r TTTTC ( TMATTA DATLV "MONDAY , JU"NT ] 21 , TUB OMAIIADAILY _ 1 . UOSKU'ATiil. Hilltor I'L'BMSlItJb UVRItY T'5'IMS Or flUDBCllU-riON , Dull * " Ittt ( Wllhnut Suii.In , On * Y r..t M Jinllj Ittf * nU Suntlny. On Ysr . . . . . .800 Hlx Mntitlm . * J5 riittt Montln . ' " "JS5 Humlit ) IUr , One Y nr . } JJ HHtunlay Hie , One Yenr . ' J ? Weekly llee Oiie 7 ir . & OmntmTIiB H Hullillnc. . . . . . . . . . . bmilti omnlia SInRcr Ulk , Cor N anil 2Uh fct C-uiiiicll Illurfn. 14 Trull Bdttt Chi. . .KO oili.i3)1 ) ' number of Ommerce New Artk ItJnms 13 II nml 14. Trlhune HUB \\ii > ilnpt m Ml Puiirlcenth Street . All r.immunlpntlorn runtime to nfn * nil cJI * loilul inntlcr ulioiild bo aiMr fd 'Io the I-dllcr. DJ ( ilMj3 : ! I.IJTTBHS All lii lno * ! * > Ir-ltcm nnd rrnilttonce flioull t > e Miliefknl ti Tlie Il e I'ublUtiIng Compftii > . nnintm llraftn , checks , txprc and postofflce ni ny onlfM to L * irmilo | mulil to the criler of HIP company . . . . . . . Tin : 111:1 : : I'fnusiMNO COMPANT- _ OK cm < UI.ATION. Htatf ft Nebraika , OouRlnn County ! C.fOtKe II TZKC.iuck. Secietnry of The Hoi > Tub- llfhltiK cnmpan ) being duly -morn i > nys thai the ncltinl numlicrot full anJ cotnpl < IP rorilis of The Dnlly MornltiR nirnlm ? and Humlny llec r' during the month of Mn > , U'iT wn n-i toll- 1 . 10151 17 . 2 . 20 IV ) 1 < . a . sons 10 4 . 1 ! > 32 M t . 50030 si 6 . SO IS 22 7 . . . 9 . lOIIO 10 . M2r3 n . ! 0I20 " MUM . : . . : : : : : : : : : JS . 1D91I 1C . 1D.8C3 Total . , " - J.rss ilmlurllnna for unsold nnJ returned - turned copleu Tntnl ii"t nlcs Nt dnll > memm * aronon it f5 orn to bofoto in" and miWrlbcd In toy /irpfdifc Ihli l t iliy of June. UJ7 1 Seal ) N I KU. Notary Public. run nni : H'M TII vi > s. l rnllrnnil niM % lm < nrf fitlli i-niuinl" HCI-N ti. ni'coniniiHliitoi'ry IIIIN- NriiRi-r T\HI niinli Io rcnil n HIM ! N1II1HT. | Illllt 1IMII ) llll - IIIK 'I In" ' . If ? > " c-iiiiiuit grt n lice on n Irnlii friini tin * IH-IIM iiiri-nt. ) II-IIMI > ri" > r lntnvt. . HlatliiK lluJrnln nml riillriinil , to I lie Clii'iilalliiit ) ) < -inrtiiciil | of The Ilt > c. The Hoc IN tor nnlr on nil IritliiM. INSIST ov ii\\i > ( ; TUP. 111:1 : . l AIITIiS I.HAVIISO I'OH Tllli SsUMMIJU I'nrllcH Icmliifi tinI'll } for tin1 HinnnuT run hni < Tin * HIM * m-tit to thfiii icixnlnrl > li.i iiotlfj IIIK Th < > ltd * IIIIH- ! IICMS oilier in IIITHOII or l > > mull. The nililrcn * n 111 lie UN oflt-ii UN ilcslri'il. As n titiilT sptltitor Ilio ' taiil old senate - ate Is a stiipiNi' inon to iKi'lf. 1C piosporlty Isn't coming f.ist ononsli for you , gut up anil lit'lp push it along. QuciMi Lll Is not going to lo o any oppottiiulty to Kocp licfoie tlio jmlille. I.iinroatc1 Alfii'd Austin doesn't care. Ho ns well pnlil for Ills vursub about the qiHMMiS julilU'o. Sonio tilings1 aio di'.ir at any price. This applies with special loico to fice advertIsing In give-aw.iy ne\\sapeth. ) ) The necessity for mure mall oarriois In Omaha , piomptly acled upon by the Vostolllce department , Is aiiothur hlgn of ( ho times which should not bi > over- looUt-'d. The lepnblle.m national plntform may have said something about Ameilcan control of Hawaii , but it never com mitted the party to annuxiitlon of mid- ocean island : ; . Hob Ingpisoll can (111 ( a lecture hall to the overflowing In almost any city in the land , but the fact that Hob Is the most popular man on the lecture plat form might not avail him as a candidate for ptesident. Nebraska has contributed the new president of the American Klsheiles so ciety In Fish Commissioner W. I , . May Tlio state appreciates the compliment nml takes pilde In ha\lug the blgge.st fish In tlio pond. According to Hai ( ley's attorneys , the state o\\es Its defaulting e\-treasnrer money Instead of him being Indebted to It to the e.\tent of his shortage. Iti Is entlrelj possible for a lawjei' to prove too much for his client. One of the best 11-h stoilelieaid In Omaha In many a day conceiiiH the American Kl.shoiles society , and Is to the offset that It will moot In conven tion In this oily next year. And the lic.st of It Is , It In a line story. If General Hnckner's name Is pre Rented for the piesldeney of the Confed erate. Vctoian's association , how will the Konlhern brigadiers be able to get mound the. fact that be declined last year to follow In the wake of the HO an l > opociatlc brigade ? The salaries of all municipal olllccrx run on whether theie Is city \\oik to be done or not. In the Intele.st of public economy , It Is far butter to keep them busy on Impiovcmcnts ie < | ulieil In preparation for the exposition thun to leave them on the do-nothing list. There should be no trouble In getting rid of the incompetents fnnn the police fete < ! oven under the decision of the c-ouit llmt every man Is entitled to a heating before ho Is discharged , Jn nearlv eveiy Instance the facts me so notoilou.s that the olllccis In unestlon ought to stand not on the order of their going , but go at onoo. "Wo want It distinctly nndoistood. " tnyi n leader of the so called free sil ver lopubllcaiiH , "that the organisation of thu free silver lepubllcnn party will not bo antagonistle to any of the or ganizations that endorse the fiee coinage - ago of silver. " Of rourxo not. The only antagonism will be against the icpiiblUan party , from which the so- called bllvrr republicans are lonegades and WIOM ! livery they have stolen. If these men want to join the forces why don't they coinu out like men and Jetluiu If the need of any one moasino of re form Is emphasized by the startling dis- ( . losuK'S that Inixv been ninilp In the testimony In the Ilattlry tiial It Is the Impeiatlvc noce lty foi full pcilodlcnl publicity of all the llnnncial transactions of the state treasury. Had there been published monthly statements of the disposition and wheie- abouls of inory dollai of state money dining the Hartley icgline. how could the slioitage of the