T1TJ3 OMAHA DAILY BiRE : TUESDAY , MAY 14. 1805. THE OMAHA DAILY UHE. B. ttOHDWATRIt. KlllTOIL 1't'tlMHHCU KVnitY MOIININO. T1JI1MH 0V HrlJSomiTIOM. Jl e ( Without 8un l i . One Year t OT IJnilX Ile nnd Monday , Ono Imr 1 * < Six Months SI" Tlirw Motillii ! ; ; J | Kntunlay lt < * e , On Yreu l J ? Wfffcly lirf. One Ymr * * OKKICU8. Omalm. The It * llulldlnir. . , . . „ . Boulh Oinnha , Hlnsr Itlk. , Corner N nnd .till bis. Council lilurr * , 12 Teat I Htrect. rhkiiKn oillriSIT. . Clminlxr nf CommTco. New York , IKmint 11. H and 15. Tribune llltlg. .inalin. . H'fi ' V Htrett , N. A\ . All communications retatlni ; to n < nv and ll- torlul nutter iliouM b mWrMiwli To the iwlltor. All lai ln < w letlfra and remlttnnce * dliould Ixs ddn-iui-d to The Ik-o I'uMIMiInu rornpnnj- , Omnhn lrnft , checks nnd pnnlolllce onlem to lie mnik' | > i > nl > lc to tlif order of Ilin company. TIM : iiu ) : I-UIIUSIIINO COMPANY. BTATKMKNT OK CIIICUI.ATION. Oeorue II. Tzucliuck , occrclary of The Hee I'lili- llnlilnff compnny , twin * Ouly sworn , wtys Hint the nclunl number of full nn.l . complete copies of the Dilly Morning. Hvenlnj ; nml Humlny Jlec jrtnte < l durlnR llic month of rebmary , H'Jj , nas MI follows : . 1 2) , 4.16 3 . . . . 20,520 4 20.1M 19.7M f , 2IJ.013 19.7V , 6 19,901 21 U.JjSG ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " a , . , . . . , . . , . . . . . , is'.sia a' . ! . ! ! . . ! . . ! ! ! is ! i 9 13,799 23 19.S53 10 2),00i ) ) 21 2.1.410 11 1D.MO 21 19.617 12 19.810 25 19fill 13 19.7W 27 19 BH H 19,700 2i Total r.ca * s clcOucllotw for unsold and returned coplra Wet .i1c . 531.611 Dally uvcrnKO . : . 1-01 ' .Sunday. monan „ . TSMCHUCK. , flwom to bfforc mo nnd nulncrlbod In my prrs- enri- thin M ilny of March. 1W3. \ ' ( Heiil. ) X. I1. TK1U Notary I'ulillc. U Cliti'f Hi'ik'll still persists ) In Inff liln ( lullcH fearlessly nml without favor , regardless of the malevolent of the star chamber organ. Kvery time that any man Is < lls- charged from the fire ami police force for cause he Is sure to come to the front as a victim of malice and perse cution. Now that the council has Johnnie Thompson's permission to approve tin1 Imtuls of the new police commissioners we take It that all further objections will be withdrawn. It Is rather cruel and unprofessional for the Grecian bend editor of the Hyphenated to Insinuate that The lice Is a pullbnck paper. That Is the ox- Elusive prerogative of our bifurcated contemporary. The Hureau of .Statistics of the Treasury department estimates the present population of the United Stales nt 70H)0,0K ( ) ( ) . This is about as much of a guess as anybody else could make without knowing what he Is talking about. Mr. Kohlsaut of the Chicago Tlmes- Ilcrald urges upon the next congress the propriety of pensioning nil ex-pres idents. This Is not so much a move to placate Grover Cleveland as It Is to shelve Itenjamln Harrison liii the com ing hurdle race. The most hopeful sign of the revival of business comes from Cincinnati in the announcement that the carriage I * factories of that city , sixty In number , r are running overtime and short of help. Carriages are luxuries and the Increased demand for that class of ve hicles affords abundant proof of return ing business prosperity. The fraudulent counting In of Gov ernor Turney of Tennessee by u fraud ulent legislature has culminated In an clllgy-burnlng farce. We do not know which the Tenuesseeans ought to lie most ashamed of , the usurper In thft governor's chair or the idiotic and cow ardly backwoodsmen who cremated a Bluffed rag man tagged with Turney's name. The Chicago administration demo crats are about to begin the publication of a democratic daily that will preach the gospel according to St. GrovOr. The Omaha contingent in the federal building are expected to follow suit at I an early day with Dr. Miller as editor Jim North as treasurer and IVistmastei f Martin as superintendent of circulation They would make things rattle. According to the census just taken by the police department of Huffalo , the population of that city is K5,709 ! Ituffnlo in 1890 was credited by the federal census with only ITM.Olii in habitants and in 1880 with l , " , iil. : If the recent enumeration Is correct , nm there Is no reason why It should not be approximately so , Buffalo has main tallied a rate of Increase during tht juist live years that Is really remark able , ami If she continues to gain h even smaller degree In the next fe\\ years her showing In the census of 1000 will attract no little attention. The effect of the democratic free trade policy upon the Industries of t country Is strikingly exhibited In tin enormous Increase of Imported textll fabrics which necessarily must have resulted In a corresponding decrease h the output of American mills am factories. The total Imports of drj goods Into this country for the llrs four months of 1S93 show an increasi of Jf .KU.IlSS , as compared with th same period 'In IS'.M. In 'other words foreign made cotton , woolen and sill fabrics arc now coming into this c nin In nn Increased volume , reprcscntlni ? 