THE OMAHA DAILY BER UO8EWATBII. KVBKY MOIININO. TERMS op SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Bee ( without Sunday ) . One Ycar.S.M Dally Bee and Stindny , Ono Ye r 8.00 Dally , Sunday and Illustrated , one Year S.M Sunday and Illustrated. One Year 2.25 Illufttratfd Boo , One Year 2.00 Sunday Bee , Ono Year 2.W Saturday Heo , On * Year 1.60 Weekly Bee , One Year 65 OFFICES. Omaha : The Heo Undoing. South Omaha : City Hall Building , Twenty- ttflh and N Streets. Council Bluffs : 10 Pearl Street. Chicago : 307 Oxford Building. New York : Temple Court. Washington : EOl Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news nnd Editorial Department , The Omaha Bee. BUSINESS LETTERS. UuslneM Utters nnd remittances should bo addressed to The Bee Publishing Com pany , Omaha. Omaha.REMITTANCES. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft , express or postal order payable to The Bee. Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamp- ) accepted In paynvnt of mall accounts. Personal checks , except on Omaha or Eastern exchange , not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STAT12MI3.NT OP CIUCL'IiATlO.V. Stale of Nebraska , Douglas County , as. : Qeoree B. Tzschuck , secretary of The Bee Publishing company , being duty sworn , says that the actual number of full nnd complete ropp | of The Dally , Morning , livening and Sunday Bee , printed during tne month of June , 1S99 , was as follows : GEO. B. TZSCHUCK. Subscribed and sworn to before me this SOth day of June , 1899. L. E. BOYLE. ( Seal ) Notary Public. 1'nrtlcn I.onvliiK tor the Summer. Parties leaving the city for the summer may have The Bee sent to them regularly by notifying Tbo Bee business office , In person or by mall. The address win be changed as often as desired. A rusli for the gold Holds of Kansas Is reported by local railroad laud ngcuts. The rush Is for the golden harvest fields , of course. Admiral Dewey bus accepted the first public dinner In Europe and from this tlmo on his digestion will bo threatened at every port he touches with the Olym- pla. It Is a little early for people who are being introduced lo Colonel Bryan 1o bo told that they arc shaking hands with the next president of the United States. The exposition has taken In the coal dealers and the coal dealers have taken In the town. Who got the best of It Is hard to tell , but we think the coal dealers. The Nebraska campaign of 1800 prom ises to be a battle of the ballots in more senses than one. The men who tamper with ballots deserve to be snowed under a mountain of ballots. Scarcely a day passes without the an nouncement of the formation oC a great railroad anaconda that Is about to swallow ttialf a dozen systems diamet rically opposed to each other. It may not he premature to prognosti cate who will succeed General Alger as secretary of war , but it is absolutely safe to predict that the next secretary of war will bo a republican. The people of Montana have just made a discovery. It Is that the plow on the great seal of the state Is a left- handed Implement , but Montana always docs the wrong thing In the right place. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ The repression of the lawless classes Is an utter Impossibility so long as straw bonds , given by Irresponsible lawyers , are accepted as a passport for letting this class of habitual criminals loose In the community. The United States can now point with pride at Its enterprising Hawaiian vol cano , Manna Tx > a , which went Into eruption as soon as It heard from Homo that Mount Aetna has resumed Its old bad habit of smoking and spitting lire. lOdmlstcu and Dahlman can bo depended - ponded upon to take the cue given by ex-Governor llolcomb and deny the Jurisdiction of the senate Investigating committee. It might bo omlmrrnsslng for them to tell all they know about bnl- lot manipulation. The democrats assembled at Chicago have found one point upon which all can agree finding fault with everything the republican administration has done. Their Ideal of the mission of an op position party Is to oppose everything proposed or done by the party In power. It is announced by cubic all the way from the Austrian seaport of ' .Trieste that Miss Nellie do Martin , a pretty young woman and the .only American girl ut Trieste , presented to Admiral Puwey a bouquet of flowers represent ing the American Hag. If Nellie had presented herself as plain Mlns Martin the flowers would have smelh'd Just as sweetly , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ The development of the ordnance arm of the army and navy IB strikingly Il lustrated by the condition the army finds Itself in at present. The seacoast defenses are burdened with n large-mim- l > cr of guns , great and small , which are worse than useless and which cannot bo sold for enough to pay the cost of re moval. Although these guns date back no further than the period of the civil war , 1he advance In offensive armament and protective armor for modern war Hlilps has been so great that instead of being a protection to coast cities , as in tended , they are an lucuinbraucc to their fortifications. OTIS JlK.llW FROM. General Otis has nont a statement to the War department In which ho denies much of what wns contained In the pro test of the newspaper correspondents. Ho states that the correspondents wished to send out reports that would Imperil operations and he denlbs the charge Unit he minimized the work of the