In rilTS OMAHA DAILY 1\TDJ5 : SUNDAY , yOVBMlMDR > i 1897 , Tim OVAHA SUNDAY BB& i : . uo.si\VATiii , KJitor. I'L'IJLISIIUU iViUV UURNtNO. TKI'.MS OP ti Dally lire ( Without Kun.lu ) ) , Ont War. . 16 U iMIly llco and iiumlnr , One Year . * M Kit Montli * . 4 t Thrie Month * . * . . 20' KunJny lire , ono Venr . 2 W Bnlunlay lice , Our Ycuf . 1 > ' IVtrkly lice , One Ycnr . M Omuhni The lc ! CulMlng. Boulh Omnli * : Singer ll.k. . Cor. N uiiJ Slili BU. Council HUifrii 10 I'cnrl Hired. Chicago Ulllee : ill Climnlwr or Commerce. New York : lloonu J3. 14 nnil 15 Trltnina Hid * . \Vlithliigtunl SOI Fourteenth Btivel. All comnuinlo.illons rclutltis to r.nvfl nn > t rial innlter itiutilil bo tulilroicd : To the IMItcr. All tiuMnois letters and remittances thuuM be nthlromi'il to Tlio I'.co 1'utll.ilclnK Company , Omaha. Draft * , clieckx , cxprc and tioitolllca lilftiiey orilern In Ijo mnile jui ) ulilu to the order o ( thn company. THI : nir. : PUIIUSHINO COMPANY. 8TATUMUNT OK BUte of NclirnHltii , Douglas County , ca.i George It. TzBchucld cverctuiy ol Tlio lice Pub- Hthlng Coiiiimny , being duly nworit , knyi that the flctiml numlirr of full anil complete copies of Tha Dully , Morning , I'xrnlni ; unl Sunday Uea printed tlurlni ; tlio ni'/iUh of Ucltilicr. JSU7. wns as fol io WH : Net total xnlFS . 7.108 Net dally nvor.iRO 19,507 OnOllOn T ! . T7.PPHUCK. Bivorn In ticfotn me unit piibfcrllii" ! In my pres ence this 1st day of Novcmlxr 1W7 ( Seal ) N , P. KBIli. Notary Public. Till ! III3I3 OX TIIAIXH. All riillroml ticMrntinyn nrc trltll rnOIIKll lll'CS to neconininillllo t'vory IIIIM- noiiK 'r wli wiuilN In ronil n IIPTVnpniier. InolNt HpOll llllV- lilK TinHoe. . If you viinnot Kct n Hoc on a trnlii from tlio n civil IIKCIII , iilrnHi- report ( lie fni'tt NtndiiR ( hiirnlii mill rallroiul , to ( lie Clrculiltlim Di'i > ! irtincii ( of Tinllic. . Tlio lice IK fur unit ; on nil tralnn. INSIST O.V HAVING TIIR 1JHE. General Hlnncn Is KoliiR1 to reverse the " \VoylerIaii nit'tliod by trying tlu > amnesty plnn first. A paper pulp trust nnd a pine trust both nmiomiPiMt during tlio sanu week. What If they should got The United States bas 1-11 war vessels of various kinds In its navy. Tlio navy Is fast outstripping the army In point of numbers nnd strength. It is easy enough for the cabinet offi cers to make recommendations in their .annual reports , but getting congress to act on them Is quite n dill'urent thing. King Oscar of Sweden ought to bo re minded that the approach oC winter is calculated to send a chill over a project to organize a. new expedition for the north polo. Every Nebraska clly ought to have a business men's club , a commercial club or similar organization , and thus be pre pared to aet promptly on all matters of local or state Interest. Speaker Keed will make a tour of the west before congress convenes and monopolizes ills attention. Speaker Heed is one of our great public men who tries at all times to keep In touch with popular sentiment In all parts of the union. The report of Fourth Assistant Post master General Ilristow shows that dur ing the last year forty postmasters died and 7 , ' 00 resigned. There seems to bo exceptions In the 1'oslollico department to the adage about few dying and none resigning. The new cornstalk industry is a reality. A factory lias been put in opi ration in Kentucky making lining for ships , imi tation silk and celluloid from the spongy Interior of cornstalks. If the Industry will thrive in Kentucky It will do as well In Nebraska. It Is taken for granted that the re turned monetary commissioners will write out a report of llieii reception mid sojourn In Kuropo which , when Issued in book form out of the government printing olllce , will be a credit to any library , public or private. Tlio report Unit the great armor plate factories of America were for sale by reason of their failure as money-making properties Is dunlod. There Is no reason therefore why the United States should mot produce fortllled prairie schooners that will defy the world. Americans will be mueli relieved to know that the rumor that the brother of the klwdlve of Egypt had renounced the succession to the khedlvate In order to marry an American woman IK denied. It speaks well for the American AV(2iU'i. ! : if not for the brother-of 'flTiTkliedlve. Tlie hist report of the government di rectors of the Union I'aciUc announces - ill grave accents Uia : 1'ie ' roadbed and equipment show marked Improvement over their condition at the beginning of the year. This startling Information has been made public In every report oC the government directors since the , road was operated. | Cardinal Gibbons lias been honored with n request from the queen of Italy for copies of all the books he has pub lished or will publish from time to time. Hut no silver potentate has , or gold po tentate for that matter , been rash enough to order all the books .published or to be published by William Jennings Uryan. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Down in Maine accidents from mlscucs in aim by Jovial good fellows on hunt ing expeditions have become so frequent that they nro talking of legislation pro- riding pen'altles for careless sportsmen who kill or malm wicked human beings instead of Innocent wild fowl and game. And Maine Is supposed to bo u good pro * hlbltlou state , too. A AKXSO.Y l-'Olt fAlHttli ( > MbN. If It is ( mo Mint the sudden retirement of General Master Workman Sovereign nml his nssodatrs from the controlling ( illlela ) position ! ! In the Knight. * of Labor was with their consent and approval It simply Indicates belaled recognition on their part of that which others have long seen , namely : titter failure of the policy they have- pursued in the manage ment of the order. The active members , those nearest to ( lie laboring men of the country , have grasped the situation ami acted lit iiccordanco with their judgment. Denial will be made that unexpected change of ofllclal I'-aderslilp Is a condem nation of the course of the retiring offi cials , but denials will nut change the fact , mid the Incident will be regarded everywhere as marking another turning point in tlio history of tin * organization. Mr. Sovereign , the retiring general muster workman , was a stone cutter hi n small Iowa town : i few years ago. Helng carried away by the political promises of the greenback party ho en gaged In work on several Iowa newspa pers , llnally landing In Uubuipie , where he developed Into a political agitator and prophet of evil. The governor of Iowa somewhat reluctantly gave him the IK > stion ! of commlhsloner of labor sta tistics. In which position lie gained na tional fame by supplying the governor with statistics quite useful for political purposes but otherwise of doubtful value. When placed at the head of the Knights of Labor by the radical element ho boldly announced his Intention of using the power of the order for politi cal purposes. Ho undertook to dictate nominations and to Influence voters In the most unwise and arbitrary manner. Imagining himself a sovereign potentate ho Issued bombastic edicts that had no more effect than , the historical pope's bull against the comet. He gave orders for strikes and boycotts that were sim ply Ignored by the Knights of Labor as well as by other laboring men. The membership of the order decreased rapIdly - Idly and its influence has boon almost wholly lost. If the Knights of Labor Is ever to re gain prestige Its leaders must recognize the fact that whatever of good Is gained for ( lie laboring men of this country through their organizations and asso ciations must be of general benefit. They must believe In the unity of Inter est of laboring men and all other men rather than act on the theory of per petual hostility between labor and capi tal. They must help the laboring man by Inducing him "to Join with others In doing everything possible for the gen eral prosperity of the country rather than to urge organized labor to ignore the rights of others that It may be the gainer. The possibility for good to the laboring men through their organiza tions Is practically unlimited , but their success depends very largely upon the judgment and motives of their leaders. It is stated that one of the matters which tlio Canadian officials now in Washington will discuss with officials of this government Is the bonding privilege accorded to Canadian railma'ds. They nro probably led to present this subject by the fact that there Is likely to lie a vigorous attack on this privilege at the coming session of congress and an effort made to have It withdrawn. There is a good deal of opposition to it In congress , particularly In the senate , and it is un derstood that Senator Elkins will'lend a movement for the withdrawal of the bonding privilege. How the West Virginia senator feels In regard to it was shown In a speech which he delivered In the closing session of the Fifty-fourth congress. Ho then referred to the Canadian Pacific railroad as the natural enemy of the transportation tion- Interests of the United States , de claring that It stands today as our great est commercial antagonist. Mr. Elkins asserted that tills corporation violates our Interstate commerce law with com placent indifference , cuts rates and takes freights from our 1'acllic railroads , in which the United Statca has a direct In terest. "It hauls more cheaply , " said Senator Elkins , "from St. Louis iiuil other Interior points In our country , by way of Canada to Oregon and San Kraii- clsco , tliiin the Pacific roads can do , though the distance is much shorter. It Is a sharp competitor for business with all the Pacific roads from and lo Califor nia. For L',000 miles the Canadian Pa cific traverses a non-productive country , one not able to support u railroad , it lives off its subventions and the business It takes from Jhe railroads of the United States. " Mr. Elkins urged that this cut ting of rates , this violation of our Inter state commerce law , this Invasion of our trade , should be stopped and the remedy would 1m found in discontinuing the bonding privilege under which the Cana dian Pacific carries goods in bond , startIng - Ing from Vancouver , to Europe and points In the United States. He sug gested that we stop every car and break every consular seal at our frontiers beyond Chicago and the Soo. This would throw the trade from Asia ( o Sj'.u ' Kniuelsco and pass It over " " Pacific railroad lines. It would break up , In part , or largely , thu violation of tlio Interslato com- meree Inw and .stop the giving of rebates and the cutting of rales. "Tho United States , " said Sonalor Klklr.s , "should at once withdraw tills bonding privilege to the Canadian Pacific. " Tlio discriminating duty In section ! 