defanlting olieas ttier have possibly mounted up over S.IMMIOO ? Had the public been kejtt apinlsed of ( he condition of the stated ( Inances , how could any ollleer have had a win-unit for SISO.OM ) drawn for ( he benefit of the sinking fund cashed with out cieditlng It to the state or account ing for It In any way without having the theft Immediately dlscovcicd ? AVItli pioper publicity , how could the tro.is- tiler have Juggled continuously with the public funds , withdrawing them at will fioin slate deposltoiles and placing them In unanthoil/ed banks to his own per sonal account ? How could he Innu robbed the school fund of both Inlorest and ptlnclpal of school moneys held as an endow inetit trust for the school chll- dien of the state ? How could he have misused the state leveiilies for the pur pose of helping mil shaKy political banks ? In c wind , had Haitley been compelled toake the ta\payois Into Ids conlideiice , how could he have held thu olllce of ( icasttier after he begun hl cilmlnal mlsappiopilatlon of their money , and how could he o\er have been re-elected after the olllclal misconduct of his Hist tot in ? The question Is , will the people of Nebiaska piollt by the lessons of costly e\peilence ? So lar as the public Is con- coined It Is as much In the dink about the .slate llnancos at piosont as it was ( lining P.ai Hoy's Incumbency of thu tieasmershlp. Not that there is any special leason to believe that mivthlng has gone wiong , but the dictates of com mon pindoneo demand that the lull light of puhlitity bo kept on the state's le- ceipts and expendltuics. The laws gov- einlng the invesiinent nnd deposits of public money In Nebraska ate plain and salutaiy and the people want to know that they aio being regnl.iilv can led out without evasion or dlstoitlon. uv/s ; ( > ! The attitude of Hlsh leaders toward the ( U'een's ( nblloe will undoubtedlv be he.irlllv appiovod b.\ their countr.Mneii over.nhei" . who aio loyal to the cause for which IiMillion have been contend ing for a much longer time than is ein- nr.icoil In the lelgn of Vicioiia. II is not dillicnlt to apiieclate ) the fooling of.tho liish jjooplo in log.nd ( o ( his cel ebration when their gilevances aio known and these aio set foith elo- ipiently and foiciblv by the leaders , who on this subject have no factional diffeiences. Whatever dlveisity ( , i ophi. ion Iheio Is between them icspectlng politital methods and policies , as to England's injustice to Iiohmd they aio in peifectlv h.umonions accoid. And the cluigos ( hey make in jnsfilieation of their position aio undeniable. They simply involve the unimpeachable testi mony of history. H Is a so\eio indictment ( hat the IiNh leadeis name against English nile in Iieland , but not moie sevoie than emi nent Kngllsh statesmen have dinwn. It Is tine that Iieland has lost heavily In population dining the last sit..MMis. . . . that she has boon indiistihilly ciippled , that lu'r people have been soioly op- picssed by taxation and the tyranny of landloidisiu , that ( hey luuo Miffeiod teitlble haidships fiom ci uel laws and that they luuo been and still aie de nied political lights and pilvileges en- Jojt'd by the peopU > of Hngland , .Scotland and Wales and by those of the self- governing colonies of ( Jieat Hiltain. Tile liish people have , indeed , repie- sentadon In I'ailhiment , yet they have no such political freedom as the people of Canada or of Australia. No Impellal military force Is quarteied upon these colonies , as upon Iieland , to enforce Kngllsh laws , nnd no one man lopie- .sentlng the Hilllsh goveinmont and clothed with despotic1 power adinlnlsteis English law In Canada or Anstnilhi us In Ireland. With all these facts of a haul nnd bitter o\poilenco In mind It Is not sni- piislng that the liish people decline to join in celebiallng the queen's Jubilee and tind in the occasion oppoitnnlty to again pii' ent to the uotld their giles- ances and invite the attention of man kind to the lecoul ot Hiltlsh wiong and Injustice In their tieatment. It Is not worth while to consider whether this is wise or expedient. It Is said to ha\o the dlsappioval ot' Englishmen who aie filemlly to the cause of Iieland and It may lime thu olVcct to stiengthen the opposition to that caiiM > . Hut theie Is no other honorable course , lor as John Ulllon says , Iiohmd would deserve mil- veisal contempt If she took any pait as a nation In the jubilee. . Xo lilshmaii loyal to the cause of Iieland can have any sympathy with this event , M > sug gestive of Ids comitiy's wiongs and thu snll'eilngs and sacilllces of his people. Tin ; i.vc.it , j..inuiti > nuA'ntx. There arc inoic men employed hi Omaha than there has been In a number of jeau. jet thereuro at least J,000 lillo men In thu tlty. A trulnloai ) or skilled miclmiilca cuuld bo broiiKlit to Omaha In tun J.i > a If they ntro nieilcil , anil for that irason It u a dl&- lionibt buiiLO game for the dally jupcis to blow about the pie perliy that Is In Omaha , tthcn , ns a mutter of fuet , It la huHtllng them to meet the pay roll To liitrecsu thu num ber ot Idle men Mil not make times good , but whin ull the Idle men ot Omaha are lit work she nlll bo the warmest toun In Amerlea Just as B o wan ten jtara ngo Western Laborer How can it be "a ( llslione.st bmiio gamo" to tell the truth ? No Intelligent Omaha woiUingman will attempt to deny that the local labor situation Ls f.