navy. In respect to the latter there Is evidence supplied In reports to the department from naval otllccrs that the press correspondents were mistaken , but It Is hardly probable that they wished to send out anything that would Imvo Imperiled military operations' , though It must be admitted that as to this Gen eral Otis was the best judge. It Is noteworthy that the statement given out by the War department dors not cover all the allegaUous made by the press representatives. They com plained that they were not permitted to glvo the facts as to what had trans pired , on the ground that It vgnild alarm the American people , and In re gard to this It appears General Otln had nothing to say specifically , though per haps ho Intended his statement to be a general denial. If so It will not bo ac cepted as altogether satisfactory. He says ho Is not conscious of misrepre sentation , but thinks his dispatches at times have been too conservative. lie would have some dlfllculty In justify ing many of them , In view of events not Infrequently 'happening ' within a day or two after they were sent , as In the case , for Instance , of the last movement south of Manila. The correspondents will now have an inning and It may safely bo expected that they will glvo good reasons for their protest. Meanwhile Intelligent public opinion Is very largely with them. noaeitT a. IAGKHSOL.L. The death of Robert G. Ingersoll will be regretted by a great many people , embracing not only those who agreed with his views respecting the bible and religion , but all who appreciated his Intellectual attainments. Colonel Inger sell was not alone the most widely known and distinguished opponent of re vealed religion of his time , the fore most agnostic of this generation , but ho was also eminent as an orator and had high rank as a lawyer. Ho was a man of rare Intellectual endowments nnd.of . a nature which made friends of all who know him. Despite his railing at reli gion and his ridicule of the bible , Ills life was moral and exemplary in all re spects , he was tenderly devoted to hla family and he was generous in his phil anthropy. Colonel Ingersoll attained national reputation : is an orator at the repub lican national convention of 1870 , where he made the memorable speech nomi nating James G. Blalne for the presi dency. In the campaign of that year he took an active part and no man was listened to by larger or more enthusias tic audiences. In his profession he was an able and brilliant advocate , but his eloquence and wit were most fully shown In his lectures. But for his atti tude toward religion Colonel Ingersoll might have had high public positions , though he did not aspire to them. Ho had no tastes for the conflicts of poli tics nnd could never have been n party ( o its corrupt practices nnd its deceptive methods. The great agnostic had many follow ers , but It Is a question whether his as saults on religion did not promote rather than retard its progress. 1 UK DEMAND FOlt A UHAXGK. There is an unmistakable sentiment , which is very likely to grow , In favor of a change of command at Manila. Some of the leading newspapers of the country have expressed the opinion that such a change Is desirable and a few- public men who have spoken on the subject take the same view. Sen ator Nelson of Minnesota said to a Washington correspondent that In hl Judgment General OtlH had not pushed the campaign against the insMix'onts as vigorously as should have been done and It might lie well for the president to put another ofll- cer In 'his ' place. Ho did not blame the president or the War depart ment in the matter , but laid the entire resnnnslbllltv for the llttlo that had been accomplished during the live months of lighting in Luzon upon Otis , where in fact It belongs , since so far as appears he was given a free hand. The Now York Tribune , in Its com ment upon the protest of the corre spondents against the rigorous censor ship at Manila , says the president and the country need , In command at Manila , a man who will hold the public confidence. "Jt is not meant that he should manage to satisfy all correspondents " that "whether spondents , says paper of reputable nnd patriotic Journals or any others. But the confidence of the people of this country Is necessary If the government Is to bo effectively sus tained. If the good faith of reports from the Philippines Is distrusted , or the conduct of the service there , that will affect both the quality and the number of enlistments , the result ? of elections in many states , the convic tions which members of congress will take with thorn to Washington , and thus the supplies of money and troops and the provision for the conduct of af fairs in all now possessions. It Is for the president to decide whether General Otis can now command the public con fidence. " The New /orU Times , which does not approve the protest of the1 correspondents , yet BUVH ; "Th- > com mander at Manila ought to bo a man of flrst-rato capacity not only for lightIng - Ing , but for diplomacy. Wo fear Gen eral Otis falls something short of that high qualification. The administration must be supposed to bo better Informed than the people , but It may with pro priety take notice of the prevailing im pressions about General Otis nnd the Luzon campaign. It la not a good cam paign to prolong. " Other prominent and Influential newspaper exponents of public opinion talk to the same effect. The American public has