THE OMAHA DATLT BEE : TTT3S D AT , AUGUST 22 , 1800. THE OMAHA DAILY.'BER E. nOBBWATER , Editor. PUBLISHED EVKHY MOUNINQ. TEKlta OF SUBSCRIPTION. Cally Ba ( without Sunday ) , On Vear.$6.00 Dally IJee and Sunday , On Year. . . . . . . 8.W Uatly , Sunday and Illustrated , One Year 8.23 Bunday and lllUBtrated. Ono Year % Illustrated Bee , Ono Year * " ' Sunday Wee , Ono Year ? -95 Baturday D e , One Year " ? Weekly Bee , One Year to OFFICES. Omaha : The Boa Building. , , _ . . South Omaha : City 1U11 Building , Twenty- flfth and N 8tre ts. . . Council Blum : 10 Pearl Street. Chicago : 807 Oxford Uutldlns- New York : Tcmplo Court. . ! Washington : Ml Fourteenth Street. , CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news ana Edtlorlal D&pwtment , The Omaha. Bee. BUSINESS LETTERS. I Business tetter * and remittances should f ba addressed to The Bee Publishing Com- / jiany , Omaha. i , REMITTANCES. nemlt by draft , express or postal order payable to The face. Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps accepted In paynvtnt ot mall accounts. Personal checks , except on f s Omaha or Eastern exohnnKe , n ° t.1cSPJ.tca ' . < THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. i STATI33IIC.NT OH" CIHCUUA.T1ON. ; ' State of Nebraska , Douglas County , 88. : 5 George B. Tzschuck , secretary of The Bee * Publishing company , being duly oworn , says j that the actual number of full and complete- f copies of The Daily , Morning , Evening anu Sunday Bee , printed during the month of July , 1899 , was as follows : 1 1 1:0,0(10 : ( 17 85,020 ' 2 i7uUO 18 8-1,700 I 3 2.1,110 ID 21,700 4 25,400 20 21,070 6 20,050 21 21,580 8 25,5"0 22 . .21,720 T 25,410 23 20,255 8 25,140 Z4 21,000 9 27,355 23 i.24,530 10 25,200 26 21,700 11 25,400 27 24,770 12 21,020 23 24,0JO ! 13 25,232 2 ! ) 21,810 11 25,400 30 20,150 IB 25,000 31 25,01O j 1C 20,040 Total 785,882 Less unsold and returned copies. . . . 10,47O Net total sales 775,403 Not dolly verago. . . . . . , . . . . 6..i. : ; Subscribed and sworn before me this 31st day of July , 1S93. L. E. BOYLE. ( Seal. ) Notary Public. Portlei Lenvlnir for the Summer. Parties leaving the city for the oummer may have The Bee sent to them regularly by notifying The Doe business office. In person or by mall. The addrcis win be changed as often as desired. Now the tug of war Is on In the popo- cratlc camp , but the Ins will make a desperate flght to keep In the saddle. Ak-Sar-Beu Is coming down the homestretch stretch for the carnival of 1890. Let every good citizen of Omaha help him along. Having been newly oiled with patent lubricator the state house machine Is duly on deck to demonstrate Its ability to travel any kind of a political road. We feel conlldetit the entire silver re publican party of Nebraska might attend the state convcutlon and still not tax the capacity of any one of several halls In the city. Captain Kllllau will not have to walk back from San Francisco on a tic-pass and the threat that 300 members of the First Nebraska would accompany him on the march was puerile. Men with questionable public records socking places on the republican county ticket are simply wasting time and In viting trouble. They could not bo elected If they wcro nominated. Ex-Governor Stone declares he Is for Bryan , but In declaring fusion a delu sion and a snare ho Is certainly placing more boulders In the Nebraska man's path than would seem necessary. Attorney General Smyth has donned his fighting suit , but the Standard Oil octopus still continues doing business at the old stand just as if Constantine J. Smyth had never boon heard of. The price of beef Is still soaring heav enward , with no Immediate prospect of on early fall. The farmer who has been raising cattle la now profiting by his foresight , -while the consumer foots the bill. It may bo pertinent to remark that the bicycle lamp ordinance Is In effect and enforced without any of the hard ships or disasters so freely predicted by Its opponents while its enactment was pending. The gathering fusion politicians are bidden a good republican welcome to Omaha , with the hope that their visit may prove pleasant and Improve the friendly relations between the state and its metropolis. The hope entertained in England that President Krngcr of the Transvaal would back down at the last minute poems far from realization. The Boer , on the contrary , bus his back up against Mnjulm hill. Every person in Omaha who owns property abutting on streets still disfig ured by rotten wooden block pavement Bliould make a tour of Inspection of the newly laid asphalt on Capitol avunuo and note the difference. The faith of Nebraska is good for every dollar advanced to bring the First Nebraska home. The bill making the appropriation to reimburse the con tributors should be the first act passed by the legislature of 1001. The city has made a contract for feedIng - Ing city prisoners at less than 0 cents n meal , while the county is taxed nearly double that figure. And yet the num ber of city prisoners is Insignificant us compared with that of the county , European correspondents continue to send out Interviews with Admiral Dewey without Interviewing the nd- mlral. If all the alleged interviews were genuine the admiral would bo doIng - Ing nothing else than imparting his views to newspaper correspondents. TUK RIOIlXa IS PARIS. The rioting by anarchists and social ists In Paris on Sunday was a striking