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Show ,2 : THE SALT LAKE TIMES: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1891. T SALT LAKE EVENING TIMES, By THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY. The Times is published every evening (Sunday excepted), and in delivered by carriers In Salt Lake City, Ogdeu, Logan, American Fork, Provo and Park City nt 75 Cents a month. Thk Times contains the full Associated Presa nnd nan Special Telegraph Service Jieport, Entire Inter-Mountai- n Region. The Times is entered at the Postoflice in Salt Lake City for transmission, through the mails as econd-cins- s matter. Persons desiring The Times delivered at their bouses can secure it by postal card order or through telephone. When delivery is irregular iake "immediate complaint to this office. Eubscription to The Daily Times. (always in advance.) 12 months B.0O 6 " 4.00 8 " 2.00 t " 75 Weekly, 1 year 1.C0 (Address The Times, Salt Lake City, Utah.) Tiie Times' Telephone No. is 481. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1S1. CHEAP RATES TO TIXTIC. The Union Pacific AYill Run an Excursion on Sunday at $2 for the Round Trip. A rare chance to visit the rreat Tintie mines will be Sunday next when the Union Pacific will run a special train at the pheno-minall- y low fare of $2 for the round trip. The train will leave the Union Pacific at depot 9 a. ni., arriving at Eureka at 12, noon. Returning the train will leave at 5 p. m., ar-riving here at 8 o'clock. Special coaches will be reserved for ladies. In addition to the lowest fare ever offered the person pur-chasing the lucky ticket will be presented with a mining claim. MOB LAW, The recent outbreak of ruoboeracy at Omaha has renewed in journalism the discussion of the merits and demerits of an administration of justice by an indiscriminate populace frenzied by the perpetration of some horrible crime. It is the correct and proper thing for the sober moralist and the conservative journal to urge the un-wisdom, imprudence and pernicious-ncs- s of such methods; for iu the out-come their is even more brutal and revolting than the original crime thus sought to be avenged. There is also the further important fact to be considered that as each crimi-nal is a member of society, and has re-ceived his character and controlling im-pulses largely front the community in which he finds his environment, society as a whole is in a great degree responsi-ble for his conduct; and this broader view as to criminal responsibility should not be lost sight of in our judg-ments upon the question of the deserts of any particular criminal. There is no uouut, wrhen a flagitious crime is committed, that an absolutely just ac-counting would demand a reckoning from every member in society. Yet the profoundest principle in-volved in the American system of gov-ernment is that human nature is not subordinate and tributary to its insti-tutions, but their lord and master. Americans make their laws and civil formularies, and these must be servi-tors and agencies wherewith to carry out the general sense of right and just-ice. The right of revolution, when government becomes corrupt and tyr-annical, is inalienable. In like manner, when the administration of justice through established methods becomes capricious and uncertain; when craft and chicane are victorious; when brib-ery and corruption are triumphant; when guile and gold are able to shield murder and rapine from condign pun-ishment; when the stealer of pennies goes to prison and the embezzler of millions rides upon the topmost wave of society; when men's hearts fail them for the impotence of law, the car-icature of justice and the practical fruitfulness of well guarded and well defended crime; at such a critical and irritating stage of society, let some awful crime be perpetrated, some brutal ravishment and death of the victim, some killing of a just and vigilant officer, some foul murder of innocent and helpless people; both public patience and private con-fidence are exhausted; the established methods of justice are despaired of; their