indefensi ble right to worship God according to the dictates of their own conscience. No person shall bo compelled to attend , erect or sup port any place of worship against his con sent , and no preference shall bo given by law to any religious society , nor shall any Intorforcnco with the rights of consclonci1 bo permitted. No religious teat shall bo re quired us a qualification for onico. * * * Hellgion , morality and knowledge , however , being essential to good Government , it shall bo the duty of the legislature to pass suita ; ble laws to protect every religious denornl ? nation lu the peaccaulo enjoyment , of its own mode of public worsliip and to cncour- ngo schools and the tncans of instruction. ri Section 11 of article viii of the consti- tution. entitled "Education , " states that , : No sectarian instruction shall bo qllowcd in any school or institution supported in | j whole or in part by the public 'funds set apart for educational purposes , nor shall the state accept any grant , conveyance or be quest of money , lands or other property 0to bo used for sectarian purposes. To supplement these constitutional safeguards against the intrusion of sectar ianism into the public schools of Omtiha , the law creating the Board of Education for Omaha , as framed by the editor of TUB BKR , then a representative for Doug las county in the legislature , contained the following provision : No sectarian or religious doctrine shall ever bo taught or Inculcated in the public ; schools of Omaha. This clause has been retained in the statutes through all the revisions which : the school laws have undergone since its 11 In the face of the constitutional guarantees of religious freedom and un qualified Inhibition of the use of school funds for sectarian purposes , no rational person will contend that there is any danger that either preacher or priest , Protestant or Catholic , will subvert our public schools to sectarian purposes or teachings. The attempt in certain quarters too force the issue of creed in the c lining school election is therefore tn ba de plored und'eliscounteimnced. No possible - blo good can spring from dragging sec- turian contention into the school board or making any particular religious belief ) - liof a qualification or disqualification. This paper has always advocated a nonpartisan - partisan school board , because wo do not believe any man fit to servo on the Board of Education should bo dependent upon , the political mauhino und because wo believe it to bo detrimental to our school system that memberships in the board should go us the reward of par tisan activity. For the same reason , veer believe it to bo contrary to the letter and spirit of our constitution that belief in any particular religion or hostility to any particular religion shall bo consid ered a qualification or a bar to member ship in the school board. Our Board bf Education dates back twenty-two yours. Wo have had Protest ants , Catholics , Jews and agnostics iSton the board , but no man has over sought to foist his belief or disbelief upon our school system. The friends of the pub- lie schools want clean , intelligent und honest men on the school board. This is the only qualification thut should bo exacted from candidates. What party they belong to and what church they attend is of no consequence so long us wo know them to bo upright , law-abiding citizen ) who take , an in terest in the public schools und uro willing to devote tholr time and talents to maintaining Iho high standard of ed ucation which wo have established. BKOAUSK THK BKB has expressed the opinion that there urb many projects where $100,000 could bo expended to greater advantage thut in building a city hospital , a local contemporary de clares that Tuu BRU is opposed to the proposition "to vote bonds for a hospi tal for the helpless in order to help out several corporations that want to ask subsidies for enterprises that promise to benefit Omaha. " Nothing is farther from the truth. The only reason THK BKK does not approve the proposition to vote $100,000 , for an emergency hospital is bocuuBO the city can manage to get al ng without it and because voting 9100,000fora , hospital will prevent us fi-oi building , ii. market house and public hlnHo , hall , whi'jljlfrn more needed , Wo , believe that the accommodations In the foil hospltabj-nlt-ca-ly established are nmplo for ullpi-jUuary wants and if an emergency ho.Vpjtal Is absolutely needed wo can readily niid a suitable building that can bouliinTed for the purpose. MUSICAL It is a fact wlIFch everybody Interested in the cause oT'fnuslcul development in the United States ought to rccogni/.o and appreciate1 , flmt wo have in this country a musical institution