evidence of the revolutionary spirit that pervades that city nnd a striking Indication of further nnd perhaps very much greater disorders in the near fu ture. The Paris papers agree In regardIng - Ing the situation as extremely serious nud most of them call upon the ministry to take greater precautions against a recurrence of Sunday's events nnd to net with more firmness. It certainly does seem that the government has been somewhat lacking in foresight nnd It may be that It has not that firm grasp of affairs which the situation calls for. But while It has appeared to err on the side of prudence and conservatism , it must bo borne In mind that the situa tion Is n delicate and difficult one , Unit much of the public Is In an inflammable mood and that a very small spark might start a most destructive conflagration. Such being the case the government has perhaps acted wisely In not adopting any harsher measures than It has em ployed. In simply making such provision against disorder as ordinary prudence suggested , but it is evident that this pol icy cannot bo maintained without peril to the public peace and order. There Is some reason to apprehend that Sunday's rioting will operate to the prejudice of Dreyfus , but it is possible that It will exert no influence for or against him. As u symptom of what may happen In the event ofl his convic tion It is , however , distinctly signifi cant. The Indications nro that within the next few weeks the French govern ment -will be subjected to a tremendous strain. HEARST AMD URYAff. In the campaign of 1800 the mainstay of William Jennings Bryan nnd the free silver cause was William 11. Hearst , the millionaire proprietor of the New York Journal. In the face of overwhelming public opinion in New York against the Nebraska candidate and the Chicago platform William U. Hearst staked his political reputation and the life of his paper on the outcome by backing Bryan with all his Influence nnd a large share of his fortune. And now it transpires that William U. Hearst has experienced a change of heart , or at any rate had lost faith in Bryan's star , and was will ing to drop him for another candidate who was not known to bo committed to any of the doctrines cuuncl'ated in the Chicago platform , and least of nil to free silver. Wo have It upon the authority of President Schurman of the Philippine commission that William R. Hearst dis patched James Crcclman all the way from New York to Manila to tender his political and financial backing to Ad miral George Dewey if he would accept the presidential nomination of the dem ocratic party in 1000. Although this tender was declined by the admiral , the fact that It was made In the name of end on behalf of Hearst affords conclusive proof that the Cali fornia millionaire editor was not only willing to throw Bryan overboard , but anxious to exert his Influence and spend his money to prevent his renornlnatlon. Whether Mr. Hearst was Inspired by * n desire to play a Napoleonic coup on the political chessboard or whether way down deep he has lost faith in Bryan and 10 to 1 free coinage can only bo con jectured. Sufllce It to say that Hearst was willing to part company with Bryan and smash all the planks of his platform If he could find a man -with whom he thought he could play a win ning card in the game of 1000. DiSGREDITABLE POLITICS. The Iowa democratic platform , in condemning the war against the Filipinos pines , expresses the belief that "It may have been Inspired by Great Britain for the purpose of producing conditions that will force an Anglo-American alliance" and declares "our detestation of the at tempt made In British interest to dis rupt the friendly relations which have uniformly existed between the United States and Germany. " Referring to this the New York Sun says : "Tho Des Molncs platform is nn experiment , nnd a most ignoble and dis creditable experiment , In its effort to test the advantages of a fusion for 1900 between the populists and the 'German- * Americans' who are opposed generally to free silver. No patriotic American , democrat or republican , can withhold his contempt * for such a transparent bid for the support , on unamcrlcan grounds , of the naturalized voters , as was made by the populists "and democrats In DCS Molnes. That any considerable num ber of naturalized voters In that state can bo swerved from their support of republican candidates and n republican national administration this year by this appeal to continental European prejudices Is , of course , hardly to be supposed. It Is not seriously expected that , such n platform declaration will make any change in the result. * It In nn experiment only , a futile midsummer mer experiment , of which the patriotic voters of Iowa will make short work In November. " The declarations of the Iowa demo crats and populists to which reference Is made are as ridiculous as they are discreditable and Imply a low estimate of theintelligence of our foreign-born citizens. Wo arc 'unwilling to bellovo that there In n sensible democrat In Iowa or elsewhere In the country who seriously thinks that war against the Filipinos was inspired by Great Britain , while as to any attempt being made , in British Interest , to disrupt the friendly relations between the United States nnd Germany , he Is an exceedingly stupid student of current events who does not know that there Is absolutely no ground for such an assertion. It Is