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4 THE ANACONDA STANDAIW: TUESDAY MOTIVING, JUNE '_'!^, 1897. tuikurAfcini cTANnAvn ^unu^',,n,,,r ,m*' n*^w^^*^^ ** u uw^ ^^^ lBCAWAvUllDA 31 AnUARU i ,^^. ,i, k^. ax th.- Detroit pap,-- 1^^^ I I^* the ll. lift should iv * headed a*^tttXMM) FVBIJalllNO CPMrANT. , ,mnMm1 |tw|( , Publisher*tnd TVoprletore., ,lf ,,^,,,^ w h^ arv eaglets*) , , PrintedEvan Day In the Tear. | |Hirt It. For this pssyaoM It la I MM Btsr*d at the. i^stsehee at Anaconda at essary to give u|^ the separate ,^^^ ace.-ona-oJ.issmsil nuxtcr. SubscriptionTltte* Payable In Adv-ince Pottagefres for the United Sute*. Can.^ad* and Mexico. Klsesher*^postage added Pallyand Sunday, ona year nllv and Sunday six months^Dally and Sunday, three months^Dally and Sunday, one nnon'h... eneyaar .tinon^. 5^l .It.00^. 1.00 .:.oo MainOfflre^Standard^conda. Telephone No. 1. Building.Ana- MMwhich ran he ki pi Intact ami^vigorous in support of , ticket tuh m,^word in the name Juat aa well a* it the^heading were aa long as the moral la*^Sensible iHilltli tans ahouhl Is- prepared^lo make se ntmirtital sacrltlees ul ,-idcr^to secure success. ' The least Ha^ nitre^that might Ih' expected of th^- allied^silver parti.* ..I Michigan should he a^tordial union with. MM ticket. Ml MM^name for election purposes. ^^^^a^ a- ^ TheMight Sort of Charily. Tha Standard has branch offh-e-s^Butte Missoula and Great Kails, a here^^ dvertlMiif rales Kill be furnished on ap^^plication. Q(AM I'liANi'lStii has Just hum^^'' fo) '^ ^ 'taCCMMM close a s^t^p. INt aiding the unemployed wl Allgeneral business, inters ^nd eorre-^srondenee should be nddrossed lo TtlF. STANDARDPlULlSHINii COMPANY, j mlttrc decided that th. best nay to aid until jalcmhlch ; ioinnioeids itself aa worthy of general,^adopitun. in all 1.1 t. i was auh- ,^tulls-d to ||m relief fund, and th. mm Anaconda,Mont. TO All* KIlTlst Us. TheAnseonds Standard guarantees Its^advertisers a bona fide paid circulation.^Dally and Sunday, three times greater^than that of any other newspaper pub^^lished In the slate of Montana Advertis^^ing contract* Kill be made subject to this^guarantee. 10.00HinAHb. Willhe paid for the arrest and conviction^of any person caught stealing tha Stand^^ard from subscribers. ri.rtASr:report it. th.-unemployed without mmMm ^i^their sell'-n spe e t was p, K|\,. (^,.^,^work and pay them wages. At the sum.' It n- const.ii r, ,| desirable that tin-work ajMMM he to til. In In III of th'1 j^Kcneral public and of isriniinont be no^tit, and mi It was cleft l mined to use the j^labor of the nun In cnnslrin ting ^ 1^luiil-yard. The Kan Ki am is,., lb MM i^sayj Hint ^the work was done accord- 1^lug to programme, nut a cent being ell- i vctli|4(ruin the fund for administrate Alltrala aewa agents la Manlaaa aro^M#pl1s^ with tumcl.nl copies of ^Tha^Ascvasds Htaadsrd^ to meet Ihe de.^a^a^d. M yaa caunoi get a ^^Standard^^aa'yaw train, kladly teport Ihe fact,^ssaaXsg ^aaaher nt train and railroad, to^CaVataalMK ltepartsneat, ^Thr Anaconda^Aaaeoada. Mont. TVKSDAY.J INK :'!^. 1KS7 I'resldenlAndrews. expense*.C^^r even slatloni ry net i saat ily^uaed mid tin- postage slamiix ^nim do-^ii.it' 'I i.vciy dollar ^tnl for actual^work on the boulevard. With the result^that the city now has a new drive way, MCI ill scenic beauty ami In eon- j sino Hon to none In the world M an^while lintiij 1111111111 ils of deaviviiiK MM i^with families dependent upon them wero j^tided over the dull days of the late^winter ami the spring, a large propor^^tion In lug aitually rescin d fiom star^^vation. In the performance of the^duty lo the huIini ribers and in justice^to the worthy poor, the committee was^very particular us lo who got lis work^tickets. It w as ili tei iiiiiii d thai those^who most needed them should have^them. To that end it enlisted the serv^^ices of the Associated t'harllles, lie^Salvation army and the police, and ev^^ery applicant was carefully Investi^^gated. Therlan I''ram WM experiment was a^remarkable suet ess from every stund-^|xilnt. The money was Judiciously Ml*^pendoil. the city has MMftMMJJ to show^for It. in fact full value seems lo have^btx-n received. This Is the right kind^of charity. l' ToTry It Again. II'.I'TKN ANT I'KAKV will sail^next week again for Ihe North^I'ole. This lime, he says, hi' has^made Ihe most complete preparation:^^and has provided imainsl all possible^contingencies. lie doesn't Intend to^reach Ins destination this year While WHHcKII Is Inclined to believe^that Dr. Andrews shoultl be^discharged front the presi^^dency of Brown university ^'or advo^^cating doctrine liable to inlure tko^^landing of the university and mislead^public opinion,^ the Philadelphia I'reaa^healtatfs