\\- \ \ measurably Improved as coinp.uod with the same peilod of last year or the > ear preceding. The labor organ jt.solf as seitb that there ate moie nu-n employeil In Omaha than thetv has been In a num ber of years and otllcct.s of the building trades org.tnUatlon it-port at least twice as many membeis at woik as a year ago. It U not , tUerofore. the facts that arii In dispute , but rather a fear , ground less , we believe , on the irnit of resident laboiors nnd mechanics tli.it outsiders may dilft In and take pin. l of them , for which they lime 1 i-n , il ntly and cotimgoously waiting. Uitli lids demand that the claims of home labor tecolvo llrst conshleiatlon The Heo Is in lieaity accoid. It has for yeais been pleaching the doctilne that the products of NebiasKa maiiufacturors , other things being equal , should bo given the prefer ence by homo consume ! s o\er Imported in ( Ides , on the gunind that It will affoid omploytnont for local aitlsans. The same loasonlng apillcs with equal foice to the dtsttlbiitlon of work among com peting applicants , skill and reliability being the same , the man who lias all his IntoioMs Identilled with the com munity , who has lontilbutod to the nn- building of the city In the past , who has stayed by Omaha thioiigh thick and thin , should have a llrst claim upon Omaha employers. The principle may not apply In equal degree ( o all the op position woik , because a put of It Is to be pild foi out of contilbntlons and ap- pioprlallons fiom other stales , but It should be tccognl/od as the gencial lillo. To .suppress or mlsropiescnt the facts with ( he object of giving local laboi o.\cliisiM contud of the local labor inaiket would avail no good puu > oso. l'ios | ) ( > ilty begets piospcrily and employ- nient begets worKlngmon. The innuber of men looking for work is pot Imps llkeh to exceed the places at their dis- l > o-nl for some little lime to conic , but ( he dlll'eience between ( he two K giadu- ally becoming smaller. It Is ( o be hoped that it will not be long betore the do- iiruid is sl ( biLs ) ; that the distinction be tween homo and foreign labor will be unnecessaiy. //.HIM//.I A' SlV7 < i ; { The opposition to the annotation of the Hawaiian Islands on the part' of those who desiio the development of the sugar Industry of ( ho fulled States is natural and iiistithiblo. They see in annexation a distinct menace to ( ha ? indi'stiy heie , because It would be fol lowed by an enormous inciease in the production of Ilawillan sugar. This is assiued by the lapid glow 111 of the in- di'sti.x In thos ( > Islands since ( he ice ! proclty tie.ity with this country went Into ell oil , admitting Hawaiian sugar to the fnited States tiee. What that ticaly has done lor the Islands is shown by the fact ( hat while in 1ST. , when the tie.ity was latilled. the total value of Hawaiian e.xpoits was only JjU.SOO- < < > , last . .MMIIt amounted to tfl.ViOO.tXil ) . iie.u Iv all sugar. Hawaii is capable ol tiebllng and per Irijis ( iiiadinpling Its piesent sugar pio- duit. of which theie was impoited into ( ho fulled Stales last je.irIHS.OOO.tiOO lioi'nds. With annexation accompli.slied the Hawaiian sugar planteis could. ioin- mand iilenty of cajiital and they would have every incentise Io Incie.iso their piodnutlon in the assuianco of a peima- nent and Inuathe miiKel. In icier ( ine to this the New Yoi't ' Coinmeic'al AtheitNor s.ijs ; "Hiiw.illan siigai is now admitted Moo into the polls of the fulled Slates under ( he pioxlsions ol the existing ledpiocity treaty , which v e have the power to modify or abio- gate entiiely. After annexation the tight to iislilct the glowing importa tion of a pioduct coining into diiecl compolilion with Ainu lean beet sugar piodnieis woi'ld no longer e.xist. We should have dopihed oni selves of the ability to defend an Impoitant home indi'stry fiom stiangnlation by A.slatic coolie l.iboi. " That ] > , ipor quotes a sugar broker tboioiighlv lamiliiu with the subject as saying that the domestic beet sugar indnsliy , under the senate tin Iff act , woold be able to meet one- half of the loqiiliomonts of our maikel in a. few yeais , liit ) the conllnuous fiee admission of Hawaiian law sugar must counteiacl the eltoct of the piotoctlon given to ( he growers of sugar beets by ( Ids measnio. Tills broker said thai fiom San Kuinolsco , at a modoiale late of Irelght , the Hawaiian sugar will easily icadi our maikols as lar east as Iho Missouri liver , coveting the very 11 act of ( etiilory in this country which is best adapted lor the pioductlon of beet sugar and thus taking away fiom that section ( lie possibility of maiKot- Ing its pioduct. Inlew of this tow capitalist would ilsk their money in the domestic Indnsliy. The Commcicla ! Aiherllser liullier say"The : develop nient of the b > ot sugar imliistiy piom Ises to give the faimeis of the wostirii states Invaluable aid In legalning ino perlty. The .schemu for Hawaiian an nexation Is directly opposed ( o ( heir In- toie.sts. Last year Hawaii pioducod ! iX ( > , < ,00 tons of sugar , piactlcally all ol which found a sale In the fnited State.s With this production liebled under an nexation she would send us liPO.tiOO tons per jear , talsed by cheap coolie laboi The beet sugar industry of the west would have minll chance of growth in face of ( Ids ticmondoiM competi tion. " ' 1 housaiids of Amoiican farmers , not only in ( he west but In other suction ? , of the country , aie proloundly concuined in this ( | ueston. ! Shall their Inturcst- bo sacillhed tor the benelil of a few Hawaiian sugar plantois and the specii lators and Jobbers who aio urging an nexation ? Theio can bo no doubt as Io ( he popular answer and senators , paitlcularly those fiom the west , will do well to iisccitain the sentiment of Ihulr constituents bofoto committing theiiueUc'.s on ( he annexation ticaty. The calamity editor and tlio JIUWH ed Itor of our esteemed popocratlc1 conteni porary are having a teirlble time to Keep within hailing distance. This ca I.unity editor asks where aio any signs of piomlsed piospcilty. Ho Is answeied In Ids own paper with a scilo.s of Inter view h whoso genoial drift Is most en conraglng , but he continues to howl ca lamity ju.st as If ho had heaid nothing. Stiango Is It not that some of the most rnbid Immigration icMilclhmlbts who want a high t-pfked tencn ngalnst the In \adlng I'ou'Uner fiom nuioptt me loud- o t In their demaiid.s for