THE OMAHA DAUDY BEE : MONDAY , SEPTEMBER 18 , 1899. THE OMAHA DAILY DEE. K. UO3EWATKN , Editor. PUBL18HED EVERY MORNING. TEIIM3 OF SUBSCRIPTION. Bally Bee ( without Sunday ) , One Year.JO.OO ally Bee and Sunday , One Year , . 8.09 pally , Sunday and Illustrated , Ono Year 8.2S Sunday and Illustrated , One Year 2.25 Illuitrated Bee , One Year 2.00 Sunday Bee , One Year 2.00 Saturday Bee One Year l.W Weekly Bee , On * "Year 05 OFFICES. Omaha : The Bee Building. South Omaha : City Hall Building , Twenty-ntlh and N Streets. Council Bluffs : 10 Pearl Street. Chicago : 307 Oxford Building. New York : Temple Court. Washington : 601 Fourteenth Strtet , CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to nowa and edi torial matter should bo addressed : Omaha , Vte. Editorial Department. BUSINESS LETTEnS. Business letters and remittances should be addressed : The Bee Publishing Company , Omaha. REMITTANCES. Itomlt by draft , express or postal order Buyable to The lice Publishing Company , nlv 2-cent stamps accepted In payment of mall accounts. Personal checks , except on Omaha or Eantorn exchange , not accepted. THE BEE 1'UULIBUINO COMPANYi STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. fltato of Nebrmkh , Douglas County.ss.t cvSr ? ° u Tiochuck. secretary of The Bee Publishing company , being duly sworn , says that ti\e actual number of full and complete cooles of The Dally. Morning , Evening and Eundav Be < \ printed during the mouth of August , ISM. was as follows : 1 a 1,840 17 ai.nu. ! 8 24,7.10 18 24,805 t 24,870 IB 24,771 4 24,770 20 20,273 C 24 , ( > 4O 21 21,8151 . . . „ 20,300 22 2I , I1 T 21,733 23 24,520 S 24,850 , 24 24,4at > t 24,750 25 25.00U 10 25,100 23 24.K4H 11 24,0-10 27 25,8M tt 24,71(0 28 24Wa U 20R05 29 2I ,200 14 24,000 30 23.04U 1C 24,802 31 27,000 IS 2-1,717 Total .781,8:10 : 3 > S3 unsold and returned copies. . . . 1O,143 Net total sales .771,087 Net dally average 24.HU3 OEORQE B. TZSCHUCK , Subscribed and sworn before me this 2nd day of September , A. D. . 1809. M. B. HUNQATE. ( Seal. ) Notary Public. It will now be In order for the popo- crats to expose their sere spots. Aud there are plenty of them to expose. From present prospects Nebraska farmers will bo too busy this fall en larging corn bins to Join In the calamity chorus. The trust attorneys would like to have a trust conference every week. Defending the trusts Is a paying busi ness for certain members of the legal profession. Nebraska republicans meet In state convention tills week. With candidates named and issues Joined a brisk flght on the central battlefield should be begun Without delay. Bryan's friends are talking about In augurating a preliminary campaign for 1000. Wonder what they call the cam paign which Bryan Inaugurated Just nftor the returns caiuo in In 1890. A retrospective glance at some of the mayor's vetoes ovorrlden by the council rwlll show the members of that body where they could have saved themselves a part of their present financial embar rassment In his appeal to the courts for recog nition as the only lawful Insurance com mission , Auditor Cornell calls Governor Poynter a usurper. A reciprocation of compliments may bo expected when the governor flies his answer. Popocratlc organs moke Candidate Ilolcomb hall from Ouster county , al though he has not lived there In flvo years. This Is simply another sample trick by which the fusion candidate Is trying to mislead the people. Henry Watterson is declaring emphat ically that antl-oxpannlon Is anti-democ racy. Between variegated views on free Hllver , trusts ami-expansion the demo crat who would like to know wlwre he is at is having a hard time. Local democratic managers cannot fall to BOO the apathy that prevails in every word in regard to the tickets they pro pose to put In the field. Every uane man knows how slight is the chance of their electing a single man next No vember. There is every reason to believe that the parade of the civic societies planned for Ak-Sar-Ben week will be one of the attractive features of the celebration. Every member of every secret society and labor organisation should take a personal pride in making this parade a success. The Sixth Nebraska district will bo reclaimed to republicanism by the elec tion of a republican to congress next November If the voters know what is good for them. Congress is a repub lican body presided over by a repub lican speaker and the effective work will bo douo by republican members , The Sixth "district ought to huvo had a uuf- flcloncy of donothlng populist represent atives in the lower house of the national legislature. The capital city has suffered another heavy Joss by fire , the department seem ingly being utterly powerless to stop the progress of the flames. Just euch ex- pcrlences us this teach cities the im portance of maintaining a btroug force of fire fighters and the very latest and best apparatus , Without such protec tion the lasses of a single day way cost property owners far more tnan the cost of adequate protection for years. Members of the Douglas county bar are Bald to bo considering a motion to get together and select seven of the fittest candidates for the district bench. Under existing conditions such action would bo untimely , and wo do not bo- llevo any considerable number of law yers arc disposed to go on record In the matter. Should they do BO , however , the republican nominees would have little to fear from the effects of an expression of choice. WEALTH iy COIlff. The corn crop of the United States this year will probably bo the largest In the history of the country and also the most valuable. The New York correspondent of the Philadelphia Press says that some of the financiers nro counting with great confidence