75,000.0)0 ) a year in excess over 189) ) when Uie McKinley tariff was In force To pay for these Imported goods we mns export $75,000,000 worth more cotton grain and cattle , while at the sam time the wage fund of the America ! factory workmen has been cut dowi 'by millions and local trade In th factory towns has been crippled to tha extent. What Is true of textile fabric is , true also of other branches o American Industry. Manifestly th shrinkage lit the volume of the clrculat Ing medium among the people Is there fore not duo to the demonetisation o silver , but to the Increased volume o Imports for which wo hnvo to pay I money or Its equivalent In America : products. /'OS TA It Thl , M'JtOXKfl. It U time for the advocate * of the guvcrn- ent onncnhlp of the telegraph to enlarge iclr plan nf campaign a little. Some of the xpcrt * are laying now that the telephone ml not the telegraph will be the favorllo cans of sending messages even between dis tant points In a comparatively few years. eng distance telephoning U now vaitly ex- enslvc , but It ta pointed out that Important eductions In tolls arc Inevitable and that It III l > c poitlblo to unite as low rates 09 the elefiraph on account of tlio caving In oper- lora , messenger torvlce .tnJ other features ' the business. Lincoln Journal. The advocates of government tele- raph have nut been waiting for this uggcstlon. The telephone has been urt ami parcel of the postal telegraph ystems of ( Jrait Britain , Krance , Cicr- mny and Austria for years , anil the cwspapcrs of Europe have for the lost part discarded the telegraph by ubstltutlng the telephone for tholr eng ill.stanco a.s well as thulr short ills- nice correspondence. In Sweden nnd Norway the government telephone orvleo extends to every hamlet from Stockholm to the North Capo nnd Vincrlcaii tourists to the land of the nldnlght sun nre amazed when they hid that they can talk to their friends rom the I'.altlc to the Arctic circle at trilling cost from every poatolllee. Vlille America truthfully boasts of greater diffusion of Intelligence than ny other civilized country and points o n greater mileage of telegraph and clephonc wires than all Europe , she Is amontably behind European countries n the matter of conveying Intelligence iver electric wires , both in point of est of messages and in the facilities 'or communicating either by telephone ir telegraph. The explanation of this marked dlf- 'erence Is afforded by the fact that In Ourope the telegraph and telephone : onstltnte part of the postal system mil arc operated solely for public con- enlenee , while In the United Slates hey are operated by corporate monopos' les ns speculative ventures for prolit. The Invention of the telephone was expected to bring about n marked cut n telegraph rates , but combination Is ilways sure to beat competition. The elegraph monopoly made haste to bo- . 'omo 11 close ally to the telephone nonopoly and both maintained exces sive rates by a compact that prevented 'roe competition. While short distance elephono rates have taken a drop slnco he expiration of the Hell patent the eng distance rates are kept up by the ) ld combine. So long ns the country submits to those exactions they will loubtless continue , but we believe pub ic sentiment will nt no distant day 'ompel the acquisition by the govern- neut of all telegraph and telephone hies as a matter of public necessity. TIIK I'ltHVALUXCK UP STKIKKS. In the last report of one of the com- ncrclal agencies It is said that the ndustrles were distinctly gaining when strikes began which have spread quite iVidoly. Thousands of cotton and woolen operatives in the east are on strike for higher wages ; there is a formidable strike of coke workers In Virginia , whoso conduct has made it necessary to call the military Into servIce - Ice for the protection of life and prop- Tty ; the furnaces In the Mahonlng and Slienango valleys of Ohio have shut down owing to the strike of the work- nen ; several thousand men employed In the great Iron and steel mills at Chicago are out on a demand for an Increase of wages ; there Is a strike of miners near Duluth which threatens to become troublesome , and there are other strikes of minor Importance. It is reported that the Amalgamated As- sociatlon of Iron and Steel Workers ulso proposes a struggle over the new scale. The Inauguration of labor conflicts it the beginning of the Industrial re- vlval would seem to be most Inoppor tune and unwise , and It Is to be appre- bended that those who are responsible for these conflicts will in time find that they have committed a costly mistake. l'r two years there have been hundreds of thousands of Idle people In the country and as many more who had work only a part of the time and at reduced wages. During this period the capital invested in manufacturing In dustries was not profitable , but on the contrary the owners of mills am ; factories very generally lost , money The settlement , for a time at least , of the tariff question and the restoration of financial confidence , together witl the fact that slocks of manufacture ! ' goods In the country had become nearlj exhausted , enabled the manufacturers to resume operations. In many cases thej voluntarily Increased wages , not quite up to the standard before the time of depression came on , but to an extent which gave assurance to labor that as trade Improved it could expect a furthei advance. The conditions are materially changed from wlmt they were three years ago , when the country oxperl onced perhaps the highest degree of prosperity In Its history. Under the present