the anne.xatlon of Cuba and Hawaii with all their Ig norant hair-lnoeds , Uldno.so coolies , Jap tii4t..st > and Illiterate iiefroes. They aiu willing to ciii r wholesale citizenship on all tin * UUiaMtant.s of llll'Sl > lsliUuls without evc-tfa'prohitlomuy period In which ( o becxmie f.inilllnr wltb our foi in of govoininenj , hlle n the s-iune time agitating forjiroMbltivo b.urlors against Industrious w6tjUngmon from abioad who ask an oppoitunllj to eat n ( lie pilvl- lego of fitlirtmsltjp. Attention Is' ui'illed ( o tlio supeiloilty of The Hmii' < ns a nowspiper over would-be eompetltors In these pails. The Sntnluy tcY piintod more special cable and telprtmphli' nevs than all other dally papers published In No- buiska combined pi luted dining the whole of the piecedlng week. The Now Yoik Woild special cable dispatches from piomiuont leaders of the liish par ties , tolling why they have i of used to paitlclpalo In the Jubilee exorcises , given exclusive to re.idci.s of The Heo alone1 repaid them for Insisting on the best newspaper. If the judges of the supicnio court will only let the pt ople of Omaha Know wheie they stand under their chatter and whether they can piocecd to push needed public Impiovomonts in antici pation of. the exposition , or must give up all hope of public woik of all kinds until another legislature inoet.s , they will umfor a boon of Incalculable value. Whatever th diclslon nnij bo , let us have It at once , so that wo may moot the situation without losing Invaluable ( lino. Accoidlng to cable advices ( ! , OflO lives have boon lost i > \ c.uthquako dNtiub- ances In India. Such tenlllc lal ility Is scaicely co"celv.iblo to us In our Ignor ance of coiMlitloiis in the Indian piov- luces If the icports b conllimed ( he caliistiophe will demand greater con- sldciatlon than mere oxpre-slons < ) f sym pathy and icgiets. The same icasons that urged the eaily .si'binissloii and aignment of the chin lei * case in go an eirly decision by the MI pi cine conit. II It weio not Important thil the court pass on the ch'irler he foi o its September term theie would line been no need of expediting the case in the Hist place. Lot the taiilT bill only got as far as the conference committee sfue : and wo n'tiy be sine the lower house of con- giess will jitit , no unnecess.ir.v obstacles in tile way ol its becoming a law just as soon as diH'oienccs with the senate can be adjusted. ' ' level ind lyiiloi The Tnmniajij ller dots not Into'id to "monkcj" v\lln tlje Tree U\ci buz aw tills jtar. Thai t.l > rold fv.nc ! ! has K - almost horse Sun111. . ? ' ! < . " * iVnn : i ITiiininor. vjilcli , ) Journnl Ono ot the 111751 , bcautful | things In thl v.otld Is the iHiii.i-or of brothers , ahtcrsi cousins , aunts ) iud ouie tlr.ieshcs wlio came forth to tir.fwivo llie death ot a nuilti- mil.lonaltc. _ . a I'rntrtMlou I" MMs(1Iith. . i. lor. ' t. t'.Vlsp m Vcr-tnl."r , * . In'tSDO thfro wu 8.353,000 pouaiH of cot- tcn Imported Intj tU'rt ' country. Last jear e Iinsjortcl "o.lj" ) 520 pounds Thus l-i fl\e Stars our in , nrf 3 of cotto.i IncrciEail from less than "U 000 001 to about $7.000000 an- nujllj. Tint fact h what has asVtcd otir southern fneuds to dlsco\er the chdims of pi election. _ \Vnr In ( ) ! Knlnliu'U. " l > iulb\llli ! Courier Journal We appeal to thi1 hallot-box. thrrcfoie If hcie be nn c'cinocrata hack of u , nr an hi- -oiiEMerablp nvmbtr of denioprats , nil ' 'nht We are ready to go to political anulhlli.lmi If the people will It. And \\h..ii w > K" , wo .hall go Eliou'lnKVnd when wo fall , we ihaM fall flKi'tln . Hut no truiuppd up san hedrim of piofei'lonal oHlceholders nnd of- OLe-seckcis , no bogus commission loun.cr- ilgncd by a committee of defeated populists , no piratical flasIth the dtath-hrad t nd croisbonc of anarchy and rrpttdHtlnn , 10 tn I or bust , has Jiiy weight 01 terror 'or us , o ciu drhe vn from the well-worn flclda ot democratic truth and patriotic ilutj' Put that In jour pipes , gentlorm'ii , i.nd smoke It. 'IVIllut ? rrrntliM in PariiiorN. I'tlei ( N Y ) I'ress Secretary Wll"on of the Department of Ajnlculturo ltcrp light on findlnR fids and telling farmers about them , which are co.- talnly very siiRsastlve A rerout Inqulr't U whv It should benfossary for the United States to have Imported 1G3S " 5:0 worth of beans and peaIn the last fiscal j'car Iui- Ing the sam time cur people pall < ! i' ' > Cfill for foreign cabbage , $127.r ) > 9 for foreign po tatoes , $ i , 77 1 515 far forelen RIOWM Iny snd COO 000 for lmport < d hops AH thesa together make qullo a bunc'i ' of money v hlch It would ceitalnly bcem might aa well have gone Io ftinuiu living Insld' th ' American boundary Mr. Wilson thinks that there wro no need for linjioitlng S10 OO'l.OOO ' w 01 111 of goat aUns last year. He believe * , goats can be laUfil as vnll and as cheapl > hi the Vnltsd States aa any .vh re When tlio'e Is to much talk ibout forelmi com petition in inTMifaclured jiroduets It s" ms to bo prcttv generally ovrnookrd that for eign fanners are geltlm ; monry.hlch ought to go to our own nvriciiHuiljto. T'leia ' must bo a fault somow-npre vrlijch ran be reme died What ind whore , cro the quwtlons to bo InvFstlRatcd "il aniweied Surely the American farmer Is as Industrious and pro gressive BS tlllcn ff the toil In anv other climate. That 'i lng so , ho should rise to the situation and secure ( ho business to which ho la entitle ] IOWA I'JIKSS OO1IMI3M * . J Rloux City Tlirir"/ / , The Holes boom 1 obblng up In a ipanner miivi' Uvo of thereat roat lack of m.Tl lal In the ranks of the onnonltlon for ( jjpdldate for ; ovoinor. Davenport HqpyUlkair Attorney Orneral Remlcy holds UlU'iiil county attornny Is not entitled to extr ? j > Ay/ for collecting1 the mulct tix ! that thU ttiii Att of the rcmilai duty of that olllclal. o > ' \ < Sioux City Jatfriiil While worahlppr at thn silver slulmVurel renewing their political vows In