TflE OMAHA DAILY BEE : MONDAY , .1UN.E . 11 , l 9k TIIEOMAHA DAILY E. UOSRWATUn , HJItor. r.vniiY MOUSING. OF HUIIRCIUI'TION. Holly DP- ( without Bumlny ) , One Year I J Pnlly nnd Huiulny , Ono Yenr ' " JJj Rl * Mnntln , ° J ThrM Monthn i jci Kiinitny llf , On Ynr , „ Kittumny Itoc , Ono Yrnr. . . . . * ? * J KM , On Ycnr / Omnlu Tlio ! ( < < Iltilldlnir. . _ . . m _ . Foulh OntKhn. corner N and Twenty-fourth Council IiliiffH. 13 JVnrl Btri-et. Dilpniro OitJrc. S17 rimmlxT of Orinmftet. Nfw Ynrk. Iliximi 13 , II nn l IB. Tribune niJ . \Vnjlilncton. 1IU7 V utrret. N. W. COUUKHPONDKNCn. A1 ! iimnunlrntlon ivlntlnc to nfWf " "i' , . ? ? ' * . torlol malter tiliouM niMronuil : To the Mttor. iiVPiNnsf ) i.nTrniis. All lu lnM < intern ami remittances houM > flflri'ttcil to The Il-o IMMInlilni company. Onmlin. Drntlf. checks nnd pontolllco orders o . be mntlo pnynliln to the onlcr of the cornpnnv. Y Tin ; ii STATKMfJNT OP CIIIOUI.AT1ON. ( IporKC n. Trnctiuck. iwcrotnry < > f The H'.1'1.1 , " * i ll hln < c comiKinj , lionlR duty mvorn. uny tlmt ncliinl number t full nnd complete copies or nn Dnlly Moiiilng , nveiilni ? nnd Humlny Hoc print" . ! < lurlnB the month nf Mny , 1JOI , w as follow * .1 , . . . 22,3ft ! KI 4 . 2.I.41S . 52.S07 . ' . ' I' . 10) ) J2.1S3 7 . 2i4 : S , 21.202 9 . Z2.72' ' ; 10. . 2X001 n , 22 SI I n , . ! 22fljt I1 ! . 22,422 n. . 16 . 22,373 Totnl . ,703,137 ildltictloiii for unsold nnd retumetl co-le Tolnl sold lly nvcrnRf net clicutntlon 'Sun < lay- - anouon i. . . T CHUCK. Bn-orn to before me nnd tulmcrlbcJ In my prer- cnro thin 2J dny of JUIIH , 1S3I. ( Seal. ) N. P. mil. . Notary Public. JIascall and Stuht and Ilroatch have re- Bolvcd to finish the Union Pacific depot building. Well , let them finish It. Nobody Is stopping them. Dill Dalton has been killed once more. If this report of his death Is really true what will the sheriffs and detectives of the next generation do for a subject upon which to practice with their pistols ? The people who rcsldo In the towns and cities will gladly put up with all the rain that comes this way If It serves to Improve the { armor's prospect for a good crop. Ha In that helps the farmer always helps the merchant. The June rise of the Missouri river Is lia ble to submerge the river front and exercise the right of eminent domain without reim bursing the onncrs of the land. The Mis souri forecloses its mortgage sometimes on .very short notrce. Fortunately for the republicans of Ne braska , alL the eggs set at the State Repub lican league meeting will not hatch at the state convention. Several of them will run' the risk of being broken before the end of August heaves Into bight. Doss Croker follows up hh retirement from active participation In the management of Tammany hall by fleeing to Europe to evade the Importunities of office-seeking friends. Rven the ex-boss has his trials and tribula tions In this wicked world. A very enterprising newspaper In these parts , which gathers its dispatches by grape vine telegraph , announced In Its Sunday Issue the death of Cyrus W. Field and favored Its patrons with a biographical sketch of the man who laid the Atlantic cable. Within a week or two It may dawn upon the enter prising grapevine sheet that Cyrus W. Field has been dead for moro than a year. Out that does not matter. John A. Harbach Is fernlnst a union depot. IIo Is also fernlnst the auditorium and mar- Jcet house ; fernlnst more pavement , more sewers ; fernlnst more school houses , and , for that matter , fernlnst anything and every thing that does not benefit John A. Harbaoh directly. John A. reminds ono of the Irish man who , after landing on an Island , asked whether they had a government , and when told that they had , responded : "Ol'm agin It ! " After raking In the purse hung up for the great Derby , Lord Itosebery Is said to have been overcome with conscientious scruples as to the propriety of a Drltlsh prime minister dabbling In turf matters. It will bo a ques tion of considerable dUcusslon how the lord's unannounced conversion happened to take place Just after , Instead of Just before , the race was run. It must have been a design ing fate that arranged the time schedule for this sudden change. Of course the sleeping car companies are objecting strenuously to any legislation by congress that look tosvard the regulation of the sleeping car traffic. That has been the attitude toward every effort of the state to Impose needed restrictions upon the busi ness. Their success In blocking state legis lation mokes It apparent that regulation , If it Is to bo at all effective , must come from congress. These companies are engaged al most exclusively In Interstate commerce and should bo brought under federal control as well as the railways. An Item recently appeared In The Dee to the effect that a public committee at Ne braska City had Invited Colonel Ilrcckln- rldgo to make an address In that city July 4. The Item has given offense , nnd the author of the report has been denounced , as nny common llbclor would bo. The IJeo confesses Its blunder , but Is gratified to know that the people of Nebraska City have no use for Colonel Drccklnrldgc. Thcro are orators In Nebraska who need only an In vitation to Induce them to cause the caslo to scream nnd dare- any man to pull down the stars and stripes. No city In this state need go abroad for a Fourth of July orator. The principle of homo Industry applies In this matter as In all others. Although the Gorman legation at Washing ton donlos that It has notified the United State * authorities that Its government will levy retaliatory duties upon American pork In case this country adopts n tariff dis criminating against the Importation of Ger man sugar , yet that affords no assurance that such