22 of the present tariff law. for which Mr. Elkins Is chiefly responsible , as he has himself said , was designed as an indirect blow to the. Canadian Pacific bonding privilege and had the attorney general given It a different Interpretation from what ho did the bonding privilege would bo of little value to the Canadian road. AH it is there Is no question as to the great value of tills concession , but It Is necessary to consider that the benefits are not all on one side , for while It may bu true that the Canadian Pacific would bo unprofitable without the bonding privilege and would become , as some one has said , "two streaks of rust in n howling wilderness , " a very large num ber of our own people derive no small advantage from the service this road gives them. There Is no doubt as to this effect of Us competition In keeping the rates of American railroads within bounds uua this Is u mutter of no small Importance to producers In the northwest and manufacturers In New England who can avail thi'inselves of transportation by the Canadian road. There Is a very strong opposition In these sections to any Interfcreiic. ' with the ex isting arrangement and It will exert great Influence at Washington. AT rilKx'o3il70iV. / / . One of the subjects pressing for earli est disposal by the Iowa legislature which meets two months lieuec will be that of the llnal provision for an Iowa exhibit nt the Transmlsslsslppl Expo sition. To Iowa belongs the credit of being the first of the transmlsslssippl states to take official action looking to the making of a state exhibit. With an appropriation sufficient only for the preliminary steps the Iowa commission has been laying plans and preparing for a work whose execution waits only for the final word of the legislature. The people of. Iowa have from the first manifested a great deal of Interest In the exposition. The two Iowa sen ators ami the Iowa delegation In Ihe house took personal Interest In the pro ject when It came before congress and their assistance there was almost in valuable. The preliminary appropria tion by the Iowa legislature , In 'advance of action by congress , was timely and encouraging to the promoters , and the prompt organization of an Iowa commis sion demonstrated thai the Iowa people were in earnest In their friendship to the exposition. There Is the best reason for tills man ifestation of interest on the part of the Iowa people. The exposition Is to beheld held In a city on the immediate border line of Iowa. There are more people in Iowa who will be able to go to the ex position In a half day's ride or less than in any other state. Iowa Is In fact the greatest agricultural state of the trans- mlsslssippi region , a producer of vast quantities of grain and meat and rich in mineral resources and in manufac tures. Iowa Is the nearest neighbor of Nebraska and the interests of the two states are closely united by the fact of such a large number of Iowa people who have helped build up Nebraska. That Iowa people should take a lively interest in the coming exposition there fore Is natural , but not less gratifying. Hut in addition to sentimental reasons there are the best business reasons why Iowa should contribute to make the ex position a grand success. All of the travel to the exposition from the east , and that will be much the larger portion of the whole , will traverse the length of Iowa and will therefore be of direct benefit to the state. A majority of those wlto come to the exposition will have the opportunity of seeing the state of Iowa with its magnificent farms and thriving cities , and to many of them the revelation of Iowa's grandeur , even that which may be gained from a car window , will be as Instructive as the revelation of the general greatness of the transmlsslssippl region at the ex position. The people of Iowa do not need to be told how they can utilize all tills to the advantage of their state. Another fact the Iowa people must not lose sight of is that this Trans- misslssippl Exposition has for its pri mary purpose the bringing together of all the varied Industries of the states west of the Mississippi river so that the visitor can get at a glance a fair idea of the resources and prospects of the region. Iowa has a vital interest in the showing that will be made. The chief exhibits hero will be of trans- mississlppl industries. At tlio Colum bian exposition In Chicago the foreign exhibits overshadowed everything else ami visitors came and went on the great trunk lines without having gained much knowledge of the states west of the Mississippi. So also the exposition at Now Orleans a. few years ago and the later ones at Atlanta and Nashville were of comparatively little benefit ilo the west. In fact , they were for the purpose of attracting attention to the south and diverting Immigration and investments from the west to the south. At the Transmlsslssippl Exposition the great west will bo on exhibition first , last and all the time. Neither can Iowa afford to bo behind Illinois in preparing for a state exhibit. Illinois is going forward with plans for a flue state building anil elaborate state exhibit , aside from the speeial exhibits oC Chicago people. Other states all around Iowa are preparing to partici pate in the exposition. OF IIKUT SUdAH , That some one .should come forward to question tlio wisdom of promoting the beet sugar Industry In the United States is not surprising. Every Important .step that has been taken for industrial de velopment has encountered opposition. There appears in the current number of the Forum an article in which the writer seeks to show that a mistake Is being made In promoting the cultivation of the sugar beet In this country , from an economic point of view , lie asserts that the foreign countries which foster the cultivation of the sugar beet do not find the Industry profitable. This Is due , ho says , to overproduction , the mips of Germany , Austria , France , Uus'sla , Bel gium and the Netherlands being now In excess of their aggregate consumption by inoro than 'J.OOO.OM tons. Consequently quently the world's markets are over stocked and In all the large producing countries sugars are sold at less than their average cost of production , only the best equipped and best located fac lories earning any profit upon the luvast- ment. 