on the Influence of the corn crop in maintain ing and increasing business activity and industrial prosperity. This corre spondent says that "our bankers are now of the opinion that the great wealth- producing crop of the United States is hereafter to bo corn father than wheat or cotton , aud the enormous crop that is to bo harvested tlila month or next la expected to yield far more profitable returns than crops of other years have done , partly through its utilization through the advances chemical science has made for other than food purposes. "It has been mid hero within a few days , " says tills correspondent , "that the bye-producta from corn , produced from what was formerly regarded as refuse , may prove to bo as valuable as the bye-products from petroleum , and wo have heard that very extensive and promising experiments are being made looking to the utilization of corn for the manufacture of commodities for merly exclusively made from rubber. " This is a fact which cannot fall to attract the attention of the corn pro ducers of Nebraska and other statics. We cannot undertake to say what the possibilities nro for the utilization of corn In the direction Indkxuted , but we presume that the suggestion of the cor respondent quoted is not by any means a fanciful ouo and consequently wor thy of moro than a passing considera tion. It is of course purely a scientific question whether corn can be used In the way suggested and wo will not assume to express an opinion , but we may ven ture to assert that It Is not Impossible. At all events this Is true , that the corn crop of the United States tills year , If the estimates nro verified , will con tribute enormously to the national wealth and Justify the claim that this cereal , Instead of cotton , Is king. And In the contribution that will bo made from this source to the wealth and pros perity of the nation Nebraska will fur nish a liberal share. UMTAUltAKTED CRITICISM. Disappointed bccauao she * could got only a corporal's guard of the First Nebraska boys to march In her parade and boom the exposition Omaha played the baby act onxl called upon the governor to give her back her 15 cents. Accordingly our oblig ing governor returned out of surplus con tributions the $1,500 Omaha subscription to the Bolder travel fund and -which 11,600 was part of the name $36,000 paid over to the railroads the week before. Oma- hogst Hebron Republican. There Is nothing so foolish and un justifiable as the sectional Jealousy ot Omaha which crops out periodically In the rural press. AVhllo Omaha has al ways been In the forefront with liberal contributions to every public enterprise It rarely receives credit for what it does. In this Instance Omaha has done Its full share toward bringing home the First Nebraska and when the state levies the tax to foot the bill it will be compelled to defray at least one-eighth of the whole expense. It may not bo generally understood , but it is nevertheless a fact , that the $1,500 repaid by Governor Poynter was raised as a fund for the re ception and entertainment of Com pany L , the Omaha company. The money in the hands of the citizens' committee was turned over to the gov ernor without consulting the donors under the apprehension that unless such action were taken the project to bring the First Nebraska back from San Francisco would fall through. When it transpired that the governor had a surplus in his hands the com mittee that had assumed the responsi bility of diverting the fund raised for another purpose very properly presented the matter to the governor , who saw at once that the only fair thing to do was to restore the $1,500 to the enter tainment fund to which it belonged. The money was spent on the soldiers and neither pocketed nor redistributed to the donors , as It would have been had the governor retained it to bo re imbursed by the legislature. If this Is an evidence of hoggishness wo fall to see it AWAITING AMERICAN ACTION. A dispatch from Berlin In reference to the feeling In Germany regarding the Dreyfus case , says that "tho bulk of the people seem to await the action of Great Britain and the United States and will bo guided thereby. " If that correctly represents the attitude of Germany there will of course bo nothing done , so far as the government is concerned , and the probability Is that even those manufac turers who have Indicated their Inten tion to withdraw from the Paris exposi tion will reconsider and decide to put their wares on exhibition. It Is absolutely certain that neither the government of the United States nor that of Great Britain will withdraw from participation In the Paris exposi tion. There has been'developed In Eng land a very strong popular sentiment against taking any part In the great show of 1000 and a number of firms which had arranged to have exhibits there have announced their determina tion to withdraw. The sumo is true of German and other European exhibitors. But It Is very probable that this ebulli tion of indignation , meritorious as it unquestionably IB , will dlo out as the commercial considerations are moro carefully taken into account and that gradually this form of protest against an net of Injustice which the entire civilized world condemns will be aban doned. Certainly BO far as the United States Is concerned there appears to bo no doubt that all the space In the ex position allotted to this country will bo occupied and probably the Renncs ver dict will not materially affect the travel from this country to Paris next year. The fact Is , that In all countries prac tical considerations will ultimately pre vail. The possibility of gain from being represented In the exposition will over come the resentment which the Dreyfus verdict has created. It Is simply human nature. The French government per haps appreciates this fact , but none the less It may BCO the expediency of rec ognizing the adverse opinion of the world and glvo the victim of a malicious persecution his freedom. That would mean at once the pacification of Franco and her rehabilitation In the good opin ion of mankind. 