tarllt American manufacturers are subject to a sharper foreign com petition than formerly and in order to meet this competition must do business at a smaller margin of prolit than h the past , ruder these circumstances they cannot reasonably bo expected ti pay as high a rate of wages as whei the competition was less and they were In fuller possession of the home mar ket. Those who demand , therefore that the pay of labor in the Industries sht'.ll bo at once restored to what 1 was In the prosperous year of 181)2 ) , ns Is the case with some who are striking for an Increase of wages , are asking that which Is not practicable , unless mills anil factories are to be operatei at a loss or manufacturers by ndvanc ing the prices of goods Invite n large ; Hood of Importations. It Is certain tha those who have capital Invested In In dnstrles will not carry them on If there Is no profit In them and to materlallj advance prices would bo to give for elgn manufacturers n larger share o the American market , the result o which could not fall to be ultimate ! disastrous to American l.tbor. It would seem that worklngmei would give duo consideration to tlies conditions and be satisfied with a nltua tlon that promises to steadily Improv If It Is allowed to do so. It Is deslrabl that labor shall be paid all that tin business of the country will Jnstlfj ut It ought to be plain to everybody hat nt the outset of the resumption of idustrlnl activity Is not nn auspicious line for Inaugurating labor conflicts. KKADH 011 T.IJ&S ? "A mere Increase ? In the amount of icney In the country will bo of little cneflt to the masses of the people , be- attse they cannot get It. " Tills sentence Is quoted from Senator effer's book , "The Farmer's Side. " t Is the most sensible sentence that has eeently boon uttered by any of the dvocates of free silver coinage. It is iiHible Itccnuse It shows the absurdity f the free sliver position. The free sliver men set up two con- Icllng claims. They say that free H' ' liver coinage would be of great benefit o the farmei-s and the laboring men nd people of moderate means gen- tally , because It would enable them to ay their debts more easily. Of course lie only way tlebts can be paid more aslly'ls by paying them with money ess valuable than that In which they ere contracted. They can be paid nore easily In silver only when silver nouey Is cheaper than the standard urreney that prevails today. Hut the silver men also say that free olnage nt 111 to t would immediately also the market value of silver bullion o the mint value. They profess lo be- love Unit the United States alone Is blu to create a sulliclcnt demand for lie money metals to maintain them nt n ratio of KJ to 1. If this were iccomplished sliver money would be nade just as valuable us gold money s now and only so far ns It were nc- Miupllshed would the mine owners be- ilud the free silver ngllation realize idvautngc from such a policy. The question Is , How can free silver ead to two so diametrically opposite esults ? The mine owner Is promised ils profit out of raising the price of silver. ' The poor debtor Is promised cllef from his burden In cheapening he ' standard In which he may dis charge his obligations. If free silver jrought the market ratio up to lt > to 1 lie people who owe money or have com- nodlties to sell would be no better off han at present. If It should not bring he market ratio up to 1C to 1 the mine nvnors who arc playing the free silver Itldler would be most dismally dlsnp- ) oluted. AM1HTIOUS JAl > AX. The report that Japan Is seeking a renty arrangement with Nicaragua by iVhlch she may secure privileges In the N'li-arngun canal Is another Indication hat the statesmen of the Island em- ) lre nrc vigilantly looking out for every opportunity to obtain advantages for their country. While there is no defl- ilte ' Information as to what concessions Tapan desires to secure from Nicaragua , here appears to be no reason to doubt that negotiations have been opened be tween the two countries with a view o securing for the former whatever privileges may be granted consistent with the rights already accorded to : he United States in connection with the Nicaragua canal. It Is said that lapan concedes that tills country fk en titled to superior advantages , but she wishes to be placed on an equality with other countries having treaties with N'lcaragua. This information is regarded in Washington as presenting a new factor in the question of the use and control : if the canal , and it is one that will [ irobably strengthen the opinion that [ he United States should take full control [ trol of that waterway. The desire of ' lapan to have equal privileges there with other nations Is easily understood mil ' this fact need not cause us any disturbance. Japan is not likely to make ' any request for concessions with out a full and fair understanding with the United States. There Is reason to think thai she appreciates the fact that It would not bo good policy to do anything which might militate against the friendly relations between the two countries and would even make no little i sacrifice to avoid any complica tion with this country. Hut there Is reason for some solicitude regarding the policy of Urcat Britain In connec tion with the canal , which It Is quite possible may assume an aggressive form when It