ceased to place any eonndouco In the otllclal re ports from Manila. It did not need the statement of the press corresxmdent | > there to show our people that they were being misled by the Information * pnt to Washington regarding the situation In Luzon , Invents Jinil furnished abundant evidence of this. The mat ter of greatest importance , however , is the loss of popular faith In the military judgment and skill of the general In command at Manila. Ihls is of vital consequence to the administration , for there will be hesitation In furnishing men nnd money to carry out the policy of subjugating the Filipinos If the be lief shall become general that the com mander charged with this task H Inca pable , or so lacking In military Milll and ability that its performance will bo un duly protracted. At present General Otis can do noth ing beyond maintaining his position. The rainfall has been almost unprece dented and the country la flooded. There can be no military operations of consequence quence for several months. In the meantime our army will bo reinforced and there will bo opportunity for learn ing much about the enemy and care fully planning for a decisive cam paign. The president should very seri ously consider whether It Is wise to en trust this to n commander who in live mouths accomplished so little. THR JUDICIAL The republican convention which will meet In this city today to place In nomination seven candidates for the bench of this district has a very respon sible duty to perform , not merely for their own party , but the people who look to the courts for the equitable and hon est administration of Justice. As repub licans the iincmbera of the convention should bear In mind that the character of the men nominated Jjy the convention will cither lmprove"or diminish the chances of party success In the Impend ing election. They should bear In mind that while this district Is republican by a decisive majority many thousands of voters have always exercised their Inde pendence In the selection of judges of the district bench and will doubtless continue to do so. If the republican candidates commend themselves to the mass of voters as men possessing legal learning , experience and the mental poise that is prerequisite for every man who holds the scales of justice the party will sweep the district and carry the state ticket to triumphant election. If factionlsui enters the convention nnd governs Its choice of candidates the party , Instead of being on the aggressive from now till election , would bo thrown upon the defensive , thus Jeopardizing both the county and state tickets. It Is to be hoped therefore thai the delegates will not allow themselves tobe carried away by personal animosities or fac tional feeling , but will discharge their duty for the best Interest of the party and good government. TJIK WAYS OF TUB JVHY-FIXEU. A recent Investigation of jury-bribing conducted by the Chicago Record brought to light some interesting and suggestive facts. It appears that the professional Chicago jnry-brlber docs his work most effectively by approachIng - Ing jurymen ostensibly as the repre sentative of the party to the suit v/hom he Is really opposing. For example , In various damage suits against one of the Chicago street railway companies In which bribery charges figure , the practice was for the Jury-fixer to approach preach Jurors ostensibly in the Interest of the plaintiff. In case the juror re pelled the suggestion of a bribe the matter was dropped , but manifestly the mind of the juror was poisoned against the plaintiff. If on the other hand the juror gave car to a bribery proposal the jury-fixer would make known to him that the offer was made in the in terest of the street car company In stead of the plaintiff. Strange to say , this policy was pursued In every in stance of jury-fixing which the Chicago Record had been able to probe to the bottom. The practice of jury-fixers in Chicago Is doubtless the practice of this class in Omaha and every other place where tampering with jurfes has become - come a profession. While It would be Impossible to eradicate the jury-fixer , the searchlight of publicity thrown upon his methods would seriously In terfere with his success In the business and an occasional conviction and sen tence to Uie penitentiary would make the business too hazardous for ordinary criminals. The French adage that he who ex cuses himself accuses himself applies with a good deal of force to former Gov ernor llolcomb. Having declined to submit to the Interrogatory of the senate investigating committee it would have been moro dignified and less compro mising for him to have kept the peace Instead of rushing into print to excuse himself for the part ho had played In the recount of the ballots on the con stitutional amendments , while ho Ig nores the equally serious charges con cerning the false vouchers by which ho Avas enabled to draw $51 a month out of the treasury for rent when , accordIng - Ing to the testimony of the owner of the house , ho had only paid ? 