27IE FUHIOX COUiVri' T.10KKT. The ticket nominated by the Douglas county triple combination has eomo ele ments of strength and many elements of weakness. While the candidates en dorsed for the support of fuslonlsts havp the advantage of not having been closely Identified with the Jncksoulon machine gang , they for the most part are unknown to the ma s of voters and have no special claim for public favor. The weakest spot In the make-up of the conglomerate county ticket is its want of cohesion which naturally springs from the bargain and sale method by which one convention forces upon another convention candidates which not only have nothing In common with Its rank and file , but are positively offensive to them. At no time in the political history of this county has fu sion been BO openly brought about by shameless bargaining and bulldozing. At no time In the history of fusion have the elements that make up the ticket been so clumsily welded together by downright use of boodle and promises of state house patronage. That a ticket nominated under such conditions wlll.bo repudiated at the polls is a forcgono conclusion. The announcement that the local elec tric lighting company will not bo able to supply the necessary current to 11- lumlnato the court house and city hall during Ak-Sar-Ben week should not bo allowed to do away with this most striking feature of the annual carnival. The city has appropriated money for this purpose. If the current cannot be secured from the public lighting plant there are other private plants In that vicinity which could furnish the neces sary light If proper arrangements should be mado. After the beautiful features produced on the city hall and court houseIn past years it would bo a pity to eliminate them from the Illumi nations this year. The Ak-Sar-Ben com- mltteo which has this branch of the work in charge should take up this problem without delay and work It out if It con possibly be solved even If the Illuminations at the exposition grounds should have to be shut down In part temporarily while parades are passing the streets. The Thirty-ninth infantry regiment Is rapidly recruiting at Fort Crook , over 800 men having enlisted. Quite a num ber of volunteers of returned Nebraska regiments have re-enlisted for the war for the pacification of the Philippine Islands and now have a place in Uncle Sam's regular army. .This is pretty good evidence that the hardships en countered were not intolerable and were at least no greater than might bo ex pected In the tropics. Tine Dreyfus verdict is now paraded as an insult to Germany likely to put the two nations as far apart again as ever. The German government , it Is recltenJ , gave absolute assurances that it had no communications through its foreign embassies with Dreyfus , but the French court-martial paid no more attention to that than to the prisoner's protestations of innocence. It was a Jury fixed In advance to convict and that is all there was to it Mayor Moores has found It necessary to make another appeal to the people for subscriptions to the fund for the relief of families of firemen killed at the Mer cer building fire. A cause so worthy must appeal to the sympathies of all. Property owners most Interested have contributed liberally , but the public In general has not yet done their full duty. It Is said the freight rate war between the Burlington and the Memphis roadsi Is uearing an end , the southern line having the best of it up to date. This tempest In a teapot lias made a good deal of noise in this region of late , yet It has cut no large figure In the great- volume of traffic from this territory. A printed volume containing a steno ? gniphlc rwport of its proceedings will constitute the monument left by the trust conference. Perhaps this will be as effective after all as presenting a series of memorials and resolutions to congress to bo pigeonholed In com mittee desks. I'opulnrlxliitr II III ) } cott. ' Chicago Tribune. Manx parents of marriageable daughters ore enthusiastic over the proposition to boy cott the French dressmakers. AttcudlitK Strictly to HiiNlnenN , St. Louis Republic , Dan Lament's private fortune Is estimated at 15,000,000 , This shows how some states men can accumulate dust by sawing wood. Life I * Too Short , Horace. Baltimore American , Ex-Governor Doles of Iowa Is trying to harmonize the democratic party , The ex- governor has gotten along too far in years to tackle such a proposition. Huiu < L _ < iiiilitlon i Chicago Record. The democratic party U taking more In terest In the alleged wrongs from which Agulnaldo suffers than in the outraged per petrated on the negroes ot the south. Effect of American 1'imli , Globe-Democrat , Santlogo'a exports hove doubled under American administration and they all corao to the United States , their natural market , Cuba's development would be a marvel with stable government assured. The Only Alternative. . Philadelphia Ledger. The Filipino government refuses to accept autonomy under American suzerainty and will flght to the last. President McKlnley's well known position la that the Philippine Islands belong to the United States , by rea son of their purchase from their former possessor , Spain , and whatever government they may have hereafter must be under I ho auspices ot the American government. The Issue , then , IB clearly defined. The only way to