The Conservative * 3 ยง NONKYAND " J' Sterling SENATORS. Morton suggests Governor Furnas as a suitable man for a senatorial toga , forasmuch as he has delved in and de veloped Nebraska for half a century. The point is well stated bat the gover nor hasn't been attending political con * ventions , besides which his bank ac count is lean. " The above is from that most othodox organ of republican principles , policies and practices , the well-edited Fremont Tribune. What can this mean ? Is it possible that service to the party outweighs service to the state ? Is it possible in the estimation of Editor Hammond a McKinley appointee that "lean bank account" is a an impedi ment to political promotion in the organization to which he and the presi dent and other great and good citizens belong ? THE CONSERVATIVE is amazed and dazed by the Tribune , when , by im plication , it declares that , among the republicanssenatorships are delivered to the highest bidder. The Conservative. The Tribune holds that service to the party does outweigh service to the state , with the people who choose United States Senators , as a rule. It is cer tainly so in the case of Senator W. V. Allen. It is likewise true of W. J. Bryan , who never did a thing for his state , worth mentioning never had a good word for it in all his torrents and cataracts of words. We were speaking of practical politics politics as she is "politicked. " It is also possible that a "lean bank account" is an impediment to men be coming candidates for admission to the Millionaires' club , which meets in one end of the National Capitol. Money is necessary in Washington life. General Manderson secured his high reputation there as senator , largely by his genius , it is true , but by interlarding it with his flve-thousaud-a-year salary , plus four thousand more every year for twelve years. It is true , too , that the richest candi dates for the two Nebraska togas are also the strongest candidates , just at present. They are D. E. Thompson aud Edward Rosewater. Fremont Tribune Colonel Hammond evidently agrees with the ancient editor who remarked in Ecclesiastes , ninth chapter and eleventh verse : "The race is not to the swift nor the battle to the strong , neither yet bread to the wise , nor yet riches to men of understanding , nor yet favor to rne.n of skill ; but time and chance happenetl to them all. " And from Hammond's republican or purely partisan standpoint Pat Crowe , demonstrating that he was of great service to the party and that he prevented most gigantic frauds at the election in South Omaha on November 6 , 1900 ; and that the legislature was thus made Republican , might sit in the sen atorial game with his twenty-five thous and dollars of gold and kidnap the sena torship from Thompson and Rosewater whoa ? the Tribune declares the "richest" and therefore "the strongest candidates ust at present. " If the Tribune photo graphs correctly the situation , why not put up the seuatorship at auction , sell it ; o the highest bidder and put the money n the state treasury ? early six- THE TWISTED TUKE. * ieB > a une after noon of more than usual calm and sweetness drifted into our lives. It was vibrant with birds , and serene , in the sunshine , as a sleep ing baby under the smile of its mother. And we walked out among the small , growing conifers which she had planted : o the northward of the cottage , and marveled at their symmetry. There were tiny White Pines , and Balsam Fir , and Arbor Vitae , all rejoicing in vigor ous health and running a race at grow ing. Incredulously we talked of the coming years when our children's chil dren should gambol in the summer shade , or shelter from the winter blast , beneath the spreading arms of those pigmies. And with pleasant forecasts of the possibilities , in human life , that we were trying to discipline and prepare our sons to achieve , while the sun , already down , draped the horizon with glorious coloring , and the tranquil night was stealthily shaking out its veil of clouds in which to mourn another departed day , we came into the cottage and to rest , and to sleep and to dream of stately pines , their perennial verdure , and the sighing winds that in time to come would make music in their boughs. But while the stars are swinging signal lights to prevent collisions of worlds with worlds in their journeyings through space "The sky is changed I And such a change 1 Oh night And storm , and darkness , ye are wondrous strong. " And in the morning bruised and mutilated , and prone upon the ground lay the Arbor Vitae which had been so trim and pretty only the afternoon before. It seemed a hopeless wreck beyond the reach of human remedy. But gently , with the tender touch , known only to hands that have lovingly fondled sick children , she took up its fragments one by one and brought them together in braid and twist , and where the lacerated limbs met joined them aunointing them with warm wax tying them fast to each other. Anc like a maimed child the poor little thing responded to gentle treatment and again began to live and thrive. And now after thirty-eight years , that Arbor Vitae with its twisted , dual trunk and intertwined limbs is telling most graciously of the deft fingers which bound up its wounds and nursed it back to life ; while her grandchildren wonder that so strange a personality in trees oonld ever have been evolved and made permanent by a woman's love of home and its , embellishment ! PARADOX.The state of Utah UTAH PARADOX. founded by Brigham - ham Young and the Mormon church is quite paradoxical in political conclusions. In the November election it repudiated the fusion ticket and its populist candi date for the presidency. But at the same time it ratified and adopted the worst part of the Kansas City platform , by voting to so amend the state consti tution of Utah , as to make the initiative and referendum a part of that organic law. It provides for the application of the referendum to the political sub divisions of the commonwealth of the Latter Day Saints. By petition a certain proportion of the voters may demand that any new legislation shall be submitted to them for approval or rejection. And a fixed proportion of the voters in any town or county may initiate any legislation and submit it to the local vote for ratification or dis approval. If the Utah legislature so elects the country will soon see the initiative and referendum under full headway among the saints and sinners of Deseret. In this country the referendum that is the voting by the people upon what shall be or shall Ignored. , , not be law has always been in vigor as to the constitu tions of the several states and as to changes proposed in either of the organic laws of those states. But here in Ne braska the people have never taken enough interest in proposed changes for the constitution to carry an election for one. And at the November election of 1900 nineteen states of the American Union passed upon constitutional amend ments and revisions and in all the nine teen states less than three-fifths of the votes polled for presidential electors were cast as to constitutional changes. In South Dakota 78 per cent of the men who went to the polls voted on the question of repealing the existing pro vision for state control and management of the sale of liquor , while in Mississippi 80 out of every 100 expressed their opinion regarding an amendment chang ing the apportionment of part of the school fund as between the two races. On the other hand , there were states , as Florida and Idaho , where the proportion of voters who took the trouble to vote either way on an amendment sank as low as 25 , and even 21 per cent. How long will it be before the refer endum in Utah will refer to the popular vote the question Polygamy. . of monogamy on the one h'aud and polygamy on the other ? And after the people of a sovereign state shall h ve declared for polygamy what power will the federal government have to interfere for its abolition ? All powers not granted by Utah to the federal Union have been expressly withheld and did Utah grant the power to regulate its domestio institutions and to prevent inebriety of matrimony ?