as unreasonable to say that Great Britain Inspired the war In the Plllp- ) | pines as it would bo to say that It was Inspired by Germany or any other European power. It Is an affair of the United States wholly and has nothing whatever to do with the Interests of any other nation. As to the question of an Anglo-American alliance , that Is settled. Neither country Is seeking nor desires such an alliance. No responsible Brit ish statesman has ever advocated IIanil we know of no American public man who Is In favor of It. The maintenance of friendly relations Is the wish of the people of both countries , but nothing be yond this , and the same feeling extends to Germany and all the other countries of Europe. The relations between the United States nnd Germany have never been more cordial than at present nud the recent expression by Emperor Wil liam of the hope that this friendship would be perpetuated Indefinitely Is heartily reciprocated by the American people. The lown democrats have Indeed shown a most Ignoble spirit in appealing to continental European prejudices and the party deserves to bo severely re buked at the polls , as undoubtedly It will be. CAl'Ant.K OF SKtt'-aOVBnXMKA'T. Admiral DeWey Is reported to have again expressed the opinion that the Fil ipinos are capable of self-government and tilKo that he Is In favor of giving It to them , but according to the report he thinks the Insurgent ? will have to sub mit themselves to the law. Dewey said , long before the Avar commenced , that the Filipinos were capable of governing themselves and suggested that they be given autonomy , so that the latest re port of his views Is to be regarded as credible , since there Is no reason to sup pose that his opinion has undergone any change. Undoubtedly had the judg ment of the admiral been consulted and accepted by the Washington authorities war In the Philippines could have bceu averted and the people there would now be self-governing under the protection of the United States. It Is needless to re count the enormous saving that would have been effected If his policy had been pursued , while there -would have been no sacrifice of any advantage that this country will get from possessing the archipellgo. We could have made com mercial treaties with the Filipinos quite as beneficial In their results as our occupation of the islands can pos sibly bo and avoided all the responsi bility and expense incident to occupa tion. tion.Admiral Admiral Dewey will soon bo In the United States and ho should bo per mitted to give the American people a statement of the policy -which ho thinks ought to bo adopted In the Philippines. His views could exert a great Influence upon public opinion and unquestionably would have much weight In determining the action of congress. From the amount of time Coin Harvey is spending in Nebraska in the capacity of touching committee this state must be expected to furnish the bulk of his fund for the relief of the democratic party. Why Nebraska , wiilch Is in but moderate circumstances compared with the wealthy states of the east , should bear this burden Is not made entirely clear , any more than what benefits the contributors may hope to realize should the silver bulllonaires succeed in dls lodging the party of prosperity. Why not give the democrats of some other state a chance to chip into the hatV With the money In hand to pay fares and the certainty that all the men will come homo over one road the various railway lines seem to have awakened suddenly to the fact that possibly they might do something toward shaving the rate for the First Nebraska men , even If the Southern Pacific would not stand Us share of the reduction. Unless the attorney general hurries up the prosecution of the state claim against Prison Contractor M. D. Welch the defendant will have a counter claim more than enough to offset It , as it was growing , at last reports , at the rate of § 2,000 per -week. It cannot be truthfully said that Gen eral Weaver never learns anything , since ho has absorbed enough knowl edge of the political situation In Iowa to forego his perennial ambition to be a candidate for office at least for this year. The controversy over the brigadier generalship of the Iowa militia between Prime and Guest threatens to rival the famous Jones county calf case. The worst feature of It Is that the matters at issue arc not worth as much as the calf. looUn tlint Philadelphia Times. Asji matter of fnot , what Is this anxiety to make moro money by raising the price ot beef but a kind of homage to tbo golden calfT American Method * In Culm , Globe Democrat. Under Spanish rule , Cuba had no railway mall service and no postal money , order sys tem. Both are now in operation and paying their way. the 1'roccHMlon , Detroit Free Presa. The Hon. J. Sterling Morton bege leave to observe that the man with < ho hoe Is not so deserving ot lamente , after all. Ho la riding now upon a sulky plow and culti vator. of the Howler. Baltimore American , With railroads complaining that they can not get cars enough to transport freight , and big concerns unable to get material fast enough to nil all their orders , the calamity howler Is In desperate straits for a subject of lamentation. JVoiv 1.1 lit to Thin ! Philadelphia Times. Tbo democrats will not nominate William J. Bryan for president next year for two reasons ; First , they couldn't come within bight of an election with