becomes known to the British government that Japan Is ne gotiating for concessions. It is not ditllcnlt to conceive how this undertaking may become a source of serious international complications and perhaps it will be Impossible to avoid such complications If the canal is not under ( lie complete control of the United States. Tills question will doubtless be even more earnestly dis cussed In the next congress than It was in the last and if the report of the commission of engineers appointed to Investigate the enterprise , which Is now on its way to Nicaragua for that pur pose , shall be favorable to continuing Its construction , It is more than likely that ( the next congress will favor the building and control of the canal by . Jhe United States. PUU , JJoinv run VIADUCT. In every city where railway tracks are on grade or below grade and viaducts have to be erected for the public safety and convenience railroad companies nrc required ) to pay the cost of these viaducts. In some cities they also have to pay for their maintenance. Hut In Omaha the railroads persistently refuse to bear their Just and legal proportion of the co t of viaducts , even though they enjoy right-of-way privileges that are ' worth millions of dollars without having paid a penny for them , nnd are moreover virtually exempted from local taxation. Sixteenth street Is now the principal thoroughfare of Omaha. The viaduct on Sixteenth street across the Union I'aclflc and Hurllngton tracks has become an absolute necessity to n ceo in- modnto the heavy trafllc between the south nnd north sides. The present viaduct is nothing more than n wooden bridge , designed originally as a tem porary makeshift. The ramshackle structure has bien unsafe for a number of years nnd should have been con dunined nnd torn down long ago. Its repair last year was so much money thrown away. Wo are now confronted with the question , What shall be done to give the people on the south side the relief to which they are entitled nt the hands of the , rnjjt/-oads ? The city 1ms no funds vrltlfcm'htch to construct n new Ylnduct and li ngj likely to be In posi tion to do so for the-next two years. All that It inrnjMTOsslbly be able to do would bo to pjy for the reconstruction of the npproawljoiv. The rnllrondgccMnpanlos seem disposed to resist over ? ' effort to make them comply with then * obligations. There Is only one wa 1hi bring them to terms. The city should .pondemn the viaduct as unsafe , adopt plans for n com modious substitute of stone and Iron nnd have the' ' old' viaduct torn down. When that Is done the railroad com panies will have- their choice between assuming the risks of the dangerous Sixteenth street crossing or come to time nnd pay the assessment for the new viaduct. If they choose the former they will soon get tired. It will be no small matter for them to maintain gates and guards at the principal roadway between the north and south , even though part of that trafllc should temporarily be forced back to Thlr- teentlt street. There Is no use of temporizing with this t viaduct trouble. If allowed to re main In Its present condition the city has | to carry all the risks of accident , which , In case of a serious disaster , might amount to more than the cost of the whole viaduct. If the city closes the viaduct to all trnlllc except foot pas sengers we can look for no relief from the embargo for years. The true policy Is to force the Issue between the city and the railroads by the same tactics pursued by that greatest of showmen , I' . T. Uarnuni , when he was taking measures to shoot the big elephant. Harnuni had been vainly trying to persuade his partner to n division of their menagerie animals and In his des- peratlon concluded that the shortest way out of the controversy was to shoot his half of the elephant. The great showman In his autobiography tells us that he brought his partner to time. The way to bring the railroad managers to time is for the city to shoot Its half of the Sixteenth street elephant. There are thousands of patriots who are anxious to have the news anxious to give the Protestant preachers as fair a hearing as Is accorded to Hainan priests and Itinerant lecturers of the Jesuit Sherman stamp. A. P. A. Organ. Do these people read the dally papers of Omaha or are they content with the pabulum of brnzc'n fabrication that seeks to Inject sectarianism Into our politics ? Any constant render of the dally papers of Omaha will attest that the Protestant preachers are given 1,000 lines of re ports of sermons and lectures for every line that Is g\yen'to \ ' Itouian Catholics. The fact Is that the sermons delivered In I Catholic clmrches are reported very rarely i and the papers are not asked to report i any of thetn unless on some ex traordinary occasion. The A. P. A. agitators , and ( x-pHosts were given ten times , the space .that . was given to Father Sherman and he was given prominence chiefly1 because his father j had marched'to'the ' sea. 1 How does the copperold proposition strike you ? There are millions in it for every man who can get In on the ground floor. Wtllll.UI > it UtT ItOJt. Atchlson Globe. A woman looks prettier getting * a baby to sleep than she looks upon a public platform. ' ! ' . I'rmpccttTO 1'uUlllff. . Clilcaca Ileconl. ' , The Florida legislature has taken up a bill to reduce sleeping