overvicuufity of Ion a tUe corn la growing an1 tl e cjUle are converting graia Into hlgh-giade href Dfs Molnc RPiirftal * The windows of heaven havu been firely opened this ppilng to teach Iowa f jiiwrs ( bo need ot mcndlui ; their ways. TUB..l'JJlx f able condition of country roac's wm/s more Injury to the In- tensts of tradi > liW any other bar that can b : placed b twtvtcojintry fulk and city folk " ' " will - hu Thu summer "tlnki'ilng" probablyhu carrl-ed on In most eectlonu , but It la time for a united effort and decided action In the mat ter of aood roada fi , > r Iowa , Davenport Democrat : No federal olTlecr Is to be chosen In Iowa thlu year , and the nearest election that approaches It comes off In U9i , when members of congress are to be selected. So If a time weie ever ap pointed for the special nd exclusive COM- slderatlon of state affairs and the cbolce of oltlcers to admlnUter home politics It Is In thU particular year ot grace. Yet all this Id to be Ignored for an lain that U entirely for eign DcmocraUj are told that they iruet accept as the trim nna only gonpd what their party platforms and leaders have never taught. Unlcs * they do thin to the extent of going back on their record they cannot help make the silver democratic declaration of principles These are the circumstances under which the thrte-corn- erod convention Is ( o bo held lu Pea Molius the coming week. HITS OK MIIIIsici IMU , incs. Columlnifl TeleRram ( ttni ) There will bo no fusion of the democratic nml pnpullit forced this full un'r-M thp popull'ts tec fit to eiidorn * Iho ticket named by the demo crats If they would do this vrrhapt we might bo nblo to forget niul 'or lvc their Ion-down iiiennnf's of two yenrs ngo * nd allow them to nmilatp with tia Tecumseh Journal An effort la In'lnn made nmong the poptili t ne ii.ip < > r to create a Jioom ffi cx-Attornoy Octieril I.cesp for pupremc Judge tlih fall We have no objection ( o Mr. t.ecso ai i man. but aa n matter of right and Justice the candidate for Judge should this fall como from the democratic party. Wo can offer a candidate for that pciMtlon who ! the peer of inv man In Nebraska , and hta ntnie U JelTcr on II Ilroady If the Mlvei forces are to unite ng.iltut the gnlclbtiRi thli coming fnll. It will be neoorvary for the ilcmocials to have hotter treatment from the populists thnu they had In Is90. ! Sewnrd Heportor While it Is > et t-irly for \ery intirh pluming lor the fail campaign , rcpultllraii'i wilt do well to pirparp lu .imple time , by the ilhcursloiio of candldiitpfi foi tlm dltTerent pcsltlons. The mnst linoitnnt | ) position to bo tilled In Nelnn.'ka this > < ar Is that of supreme Judge , iml the H"portcr Is In favor of carry tin ; out ihe usual rus- tom of giving a good ollkcr two Icitns Judge A M. Test , whose term cxplics with the present year , \A \ one of the bp n ] uil < tn In Nebraska and han made n most ctecllciil iccord dm Ing hln six yi-irs on the supreme bench. We POO no rcaaon whv he should nnt be lenomlnatcd aim re-ekt'tcd to tin position lie hai so ahlj filled holliet Judge Post IH n candldiitc or not we arc not Informed , hut In the alnoucc of any dcclarvlon to the contraiy on his pait It Is fair to preimmc that he would be willing to be 1 Is own ti"cc irr rrunonl Tribune Thn Nebraska Ijeague of 1U pub .ui a dubs will hnld Its aun.iul mpotltiK nt Om.ilm on the 2fllh lust. In ad dition to the ordlmrv buslncsa of re organis ing for future work and d-loe'lng delegates to the national meeting at Detroit will be the consideration of the proposition to -curo the ne\t national g.ttherltn ; at Uiuahi during the exposition Tor this purposa the very strongest deh nation pra lblo should be se lected to go to Detroit to urge ( li claims of Otnilii Under such rlrciimstaiicea there would seem to be llttio doubt that the greit gathering of representative rcpubllcms ot the countiv could he- secured at exposition time Omaln Is ihc ernventlon city for next > "or n'ld they arp nat.irally sravltatlng thl'hei Ucnldcs Nebraska has bncome a stpto of more prominence than ever In po- ll'iril elriles , by reason of Imlng C _ 1J Hon'lev and W J. limn at t > r"l Icntial ( andldalcs last vcar Sim iltancoii'h It be- tcmc i > pppocrutlc state an I the Impni lance of rediomliiK It Is nenerilH recrgnlT 1 The ji hiring of onrh i body a' ' themetiopolh will hive a salutary Inlluenee It will bo hill at n tliin v hen a Mate campaign li on nnd vvhrn the tlu'y of dion-Im ; .a legislature which must ilrct a U'llted States senatoi , Io Imposfd Dn'ge county , which made the latpcst i republican gain of any lu the state In a jiar of n slump clc > e , shore to popocrucy , tmw It to llf rlf nnd the patty to send a strong delegation to Omaha. XI , AM ) OTIIIMIWISK. The sol tens Illnr.-s of Mr Nlcollnl. hus band of Adellna 1'attl , If due to cancer of ths Ilvci. lie U > confined to his apaitmentj In the Pattl car.tle Inalcs lie v as a new boy In the business of de livtring te'oKraph mcosagtn to United States , donatora That was hh apology for In- ciulrlnc ; "Is Uitic a man around hero named H.inna ? " II H Chamhnlain of Denver , Cole , who died leccntly In Unqlaiidvarf a ical istalc boomei of I no Dainato type He conducted operalloi's on n hugs scale and left ? 15,000 000 rf dp'ts Ucproacutatlve 'Halley of Texas when a hovns cousldcied la/y. but he had bis ambition awnKoned by the character of lah- ni' tl Woith In Mrs Snuthwoitli'i- hmai-1 or , In the Depth3rd dates hU caieci fiom the reading of tint novel. 