him as their can didate ; and , second , be represents no vital democratic principle , JIouuiK'c to the Sucred Idol , Chicago News , It Is possible that the Iowa democrats will bo accused ot shelving the financial question and substituting the Issue of Imperialism In Ita ulace. Hut the very first lines of the platform adopted at Des Melees "unquali fiedly and unreservedly Indorse the Chicago platform cf 1896 in whole and In detail , " It Is not. easy to eee what they could have said that would have committed the party In .the Btato moro completely to the IC-to-l Idea IS IT WORTH Till : \MM.nt Prulli of the Policy of l > t | > ini lon llc- rnniliiR More VlipnrpiU. Philadelphia Ledger ( rep. ) It Is settled at Washington that the army Is to bo Increased to a\totnl ot 100,000 men under arms. This Increase of enlisted men , though following close upon the heels of the Hrtuscls pence congress , was not a consequence quence of that conference ; It Is , on the con trary , a direct and , It may bo said , an In evitable sequence of the national administra tion's policy of "Manifest Destiny , " or ex pansion. This policy , as It has been dally Illustrated , docs not mean alone the ex pansion of territory ; It means , among a goodly number of other things now and strange , an army of 100,000 effectives , a navy of many and formidable ships ; It means the expansion of the lists of dead and wounded , the expansion of taxation , ot war taxes at a tlrao 'when ' any war authorized by con gress , without which authorization no war Is justlQed , cannot be said to constitutionally exist , and of the expansion ot the cost ot all the necessaries of life. Thus , itlll bo perceived , the price of tne policy of expan sion Is high and with each now day it Is certain to be higher. To create and main tain vast armies afield , to construct and keep afloat great lighting ships , requires enormous revenues , all which must necessarily bo fur nished by the people. Not only are the Spanish war taxes still on months alter peace was declared , but they must ho ex panded Indefinitely In order to keep pace with the policy of expansion. Onerous and burdensome as they are the icvcnuo sup plied by them Gtlll falls far behind the ex penditures , as , for instance , the treasury re port for July shows that the government's Income from all sources was far less than its outlay , the cost of the Philippine var alone for last month havlug been upward at $19,000,000. There Is something exceed ingly attractive In playing at expansion. The game Is undoubtedly n pretty one , but , nil things considered , Is the game really worth the candle ? Let thoughtful folk con sider the following list of'losses of our troops In the Philippines from August 6 , 18D8 , to August 14 , 1S99 : Killed Mfl Died of wounds nnd accidents 323 Died of disease " "I Total deaths SM Wounded .1,649 Captured and mlsslrig la Grand total 2,393 and then let them consider this significant statement of that stalwart republican leader and honest statesman , Senator Burrows : "So Tar the warfare has waged fifty miles north of Manila and only a few miles to the east. There are thousands of miles yet to subdue and fully 10,000,000 people to sub jugate. " Evidently the policy "Manifest Destiny" Is not a cheap one , but one which will grow dearer the longer it Is jiiirsued. MAT LESS MEAT. One Wny of GlviiiK the Ilutchcm 11 Ilnrtl Front. Chicago Chronicle. People who complain of the great advance In the price of meat have a very simple remedy a remedy , moreover , which will not only save thorn money , but will Improve their health. Let them cat less meat or cat none at all. There is no reason why the average city dweller should eat meat three times a day or three times a week , for that matter. And the eating of largo quantities of meat In the summer months Is simply stuffing the firebox of the human furnace with fuel which cannot properly bo consumed and which cfogs up the machine with disastrous results. Hard manual labor may necessitate a meat diet , though even that Is disputed , but for sedentary occupations , which occa sion a very slight , waste of tissue , there Is no necessity for fopd containing more nitro genous factors than are to ibe found In vege tables. The vegetarian dpctrlne no longer rests solely upon , .theory , though comparative anatomy demonstrates pretty clearly that man IB not normaly a carnivorous animal. It has been tested and proved to bo sound by actual practice. It has been shown by years of experience that animal food Is not necessary to health and strength , and It has been shown that In some cases at least such food Is distinctly detrimental to vigor. Cer tainly It must be evident to everyone that the diet which is proper for a hodcarrlcr or a blacksmith must bo unfitted for a clerk or a professional man , yet clerks and profes sional men -whose eolo exercise Is a walk of a few blocks dally eat quite as much meat as Is eaten by men who are exhausting tissue toy hard physical labor. The result , as physicians are coming to realize , is the great prevalence of Brlght's disease , rheumatism , apoplexy and the other ailments due to non- aBslmllatlon of largo quantities of animal food. food.Meat Meat occasionally Is-wen enough. In the winter , when animal heat Is needed , meat supplies the fuel moro compactly , perhaps , than anything else , though even In winter It Is by no means Indispensable. But at no