30 a month. In replying to the census bureau the State Board of Health Is compelled to admit It has no reliable vital statlntics of this state. The same is true of every other department. Kven where a pro- teiibo of collecting statistics has been made they are Incomplete and for that reason unreliable and valueless. Indus trial , criminal and agricultural statis tics , the latter of which would bo of especial value , are In a chaotic and in complete condition. The searcher after Ktatlstlcal knowledge regarding Ne braska uuust dig It out for himself or wait until after the federal census sta tistics of 1000 shall be published. Ben TilJiuai ) , the South Carolina ter ror , has r.galu been heard from. This time he came to Chicago to deliver a menage to the democratic national com mittee to the effect that the day of re demption Is still far off uulcss the American people break the shackles of party slavery. And each of the demo cratic national committeemen said amen. Every city of any considerable popu lation Is obliged to maintain a hospital for the treatment of contagious dis eases. Isolated from residence neigh borhoods , these bulldlugu are not half as dangerous ns petroleum , gasoline and naphtha warehouses or gasholders. And yet nobody has ever enjoined the construction of mieh concerns In Omaha or tried to destroy them. Since the city must have a contagious disease hospital the authorities should see to It that tin- bugs keep their hands olT and foolish people who are flustered by Its locution within half n mile of n dwelling should have their nerves quieted. lown democratic papers Insist that Cato Sells shall reconsider his deter mination not to bo the party candidate for governor. At last accounts Mr. Sells had not been convinced that It was good policy for him to put up his en trance money In a race lit stands no show to win. A Thin * of the runt. Washington Tost. .Possibly fiomo ot the persons who are writ- Ins to copiously tor the newspapers are not awareof the fact that the now army refla tions provide lor competent cooks for the messes. The practice of shooting dum-dum biscuits Into the troopers Is n thing of Uio past. Trnllle on the l.nken. Springfield. Republican , ffho railroads are not alone In having all the business they can handle. Shipping on the great lakes Is overwhelmed with trafllo and rates have been advanced to the high est point reached In ten years. The boom In the Iron nnd steel Industry IH the chief factor In the unusual activity In water transportation. AH Outlet for Rnn. Chicago News. Revolutionary manifestos continue to np- pear In great numbers throughout the Island of Cuba and every general who has been unable to find a job gets out his little Inflam matory circular on Saturday mornings. Meanwhile the private soldiers of the Cuban army and the Cuban populace are working on the plantations and seem thoroughly satisfied with the present condition of affairs. A Hint to Cnii ml u. Philadelphia Press. If the Canadian government wants to perpetuate the boundary troubles , as seems to be the case , the American government cannot prevent It from being done. But the responsibility will rest on Canada , and It 'Will learn soon enough that it has about all the burden now that It can carry. The United States government has all the power It needs to bring Canada quickly to terms , and that power may be used when the tlmo cornea. TrnpH of reunion Sliariicrn. Philadelphia Record. The pension sharps at Washington have set down Pension Commissioner II. Clay Evana ot Tennessee as an obtuse and ob stinate man. They have been striving , with all sorts of blandishments , to Induce him to ogrco to become a candidate for the repub lican gubernatorial nomination In the Volun teer state , but he has so far refused to con sent. Moreover , ho has already had a fruit less experience in that line. As an official desirous of doing hs ) duty he has evidently determined to continue his opposition to the perpetration of pension frauds and scandals. A Patriot nt the Mouth. Chicago Chronicle. With , Indomitable resolve Senor Felipe Agonclllo proclaims his determination never to surrender to the hated Americanos. "Rather will I shed the last drop of my iblood , " ho declares. iAnd perhaps Fellpo Is sincere Jn' ' this loftily patriotic declaration. A't ' the same tlmo'We' venture to point out that Felipe , with singular obtuseness , insists upon remaining infa locality -where there Is no earthly possibility of his bleeding and dying for his country. In Paris there are no militant Americanos , with the possible exception of General Horace Porter , who Is probably out of practice In the art ot war. Hence It is difficult to see how Fellpo Is to shod his blood for what Mr. Agulnaldo calls "incomparable Flllplna. " Why Camilla IH Hcntlvo. Nineteenth Century Review. The weak spot in the armor of Canada is the slow rate at which the population In creases. The census of 1891 showed that the previous ten years had added only 500,000 to the numbers of the people. It Is significant of the advantages which Its geographical position gives to the Ameri can republic In its commercial Intercourse with Canada that last year , in splto of the preferential tariff In favor of England , no less than 72 % < per cent of the Imports of the Dominion come from the United States. Of the rest 17.10 per cent came from Great Britain and -some 10 per cent from other countries. On the other hand , the Dlngley tariff has eo killed Canadian exports to the United States that , in spite of the thousands of miles of .frontier along which International commerce means only transport from one homestead 'to ' another , the United States took only 28 per cent of the exported pro duce of Canada , as compared with 66 per cent sent across the Atlantic to Great Britain and 6 per cent to the rest ot the world. In fact , while 75,000,000 Americans spent