action will not be taken.'The particular consideration for the removal of the Gorman embargo oTi American pork was the equal treatment of German sugar ex porter * with the incur exporters of other countries. ItemrjTo thU oonildoratlon and rttrminr will ! ; < * /r a to talzo the flnt ocoa- IMt ttiMf offer to reoccupy her former tff again ( butting out the American K..jC TlMr ii ftJl of the Herman legation I .IIM * M p(7 Hut ( l niiny has riot yet < / / w lt > tfjf 6 * tMtos In the matter and ( Cut M ( fc * * af * > rrf * > to il until > m k'j i Uul 16 * i/aoftd It Dtia undtr her f t. /.K.S-.S 1'xrArnti.wiiK mnitict \ t.Tvn'n The efforts of republican senators to ae euro In the senate tariff bill less unfavnrautt consideration for the agricultural products ol the country than \M ! accorded In the house bill has not been without effect. AKhour.t the demands of republican senators were nol fully compiled with , and doubtless were nol expected to be , rates on agricultural proJuct.1 as provided In the Wilson b'.ll have been generally Increased nnd n number of sucli products that wcro placed by that bill In the frco list , wholly for the benefit of Cana dian farmers , .whether Intentionally or not , have been made dutiable. Thus the objec tion to the house tariff bill that It proposed to glvo the agricultural producers of Canada the unrestricted advantage of the great American market does not lie ncnlnst thn senate bill , although the latter measure falls considerably below the protection asked for by the farmers of the United States , with whoso products thosu ot Canada come Into competition. The entire agricultural Interest of the northern border states Is directly concerned In this legislation , and In a dogrcs the farmers not on the border are also. Inter ested , for obviously this Is a matter In which the welfare of n part Is the welfare of all. The policy of the Wilson bill would unques tionably bo very damaging to a great number of our agricultural producers , and It c.innqt reasonably bo assumed that the advantage to consumers , If thcro should bo any , would bo at all proportioned to the loss of pro ducers. The farmers of Canada have an nd- Vnntagc In cheaper land and labor , nnd the effect of enabling them to freely compete In our markets with American farmers could not bo otherwise than to reduce the value ot agricultural lands hero and also tlio price at farm labor. In view of the fact that the producers of this country arc not now get ting satisfactory returns on most of their products , and that the outlook Is not alto gether favorable , It would manifestly bo a most grave mistake to subject them to a competition In the homo markets which would .Inevitably still further reduce the value of their products. Besides , there Is not a single valid reason why this country should make any such concession to Cana dian producers ns the house bill proposed without requiring anything In return. Can ada maintains a strong tariff wall against our manufactured products , and the govern ment of that country proposes to adhere to this policy. While asking for a reciprocity arrangement that would allow the natural products ot Canada to enter the markets of the United States free , the Dominion govern ment has persistently declined to concede anything to our manufacturers. Under such circumstances thcro can bo no justification of a policy which proposes to build up Canadian agricultural Interests at the expense of our own. The agricultural schedule of the senate bill will not be satisfactory to the American farmers directly affected , but It Is an Improvement upon the schedule that came from the house. 7/OH' THEY 110XKI ) TJIK COMPASS. About two dozen citizens , called together by a confidence circular to devlso means for reviving commercial activity in the lower end of town , got together Saturday night. It was suggested that the street railroad company should bo made to run two or three moro loops and a switchback through , over and across several of the lower streets be tween Thirteenth and Ninth to stimulate the jobbing trade. This brilliant 'suggestion was voted right and timely without dissent. Then It was proposed to build a viaduct and market house across the chasm on Twelfth street over the railroad tracks , regardless of expenses. Where the money for this aerial structure was to como from was not broached. Nobody present offered to sub scribe a dollar or contribute a foot of land , not even that most public spirited of all our spirited citizens , John A. Harbach. Pre sumably Hascall and Stuht will take that contract and supply all the sinews for Its speedy execution. Having disposed of the Twelfth street Via duct and market house on stilts , the conclave wrestled valiantly with the union depot problem. The concurrent opinion , as expressed ' pressed by an eminent judge , was that Sluht made an eggreglous ass "of himself when ho brought that Injunction suit and allowed John D. Howe to become his "pard" as an Injunctor. On the proposal for the Immediate finishing of the 10x12 grand cen tral union depot thirty feet below the Tenth street viaduct there was an unexpected di vision of opinion. Fourteen men , Including Ilascall , Stuht and Droatch , decided to man damus the United States court to mandamus the receivers to quo warranto the general manager of the Union Pacific to proceed instanter with the sky parlor , and the reso lution was declared to bo the volco of Omaha. All that now remains to bo done Is to have the mayor , city council , Doard of Public Works , police commission and park commis sion fall In with Stuht and Hascall's pro cession and Invoke Judge Dundy to place the seal of his court on the parchment directing the Union Pacific Depot company , over which ho has no control , to resume whcro It left off two years ago. And It Judge Dundy does not Immediately obey the behest of Acting Mayor Ilascall , Judge Scott can clto Dundy to appear before the criminal branch of the district court and answer why ho should not bo punished by fine and Imprisonment for contempt. TllK KltlAltAUUA CAHAh , The advocates In congress of the policy of Identifying the federal government financial ly with the Nicaragua canal seem to bo making progress In gaining converts. The house committee on commerce has agreed to report a bill , In the main similar to the Mor gan measure , foi the acquirement of tbo canal by the government and for carrying on the work to completion. It Is said that rep resentations that British Influences are at work In Nicaragua against the United States have had the effect of stimulating the desire for early legislation. That Drltlsh Influence may bo operating to prejudice Nicaragua against this country In connection with the canal Is not Incredible , but It does not seem probable that It can have much effect , un less the Nicaragua ! ! government Is strangely dcflc.le.nt In an understanding of what Its bolt Interests are In the mutter. It ought to know that the United States will never tolerate British control of the projected waterway and that a-iy arrangement that might bo made between Nicaragua and the llrlllsli government Involving such control would bo > lgorously , and doubtless success fully , opposed by this government. It Is hardly conceivable that the Nicaragua ! ! gov ernment Is unaware of this , and , assuming that It has the knowledge , there leetns to bo little reason for the reported apprehension regarding British Inllnencu there. The terms of the measure which the house committee on commerce proposed to report hnvo not been made public. The Morgan bill provide * that the government shall ba- como roipoiislhlo for bonds of the canal company to the amount of JIOO.000,000 , the government to have us part aocurlty stock ot the company to the amount of 170,000,000. | In the report on thU bill It was said tlmt i Its certain effects , If It became a law , will | bo to put Into nctlvo business employment , $100,000,000 of money borrowed from our own people without risk to the government. Such a movement ns this at this time , It was urged , would stir all Industries Into activity and release other hiinJrcds of millions ( lions of dollars that nro being hoarded. It would furnish employment , said the report , to 50,000 Americans who are begging for work nnd often for food. It would yield to the United Slates , at the rate of $1 per toi for canal charges , not less than $4,000,001 per annum ot dividends on Its $70,000,001 of stock In the canal. It was also urgei that If action by congress Is delayed unrca sonably long the company will bo coiapollec cither to abandon the concession nnd Ins. the money already Invested In the canner or to accept the offers made by foreign cap Itallsts. These are plausible arguments , but they nro hardly of a natnro to convince tbo American people that It Is dcslrnblo or wouU be wise for the general government to assume sumo the obligation of practically providing for the construction nnd maintenance of the canal which the Morgan bill provides for There Is a very general and firmly notei popular sentiment that this Is not -n sort o business In which the government can prop crly or Judiciously engage. Whatever the govormcnt can do within Us proper functions to Guard the canal company against forelgi Interference and to keep the enterprise under American control should bo done , but the proposition that It shall become responsible for the money necessary to construct the canal by endorsing the bonds of the com pany , or that It shall provide the money as provided In the Dryan bill , by subscriber for stock of the canal company and issuing United States notes In payment therefor such notes' to have the same legal tender qualities and redemption rights ns the green backs , will not ba approved , It Is entirely safe to say , by the Intelligent Judgment of the American people. .1 VAii-it It has not been thought that the consum mation of a commercial treaty between Ger many nnd Hussla would bo so far-reaching as to affect nny Interest In the United States , but It appears from a report to the State department by Consul General Mason , at Frankfort , that such Is the case. AccordIng - Ing to this authority the petroleum and lubricating oil Interests of this country arc likely to suffer seriously from the effects of this treaty. Until the tariff war of last year between Germany and Russia nil crude nnd refined petroleum Imported Into the former country was subject to a uniform specific duty. The tariff war caused the rates on all oils ot Russian origin to be advanced CO per cent and for some time all but suspended Imports from that coun try , the result being a corresponding Im petus to German Irrports of American lu bricating oils nnd kerosene. Under the gen eral law , as It has stood since 1874 , Ameri can petroleum has enjoyed a definite advantage - tago over Imports of Russian oils by reason of Its lighter specific gravity. The treaty with Russia amends the general tariff law of Germany In such a way that the practical effect will be to abolish the ad vantage which the American oils have hith erto enjoyed by reason ot their lighter grav ity and put both upon an equal footing In respect to duty , whore they must compete on their respective merits as illuminating' ma terial. The best authorities , Consul General Mason says , unite In declaring that the best grade of Russian kerosene Is fully equal to the best American In Illuminating power , but It has the disadvantage of being a heavier oil. It Is perfectly obvious , however , that the petroleum trade of the United States with Germany , which Is a considerable item of our commerce with that country , must suffer. Nor Is this the only American Inter est which will be unfavorably affected by the commercial treaty between Russia and Ger many. Doth countries , says Mr. Mason , are striving by every means to enlarge and ex tend their foreign trade ; each will make the utmost of every now advantage which has been acquired and the competition in their respective markets will become , In future , correspondingly moro difficult for imports from other countries , Including the United States. Germany will hereafter buy moro of Russian products than she has hitherto done , thereby reducing her demand for similar products from this country , whllo Russia will take the manufacture. ) of Germany In preference to those of any other country. It would sc-om that wo must bo prepared to witness a large diminution of our commerce with Germany. TIIK KIQIIT UOUll LA\r. \ The act to regulate the hours of labor of mechanics and laborers known as the eight- hour law has been declared unconstitutional and void by the supreme court. The grounds upon which tlio court declared this act Invalid are that It Is special or class legisla tion Inasmuch as It discriminates between different classes of labor by exempting from Its operation persons engaged In farm or domestic labor. There Is also a fatal kink In the act In the provision that fixes the pay for over tlmo at double the amount per hour paid fortho previous hour. Thus a man who worked for $2 a day of eight hours would bo entitled to BO cents for the ninth hour's work , $1 for the tenth hour's work , $2 for the eleventh hour's work and $1 for the twelfth hour's work. And If ho woiked fourteen hours he would got $8. for the thirteenth and $1C for the fourteenth hour. hour.Whllo Whllo very few workmen nro obliged to put In fourteen hours at a stretch there are occasions when men may bo required to put In four or flvo hours over time. FQr Instance , a washout or n break-down on a railroad may require the engineers and firemen to remain In active service twolva to sixteen hours or oven longer. Such things are liable to happen on any well regulated railroad. The same Is true of section hands , telegraph repairers nnd op erators. It also might happen In cities during a flood or other disaster that would require workmen In factories or other es tablishments to remain on duty a whole night perhaps. In such emergencies a charge that doubled the amount per hour as paid for the previous hour would bo exorbitant nnd oven ruinous whcro any con * sldcrablo number of persons are employed. Obviously the act should have provided tor emergencies. It will bo berne In mind that The Dee called attention to the fact of the exemption of farm labor as class legislation. The farmers In the legislature wcro willing to let everybody else work eight hours except the men whom they employ. While there was nothing to prevent - vent the farmer from working his men sixteen hours a day ho was willing to sub ject all other employers of labor to the pressure ot a compound condensing engine. There Is really no great loss to .labor by reason tit the decision of the court. The eight-hour day has become almost universal for all wageworkers outside ot domestic service and farm labor. Iti adoption Is not due * to the rlprtit-lioiir ln , but to the n.itiirnl process of "si/orlcnlng / the morn go labor hours by tljn Introduction of InW raving machinery. , < „ In' many Instances the right-hour law hnaibi'tti n detriment to the great mas * of wanting 'people ' bccaiiHii It rrcntcd a favored lMlof ] workers In public employment at tlo | , cjcpcnso of the other waRinvtjrkCM who er" compelled t' ) con tribute lliclr nhitrc In tnxr without rnjoylnt ; tlio benefit uf redncjiiV hoitrs. ' ' The leveling Is going on all the time , Mho the law of gravitation , will operate upon nil classes nt labor whether thcro Is tiny law dtT the statute book or i".1 not. . Chicago still con'tinuus ' to wage vigorous war upon the smoke nuisance. The cnmdo against thn smoke nuisance Is about to tnku In public EChool buildings. Chicago has n smoke Inspector nnd that ofilclnl has notified the school board tlmt unless nmolo consum ers are provided ho will proceed to prosi'cuto the board for permitting more than 100 school buildings to bo chronic violators of the smoke ordinance. The smoke Inspector de clares Incidentally that every partlclo of smoke which comes from n chimney Is wasted fuel. The proper combustion of fuel Is n sclunco whose laws must be observed If economy bo desired. It Is nnqucstlonublo that smoke escaping from u chimney Is wasted fuel. Either the furnace Is worn out by neglect or Inferior coal or the engineer In charge does not understand his business. U costs money to maintain n smoke nuisance. It Is In the Interest , therefore , of private economy , ns well as of public health and cleanliness , tlmt the smoke nuisance shall bo abated. Senator Hoar shculd not let his zeal to be friend the heirs of hl late colleague. Senator Stanford , get the bolter of his sense of Ju dicial fairness nnd equity. The prosecution of the claim of the United States against the Stanford estate for Us share of the Indeb cd- ness owing tbo federal government by the Central Pacific has not been suggested as a punishment of the beneficiaries of that estate - tate , but ns an act of justice to the people and taxpayers of the entire country. There Is a loss that must be berne nnd It Is n ques tion whether It should not be recouped from the property fraudulently diverted from the railroad to the stockholders rather than drawn from the Innocent shippers along the line of the road. Sentimental admiration for the character of the late Senator Stanford has no place In the matter. llro.Ucli anil Stulit. Lincoln News. Turn nbout Is only fair piny. tip In Omnho. Ernest Stuht 1ms been running Mayor Urontch for governor a long while. Now let Uroatch do as much for Stuht. 