car rates. The officials of the sleeping car companies will now-put their legs In proper position to sustain another pull. _ _ Unit the Joyful TKllnRS. Chicago Tlmps-Herald. All good citizens ought to rejoice that a court of the United States has enjoined the unauthorized dramatization of "Trilby. " Mr. Du Maurler or any other laborer Is worthy of his hire. Decides , we've had enough "Trilby" to last a lifetime. Sura Tlilnc. Glolx'-IVinocmt. The recent rains In the west hare greatly Improved the agricultural outlook , nnd the promise of a restoration of good times. Bountiful crops will solve several political problems that are now glvlnc the country considerable trouble. \Vlinrn tin. Kl.it . P.UIetl. Kansas City Star. Brazil Is just at present laboring to restore her paper money , which was Issued under an old-time grcsnback flat system , to a par with gold. The flat money men of this coun try would do well to study the living ex perience of the greatest of South American republics. ClitiiuiR a I'buntont. New Yolk Tribune. Senator Voorhees of Indiana. Is deeply en gaged In a ptlll hunt for what he calls "the parity of value" between gold and BltVer. It Voorhees over discovers such a "parity" he ought to have U stuffed. The world la full of men who refuse to believe that any such thing exists. Dinpntm ! Title a Xiillonitl Danger' lirooXlyn Kugle. Disputed title holds In It the gravest dan ger to American Institutions. The Investiture of defeated men with office and the denial of office to elected men Is that nullification of elections which destroys both confidence in and affection for ( government among the pee ple. The reversal qf the people's will In Ten- neesee last week/s / | Another case of peril and shcme. Those wio.study the root causes of the facts that jeopardize free Institutions Hnd them In Lh , ances and facilities to wrest the declaration of elections from the will of the people : fltttl > o polls. Unrf ro. . _ Ly Btnr. " The story thaC"ttie Spanish In Cuba kill the Insurgent prisoners who fall Into their hands Is not Improbable , the only question being whether they ever really fight any battles or take any prisoners. There Is noth ing In the history , * J Spaniards In America to Indicate that the "quality of mercy" will I ever be displays ! frf any warfare to which they are parties. It Is In their blood to kill I the helpless. TJlKf | gouth Americans have never advanced beyond the veriest savagery In their Ideas of war. The battles between the Chilians and'lWQvlans were massacres after surrender as before. The Spanish troops In Cuba Will kill the Insurrectionists and the cry of the Cubans will be "Death to the Spaniards , " and It will mean what It says. PROBLEM SOLViiD AT LAST A Now Money Metal for America's Monoj- losa Millions. COPPEROID AS A SUBSTHUTE FOR GOLD Mullein * In It for Men Who Wield on In- llurnco A Ilounnzn for Kdltora nnil Politicians The I'roe C'ulunijn of Copporold Uollnrs. HANCOCK , Mich. . May 6. ( Editor of the Chicago Tribune. ) I am the president and principal stockholder of the North Lake Copper Mining company , which company , you are aware. Is the owner of the greatest copper mine In the uorld. We have a capital stock of $10,000,000 ; have expended nearly $1,000,000 for the pnr- chase of the land , machinery , sinking shafts , etc. We were Just ready to commence on enormous business when the financial panic followed by the strike of our miners caused us to close up. We are In debt $500,000 , and will soon bjcome bankrupt unless something can be done In our favor. We have title to 1.95G acres of land , a mountain ridge nearly three miles In length nnd about one mile In width. Under the surface Is a vein of nearly pure copper ere averaging about thirteen feet In thickness. Our skilled engineers , after a careful Inspection during the last three year ? , estimate that we can , from this mine alone , produce 231,000,000 tons of pure copper , and can furnish It for less than $100 per ton. So much as to the capacity of our mines. Next , I wish to say that one of my brothers has resided In Paris for the last five years , and has been Intimately associated with a . celebrated chemist , who has recently made a wonderful discovery. He has Invented nn amalgamated metal composed of antimony and several other metals and acids. This metal , when combined In small proportions with pure copper , will produce a wonderful metal called antlmonlc copper. This new metal Is ns hard and enduring as gold , and resembles gold so much In appearance that nlno persons out of ten would think It was gold. About the only real difference be tween gold and antlmonlc copper Is that the latter is much lighter In weight. It is. In fact , just about one-half the weight of stand ard gold , and a coin made of the same size and shape as an American $20 gold piece will weigh Just one-half ounce avoirdupois. Considering that this metal looks Just like gold , and Is as permanent and lasting as gold , why not make It the real basis of American money ? Now , Mr. Editor I know that you are called a geld bug and have always opposed any kind of cheap money , and claimed It was not honest money , and all that. Hut when you realize what a wonderful sugges tion I am going to make I feel sure that you will chong ; your mind utterly and flop over to free copper , Just as a lot of prominent democrats recently flopped over In favor of free silver. Now , my proposition Is this : That we get up a powerful organization and work day and night until wo effect the fro ? coinage of antlmonlc copper at the ratio of 2 to 1 of gold. Two to 1 Is a proper ratio because gold Is twice as heavy as the new metal. 