The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, January 26, 1899, Page 5, Image 5

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    Jan. 26,1899.
THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT.
i FRAH MS i
BV if -. " ' I . I il v ''jr ' - '. J
X X' : VW;j 1
rJwv
IAMS' HORSE SHOW At the Omaha
superintendent and am on th
Horse on ground. Mora block
y.OOO iiounl hormm, 1,H()0 pound
old, either); mora stte prlB winner, expoimon winner 11 1 leading
III., U., N"b. and Ht. Loul fair--nnd
the United mates, wight D.uuu pound.
IAMS RE-tf 1 00 A flfl for making Greatest Hone Exhibit at the
'CEIVED.,9 OfiUiUU Omaha Exposition,
'lams' "Bon Ton" and "Jaquea Coeur," largest and moot noted Btnlllona
in United Htnre, 1st prise winner at Hi., la., Nob, and Ht. Louis fair,
were flOt shown for ribbnr.e at Kipositlon, lams always has a barn
lull of ribbon grubber, lam and bis horses ar mascot to people
who do business with bltn.
lams baa no salesman in country aniline
four prices. rave nan mm mono wy going aircot to lams' barn and
buy a winner begnaranteee to show you mora stallions tbanall
other Importers in Nebraska good guarantees nud lame pays freight,
Tlm to responsible pari 1. Qne large, 1100 lb. Black Spanish Jack
-Price 1400, worth $1,000.
$W999099990W999909090990
200 ACRES IN NURSERY
DO YOU
WANT
TO PLANT
Cherry Trees, Hum Tree, Apple Trwi, drape Vine, Fralt Plant
of all kindu, Bbad Trmm, IUwoi, Kwrgrmm, etc., that art
NEBRASKA GROWN?
YOUNGERS
between McKinlcy and Clcvelan1 any
duy,
Much lK)tInff beard over the Mc
Kinley balance of trade an though the
Mjlntf bad juttt Ntartd, Hut it itlarU'd
under the WilMon bill during Ueve
land Bdinlnifttrn'Moni o really be de
eerven more credit than McIClnley.
Khort crop in Auntralla, Bouth Am
erica and Kurope, and bountiful crop
in America lit the great canoe, Flnd
Inff the rlchettt iron ore bed lit tin,
world In Minneitota in another caime,
It in not tariff or Rold elandurd that
hai done it, McIClnley hue done no
more toward Jt than my roonter.
We well rememlMT Die time when
the republican party atreiiirth wun
iiiontly In the country and the old dein
ocratlc party etrcnirUi wan In the clt-
lee. J lie win in war on were all titronffly ,
democratic, Jfut oil that In changed,
Nearly all the large el tie art etrongly
republican now. The lower the grade
of the people the heavier the republi
can majority, The moat of the rcpub-l
II ciin election money la need in the clt
iee. The etrength of the new f union
party In In the country among farmer
and laboring men. The wentern farm
era know who their friend ore. City
politician go out Into the country
before election and honey fuz.lo anions
the faruieri, kin the bnliica and then
come buck and make port of the coun
try people. They go Into the low
down alum and make vote by drink
ing and dancing witlt the illrtiettt and
vilent, That ! how pnrlic have
changed in forty yeara.
More and more do the patriotic peo
ple of this country wixh Hint United
Stnteii aenatora could be elected ty di
rect vote of the peoidc. It I nothing
h-M than buying and aelling under the
prcnent yteiii. It I eetimatcd that
the averageuniount of money imed up.
on the legiHluture la $100,000. The low
er bonne in congre lui voted to
change the met hud two or three tinicN,
but the Menutora kill the ineuMiuc. The
rich nabob know they never can get
In If the people vote direct for neiui
tor. The t-lcellon of nenetor U the
bigget lump of corruption within the
bound o fthl governnient. New York
1ia improved McnHtorial timber by
electing Chniiueey M. Depew in place
of the big beer guxxler frtun Try. Few
are the liiiprovciuent that way,
TUB MA II, OKI'BU ltl HINi:.H.