1'nlno Prrtcnso. Philadelphia. I.edRcr. Sugar Is to be taxed for the sake of the revenue It will produce , nnd the revenue is needed now , but the senate has decided thnt the new tnrlfr , so fnr ns suinr Is con cerned , shall not take effect until next January. 'i ' End the Prr ry ( iiibblo. Qlobq-Democrat. The tariff debate inthe , senate In easily the dreariest thlnjc ot the kind thnt has ever been known In this country. All of the speeches , with the : , single exception of Sherman's have been commonplace nnd rep etitious , nnd the country will experience a feeling of decldedu'ellef when the monoton ous performance cpmes to nn end. 1 o Indian's I'lii.inelnl StiugKlo , Denver , Republican. There Is nothing ; checilng' for gold mono- mctalllsts In the1 condition of Indian finances. More nndmore the government Is being- driven into b corner In Its pffort to maintain the priceof council bills. A new gold loan muy ibe made , but that would not give tpermaaent relief. The worse It becomes for India , the worse eventually will It be' for "England. Disaster Follow * 1'orost Destruction. Springfield ( Mnss.j Republican. It nppenrs that the towns which have suffered most from recent Hoods Hi various parts of the country wcro lumber towns located nt the base of mountains , whose sides had been swept clean of forests. This Is another powerful reason why the tariff on lumber should go. The policy of con fining lumber consumption to our own pro duct as long1 ns a tree Is left standing Is a remarkable ono for this country to bo en forcing. Arlil r.niul Survey. Kansas City Star. The proposed survey of the nrld lands of the. west. It undertnken by the general government nt nil. should be begun In ear nest nnd with a view to absolutely settling the question ot the possibilities of Irriga tion. It Is hardly necessary to say that the proposed appropriation of $25,000 for each stnte , when Montana , Washington , Oregon nnd the Uakotas are Included , is but n drop In the bucket. If the work Is to be done at all , let Us magnitude bo fully realized from the start and the neces sary provision made. o I'uttietlc I'loii for n first , Louisville Courier-Journal. * Tills Is a dreadfully disagreeable sort ot a year , anyway. Weather nnd weather and elections nnd elections , until It has simply become exasperating. It mjxy be the making' of blackberries , but it is roughen on democrats. Let up on elections. Boycott elections. Abolish elections. Blot elections out of the constitution nnd swipe the word out of the dictionary. Some people never know when to stop. Nothing Is more disgustingthun cnrrylng- thlnga too fnr carrying elections especially. There nro thousands and thousands of folks In this country who are just plumb tired out at the mere thought of nn elec tion. Say , what's the good ot elections , nny- liow ? They nln't all-llred funny as some Ijlots seem to think. Jlloiv Almoil nt Labor. Chicago Tribune. The movement In favor of "free colnngc nt the ratio of 10 to 1 , " like the free trade movement , is a blow aimed at labor. It Is expected and intended to reduce the effec tive compensation of the wage toller. The [ irogrum Is to pay him with the same num ber of cheap dollars that ho now receives for n week's woik In good money , while each of those cheap dollars will not buy more than at present 50 cents' worth of food , clothing , fuel , or nny of the other things which nre necessary to the welfare of the worker and bis family. And they tiave the effrontery to nsk the wngeworker to vote for a chnngo which would place lilm In this predicament , nnd hope that be ; s asinine enough to do It. They have the jrnzen Impudence tot nssuro the workmen It would be for thfln benefit to get half worth dollars paid , -them for their labor , when the persons .giving- this assurance < now well they nro counting upon the con trary , nnd thnt this expectation la the chief reason why they 'Want ' free silver colmigu at n ratio which would cut off GO per cent of the buying- power of the American dol- At 10:10 : yesterdn , mqrnlng JIrs , Qourtzen , 1900 South Second street , fell from a Twenty-fourth strefit cnr , In charge of Conductor Chllds , Twenty-fourth nnd Seward streets. no wns about to leave the car when a ( Sudden Jolt caused her to lose her balance. She fell on her side nnd sustained Intcrnnl-lJiJurli'S. . Towno was-t-allfcd and made IJr. - nn ex amination of thawoman'8 Injuries. Ho says they are qult serious and may prove fatal. % \ POLITIC IT. POTI'Ottltltf. Ord Journal : Ain't It about tlmo for another ratification meeting over the demo cratic victory of 1832 ? Perhaps tlmt Is what the silver democrats are going tu do In Omaha. Ilontrlee Express : It seems n pity to atntiRhtcr Judge llroady , even as n nx At the Jlminbles , but that'j what will happen him If he allows his friends to persuade him to run for congress In the Klrst district. Seward lllade : It Is safe tu any that Con- irassinnn ; Hnlner will have no opposition for renomlnatlon. He hn been a faithful worker during his first term. He has remained In Washington nt his post cf duty , and attended promptly to the wants of his constituents. Kearney Hub : Unless npenrances are quite deceiving Jnck MacColt will receive the republican nomination for governor on the first ballot by n largo majority. He Is one of the nusl popular candidates that bus cvsr stepped out before the people of his state. Cozad Tribune : Our demo-pop friends who advocate fusion to down the republicans In Nebraikn are respectfully