' ' V" * I * s f 'Che Conservative * city , county or state of their adoption. And senators and members alike have represented Nebraska who never did , and never can , point out a single acre or spot of ground which has been improved or made better by their coming and living here. Many have been elected like the notorious Kem who had not a del lar's ' interest in the state or people and who never did anything except hold offices and draw salaries out of tax- raised funds. The question "What has he done for the public good ? " should be asked as to every candidate tipon every ticket in Nebraska. Those who have clone noth ing ; who have improved no real estate ; who have founded and embellished no homes ; who have not tied up with the lands and anchored in the soil of the commonwealth , ought not to be voted for by anybody. Good government can only be secured by the election of in telligent , conscientious and competent men who can show something that they have done for the common good while discharging the duties of private citizen ship. Let us have no more deserting Kerns who carry away their earnings to another state. The farmer who cultivates ten acres perfectly , is more desirable than one who only half-cultivates a thousand acres. The former helps pay taxes ; the latter cannot. Surgeon-General TIIK NUKSE QUESTION. Steniberg's state ment in regard to the presence of women in field-hospitals is as follows : "My position with reference to the inadvisability of sending female nurses to our camps of instruction or with our armies in the field has given great of fense to some members of the Red Cross society. I have gladly accepted the assistance offered us in the way of delicacies for the sick , etc. , and we have now a large number of trained female nurses on duty at our general hospitals , where they are giving great satisfaction ; but I see no reason to change my views with reference to the sending of female nurses with our troops in the field. They are an encumbrance to an army mobilized for active operations. This objection does not apply to the sending of immune female nurses to our yellow- fever hospitals near Santiago , and 11mvo already sent nearly one hundred. " The wounded soldiers would perhaps not vote with the surgeon-general in tins matter. No modern GEORGE ELIOT. . , , , writer evolver more epigrams than George Eliot. And having attended a communistic camp meeting , where leading populists airec their eloquence , and vast avalanches o : tumid metaphors of thorn-crowns and gold crosses slid down onto innocent and ninssctl discontent like avn from the verbal volcanoes in crup- ion , George Eliot , with intense descriptiveness - scriptivoness , wrote : "Blessed is the man who , having lothing to say , abstains from giving us wordy evidence of the fact. " How nmch speaking will populistic enders do in Nebraska or elsewhere this autumn , on the money question if ; hey "abstain from giving us wordy evidence of the fact" that they have nothing to say ? ° AX INJUNCTION. . junction should be invoked in behalf of the taxpayers of every county in Nebraska where the commissioners permit the payment of uiiitemized , unspccilic and unbusiness like accounts. Every board of county commissioners should bo enjoined from paying out public fnud.3 except in liquid ation of definitely stated and precisely detailed liabilities. In Otoe county no charges for bridge repairs should be paid until the bridge mended shall have been located as to quarter section , section , town and range and a detailed statement of the labor and material required and con sumed in the repairing sworn to by the claimant. An injunction upon Otoe county commissioners to preclude the payment of any bills except those veri fied as above suggested should issue at once and be made permanent. The man who knows and is constantly telling all about how to build xip a city or improve the common weal , and takes delight in criticising those who deal in deeds rather than words , is invariably a drone , a burden and a nuisance. This now tree will Tin : i or produce sixteen APPJ..K T EE. \ . . „ „ . , bushels of fruit where one is grown now. But the now apples will be so much inferior to the standard varieties , like the Jonathan , Winesap , Rome Beauty and Rawles1 Genet , that it will require twice a many of them to make a pie or a burro' of cider , or to buy a gold dollar. Quan tity in apples and quantity in dollars is not as desirable as quality , and statutes can make people prefer poor apples to good apples just as easily as .statutes can render the silver bullion in a dollai of that metal equally desired with the gold bullion in a dollar of Hint metal Legislation can produce apples by enactment actment as readily as it can , by that process , evolve values. Many men do not allow their princi pics to take root , but pull them up ovorj now and then , as children do flowers they have planted , to see if they art ? growing. THE CONSKUVATIVK cai count a largo number of public mei who have been distinctively successful ii pulling up set after set of political prin ciples and replacing them with now ones that grew until they took root in official places. They have looked upon politics which yielded no offices , as 'armors ' look upon fields too infertile for crops. The mendicant who asks alms Because of poverty is moro honest and worthy , generally , than the man who lemands office as pay for having ad- lercd to a political principle. Ho who isles remuneration for being honest and steadfast is not honest and steadfast at ill. Elderly citizens TI IK MTTLJ5 JO It- UK POLITICAL. remember the fam ous thro e-c a r d Monte games played by the celebrated Canada Bill on the pioneer passenger trains of the Union Pacific and other railroads in this propinquity. The skill with which Bill manipulated the cards , the celerity with which ho flung them upon the table , faces down , and the urbanity with which in an alluring voice he said : "Now gentlemen , where is the jack ? " "Who will bet mo ton dollars thai lie can find the little joker" have never been surpassed. But all are equalled by the great three-card Monte assemblage which con- . , voued at Lincoln on August 2 , 1808. At this political Monte Carlo the deft dealer is populism. The cards are handled with consummate skill. They arc thrown face down. And the invi tation to turn and show up the jack , democrat , and also "tho little joker" of a silver republican is delivered to the public witli the most persuasive suavity of tone. Fairness and equity to the memory of Canada Bill , however , com pel us to admit that , while he , as an in dividual , was an incomparable and peer less blackleg , the composite gambler conventioned at Lincoln , in a trinity of chances political , threw the cards more adroitly and with a tact more bewilder ing than the deceased William ever exercised. Three-card Monte politics are a puzzle. Those who do not bet upon them may bo .secure from embar rassment and disasters. The Democrat has received , T. Sterl ing Morton's new paper , Tin : CONSEK- VATIVI : . The paper is interesting , be cause nothing thai Mr. Morton writes lacks interest , oven though one disa grees with much it contains. TJUCON : - SKKVATIVK is to 1)0 issued weoklj' "in the interest of the conservation of all that is deemed desirable in the social , industrial and political life of the " The will "de United States. paper clare for the continuance of the gold standard" and "combat the free coin age of silver a't J ( > to 1. " This appears to be the real purpose of the paper , and wo know of none so capable of defend ing the gold standard as Mr. Morton. His diction is elegant , his rhetoric alluring and his sophistry the boldest of any writer defending the destruction of one of the country's metallic money. Adams County Democrat.