which in not surpassed in the comprehensiveness of Its curriculum and the thoroughness " of"its tuition by the best schools of tno old world. This is the National Con- sorvutoi-y of Music of America , located In Now York and established olght years ago. The progress of this splen did institution 1ms been steady and rapid and it has accomplished immcas- urablo good. It has supplied tuition to 2f > 00 pupils , many of whom arc pursuing a successful musical career , a number of those having boon taught free of charge. The conservatory was not established as u money-making en terprise , but with the single purpose of encouraging and promoting the devel opment of American musical talent. Its founder , Mrs. .Toannotto M. Thurbor , had boundless faith in the educational possibilities of such an institution , and in order to give those the highest test It was nccoiwury to olTor the advantages of the conservatory free of charge to till persons of remarkable talent without the means to pay for tuition. To these who can pay the charges are most rea sonable lower than in any other musi cal institution of equal merit anywhere. Nobody is excluded from the conserva tory on account of race , creed or color , who has the talent necessary to meet the requirements. The director of this institution is Dr. Antonin Dvorak , eminent as a composer and ! admittedly the greatest muster of instrumentation in the world today. Under his direction are fifty-six in structors , the professional repute of most of whom is intornutionul. These constitute a corps of touchers of the highest cllicioncy. The scholastic year of the conservatory extends from Octo ber 1 to Juno 1 , and the annual entrance examinations begin September 21 and close October 2 , though paying pupils may enter at any period of the year. The patrons of the National Conserva tory of Music iji'b iulo'many distinguished citizens , among , whom are Grover Cleveland : , Chainicey M. Depcw , William BM . Allison , KoW ll P. Flower'William BC . Evarts , Audr.ow Carnegie , William C.Whitney , nnduMajor General Schofiold. iOf the 150 coii | uting patrons of the conservatory , 'naj one has given less than S100 and 'irih'ny ' have gone into the thousands. SjicU an.institution us this ought , to have' inn much larger list of _ , ' " ' ' patrons from''among these who are easily able to epij'tributo $100 or more. THK BKK wouhUbespeak for -this excol- lent school of .music the earnest interest and substantitilrnHUpport of. ' everybody who uT > preciuto rr - "thoimportance of raifsicai ititvcfojfecn't" in'n tlj'5' United States. ' THK QOKS I'lUff Ul' ' LAXD SUl'PbY. The expression of a fear that the American people will at a not very re- mote date find themselves landless is not uncommon , and certain statisticians make a plausible prosontutio'n of figures to justify the apprehension. The open ing of the Cherokee Strip to settlement , with the certainty that within a few years the remaining reservations in the Indian Territory will bo similarly dis- pobod of , has renewed the talk ulrjut a prospective land famine not far off. It is undeniable that of the public domain little thut is desirable remains and it is only a question of time when the farm seeker who wants land at government terms will have to accept thut which must bo irrigated or go without , but this does not warrant the fear that the American people are soon to become land hungry in this generation or the next. When there is no longer any desirable government land to bo had there will begin a change of conditions under which the danger that some now appre hend will bo put off for a very long timo. It has been remarked that the great vice of the American farmer is to spread out. Ho prefers to superficially cultivate many acres rather than to carefully cultivate a fow. Durintr the last . twenty-five years the pop ulation of the United States about doubled while the cultivated area increased more than 154 pot t-out. Immense tracts are owned by individuals which cannot always re main the property of one person. Thus when the time comes that no more arable land is to bo hud from the general gov ernment these tracts owned by in dividuals will come into the market and will bo cut up into small farms , and the state school lands yory generally will ho treated in thq samq way. From these resources the demands of an in creasing agricultural population will bo supplied for jwrhaps another genera tiun , Before jTjJJt ) supply is exhausted the work of rwlvomlng the soml-at-ld lands by irrigation will have been In augurated ' $ , ' scale. Few people .havo .ni ah intelligent idea of the oxtoHWf of this fesonrco. The - $ . ' , , ; is estimated to contain 200,000,01)1) ) ) acres , capable