'Statistics are given showing thn largo Increase in sugar production within a few years , the Increase In the world's stock of sugar In the past crop year hav ing been over 25J,000 tons , In spite of the fact that the war in Cuba greatly reduced production there. It is further urged that If this coun try should produce all the sugar It con mimes our farmers would not bo able to sell so much of their other products to the countries from which wo now buy sugars. It Is pointed out that wo sell about ? i20,0 ! < )0,000 ) worth of our prod- nets , mostly food , to the countries of which wo buy $8ii , < MX.000 wonu of su gar and the suggestion Is made Unit If European countries shall be deprived of our sugar fraile ( hey would turn their attention largely to the production of such agricultural staples as they are now taking from us , while the cane sugar countries , having lost the Ameri can market , would not be able to buy our products. Still another consider.-- lion presented the writer in the Forum and nps the most important refers to line of the government from hnportQ ) , is of sugar. This rev enue , bascirTtpon last year's consump tion and the present customs duty , Is estimated at ! } tX,000 ( ) ( ) a year and the question Is asked how the government could do without this revenue. U must IIP admitted that all these are pertinent considerations , but they are not conclusive against the policy of bJilldlng up the beet sugar Industry. Wo tlo not believe that the growth of that industry to a point where It will supply the home demand would lessen to any appreciable extent the foreign demand for our agricultural products , nor do we apprehend that the loss of govern ment revenue could not be made up from some other proper source of rev enue. It Is possible , we concede , that all the benefits now expected from the development of the beet sugar industry in the United States may not be fully realized , but there can be no doubt that they will be very material and Im portant AUADKMV Uf JSG7B.\CKS. A special effort is being jnit forth to make the approaching meeting of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences which Is to bo held at Lincoln on the Friday and Saturday following Thanksgiving day of special interest to the men and women in the state who are specially Interested in the advancement of our scientific knowledge. As explained by one of the officers , the purpose of this organization Is to take up the study of the scientific problems peculiar to this region and to encourage the pursuit of scientific Investigations. In every com munity the working scientists sooner or later organize an academy and a large part of the results of scientific Investi gations have appeared In the annual "proceedings. " With proper support , there is no reason that the proceedings of the Nebraska academy should not form a positive contribution to the liter ature of science. In many countries the public men deem it an honor to hold membership in the learned societies. Henjamin Frank lin was an active member of the Amer ican Academy ol ! Sciences and Arts in lioston and lie was one of the original members of a similar organization in Philadelphia. NApoleon thought it of such Importance to France that lie or ganized the National Institute out of the four French academies of which the Itoyal Frencli , Acqilemy of Sciences was one of the oldest and most successful. So , too , in Germany and Great Britain the great academies of science have been encouraged Tmd patronized by the foremost rulers nnd loaders of men. Even in Kussia , often reproached as half barbaric , Catherine , I.ntook an in terest in the founding of the Imperial Academy of Sciences in St. Petersburg. Willie America lias as yet devoted comparatively little attention to scien tific culture , science is receiving more and more consideration in this country from year to year. In this movement Nebraska has rightly joined and it should be Satisfied with nothing less than a place in the front rank of the states that are contributing to the ad vancement of science. A CUUNTItY ( > ! LKL'iinS. Hawaii is a country of lepers. Ac cording to Dr. Prince A. Morrow , an eminent : medical authority , more than 10 per cent of the Hawaiian race is affected with leprosy and this terrible disease has made notable advances within , the past half n century , the Islands which It Is proposed to annex to the United States forming one of the great leprous centers. Dr. Morrow says it is a contagious or rather a com municable disease and while formerly supposed to be of hereditary origin , it hi now known that heredity has but little or nothing to do with it. The lepers in the Hawaiian islands are Iso lated , it is true , but this has not pre vented the spread of the disease. Ac cording to Dr. Morrow there seems no prospect of extinguishing the disease in the Islands. The death rate among the lepers has been lowered , but the num ber of persons stricken bus Increased since the foundation of the leper settle ments. Wlilte forclgiiers are not ex empt from