The Conservative (Nebraska City, Neb.) 1898-1902, August 04, 1898, Page 3, Image 3
Conservative. ORIENTAL ECONIn contrnst with OMY OF WOOD , the iinmeiiso Coni- morcial Mills of Puget Sound , sawing logs of six or eight feet diameter nnd sometimes a hundred feet in length , let us see what the Japanese do. We take a tcabox , light , but very strong , capable of safely protecting its contents on its ten thousand miles jour ney. It is made of narrow pieces of wood , often but two or three inches in width , and very tliiu , doweled together with care and precision , thus piecing out the boards to a foot or more in width , comprising the sides of a tea chest. The shrub or tiny tree from which these boards are made can not bo more than three or four inches through yet they are economically sawed and built into the form desired and are much stronger than our American shipping boxes which are manufactured from largo trees , and contain four times as much wood as the Oriental. Our past and present wastefulness may ere long require the same economy as wo now see in the Japanese. JOHN P. BROWN. WHO ARE Does "General" THE CUBANS ? Garcia represent the Cubans ? All in authority , includ ing the New York junta , say so. And now it is openly confessed and pro claimed that all the liberty which the vet eran conspirator and revolutionist over wanted was the license of power to di rect a worthless gang of traitors to the government of Spain in the work of rapine , robbery and murder. BRIDGE DISBURSEDlirillg tllO MENTS IN OTOE year 1897 the COUNTY. county Qf Qt paid the bridge building firm of Hender son Brothers twelve thousand tliree hundred and seventy-six dollars and ninety-four cents ( $12,370.94. ) This firm in that period received from Otoe county for now bridges only three thousand two hundred and ninety- eight dollars and sixty-nine cents ( $8,298.69. ) But in the same time Henderson Brothers got from Otoe county for re pairing old bridges within its limits nine thousand forty-three dollars and thirty- five cents ( $9,048.85) ) ! Wo have a curiosity to learn whether it would bo cheaper to burn the old bridges and build now in their stead ? Bridge repairing seems to be without limitation in Otoe county. Will some one itemize and publish all expenditures in this line ? IN A DISASTROUS Discontent , like DROUTH. weeds , is difficult of extermination. Nothing fertilizes discontent and rejoices the demagogue and political place hunter in an agricul tural community so well as a disastrous drouth. After crops have been de stroyed , and the farmers have nothing ; o offer in exchange for money , the ex- jlosivo oratory of communism is effec- ; ively torrid and crimson. Then the injustice of the xmoqual distribution of ; he currency , the rainfall , the sunshine and the crops is made as plain as stars in the sky. Then plutocracy , the cap italistic classes , the corporation cormor ants and the venal vampires of the money power are depicted as the real conspirators who arc trying to bring ruin to those who owe them and uni versal disaster to the entire commerce of the country. MONROE This is the name by DOCTRINE. which a famous maxim of United States policy , enunciated by James Monroe , president from 1817-1824 , is popiilarly known. Briefly stated , it is "not to permit any European power to interfere in re- staining the progress of liberty in North or South America by exercising sovereignty on this continent. " The foregoing sentiments were set forth in his seventh annual message , Dec. 2,1828 , as follows : "The citizens of the United States cherish sentiments the most friendly in favor of the liberty and hap piness of their fellowmen on that side of the Atlantic. In the wars of the Euro pean powers , in matters relating to them selves , we have never taken any part , nor does it comport with our policy to do so. It is only when our ights are in vaded or seriously menaced that we re sent injuries or make preparations for our defence. With the movements of this hemisphere wo are of uecesity more immediately concerned , and by causes which must be obvious to all enlightened and impartial observers. The political system of the allied powers is essentially different in this respect from that of America. Tin's difference proceeds from that which exists in their respective gov ernments. And to the defence of our own , which has been achieved by the loss of so much blood and treasure , and matured by the wisdom of their most enlightened citizens , and under which we have enjoyed unexampled felicity , this whole nation is devoted. Wo owe it , therefore , to candor , and to the ami cable relations existing between the United States and these powers , to de clare that wo should consider any at tempt on their part to extend their sys tem to any portion of this hemisphere as dangerous to our peace and safety. With the existing colonies or dependen cies of any European power wo have not interfered , and shall not interfere. But with the governments who have declared their independence wo have , on great consideration and on just principles , ac knowledged wo could not view any in terposition for the purpose of oppressing them , or controlling in any other man ner their destiny , by any European power , in any other light than as the manifestation of an unfriendly disposi tion toward the United States. " DISCRIMINATING To prOVCllt llU- IIUMANITY. man suffering , and to alleviate the agonies of sick and starv ing Cubans , American authorities de clared war against Spain. And now with no defeats and with phenomenal victories by land and sea the people of the United States witness their peerless soldiers stricken by fearful fevers in miasmatic camps and beleaguered by hosts of re fractory diseases on every hand. Gen eral Shafter reports between four and five thousand of his command in hos pitals ; and a single regiment the 24th regular infantry has lost every one of its captains. In the front of facts like these , when honorable peace may bo at tainable , one mentally pictures to him self the splendid youths who adorn our fighting forces , the good mothers they left at home , the affectionate solicitude of those mothers , their tears for the loved and the lost , their sobs for the wounded sufferers , and sometlmig like humanity wells up in the sympathiz ing heart. Then ono wonders why humanity should not lead us towards speedy and honorable peace ; how can hu manity discriminate and direct its sym pathies so that they shall go out to aliens and forget their own brothers ? ECONOMY IN A late number THE USE OF of TllO Lincoln PUBLIC MONEY. Courier &eolmeB that a Mr. Schwiud ( whoever he may be ) drew pay from the state for eighty- four days service , when ho worked only seventy-four days. Schwind likewise claimed 151 days service as secretary of the senate , which sat only eighty-four days. Schwind did not omit to charge for ten days out of that eighty-four while the legislature was enjoying a vacation. Schwind's bill was verified. He re ceived from the state , upon the approval of the auditor , $004. Schwind is an an imated mustard plaster when it comes to drawing salaries. Accordiny to The Courier , Schwind had two assistants who likewise re ceived pay for 151 days each at $4 per day. Beside the two assistants , ho had a stenographer who cost $848. Beside the stenographer , Schwind had a messenger who cost $225. Beside the messenger , Schwind had a custodian of his office who cost $246. Schwind had also a custodian of supplies for the sen ate who cost $240. Beside the foregoing , Schwind indulged in the luxury of a message clerk at $878. Schwind like wise had another clerk at a cost of $888. In addition to the above , Schwind re ceived $1,800 for compiling a legislative journal subsequent to the adjournment. How many Schwinds are there in the service of the state government ? Are Schwinds a perennial crop in Nebraska ? Are the Schwiuds as a clan or tribe in any way responsible for the origin of the word "Swindle ? "