to recommend such a course^for fear the discharge would have a^bod look. It aays: ^Hut there should^not be even the appearance that his^resignation Is askitl to conciliate any^rich man. no matter what Ills views,^may be. In order to secure gifts of mon^^ey for the university. The suspicion^even that such action was taken would^orewte the Impression that freedom of^thought and utterance is not tolerated^at Hrovvn university and thut the ad^^vocacy of certain ideas there can lie ob^^tained by addition* to the endow tin nt^fund. This would harm the Inlluem^^^ M^Brown university more and do greater^Injury to the cause of higher ^ din atioti^than any Indiscretions or advocacy of^erroneous opinions on the purl of Presi^^dent Andrew s can accomplish ' ThatIs Just where the shoe pinches.^President Andrews has been open in^his advocacy of bimetallism for years,^yet there was no organized effort to re^^move him until this spring, when It^was hoped that Mr John I). Rockefeller,^the Standard oil magnate, would give^the university a handsome sum nt the^commenoemt nt exercises when his son graduated.The event passed without i It Ihe Until operations w^any such contribution. It is broadly^hinted that Rockefeller is still willing^^to como down with th* Muff^ If An^^drews is removed, ruder I hose circum^^stances the removal cannot la- effect^^ed without creating ^the impression^that freedom of thought uml utterann^Is not tolerated at Hrow n university. Thegoldbur; press always Hies Into a^passion whenever It is Intimated Unit^a professor In a Western Institution of^learning has been called down for^teaching Ihe gold standard, liut from^the blmetallists' standpoint such a pro^^fessor ^is advocating pernicious doc trineliable to injure Ihe standing of the universityand mislead p^MM opinion Hothat the removal ul such a professor hasthe uuthoiity of the Philadelphia Preas. Logically, blmetallists might go fartherunder this formula and deiniind thedischarge of all the piofvssors in Easternas well as Western colleges whoteach the gold stand.ml It's u poorrule thai docsnt a*Oft bMh ways^If President Ainln^^' advocniy of bimetallismhas injured ihi standing I ofHrown university, tin Philadelphia Pressshould explain the admission in anotherpart of its editorial that 'din^^ing the past ten years it i Hrown uni^^versity! has grown more rapidly in numberof atudents than any otbjt i New [ Englandcollege, but its endowment has I notIncreased at all.^ If this Is true, Brownuniversity Is doinf i-ph ndidly | inthe Arctic during; ihi summer^months he will secure nnul. dogs, skills^and furs for the parly thai will strike^mil for Ihe Pole nexl year In Ma nil.^lMbi. lie ixpeets to reach the head of^navigation, when he will i stablish a^base of supplies Prom this point the^rial siari into the unknown land will^be made. It- March of Ihe follow In;;^year It Is though! thai the adventurers^will have MM bed a poini about ::f;(i^MUM from the Pole. At this place an- 1^other base will be established and (MM^lie conduct^^ed. Thereafter IN tamp will be moved^forward ftom time to time, as condi^^tions ptrniit, until a point Is rMscMal^from whli h a dasli may be made for the^Pole. Pearv s olan Is similar lo that^proposed by Hubert Stein In UN, but^which could not be tested, owing lo^kjwk ^f funds liislcad. however, of^making MM tl lilt I advance within a tlxcd^time. Mr. Stein proposed to establish In^the Arctic a number of stations, or^l-.i-.s. (MM which the forward move^mint could be made as health and food^i warranted. Il was Intended IhM ill^Hllltiolis should lie schools, where cdu^cation In Arctic life could be hi:d. As^i In men became more and more hard-^I encd and better able lo Ml for tin ni^^si lv.-. liny would advance, tboimli^ncv'i lo a distance thai would MM al^^low t parutlvcly eusy relurn lo the chiefMUtM WhilePeary Is pursuing thf elusive^Pole In this fashion Major Amine will^make bis ptolei te.l balloon night ac ross^the polar seu. inking observations ami^photographs of the icy wastes or open^waters below bint ir he gets buck lo^civ Dilution, of which he MnOcMMM to^have no doiibi Ins story is likely lo be^even more wonderful than that of Dr.^Nanscn and his Kram The relurn of^the Jai kson-llarncswoiili expedition is^also i xpei ted this summer Ii has Ihi n^for three years tiymg to n^ li tin nob^^by way of Kranx Josef Land Dr. Nan withoutthe aid of the millionaires.^Judged by practical results the standing^of Brown university, so fat from being^Injured, would seem to have in mi im^^proved by President Audi v.