time of year , and In summer least of all , Is there any reason for the city 'business ' man to consume a quantity of animal food that would suffice to nourish and sustain a coal- heaver. He Is doing violence to his system when ho eats food which ho cannot assimi late properly and that Is what happens when ho devours meat three times a day. The advance In the prlco of meat , there fore , affords an opportunity for diet reform. Let peopTo cut down their meat 'bills ' or cut them off altogether. After a trial of a month they will agree that they never felt so well In their lives. GREAT ( WESTERN CHOI'S. Thlnprn ComliiK Our " \Vny nt nil Irrc- Hlnllhlf > I'acf. Buffalo Express. Western farmers expect to pay off the remainder ot their mortgages , to refurnish their houses , to buy new farm Implement" and to put eomo money In the banks with this year's crops. They made a good start In that direction last year and will finish up the job this year. There is already con siderable money in the wcot , The eastern banks are just learning that fact through the absence of a great demand for money with which to move the crops to market. As a usual thing the money to do this has come from the cast each year. But this year tbo west will furnish a largo part of the needed amount. AH of which goea to tihow that the wlso western farmers laid I by some of their J898 profits for a rainy ! day ; or , Inasmuch as wo are speaking of tbo | west , it would ha moro proper to say , for a dry spell. The wheat and corn crops this year prom- lie to bo greater than they were last. Kansas alone expects to have not less than 300,000,000 bushels of corn , and the asser- | tlon IB made that the value of the Kansas corn crop will exceed that of all the gold and silver mined In the United States. And Kansas Is hut one state of many that will have a share In this prosperity. Th < 9 west waited long enough at fortune's feedIng - Ing trough ; she ought to get her fill now. I'lirt of thi > War Tux. Boston Transcript. Now the dressed beet men of Chicago pro claim their Innocence and say that the farmers and ranchmen are getting the bene fit of Iho Increased price of beef , owing to large Government purchases for tbo army. So the cent or two a pound extra Is virtually a part of the war's taxation. Tukuu Off the IIIIlH. New York Sun. A campaign of the Hon. Augustus Van Wyck for the democratic nomination for president , assisted by his true-blue friends , but without the approval and patronage of Mr. Richard Crokcr , would afford one of the inw.t entertaining ipectaclce ptcr beheld ill American politics. SMYTH'S ASSAULT OX Tim TIU'STS. Central City Nonparlcl ! After three years of meditation And inaction regarding the Nebraska anti-trust law , Attorner General Smyth has at last commenced a suit to en force the law against the Standard Oil com pany. Smyth can bo relied upon to make a grand-stand play as A campaign draws near. 1'apllllon Times : Every good citizen of Nebraska win bid Attorney General Smyth godspeed In his fight against the trusts , lie has oncncd the fight by nttncklnc the oil trust , and will probably gct after the grain- buyers' or elevator trust next. The only danger In the flcht acalnst the trusts In Nebraska Is the fact that so manv ot our courts are presided over by creatures of the corporations. North Platte Tribune : Now that the state camp.ilEti Is about to begin , Attorney General Smyth announces that ho Is going after the trusts in Nebraska with a six- lined pitchfork , and that they will all die a horrible Oeath. That's right , Constantine , after them , nnd don't let one of them escape , dut why , pray , did you not gct after them sooner ? Is there any politics in this mid den move you make ? Pierce Call : ( Attorney General Smyth seems to at least have awakened to the fact that there Is a law against trusts In our state iind It Is stated that he is now about to brine : action acalnst the Standard Oil company. Is ho sincere or is this a bluff for political campaign thunder this fall ? It sincere why did Mr. Smyth wait until three years of his time ns state's attorney are passed ? Mr. Smyth presumes a good deal on the credulity of the people. Bloomlngton Echo : Attorney General Smyth has started an action against the Standard Oil company under the nntl-trust laws ot this state. Whether the gentleman In sluccrc In his action remains to be seen. The facts are , however , that the company has been doing business in this state con trary to the anti-trust laws ever sluco Smyth was elected , and as the company Is able to appeal the case Inetanter to the federal courts , where it will be tied up for the next four or five years , it would look as it the legal gentleman were simply making a grand stand play for the fall campaign. It ho had been sincere ho would hava attacked some case that was entirely a state organization and then ho could have tested It In the supreme court ot our own elate. iKirernont Tribune : Attorney General Smyth has finally been aroused to his duty of enforcing the Nebraska anti-trust laws , and he has directed his first blow nt the giant ot trusts , the Standard Oil company. Incidentally , It may bo remarked , a cam paign Is just coming on , and the party to which Mr. Smyth belongs is in need of a llttlo stimulant to give it strength. From this point of view the attorney general's move must be admitted to bo a very timely ono. 