of yielding undorW proper system of irri gation abundtifttaprop8 and Bupporting millions of pac/ple. There is etill an other resource . jd a very important one , namely , a ; | > # Uor cultivation of the lands now ini&fl \ It is said that the waste and laqlTHif1 thrift that charuo- terizo American ( farmers amaze the European agriculturist. Franco , with un area ubout that of 'Texas , sustains u population of abaut 38,000,000. Belgium , dowith an a oa of a little over 11,000 square miles , less } than ono-faurth the splarea cf Neb atka , sustains u population of over 0,000,030. Not one American farmer In 100.0 , obiorvos u contompo- raiy , kn ws anything ubout the prop orlies of different soils or how to vary crops and got the full virtue oui of his holding. Ho goes on in the olt slip-shod way his fathers trod am wonders why ho duos not got ahead In the world. There lius been B > me reat > on for this iu the past , remarku the same writer. The cheap lands of the west with their abundant crops soiling lower than eastern farmers uoutil produce thorn bus discouraged extensive funning. Hut with the filling up of the west the L'rcnt quantities of land in the east nnd south now lying idle or only half culti vated will bo brought Into use. As the population becomes denser land will of oottrso tncreaso In value , and It Is probable that good farm lands In the United SUxtes will never bo cheaper than they tire now. Indeed there Is pot-hups no investment more certain to yield a profit. It is just as obvious that there is no danger of the American people - plo becoming land hungry for several generations. A coMMUNDAUhi ! work has boon undertaken by the Grand Army of the Uapublic in planning the erection of a monument in Washington , national in character , to the rank and file of the union army and navy. There are memorials , some of them Imposing anil costly , in many cities of the country in honor of the heroes who fought on land andbcafor the preservation of the union , but these are almost without exception Intended to commemorate ) the patriotism and loyalty of the men who wont forth from these localities. Moreover , they make no distinction between the rank and file and the olllcer.s. While monuments ments to commanding officers are com mon , a fitting memorial of the private Boliiicrs and common sailors the men without whoso courage and fidelity the genius of the commanders would have been ftltilo has yet to bo provided. This the Grand Army proposes to pro vide and it is to be hoped that it will push thu project vigorously. There can be no doubt that whatever support may ho asked or desired from the genortil public will bo cordially given , for the musses of our people duly honor the heroism of those who fought in the ranks and fully appreciate their eliilm to the popular homage. Snob a monument ment would servo bolter than any other to remind the coming generations that the American republic was saved from disruption by thu unbought and willing sacrifices and the lofty heroism of the rank and file , representing the common people , the masses of the country's pop ulation. . CHICAGO is trying very hard to im press Secretary Carlisle and the conpe gresbiotial committee on ways and means that her federal building is liable to tumble down any day. The building was never a very handbomo structure and doubtless does not moot the wants of a city of a million and a half in- habitants. It is doubtful , however , whether the building is really in as dangerous condition us it has been rep resented. To use the prize ring parlance , the structure is sadly disfigured , but still on its legs. t.at Thrill Itoll. MiltatlcliMafines. . Tlio clouds are rolling by , and what's more , tlioy'ro rolling by on tno whizzing wheels of Trim liurariiiii'nx < > r Uio Talk. I'hllntltliihlit Time * . The horrible idea suggests itself that the senate intends to talk lifty years niul then try to celebrate its silver Jubiieo. Inlying Op itittriliiiiiun. Kansas Cltn Star. The autocrat of Austria Is laying up retri bution for himself in the orent of a conflict with Hussta. The treatment , of tlio Uolic- mians will certainly boar bitter fruit before many years. I'ubllu Kccent occurrences is connection with the free distribution of provisions on tlio west sidu lead to tlio bcliof that tlio distress in tills town is not so widespread us lias been believed. One man who asked for relief was discovered to bo the owner of u two- story Hat building which was bringing him n good rental monthly. A woman who was lu line awaiting the distribution of bread had her poclcet picked of j-OOU. How many other people iu comfortable circumstances are taking advantage of public charity f UunilHinmiil l > y tlio Pops. 