-i at y^of economic beliefs in oppoctl ion in those^held by the moneyed classes This vv-^admit, may ixisslbly be an argument^of the post hoi pi opt. r hue v a: fit-^out the Philadelphia Press certainly^has not proved that President Andrews'^belief In bimetallism has Injured^Brow n's standing In tie ^'ohd-st nil's story of his meeting with Jackson^leav -a little hope thai the latter hassin -^ceeeded in the main object of his expe-^dltloll although gg v. Ill he able to add^no little to MMMJfff know ledge of th^^Aiclic regions. a ^as a profitable one for this^wxattttv li has lxi-ii argued that thr^^*^^^^^low ,-f \Uaka has nearly In-^ve^.^sl ua tn Mf with Ureal Britain. 1^Rut II has also MkVaaMaVMd our love of^vvuauv and national pride The i oua-,^|rv tvcixKts a suigesllon of war ix caslun.^le .I. vrh.p Its latent itatriotisin.^^^ ^ Till:PhiUdelphta Timet tails at- j^trillion to Ihe almost complete^annihilation of cln ular and^laattii advertising. People do not look^at tin- glaring things on the walls and^board tenet, will not accept the print^^ed ^dodgers' thrust at them on the^street, and aa a rule refuse to look if.^the printed or even engiav^i| ilnulai-^sent through the mails. The only an^nnunccniints that seem p. hold then^own and retain popultr Uvm MMjtkV^that ayMMMtf In the magaain.ii ami^new spapci*. esp. i tally of the higlin^grade, that enter households, liven in^this Ihe old slap-dash^ Idea has b en^abandoned and advertisements an ^^thorough and made so eiib rtaiiiiin;^that they are read almoMl as t xten-ivi l^^as the news columns. Q ^^! MontanaComment. Thoseof a sportive turn of mind t^should commit lo mommy tin tact^that you have nearly lifty days in^which to drop your glgaoleons at either^tin- Anaconda uf Butte races Missou^^la Democrat. ... A majority of tin American |pie willendorse President McKlnMy'l |^isl-^llon M regards Hawaii. II should In^annexed to the ITnUed Htatea before^some Other power takes Ihe Islatnb. un-^der Its protecting wing. Fergus t'oun- |^ly Argus. ^ . Therewi ft MVtVgyl Ml ^^il^ nt linnets^nail befoie Hi^' Montana Puss ajgot ta- tloiiat its mmIIm in Helena this week, ONof Km lu st was ^The fJaVhvg.^ by | Johnit Read, MaHat of the latet Moult^lain. It Is full of huiuoioiis lllngs at^various iinuiiliient tin in'iers of lite as^^sociation, bui Is written with such evi^^dent good nature thai tffcMM can be^^taken- Dillon Trlbtim. * . S.naioi Carter has again disgraced .^himself, this lime by voting for an In-^^ r.-asc In Ihe duty on sugar. Ills col- !^Ii ague. Senator Mantle, however, voted '^In the negative. Should the duly as It^now sianiin be ^ ^ i ii II r i in 11 into law it^would permit the sugar trust to make^on their present holdings u clear proltt^of IIL'.fltlfl.lMHl. What manner of man ,^niiist t'nrter he to thus stultify himself^|R voting for so corrupt and preposter^^ous a mensure'.' Lewtslnvvn Detnot rat. ! ^ Thetalk of reuiovlng Professor An-^di^-ws from the faculty of the Hrown^university is bringing his friends out, |^hut It Is not probahle any such change^grill ocelli. It Is unpollile al this lime,^and It would give Hrown university a^set hack from which il would not re- I^cover, should such a change MSCtir. 1^Professor Andrews lias been highly^honored In the president of the United^Stabs and Hrown university shares in^his honor If liny should dismiss him^from the faculty It would nun all s., k-^ers of trg-tk In the inonetui v line away^from them and give the great Institu^^tion tt black eye. Professor Andrews^does not anticipate such a change.^ i^The Mlssoullan. iao TheHuston t'onuiu-rcia 1 HulMln ill^its endeavor to stand li^ tin Mgieftl^wool spec ulatots ami mamifai turers .^niakis some unwarranted statement:! I^While It is a fai l Hint MM ,in vims^have Meg fashionable of lab- the infer- |^line that the Wool of which these goods^are made Is Itunni ted w ill not stand^Much of the Ohio, Michigan and sonn^of our Western wools are used in the^muiiulai tine of cheviots. The state^^ment ton thill ^we raise no carpel wools^In the I'nlted Slates^ cannot bo con-^Hi mod by the thousands of readers of^the wool sales In Itosinti. I'hil:ub-I|iliia^uml other markets In which large^quantities, of our wools arc sold as car^^pi t wool. There Is no gainsay lug Ihe^fuel that a large amount of the enrpe,^wools used In tin- LTMted States come^from al t ond. but this Is led because^t li. same i annot be crown in Ibis coun^^try. Km ky Mountain Husbandman.^^i ^ i CurrentHumor. At ill, ago r.v i ling taper .-c Ife 11 cl lis new editorky egMMMM**' tasaainat atn. Wc^bate mil mm tin sgaMMer'i guratsMM,^but for the is in-lit of nihi l papers tug lii-1 senile sll,table BOOS; 1. I'clvc tell dll- ftriuiami MlaMMIng replies to the gayer*^What Is Un MM lire^ I, Hive example*^of your skill In Mrtaleaa libels. ::. fan you e^ c I, - 4, I la I ^ i I .' i ^ V. t kill, el a peeel or an invi nun I Irish i y. list. Mts Imrliam Why do y on shun HMSt-^I, y ^ I have null,-id several limes now^i I: i von Ve i;eem out of your way lo avolel^tl^ stlag MM^Mi liuibiini I in sn-^(el. iciu* of blm. Mi^ Ih-.