'Hero's ' to his success In his struggle with the dragon , though the chances ore against his coming off a victor. The Stand ard Oil people have gene up against some good deal harder propositions than Attorney General Smyth without suffering. But they are a shining mark , and 'Mr. Smyth should keep shooting away at them , now that ho has "drawn a bead" on them. Seward Reporter : Attorney General Smyth has Instituted proceedings In the district court of Douglas county against the Standard OH company to compel that organization to cease doing business In Ne braska contrary to law. The position taken by the attorney general Is that the Standard Oil company Is a trust and under the statute barred from doing business in Nebraska. To tha people the Standard Oil company is a trust and under the statute Is barred from doing business In the state. To the masses the Standard Oil company Is a trust , pure and simple , but whether Mr. Smyth will be able to provo such to be the case Is quite a different thing. The attor ney general states that he Is going after all the trusts wh'lch do'business In the state. Should bo do BO ho will have plenty to keep him busy during the rest of his term of office , but It IH dollars to doughnuts that the filing of a few petitions just at the opening of the fall campaign will be all that the burst of energy on the part of the at torney general will amount to. Some years ago the Incumbent ot the same office now held by Mr. Smyth , started in to regu late the railroads and the result was that the state paid the costs. When lightweight attorneys attempt to outwit he legal de partment of the big corporations or trusts success Is not likely to follow. Mr. Smyth selected a good fish to .begin . on. I'EKSO.VAL AVD OTHUUAV1SR. Thomas Bain , new speaker of the Cana dian House of Commons , is the first farmer to gain that post. The controller of the treasury has decided that the testimony of people present at a man's birth Is better than a public record as evidence ot his age. In a recent discussion a friend ot Senator Morgan's quoted to him : "A soft answer turneth away wrath. " "Not over a telephone - phone , " replied the senator. The father and brother of Ellhu Root have both held professorships In Hamilton college , where they were known among the students as "Cube" Hoot and "Square" Root. Fifteen hundred men have been laid oft at the Cramps' shipyard , Philadelphia , because the firm cannot obtain structural iron In sufficient quantities to keep all its men em ployed. 'Hero ' is provocation for a calamity howl. The editor of the Baltimore Sun delivered himself of an instructive editorial which be headed "A Simple Cure for Choking. " When It appeared next next morning It bore the fetching caption "A Simple Cure for Jok ing. " A moro curious series ot coincidence could hardly happen than that which Involves the names of the two watchmen at Blackwall Pier , Liverpool , who are named Day and Knight. Mr. Day Is on duty during the day and Mr. Knight at night. Cornelius Vanderbllt , who has been cut off from much active life toy his bad health , finds amusement 1 the phonograph , which bo has constantly at his side. This con veys to him airs from the latest operas , and Into it he frequently talks himself. Gavels made from wood from the sills of the old homo ot Thomas A. Hendrlcks are to bo used by tbo president of the Ohio democratic state convention. They are to bo presented by citizens of Zanesvllle. Hen- drlcks was a native of Ohio , being born In a log cabin in Musktngum county. General Fuuatou'a mall Is probably tbo largest In tbo Philippines. There are quan tities of letters of congratulations from frleruVa and strangers , requests for auto graphs , political advice , sample cigars , which seek to bear his name , stocks of newspaper clippings and countless gifts ot every description , A Now York man has brought suit against a tribe of Red Men for Injuries inflicted upon him during an Initiation a year ago , Ilia most serious charge is that while bo was tied to a stake bullets were fired from revolvers and that ono struck him In the leg , Inflicting a wound which confined him to bis borne for two months. K.vvoniTus ron srpnn.MK Grctna 'News-Reporter ' : Judge Dickinson of Tekaraah would receive hearty support from this paper It nominated for supreme judge on the republican ticket. He is as' able and good a man as ever sat on the bench of Nebraska. Klmball Observer- Judge Dickinson of Tokatnah Is receiving many flattering no tices from the press as an available can didate for judge of the supreme court. Ho Is an able jurist , Is clean , capable and Is identified \\lth no factions. Tobias Gazette : 'Hon. ' Robert Ryan of Lincoln Is of the right material ( or a judge on the ejuprcmo bench. Where he Is best known all speak words ot commendation. Ho Is tearless , nblo and not erratic. The people would make no mistake by electing him to this high office. Alnsviorth Star-Journal : The name ot Judge Dickinson of Tekaraah is favorably mentioned among republicans In connection with the supreme judgcshlp. Judge Dickin son Is ono of the ablest lawyers In the state , and 1st .now serving on the district bench. It is believed , besides , that the nomination ot this able jurist would go far toward heal ing the discordant tone In Douglas county and result in harmonizing matters In gen eral. Blair Pilot : U cannot bo said to be a boom in the case of Judge Dickinson for