1 insist upon antlmonlc copper In stead of pure copper , becaus ? my brother and I have an option for tno purchase of the patent for the making of that kind of cop per. Of course we will allow the copper miners of the world to have the- free coinage of that kind of copper at the United States mints , but they must pay us a royalty of 50 per cent for the use of our antlmonlc metal compound. I will make you president of the grand organization and will expect your news paper to take- the lead of the whole country. I promise to pay you $100,000,000 for your services , to be paid when the result has been fully obtained. I promise also to pay $10- ? 00,000 to each of the gold-bug newspapers ri all the big cities of the United States and one-tenth as much more to the gold-tug country editors. It will not be necewary to pay the- free silver editors anything , as they are all now In favor of getting a good dollar for fifty cents worth of silver , and when they find they can get as good a dollar for 1 cent they will certainly fall In line with us In regard to certain "on the fence" sliver papers , like the Inter Ocean , I will promise to pay them one-half the price I have offered the gold bugs. I will also make to Orovcr Cleveland the same liberal offer I have made you. And will also pay to congressmen the same rates I have named for city editors. Without stopping to figure It up you may think I am offering more than I ought to offer for the passage of the free copper act ; but Just think after the law has come Into effect our copper will be worth $10 an ounce , and the 231 tons of copper yielded by our Great Northern Lake mine will be worth $73,920,000,000,000 , The royalty we will receive from other mining companies will pay all the bills I hove promised and our company will bavo the clear product of our own mine. I wish to say to you that I am a free sil ver man , not because I have any Interest In silver mines , but because I am In debt $500- 000 , and I would be happy If I could pay my debts at half price. Next , If you feel like accepting my offer you must come out at once In favor of free silver. All the newspapers that are to stand by ua must do the same. It Is absolutely necessary for us to have the free silver bill passed by both houses of congress , signed by tha president and Its legality afterward ratified and confirmed by the supieme court of the United States. When this Is done and the people of the United Slates see that con gress has the legal right to say that CO cents' worth of sliver is equal to one dollar's worth of gold , they certainly will agree that congress has the right to say that one cents' worth of copper shall be equal to one dollar's worth of gold. Our chances for success are grand. The populists are and always have been right on this Hue. It Is true that they have demanded free greenbacks , but paper cost ! as much per pound as copper , and they will not object to this slight change. The democrats are fast falling In line with us , and all we have to doIs to bring over the republican party. I will send an agent to attend the Ilepublfcan Club convention at Cleveland , 0. , and will give him funds to try and convert them over Into the free silver line now , and in later years will use the same means to get them Into the free copper line. If the Tribune will do Its duty all will be well. O. T. C. To Smnko or Not to Smoke. Chicago Times-Herald. Secretary Orcsham's Illness Is thought by some of his friends to bs In part due to his excessive smoking. The secretary has been for many yrars a great smoker of rather strong and poor cigars. It Is believed that he might now rally faster If he had not smoked HO much. Secretary Morton has stopped smoking altogether. Postmaster Gen eral Wilson , who did not take up smoking till after he was 40 , has becom ? so fond of hU cigar that , like General Grant , he ad mits ho often cats dinner for the cole pur posa of making a cigar taste Just right. President Cleveland some lima ago. on the advice of his physician , gave up smoking till after dinner , and even then ho smokes at most two cigars. Hie Duty of Ihu Hour. Courier-Journal. The duty of the sound money men every where Is to fight fanaticism with facts , to meet passion with logic , to answer mere assertion with history. The free sllverltes make more nolso than they will make progress. Theirs Is not the first wave ol error In this country which has b.-en turned back by the rock-rooted barriers of common sense. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report run nr.rr.xirr , Minneapolis Journal : The A. P. A.s do not know whether to attach themselves to some one of the national political parties or to put up a ticket of their own and go It ilocc. They probably will not venture to do the latter ; It would show their weakness too plainly. Detroit Free Press : The A. P. A. conven tion at Milwaukee talked a good deal of bun combe about a ceparato political party bated upon the peculiar principles of that organ isation , but It will end In talk. Men thus Inimical to uno of the fundamental princi ples of our government know that In politics their only hope of ( polls Is In the carrying on of a guerilla warfare. 