-m so poll''- atal fllelcilly eet lal thaiI au*|Hct he s geiiltiK ready to try n Ieiw mm! mom y fTMU BMv lieve- lalltlLMMMV, -I knoa a man alio lives tin baseballs.^^^ \\ bet oo y on mean^'^^Well. In- o. tg.-d a eiuartcr of gM MM^lie aada't kad a tgaare aaaal fm a a-eaa millalien I got out lo the gaaSt In lied i^Better seat tkaS I had. Ilelrolt Kr.e^Press. Maa son-What have all the iinili-rl.il^-^crs goi tings out for Illldhk - Why Man, linn's a do. tors'^eoiiveniiou in tow n Phllaeb Iphia KMtk^A merle an. Magistrate Vttu claim you saw an air^^ship III broad daylight^^Prisoner That'sh ^iBhl. y r honor.^Magistrate ORhci. ibis I- noi a mallei^for the ixdIIci Matrt U s a ease of llin-^Hems. Take blm lo Ihe Inebriate liosist.ei^t'hleaao Tribune TheProwess of Empire. Fr'ini la Phlladt Iphia Preai. Wliil. ,i may seem a little' Im-on-^gnious for th' i|tio-ii of Kngland. pre^^eminent as a woman who siunds fol^^icignore the civic, legislative ,| , lentiri, d^ eelopmeat eef he r reign^in th- gnat Jubilee parade of June jj,^,. mplalnl of whl'-h Is made- abroad, tt^must reel be foigotte n that she doe s this^as empnss rather than as queen. As^ml i of pie t|s tout ^ nlonles in the East.^Wist. North and South It I* but nat-^an exploits'ill of the prognss^uj empire Hi^ military and naval pow-^^ ihe empire thouM pntlnmliMU fm. alii l all. ev hatl v ^ r he ^. been the^irementlovg developinenll In the world^of science, and whatever tin great ad-^vanee in whal we call cIviluaHon, force^nil rubs Hi,- world, and, in !-'^.' as In^IU7. Kngland mual rely mi its bul^^wark! ^^f war and on ils red-erogttg on^laud to hold what it has ami command^worbl-wnl' reaper I and wofMVwMM^homage. Itis perhaps tins ugeMMalleled lerrl-^lorial advance that has cause.! those^-.v tie. arranged tin- jubilee programn*^I., aecentuati Ihe ke ynote of England's^proweaa by nteana of a dMpla} eef paw*^. i well calculated In I man s* i he visit-^oei from foreign rnantftM tad la give |eey to III. Colonial he-ltrl HoUblleSS l.e.ielSalisbury feels this Is an oe t usion^which with ail its eaycty nei ils to as^^sert the grim fact that Kngland in^tmrtg, reliant, rcsoiirt eful and capaiib^..: e;riritei eb-eels than ever For other^^wise Lord Salisbury should incline to^the human side of liiings, sun ^ he him^^self, and many of Ikoae about blm. are^eminent In scientific reaaafrli ami glory^in laa deeds of Anglo-Haxmi bruin as iI a In Ihi intpllsamenta of Hrit- ishbrawn. Bui tie kttter calls for^i^^^ignition aaauredly when llritish ler-^lilory has reached n total nl noeeut MM*^liflh tin land una of the globe ami Hie^one en tubs oyer more than one-third^Hie world's popiilalIon. AltaOUgh Hie 1'ell-e ecateel patc he s of Hellishland In Africa and ill Austral^^asia uml Asia have' eaten int.. these^regions as ihe color of no other natieen-^aUty. save Russia, still the advance is^inn In i ke d. FaTOM India Kngland Is^still pushing eastward into f'hina, Sium^win soon be her dependancy, and araM- vold. Iiaving Hellene hlstati. she sur- roundaAfghanMiaa us if 11 were held Inthe claw of a giant lobster. Progress^Inn. as ill^ d la pa tones record. Is tem^^porarily Interfered with by wild border^trlhag, this lime Hie Wazin. hut Ihe^tlnnl halt will come from Kussla at^from Turkestan, the Musrovite gratl-^ually ndvancing with a territorial^wedge Into Ihe lie al t of Afghanistan^awaits Ihe- Inevitable. Whether t'abul^Is lo lie English or Itlistlan largely de-^panda on whether t'onstanlinople Is lo^hear ihe Itusslan service in SI. Sonhia^or Is to reeiiain nominally uttieman. WithRhodesia still a dream and in^the perplexities of an Easl i li question^that kmews mi hounds, but shifts from Theaaalyto Thibet, from CambodM to Mamburin, with side Issues in Egypt,^Persia am! Arabia, it is no SI It Ida f that Englandin tin- ^.^^'^,n ownnvmoratloa^Mragnonlea rga'ts nonajnesl and the^means lev which It 'a made permanent,^and s-eeti.s Indifferent In the nthcr^events ul the' pMgll. Fi r the coll'piests^and colon la] advance I epfeaeiltl ob|ec-^livr snlendor, while the passive- glory^of sublectlve achh-vi ncnts arc not^a- ily gpprehendad by the many. Per^^haps II is this rather weirdly display of^power ill men ami money, this apparent^joy in MMCUest for conquest's sake. thatjustifies i in- KuropeMl concept log^of British civilization us essentially^hypocritical. Hut while you cannot^make' omelets without breaking eggs, noone can deny thai ft agin gjaienn ad^value is for the beneftl of the arorM amit.f liiimanltiui'in pro-iess and the^cniane ipation of man and mind. Personal. Alaskaa llcuelit. r UK stalei.ienl seemclinii-s inai ^^in connestioii with the Met vail.tn^annexatleui . oiurety i rsy. ih.n^Alaska has ornv.