maintain our authority In the Phil ippine Is to whip the Filipinos. Aoknowledire the Corn. New York World. Nebraska's com crop thta year , now safe , will bo 300,000,000 bushels. Corn is now selling Ihero at SO cents , making the crop worth $90,000,000. It is pleasant to fee4 Uiat the "crime ot 1873" Is not blighting Nebraska to any calamitous extent. Downfall of Hn e Moll. Springfield Hepubllcan. Down goca base ball. President Johnson of the Western league , In reviewing the post Mason , writes : "Our patronage has fallen far short of the standard established In previous years. To the thoughtful mind it ia painfully evident the great national game has to a certain degree Icat Us hold upon the public. " The cause of the de cline may bo stated as rum , rowdyism aud rebellion. Ilximimlou of the Navy. Kansas City Star. The navigation bureau ot the Unltod States navy has Issued a lUt of 312 vessels in the navy. This Includes many small vessels captured In the waters of Cuba anil the Philippine * , but altogether U la the showing of a great navy , such as the United States never possessed before with luore ships to build. The American navy inherits high traditions. U is flushed with recent victories and Is now sufficient for any duty which may bo Imposed upon it. It should bo amply able to co-operate with the fine army wo arc forming In the Island of Luzon and make the war for the supremacy of the Unltod States in its own dominions a short one. WEALTH PUT TO COOD USB. Much Good Accomplished by n Mnii Worth Million * . Baltimore American. The owner of a largo fortune Is neces sarily exposed to much criticism. Ms bare possession places him on an eminence and the whole world asks : "What will ho do with it ? " If he gives liberally to charitable objects , the conclusion Is that he has Inter ested motives and wishes to make his name resound through the land ; If ho gives noth ing , names Implying all possible degrees ot meanness are showered upon htm , and , to crown all , many people who would repudi ate the least connection with socialism oven deny the millionaire's right to the wealth ho holds. There la some reason for many of these allegations. Largo aggregations of capital become especially dangerous to the common weal when they are entirely controlled by one man , when the man himself 1s often de prived of the 'best ' qualities of his heart and mind by the love of gain that has become rooted In him , and by the struggle that teaches him to sacrifice anything between him and hla goal. Such things , however , cannot bo said about the late Cornelius Vanderbllt and his millions. Ten talents were given him and he earned ten other talents. Ho supported many benevolent in stitutions , and never hesitated to supply ell their needs , not allowing a ilofloienuy to stand for a day. Few people have tny cor rect idea of the number of charities to which ho contributed , or of the amount of his wealth that found Us way Into the poc.k- ets of the needy , as one of the conditions of hla giving was secrecy. Besides this , he was personally active in many good works , and may bo said to have been the father of the Railroad Young Men's Christian as sociation. His fortune , too , was not accumulated by eharp practice , like ( hat o Jay Gould , nor ' through mlsorllDessJiko 'that of Russell Sage. It did not grow like the Astor mil lions , by the Increased' ' value of real es tate , nor was It made by speculation and combination , through which'Rockefeller has grown rich. The Vanderbllt fortune was made , and has continued to grow , In busi ness oa legitimate an that transacted over the counter of a country store , and in in vestments oe lawful as that of a former who plants oats , because ho thinks the price will be high. * Mr. Vanderbllt demonstrated that n great fortune may not be , a menace to society , but may afford a widely extending op portunity for helping humanity. The out cry against immoderate wealth would not bo heard if air millionaires discharged faith fully the duty their position owes to so ciety. SOUTH AMERICA'S I1UOABOO , CnnnelcRB AInrin AmnnK the Republic * of the South. Washington Star. It would be most unfortunate if a serious sentiment of distrust of the United States were to arise in South America In the light of all the reasons which exist for practical and hearty co-operation with this country on the part of our neighboring republics of the south. It Is A matter of current belief that a movement Is under way In that region to ward the establishment of at least an under standing among those republics In the nat ure of a defensive alliance. Certain hap penings have tended , It Is said , to encourage the belief that the United States Is seeking territory , and that the Integral sovereignty of these , our neighbors , Is threatened by the new spirit of Imperialism which Is as cribed In some uninformed quarters , both American nnd foreign , to the people of the United States. Ot course , this Is all very far from the truth. The United States early In Us ca reer proceeded with wise forethought to fill out Us area on the southeast by purchasing territory from Franco and Spain. This brought its boundary to the ocean. The acquisition ot Texas by a perfectly natural process of amalgamation was of n different character. But the process stopped there. Since the annexation of Texas by vote of Us own cltlzena and the pacific acquisitions which resulted from the Mexican war there has never been any desire on the part of the United Statea to penetrate further to ward the south on continental lines. The recent acquisition of Porto Rico la by no means an Index of a new disposition. That Island /ell Into American hands as a result of a war In which the state engaged re