failure unlocks the bars and bolts of prudence; the civilized man is be-reft of his civil restraints; the inherent right to primitive, barbaric and undel-egated methods revives within him; he becomes witness, judge and jury, and with an indignant sense of right he wreaks the full measure of retribution upon the culprit. We should cease to be fools and weaklings when some such outburst of popular indignation arouses society from its lethargy, such as the killing of the mafia at Jfew Orleans, the hanging of the murderers at Topeka, or the re-cent lynching at Omaha. The installa-tion of the mob is not the danger point to a sensible man, no more than the rush of an avalanche which has been loosening for years. The danger point is in the corrupt and pernicious administration of law, the stealthy ad-vance of vicious and unscrupulous cus-toms, the perpetual encroachments of social immorality and baseness, these are the things to be feared more than the frantic indignation of the mob. The former are the procuring causes; the latter is the natural consequence. Those are the murky vapors that fill the sky Avith pestilence; the mob is the light-ning's glare that rends the sky and clears the atmosphere. In many cases mob violence is the drastic but only remedy. It deal's up the firmament with an awful social ca-tastrophe. It rebukes the lawj-er- , the casuist, and the ruler who forgets es-sential principles and discharges his functions for merely selfish and grovel-ing rewards. It startles men into a realization of the facts that institutions and methods must conform to the sov-ereign behests of the infinite right and justice, and that when Uimsy corrup-tion casts her polluted mantle over soci-ety the inalienable sense of right and justice will, as a dernier resort, tear it into shreds. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. Let Them Answer jf They Can. "New York Press. For the benefit of Mr. Cleveland, Governor Hill and the whole host of free traders, we present in a nutshell some facts about the operation cf the new tariff which they will have to meet squarely or confess themselves beaten. The McKinley bill has Increased the duties on about 115 articles Reduced the duties on about 1!)" articles And left it unchanged on --49 articles Increased onr foreing commerce (in eleven months) $74,70H,K.;9 Increased our tree imports JllOlSJifJl Made the per cer.taceof free imports 05.75 of all our imports. Increased free imports over the last tariff, per cent M8 Reduced the duties per capita from S3.S0 to S3.07. Reduced the total revenue ("tarin taxes") in twelve months $41,396,485. Increased the cost of no necessity of life and re-duced the cost of many; stimulated business, and thereby tended to make people busier and earnings surer, if not larger. The tifrures here given for foreign com-merce and free imports are for eleven months ending September 1st, the latest at hand, and the percentages of free imports, which are now lartrer than ever before iu the history of our government, are for six months, beginning April 1st, when sugar became free. Such is the early fruit of genuine "tariff reform" by the republican party. We will allow the free traders to squirm over these figures until they shall be able to answer them. AMERICAN RATIONAL BANK. Capital, $250,000. Surplus, $25,000. Successor to the Bank of Salt Lake, - - Salt Lake City. INTERESTS PAID ON DEPOSITS. ?t"?-- BACO?r Pr-irl- nt Secretary F. Sell? T. A. Datt H M. Bacon Vice-Preside- Gov. A. L. Thomas M. J. Grat L- Holland Cashier 8. M. Jarvis D. G. Tcsvicliff W. B. IIollaa-d- . Ast. Cashier J. Y. JroD F. V. Ross C. F. Loofboueow. Money to .Lend on Improved Real Estate by James H. Bacon. BANK OF COMMERCE. . OPERA HOUSE BLOCK. SALT LAKE CITY. Five Per Cent Interest Paid on Savings Deposits. Transacts a General Banking Business. DIRECTORS Bot--"a- rk President AVm. H. MclvrrnE T B Fablow W, V.. Chisholm Vice-Preside- M. K- - Parsons C L Hivvoitj f- - ALKEK Cashier AV. II. Irvine E. E. Ricat S. H. Fields, jb Ast. Cashier E. B. Critchlow. "57. J. KING. E. S. YANKEE. King &Yankee, DEALERS IN Hardware, Stoves, Furnishing Goods, Carpen-ters' Tools, Bronze Goods, Etc, A FULL LINE ALWAYS IN STOCK. 