-.l I bud (aWQMlUtnl^for the rnitetl Si a- s is In no sense^Ixirne out by the fae is Secretary Sew-^HE Detroit Tribute s.iy- ilia the aid liegoCksMdl tin loin base of Aiaakcl^BUear parties of lows have gtra from Ituaala In Isn; for JT.^ist. m anexaiiipk- of oomMning under^Oege name that all silver organisations^should follow. Last fall, ihe Tribune^says the lost ocoaaleooed in Michigan^by th-.' cun.usion eef th. ballot ^ js . n r-^ggMgfi ainl -tntnuestlonabiy ^ netj per^tent, of the vote counted in the Michi^^gan spun^ ^ lee Hon foi Un Judicial can^^didate of the gold faction of the deas- .^euerncy- were placed ther ^ by th- errors ^ he attaine d it ihi frl ndahip of Ru - ^^of the vol err.^ It Itbei having teen mot -t-.e i m ^ ,.f probablethat by the mit r ski, ntlal v alue t^ Ihe I'n ted St.it s, but v ^ I^election all tht ail.-; oiiti:^I ..s ailllpurel] ar a ttnaitmcut th i gtdd. The tisli .'.enir.ilastMl MBaaTt ay. thatthe pioee-ecel.. of ihe salllloll e.itcli alonein three years ce|ual In valin tha^entire amount paid fe^r the territory^while tin pioe.-cds ,,. t|^. feala fishcrn-t^have returned the pin chase men y^. lesoy tun. - .. S.. ' t.n y ;s.^had a neelltical e nd ill view when h -^the |eure hasc frenn Kiissbi ami Vlay Kuril W atson Everylhlng I- gMt*a'^lo Ih done by machinery these days. It is^si methlng awful PerryPatetlle i elont six' no call fcr^voir tier Hie- neither, lo git ^ ze iled ahaat^It. 1 giies* ag machine- won! never take-^up our irade- and ruin It.^-t ine Inii.ul En- aageafe Twent to Ihe trial of that bialn test^^ing machine.^ he said.^^^Yea*^ sh.- riiunie-el ae-.trlly .^^'I let them try II on m^\ be .'o-itlnne.1. fililng sure he Would rouse' her lll'.ele'-t IIIdue time Ve- she lespolllb-d Kllll 111. sallle evidentweariness.^^It dletn t work.^ he persisted^(if course not.^ she sidd. with sonic^e midntsb IIlook him some Hme to tlL ire It all eeui.tun a*haaJm did be aMMN la ix^s-- poashis |. .me-.el for at least aiiolhe r^Keek.-t'hlrago Post. Theonlv obj.s tl.ni I have lo lb.el weeni^i - ibl M-s. I'elenne reflet lively I* be^lack of versatility. Idon't quite undcrsi. n.l.^^Hhe knoas only two top: - about^which to Meat, the ^e.ether and other^^'^M^a. Wasblnston St.ir. t ThaMahaa of Maath. Ireland, sim has^ler.u e iiosen arehhlahap af Imblin. Is a^I,mail e hure hnian with e vangelical tend-^rnrlea. lb- Is a total abstainer from Masee ami taaacco, i:..pr.s.ntalive I til i ley of ie-xas wlnn I^hay a*as eaasaaereS lazy , but hg had bis iimbltiein awnt-ene el by I lie ebarite te:- nt* lsiim.nlWorth In Ml gouthworthi^' Isbinael. or lii Ike lietiins.^ and dates in-rarest traM Iht raavasag of that novel. Rlrally a yaMM Mag wneie to William^Dean lion aha lor bis autograph. Th ^ nov^^elist repelled in a typewritten biter: ^Have^^ ^.ii Mughl my last kaak. ' The young^man tatWteed ^1 have nut. 1 want lo^ssU you autagragtk in order to gal ggnvgh^nioneey to buy it! Of, IcSMM Hall, the geologist lef Hie i.in of X.-w York .Is to sail lor Kurope^on June :'t io attend the eunilng Msallag eelt he lnternatlini.il geolo^b'ill COtmil'SS^at St re let slnll s as re|ir.'Selltllliv e' uf it.: in.. Altkougk In- Is H years old be:^is in vigorous beallli. MwardDaajnea, who has bean Called Stat.. eon ul seiieicl at Amsterdam. Hol^^land, tor Ihe last four years, has Maided^in Mad] tot un hotass Calhelto tub st- beeoel al tile \lll^ ro .1ii eolle He iii Koilli Hei- a native 01 Ne w Hatran, Conn., of hackeliy be' WHS eltv l-lelk during tile^ma v eii :i 11 \ of Jo.-epli It. Sal^' nt. Mi- I'taub Pre. i eii w tie * rc, .-lit ly- died inDetratte e.sed to relate that when she^Brai moved i In re from New York. K yean^ags ket father beaghl the laad tosM tks Indianawho bid settled there, ami that itw.e no aaaaaal thing to shoot assr fromIhe back do ir of their little log cabin. * i ^^THE POCKETS OF GOLD. PrettyHMito dandelion. WithpocKe'ts fell of shining gold^In Un- air thy hair II Ih- Itylng,^lake eloan. Khcn thou art gray and old LaUghMgchlldim, will lee blowing^The sllte iy lo. k- lii,111 iliy gray lu.nl. Timeeef ebey tin y ihlnk the y 're knoKing,^toy what thr gnadeltoa said. Pudsmay ly to hide their treasure. theiraeaaTa xiii burst ihgw ggeket soon; gamlllaikiss aged till their meaaure.^They'll open for thai aiieonic boon. Peekets full eel hll.-hl sold bkie amondw^Pexkets full ef bright gold te. m'HK Willix- gnaa all the day .^I re the coining linn* for .In amine They'llclose their purs, and huh away. Xeiiet h. Ir ric hes sb.. II l^- stealing.