luctantly as a means of preserving the peace and establishing humane government In Cuba. In only one other place Is there a suggestion of the need of America sov ereignty or suzerainty. That Is nlong the line of whatever 'trans-Isthmian canal may be dug to unite the oceans. The Instances cited recently as causing the southern apprehensions are trivial , sep arately and In the aggregate , and , to one who understands the American character and the policies of this government , they are utterly Inconsequential. They are far more than counterbalanced by the action of the United States In the Venezuelan boundary dispute , which doubtless saved that country from partial If not complete absorption by England , The records teem with other Instances of such enforcements of the Monroe doctrine an should establish beyond the least doubt the Intention of the United States to preserve this hemis phere for the enjoyment of Its present owners. Should a defensive coalition such a ls outlined be formed by the southern republics It will eventually fall to pieces through the lack of a reason for Us existence. It might gradually , before disintegrating , reveal to the republics , however , Uiat their best In terests He along lines of a more hearty co operation with the United States in the de velopment of tlho western trade through the construction of the canal and the encourage ment of In vectors by making life and property in the republics more secure. An alliance for the mutual discouragement of revolutionists would be far more to the point than ft pact to prevent absorption by the big brot&er of the nonij. HITS OK KUS1ON POLITICS. Beaver City Tribune : There Is a growing suspicion that C. J. Smyth's hatred of the trusts Is always exhausted In the flllng-of- the-lnformatlon stage. Lyons Sun : Holcomb conspired with oth- era to defeat the will of the people and scat his law partner in an office to which he had not been elected. Is such a man flt for"tho supreme bench ? St. Paul Republican : Some of tha popu lists who are Just beginning to recover from the spell Into which they were thrown by " " Inquiring what "Coin" Harvey are anxiously would become of tholr donations to the "educational" campaign fund. Woyno Herald : When Si Holcomb gets through with Nebraska this year , with the thermometer turned upside down , he'll won der what bccatao of that 18,000 majority ho once had. No $20 per month will save his bacon 'his time. House rent Is too dear. Flllmoro Chronicle : The late fusion con ventions talked a lot about "government ownership of railroads" but fought shy of the isauo of etato control. Was It because of the fact that the three fake secretaries of the State Board of Transportation wcro taking leading parts in the three conven tions ? Wisnor Free Press. Why was the suit begun against Joe Bartley's first terra bondsmen never pushed to trial ? Because n Judgment against these bondsmen for the $365,000 sued for would have been a conviction of Governor Silas A. Holcomb ot groEs , If not criminal , negligence ot his official duties. Tekamah Herald : Before the pops got into ofllce In this state their principal wall was n reduction In freight ratca. Do you hear anything about It now ? The rates nro Just as high now as they were before the pops went into the state houso. Their howl for a reduction in rates was only their method of farming the farmer. Schuylor Sun : Auditor Cornell is cither ono of the biggest rascals or greatest fools that over filled a position In the state houso. Scarcely a week passes but that ho hunts trouble for himself and others by re fusing to audit some Just claim , setting up his own eelf-profeesed knowledge against that of much abler men than he. York Times : A populist exchange says Edmlsten is taking hold of campaign work with his "old time energy. " Thla means that the Lodgcpolo ballot boxes are to bo stolen again and all others where there are republican majorities If the feat can bo ac complished. Edmlsten Is Just the right man to run fa. campaign for Slippery SI. Fremont Herald ( dcm. ) : Commissioner Hlbbard has been Informed by Auditor Cor nell that the latter refused to Issue a war rant for the payment of the salary of Mr. Hlbbard or the expenses of the office of pure food commissioner. That man Cornell seems the better suited the more ho can make himself universally In contempt. Bradshaw Republican : Attorney General Smyth never seemed to find out that cer tain trusts existed In our beloved common wealth and were subject to prosecution un til Just on the eve of another campaign. How Is the Intelligent citizen to view this conduct of the attorney general ? Can It bo possible that ho Is really serious ? Time will tell. Alliance Times : One Edgar Howard offered a resolution in the Omaha demopoplc con vention "pledging that the nominees of this convention forswear the republican practice ( sic ) of accepting railroad passes , " and then wont home and supported Holcomb for ou- premo Judge , who hasn't paid railroad fare for years and deadheaded his house rent whllo governor. Holdrego Citizen : Holcomb is on the etump hunting for votes for supreme Judge. It mlght'bo well for him. to explain his 'connection with that famous recount com- inlmlon and the scheme to count In enough fraudulent ballots to seat his old partner on the supreme bench. In view of his career Is it any wonder that even Bucfh a staunch doniocrtut as Edgar Howard , editor of the Paplllloa Times , should in a fit ot indigna tion call him "Slippery SI. " Hebron Republican : Silas Holcomb promises to be good If elected to the BU- preme bench. Ho has openly acknowlcdgea that ho carried ; a book full of railroad passe * when he was governor and that he mode many calls upon