only $35,460,000 in buying Canadian goods , the 6,000,000 Canadians expended J66.587.000 In buying goods from the United States. CHEAP AT TWO IIUXUIIEU HOLLARS. StnlcHinnii Out of a Job Worthy of ] | | M Hire. New York Sun. Is there any force whatever In the con temporaneous criticism of the Hon. Wil liam J , Bryan for demanding $200 for the speech which he has been asked to deliver at the annual convention ot the Fireman's Association of Western Pennsylvania , to beheld held la August at Scottdalo ? Mr. Bryan is In one sense a public man , the candidate of the great majority of a great party for president of the United States. Is It to bo assumed , therefore , that his time , rung power and his genius'for oratory are gratuitously duo to any fire man's association or other non-political or ganization , at Scottdale or elsewhere , desir ing to engage him as a star attraction for a special occasion ? Not a bit of HI Mr. Bryan's brains nnd lungs are worthy of their hire. Ho Is be fore the people In two aspects , one as a statesman and party leader and tbo other as a lecturer and orator who o popularity Is unmistakable. Ho must live , Ho must provide for the needs of his family. The orator nnd the lecturer must support the statesman eo long as the statesman re ceives no pay for devoting his tlmo and mind to questions of public policy. It is as legitimate for Mr. Bryan to charge a fireman's association $200 for a speech at an annual convention as It Is to charge a client $200 for an appearance In court ; and both charges would bo entirely and abso lutely proper. Wo advlie the firemen of western Penn sylvania by all means to secure Mr. Bryan's services for fhelr aanuaf meeting. If they want to wake the occasion notable and in teresting they can hardly invest $200 to bet ter advantage. There Is already some speculation about the price which Mr. Bryan win charge for a speech In this town on labor day. That In his business ; but our own oplnlo > is that as a statesman and a party leader and campaign strategist Mr. Bryan could oven afford to pay for .the opportunity , in stead of charelnc for attendance. We be lieve that he will urefy come In the foot steps ot Hogg to the cradle of the Van Wyck boom , and that he will come jladly and gratuitously. TIII : I RX Axn TIIIJ swonn. Indianapolis News : Those "round robins" are "birds. " Philadelphia Times : A new reading for the tlmo being Is : The bltle pencil U mightier than the sword. Milwaukee Sentinel : At the same tlmo It Is probaWo that the newspaper corre spondents are no capable Judges ot general * ship as General Otis le of news. Washington Star : General Otis Is ac cused ot allowing his work as an editor to Interfere with his efficiency no a fighter. Too much versatility Is always dangcrouA. Chicago Pest : Possibly there la some reason In the stand taken by the adminis tration that General Otis In bolter qualified than the newspaper correspondents to di rect affairs In the Philippines. Baltimore American : The modern cor respondent Is a power nnd any arbitrary In vasion ot his rights Is a matter for a pru dent man to think twlco about before at tempting. The representative American correspondents are not ot a class to abuse trust reposed In them and their rights are too much identified with the rights of the people to bo Ignored. Washington Post : As between the unre stricted publication of facts 'by the press as sociations nnd the deliberate manufacture of falsehood by n military censor there can bo no comparison In respect of mischief. It afflicts men Infinitely ICM to tell them the clmpto truth , however , unwelcome , than to convince them that they are being deceived and so leave them a prey to suspicion and suspense. New York Sun : Ono of the Manila cor respondents who contribute to the carping Just now In vogue describes General Otis as "a fussy old man , unaccustomed to anything 'but regimental command and saturated with the Ideas and methods of a routine clerk. " The value of this criticism will bo apparent on noting that it Is nearly six years since General Otis has had a regimental com mand , having received his well-earned star In the latter part of 1893. He Is the senior brigadier of the regular army and as such has held Important departmental commands for years. Ho served In the Army of the Potomac through some of the most tre mendous battles , compared with which the bloodiest of the affaire in the Philippines , or , In fact , all of thorn put together , would seem like a skirmish. 'Ho ' was torevetted n colonel both In the volunteers nnd the reg ulars for gallant and meritorious services at Spottsylvnnla and a brigadier general of vol unteers for like service at Chapel House. I'OMTIC.U , I1IUKT. The socialist candidate for governor of Texas at last year's election was Mr. Rovol. John R. McLean's campaign for the demo cratic nomination for governor of Ohio has passed the press bureau Into the oil field. Kansas City thinks It has a cinch onthe next national democratlo convention. The town puts up the stuff , and that is more than half the 'battle. 