^Thev wish to lak^ ihun when they^leav I AndIn Mghaf realms gM reeling;^Ah. little flower, do not grlevi-. Thyblight gold elo not think of taklns^Away from e irih. through higher ;.lr;^Snowllake s ne er use gold In making. Andso the e 'OUeie tie-eel nolle up III. te. Manmust leave- bis when departing. thoughsome to ii woulel like to cIIiik'^Thru. too. dear little friend, ere starting. Mattleave It, when iliou ahalt take^sing. Iiee l from heavy weights ImpenelliiK^With lishi.r wing ihoul t soar the air, Then in lime, thy gold conceding^To men thy comrades flying there. far. lime sell. fair, fl) lag flower! tieescatter seeds I. hteb shall be glOKli Theywill I.nd some eTT.issy bower.^And thou shall reap aa thou hast sown^-Hp:.. i-, i P.cpublksll. hjoWIVJiarH TvVain^^i)aW tl]e ^(^taroicje MarkTwain In ihe Ne w V.,rk J.eurnul. Igot to my stat in the Siianel Just^In lime five minutes pasl Ul-for u^glance around before the show began.^The' houses opposite at far at Un gag^could reach, In both ellree tlona, sug^^gested boxes In a theater snuglv^packed. The gentleman next ta tm^like in .I th- groups to beds of luawg^and said he hail never seen sue h a^uiaascd and multitudinous array of^blighl cileers ami tine e lollie s These displays rose up and up, story^by story, all balconies and windows l^c-^ing packed, and also the batttennentl^stretching along the roofs. The side^^walks w re filled with standing Ixjople,^liut were not um omfortably irowdcd.^They were fenced from Ihe roadway by red-coatedsoldiers, a double stripe of vividcolor which extended throughout^Un six miles a hlch the prta-catlon^v oiiid Iran ree Klvemlaatei later the Inael eif the^column came into view, and was pre-s-^ently tili 11 k by. b el by t'aptaln Ames,^Hie fullest man in Ihe Hrittsh iirtur.^And ihen tha cheering began. Il took^me hut a IIItle while lo determine that^tills .procession could not hg de sc ribed.^There was going lo la- loee much of It^ami too much variety in It. so I gave^up the iiba. It was to be a spectacle^for the koduk. mil the pen. Presentlythe procession was without^visible- beginning or end. but stretched^te, ihe limit of sight in Ixdh dire e thens bodiesof soldiery in blue, followed by^a bloc k of soldiers In buff, the n a bbx k cl led, (I block Of bllff, 11 block of )t'l- low.and see on. an Interminable drift^eef swaying and swinging aenfjotehea of^slicing color gparkltacg and Hushing^with shifty light rcllie ieil fnuu bayo^^nets, lam e'heads, bi azen be Inn Is and^burnished breast plat' s. Peer varied and^beautiful uniforms and unceasing sur^^prises In Ihe way of new and unex^^pected splendors, il much surpassed^any pageant thai I have iv r se e n. Iwas not die aming eef so stunning a^show. All the nations seemed to Ijc^tiling by. They all seemed to be repre^^sented. It was a sort eef alle-geirb-al sug^^gestion of the East Day, and some who^live to see that day w ill nrobably rc-^e all this eene if they are met too much^disturbed in mind al the- lime. Therewere live bodies of oriental si^1-^ilieisof the different nationalities, with^complexions ilifTerenliati d by live dis^^tinct shades of yellow. There were^about a dozen bodies of hltii'k soldiers^from various parts of Africa, whose^complexions covered as many shade .1 of^black, and some of these were Ihe very^blackest people I have ever icon jel. Thenthere was an exhaustive exhibi^^tion of the huntlred separate brown^races of India, the most beautiful and^satisfying of all the complexions that^have been vouchsafed to man. and the^one which best sets eeff colored clothes^and best harmonizes with all tints. Thet'hlnesc. the Japanese, the Oi^^lcans, the Africans!, the Indians, Ihe^Pacific Islanders^they were all there,^uml with them samples of all the whites^that inhabit the wide reach of the^Huron's dominions. Theprocession was the human rate^on exhibition, a spectacle curious and^interesting and worth traveling far to^see. The nicest splendid of the costumes^were those worn by the Indian princes,^and they were also the most beautiful^anil richest. They were men of stately^build anil princely carriage, and^wherever they passed the upplauso^burst forth. Soldiers,soldiers, soldiers, and still^more ami more soldiers and MeMMM and^muskets and lances^there seemed to he^no end to this feature. There are ati.000^snblii rs in Konilnn. anil they all secm^l^to be on hand. 1 have not sen so many^i xcept in the theater, when 115 privates^and n general march across the stage^and behind the scenes and across the^front again and keen It up till ttvy have repi esi'llte ll aflO.IHBl. Illthe early part the colonial pre^^miers drove by with the host, and by^and by after a long time there was a^gmnd output of foreign princes. Ill