the contagion and It Is stated that they furnish an increasing per centage of the total number of lepers in recent years. An to whether annexation would be likely to bring leprosy Into the United States Dr. Morrow believes It would. He says that If annexation comes it will bo "idle to think of confining leprosy to the Islands , or rather excluding It from lids country by quarantine measures , " because no practicable means of Inspec tion could detect ) the symptoms of the disease In Its' ' , tmrjler stages. Leprosy would not develop in our northern cli mate , but it would do so in the south. Doubtless tiU ) , .Jannexatlonlsts will pooh-pooh the Idea that there Is any such danger as1 Dr ! Morrow points out , but most otlieipe'ople ; will bo likely to regard the mailer-.somewhat seriously. Leprosy Is not unknown to this coun try , but it Is hai djy desirable to Increase tlio chances of dts"spreadlng here. It Is gratifying tji'note Unit questiona ble fraternal iiinur.uico associations are receiving attention from a number of state Insurance Superintendents or In. speetois. AVhlle the good and reliable fraternals doubtless exceed In number the weak and fraudulent concerns , many times the ordinary person la not In posi tion to Judge of their soundness and It is plainly the duty of the state , If it un dertakes to supervise Insurance at all , to protect thu public from imposture and fraud. The Italian government retains for Itself a monopoly of the tobacco trade and the United States consul at Koine makes a mournful report on the fact that when the government wanted to buy food tobacco It was necessary to send u representative to Nort' York to purchase It In the open tnnrkot , Instead of Irarltifi offers made by American tobacco deal * ers. It Is too bad that Aniprleaii busi ness men are not able to encompass tlio whole world with llit'lr trade arms , bill It Is flattering to American tobacco grow ers to have n tobacco buyer SWMH all the way from Home to New York to got good leaf for the government. Still further Improvements have boon arranged In the fast mall facilities out of Kansas City by which the merchants of that city are to lie placed In more direct communication with Kansas points. The fast mall facilities out of Omaha con tinue to be noticeable either by their ab sence or by their Inconvenient time card , which practically destroys the greater part of their usefulness In commercial circles. No one objects to the improve ment of the fast mall service anywhere , but a better distribution of postofllco at tentions would be appreciated by Omaha and Nebraska business men. The destruction by lire of n huge wooden building used by the stale of Georgia as an asylum for insane negroes calls attention again to the almost crim inal recklessness with which so many states expcwe the lives of helpless wards by confining them In ramshackle lire- traps. It Is next to a miracle that we do not have much greater loss of life from tills wanton negligence. Whenever a. legislature wants to provide for the erection of a state institution It should either provide a structure which can be used with safety or It should defer ac tion until It can provide oue. The new American minister to China proved himself a firm friend of the Transmlsslssippl Exposition' when a member of the Illinois legislature before which the 1)111 providing an appropriation for an Illinois state exhibit was ponding. As representative of the United States at the court of the Chinese emperor Min ister Uryan may be confidently expected to do what lie can to urge his celestial majesty to arrange for the official par ticipation of China in the great show of 1SOS. mof 'LViiiiiu * . rhllaJelphla Tlmm. More and inoro Indications of good times really go to show that the so-culled march ol prosperity Is probably a quickstep. , % H(1 KlIHy > ! ' Vt'CCHM. Uctrolt Tree 1'icJs. Ono advantage of. the western gold "dis coveries" Is that they can bo worked at all seasons and In all kinds ot weatiier. iU'imrc of 11 U In in or. Washington 1031. The clamor for cheaper sleeping car rates , so the ofllclals idecliiro , comes mostly from people who never patronize them. There Is nothing strungo In that. Tliuy are doubtless striving to got thu rates in reach so that they may patronize them. ( lie lnlcrcNt nt Hume. It is estimated that Europe has sent us back ? D7,000OOOi of our securities In the last sis months lu the endeavor to prevent the sh'puient of gold to our shoics. Kuropo is welcome to continue the process so long as she desires. Wo shall bo able to wku euro of them. \ < -l > riku n.llciii-irknltlr Stiitu. Slirlncllelil ( Maps. ) Republican. An Omaha dispatch to a Chicago paper says that business is exceptionally good in Ne braska. Not a few of tlio old-timers liken the present to the old boom days when everyone wanted goods , wanted them In a hurry , and had money to pay for them. " Yet Nebraska has just voted the populist- democratic ticket. It's a remarkable state. A Slim ill' I'roHporit- , riilln < lelitila ] Tress. One pleasing Blgm ot the times Is the re ports from all over the country of the large attendance at schools and colleges. In In diana the reports are to the effect that about 100.000 more children are attending school than was the case last year. In some of the colleges tlie atendance Is so great as to re quire additional accommodations. This speaks well from prosperity. Sluitli'i'liiK n Popular Idol. Chicago Times-Herald. Captalni Jack Crawford , the poet scout , should cut his bilr now and come In from thu reservation. Ilo has betrayed one of the principal secrets of his long-haired fraternity. In a recent interview ho explains that break , ing glass balls with a rlllo from the back of a horse Is accomplished by using cartridge filled with small shot instead of a bullet amd adds : "A man ought to be able to ride a streak of excited lightning and break glass halUi with such an outfit as that. " Alas ! Do all popular Idols have- feet of clay ? AliKTlc.