The until trdfe bMhlne I proving
a grcnl lut'cen it ml tint lime I coming
vlit 11 a permiti will not need logo out
of hi jmd to buy nny kind of good
t hit I he tuny nrrd, If you iufd h itit
of elothen, clonk, hal, drc, dihe,
ftirtilttire, In f id aimoitl anvlhlug, all
you need In do I li write for a rata
iogue or lke your iiieueure ami eeml
li in Mtine gNHl reliable firm, It at any
1 1 in vou houht write to any of our
adiertbtrr. vte would t pclard in
ltne )ou turn I Ion our name,
STARVING NEW YORKERS,
NmmJmm.I t.lt WaivltM 1 1 a
al MMttlgM m ai '.! l rr.4,
Mi.nirH M, Juan, nf TtiUIn, who
hciie.e Unimt ll.roitwH i aarae!
a4vt'4ef f a lfa4l 'tmira br -vial
an I atuakelpal r'om, a tva
wab abtf tklta baeitf m-a tiNill
ailbaj a IK 'Wteamna'a bkry,
lrtatf a4 Tea I a aiewl, ait t
a I M, fr aatl bt I kra I iftei U
ajiiva li aaea at a lilt H aapply U t
aid.
Il lHVMWt Mlf Jor rt
aWiJr llMi.la JoaraM r'rif
at ik U - . Mm Ut aiar
MTa'ekl ul Ika bHH It a tf ew(M
mv walHat at wtl-lalabl a ilbt itl
t--!, M a w ifeaa aaf wtkae
1ttie, li arfitt rtMMitNNti'M i ik
litlita ttfllio e . ! htata
' p.tiltMWi 1 aUa I kv ive a.
I aaw l IM t tae aad a ka
o
.IMPORTER & 0
BREEDER
Black Pur
chcrons, . Belgians,
Shires, ,
Clydcs &
friarl-tre.
Ji Z -
Eipoaltlon bad all th people-judgi
rtm to wo the iurgc eitubit
HI all ions than all exhibitor; more A
two-year-old (and not three-yenr-
tbe largest Bullion and Mars iu
Inferior stallion to companies at
on u. p. ana b. n. rv. o
ST. PAUL, NEBRASKA. A
i-1 '." . i 1,1 .. .'J j.jull ...i um-mrn
20,000 TREES IN ORCHARD
ill
If yon do, writ for oun Deiwrlpt
lv CataloKn and l'rlca Lint
which w mail FUKE, Lddrm,
8c CO., Geneva, Neb.
nun, accid"nf!y, and It ebocked me,
There wi re 2TA men in line. I remarked
then that nowhere In ibe poor ex t parte
of Kurope bad I wen o MUKK'tive a
niRht,
"I came here again laet Monday, It
wae a nty nlht with a cold, drlKxPiitf
rain. I went out at a few tninntee afUr
riil(lnllit and there wi-re more than 200
nien in line. They were elletit, eullen,
end, two-thlrdH nt I hem bad no orer
coale, and moet of litem bad (heir lluht
cntitti pinned tinder Ibelrchltm, I could
eneily tbihk that it corered a lack of
Mrt, In many cawN.
"Huih eiiclit end eixha condition
are unworthy of eucba&creat people.
They are Ineone nitM with mir elalme to
be eoneidered an advunced nation.
"I em deeply Impreered with the belief
tbwt it le ln dentiny or lb lit nation to
irad the world In eolviti problemeof
7 B . . ' "Ul ' perrrmurin
brlnKfng abontniich a alala of affiir n
will enable men who are wlllmg to work
to be eelf supporting and aelf iepfctlng
and of value to tli.inNflve and to the
community.
'There I a degn of moral rettnoni
bllity on every man who I In comfort
able circumetarice when euch thing a
(hi urn po-cllle. It I a dlegraee to the
city, to the atate, to Hi country. Tin re
ought to beetjeh a solution n will re
move the evil, and do ( with almple
jiiHticeend wiiliout any Mdmlxturn of
charity. The ilnht to work I an inher
ent right, the same a the right to
breathe.