In^Ihe invoice. Thefeature of high romance was met^watiliniT. for among the m rode Prince^Rupert eif Itavaritt, who would be^Prime eef Wales now and future king^id Kngland and emperor eef India If his^Stuart ancestors had conducted their^royal affairs more wisely than they^did. He came as a peace I'll I guesl to^ri pt i seiil his nieether. Piinci ss I.udv. Ig,^he iress eef the house of Sluart. be whom^English Jacobites still pay unavailing^gegggage a* the rightful flMM of Eng^^land. The-bouse of Stuart was formally and^ollieially shelved nearly two .eniuriis^ago. but the microbe' of Jne eibite loyalty^Is a thing which Is met extermlnable^by lime, force or ar:rument. Allast, w hen the' procession had heen^on view an hour ami a half, carriages^began to appear. In the first came a de-^tachincnl of two-horse ones containing^ambuss.idols extraordinary. In one of^them Whltelavv Held, representing the'^I'alted States; then six containing^minor foreign and domestic prim i s and^pi lln esses; then live four-heerse car^^riages Itiishteel with offshoeets of the ttvmlli. Theexcitement was growing now;^interest was rising toward Un- boiling^point. Finally a landau drawn by eight^. ream-colored horses, nicest lavishly up-^beolatered in gold stuffs, with postillions^ami me drivers, and preceded by l.eerd^W olseley. t ame bowling along, followed^b^ the Prime' of Wabs. and ill the^^rortd rose lo its feet and un S0V It d Thegaata empress was i eon.. s^,c^was re, l ived with great enthusiasm, it^was rsaltaabla that sln^ was the profes^^sion herself, that all the rest of n was^mere embroidery: that In her Ihe Msg*^lit taw Un Eritlsh empire Itself. Slu^was a sy mbol, an allegory of England's^glggdaat ami the might eif the Prillsh^name. ItIs eeve r mew : the lirilish empire has^matched pasl under review ami IggaMC*^t|on. The proe cssieen steeoel for sixty^yean of piuglSM and accumulation,^imeial. material and political. It was^math- up lather of the- benellciarics of^in ^ ne p. rilu s thun eef ihe crcttlort^eef them. ^ IIwas a Memorable elisplay and must^live in history. It suggested the- itisle-^tial glurles of Hie reign finely and^adequately. The absence of the chief^rragton ^'( the 111 was twrhans not a^sei ieeus disadvantage Ona e euild sup^^ply Ihe vacancies by Imagination, and thusnil out the pcocoaaMa earj effe-ci- ivcly.Ogtg tan enjoy a rainNivv with^^out nnceiuMertt] forgetting the forces^that made it. Constipation Cstresfuny half th- (lekaesi in tin- world. It^ret.iais the digrstcel final too Ions in the bowels^and BnatoaM biliousness, torpid l.irr. Indl- Hood's gestion,bad us'.r. coated^loiiKiie, sick I'a-ail.ic In-. h^^^omnia, etc. Hood's Pill^cure constipation and all its^results.easilyaudlhorouchh. JSC. Alldntspists.^Prepared by C. 1. Iloml 4 la. Lowell Mass.^The ouly Tills lo : i:.- s ita Hood's Sirsaparilla. a%^c%%%%%.a^%^ai^sx^^st^%%%%%% ryf M.J. CONNELL CO.! KITTI. Mi '.N I AN A MightyBargains! ARemarkable ThreeDays' Sale of KidGloves AtIMMW Prices than otlvi in , h ints buy for The Big Glovs t;^ Bl^of Ihe Heaton lii-nuini- Itargalns that will wind up in a bl,,,., oi g|. ry^the givatcst six months' fllOVe selling In the history of this kll 1^Such bargain olTi'riURs are vveirili leading about slill mop v.oltli^ of^an early examination to.morrow. * Luilles''J-rla^(^ Kmhrnidf*rt^il KIDGLOVES Silfrtrtl skin-*. |^t^r(^^rt in fit^Hii^1 rtni-li. lull lilif of tltNirfi wmfolnrintiw, tlMVbeflffi prifi* fl.00. 'JbU suit, ouly 69c KIDQLOVES rt'i-i**i^v**menni, mx+ry fanliitmkiblr^lito'l'- ttfftlur.^ftlffaMfl gVaV] 4rtkHV, ti hiimltiMii''^l'Iuvc. wtmry |^f'r i*ti*^l itmi^wurrMntfl, worth ft TiU Tin. ItanWkouly 89c t Lii'li's, rral Kii ih Ii KIDGLOVES Two-rlasp,linn (No me rmlir^i^^fy, Htif , ptialilo *kin^. r\^ rv^^ it'ttralilft tit-iv '-oltir. fttt^4 Hint^irUnrKlitct 'l: ht'tli-r tlmn the^nvi'i'Ki(e ulmr tlmt rrttoiU lit^#1.75. Tlii^ ^nle, only $ 1.25 l,:i,lle'-'lilip-t I'm i. KIDGLOVES 1 i-ji-. gWttMai or iHtali ^*^lf 1Htnl |W*^l4MMa1 ^^nlMOM i t J .^, [.iiilH' or ItMTnfHItl, gMMN till-^, iftTi, liut H ItaatwlW Color til I - -^1 hi.. Iti^^ In-t idloM- \^Mi c:^n^I liny htW or HMWgMtfal ut I**'.!^|hi juiir. TMl **W, only 1.50 4 i *The Great.