1 The United States consul to Have , who , VM irtmked icce .tly foi aiwcrting that ! T-ei < h v MIES wen , adulterate ! Insists t'lHt be told the truth Th it's the tumble Hi sbould have stuck to diplomatic tci n n The iraiqul-s of Lome Is one of the manly mpii who 1'M'i hh mother-ln-lan and doc not hca tate to prot-lalm it Fpcakln , ; of hei H a pub itbed niticl" I c say. ' H lias been the proiiue ° t pieroatlve of Qucin Vle'orla to mal'o the woiunn's diity the natlon'j glory. " A. H Spofford , the librar'nn ' of coa rcru wrj : i war corrcaponilunt dining ihe late ilvll wai. At cne of the Hull Run battle' ho had for colltag.ics , Murat Halul I , VII- lard , lioynlon and White'Ile'J ' ' lie was appointed librarian by I'lo&IfUnt Lincoln , and lor thirty-Ive years has held the ol'lce Walter Klttredf/c , author of "Tenting on the Old Camp Ground , " la living at Heed's rurj , N II He w.rf a popular singer long befoio the war and wrote many of his s-o'igf None evci acquirad prpularity equal to ' runtlug on the Old Camp Ground. " which N'r IClttisdge wrote and lomp'sad on tin night after hesas drafted Into the army In the Tobacco trust dial In New Yoik Jc-3cph H. Choate < no of the lawyers for the truat , atkcd cne of the tnle"nen' : "What wcu'd you do If nt the end ot till" trial you found that eleven of the jurors are of one mind and you of another' " "I would agree with the cloven , " wen the reply "Why no' " rjld Lawyer Choate "Dncauso I should pr-bablv to In i burnto get home , " was ho icpl"Vou are accepted , " said Mr. Choatu. AUSTIN'S JMU\\TIMJ r.Kroirr. Clilcago Il'coid Let the merriment of the queen luhlloo go on unchucktiil Itemcm- bei * . no one Is compelled to read Alfred Aus tin's poem. Olobc-Oeineciat1 Laurcato Aufctin's iiocin on th Victorian jubilee has the one meilt of avoiding an t'lTurt to be lullliant It is iroto loiiironplaco , vvliliout a Etriklug phiiU2 or a fresh ( bought Mr Austin bhoiild write ono moio po m , his swan bong Indianapolis N'wa 'Ihtnk of a poet lain cite speaking of "glnllni ; a tiovvn about' the broT.1 of the "maiden with niajrnth mien , " 01 ujlng "vow" as , the equivalent of "prayor" The "ponn" ends with the dec larallon that the quieii' > people , gathering "fiom near , from far , " unitedly Indulge In ihl-i praje. IxiiiKti and longer may Blip ndgn , And , tluough a Mimmer night t-uene , Whonfe day doth mvir wholly V-TPP , CJoil IHKI and ble'is our 'mpres.queen ! "A summer night inrcne whencft day doth never wholly wane" U great , Is Immense 'u Aihllnlan but what docu It inian7 Chicago Tribune' The coincidence Is well worth iPinombcrlng , for lnutanco , that The dew was on thu summer iavvn. And that The rosm bloomed , the woods were green When "a maiden with majistlc mien" went Into the rclgii-rccoid-inaMng busineEi > and HO consistent has bcin hu eonduct and the manifestations of nature that Now tlin ci okoo rails oneo more. And onoo ana 111 June's loses blow In token of the expiration of si\ty yenr. < Thuro are to many hidden delights In the poem that there lb danger of ml.ihiuu ome of them at a llrst reading. St LauU IUUbllc ] ' 1 hi ) sweetly juvenile sLnllnunt of Mr Austin's latist it ml most notable effort aa a laureate IH In It&clf incut n lulling After tiotttng tlio quitn of Hng land out In ihe dew of the lawn ho iniKui the ciu.lioo Hlng to her and the room blov , again and tells her that It la the "grealrat greattutii to be food" wlikb In nice for Vic , but rourjh on the prince of Waltn and given her a crown and a UUIi'iit and a helm regardless of > xpciu > e , and makes much of her generally , just as thu moat Kiiihing of class pocta would do And he wantu her to htay , too , until he hits occasion to sing to her again , because , after malting her people ple "pour" round her throne and vow and lift their hearts and pray bo plpru. Longer and longer may ehe reign , AnJ through a suninier nlcTt nrcne , Whence day doth never vshol v wane , tlj < l bpaio and bless , our i-mi > ies < * oucen , Un't It at nlco1 You don't have to dig deep for any thought In It it's a regular tiunlle-bt-d cinch , so to speak and then , an before ihe rhyming Is BO sweetly familiar It Un't necciEary now to auk Time to turn backward In h ! < > flight and make us children ) again just for a uiqht a surrender to the spirit of Mr Ai'stln'n jubilee muse Io all that needed to attain the Nirvana of second end cl lldhood is u \ niicmin 'mi : iMitcin Detroit Prop I'rws tlom > U > the irnn of the Ilnwallnn tr * l > th'n ' .oniitrv li to pay the M iHiO.OOO Ind'bioiinpss nf the Is lands tly dint of ( nil hustling Hawaii wni ublo to furnish the ] > en tor the slKnlnK of the treaty. I.oiiMvllp Courier Journal ( I'em ) One of tlio provUlore nf Hip brnutlful trinty for the annexation of the Sandwich Idlnnds. thp rntlflcallon of which will violate our national rxl.stene < , will ipjcct with rnntiMiipt the tpnchlngs nnd wainlngs of the founders and "om erv.itoM of our Institutions and open thp way for untold btirdrni and entangle ments in thp future Is that , while we are to . .icqulnthn publU lands of thp Islands , thpy nre not to be subjoet to Ihe land lawn which apply to thp rest of our public lands , but tin * rpvpuupa derlveiPfrom thp Huv.allan pub. lie Innds are tn be devnted to thp Inhabitant' ) of Havviill. Arp wo annexing Hawaii , or Is Ilnwall annexing us' Kiuuas Cltv star ( Iml-dem } In view of Hie largo number of rhlnameil In what will piobablv fcoon bo HIP s tate of Hawaii. It Is- Intprestlng to note that Iriere are now ibotit 300 mturnll/ed riilnampn in the United StatV' who , v.