Two remedit I curt euguent that
would b- certain tooirnte hiru'ly In
tlm right, direction. Ohm In a ohorlr
workiittt duy, for ehortfr hour for th'iee
now employed would at once and front
tit'Ci'xhli v nienn lioiii of work for thoee
at. prfHeiit. uiifinploved.
"Another I the publin ownernhip of
public utilit. the ixiblio ehoiild own
lite rnilwave. the litftniiitf Hinl heating
VMtoni, the tchuihoiiKnnd th telritriiph,
U'ertt lliix rlrfht mTtired, immeUNil bene-
flin would iveiilt. N. Y. Journal.
It i pitMiintf Mtrnni that uch ue n m
Mayor Joue einnot the cati-e of 1 II
thi rniwry. Vt thert. are Ihoimtnd of
good men w hone early education ,H
been eadly neulwtfd and liny do not
nmuii In luttT bit. (o be able loetudya
fcitmeelhnt Hey wholly li4lecttd iu
Ibelr youth. The eoonmitUi t tretold
all I hi eufferliig for. told tluit nmnl
lien would fin I to lb 04110 of it all
and how tlo-y would aecriln it to vr,v
thiitgbiit the right thing. iVrhnp If
Mn.vor Joue liould lead U'itluki'
propleny, written In Mi(M he would
riilitfbleiipd WoloMkl lomlohl jul
tml lot hH'iid upti.t lb douiotiell
1 ttn-u of nlvt-r an I jtl how eueli men
h Mit r Joni aoul I puutm) iivfr
Ihe wvum ol auff 'ili.g iu eon try able
to I leu lbu it bHiitliertil lnhbi
laat. It tnkr bard em ly in undr.
tud the. Ihluti t ud (h gold stand
aid uieaeoualthlriablly whea Ibry ,Mik
Ihacbaaea thai ma would aolaludv
Ibrai. TttFraU ao doubt ia lb ntiad of
any Htaoaiit rottoraiaa: akal auaid
rhv tb uRriua f IN wortd. o,ta
Ikiag IkataM Mir a ouakt to kaowta,
lltal o th km.h k lov are
r arva la ibu e4airy a Id lir tb
tltiiuallitioa oi ilrr wad ik ea
traelioa ut lb vitiatu ol t y ,
"MmUf lr" to tto Utor4
lUvaa. Jaa. II -lira. Kraaaar,
lf at iHr, W. I Uraaaar, l'aU4
Rial aaalUrv taipaotor, wild tkv
Aatarbsaa U4ieaMt Ibaat Ma
tlaatva nufcttjli , KvUbasa, iHab
UuUtr, MtVwl.t aa4 tburyaa
bar taw4 a tall la all Awartaaa
Mea la llataaa l tb la ar
raatfiaf Kf Iba wUa? aa f rW
Bfy It a 'Mala y. Ibay will
blau arya the rtUm tf a aM)aaaat
Iu lb HMtawt f ibe Iba Mala l
liwia la IWUta etir,
9
o V
DIRECT LEGISLATION
Governor Llnd of Minnesota in hi in-
augoral addrea plant hi feet firmly on
the populit plank demanding direct
legialation and aay:
Under the new economic condition
which have obtained and which have
made capital, through orgou'cation,
uch a potent factor In society ami In
legidiatton, It ha become iieeeeeary that
the individual citizen ahould be given
more efficient mean for hi protect ion.
TbecxcluNlve repreentutive method l
no longer a anf guard a ha bwm so
prominently demonatrabid in the recent
franebiaa acaiidala In one of our aiater
atate. Instance of similar character,
though notao flagrant, are not wanting
In ourhletory. The only remedy,! t aeem
to me, ngaiuat such abuee, la to afford
the people a constitutional method by
whliih they can Initiate needed reform,
by direct action, on the one band, and
exercise the veto power on questionable
or corrupt legislation on the other. Tble
involve the introduction of uo new
principle in our form of government.