'All of the eleven contested election cases In the house of the Fifty-sixth congress ha\o 'been sent to the public printer. Of these the testimony In four has been printed. The proposition Is made by R. P. Scott , a 'wealthy ' citizen of Cadiz , 0. , who wants the republican nomination for congress , that the nomination be put up at auction and given to the highest bidder. The New York World has undertaken to canvass democratic sentiment In the various states , and makes the estimate that the next democratic national convention will contain 378 delegates favorable to Bryan and free silver and 532 delegates opposed to him. him.Tho The present governor of Indiana , James A. MoUnt , whoso successor will be elected at tho'presidential contest of 1900 , Is a re publican , and' ' ho has announced recently tlm ho Is not a candidate for the office of vice president or any other. He declares that at the close of his present term he will retire to his farm. Tammany Hall Is not lo continue to enjoy a monopoly of sachems , sagamores , wlskln- kltfl , seasons of fruits and flowers and oracles cles of the harvest moon , If the Mohawks of Buffalo , an organization committed to Bryan , can hefp it. They have a national chief , a chief of scouts , a scribe , a big medicine man , an outside guard , an Insldo guard and tribal scribes in abundance , the Mohawks being in favor of silver , and plenty of it. A great discovery has been made in Chicago cage through Bomo excitingly sensational tes timony given by the commissioner of public works before the Baxter Investigating com mittee. The testimony showed that during the last year one contractor had received $129,000 for repairs -to streets , an ot which WAS let In lots of $500 or less , to cvado the law providing that all contracts over $500 should be advertised and let to the lowest bidder. In Now York the same method of evading competition in $999 contracts has been known for fifty years In connection with certain public work contracts. Chicago seems to have onlv beard of the maneuver recently. PIIIMI'IMNUS XOT WANTED. ISxprenitnn of Sentiment J y < ht- Oregon Vnlmiiocrn , San Francisco Call. A significant Incident took place at the Orphcum on the night of the reception given to the Oregon volunteers. The program of the entertainment Included an evening at the theater , and 400 of the volunteers were provided with seats at the Orpheum. The number , it will bo seen , was sufficiently largo to thoroughly represent the sentiment of the regiment. That is the fact which gives significance to what occurred. During the evening ono of the performers , George West , came upon tbo stage to deliver a speech upon topics of the day. He began by asking : "Do wo want tbo Philippines ? " Instantly from the volunteers the response went back , "No. " If there wore any affirm ative voices they were so few they were lost In the volume of sound of that emphatic negative a negative made doubly Impres sive by the fact that the volunteers rose to their feet to glvo It force. "Do wo want the Philippines ? " That Is the question which persons who have not had tlmo or opportunity to study the isuuo fully are asking all over tbo United States. " .No. " That Is the answer which the volun teers , who have had experience In the islands , glvo In response to the question. The Oregon volunteers are representative of the truest American manhood. They are not among those who glvo their country Up service only. When the war with Spain broke out they offered to the republic their strength , their valor and their lives. They left their homes to go wherever 'tho service of the nation needed them , They were sent to the Philippines , and there they proved themselves faithful to every duty and loyal to every trust. No ono dare accuse them of being weaklings or false to the true grandeur of the republic. They speak with the au thority of men who have attested their patriotism by the arduous proofs of service at the front , and the voice of their patriot ism declares "wo < lo not want tbo Philip pines. " OTlinil LAMIS T1IAX OfllS. A difficulty attending Oullandcr represent ation In the Volksraad Is that that body deliberates In Dutch and Is determined tc admit no other language. Outlsnders In general speak nearly everything except Dutch. H U not unreasonable that the Boct should desire to conduct his parliamentary business In his own tongue without the confusion of other dialects , but an the Outlanders - landers Insist on representation and pay taxes heavy enough to Justify their claim , the case presents some difficulty. In pref erence to war with Great Britain the Bocra seem willing to modify the naturalization laws , admitting Immediately to the fran chise all who have been In the country slnco 1S90 and others after ft residence of seven years ; but ns to the Introduction ot any Outlander lingo In their parliament they are all obstinately opposed to It. In a mat ter so urgent some way ot accommodating the dinicultr will no doubt bo found , oven If the OutUndcra have to educate a class In Dutch to stand up In parliament and darken counsel with inarticulate gutturals llko the rest ot them , * * It now appears that the recent falsification ot the official report ot the Reichstag , nt which eomo account was given fn this jour nal the other day , was effected by persons not connected with the house or with the stenographic bureau. The affair Is not to bo allowed to blow over and If the presi dent of the Reichstag Is unable to solve the mystery at the bottom of It , the case will bo taken In hand by private members at the opening ot the new session and a de termined effort will bo made to bring the offenders to justice. There Is a possible duo to their Identity In the fact that In the parliamentary report of the president's ruling which appeared In the Imperial Ga zette , the official