-lli .Skill I"mix. Chicago Tribune. If orders for locomotives keep pouring in upon the factories of the United States as they have been doing lately It will not belong long before American railway engines will ho puffing In every corner of the globe. The latest large- order , which amounts lo fifty- six locomotives altogether , includes twenty- one for the government railway in Finland , twenty-four hoivy broadgaugelocomotives for the government of llruxll ami ten for thu Grand Trunk railway of Canada. This , in connection with the recent largo orders from foreign countries foi ; American steel ralta , Indicates the superiority of American meth ods In the Iron and steel manufacturing busi ness , a superiority which eventually will drive foreign competitors out of business. ' Ji\VlMt A.VI ) THIS H.M'OSITIO.V. Tlio Cnlormlo Caiillal I" 1'ut UN SliniillllT l Hie U'hecl. Denver Times. Denver must help the Omaha Transmlsals- slppl Exposition. It has already ictonu Den ver a VJst amount of good. It haa awakened our slumbering real catato owners. They rub their eyes and discover that they are drifting In the direction of old fogj'Ism. They lieehly realize their humiliating position when they Btop to Hilnlc that Denver was lu uvcry way belter able to have secured this great exposition than 'was her rival In the sweltering cllmato along tlio muddy river. Denver is the only representative city of the Transmlsslssippl region. Her climate , her mountains and her mineral ! ! are the characterizations of all tha iiideveloped and Intcrustlns portions of that coming empire. If u Mississippi valley exposition wore he Id Denver , though geographically In that val ley , would tiot bu the placu to hold It. Like wise Omuha , though technically across tlio MlBolffilppt from iho rising sun , Is proverb ially east of the region ot mines , mountains and sunshine Implied by thu term "trar.3- inlsBlsslppl. " Ilut we were smarting about water rates and looking for visionary help from politics when llio exposition was located , and now wo are honor bound to turn in and help It out with generous support. After all , It may be made to bring 110 Into the country tribu tary to Denver where one Is brought to the Omaha region. Let Colorado's exhibit over shadow that of Nebraska in GVerythli > ex cept corn and 4iogs , 'tiio good effect * of < no World's fair wore postponed five years by thu panic that came ut the frame time. Now the country has re covered aivl Is ready to boom. Tills Trans- mlsriUslupl Exposition next summer will take at Us rising llool the tldo tint bears on to prosperity. From this tide , Denver , of all cities , should receive thu moat benetlt. It Is the only raetroi > olla of the undeveloped region , Hut It Is necessary for this city to promptly inaugurate gome move tiiaL will also uttruct national attention and show that our people have confidence In their future , We luvo missed tbo TranainlsiUslppl Imposition. What can we do to make up for that ulotbful and colossal blunder ? . in. ' m\STS ruon UAM > HORN. People who. re all tongue liavo no pars. A good Ruldo will not bo rejected bccnuao he Is bow-legged. Mony n loud amen Is nothing more thnn a by the man who makes it. Ona of the best offices of education ! to tsncli tin how to teach outselves. No nooil comen of Morning others for tlio misfortunes bring on ourselves. Kvory hey thinks his mother Is the beat woman on earth and they are nit of them right , too. The ox sUimllns tdlo In the anode has more trouble with tlio nirs than tlio one wearing the yoke. What evidence of the patience of Qed cntv bo more conclusive thnn the bald head of the Infidel lecturer ? The man who Jumps at conclusions may be recognized by Ills having his overcoat half on btforo the end of the benediction. There are two clnssra of men. who never pront by their mistakes those who blnmo It on their wives , nnd these who lay it all to I'rovldcnce. 1'KUS.OX.VI , AM ) OTHHllAVISHS. The horse show In Chicago left several social scars In addition to a deficit ot $18,000. 1'resIdoiU McKlnlcy'g retention of ( Jencrul John A. niack of Chicago ns district attorney Is n compliment to Hie latter's war record. General lllack Is the hero of tlio dot fight At I'mirlo Orovo during the civil war , and It was hla coolness and courage which saved Lbo day for thu union. A woman arrested for keeping a dos with out a license In London pleaded extreme pov erty nnd the magistrate allowed her fourteen dnys to raise the money. The newspapers fipoko of the case and within a week the clerk of the court received $154 ftom UHtlsh dog fanciers for her relief. Charley Towno Is pawing the atmosphcro of Minnesota , with his iisunl post mortem energy , varying the performance by giving soullcM plutocrats nu occasional swipe. It It comforting to learn from Charley's agi tated lips that ho will "redeem the coun try from corruption and tyranny" or perish In the attempt. There are Htored In magazines eight miles from llutta nearly half a million pounds of dynamite nnd the monthly consumption In the city Is about ninety tons. That's one of the things that goes to make the biggest copper camp on earth. lUnttu would make the biggest flight Into the unknown on record It that dynamite should let go. A righteous Illinois Judge , doubtless with the experience of the I.uetgert trial fresh In his m'nid , has decided that "expert" testi mony Is no more valuable than 'any other kind , nnd that a physician' who Is subpoenaed as a witness must ann-.ver without the assur ance of a special fee for what he claims Is his superior technical knowledge. The monument to the late General William Tecumseh Sherman , which was to have been erected in Now York by May 1. 