-re mndp cttlsctis prior to the law psiwspd In 1SS2 Thi-ro are over 40000 Ameilcan bom C'hlnp'p who have never known , ui ) other country than tlilt , and yet they and thrli families arp citl/eus ot China under our present l v\6 Tlicrc are now lu the United Stairs , ill addition tn the above j about BO nee C'hlnamcn w'lo ' nre legal resi dents ofbo United Stafp by tight of con tinued residence dating back from twelve to loily yearn Under llie pirscnt law the Hawaiian Chltit o would not become citi zen ? should the- United ytatcs annex the Is land" lluftalo i\pires : ( np)1 ) Tor the secon 1 Hintn tieaty ot tinnc\allun baa hem signed by thi > oMditlve branclips of thp govern- menl.s of llnivall nml of Iho United States Iho Kxpieus can but leg.nd Ihe stetv an nn en01 , for itasons that we liavu already stated Still of all the dlnVront acquisitions of territory vvlilih ihe United States has nmde alnrc its oignnl/atlnn a > a govern ment Iliero Is not one which time has not vlmilcatpJ I'eihaps we who oppose 111 annexation of Hawaii will nnd our feai groundless It Is to bo hoped so , If the an nexation Is to take place Theie Is no cer tainty , howpvcr that the treaty will bp con fit niul by the necessary two-thirds ma jority of the senateA considerable group of sinators has . .ilieadv dcclaied firm oppo sltlon to the convention Their number may prove snnieli'.H to defeat it. Chicago Tribune ( tep ) The totil niea of the- Hawaiian Islands u fi.f.10 square mile , ' , or something | C > H than New Jcr ey , or a half larger than Coiini-cucut. or SO per cent of the aiea of Massaihusetts , or four tlm-s tint of 111 ode Island , or thno and a halt tlmeu that of Delawaie The largest blind Hawaii contains I.IMO square inllns 01 nearly llvo tlnu-s the ana of Cook county. Maul , with 7CO Hiuaie miles , er that of a largo 'Illinoiscounty. . Knual 590 bquarc miles , Molokal , of 270 ' . .tuare miles , being about as large ES Du 1'age , Kendall or of many bouthern IlllnoU countle" , and several other smallei island's In the group rang- lig flora 150. 100 , down to sixty-three squaie- miles The capital Honolulu has about 3 > ,000 Inliabltanta The present population l ( Btlniated at 110.000 comprising 10,000 Cn- Kl'nli ipeaking whiten ( more than half of them being Americana , who own 90 tier cent of the property of the Islam's ' ) , 15.000 I'or- tuguc p 30000 natives , 11000 Chinese , 2 : > , - 000 Japanese and 10,000 half-breeds and mixed races New York Commercial Advertiser ( rep ) If we leave thp ifp policy under which we have grown strong for a hundred yens and begin to reach out out to sea for moreleni - torv , where shall we top ? If Hawaii Is to bc annexed , why not Cuba' And then thcro are the remainder of the West Indies III It- lib , Pionch , Dan'sh ' and Spanish iqially \alld "arguments" rould be- flamed 'iy our Jingoes for the appropriation of these by pur chase or by conquest , even If we had to fight Huropo In order to gt them This prospset of disaster , confusion and bloodshed Is enough to make cve'iy sober-minded person condemn Instantly all attempts to annex any territory whatever beyond thbordeii > of our o\vn con tinent We have more land , moie "re- fiourceh" and a greater diversity of popula tion already than we know what to do with All our brains and eneigy'are required to put om own national hoiis"hold In older We eon kp ° p Hawaii from being annexed by any any othci nation In time of peace bv declaiing that vo should regard such an act as un friendly to tlio United Slates. That Is all that ought to bo done. SOMH ( ill \VHS AT TII13 CYIMTM , . ' .VIn-re Itrst tli < * ItriiinliiM of l'nminis i'riuilc. A granite fhait bearing on Its face the name of Stantou maiks the grave of Lin coln's occiotary of war the man who held that dllllcult post during the turbulent days of civil strife iiayti a writer In Donahoe's MagazlneOne s > ldo of the shaft Is Inscribed "To the- memory of Hdvvln M Stanton , bom Dccembei PJ , 1SH. Died December 24 , 1SC9 ; jnd hU wife , Alice M Stanton , born Septem ber 2-1 , 1830 , and died November 17 , 1873. " On another &lde of the fihaft Is an Inscrip tion to an Infant con Janice II Stanton 'Hie three gia\es are eovered with Ivy of an evergreen variety , and marked by small > quaro granite bead and footatnnes Another Illustrious secretary of war , whoae fame a a cabinet mlnlntcr Is Higely Identi fied with h'fl ' beautiful wife John H i.aton of Tenuessfe h also burled at Oak Hill A weather-stained pyiamldal monument , ter minating In n bioki'n column , Mtates that lui wiin bom June1 IS 1700 , and died Novem ber 17 ISC' ' ) and that ho was United States jcnutor fiom the state of Tenntficee for eighteen years , serictary of war , governor of the Male of Florida and minister to the court of Madrid Hy his nldc i 'i his wife the nevcr-to- be-foigotten I'ef , , Nell the cmhod Incut of gbticnnm Impulsej , daintily , bcwluchlngly beautiful , with her queenly cirilage , exquls' itrly poKid head , scintillating cyrn , ber laiif-htii-loving hunl and yet the object o/ / the most liituuie hocl.il jealousies that uvei burned Here reals beauty , sorrow and triumphs , v.bile over all grow grac-d and v loletri in loving ilv.ilry Near the entrance to Oak Hill , on a clr- ( Ular plot cov Hi oil wltb periwinkle , utaiidu a pedictul of white fitanc , surmounted by a maiblo ln : , t of John Howard Payne Tlio fatu oi the pt-dcotaf ii liiacrlbcd "In mem ory of John Howard 1'Jyne , author of 'Home , Sweet Home' ' Horn , Juno 9 , 1791 ; died April ! > , l.Sr > 2. " On the rt-verfcu of the pedestal are the wmda Suie , wihon the gentle i > lrlt fled To icalniM bnyonil Hit * uzura domo. With aims outRtrit < hiil , llie anpela Paid : Wi'b uini * to HfiiveM'H Home , Sweet Home. ' " 'Iho appiojch to the monument Is through an alloy lined with palm and fcum At the thus of his death 1'ayne was consul ut Tun la It necma a Atrango fate that a man whose hi'iplii'd funs ol homo hi touched and thrilled ° o many lieartn should have died and been burled In a foreign land , KO remote from hta native chores. In 1883 Mr Corcoran had him brought homo and erected In his memory the above diwrlbed monument Ilrsldt ) the monument U his grave , cov ered > vllh the original alab that marked liU lonely i rating place In ] fur-away Tunis The slab beam the coat of urinn of the United BtatiH , and a brlof record of I'aynr's life It waa broken In transportation , Bcvering tlio coat of arms fairly In two partn The grave of that most magnetic of men In life , James O Dlalne , Is visited perhaps more frequently than any other at Oak Hill These visits are not made In an Idly curloiw spirit , but rather In the nature