referred to the fate of fusion In Oregon , where the same parties milled to defeat the republican legis lative ticket. It didn't work in Oregon , neither will It go In Nebraska. Lincoln News : The Majors men nre now whispering around the ttate that When the war broke out Jack MncColl skipped over into Canada to escape the draft and remained there until after the war wns over. MacColl was only 12 years old when the war wns ever nnd he didn't have to go very far to escape a draft. Plattsmouth News : Nebraska voters will pay moro for every pound of sugar they buy from this tlmo on , as a penally for having voted for Dryan and other democrats to misrepresent their Interests In congress. Object lessons come high , but we have n good ono In the Sugar trust legislation of our democratic congress that thn common people can nnd will heed. Howclls Journal : It seems to be the opin ion of the leading democrats of the Second district that Judge Irvine will bo made the nominee of his party for congress. With Judge Irvine ns their candidate the demo crats would stand an excellent show of suc cess. The district Is very close and Irvine Is extremely popular , as was shown by the large vote ho received In Douglas county when ho ran for supreme Judge. Lincoln News : Tom Majors owns some thing like 3.7CO acres of Improved lands In Nemaha county , but they have not been cultivated half so well for the past quarter of a century ns have his hopes for the gov ernorship. Tom has been n candidate for governor a great many times. Ho moved to Nebraska the year after Do Solo discov erer the Mississippi and has been running for governor ever since. He only stopped once , and that only long enough to make a war record. Goring Courier : A call Is Issued for a state conference of the so-called Urynn dem ocrats who are In reality populists to dU- cuss ways and means for becoming populists and at the same tlmo retaining the name and dignity of the democratic party. It Is the same old scheme , engineered by the same old gang , who nro In It for the coin , and nf course It Is being backed by all the Jim Crow democrats who have held hands with the pop ? over since the possibility of using the latter for cntspnws was conceived. York Times : There will be plenty of work for nil republicans this fall In Nebraska. That the victory Is ours there can bo no question , but with our opportunities , with the weapons the democratic party has put In our hands , with the almost universal dis tress that has been brought about by tills unwise and disloyal administration , a bare victory Is not enough. It should bo a land slide that will bury the opposition out of sight , that will emphatically rebuke the foolish vagaries and the criminal deceptions of the opposition , and It can bo made that by an aggressive and energetic campaign. LA1IOK XOTES. Canadian Patrons of Industry have estab lished a national organ. Chicago printers voted against a flvo-day law and for eight hours. Dradstreot's reports 175,000 as now on strike In the coal mining Industry. Two of the large flour mills at St. Louis are closed because of the coal famine. There Is reported to bo a great scarcity of farm laborers In thu Lower Mississippi valley. The stone cutters In Rochester , N. Y. , who went on a strike recently , have re sumed work. Chicago painters compromised their strike. The Trades assembly will back the Pullman strike. Dr. Parkhurst has promised to aid the labor unions of Now York City In securing labor legislation. The actors In Now York City have or ganized a union which bids fair to become national In scope and character. Representatives of over 1,000,000 coal miners , at the International convention at Drussells , demanded eight hours. J. S. Coxoy of Commonweal fame Is one of the quarry owners who employ members of the National Quarrymens union. The striking coopers at the Cobb Lime company's works , at Rockland , Me. , have accepted a cutdown of 1 cent per cask. The contractors have acceded to the de mands of the carpenters at St. Louis and l.COO union men have returned to work. The striking brlckmakers of the lllue Island district of Chicago have compromised their differences with the manufacturers. The strike at the Washington mills , in Lawrence , Mass. , was declared oft and sev eral hundred operatives were given work. The waiters In their national convention resolved to endorse In full the political plat form of the American Federation of Labor. Forty creel boys employed In tbo carpet mill at Mount Holly , N. J. . struck for an Increase of 25 cents. This throws 100 weavers out of work. The Chicago , prlnters union paid $8,433 In out-of-work benefits to Its unemployed mem bers during the last fifteen weeks ; $4,500 was paid out In sick benefits. ( IKXIVS HXTltAOlltHSAKY Harper's IJnzar. Hicks Is a truly wondrous wight , whose llko'H not otten met ; , , . . . . , , A man of gifts so varied that they've brought him but regret ; Whoso work so full ot power was It brought about his fall , So that today ho nits and dares not use his mind at all. IIo wrote a farce so funny that all those who went to see Did simply die thcro In their seats from And 's'o,1 of cours'e. Hicks hnd to take his play from off the boards , Lest In the future ho receive a murderer's rewards. "Tho novel Is the thing for me , " he said , nnd sat him down . . . . . Before his desk nnd penned a tale -that captured all the town ; But It was such a brilliant talc , so dazzling bright , Indeed , It blinded with Its splendor every ono who tried to read. Ho turned his mind to music ; wrote a waltz folks woie entranced ; But when 'twas played oh , scandalous ! the bishop , even , danced. And once nn orchestra of ten , whllo play- ' with his notes they really couldn't Mtop. Then painting Hicks took up. Alaa ! So potent was his brush That men were trampled down and maimed liy others In the tush . , Who'd gene to gape ; and hence It Is at least so rumor Bulth That Illcks now Hares do naught at all imt sit nnd wait for death. Highest of. all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE ii .tan Tin.