1894 , will probably not bo ready for unveiling before the latter part of next year. St. G-nidens , the sculptor who has thu work In itand , Is a very slow worker and Is paying particular care to the Mulshing of this monument. The state of Virginia will probably receive $100,01)0 from the estate of the late Major Lewis Ginter , under a law passed by Us gen eral assembly at Us last session Imposing a tax of 5 per cent on collateral Inheritances. Under this law all his bequests save that of $40,000 to his brother , are subject to the tax. The bequests aggregate about $2,000,000. Senator Gallinger of Now Hampshire , when In Duluth recently , said concerning the atti tude of the east toward the west : "Tho east has just as much confidence- the west ns It ever had , but In future eastern people will not bo as quick to scatter money In every mushroom town that springs into existence for thu purpose of unloading at big prices. " AVI I AT WK A.V.NKX. A Jiili Lot ( if I.rroNjAiiinii r llmrnilaii Dlsnil vnntnucx. Chicago HccorJ. A peculiar reason Is advanced by Dr. Prince A. Morrow against the annexation1 of the Hawaiian Islands. Im the current issue of tlio North , American' Hovlew he points to the clangers of leprosy likely to follow an nexation. Ever 8'mcc 1818 leprosy has had lodgment on the Islands. In 1SG3 part of the Island of Molokal was set aside aa a leper colony , and since Its establishment 5,300 lepers have been sent to the colony , of whonv 4,000 died. In tbo iirst twenty years 3,070 lepers were Bent to thla colony , while from 1SSC to 1S9G 2,013 were transported. With this apparent In crease of victims of the disease the annuil percentage of deaths has been reduced from 25 per cent to 15 per cent tlUs for the rea son that patients arc received in earlier stages of the disease and so live longer In the colony. But none ever gets well. Dr. Morrow's reasoning Is that the dls- ease is no respecter of persons or of nation alities ; that the Hawaiian Islands today are hotbeds of the malady ; that In its early stages leprosy defies detection , end that an nexation of these islands naturally would lesson quarantine restrictions on tlie IMcillc coast , thereby Increasing the chances of the Introduction of this most loathsome of all human Ills. Ordinarily the physician is radical In his pathology ; with him the possllilo must be regarded as the probable. At the same time Dr. Morrow has put a serious light on this subject of annexation , in which It nvsy be well to view oven possibilities with uomc measure or concern. IIAI.l'-II.\Kii ) I.AWVISKS. HoNlrlulliiiL on AiliiilHNlini ( o ( hr liar In Illinois. OlilcnKO Chronicle. It Is entirely proper for tlie supreme court of Illinois to take mich steps as will render tlio granting of a cortlflcato to practice at the bar more dllllcult than the rule has been hitherto. The half-baked lawyer , If not al ways aggressive and quarrelsome , With Just snlllclent elemental knowledge to ho a bar rater , , Is , even when he means well , so 111 advised of the true persictlvo [ ot the law that ho consumes the tln.o of courts and juries needlessly to the Inllr.lte cost of a non-litigious public doomed to bear the bur den of ill-conducted courts and Illiterate bars. "Men who assume to practice on human lives ought to bo skilled i logicians. Men who assume to serve at the bar ought cer tainly servo sutllclently long apprenticeship to bhow their capacity o < a in as tor hard. Admission has not been hitherto wholly per functory. Some showing oi1 competency has 'been ' necessary for tlio license , hut It had not been sutllclcnt. A lawyer ought to pos sess , If not a university education , at loaal en education milllcieiitly Pbcra1 to make him an Intelligent Interpreter ol laws. The period ot requisite study lias hitherto been two years and trn supreme court lies di rected that in admissions to Ihe l r here after It shall bo shown tint there has been upon the part of the applicant three years of study. It must also bo ahnwn that thu applicant has had at leasv a high school ed ucation. Any citizen who Is conversant with the delays and expenses that a/o brought about through the grotesque cot duct of an Ill- constructed lawyer llounileil ig about in nome cause In the courts will lull this change an even In some slight degree to j.romlKu reformation. 