^20 Per Cent Discount LinenSale i Kndsat store closing Wednesday night. The new tnrilT will shortly be^^come a law, and Linens will be sharply advanced all along the line-^In some cases ^iO per cent, and more. It would he tlillh ult to overesti- Q^mate the importance of ibis gnat pre-inventory Oeffor eef Twenty Per j)^I'ent. Discount From the Lowest Prices l-.ver Qotetl Here .ei i;isevvhe %*c%%-^V%%%cf^%%%%%%%%%%%^%^%%%%^*V^^s FewerLegislative Sessions. Pills Fromthe Philadelphia Times. Theunderlying principle upon whie h^tlie American t'nninionw calth is bus-d^Is that of the right of the people lo^govern themselves through repr s oi.e^lives of their own choosing, and In the^early days of the republic the peoplo^were disposed to exercise their sover^^eignty In this mailer fraqasatly, AN^tin original stale legislatures cxc^ pt^that of Si nit Ii Carolina were elect, d us^oflen as mice a year, while tgasai of faanatilfgiand RlMda lilanil were chosensemi-annually. AfterBMN than a century of cxp-ri-^ence In this line. Ihe American peeepl^are disposed lo look upon u stab leg^^islature as u necessary evil not la M^endured too often. Wi have gTOWl^from 1:: slates to 4.'.. and In but four of^these^Massat husetts. Ithenle Island.^New York and New Jersey^are annual^se ssions of the legislature now held In^each of the other 41 stubs the legisla^^ture meets but once In f.vn years, and^the policy of extending the' lerin lo one^sessiifn In four years llnds many advo^^cates. In no Instance has tgtafg been a^relurn to annual sessions where the bi^^ennial aaaataa has been once estabiish- eei.and the closest inquiry would fail^lo lind i'n advocate of a return to the^old practice outside of those who profit^by a legislative session. Thecauses for this popular distrust^eef legislative hoelies lie- on the surface^and are apparent to every intelligent^man. To begin with, every stale- has g^code of laws covering all ordinary con^^ditions, so that legislatures should real^^ly have little to do except to provide^revenue and make the necessary np-^|n.epilations for carrying on the slate^government. This can he done for a^term of yageXI as well im for one year.^Legislative bodies, however, are seldom^satistied with merely furnishing the^manBs to carry on a slate government,^h'very session of a legislature, even in^the oldesl state, is certain tee sell a lot^of new laws to our already too long^list, and with annual sessions the ma^^jority of the people are never qtlttS eer-^tuIn what the law Is upon any given^subject. New tax laws, also, have to^run the gauntlet of the couiis and de^^cisions tan seldom be- rendered by^courts eef last resort In less than two^\eats freem Ihe time a new law goes^into effect. * Kverynew sessieen eif a state legisla^^ture furnishes a new opportunity for^the- cranks who lielieve that . verything^under ihe sun is c apable af regn . ^ n^lev statute law. an unportanlty that is oanavltya-orfcai tee its fallwl capacity, andIn view of all these well-known^evils attendant upon frettn. lit leglsla-^live sessions, it is mil te' he v. ondered^at that the pre vailing Unitary is to^^ward fewer rather thsn more fre^^quent sessions. The people doni v ant^la lie governed Ion much, and th* in i -^Joritv want to know if possible nn4cr^what tevtle of laws they are living. With^fre-quent leyislatlve stssions. they are^in danger eef being governed BMN than^thev want M be. Itis true that the pgapla ravta rem^^edy th. se evils by choosing ve iser legis^^lators, but the wisest men don't want^la gee to a state le gislature nnd fe v^c.eultl be fleetest! under present condi-^tlont If they did. Fnder existing eor.-^diiber.;'. It is easier to restrict the tVHl^ef our legislatures by making I^live sessions less frequent than In any^other tray, and th.- Amerncn people^sic oib'ptitis th'' easiest way. Farther^on In our governmental ilevel^i^:in t.t^v.e mav aelopt Ihe plan of ^! dins^latter 1 gislaturcs,but iven in that -^a return to annual sestlor-i i haroly^probahle. If blennhU te^a;ons haven't^eemc to stay it Is btvaur ^ In th - fu-urc^it may Is- d.clded to limit session:, u^once n three cr f' ur years. iRubber Stamps { AllSite-.. Siv^t and sy- 5elfInkers m PlainHand Stamps STAMPSFOR^Railroads, Hanks, Postofflees,^County Olllcers^AND BUSINESS MM GENERALLY ihompt toaUtVIOaV i ! 0 ^^d r^^^^^^^^*^^) t t^0^4^4^$ 00 00 v^A iStandard Publishing Co \ AXAvCOMDA.l!(e.\T.^The gandgomtM and moat elegnntlv^appoiatea hotel la tha West, riraproof.^All modern conveniences. Service strlci- !. first class Ratal, ^r,.:.'i per day sag^upwards. U. W. OKYNoLOC, Msr. AREYOU WILLING Teput in cvtri i'm* in etrd*. ne p^v bi^ rent, en^Mtia s'rp.'tl H'hy to-. tr.vt^ st ysafl nnn mois.^nut! save't*ie c.\-ra re-tit uai fiene-.' rieri. hir- f..r^taaaralff Hosnu. li cin )^vj ^a. e ete-li gaaMk^rt prir*^ H'.e these: Mains.|s-r pound Ug 10-lhPull I^ird TV Itestliour. sack 11.ii ItoolBeer, per bottle l^u fntsup.|ar buttle loc eiItars So.-tp $l.ivi 2t'ans Peaches 2Sc t'.insTears 36c.- fans California Fruit S*^c e H.eTs Toilet Slip ti (haartrotti^ C A is. chow Mr PisArrer:i.:i KHgs Me GoodTen. |^cr |rai:ral gat Berry Dlshr.i tt, aHood IMrncr Tail 5 4P.uk.je - m.ij Yrast lie o. II.Morcjan, BLTTi. Morrr.