the railroads for free rides for his friends and supporters and thda not withstanding that his party had declared that a pass was a bribe. Would Holcomb on the supreme bench be any better than Hol comb in the executive tihalr ? Geneva Signal : Mr. Stubbs , whom the pops have nominated for Judge In thle district to succeed Hastings , Is doubtless all right on the silver question , tut it is generally admitted that he Is pretty weak on law. .ludgo Ha tlnga knew the law all rlg"ht " , but he refused 4o became a Bryan worshiper and they gave It to ihlm In the nock , Mr. Hastings has HtUe In common with the popi of this district If he only knew U and ho ought to have quit training with them. Kearney Hub : Auditor Cornell is at It again. Ho has found another law that Is unconstitutional. This time it Is the pure food act and to save the trouble of hav ing It passed upon by the court he has taken It upon hlmacJf to set It aside and re fuse to pay the warrant for the salary of the commissioner appointed under the act. The auditor has Bet out to give Governor Poynter's administration aa much trouble as possible and Is succeeding admirably. oiuuiuu 1-iunoi : it is sau 10 contemplate that the populists have fallen BO low that they have only Edmlsten for chairman of tholr state central committee. In casting about for available material for the place tbo fact that Frank Hilton has turned re former appears to have been overlooked. That party should reinembur that Edmlsten 1 not the only enterprising ex-oil Inspector In their ranks. To bo cure Hilton only knocked down $400 of the state's money , but then he was a republican. Now that ho has flopped ho Is In shape to Increase the amount when an opportunity is pre sented. Papllllon Herald : The Nebraska fusion campaign Is being conducted on national Insues only. They dare not stand on their state record. They admit that Holcomb has been corrupt , but thny any that lie has promised to do better. The history of criminals shows that there never was ono convicted but what would promise to do hotter If sentence wore suspended. Few have reformed , the many having returned to their life of crime. It will be time for Holcomb to nsk tbo people to believe ho has reformed when he can point to on act of penitence. North Platte Telegraph : It will be mighty up-hill business for our populist orators to go Iwforfc the farmers this fall and repeat their story of the hard times and how the poor farmer may be expected to bo crushed down lower and lower until he becomes a mere serf of the money power. The farmers today are the kings of the country. The re publican party Is not entitled to the enor mous crops , but it is entitled to the credit of protecting the manufacturers and work men of the country by legislation that has set the wheels of industry In motion all over the land and furnished a market and good prices for the farm product. Fremont Tribune ; We Insist that the proper thing for Chairman Kdmlatcn to do Ute to appoint a smelling committee consisting of W. O. Oldham , Edgard Howard and Harry Phelps to examine Silas A. Holcomb'a passholder and ascertain if any railway bribes are etlll there. If this cannot bo done let the otllcta of the general passenger agents of the state be carefully examined for evidences of returned pasteboards bearIng - Ing Holcorab'a familiar signature. The fu- stonlsts who forced their candidate to swear be would touch not , taste not , handle not , are entitled to know it be ! acting in good faith. It is difficult for the leopard to suddenly change hla epoti. * TIII3 Sfl'UKMU JLIH1KS1IU1. Hastings Tribune : If the republicans of Nebraska put Judge Sedgwlck up to make the race for the supreme bench ho will prove a man whom every true ropubllcAU In the flint * will vote and work for. Such Is the man the republicans should nominate if they would jvln. Mtnden Gazette : Our neighbor , Calkins , of Kearney , is developing now strength ovnry day as n repubHcon candidate for supreme premo Judge. Ho Is an nblo lawyer and has n host of friends who will push his candi dacy with all the vim at their cocnmahd. It the nomination should ooino this far west , Calkins will got it. Oreeloy Leader : Lorenzo Crounso saved Nebraska to republicanism In 1S92 and gave nn Administration that wns n credit to the state. Moreover ho did not give a voucher for $50 house rent and put $20 ot It in his pocket , when the commonwealth presumed ho was paying the woman $50 Instead ot $30 for n gubernatorial residence. Hastings Record : Lorenzo Crouneo would maka a good strong republican candidate for Judge of the supreme court. Ho would poll a good strong vote In Douglas county. His nomination wottM silence the guns of the World-Herald nnd the democratic friends ot the late Dr. Johuston would re member that Governor Crounso kept Dr. Johnston at the head of the Hastings csyluui , although Johuston was n democrat. Wayne Republican : Among the many worthy names spoken of In this connection , wo believe there Is ono that fully meets the wants and desires of the masses of the party ; that man is Hon. S. II. Scdgwlck of York , Nob. , district court Judge of the Fifth Judicial district , for years the leader of the bar In his section of the etato nud the only republican ever elected Judge In his district since the opposition party sprung up. It you are unacquainted with tbo man and his record look it up. If you do , wo feel assured , that should you bo a delegate to the next republican state convention and wish above all the party's BUCCCSS , j-our vote win bo recorded for Hon. S. H , Scdgwlck for supreme court Judge. York Republican : The candidacy of Judge S. II. Scdgwlck for the position of supreme Judge is announced. Mr. Sedgwlck has made