0I Philadelphia Hccord : It would appear that I In the opinion of some greedy persons the Dominion { of Canada Is not big enough to hold the people who wish to live In It. So they have started an American Protective association party In Canada. Canadian dele gates are In attendance at the A. P. A. meet ing of the supreme council In Milwaukee , with n view to affiliation or consolldat.on of the members of the association In both coun tries. As there arc 3,450,606 square miles of territory In Canada , nnd a population at the last census of 4,833,239 nearly two-thirds of n square mile for every mother's son or daughter It would seem to be a llttlo too soon to commence crowding. 1'RKsosA.i , AM > ornuinrisK. Texas Is suffering from a copious deficit In the state treasury , coupled with sllvermanla. In summing up the effect of the May frosts the blighting of the premature straw hat was overlooked. The haughty and fearless emperor deferred making his mark till the clotc of the war. He elgncd the treaty of peace. UlEtnarck hopes to live to be 100 years old. Ills stock of stelncrs was substantially In ert * sed at the last anniversary. Omaha cheerfully yields the hall record to Ilochester , N. Y. , where 250,000 panes of glass were shattered last Saturday. According to Susan 13. Anthony the new- woman Is earnest and lofty , but the real fuctlon | Is whether she will hold pins In her mouth while dressing ths baby. Down In Kansas a number of doctors dope with opiates a man who persists In talking himself to death. He wants to make speeches day and night , and his topics range from 1C to 1 to temperance. They speculate In real estate In Berlin , too. Count Stolberg-Wcrnlgerode recently sold his palace In Wllhelm strasse for 9,000- 000 marks ( $2,250,000) ) . Sixty years ago the property was bought for $30,000. Owing to a sudden precipitation of business through the activity of the hip-pocket , Ken tucky undertakers have deferred action on the proposition to substitute "Morticians" for the gruesome title of undertakers. Dan Hlce , the veteran clown. Is over 70 years of age , and lives a quiet life In a cot tage nt Long Ilranch. Thirty years ago a monument to the genial merrymnn was erected In a public square in Glrard , Pa. The Hon. Charles A. Dana's ofllce cat has evidently withdrawn from the contest for the first prize at the New York cat show , for the Sun expresses amazement because a majority of the visitors to the show have been women. In the Interest of historic truth It should bo noted that only ' 177 votes were cast at the silver primaries of the democratic party In Chicago two weeks ago. When the party has a real live Issue to contend with It rolls up 110,000 votes In the city. A Jury of his peers In Missouri has pro nounced Dr. Arthur Duestrow sane. The doctor killed his wife and child a year ago , but as he has the call on a million or more dollars the coin cast a serious doubt on the health of his upper story. For the information of the Sioux City Tribune In particular , and deluded democrats In general. It should bo stated that Omaha has not had a democratic newspaper slnco Walter Uollly Vaughan doffed the mantle of Andy Jackson and hied to Chicago. William S. Steel , chief coiner of the United States mint , whose resignation , tendered more than a year ago , has Just been accepted by President Cleveland , has been In continuous sen-ice for thirty-four years. He entered the institution In 18G1 as assistant weigher In the deposit wolgh-room. Ho was made chief coiner In 18S5 , and since that time the entire coinage output of ( lie government has been under his supervision. Andreas Haftas , the last veteran of the Greek war of 1821 , did not realize his great ambition to live until 11)01 ) In order that ho might say he had seen three centuries. He was born In 1779 , and was , therefore , 116 years old. One of the streets In Athens Is named after this aged man , and when his death occurred recently n vast number of people attended the funeral , which was a pub lic one. 1'rotcst Aciilnitl llurl ) rlsm , New York Sun. We desire that during the continuance of the Cuban war International law shall be fully respected and our neutrality laws fully enforced. But there can be no reason why the Cleveland administration should ovr- atretch any provision of our neutrality laws In the Interest of Spain for the purpose of perpetuating , near our seaboard , the exist ence of those huge European battlements which may any day be used to our disad vantage In the ravishment of our cities on the Gulf and the Atlantic. There can be no gcod reason why , If those of the Cuban In- sui gents v-ho may be taken prisoners arc indeed butchered by the Spanish troops , we should not enter a protest In the name of civilization , under the authority of the American government. AltMtlt.ll. JtKAnti. WashluRton Stars Admiral Mf u > prefer * to be out In the audlenco. where ho can make remarks about the perfornunco when he fct-ls like It. Qlobe-Uemocrat : Admiral Meada appears to have retired from the navy for the pur- POJC of securing mi opportunity to denounce the administration for It * lack of American ism without being court-martialed far disre