organ of the German gov ernment , the report of the parliamentary proceedings In question was also falsified , but in a different manner. The permission accorded by the president to the Liberal deputy , Herr Roslcke , to discuss the em peror's Oeynhauscn speech was omitted , seas as to make It appear that the president had Interrupted the deputy \\hon ho referred to the Imperial speech. There Is much spec ulation as to whether the forgery and sup pression were duo to the luterfcrcnco of some obsequious courtier or a direct gov ernment Intervention , which would bo much moro fcrlous. * * Great Britain Is threatened at all times with a race war rtn the West Indies , as well as in India and China. In Jamaica there are 800,000 negroes , multiplying nt an enormous rate each year , while the whites number less than 10,000 all told. H is not safe now for whites to go about the Island alone. They imust toe armed and travel In parties , and oven these precau tions will not avail much longer. No ono can tell ( when the negroes will rise and massacre all the whites , for all they are waiting- for 1s a leader. If war were to arise between the whites and blacks It would bo Imposlblo to conquer the latter. The maroons ( descendants of Spanish negro slaves ) have held their own in the moun tain fastnesses ever since Spain quit Jamaica. > No one could get at them to bring them to subjection. For every negro killed in war by the white soldiers at least three white soldiers would have to die. * * The correspondent of the London Times in Berlin says that there Is deep and gen eral ipubllo Interest In the fate of the Rhine and Elbe canhl bill In the Prussian Diet. The till has brought about a trial of strength between the government and the agrarians , who have succeeded In delaying the passage of It toy obstructive demands for "com pensations. " Dr. von Mlcjuel , the vice presi dent of the ministry , has been lukewarm In his advocacy , o > f the bill , but has now pri vately warned. . ' his agrarian friends that. It the tolll is rejected , the Dial will be dis solved. A general election In these.olrcum- stances would mean a broach 'between ' the government and the agrarians. It would also probably Involve the resignation of several members of the ministry to make room for others who would lend more ac tive support to the government In the elec tions. The agrarians are beginning to bo alarmed , the correspondent says , and it Is thought that In the end they will cease their opposition. A > sop Is to bo offered them In the shape of a new clause devoting 2,000,000 marks to the canalization of the Oder. The Parliamentary opponents ot the agrarians are opposed to any compromise. They would prefer to fight the battle out , fearing that the government will have no liberty of action In its commercial relations eo long as the agrarians are strong enough to exact concessions. * * * lAs the pope Is a very old man , not In the best of health , It Is not protoablo that ho Is laying definite plans for what ho will do In 1901. A dispatch from Rome , how ever , says that ho has resolved to conduct personally the religious ceremonies that are to mark the opening of the new century , and that a feature of them will bo a con sistory , at which certain prelates will bo advanced to new dignities. This announce ment can hardly bo Interpreted otherwise than as meaning that , In the pope's opin ion , the next century begins with 1900. Now , of course , that Is a prdblem which Involves no points of doctrine or dogma , and there fore the venerable head of the Catholic church might fee mistaken about It without throwing any light on his claims to Infal libility , but still In so simple a matter nn mistake should bo made by anybody , and least of all toy a man with a mind as keen and quick as that of Leo XIII. It la a fact beyond Intelligent doubt or argument that tbo twentieth century begins with January 1 , 1901 , and for any other view to rccelvo sanction as high as his would be really too unfortunate. Revolution in Scrvla Itt part of the pres ent political system and confined to hun gry Beckers after office without following In the country , or to tbo tools of some for eign Intrigue ; but the revolutionists are careful to keep within the limits of law. If they have unwittingly gone beyond It they have only to lf ave the country for a few months until the next conspiracy has caused the last one to bo forgotten and then they may come back to take their chance at the next turn of the wheel of for tune , perhaps ns fellow conspirators with those against whom they conspired on the last occasion , And whllo the politicians who rule him are passing their time In this way the Servian peasant tends bis herd of woolly pigs In the oak and ( beech forests and his cattle on the communal pastures , or culti vates the corn and tbo plum trees that glvo him the , fruit from which ho makes the dried prunes for tbo foreign market and distils the ellbovltz that cheers his heart and enlivens tbo conversation of the village resort when his day's work Is done , due of Hie lllllculH- . Sun Francisco Chronicle , There are several difficulties in the way of making trusts effective , but the chief ono Is the inability to coax all the available capital Into them , ' .As long as It Is Im- posstb'l-e to do tbls there can bo no Icad-plpo cinch on the consumer. BAKING Makes the food more delicious and wholesome IMCTS nnmrri : n.uivnv , Slllj- Fiction * of