There are do etroiigcr reason for trust
tug the people to pas upon men than
npon uieueures, We do not think bo In
regard to constitutional enactments,
which i legialation in it highest and
most important form. The people now
have the power to initiate reform, and
legislation in the matter of locating
county aeata, and in some municipal un
dertaking!, Thi power,- with profier
restriction a to the time and frequency
of It exercise, ahould be extended to
other Important questions, ily the pro
vision of our constitution tb people
now bur the veto power at all the poll
on any legialation by which it proposed
to change oar present law governing
railroad taxation, We are, therefore,
already committed to the principle In
volved In the second branch of the ques
tion, The conatlt otion could, and In my
judgment ahould beao amended as to
enable a minority in the legislature, by
appropriate action, to refer enactment
at least such aa extend corporate privi
leges or authorise the granting of fran
chises, to a rote of the people before be
coming operative,
EXPANSION OF BRAIN
President Hoard remarked at I he form,
or national congress that: Onr ability
to retain the market of the world de
pend almost entirely upon our econ
omic skill, Our talk about cheap land
be,, I fear, cheapened our thought and
our estimate of what I involved, Ex
pulsion la acres, or In national poe
aion will not help us. The expansion
of the brain, skill and judgment of the
farmer will help,
Uncle Sara Talks Turkey.
A telegram announce that B.000 car
casse of mutton, UD0 lambs, 1.')'l ton
of potatoes, 81 of onion, and '2'i of car
rot hav bfen sent from Australia for
Dewey' fl-et at Manila.
What' I hi I bear? Autraliu ba tb
job of si-lling sheep
To feed our Yankee boy In blue? That
make my dander creep!
H bere, young man, I thi thing true?
I l hi here sale a foot?
If 'lie I'll put my gloeou and read
the riot net.
What do I hire you for, young man?
liow do you earn your pay?
To set and let Australia feed them sail
or while you piny?
No. sir, not bv a darn sight, you
thi country' trade,
An' Yankee farmer pay the tax
which you folk are paid.
Confound your big "expansion"
help
with
and
your darned old "open door,"
II that's a sample of It, don't you give
u any more.
We've got the mutton and the beef,
right hi're in Yankeeland;
It' plenty yood enough tt feed them
boys you understand?
Land sukesl the money that I lake to
educate an' drill
Our farmer to produce big crop au'
then you fuller kill
Ills chance with your "open door" that
let Tom, Dick and Harry
Coineinuit' kick hi price down an'
then proceed to tarry.
The farmer come In Mint, young man,
hi boot i big and ntout
An' if yon g ve him wcoud (dace he'll
kick you fuller out.
Danger in Calcium Carbide.
Hiierititiidetjt Murray of the Hureau
ol CombiiMi idle, ha Hindu regulation
ovi ruing th transportation, storeue
and shIh of ciilciiim carbide, which the
firemen declare to b a sourtm id danger
iu a burning buihlinir, Imchii when
witter reached It, acetylene- gn I given
Oft. A llUMitter wltore keep It lor U
in bicycle lii m pt. lb rentier, iu Irnnsil
or 011 storage, it mut It eet loMed 111
herinetli'iillv Mealed Iron recepiHcl. s
marked "daegeroiis, if not kept dry."
No pM'kttu iu ty e ttitaia ni'tr thin I oil
it'titiid. It itiul ttoi-d in Uol4it.1l
builduu that ar fir protd aud water
proof. ,S, ariiiivotl liaitt or heat will .
lruiiiltd In I he hull. In g alter Ktorod,
Sol litttta lha Iwealy Hiunds, In bulk
or ia e trlridtf., iii'ty b kepi Iu any
'ore or factory, nn I ihi mut Im. In it
neeprtMil safe or vault alHv lltiiwt
rmb audit mtlt b- kept ) iut'll
aov h floor, ,
The inimlc!wr, lru ortiioa,
1 or awe, or um d I iiutte atvtt.