the supreme bench. When It became known that the judge would accept the nomination If It were tendered him the people nt once wanted him. A man with a batter judlcla record cannot 'he found In Nebraska , am there are none with clearer heads. When the 'Judgo lands on a point ot law It can be ( banked on ns correct. Where can yov find n district judge who has had but ono ca. j in fourteen reversed by the supremo1 court ? That Is Dickinson's record. Oakland Republican : The name of Judge Charles T. Dickinson of this county has been heralded by many paper * throughout the state as the proper name to head the republican state ticket , as candidate for supreme premo Judge. Until very recently he hai not consented to accept such nomination If tendered him. Ho now has the nomination for district judge , which was given him by almost the unanimous voice of the judlcla convention , after ho had served the dlstrlc in that capacity for four years. Not another of tl\o very able Judges of the district hai a vote so large. Tnero is pernaps no oincr man In the state bettor qualified for the office of supreme Judge than C. T. Dickin son. Ho Is and has been for years a dili gent tftudcnt In bis profession , and among all the cases tried before him as district Judge during the past four years only fourteen cases were appealed to the supreme premo court and only ono of tbeso was re versed. Ha Is n clean man In every par ticular no man having aught to soy against his character , either as nn officer or a private citizen. ( Ho is the right kind of a man to place In the highest tribunal of the state. CANADA'S IDLE TIIHEATS. Chicago Inter Ocean : Sir Charles Tup- pcr seems to think that the United States was created for the special purpose o knuckling down to Canada. Ho seems to think it In spite of all the proof ho has re ceived to the contrary. New York Mall and Express : Sir Charlca Tupper assures his follow Canadians that the United States will agree to arbitrate the Alaskan boundary dispute after all. Sir Charles is deceiving somebody , but whether it Is himself or his constituents remains to ( bo seen. Philadelphia Press : Canada has the power to exclude American miners from her side of the boundary line. She now im poses a 10 per cent royalty on all gold dug out of the ground by the miners , an imposi tion practiced nowhere else on earth. There Is nothing of the kind imposed on the British miners in the Transvaal , which country Canada ostentatiously offers to help'Eoglandwhip" because"1 of alleged wrongs to these same well-treated British miners. But when it comes to the shut ting-out game Canada will be ready to cry enough in about one day. The stoppage of the bonding privilege in the winter season , a mere matter of treasury regulation , would bar Canada from communication with the outsldo world for six months and would at any time bankrupt her railroads. Philadelphia Inquirer : This country must look to its Interests in the Pacific if it Intends to retain the paramount position , there. Our prestige is threatened , and that seriously , by Canada. The stand that that country has taken In demanding'a port of entry to the Klondike Is not an isolated matter , but Is part of a settled policy on the part of the Canadians to win that posi tion in the west that we now hold. It Is part of a system that has been built up and developed by Sir Wilfrid Laurier , and which has the support of men in both of Canada's principal political parties. It evidence were wanted to prove this , all that need be done Is to point to the effort ! that Canada is making to push through transcontinental railroads and deep water cables. These two things control trade. TIIK IIISB IN l-niCES. Varloim Kxplnnationa ot the Cnnie Pninilile Political Effect. Philadelphia North American. The increase in the cost of JlvJng Is be ginning to attract general attention and Is eliciting various explanations. Tbo rlto in prices is general. Meat , salt , carpets , print cloths , hardware , coal and other stapled have gone up so much within the last few months that the movement cannot be Ig nored. According to ono class of thinkers , this rise Is caused entirely by the machinations of the trusts , nnd hence is wholly evil. Others hold that the trusts merely register the operations of the law of aupply and demand. Times are good , production can not keep pace with consumption and prices naturally go up , as they would If there were no eucli thing as a trade combination in existence. Doubtless there Is some truth in each of these theories. Times ore brisk , a strong demand tends to force up prices , and the trusts send them up even further. But may wo not bo feeling tbo effect of another influence , more general still ? Is not the enormous increase in the world's production of gold within the last few yean bringing us into such another period of rising prices as followed the discovery of America , and later the development ot the mlnca of California and Australia ? To eay that prices have gone up Is simply another way of saying that the value of money has gone down , And bow could It be expected that the value of money would fall to go down when tbo volume of gold added annually to the world's stock has doubled In six years ? If it turns out that the downward ten dency of prices , which was Mr. Bryan' * chief stock in trade in 1896 , has been not only checked but reversed by the production of gold , will not a