213 State Street, Salt Lake City. Electric Motors! Of all Sizes kept in Stock up to 500 Volts. , and from Power to 40-Hor- se Power, ALSO Electric Light Dynamos, Incandescent Lamps Q the Best Manufactum Suitable for any Socket, 5Q Volts to 110 Volts, 16 CP. to 750 CP. Also a F ull Assortment of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES, QTEAM PUMPS, L HOISTING ENGINES, AIR COMPRESSORS, ROCK DRILLS. Eraser & Chalmers, Chicago. M A CTTTTJ FIT? L. C. TRENT, Director and General Western Manager. Salt Lake City. Utah. - Helena, Montana. BUSINESS DIRECTORY ATTORSEYS-ATLA-LAWYERS ROOMS 40 COMMERCIAL O. W. POWERS. OPPOSITE CULLEN VTTORNEY-AT-LA-ARCHITECTS. reT7aThai IATE OF DENVER ARCHITECT OF Block, Etc., Rooms Commer-ia- l Biock. Fl'RMTl'BE. MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN ALL school desks, screen doors and furniture. Jobbing and repairing promptly attended to; 106-11- 0 . So. Temple. INSURANCE. LOuisiYASLSCa FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT; MUTUAL of New York. 85-8- 0 Commercial Block. PLUMBING. pTXmoran ' ' STEAM HEATING ENGINEER 259 MAIN Lake City. Books 1 oys, Wholesale & Retail. UTAH Boot & SMoiry Co. Duncan 11 McAllister, Manaerer. "QTAH RATIONAL BANK. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Capital 3200,000.00. Surplus 10,000.00. DIRECTORS J". M. Stoctt resident W. H. Rot T. K. William A. B. Jones Cashier Thomas Carter ,1. A. Groesbh k Bolivfr Roberts.., C. W. Ltman-- AVm. F. Colto.v A. L. Williams Botd Park P. L. Williams W. H. Ltox S. C. Ewixa Alexander Rogers Jos. A. Jexxixgs Jos. Baumgartex W. E. Russell. This Space Reserved for B. K. Block & CoJj Agents for j i Pabst Brewing Kj Company. j Dealers in H Fine Wines n and Liquors, sj 17-1- 9 Commercial st. M JJNIOX RATIONAL JJAXK. j Successor to Walker Bros., Banker. EataoliBheJ ieso. Capital (Fully Paid) MOO.no Scnm-u- s 40,u: United States Depository. Transacts A General Banting Business. Safe Deposit Vaults. Fire and Burglar Proof, vIh"1n"r President . "v""4" nt --M ! . ( heesman Cashier J". i1" af'wo,rth Ast- - Cashier Walker.Or Ast. Cashiei S. D. EVANS, I Successor to Evans It q jj 4" UNDERTAKER & EHBALMER.Hh 214 State St o- Salt Lake. j! H Special Attention Given to the Shipment I H of Bodies. I j Orn all Tlignt. Telephone. 364. H F. E. WARREN" MERCANTILE CO. r Has recently been appointed the eneralagpntsfot the World-Renowne- d yELLS, JfARGO & QO.'S BANK. SALT LAKE CITY UTAH RUTS ANP T. " MAKES . . jrincipal citie. of the I'nitwl .. ... . , uiii on ail poiuts on the hacillc i Issues letter i' I.ible in the principal cities of the w.. Special attem .. i n t- "ng of ores and bullion. Adwu.i !.;;:!. i.u s ...vigumeiits at lowest rates. Particular attov.t-- ' .. vtiors through out I'tau, Neva- - j i... . .ij iii iu ; iorritoiies. Ac-count!) aolicitec. t Wells, Fareo ( London Wells, Faro A Co New York Maverick National IV. :k Boston First National Ei::k Omnha First National BnnV Denver State National li: . Lenvcr Merchants' N'atioi ;,i Chicago Boatraena' Bank St. Louis Wells, Fargo 4 Co San Francisco J.E.Dooly, - - - - Agent. McCOKNICK & C BANKERS. E8TAB1.WHB D, 1873 SiI.T LAKE, ClTT, UTAH. A General BanMno; Business Transacted. Collections promptly made on all points in the West and Northwoat. Careful attention given to consignments of Ores and Bullion. Exchange and telegraphic transfers on the principal cities of th United States and Europe. PRINCIPAL CORRESPONDENTS: J5ew York Importers' and Traders' National Bank; Kountze Bros. Chicaoo Commercial National Bank. 8as Francisco First National Bank. Ox aha Omaha National Bank. St. Locis National Bank of Commerce. Kaksas Citt National Bank of Kansas City; First National Bank: American National Bank. Denver Denver National Bank; City National Bank. Pueblo First- National Bank. Portland, Ore. First National Bank. London Martin's Bank (Limited) tits Lombard street. E. J. Smith Printing Co. Job Printing and Book Binding. Bank, County and Office Supplies. 