5 Glasses ] that fit your face as well as your eyes Dr. J. H. Daily just onouijli moro about fitting glasses : iHto miiko It lo j und Iiuerest to go to him , X Optician In diareo S t 'Dr. W. I. Seymour's Optical Tarlora , < ) SIS-3U Korliuch Itlk. , IGIli und IMutlas. S SKOUL.Ut SHOTS AT TIIK 1'UMMT. St. 7onU neimbllc : The St. Louis minister who preached on the subject. "How to Tainn the Human Shrew. " has cutabllshed tlio fact th < U In at lca t ono nmcullno mind ( ho belief IB lodged that women < ire httmnn , Chicago Chronicle : Hov. Pom Small In hU sermon last Sunday Announced that civiliza tion Is a failure , a statement which Indi cate * tli.it Mr. Small either reads the N'ew York Nation or that Iio lias been playing cuchro with A Chinaman. Minneapolis Journal : Tlio Kenturliy preacher who expressed R disbelief In hndej nnd WOB shot at liy his congregation , tin * brought stilt for ilamii od. Same men haven't nny mom senao of tlio iilctnreaqui' tlian an nl I tar of < i colored Sunday supplement. Cincinnati Commercial : Tlio Hoard of Mis sions declines to let Dr. Houston return to China as a missionary pending an Investiga tion now In progress touching his orthodoxy. It would not do to have the heallu-n Chlncsit exposed to a hanco of heterodox contagion in denominational creed. Chicago Inter Ocein : : An evangelist < U n ruvlvAl In North Carolina , seeing two young wnmen smiling during Ills exhortation , knelt by their ldo and prayed that they might then niul tlicro die and KO to perdition. For tunately for the slrls. the revivalist's fervid nnathcir.n failed of realization. Minneapolis Tribune : A lloslon preacher Is threatened with discipline beeauso he ( ior- tortncil a marrlapo ceremony for n darliiR cnuplo In a lion's C..IRU with the lion nn onu &f the witnesses. Just where Ills offcnfo comes In It hard to see. In bravo old Danlel'ii time , the lion's den was good enough to servo the purposeof the Lord to teaeh a Gfe.1t moril lesson. I'hlludelphla Hecord : Some of the ehureh men scorn disposed to maUo an assault on Snnta Clans with tlio Idea ot driving thot Hersnnnpc out or his Christmas stronghold. They might as well try lo abolish Mrmrs. Why don't the spiritual RradRrlmls taeklo sonio loss tough nnd lusty , lesa iood nnd gracious , ICMI dullghtful nnd lovable offender : iKlnst their eold. hard , matter-nf-fact philosophy ? Santa Clans Is out of their reach. He Is snfe cntrenelind In the unques tioning faith of childhood. He won't budge. The Iconoclasts had better select some Has ( lllllcult undertaking. As long ns babies nro born into the world Santa Chtus will con tinue to make his Christmas pilgrimages. inri.iis. Puck : Ethel Just look nt her ! Wlmt a. mincing step ! Jaok And Is that why you nre so cut up ? Detroit Free Press : lie Don't let yutir fnt'iteivitit ' In rlcctrlc lights. She Why not ? Ho WVll. or , you can't turn it low , don't you sccV Judfje : " ] lo ° s the iiolilenmn sei-in to think u good iloal of Mls Clnru ? " "Oil , j-L'H , Indeed ! He cnlla her 'his llttla Klondike.1 " Chtenjio Ilecord : "I wondnrliy it Is Hint Mrs. Crosby doesn't net along with lu-r neighbors ? " "Can't Imagine , unions It Is lernu w most of tliL'in are relatives of Itcr husband. " Detroit News : "Her marriage must have la-en a terrible blow to the family. " "Hlow ? Why , they didn't spend u cent. She ran : iway , I tell yon. " Chicago Post : "Marriage Is n lottery , " ho wild. "Do yon ever gamble ? " she asked coyly. Thereupon he cli-clded to try the g.inio Just oncu and see if be could gut a prize. Imllannpolls Journal : . "At no time , " said thn Cornl'ed Philosopher , "Is n man no will ing to take .bo burden from the weak shoulders of frail woman ns when f > lnIs harassed vtith tlie care of a largo and pay- Ing1 property. " Boston Traveler : Kittle I heard tmlny you married your husband to reform him. Sarah-I did. Kittle Why , I didn't know he huil any bail hiibllH. Sarah Ho had one he was a bachelor Chioaeo News : "My wife's health Is ex cellent now. " "What has cured her ? " 'T told her I would allow her FO murh a month lo pay her doctor's bill ami buy her gowns ; she Is now dodgingtlie doctor right alonar. " Detroit Free Press : "Von have ? basely deceived mo ; you told me when you mar ried my daughter that you hud money coming to you. " "Well I meant the money I would p > 't by marrying 'her. ' " Btpn Rtnr. Tlie lawyer was nettled the smile on his face To ii look of Intense Indignation n ivo place ; l'"or tlie experts excusable quite was liia f u ry Were usurping1 his right of confusing the Jury. THU ill 1STIIII\ . Lo ! nfter ninny years of silence you have come , The morn was gray as nny morn J-ns been ; How could I Itnci.v 'Iho c-venlnj ; would bring in A. friend wlio.se generous greetings Ionwcro / ; dumb ? rhe time had sped that marks HIP blossomy - somy spring , But when the blithe old wmlon Finilel In June And Jio-.ssed In Its exuberance of Munm , [ JiilsseU the hopes it all was wont to bring. And winter sends you back ! Words III ex- prcss The 'welcome your divining heart mubt know , My good Samaritan of long ago. How you had sinned eru I could Jove you less. 5o yon are come to counsel Just ns tbfi , To'loss iny books , or whet an argument With spicy Incivilities well me ; What Joy It Is to have you here again ome sit beside me In the oaknoml lil.ize , HI re where tlit- light may MIIIH- upon your face ; Tbo 'while In every lineament I trir > e kVlmt I - " > o loved In days agono to pialxn. Omaha , Neb. CATlIAItlNIO Ul'Sll. The Real Value of a watch depends upon the accuracy of the movement and not upon the price of the case. The "RIVERSIDE " Waltham Watch movement is a most accurate time-keeper. For sale by nil retail jewelers. Adopted Exclusively by the tlppl Exposition. Kqual to Others in Tli if Best I'oInts and Superior In Having Man/ Features DISTINCTIVELY ITS OWN Send for Catalogue. UNITED irPEWTOR AND SUPPIKS CO. , KHU Kill-mini St. A A A A A A AA Arc you coins In the SytloKt In order to maka your trip certain , nddrcts with ttamp The Seattle & . Alaska Transportation Co. 4nd 48 Sulllvau Uulldin : , Seattle , Wuau ,