campaign for the free coinage of sllVer ibo curdled on .under considerably greater disadvantages next year than before ? And if tbo rise bo attrib uted to the malevolence of the trued , will It not bo embarrassing to denounce those BAKING POWDER Makes the food more delicious and wholesome . , . ftQVAl KAKthQ OwtiH CO. HI * TOR * combinations for raisins prices And simul taneously advocate free silver its A ot pushing prices still higher ? A SAMPMJ tPMtioiiNlhlllt- Criminal CnrolcuMionn. , , Springfield ( Mass. ) Uepubllcan. | lj f A corporation with a "soul" Is being grad ually revealed by the coroner's Inquest Into the recent trolley car horror near Bridge port , Conn. Ono of the witnesses for the company who fmoro that he uni a paMtcnftcr en the car and that the car WAR going slowly hnn now contended that IIP WRS not on the rar nt all and that ho perjured hlmxclf In " > fc\ * ' his testimony. Another witness has appeared ' ' with the ftuo which ho claims teas 4aken by himself from the wrecked car after the accident. It Is a remarkable coincidence that the fuse presented to the coroner is all right nnd that the man who grubbed the original fuse from the car Is nn employe of the troiley company. The corporation , ot course , did not arrange for or anticipate such telling testimony In Its favor. It also appears that the company docs propose to settle nil damage claims at $100 for each dead person. As the company's lawyer points out , under the Connoctlcitt law no damages can be obtained unless the victim suffered pain In dying. Who can provo that the victims of that trolley wreck did not dl Instantaneously ? The offer ot $100 a head U , therefore , magnificent. There were twenty- nine killed , and thus the wreck would cent the company $2f)00. ) It could have another wreck right away and not ho financially em barrassed. CHAKK OP THE WITS. Chicago Tribune : "I reckon the moot useless nun In thin world , " said Uncla Allen Sparks , "Is the fellow who hits pl.iyrd Just enough lawn tennis to spoil him for a harvest hand. " Washington Star : "Imitation , " ald uncle Bhcii , "may bo do slncorlost flattery. But do gemrmm at do bunk has had folks put In Jail foh takln' tlah pens In hand an' tryln' tcr pay dut kin' o' compliments. " Philadelphia Times : Lots of exchanges nro continually advising people not to pick the fungus for the mushroom. Apparently they can't give too much room to what no doubt is a. timely suggestion. Chicago Post : "What brought you to this ? " aske-cl the Jail visitor. "A pollco patrol wugon , " answered the prisoner. Indianapolis Journal : "Ever notiro how a skeleton grins at .tlilngn In general ? " asked the boarder who Is cultivating his llrst mustache and some pessimism. "I have , " said the Cheerful Idiot , "though I don't see now he hag the face to do so. Chicago Record : "Alarie , didn't you feel terribly when your engagement was broken ? " "Yes ; nnd T had another dreadful blow the same day any new- frock came homo and didn't ) lit. " < Cleveland Plain Dealer : ' 'In ' handftMB them ibis-cults o' yourn , mum. my early tralnln * came In mighty handy. " "What do you mean by that ? " "Why , when I wtiz a , young fellow , mum , I used to work on .highway . sortln' cob blestones ! " Chicago News : "I am so ambitious , " said tha egotistical man. "that some day you may sec me bring the earth home. " "If you bring lo on your feet , " cautioned his meek wife , "don't forget that the door mat stands In the vestibule , and that the last time these halls wcro scrubbed I did it myself. " Washington Star : "Go to school , sonny , " said Uncle Bben , "an1 git educated 'bout geography. It'll help you to un'stan' < 3at dls worP would keep pwlne round , even if you dldn' happen to bo on han' lo push an' holler. " BREEZES IN TUB CORN. Falls City Journal. There's a melody that's sweeter than th' fairies ever sung , Or has ever found expression on a faltering human tongue ; 'Tis a eoft and swelling chorus , 'Us a n- tlo eweet 'refrain ' , ' ' ' " n VJ " Breathed Into the car of nature , from , tha Ihlll and from the plain. It 1s common In Nebraska where the spread. Ing acres lay , Bathed in radiant floods of sunshlna all the glorious summer day ; Sweeter than the echoing music of a. fairy's silver horn Is the soft , melodious rustle of the breezes In the corn. 'Tis the music of an anthem that is sacred to the -west , Where the 'broad ' prairies lying1 , by the hand of God caressed , 6ml le to greet the golden /sunbeams / as they kiss the waving grant As it botvs a kindly greeting to th breezea 0.8 they pass. As the regiments of plenty march across a happy land There Is naught of martial music , th ro'a no military band , But they march In perfect rhythm -without either drum or tiorn , For their music is the rustlingof the breezes in the corn. . Where the long- green rows are standing there's a flash of emerald preen , And the ever-nodcUnff tassels maks an animated scene ; And the early dewdrops sparkle , from the fields of ripening grain From old Richardson to Cherry , and from Dundy back to Wayne. And Nebraska farmers listen as there falls upon tha oar The sweetest kind of muslq that -we mor tals ever hear ; Tis a eong whoso equal never on a human ilp was born , Tis tha soft and gentle rustllns of the breezes in the corn. Some Bargains Ladies' Straw Hats 25c Misses' Straw Hats- Men's Crash Hats 15c Wen's Crash Caps Hot weather comfort cheap. ,