24 36 W. 3kd South, Salt Lake Citt. HAPPY HOUR jDental Co. 212yi S. State St., opp. Holmes Big. .'. j 1 administered. Office hoTir-- C VNFSTHETICS Operating from 9 A. to 5 P.M. iiitiF.ftffi, "THE TAILOR." 29 E. First South, - Salt Lska City. IFOUNTAIN RESTAURANT"" : and LUNCH COUIITEK. 113 MAIN ST. 113 A delicious American cooked dinner, changeable very day, between 11:30 and 8:00 o'clock, for only fee. Specialties Breakfast and supper; oysters m everv stvle', short orders of all kinds "at all kour3. i'. 11. GKICE, Prop r. Recently the following Notice appeared in the 3 San Francisco Chronicle. fct " Judge S had been sick only about two SJ weeks, and it was not until the last three or EJ four days that the malady took a serious turn, nu At the beginning of his illness he suffered from U diabetes and stomach disorder. Later the fg hidneys refused to perform their functions and Is he passed quietly away. Thus ended the life j of one of the most prominent men in Cali-- M fornia." Like thousands of others his un-- js timely death was the result of neglecting early m symptoms of kidney disease. a IF" YOU I are troubled with diabetes, gravel, or any de- - ranprcment of the kidneys or urinary organs, g im't. delay proper treatment until you are t forced to give up your daily duties ; don't J waste your money on worthless liniments Eg and worse plasters, but strike at the seat of 3 the disease at once by using the greatest of all E3 known remedies, the celebrated Oregon Kid-- E3 nev Tea. It has saved the lives of thousands. K Whv should it not cure you ? Try it. Purely W vegetable and pleasant to take. Jl.OOa pack-- Sjj age, 6 for $5.00. jy --Oi f .NlqtsiN ! , TERRACE SITES.f FACTORY SITES7 74 ft., 554 E, 1st South, 87000 ; easy terms. First-clas- s resident lot. Don't let this slip, as it is ' a bargain. Fine Terrace Site, immediately north Temple cor-ner, 200 ft. on Main street, 115 1-- 5 ft. on N. Tem-ple ; anxious to sell. Call and see us for price. --n Another handsome Terrace Site 107 ft. on v 4th East, bet. 3rd and 4th South streets. Price and y terms reasonable. 2 new brick stores, 126-12- 3 "W. So. Temple, 14x40 ft. each; iron roof; ground 23x165 ft., Good busi-ness property ; $275 per front ft. ; good terms. 56x165 ft., 132 W. So. Temple, 12-roo- m dwelling, in good repair. Fine business property ; 275 per front ft. A bargain ; 1-- 2 cash, balance easy. 15 first-cla- ss Building Lots, 50x150 ft. each, on Cap-itol Hill; all under water. Make us an offer, as we want to sell. A No. 1 Factory Site, 270 ft. fronting on D. & E. G. W. R. R., bet. 5th and 6th North Temple streets ; $2250; 1-- 2 cash, balance to svnt. 25 Building Lots in west and northwest part of the City ; 8150 each, on installment plan. Best farm in Utah, 10 mile south of City, 130 acres; all fenced and well improved. Chep ; good tarms. See us for figures. A Good Tii! The ppople know a rood thing when they see it. The flre-- t cold snap "has caused a rush for our Custom-Mad- e They are certainly the finest selection of Garmenis ever shown by any Tailoring Establishment to this City. Saltern Our line of Suits have no eqc.ul either in quality or price. Don't Pay Big Prices! To Merchant Tailors when you tan pet just what von want by visiting the Eastern Mislit Clothing I'urlors for half the money. fSTEINWAY TlANOSj FOR Utah, Idaho, Wyoming. We have just received a complete stork of the new stylos and a cordial invitation is extended to tha public to call and examine them. F. E. Warren Mercantile k 1 Fccnd Sonth, S!t Lake Cifv. 4 )otc!o. HOTEL KNIJTSFORti Opened June 3. New and Elegant in all its Ap-- , , pointments. 250 Rooms, Single or En Suite: 75; Rooms with Bath. G. S. HOLMES, - - Proprietor. WALKER HOUSE. First-Cla- ss Kuropeanllotel.