1'hilMltliilita Itccurd. Dishonorable dismissal from service is the punishment meted out b.v a court martial to Colonel Hughes , of the Kansas malitia , for refusing to obey Governor LluwollitiR's orders ( luring the legislative deadlock last lall. Colones Hughes may ac-cept his dis missal us a decoration of honoi1. The Kansas supreme court has decided that , tlio republi can house which ho refused to disperse Is thu rightful one , and in disobeying orders lie quenched an incipient llamo of faction that ini''lit li'ivo hurst out into u wide sweeping bliuo uf revolution. Tlm l.OMHHi Siiunrzrit. ( .Mass. ) itejiitlillcan. Those Columbian souvenir half dollars , which pcopln were paying $ L for , are coming u on the government treasury at their fuco value to such an extent Unit legislation is iskea relieving tlio secretary from thu necessity of redeeming them in full legal x-iider money up to sums of J.20. Senator Sherman said at the time these coins were lutliorlzcd that so many were nrovidnd they could never become rare enough to command i lanciful prlcu , and this Is provini ; to ba thu case. But pending thu practical demonstra- Lion of the fact , Chicago seems to have realized handsomely on original expecta tions. llullruuil Prujit.Tly ll'i etkurs. KantaH Cttll 'ftiiieM. It la stated that 10 imr cent of the railway uillcago of the United States has within the lust t'uw months passed into the hands of ro ceivers. titrangu as it might seem to ouu un acquainted with thu facts , a receivership 1ms come to bo regarded as ono of the most fortunate things that can happen to a strug gling road. While confidence is not usually considered a necessary quality In increasing the earnings of a road , the trust Inspired by the appointment of an experienced man to Its head often has much olTect in setting thu corporation upon Its feet. Thu business qualities of thu receiver usually do the rest. To say that 10 pur cent of the roads are uudur rocnlvors is not necessarily , there- tore , to Intimate that rum stares them in the face. On the contrary , it is u bravo ackmuvledrnient of their actual ixindltlon , and un assurance that all that seasoned ox- norionco , ability and uprightness can do to resuscitate- them will lie done. Development of t.iuVuft. . ISruoMyn K.iylc. Thirty .vears UKO pllprims were still lum bering ncross tlio plains und through the mountain passes lu "prairlo sohoonera , " buf falo still ranged along tlio prulrio in herds no eve could measure. Denver was a village and other cities of the middle bolt unbuilt , the Indian menaced the frontier and savauo wars meant something , Life beyond the Missouri was rough and wild , 11.id any man of that day foretold BO speedy n chantro he would bayo beeu laughed down. Hut the change has cotuo. There Is no longora west , as distinguished In aims , character or condi tion from the east , nnd thu country Is a unit as It hus never been until this timo. That Its various sections will la the future bo still less sectional lhero is no manner of doubt. The prominence attained by the United Sjutea 1" mining and manufactures will bo still maintained , but these industries will m time become subservient to agriculture , which is * tbo basis of life itolf , now that man has idostroyea thu jfaiuo that lie once subsisted oa. M vvi.\n \ .iitin. , ir run I'tn.nr. \Vixshltifjton Stnr : Tlio popa Is to publish Ills I .at I n pooiii s soon. This step toward having r-ootry written In u comparatively unused language will doubtless rrcolvo gen- em ! cneoiirairciiicnt. Philadelphia UncoM : lov. ! Or. Tulniago Announces that no will Imvo ihu tie t winter of commercial prosperity wo Imvo sce-tt in generations. As tlio revcromt gentle-nun Is In n sense a dealer In futures tils wonln may bo ncccptcd as tlm Judgment of nn uxpcrt. Washington Star : Hov. Uoliort Mclntyro of Colorado , after declaring that riot and desolation will sweep the country , fouiplains that when ho was locturlni ; In the exist people - plo st.ircMi at him as If Jio wore u curiosity. It looks a * if Mr. Mclntyro were uncon sciously doing Ills he-si tu live Up to this offhand - hand estimate * of hlmsolf. St. Paul Oloboi Uhlcnco has had a con gress of Catholics nntt .lows , and now she Is entertaining the representatives of nil Itnown rellcluns. She ought to bo on her best bohnvlor , one would think , vet the po lice srctn to bo kept us busy ns ever. It Is to bo feared that the religion that Is to rede-cm Chicago has not .vet been Invented. Minneapolis .Iniirtinl : Mr. Gladstone at tended ervieo on Sunday at the Episcopal church In thn town whcro ho Is visiting and thu odlllpo was rrowdcd. The pruni'hor. in stead of being grateful to the premier for lirliming him n congregation , publicly roasted tlio people for worshiping a creature Instead of a creator. That man Is nut a practical Christian. Hi ! should Imvo taken up n col- lecliun. Chicago Journal : Iloni-y Prosprved Smith is again In evidence. The Ohio synod 1 % to do n little moro wrangling over him next mouth , Prof , Smith's e-asu , like his mldulo name , reminds 0110 of a certain old German farmer's udvico. A hotiscwltu had Just bought some butter of him and asked how to keep It fresh. "Oh , pool her in a yar she'll keep , " w.is the answer. This little Prusby- torlan Jar is showing every indication of "keeping' ' for nn luilullnlto period. Kansas City Star : "In the tumo of Leo XIII. I salute the great American publlcaml I call upon thu Catholics of America to go forward , In ono hand bearing the book of Christian truth and in the other the consti tution of the United Status. " This was the greeting of Algr. Satolll to the Catholic congress which oioicd | ( at Chicago yester day. It was n noble and patriotic suutl- ment , nnd fraught with unusual import ns proceeding from thu specially cominissluncd delegate of thu Roman pontiff. It gives w the venerable ) and potential ecclesiastical organization to which It is addressed a high mission. The book of truth in mm hand and tin- great thai-tor of American liberty in the other constitutes nn equipment equal to the achievement of tniirlity results. It nnpos.-s no alliance imlwccn the church and state which infringes upon the spirit of our American institutions. U makes loyalty to the national government as vital as the ob servance and discharge of moral and rejig- ious obligations. 1'IML'I.IS , . IXU Itaco trnci : winnings take high rani : as I stable : money. As a star maker a properly volcod banana peel is irresistible and impressive. The cultivation of snails In San Francisco Is a melancholy rolloction on the golden gait. Senator Hill's congratulations to Grovur on the birtli of No. " were probably shipued U'v slow freight. , Senator Teller laments the dearth of great editors. The country laments the su perabundance of smallborcs In the scuato. Albert S. Willis , a blue grass diplomat , goes to Hawaii as a representative of Undo Sam : , and Incidentally to watch Mr. Glaus Sprceklcs raising cane. The Jersey cholera scare turns out to have been u toadstool plcntu , nutting night fu nerals. The toadstool is entitled to a place in the undertakers' trust. I Emma Goldman , the feminine firebrand of Now , York , Is unable to appease her gory ap petite with four generous meals a day , fur 1 nished by the authorities of the Tombs. Mr. Bryan's argument with the Bermuda onion will doubtless bo added to the franked literature of the First at nn curly day. "Yo that , have tears to shed , wcfurc to shed i , them" when the pealing begins. In proposing an aluminium university , Senator PelTor makes a serious mistake in thinking the country is suffering from a shortage of lightweight statesmen. Look around you , senator. Huv. .John J. Tigho , the Jersey orator who delivered the Columbian address in Omaha last October , has published u collection of his writings in prose and verso which abounds with beautiful nud truthful word pictures of iho west. Associations and sur roundings servo to accentuate his enthusi asm for the nest and Its people , as is shown in these lines referring to the east : Whcro wild ambition , taste und art , And wealth and power and fold Around the fancies of oiirymilli TholrallUorltiK trappings fold. Tlioy bid un ni-nip our dreams of llfo With all we Imped fur hlttm.-d. ! And yet. tlm hoiiii'stuad of the heart Is in thu boundless west. The husband of Ella Wheeler Wilcox Ii.is been telling a breathless world how that gifted lady writes. According to his ac count she grabs a pencil and tnot\ gazes long and earnestly at her upturned thumbs Presently the thumbs begin to wiggle , the poetess of passion commences to hreatho hard nnd cot red in the face , her back hair pots agitated , her brain begins to seuiho.and then burning thoughts uomo tumbling out head over heels bo fust that shu can hardly write them down. This is not precisely the way Mr. Klla Wlioolur Wilcox tolls it , ' but his facts are all embodied in the foregoing statement. rmifwi/i.v f.v THiMiH.1. ! li si Wouldn't It l > o Jolly lo hnvo n like n Inure wlicii you took nglnso ( bout null hut ilayr ItulTnlo ( ourli-r : Sii lflnR of low-Rouif ( pro i ilc , thfl man In chnrcnnf the wntch PIMIU icrlna Jowolrystoto Is Rt-iu-Mlly bohltul thu UlllO.