Wit 1 altMilul.lv K.tibnrd wtibia lit
bniilaof ibwrlty V V, Ha.
KALEIDOSCOPIC CABINET
TI.m ar foasiaal ebaitn la lb Kla
ll'rl,lm l mora vhaana Ibaa cr
awr Htik la lb seat Ivsib id i by
aay prlou rblal. H.rriry
hkraa it'i4 oa eeril ol nl- a
aaI an rM lt Mf wbi rvU s
l bmiKi e.li ii ih 'ta, ('ion'
MUtMa, aa-l aa inwrM bt 1 14. Uf ,
lba aa.b b? Ii Ura llriuin
'im ! eittt IU . untrll
HEAR r DISEASE
ata('oaK,a U ami'i
nvi: hou.AKS 10 you
ll will hlbabittiviittiiiatMtii.ao
aHata aa I d-4 or b itl
ar.taal tw w. ll imm a itl Iw1
KK tl,t"i J Vl'tMUMI.r.VI i
(W..i, 1 1 JT 0 11 , ,ia.HJa, b
THE
V
Immense Increase
EN'HOLUiKNT OF
'-. r- ,-t
.... r tjipvppyA
ISot
f t-.V e.'.',it'l
mm
0
..lWtf:'t
by Charlc Kmory Hmith, and Attorney
Uenerul Joseph McKenua having been
appointed Just Ire ol the supreme court,
Governor Orlggs, of New Jersey, was ap
pointed to luccetd him. Now upon the
retirement of Hecretary Wis tlm ap
pointment I gven to Bthnn Allen Hitch
cock, a personal Iricnd of tbe president.
m
(Continued from page 1.)
duMtrle, which we have so palimtnkln.
ly ami at such sacrifice fostered and
built up-wlth an implied understand
ing at least that they would, by com
petition among themselves furnish the
consumer with goods at the lowest
M;ssible price commensurate with
good wages, gathered Into the hand
of a few corporation and trut, who,
while atlll demanding protection from
the government, use their awful pow
er to kill all domestic competition, and
to bring about the very condition in
reepect to lulior which tbe tariff ays-
tern wn designed forever to prevent,
Klmll we permit these Industries, fos
tered by national sacrifice and na
tional wisdom, to be absorbed by a few
benrtles exploiters and to be used as
a weapon for crushing American man.
hood into a slavery more appalling, be
cause more helpless, than that of the
black slave whom Abraham Lincoln
emancipated?"
"(ieutlcmen, shall we bo atlfled
with the statement of economist and
court that there i no remedy for
till state or thing? Must we ait u
pinely idle while before our very eyea
a great people, alowly, but surely, de
scending to the grade of slave? I it
jHMil)!o that fhuniun Ingenuity, that
human pity, afford no mean to stop
this downward movement of the nu.-
on thi continent?
"Khali a nation which accomplished
llii-Mf tiling (freeing of lb Hlnv), (n
spite of constitution aud courts, base,
ly i'onfi'H it helplessness to preserve
the freedom, the manhood of the coun
try, jieettUKe. the Hopbistry of the
Jiuiie Itnchaiias and the JiiiIrr Taney
of our own day shake in it face tbe
rugged remnant of law that Abra
ham Lincoln defied and spit iihii?
"There must be remedies. The law
wiiM made for the jtcnple, not the peo
ple for the law. We huve done g-reater
thing, bolder thing, before. (It her
people have iiffoinplitthe.) reform
which Deemed quite a diHIeiilt to tjte
lawyer and the court.