-- - Tha Walker is located in the business center of tha City and has all the Mniip.rn ImnrrvRmpnfs I Tnnvpnipnrp QOMMERCIAL. NATIONAL BANK, SALT LAKE CITY UTAH. Capital (Fully Paid) 3nn,ono ScfiPLUs 30,000- General Banking in All Its Brandies. Tssnes certificates of deposit payable on demand bearing interest if left a specified time. Sells drafts and bills of exchange on all principal cities in the United States and Europe. Geo. M. Dohtjit Fre?ident W. P. Noble Thomas Mabshall 2nd Joiih W. Donnellan Cashier " PrRKCTOBS F. H. Anerbach, John J. Paly, F. J. Salisbury, Movlan C. Fox, Frank II. Dyer, Thomas Marshall, V. P. Xoble, George M. Downey, John W. Donnelliin. RANKING J)EPART3JE.T DTAH TITLE, INSURANCE & TRUST CO. Paid vt Capital JlV.rCrt. SfBPLUS 10,0-0- PATS 5 PER CENT INTEREST ON TIME acts as trustee, guardian, adminis-trator and executor; transacts ffeneral trust busi-ness; insures real estate titles: insurance fee covers ail charges tor attorneys and abstracts. STOCKHOLDERS: Bankers J. E. Doolv, T. R. Jones, L. S. Hills, M. H. Walker, W. S. McCornick, E. A. Smith, II. T. Duke, Josiah Barrett, Hyde S. Tounp. M. S. Pendereast, T. A. Kent, W. T. Lynn. J. R. Walker. Capitalists R. C. Chambers, Kelsie & GUies- - James Sharp, John J. Daly, R. Mcintosh, A. . Thomas, Governor of Utah. MiRCBArrrs F. H. Auerbach, T. G. Webber, Hugh Anderson, W. H. Rowe, A. W. Carlson, S. H. Auerbach, W. F. Colton. Jas. Anderson. Lawyers John A. Marshall, Wei. C. Hail. DR- - HODGES DENTIST. Teeth extract- - SiMtSMMV ed without pain MSSLvS' "PS . bv the use of vi- - talized air. AllIMfSm work warrant- - ctiTi ft MkWfmf Salt Lake City. ill hi, Y i y They Must I'jl be Sold, as Owner Needs Cash. . ' jj Call at Once .1 JjJ II at Room 16, Commercial Block. . j! j ' j! II Skookam Ioot Hcni Opoxjuqp. Grows Hair Rapidly. R$'v& Eradicates Dandruff. Stops Falling Hair. t''Wf;..451 Is a Preventive of Baldness. TVWMf Bald Heads. I iWiii) Toikt Article fe k ' ,..S l Is Tree front all ,''fj: coloring matter. (Trade mart rrgisttred.) Coutaines no Mineral orVegetable Toisoaa Is an honest and meritorious preparation. Nature's Own Remedy. Skoohim Root Hair Grower Go. NEW YORK. Po Sal by all Druggists, A 85-8- 6 COriMZP.CiAU BLOCK. i t Bank of the Republic. Caittal, $300,000 Ftllt Paid Up Fkask Knox President L. C. Karricx Vice-Preside- J. A. Earls Cashier 47 MAIN STREET. Transacts a general banking business. Money loaned on faverable terms. Accounts of mer-chants, individuals, firms and corporations so-licited. Five per cent interest paid on savings and time deposits. DIRECTORS: L. C. Karrrkk G. S. Holmes Emil Kahn j. A. Earls V. E. Smedley Geo. A. Lowe Frank Knox H. L. A. Culmer J. G. Sutherland. T. E. jones o- - BANKERS. 163 MAIN ST SALT LAKE BUI'S ORES AND BULLION. JOMBAKD JNVESTMENT COMPANY." Of Kansas City, Mo., and Boston, Mass. Branch Office for Utah and Southern Idaho. Carner First South and Main atreet, Salt Lake City, Utah. W. II. Dale - Manager. IJikeJLoana on Farm and City Property aj 111 u WW I II U I UltlWlliW VA. UH II lUIIIUIIUUU Pertainins to a strictly first-clas- s house. It managed as well as any hotel in the West, and i strictfv the business and tourist hotel of fcalB Lake City. PASSENGER ELEVATOR. The Walker and the Metropolitan are the twr leading hotels o tait Lake City. G. S. ERB, - - Proprietor. THE CULLEN. THE Modem HoteJ OF SALT LAKE CITT. S. C. EWINS, - - Proprietor HOTEL TEMPLETONJ Just Opened. tITonly FIRST-CLAS- S HOTEL EC THE CITT. ;; Corner of Main and South Temsla Streets. r UTAH an MONTANA ! lip Importers !zs&siii & Dealers ' In High Grade Machinery. or fill kinds of dnty. Carries in stock for immv diate delivery Magnesia Sectional Pipe Cover-ing, Iron Pipe and Fittings, Air Compressors, IngersoU-SergoRn- t, R. D. Co. Rock Drills. ENGINES & BOILERS. From 3 to CO Horse-Powe- r. Hoistlnc Engines, Pumps, Horse Whims, Wire Kope, Drill Steel, Mine and Mill Supplies, Sffety Nltro Powder, Caps and Fuse. , j , Main Office and Warerooms, 259 S. Main, Salt Lake. AGENCY, Bntte, Mont. tSCorrespondence Solicited. Jggtot PERINI BROS. Manufacturers and Dealer in m$j!w Umbrellas, Parasols, Walking Canes. Jf)-- DpTrC I kid gloves. 