friends for himself since ho has been on the district bench for the simple reason that ho wns not a politician on the bench and ho was a Judgo. If ability arid fltnwra weigh with tbo people ho would bo a strong candidate and would show the Ous ter county Shylock a merry tlmo before the campaign IB over. The people of the dis trict have done a very nlco thing by Mr. Sedgwlck In electing him against the natural odds that exist and many feel that ho Is needed in the contest In the district. How ever , If it is found that he Is the strongest man to make the race In the state , they will lay aside their desires in the district matter and all shove in the state contest. Stanton Picket : There is no lock of avail able timber in the republican ranks from which to select a candidate for supreme Judgo. There are these who coanWno charac ter and knowledge ot the law , together with these charactorlBtics which are necessary to the making of a really creditable supreme Judge , yet of all the number mentioned or though * of Judlge M. B. Reese Is , to our mlna , the most available man for the place. The fact that ho 'has ' previously held the position , and with credit to himself , the party ano the state , is greatly in hla favor. The further fact that he waa defeated for the re- nomination by railroad influence ia also In tots favor. The only question is , Can he be prevailed upon to accept tJno nomination ? Possibly ho might if the nomination were tendered htm unanimously. Moro probably he would no * . Judge Reese Is a good' ' lawyer and when oft the bench enjoys a larger In come then the oalary of Judge amounts to. If ho can bo prevailed upon to accept the nomination It should , in the Interest of re publican euocees and justice In Judicial mat ters , be given him. Hastings Record : The Record has ono good reason for favoring the nomination and election of E. C. Calkins for Judge of the supreme court. It known of no good reason why ho Should not be nominated. The one good reason Is that Mr. Calkins Is not and never has been a political lawyer. He hat been content to study and practice law. He la not under political obligation to any party. He has not asked for the nomination. On the contrary ho hns only agreed to accept the nomination at tha urgent request of friends from over the state. Ho has been an active practicing attorney for nearly thirty years. During orrery year of that tlmo he boa also been a law student. There Is no accumulation of duoi upon his law books. Ho takes thorn down and reads thorn. Hav ing no political debts to ipny and never hav ing been a railroad lawyer ho stands iwnong the exceptional cases of non-political lawyers In Nebraska. The supreme court of this state r.hould bo composed of non-political and non- ofllcoseeklng attorn < ? yH. Such an attorney Is E. C. Calkins of Kearney. As an attorney ho Is the peer of any lawyer In the state. Where best known , he Is best appreciated. He IB a wcntemor and the wcat needs a west ern man upon the supreme bench. HCIIOK.S OP TUB WAU , Enlistments In the volunteer infantry range from 400 to 500 accepted men n day. Recruits are required to pasa a moro rigid physical examination than did the volunteers for the Spanluh war , so that the new Philip pine army will bo composed of m n In the prime of life and In the beat physical condi tion. The regular army IB recruited up to UM > limit of 05,000 , The volunteer army of 35,000 men will bo recruited in full by Oc tober 1 , with the exception of the two colored regiments recently authorized. With these recruited the tc < tal strength of the army will bo 100,000 , the limit placed by con gress. Out of this number 06,000 men are booked for eervlco In the Philippines. It la the prefient intention to send every volunteer command la the Islanda , as rapidly as trano- porta will permit. Most , If not all , of the flr t thirteen regiments called for will rcacn Manila during November , and the remaining roglm nts by the clcne of the year. The tallest man in the bunch of Colorado volunteers , Just home from the seat of war , is Color Sergeant Richard G. Holmre. Ho stands lx feet six Inches In height and weighs 216 pounds. Ju t before the Spanish- American war broke out ho was a student nt Lafayette university , from which he grad- uated. Whllo in college he was for two years captain of the foot ball team. Then lie removed to Denver and was one of tbo first men in Colorado to volunteer for serv ice. At tbo storming of Malato ho was with the leaders when they reached the heights , and , after one man had been shot down while attempting to raise the flag and bad fallen with Us bloody folds draped around him , Holmen rushed forward and , In the face of a storm of bullets , pulled U to the top ofthe staff. He Is said to be the uioet popular man In the regiment. Your Uncle Samuel -bcllevoa with military exports that "an army marches on Its stomacV and has provided at Manila an abundance of the wlierewitli to keep the In terior department In good condition , Manila Kroodom givc the following account of the uuppllcs In eight : "The three warehouccs In which thla stu pendous Htock ia crowded cover an area of 4,000 square feet and the average height of the different plU * is thirty feU Here are re- ooivod and distributed monthly rations for 40,000 men , which moans 1,200,000 rations a month , more tlhan the whole army of the United Ruvteo uued before the war. The valuation of the ratlcmw for one month , on a gold basin. Is $210,000. The ealen depart ment Buppllre $200,000 worth of goods also , making a total of almost half a million dollars lars worth of goods contained in the monthly distribution. The weight of the ration mippljr for on month U 8,400,000pound * , or 1,700 