- " . Italllmnro Antorlrnii ! A woman In Ohio Im * Just received licnli-i'it-n as nu electrical onul peer. She emslil , liy nioro force of Instinct , to know limr to mnnaKo the sparks. Indl.iuapntli .lourmil ! Mr . WlckvrtroI'd Juil llkn to knovr what kept you out so Into last nielit , Indeed I would. \VU-kwlro-My dear , this It nn era of returning - turning coiilldt-nce , and you oiivlit nut to delay - lay It by Koltlnn such Ideas In your mlml. llainlol's ftiuilllar ro- murk to tlm oiTuet Unit hn wa reading "wonN , worm , woriiB. " islvtw rl n to tlio suspicion that. nuiiiimtk hud a stlvnrilubatosnniowlioro In Hi Iloston 1'iMt : "MU-t WitlmmrU much sontlmimtiil th.in I thought. She keoui nverv mow letter tluildld lovoiul her * rites to Imr.1 " ' "That Nii't. sentiment , my dour ; It Is Rood , h.ird , breach-of-proml-iB seii ( \ " Dotnill I'ron I'ross : Uashfulliovur-Mury , I bi'llovii I wiufltl llko to go on the vuiiiiiiln and Imvo n pipe. Aliirv vos' , do ! You have not plnod very much. so far , Itimtou rourUir : The liulle.1 huvo iitrnln tnkuii In wearing combs In tliHrhalr , and with a ktiowliMlgn of this fiu-t we. venturn to .smjcoit that. Ihu sweetest , tiling In ooiuhs Is honey. 'IVutti : Mri.diytjir cifior ki < iliu'iir ' h'li- ' iui.1 Oh , U-i-irlln , h.ivn you linn drlnklini ? Mr. tinyboy Nothing stroiiKor thtui ; i llttlo brandy , my denr , Mr * , ( iiiyboy ( much relieved ) Oh , It's all right , then. llurpiVs Ilaznr : "Tommy , who was Joan of AirV'nsked the toucher. ' 'Noah's wife , " snld Tommy , who Is great ntKiitfsslfiK Now Orlonns I'lctiyBno : Clmpeniii' ) lll.o t bo stored away In nod corners. Washington Slur : "A run" I you ashamed of yonrsi'lf , " Hald tlio ovoixreun to a nelcliborlni , ' Ireo , "to biMlroppliit ! your foliage In this lazy " milliner ? "Niivcrtiilnil , " was ( bo reply , "I'll turn over a now le-af next sprluir. " AITKUTIII : r.u.u A man with a iiuturo unduly vnln Will M > iniM lines follow a mil Inn Tn swing himself on u passim : train \Vbtm the sumo Is nicely In motion ! And whe.li ho arises , hopping mad , From when ) ho was tumbled and shaken , Ilissinllo Is us falsiMis tlio out ! ho hud At the time his picture was taken. TllK OI.V.S HOT. .vnm ll'nffcr / ' , . In Sleepy Hollow graveyard , wlifon thu long < i ly was doiio , I sadly tmiMid above Iho dust that once was Kmer-.otij And whitro earesslus zephyrs the clustered greeniiry WHVU I stood lu chastened revorlo at Hawthorne's qulol grave. On this green hill , 'ncnth .sun and stars , will sh-up from ago In ago The Druumur In his dreamless .sloop , tlio Mys tic and tliuHaio ; Thu bust , the crown of nil her years , our wust- ern world can show , Thu fullest lloworugo of our time , Is burled he-re below. They sleep , nor bond I bo wlutor storm , nor fuel the Ktiwmor hreo/.o ; They sleep , but tlm strong words thoy.spako are blown o'or all Iho seas. I turned away where bonding grim o'or hum bler burial waves , And then beheld u gray old man who walked among the graves. "Grout men are burled here , " I snld. Mo wiped a falling tear , "Great men , " ho slshcd , "I know , but then , my boy Is burled hern. God ciivo "them .sli-enuth nud length of day.s till all their work was done Mv boy , my boy wo burled hero lioforo his work begun ! " The Dreamer and the Mystic I loft thorn to their fume , And silent loft the poor boy's grave , tlio grave without a name. Their homo Is lu the thought of men in nations wliloiipart , Thu hey Hulls love as warm as theirs In his oil ) father's heart. European EditionKew /Vft / , $ ® $ $ r H-i C - s4 ' /H.feSa ' E TOILKT. This pretty toilottu do promonadd Is In bright red surah , with a tvldo bertlm of vary light green tulle. The * volant is of the lat ter material. J-r t COL Largest Miinufiiuturnrs nnd Hotullorj of OlothiiiKln the World. Listen to my tale of Woe. ( tly purmliwloii , ) A little green peach in an orchard grew , Listen to my tale of woe. Ono day this little peach dawned on the view , Of little Johnny Jones and his sister Sue , them 2 , them 2 , Listen to my tale of woe. Now up at the peach a club they throw , Listen to my tale of woe. Down from the stem on which it grow , Fell the little poach of Emerald hue.wise John , good Sue , Listen to my tale of woo. Great heads had them 2 , Johnny Jones and his sister Sue , He always wears our suits so naw , he do , he do , Listen to my tale of woo. "Don't take a bite" said John to Sue , Listen to my tale of woo. For then the trouble'd begin to brew , A trouble thr.t the doctor couldn't subdue , too truo,2 true , Listen to my tale of woe. Now John grew wiser as older he grow , Listen to my tale of woe. And came to know a thing or two , Our suits he wears which proves it true , boo hoe , boo hoe , Listen to my tale of woe. Great heads had them 2 , Johnnie Jones and his sister Sue , He always weard our suits so- new , he do , he do , Listen to our tale of joy. DROWNINQ , KINO & CO. , Corner 15th nnd Doughm Htrcots.