1 7 I . f Every pair fitted to the hand. Umbrella and Parasols re- - y I rflTI'ed n(i "Pired on hort notice. Paraaol made io match ftr I 1 ?v Knuteford Hotel, 265 State St., Salt City, Utah. Main Stor- e- 4f .m! iSf 933 Sixteenth St., Denver, Colorado. i Melbourne's Proposition. Laramie Boomerang. A telegram from Goodland, Kansas, says that Frank Melbourne, the Australian" rain-maker, has closed his experiments at that place. lie explained that the cold nights counteracted all the work he did during the day and tliot it was useless for him to exper intent further. Whether or not the mysteri-ous machine has brought the late rains the people of that section of the country have every eoniidenee" in him. Friday a mass meeting was held and Melbourne was asked to submit a proposition for watering the counties in western Kansas. His proposi-tion was to water them at ten cents for each cultivated acre. There were this year 2,000,-00- 0 acres under cultivation. To raise this amount the count' commissioners will have to levy a tax. The opinions of leading attorneys in the state were read, showing that this could be done under the irrigation law passed last winter. If Melbourne does not produce the rain he will receive nothing. A conven-tion of the counties interested will be called, at which the proposition, will be submitted. Cl'KIOUS DEMOCUAC1'. A democrat is a curious compound; wonderful for pluck and perseverance; wonderful for hopefulness and persis-tency; marvelous for the moral blem-ishes that he can hide from his eyes, and still think himself beautiful; mar-velous for the sins he can coDdone, and still think himself virtuous; incompre-hensible for the divisions, differences, axtravagancies that he can tolerate, and still think himself a factor of a ?reat and united party; wonderful for his many and perpectual makeshifts jmd temporizing expedients, and still think himself consistent; for his many Bat knock-downs- , while he yet again comes to the scratch as lively as a cricket. How he catches at every Btraw, and still thinks himself planted on a solid foundation. How they talk about being a party, while they are Scarcely more than an undisciplined mob. They strain at gnats and swallow camels. They are all things to all men; always actuated by expediency; silver men in Ohio; gold-bug- s in New York; free-trad- e on general principles; rabid protectionists when, it comes to any local interest or industry. They talk much about their policy; but they really have no policy, and can have none until they have held power long enough to develop and unite upon a certain line of action. For thirty years prior to the war they controlled the country,and their policy was that of pro-slaver- free trade.low-priee- d labor, low-price- d products, high-price- d cotton, with secession as a standing alternative if they were overpowered in the prose-cution of their schemes. Since the war they have had no control of gov-ernment, and their conflicting and in- - harmonious counsels have never been unified into what might be termed a definite party policy. They get knocked out year after year, yet they never fail the next campaign to come np smiling. A eat is said to have nine lives; but a democrat is indestructible and imperishable. It is hard to define a democrat by ; r. .; ,' tiling what he believes, for ho, believes ahything and everything or nothing, 'i'here is one line of distinction, how-cjve- r, between a democrat and a repub-lican that serves more fully than any other to discriminate between them. That is the line on one side of which lies individualism, and on the other societary union. The democrat is an egoist. He believes in himself, and himself is the essence of his party creed. The republican has Ihe instinct of association and Republicanism means system, organization, unity. Democracy means felf-assertio- individualism. The one las Jefferson for a type; the other has Hamilton. Both principles are indiipensible in a republican government; the central-izing, or organizing tendency, and the g individualizing tendency. The' are the centripetal and centrifu-gal forces, never to be combined as one, but by harmonization to bring about unitary effects. Hence democracy is largely negative, and always must be. Pemocrae-- , in a philosophical point of view, gives