"If itfhiiiciil const ruction of Ibe
coii.tltntloit atniul In our wuy, the
count it ut Ion en it be amended; or, a
more summery method may be adopt
ed by Heeling and npHiiniinj Jmle
who will foil! rue thenc instruuiciil ac
cording lo lh cU-miil hw of jwnllee
ami hiiiMHiiil) ,"
Hit Hie iii.-nlloit of remedie Hover-
lior I'liiL'tee Mtyat
"ll U hie n I that the state (egiiibl-
lnr luie but little power Id reach
the oiut-e of Hi ttUeit-e, If hum ttale
wire lo tlettl heroically with the suit-
(t I, t In.linti li' in ij; III Ih ill it clt to
oilier slatr w tilt h nifleetei thi work
lull il would nt'citt lltitl Ih Htwrr of
Mate utiirlil retpure all It filUrit ttt
! I rent i I alike and tHitu-l foiigit
rot) urnllnti tt ftifnUlt iiiiellie al
the Mtine ptii-e In all ll lithitbilaitla,
rtcrpt a lt tl.fft-tit In rtt ttf Iran.
o(iulittt and In amount 'Mrvltwl.
I hi would pivhibtl Ihn MamUrd Oil
and litiitrt'ttll lrul (rout ptilihiy up
the tW lit one hality lu trmti oul
c..iii, litiiMt Iu iii'ihrr, a I ntiw d-oi
wheiM tur atti itua tl.tre tontirte with
le-v t oitil'ltit
"If ll ivtordt ittttsl m ppli'd al
UitnlilttirtoH and ihhi tsoer ail tlira
iik, ihia tliw imi telle a tf all r
li IhIiI m iba atttr.
"Ihi MHty al b Ik l r liwt
for Ike tli.-txb.it of rt-uw.lt la le-
Ud. ll H'V Mtflel, butte,
ll! a prat !u irp Mibl Im Ukew la
lb tUtttH, tltm'ii.tM l( a Mtikit. law
wi ( t. whttb tti".M mtiN ir
HitiUift Ut Intra t.f .iitiM wKI-'b
iib I trr'dd a altwtty wilkla
Ikrtr ft.wt spbrr.
Wb bt.uM aay fuf plt4ta t aa
irMitil fr Iba r.it..Hl at itteta ar
mul il .f wttMfrlat'le bittwf
tiitb rtUit atit.ukl bt jft t w
THI?
in
mm
1UI
NEBRASKA UNIVERSITY.
in Students, but
duction in Per Capita
STUDENTS.
Tb above cuts show the Increase of el ndent and tbe increase of In
come, each line representing a bienolum, beginning in 1871 and ending in
1808. In 1871 tbe number of students was 180 and tbt Income was
87,073. In 1808 tbe number of students was 1,015 and tbe Income was
232,r00. Tbe blank space on the right side of tbe cut shows what Is re
ceived from tbe United State government. Tbe break In tbe Inorenw of
students four years ago was oaused by cutting off tbe preparatory depart
ment. Tbe cost to tbe state for each student In 1871 3 wae faoa.00. In
1807-8 It was $1 68.00, a decrease of over forty per cent. Tbe very great
eat economy baa been practiced In every department. No charge of ex.
travagano in expenditure can be made. The legislature should bear this
In mind aud then appropriate what Is Decesoary, '
dividual. Legislation which
hr directly compass this result would
doubtless meet with tbe condemnation
or ine courts. Hut there may be ave
nue by which the purpose could be
attained without that danger.
"The federal congrc found no
legal obstade la the way when It
wished to prevent the issue of circulat
ing note by stato banks. Under its
revenue rilng power It levied a tax of
10 per cent upon all such circulation,
and the notes diapeared at once and
have not since been seen. A tax,
equally prohibitive, might tie levied
upon all corporstlona in tbe United
Ktates organized for other purpose
than the conduct of railroad, steam-
lwat lines, telegraph, telephone, can
al and possibly one or two other great
en-ierprutea too neavy tor the hand of
individuals or ordinary partnerships.
(Such a measure would do away, once
for all, with the Byndlcate, tbe trust,
and the combines that arc sapping the
me oiooo or tins people.
"In former year the legislature of
great atatea regorded it aa their priv
ilege and duty to mcmorializij congrea
on matters of concern to thi nation.