the llnt-I'tiMirr of J. StoKIng Morton' * Conservative. The very day that "Coin" Harvey MM in v Nebraska City that there were no signs of r" real prosperity any whet c among the people of Nebraska , or any other state , records ot Otoo county t\cro published showing that during the last twelve months the mortgage Indebtedness of Its citizens had been reduced more than $125,000. And upon the same date money in nbundanco was offered on long time , upon ' personal security , to the Conservallve ni 5 per cent per annum ! This offer wan made by the .Mutual Llfo Insurance company upon its own policies to the amount ot their cash value. Before "tho crime of 1S73" the Union Mutual Llfo ot Mnlno was getting 12 per cent Interest from the enmo party In Otos county who Is now offered money on New York Mutual Llfo policies at G per cent. Figures nnd facts stand up before the mendacity of the Uryanarchlsts nnd Illns- trnto the strength and glory of truth ! Out of 400,000 ncrcs in Otoo county 60,000 acres , except for purchase rnonoy , have never atone ono and the same tlmo been under mort gage. Chicago Record : She Have you sent any of your poems to the magazines ? He Yen , but merely n * a guaranty of gooj faltli , ami not necessarily for imbllcvttlon , Indliinapolla Journal : "Is the cashier out ? " ho nkcd an ho looked around. "No , " replied Mio president , ns ho gln up from an examlnaitlon or the books , cashier Is not otit ; It's the bank that's out. " Philadelphia Record : Brber .Shall I cut It short , tiir ? Victim for goodness sake , yes ! I'm tired of heaHnc you talk. Chicago Post : "Good news from the Phil. Ipplncs , " ho said , as he- looked up fioin his paper. "What Is It ? " "It I ? roiwrtcd Hint Agulna do Is over trained. " Chicago News : Insurance Clerk Here Is a , woman that wishes her pot cat Iniurcd. Manager All right , but tell her she'll bavo to take out a. policy on each ono ot th ? cat's lives. Cleveland Plain Dcnlor : "Family gene nway , eh ? Then we've got the premises nil to ourselves. Say , there must ho $100 worth of lend pipe alone. It's a cinch. " "It's a , lead i > lpo cinch ! " Indianapolis Journal : "Como away from those persons nt once. " cried Mrs. Tort6l ale lo her youngest. "Don't you know It Is re ported their shells are only Imitation ? " Philadelphia Record : Mrs. AVIgwng Mr . Passco upset a. kettle of raspberry Jam over herself today. Wluwais Ah ! 'Nobody ' could deny , then , that ho was well preserved. Detroit 1'Veo Press : "And do you think It right that . woman should play Hamlet ? " asked the serious-minded person. "I don't see why not , " answered the rudn Individual who goes to vaudeville shown only. "No man 1 ever paw could make any thing of it but u roast. " THAT VACATION TRIP. Chicago Record. Now Is pome the vexing ueason when a fel- low'a very reason Totters to the vergj ot madness , and Ills thoughts become a crime , At the old , recurring question , "Shall I ( lee from ithe congestion Of tti > city , In t'ho ' country spending my vacation dime ? " And ; ho vows he will not waver he's de termined not to favor Cnco again the coaxing spirits of the for est , field and farm. ( Bugs and snakes that wait .to . nil him full of poison and to kill him Are omo pleasures Unit Impress him with u. total lack of charm. ; When 'tho place had' ' been selected ( and hla board JiaU been collected ) On his last trip he recalls UM fact of bunking In a roo-n AVhere through celling , walls- and flooflnff came an awc-lnsplrlng snoring , " Imitative of the advent of the distant crack of docmi. While wlWi fleroi Intent to ravage came a horde of hungry , savage , And uncouthly rude mosquitoes , zipping madly through the dark , O'er his blood raising contention with some things I wouldn't mention , But the whole of which considered him a nlco and Juicy mark. When ho flslvsd how hotly broiling was the sun , as ho cumo tolling Seven miles along a dusty , crooked , crazy country road ; In his speech loud objurgation , In his heart prevarication ITwaa three scraggly catfish that com- bis piscatorial load. Much moro ploawint it Is , very , In the city now to tarry Lolling 'round , he holds , In negligee , and talcing 'things ' nt ease , Than to rustle for diversion on a most nb- surd excursion , ( For t'ne erase of leaving 'town ' , he says , is simply ta disease * He proclaims it's nicer resting In a. oulet flat , digesting Coolly , calmly , undisturbedly , his little old two weeks ; Whllo serenely contemplating with a smllo the enervating "Wild and foolish hurly-burly of the conn- try-going freaks. Though ho makes thess sago pretenses , when his fortnight off commences With the detail. ? of a country trip you'll find ihlm all aflame ; And he'll go. ( To como. back "busted , " nearly dead si ml all dlrgusted It wan thua last year , mid every year It's just the very nuine. ) There is Money Waif ing for You. If you want a suit of clothes for present wear , half its value is waiting here in money for you. This is not a figure of speech , It's a fact. If you want a cas- simere or cheviot business suit that is worth $15 you can' get it now for $7.50. $10 suits for $5. $7.50 ones for $3.75. $5 bicycle suits for $2.50. $7.50 ones for $3.75. $10 onee for $5. Crash and linen suits at half price and you can bring your children here with the assurance of equal ly low prices for them. If you are in need and are down town tomorrow be fore 6 p. m. Drop in and see our values before you decide.