the. remote ideal, just as free trade is the far-dista- ideal; but republicanism and protection give the practical working methods whereby those far off ideals are to be realized. Republicans believe iu self government; but they don't hold the doctrine in a form so intense that they cannot yieid personal peculiarities and idiosyncrasies ana a certain measure ot personal privileges in order to the welfare of the whole body politic. Society is in a constant state of mutual attrition; and f one man refuses to yield anything at all for the accommodation of others; or if he refnses to sacrifice something aad , unite with others for the accomplish-ment of some united purpose, he fails to achieve his highest usefulness as a citizen. Republicanism represents the uniting, combining, organizing, centralizing , capabilities of human nature; hence it represents progress and development. It represents education, reform, and all those higher results which can be at-tained only through combined action. Lemocracy represents individual free-dom and personal independence. It represents the goal, the culmination, the results of societary action; while republicanism carries with it a higher unity, and a genius for the use of the means necessary for the attainment of all the noble ends for which humanity has a capability. Church. Unity. Philadelphia Press. The tendency in all branches of modern endeavor is toward combination and unity. It is as true of the church, or ought to be, as of industrial work. The gain to mankind is t. In olden times church unity was brought about by the stake or by gagged mouth and padlocked book. In these times, however, different forces are at work and the heretic comes to be looked upon as a martyr. The Methodist Ecumenical council, which embraces the various branches of the church, is in itself an illustration of this modern spirit. It should be followed to its logical conclusion by a union under one church gov-ernment. Thinking Farmers. Omaha Bee. The farmers who work are the farmers who think. The farmers who talk and shriek calamity are the farmers who think the farmers who work do not think. That is the difference between them and that is what will relegate the sliriekers to the rear in November." That "relief check" of our gouty coteraporary is good; but didn't it oc-cur to you, neighbor, that it was rather ghoulish to riile the dead heroes of Thermopyla: of the god-lik- e sanctity that instinctively attaches to the nobil-ity of action that immortalizes human sacrifice, in order to construct a base-bor- n simile? The soul is crave a that can sit beside the stark forms of those gallant warriors and not catch a more ennobled inspira-tion from the grim heroism moulded on those "dead faces by the exalted en-ergy that imprinted on the plastic and expiring human the similitude of the divine? And as to cutting "relief checks" in twain, neighbor; please don't quote from your own questionable devices; but know rather that the blessing of (ion distills itself upon right action; and that our reform move-ment is one which makes two blades of grass and two precious checks where there was only one before. Who wouM be president of a South American republic? Yesterdaj' an-other attempt was made to assassinate the chief executive of Nicaragua. Bet-ter be a constable in the Thirteenth ward. The report of the minority, Messrs. Tow and Skinner, in the investigation of the alleged crookedness in the offices of treasurer and auditor-genera- l of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, makes it certain that nothing out of the way was found. We have known Mr. Skinner a long time and know him to be a kicker from a way back. Had there been even a shadow of excuse, a report which he signed, would not have been so tame and featureless. Br. Burrows, oculist, aurist, optk-Ia- Spectacles fitted. C'cmirucrcial block. The Russian government is negoti-ating for the purchase of large quan-tities of breadstuils in the United States. The World's fair directory is again .. taugled up in a squabble with the na-tional comuiissioa- - |