of pilgrimages - age-s to tiio last rtfttlng place of a man who was widely beloved. H grave Is marked simply by a white marble footetone , bearing his Initials J. O. I ) Illalne tielected Ills own grave at the foot of a blighted hickory , which , by hU OV/H wish , was to fill the place of a hcadstonn or monument. The tree died last ytar , and ltd removal became necessary. It was rumored that for many months Dlaine'o grave had a military guard. It had no military guard but a brave , military watcher for three weeks of dark raid-winter nlgbts in the person of Trederlck Sommer- vlllo , the ( superintendent of the cemetery "I carried a platol In each pocket and a gun * on my shoulder , and you know I am a Vir ginian , " was Mr Sotnmcrvllle'H own com incut on the fulfilment of that memorable duty. Walker Ulalne rests at tils father's side , and next to him Mr > , Coppluger , whcao grave Is nmrkrd by a Oltlr PIO/YI bearing ' n coat or \ . nm an ) In iribfd To tin mem ory of \li.o Sianwixil lUughtpr of JaiiKd ( J llhinr nnd wife of ( oloi'd J J Cop plngcr. t' 8 A Until Hugmta .Maine March IS t < ! (10 ( IPI | nt Wa hliiKl n 1M > runry 2 , isio " in unmli inter * nt thp bi-o of the crfKs ATP tin- word - "This cross IB prcctpd by her sorrow Inj ; hrsb.nul " * Rrarrfnl lmpllclt\ marks ill thrc-c graveti , whuh are devoid allkp of menu M and floncrs Thp clo -clipped gravi K ows thickly over all with an intormlnglluR of clover In the shadow of the cro s. I'rrp "I'oppprMiit Is n nilnlstorlnir ! "A mlnlstrtlng nnRol" Well , It In n woniMiivlio \o\vt \ to mil n lawn mnw < r' Hnippr'i iinzir "Tint orn'o is n coikot for nlMiitdlty , mM l > | iu < n > < to Cupliln Kldd. "I nskivl her If I w mM bo linmoitnl , and slip nnswilpil , 'Thou sbnll - clipoKonos * You npvor enti got n vvoiimn to ntiitvvei n plnln quotHon " Plilkiilelplila Noilh Aiiiorp.ni | r\\ \ \ tell you , gintlpiiien. there m , ritdleiilly wtong wllli thH nnllon M > .n i on the l.dgp of the Crowd Hravi-nt' An- i olbpr niiice worker bus loft Wa hlnston in I . „ Tlme "What did thnt tmn I do to make hlm elf so famous' i-k I 1 the Altruilnn , a7lng eurloslv nn an n- 1 dividual who foimod the center of a MH lal Bump. "To the best of my knowledgi , " replied the eynle , "be did the pulille. " Indianapolis Journal : "Seven di liars fern n loom and hioi\kfn t' Grout Si ill' mm. that Is nw fully steep And nwfullv high. Raid tlu > vlcllm. "Yes , " iiilmlited the Mimmer lanlloid , "It In s-o high and sleip that 1 don t see how 1 can come down. ' ' Yonkers StatesmanCtlmoinbenU \ \ alta a moment I just thought of voni. tlitnu 'icii'-t "Well , what Is It ? " " \\liv. von know a gloat many ei lebnillons ; ire IIO-MO mod mi account of bad woalliPl " * "i o- * ' \\.1I , the ci\u on's Jubilee Is dirfeienl It will be lit Id on account of the lolun" Wiihlngton Stnr1 "A womiii , " lenunked the man who would falu bo facetious , ' al- vvnlondo Iho lu l of a lmv Mi t ' "VIM , icplled MKs Cmontio , "nml yet the inon me MI stupid as to go on putting tin- iidvortlscineiilM In that MIIIO pure , a" If VVP wnron't on the lookout for thorn all the time. " Detroit Journal It wn- < the e\o of tholr luldiildny "I'eilmp * nflei nil. " bo fullered Kii/lng trudoilv vet orlouslvv down Into In r lustroiive , "rto "hall ui ike a mistake In mat i v Ing. "How vou filghton me , UJvvIn , " uho ox olalme-d with .1 silvoi "Cntne. lot us n- hoarM ) again , and mike n Hiu mee duult y sine" Chlenuo Tilbuno' "I know I plav r-boss voij. pioilv " "lid thn young woman mov ing hi i knight to thn VMong squill o , "but I do MI love to loam ' "I wondoi. " i PI lied the youmr in in pie paring Io mate In three moves , "If you ion il leirn to lovo1" Her aiiswoi wa veiy soft and gentle , but It Inuke u : > thu game nt once. Cincinnati 1'miulrcr I'd rather be most nny man In blstorv's class or f line's bright bniid * Thin Atla , for ho nlwnvs Inul A world of trouble on bis luiiulH Across the way she giaoeful sits. That bowl of batter , sre hop boat It : i A c.iko .she makes hit teetli ho gilt- . / Some other man will help hoi oil It. ' ( ill Mill 1TIII1)11. . OiloiKn lloronl Well , pupils put tiway vour" books ; Tor little will you need thorn , DNeiid your inodltitlvo looks , We have no timeto hevd them Your long class diys have toadied nn end ; Your .studies are beginning The world's your school If you Intend A contest worth the winning. Your class-ioom's nairovv aislen will now C'.lve pi ire to biomlei lilglivvav , Thrice blessed he , the fates allow , To linger In the byways ! The books you'll lend tire hum mi hearts And natuie'a strange lonmnce'H ; Nor miv you skip the tiagk jiarty , Or dally long with "fancies" 'Tin well to learn this rule or tbice , That Justice , Truth and Labor , With Jilst a touch of sympuhv , l'"or bird and boast and neighbor , Will solve Ihu pioblem of succi'-s , ' 1 hough fame and wealth may shun you You could not ask for more 01 le .i. So go , and blisslngs on you ! In 11 Jaunty .Sailor Mult In a Joy , Our vnrlolj of < | U-NP fiiiioy iirim-iilH for I InIll - lit * ft-llimM roiiliiliiN mini ) \i-IHi-M In inalerliilH nml IrliiiiuliiKN tlui < are not Io lir fiiiiiiil clMi-n liere. AM I lir miriiier en < luT niiir | iielien dm WiiNluilile KnllH artIn Kreuler Jt iniinil , nuil ( lienn am tjiiUn tin iirrlly In | inti > rii an Hie clolli miltN , n lillo iniioli In i-lllier Mini , lion ever , our prU'CH urn UN Imr UN any innvvliu ivnn < rral- l Kiiod i-liillicH ni-eil lioiio tn | ia > . Wr do not niiilot ( lie "elu-np" mirlH llui ( NITV u oulj Io Hull a ml < lo nol liolil ( i.Ki-IIior. Jlvorj tiling it in M n nr liny ivaulN tit i < * nr IN Iirru a nil of ( lie ln-Kt , We InKc Mdiok July 1 mid nant ( clean up many ndilN nnd finl Unit lin n iieeuiiiuliili'il iliirlnir ( lie liiHt fetv iiionlliH , mill to do HO miiUn u MM-rliil price 'J'liu lion I for , Ihu | irlc * ol ( lie BROWNINO , KING & GO , 8. W , Cor. IBtbund Doiulu 6U