tons. A tihreo months' supply , amounting to S,100 teen and vnlilM at $630,000 , Is always kept on hand , exclusive- the enlos devort- mcnt , which baa In stocV 6,600 ton , valuer at $1,000,000. There nro three warohouwco , ono of which covers a t vice at 22,000 square fee * . H Is In chnrRO Of a commissary ser geant , two overseers nnd twenty natlws. The eecondnarehouso han a spaoo of 19,99s aquaro feet , whllo warehouse No. & la dovotcd exclusively to sales articles. Hero is founa ovary-thing , from army boftna to Runslon cavlnr nnd champagne. Five hundred native * nro dally tcnployed nu coolies In and about the warehouses "Tho following Is a list of the dlffwvnt articles nnd the amounts Issued monthly to the Eighth army corps : Frc h boot , 840,000 pounds ; bnoon , 240,000 pounds' ; eat man , 120- 000 pounds ; flour , 1,215,000 pounds ; hard bread , 1,120,000 pounds ; beans , 180,000 pounds ; rlco , 100,000 pounds ; dried fruit , in cluding npplcn , ponclicfl wul pninw , 150,000 pounds ; potatoes , 900,000 pounds ; onions , 1SO.OOO pounds ; tomatoes ( canned ) , 120,000 IKwnds ; ooffco , 120,000 iK > und ; sugnr , 180,000 pounds ; Kilt , 48,000 pounds ; soap , 48,009 pounds ; in > ppr , 3,000 pounds ; vinegar , 12,000 gallons ; baking powder , 48,000 pounda , candles , 18,000 pounds. " Mnrct "StvnililtiK Aronnd. " New York Sun. The Hon. Dent Marot , populist , ia ? | r chairman of the Nebraska democrat1 ; , tate committee. "I will nvako as redbot nn antl- oxpanslon campaign , AS I know how , " ho tolls the Kansas City Journal , Yet person ally ho U "an expansionist , nnd n rank ono at that. " A very accommodating sort of pcjiullat is IJent Maret. Ho Is an oxpnn- slonln managing an antl-oxpanslon canvass , and ho is a plutocrat managing an nntl-plu- tocrat canvass. Ho ecems not wholly caUt- fled with his matchleas leader , -"llrynn IIM got to swashing around on the war quen- tlon , " says Bent , "and we are lUblo to suitor the loss of many votes as a result. * * But swashing around Is one ot ( ho colonel' * favorite amusements. THOUGHTS THAT TICKI/H. Detroit Journal : "I thought nho wo * flame of yours , old man. " "She was until she put herself out to cut mo Indlnnanolta Journal : "People eay he is i ooiirtlnR you only on account of your money , dear. " "Tliev never make such remarks about vou. dear. " Chicago Record : "Dreadful thing ha.p- oonetl In my stable this morning. " "What was it ? " "AIv automobile got at the gasoline tank nnd foundered Itself. " Brooklyn Life : Coldwatcr My friends , I vote as 1 pray. Bibber ( on the front sent ) Deacon , con- fcsshun'e Rood fr the noull Toll ua , now wuthor vou vote early'n offon , or wuther you pray only once cr year. OhlcaKO Tribune : "I don't see why you nhould raise the price of milk. It la high enousrh already. " "Don't you know , ma'nm , that the prlc of beef has been raised about 20 per cent ? The milk lias got to go up along with the rest of the cow. " Detroit Free Press : Bonedlko Well , colonel , how do you like yachting ? Colonel Culpepper Fine , Ban. It'e watn.h , watah all around and not a drop to drink , Bah. thank Gawd. Chicago Post : "I understand there nr name firms that always give a young em ploye a raise of salary when ho marries , " nhe said. "It Is a strange fact , " replied the cynloa ] bachelor "thai there arc men BO constituted that they enjoy encouraging other men. to Kot Inco trouble. " Indianapolis Journal : "Barker humbly savs he is but an Instrument in the hands of destlnv. " , , "I know ho talks that way , but all th sumo ho thinks destiny has Us hands full when It Is us4nff him. " Ban Francisco Examinwt" M c Both George and Harry are. very attentive to Beas. I wonder which of the two eha will nceopt ? " Ethel If I knew which would propoM first I could teJl you. " Nothing Jiorr Under the Tent. Minneapolis Messenger. Lwandered to the circus , John ; I sat be neath the tent and saw the man from Borneo , likewise the tattooed gent. I heard , the toothless lions howl , while men in soancled clothes stepped fearlessly into their dens and whacked them on the noee. I saw the sacred elephant spout water throuch his trunk , the salamander eating lead and other molted junk ; I heard ths merrv clown got oft the jokes we used to know -when we were boys together , John , some twenty years ago. The same old hnrs&q waddled 'round the , same old kind of ring ; the name old comic vocalist * nrovcd that they couldn't sins ; ; the satna old hippopotamus wus grunting1 with dis trust : the same old Persian ox was klclc- InK no the dust ; the some old rhcumatlo acrobat crawled painfully around , and the ossified contortionist was crawling on th ground , and ladles rodn barebacked steeds to music Bad and Blow the same old girls wo used to see some twenty years ago. KISWAIII ) . In the hollow huaks of our greatest lossea Am eecdn that will grow and blossom with Rain ; In the blackest cloud that the storm-wind tosses Is a silver gift of refreshing rain. fIn ( In the sharpest thorn that our anguUb nresscs In a healing balm for the -wound It makes : In the bitterest cup that Fate possesses Is a sprlnUlo of sweet for the heart that breaks. We Believe That we that we have the best clothing for fall and winter wear ever offered in this city , price , materials , style and all that considered , It has all been made for this season's wear under our personal supervision , and made as well as it can be made. We offer it in the confidence that it will deus us credit and we guarantee every garment. It isn't too early for an overcoat , and in fact a few cool evenings indicate that the season for heavier gar ments is due. We have some very attractive gar ments to show the man who will take time to look at them.