spect to his superior oinccrs. llurffila Exprcsi : It has been known for sonic time that naval ofllcers who refused to play courtier to the political authorities at Washington have been subjected to persecu tions and been made the victims of unfair discriminations. Admiral Walker was pun ished for during tu nuke a report en Hawaiian affairs \ \ lilclivai ut tatlancc with the administration's views by relegation to un important shore duty. Commodore SUnton suffered the humiliation of bring superseded In command of the South Atlantic station for no apparent reason than thnf he was too boldly American. Captain lllfi.son wns re lieved of the command of hi * vessel an charges which could not bj sustained. So It has gone. Positions In tlin navy teem to have been treated as mere political olllces , the Incumbents of which must act the cuckoo or suffer. And now this monstrous malad ministration reaches Its culmination In driv ing Admiral Mcade , who Is one uf the best olficcrs of the navy , Into retirement. Mcado commanded n ship during the war and took part In several Important actions. He served under both Farragut and Porter. Ho has performed distinguished services since the war , for which he hns many times been highly commended by hit superiors. He Is Just the kind of olllcer whoso services the navy needs for as long a period ,13 It Is possi ble to retain them. 31.11" TI.VK JllltTlI. Philadelphia Inquirer : Weds How do you dig- your bait \vlion you go llslilng ? Cods With a corkscicw. Thomas Cnt : I gently squeezed the llttlo hnnd so closely held In mine , iind knew It was a lead plpo cinch four aces and u nine. Watcrbury : Jones I see the silver men nrc getting more and more fanatical. Smith How's that ? Jones Why , they refuse to recognize the golden rule. Chicago Post : "Wna she ever married ? " "Once on the South Dakota plan. " "What's that ? " "The divorce decree Is printed on the back of the nmrrlage certificate. " Washington Star : "Hns the king of Urn- squog ever Insulted us ? " nsked Great Ilrltnln. . "Never , " replied the warrior. "Well , go out and Irritate him a bit. He's got some ground that I'd like to own. " Detroit Free Press : Son Well , father , I think I shall nmrry. Father Marry ? Why , you haven't any thing to mairy on. Son I'd like to know what's the m.i'tor with the Btrl's father. He's worth u million , Chicago Tribune : "Uncle Oeorge , " said the little boy from the country , "are these the buildings they call skyscrapers * ? " "They are. Tommy , " answered his city uncle. Tommy took a comprehensive look over- head. "The sky does need scrnpln' here pretty bad , don't It , Uncle George ? " ho rejofned. Chicago Tribune : "It seems to me. " said the man with the market banket on his arm , looking discontentedly nt the stock of ribs nnd chunks hanging on the hooks , "that the bony part revival has struck this shot ) pretty hard. " "Yes , sir , " replied the man behind the white apron , eyeing him shatply , "It's pretty hard to make both ends meat , Uicsf days. ' THE CENTRAL OHlt. . Jmlgc. Mv best plrl IB a Central girl , She often strikes me dizzy ; For sometimes when I nsk a kiss She pertly answers "llusy. " And If I hesitate for words While trying her to woo. She looks up with a roguish smlls And saucily a. kR. "Through ? " A aAt > TlOAU.MlV itOXO. Wll T. Halo In Atlanta Constitution. Though critics may denounce my muse as only critics can , Today I'll sltitf a btraln of things which Iilcnse the Inner tiiun ! The birds the ( lowers nnd the streams cerulean skies above The deeds of heroes who have died-tho tender passion , love ; All these have served for themes for song , nnd all their changes run Since God earth's clmos drove away , and toiiis together BIIHK , And until tin- end of time some bard will Hllll the subjects old Embalm In llowliiK veise embossed with similes of gold ; Hut I will risk the critics' sneers and drill a lay Instead , To glorify the excellence of brown corn dodger bread ! How memory at the thought of It adown the past will steal To when we round the table ranked nnd atu the noonday meal ! The dishes of boiled Humptuousncss , the blend with crust of brown , The milk so cool and rich 'twould shame the cheat we Imve In town- Yes , these are conjured up again , and set my longing mouth A-waterlng for the shortened pone jnnia best here In the south ! And oft I think 'twould suit me well , when resurrection day Shall dawn nnd Gabriel with his trump shall raise my Bleeping elay , If angels bringing me eome dish on which the saints arc fed , Would set before my hungry eyes a pone of dodger bread ! BROWNiNO , KING & GO. Boys' Suit Bargains. Monday and Tuesday we make a spoeial n c of 2-piece suits at three prices. $2.00 $2.50 $3.00. They are beauties every one of them None better in the world. The § 2.00 suil is a Vermont gray , Ox ford mixture ; also a brown mixed cheviot ; nicely made up long cut coats. The $2.50 suit is a gray or tan , cassimere or cheviot perfect gems of value. The $3.00 suit is a tan mixed cheviot that ordinarily sells at $5.00 in any other house. These are all our own first-class make not imported for the occasion but goods intended te have sold for much more. As these prices are special for this sale we cannot guarantee the assortment to last longer than Tuesday. Reliable Clothiers , S.W. Cor. 15th unJ Douglas Sts.