\tm. Oregon deserves unstinted prnlie for offec- tiially plugging n pernicious blowhole. Reflections on revolutions In South Amer ica should crasevlillo ( lie mllltla Is In tlio field In llvu American state * . Into royal assurances of pence nhrn.id nro coupled with n report that Krupp'n RUII tnc- lory la overwhelmed \yltli orders. As llio Ort-Kon majority rjacs Into n\o ( Inures , n largo nssortinota of polltk.tl lias burns threaten to forsake tliolr KMVO clothe * . If It In true tluit tlio Moml aUcil In de feating the domocrnry of Oregon , It Ulna- tnites tlio folly of cultivating n repugnance for water. O'Donovn'n Uossa'a ro-cntry Into Ireland wns sliimll/cd with brnss bands In Cork. Ills mission , however , will not bo limited to tlio pulling of Cork IORS. Senator Mcl'horson's over zealous valet manifests no anxiety regarding his Job. Serv ants possessed ublllty to tarn < I5OI)0 ) for Hie lioitsB In a tow hours are too rare to be dispensed with. Tltero Is notlilm ; now under the nun. Tlio poisonous root , tlio eating of which cnused tlio ileath of MVP boy In Tnrrytown. N. V. . In half nil hour , la n species of water hem lock , similar to that which catned tlio death of Socrates , ncctirdlng to Crook history. A hamhomr- monument , paid for by sub scriptions fathered among tlio newspaper iiml other friends of tlio late William Mc- Onrralun , has been put over his Bra\o. In- scrlbeil with tlio words he was of truest heard to quote In his hopeful , cheery way , "Hotter Days. " Two of his heirs from Con necticut have turned up and are going to try their luck in tlio fight that occupied his life that of pro&ecuting the McUnrrahau claims. A Washington scientist dopoioa and gays that sweat Is a liquid photograph of one's emotions. Chemical analysis of perspiration uhows that good and bad emotions affect the exudations of the Inillvldu il. This Is particularly noticeable In the sweat of a guilty portoii , which turns to a pink when placed In a glass tuba and exposed to contact with selcnlc acid. The dlbcovory Is timely. As several senators arc now In the sweatbox - box , sulllcleiit material Is available for a practical demonstration. Investigators nearer homo are at liberty to apply tlio test. The Invention of M. Turpln , about which the Fioncli manifest some Irritation , Is a base Imitation. \eraclous correspondent of Mtilhatton tendencies asserts that the honor of originating the man-killer belongs to Wilbur Clinton Knight of Nebraska , a verdant Yankee , who floated up from llluo Springs to Lincoln ten years ago. Mr. Knight possesses a keen sense of humor , and when he gazed upon n legislature In active eruption lie excl.ilmod , "What funny things wo see when we haven't got a gun. " An Irresistible Impulse to arm himself led to the Invention of the terrible engine of de struction which M. Turpln palmed oft on the German government. Fortunately the legis lature adjourned before the gun of Mr. Knight was perfected. TllK VOUlll 01' ' New York Advertiser : The revulsion against political Insanity In Oregon Is most emphatic and there Is no doubt that It ex tends all over the Pacific coast. Globe-Democrat : 1'cnnoyer gave Presi dent Cleveland a sample of gubernatorial politeness and proposed to follow It up with senatorial courtesy , but Oregon has excused him. Kansas City Slar : The state of Oregon has made It plain that It Is easy enough to pulverize a crank like Pennoyer when the people once unite to accomplish a work of that. kind. New York Recorder : Oregon has grown weary of socialism. She has set her face against It and against democracy by an overwhelming majority. Her populist gov ernor will not go to the senate of the United States , and the democrat who planned to succeed him Is left at homo to nurse his baffled ambition. Courier-Journal : The redeeming feature about the Oregon election Is that If the democrats are beaten so are the populists of the Pennoyer brand. No such "fusion" as that of democracy and populism Is really deserving of success , and the sooner demo crats everywhere appreciate the fact the better for their party. Philadelphia Times : Next to the well merited defeat of a dangerous demagogue the Oregon result Is reassuring In its Indi cation that the wave of populism In one of the worst Infected states of the extreme west has reached and passed its flood tide. Wl.at the Oregon election has demonstrated Is likely to be manifested In all the states which have suffered from the populist craze. New York Post : If the democratic sen ators and representatives In congress had any sense they would take warning from this result In Oregon. They are contem plating the same blunder ; Indeed , have all but perpetrated It already. The great ma jority of the democrats in the house , with out any warrant from the last democratic national platform and In defiance of the party's traditions , have accepted from the populists the income tax principle and made this the condition of their supporting any tariff bill. The democrats In the senate seem on the point of following the example. The consequences on the national field must bo the same as In the state. The people "have no use for" a party which has no principles and which Is ready to take up any wild notion which demagogues bring forward. The drift of democracy towards populism must end In the deserved defeat of an organization which retains no claim to popular respect. TIIK sva.tn MAT Minneapolis Trllmnn : Tlio propio