J hey 'requested the repreaentatives
and 'instructed and directed' the sen -
ators to take action 1m cnnfnrniit
with their wishea. This ancient and
valuable privilege ahould be revived.
It Is true that the senators at Wash
ington no longer regard themelve a
amenable to the directions of their
creator. Indeed, it ia otten auld, and
with too much truth, that the aenatora
aent to Waahiagton own the legisla
tures which send them there.' Huh thi
l lilt
..Iw.i.1,1 1.. .1iI.,l . t l i. l i
legislature were honest and courage -
0i" n
"kvcry federal aenntor ahould be
compelled to take oath, in the presence
of the legislature which choose him,
to follow it action in hi conirresaion-
ul action when those Instruction are
einltodied in formal resoluton and
conveyed lo him 1v the L'oventrtr. or
trnnsmit hi resignation. Some might
jtejtire thenmelvea lu spite of thi, but
all would not.
I "The present legislature of thi state.
should see to It that the aeuator they !
eiwit to represent thi atate nt ash-
ington 1 fully I m pressed with the ne-1 ' Peckbarn. Abraham & Hewitt, Henry
cessity of immediate and vigoroua ac-! Loomla Nelson, William II. Horn
tion on the subject of trust and com-! blower, Roger A. Pryar, Francis Way
luiies, but It should also memorialize
congress in the Interest of audi legl
lltitotl.
"It would be a pnier rebuke lo thi
republic,,, admlniatratlon. which, ao
fur n 1 huve U-f,, able to observe, ha
never taken the llrt step to correct
1
thi riMiiiftrou aluiNe
"The adnilnistratloi, la full of aolic
Itmltt for the suffering of the uti
Jeci t.f iht SHtiibih monarchy, wheth
er they live near our const or at tne
other aide of the earth. It ha much
to miy of 'humanity,' ami It right:
but the humanity which seem In rnii
maud It greairnt symputhy la thut
whlftt U f.trl bet.1 away antl with who.ti
affair il loot proUil.ly lit il or iMith
In If In tin under the t'oiiMilutloii,
"ll U the htiittni.lt v whlth tttvtipUa
lbet (Ittlra and tfrrCloHf lllierlfsil
hiiiiisnily whkh uttwl
Inleretta ittf,
and whUh should tnnal Inlrrt-.l the
alitiiiiUtriiiit antl Iha tHiugre of
the I lill.tl Htlrtt, Our own nnlivf
himmotly hut iii'tch iihtk lo roitiupUli,
of than thai of the I'hliipplite or of
t tthtt, t htuiH oftleer front the
lint t.f ('obi iu lot lit h of S ) Irr
rtrr .xldle.l llifltt Witt, BiWh liti.ttlitttt
w rt.iia aa i.ttr ttwa iU ar Inrral
med with today frtut lb Irutt and
totiiUtr and tiiohw(ttille M.tt which
ItttMtl of lb frval inert ttf lit rrpuhll.
tan rty t.f Ihi tly ttMik with lo'rr
all. ti, w. with a)uitthy,
" I h writ wb.t are mmi utrtitorUttta
a tha btsaJ of ytvat ttwrnttpiijiea mtm
Ut Vt tb aw I lullutat filtteJ tf th
prvMHt adittiaittraliaa awl la Im the
Hwiki r(r m rtli lb wttitta tt
ail p'i wba ytiitU af lb l'n.
d atate, It Wing their well tUrtiunl
putt lo tltteit alttPHtiua fttntt lit
t.ttitffr r.tMMtlii )fttt tbvut. But
far Ike Attttrwiw at
ifil, tbt admlMitiilMt atmiu ta
bb ttpt tbtwt a batltif aa itfbl
tttvpl i.t Uv tb.ww Ibfit litre attti, la.
rttleulatlr, Ibvlr fvertlutH lor Ibe
aM ttf hiralfw Uad at lb fatiea
lag af UtfiM a4idie
40 Per Cent Re
Cost.
INCOY1K OF UNIVERSITY.