will j Judge at the polla which represents t.ullt ro- j form- the body of thirty-seven republicans who stood for free sugar. or the aggregation | of forty-two democrats ! who \olcd n stiff pro- vtl ' tocllon for the sugar octopus at the dictates 1 of the president. St. Paul Globe : Wo tny Dint this gratuity to the trust ha absolutely no oxciisq , It Is not needed to oompcnsato It for any , greater labor cost In refining than Its foreign i competitor have to meet , nor U It n notirco of revenue. This In shown by the f.iel that : for years there lui\o been no Imports of roi I fined sugar to any extent that would bo ap preciable on prices. i Chicago Herald : Senator Mcl'hcrson's servant girl , who sent tlio famous tclrgrnm ordering a purchase of Sugar trust slock-- a transaction by which the senator cleared $15.000 ought to bo advanced to the rank , p.iy and cniuluiiionls of tjpewrltpr At the very least. Huuh n foinaln Is lee Milu.iblo to be exposed to the rink ut being blown up while lighting the kitchen fro with kerosene , Springfield Republican { Ind. dom. ) Only on the supposition that the \\holo democratic. party l under obligations to the Sugar trust Is the action cf the majority ex * pllcablc. There Is no other way to account for this extraordinary COUI-RC. Hut the people ple will have to be given a very different ex planation before they lend further support tea a party thus committed. A moro shameless violation of the popular confidence was never scon. Minneapolis Times : Tlio people wcrn ex pected to believe that sonitors from sovereign eign states were pleading for the welfare ot all their people , when In fact the senator for the Sugar trust had arranged with the senator for the Salt trust to pool their Issues with the senators who represent metallic bedsteads , steel pens , cutlery and hosiery. and Insist that their common enemy the Cio.OOO.OOO general consumers shall pay for feit anil ransom to them all. Now York Tribune : The Sugar truit hat the support of every democratic senator , ex cept Messrs. Hill and Irby. In getting every thing It has demanded. If It bought votes the votes have been delivered. If II enabled sundry senators to make profits In specula tion without risk to themselves they liavo paid It by voting to bestow upon It a gift of $31.000,000 , acccrdlng to the calculation of Senator Aldrlch. If It bought the democratic pjrty at wholesale by Its contributions to the c.unpa gn fund In 1S9U the democratic ad ministration and senators have delivered everything they were asked to deliver. Chicago Kvcnlng Post : In thu list of sen ators who voted to glvo $50,000.000 to the Sugar trust In addition to providing other wise for that hungry conspiracy In a way that the atrocious McKlnley could not have Improved upon wo find the name "Palmer. " Who can this bo ? Imposs.ble It should bo John M. Palmer John McAuley Palmer , the upright statesman , the people's senator , the fiery pillar of thu dark days of tariff reform. Surely the scourge of moncply has not gene back on us. Who Is the rank Impostor who has borrowed the whiskers of a goat and thus disguised sits In the stead of thU de fiant democrat ? And where Is John Mc Auley ? Have the minions of protection made away with him ? Is he In the Potomac or only In the soup ? Wo are distressed about him , and while he Is away the county that lies over against his homo county has changed from C35 democratic to SOU republi can. Philadelphia Ilecord : "A silk dress Is like a scandnl , " says the Mnnuytinlc philosopher , "because the chances nre ten to one that there Is a woman In It. " Tld-Illls : "Do you think you can safely trust n business secret to Hanks ? " ' I should say so. I lent him T5 nearly a year ago , mid he 1ms never breathed n word about it since. " Plain Denier : "Now I'm Betting the run of the thing ! " ns the policeman said when he took after the dudi1. Indianapolis Journal : "I don't see why It Is that men nro always so willing to give their friends tips on the races. " "It's on the principle , " replied her hus band sadly , "that misery loves company. " Now Yoik Herald : Crunimer Wbnt has become of Andeison ? When we were In college he was a very promising young mtm , but ho seems to have dropped out of Mght. Gllleland Yes ; he became the husband of a celebrated woman. Chicago Tribune : Them's my sedi ments , " said the hydrant water , ns It went through the alter and camu out on the other Bide. "I hope I make myself clear. " Washington Star : "Papa , " said the young- woman , "surely you ought to knoW better than to use the small 'i' In your letters when speaking In the first person singular. You should use the capital. " "Not much I won't , " said the plutocratic parent. "The small letter uses up lesit i. ink. " THE AMIORICAN LAUUKATE. ClilcnRo Inter Ocean. He could not sing the old songs , The words were blurred and dim , For he had eaten biscuits That were too sad for him. * * And now the mighty pugilist , Who'd his weakest muscles thicket liny drop the iTunibcll and nil that , And wrestle with spring chicken. They Supposed So. Kansas City Journal. Prom the description of an Interviewer , Mr. Mary 13. Letiso appears to bo n bo lit the sort of man the public supposed him to be. i Sjf jnDiprol yjl I i MlvV ; ' - ; . I 11 A I * * * * n n r ( Ml 11L U j 3& 0 $ - c > 'y ! & ? n/ © ® \il \ I Prices * 'V- are JHiaii. - "t A1S a worthless article is sold for nothing j ( J costs you something to got it homo. But when you got the finest quality and the latest style suits for $8.50 , $10 , $12 and so on and boys' suits for $2 , $3 and up , accompanied by our guarantee for good value , then you got a bargain , indeed. These are the kind of prices to look for. Browning , King & Co. , S. W. Corner 15th and Douglas.