It may be noted that the New York
Hun (avowedly a defender of the prin
ciple of concentration in industry),
which usually treats Mr. l'ingree as
subject for Jeat, takes occasion to point
out that tbe Chicago Associated Preaa
(to which it does not belong) "care
fully suppressed" the paragraph, re
garding the "news trust" In its distri
bution of the l'ingree message by tel
egraph. Bays the Bun:
"Ut there be light in Michigan I The
overnor is right! Tbe Associated
'ress la an octopusl Primarily its ob
ject ia to cheapen the news so that it
Is not worth printing, It ia no longer
an association to gather and to distri
bute tbe news, and it should be known
aa an association for the Suppression
and Distortion of the New for Con
sideration! The Hon. P. "ingree ha
Bupperposcd bimself upon the sinuosi
ties of the worthy Lawson and the as
tute fttone. There must be tribulation
in Chicago over this bitter and unto
ward blast from the city of tbe strait.
For years tbe trusts have been the
Sirlvate Prometheus on whose pate da
ole graa Htone and Lawaon have
grown plethoric; and now to be as
sailed aa themselves the foster parent
,0' Mdeoua octopus ia too much, too
i mncn.
ANTI IMPERIALISTS MEET.
A Grt Mm Keating Bald la Aeattea?
ol Mult, Jfw York.
New York, Jan. 24. A mass neat
fng of citizens was held ia tha Ajad
tf . t.. -l-t.4 41. . ....
VUJJ v, iiiusiu im, uikii. uumr luv tur
, Vlee ot th Continental league for the
purpose of protecting against tha
V'-cy of "ImpcrlaHam and entangling
alliances with European power "
The meeting wae attended by a great
crowd. lxng before the door were
opened 3,000 people were clamoring
for admission, and In a abort time the
polltia ordered th doors unlocked be
cause of the crush. Ten minutes later
thcri was not a vacant aeat in tha
house.
A Hat of vice president was read,
including these names: Wheeler IL
land Clen. John C Hheehaa and Fred
crick IL Coudert A number of vloa
prealdenta were announced aa r ara
.1.. r'.n...t I . i . ..i.. i
-w ".r"'.":
cioJlf 8muel 0"tapera, prealdeat of
th Amerlena Federation of Laborj
, .. i tt, t ..... i . .
xuuu ... i ncmiii, fKBsrt muter
workman of the Knights of Labor;
Ihinlel IlarrU, president of tha (State
Federation of IlKtr,
t'oiuiiiuitloatloita were read from aa
President Cleveland, Colonl William
J. ltryaa and Itiahop lUnry C Potter,
regretting their inability It ba prca
nt. Mr. ClevUu4 la hi letter aaldt
l ant tiprtNMkl to tha eipanaloa
eraae now altlictlng our boly polHI
that any organlialioa furm4 la opno
Billon to It ba tuy bearly synpalhy
and approval"
Qstrung antl-eipaaaltta raaolatloa
were adopt!.
EARTHQUAKE IN GREECE,
t vmf rtwtir iwtfr4-
Bm isMte !Mti
AfMBB, Jaa. II A lrvaa, BUlf
dUlurbaitea wa fl ylrdy atoetH
lag aUtal bait b I a'altnk Ibruuglf
a I tha Pltiuaaa (tba auatbata
Brl vf Ibe bladoua vf Ureek e-.
elally la Iba aiutbUr oVpart
awi af Iba hlla All Iba
kwaa la lb lwa af I'bllialra, ta Iba
dMtlaul ttf M4la. w Iba ItMtlaa
el bate ba tltaaU a4 Iba !
, bltUaia r aaw eatupiag wal la Iba
eabarba T iillaaa la Iba t totally
af t'btbalfa t VMtttpWUly we
lr4, ataay ptnifU Imtaf aligblty
la)ar4
The vtll4 at KyrltB a4
klaaa were aa waflaaily aValitty!,
IboaBj It la bhI batiwa aa y vtbalbe
b wr aay vl'at Ibeea,