Show A BAD LOOK THE HERALD fears the lockedout union miners in the Coaur d Alene country are losing their beads and in their desperation are doing things which will not only bring trouble upon them but also deprive them of the sympathy aud support of those who i want to bo their friends Until this weak the miners have been models of deportment deport-ment They have been cool cautious and considerate careful to violate no law conservative con-servative in thoir utterances and professing profess-ing only a desire to win by fair means Their leaders also have been wise and until recently have restrained the hotheaded hot-headed among tIle workiugmen The course pursued has been such as to command com-mand the respect of tho press and people who have hoped that the trouble between the mineowners and miners would bo amicably settled on fair and equItable equit-able terms Telegraphic reports cannot always be relied upon and in cases of this kind the news sent out Is often colored in the interest of the employers We hope this will be shown to be the case now although al-though the opposite is feared It looks very much as If tho miners learning that troops would be sont into the country had become desperate and lost control bf themselves them-selves It looks that way because they have been destroying property arp reported re-ported to have arranged for the blowingup of mills and railway bridges and entering upon a mad career of destruction If the reports are true then we pity tho poor miners for however just their cause maybe may-be they will both fall of success and be subjected to punishment Furthermore they will Buffer the loss of that popular sympathy which is such an Important factor fac-tor in bringing about fair adjustment in disputes of this character The sense of justice in the American people Inyariably inclines them to the Bide of tho poor and weak but when the poor and th weak cease to respect the law and constituted authority public opinion changes Anarchy An-archy will not be tolerated in this country It no sooner shows itself than tho better elements everywhere declare themselves in favor of the vigorous and determined application of the law We do not say that the Cmur dAleno miners have concluded to take matters into their own hands and defy every authority save their own but tho tendency is strikingly in that direction hence the apprehension that a very grave mistake Is being committed commit-ted and one which will fall heavily upon thQ poor men whoso contention has all along had tho encouragement and support of the press and people It is to be hoped that matters have not proceedod so far that they cannot be adjusted ad-justed on terms which will bo just to the men It is to bo hoped that the latter have done nothing which will outlaw thorn It is to be hoped thero will be a return to the wiser counsels which have been heeded In the past audthat the locked out miners will act at all times with the full understanding under-standing that authority and dignity of the state and of the United States must be maintained and the law upheld at whatever what-ever coat < < IN 1SSJ when CLEVELAND was first nominated for president Tammany was most bitterly opposed and it was Dot1111 ten days before the election that it was certainly known it would support the nominee JOHN KELLT dd little else but sulk whilst GIUDT whom Mr CLEVELAND whilst governor bad snubbed with a number num-ber of other leading lights openly denounced de-nounced the Democratic candidate Yet within a fortnight of the election a change took place and Tammanys entire force many scores of thousands strong turned completely over No such antagonistic feeling exists today for at the very outset no sooner was the nomination made at Chicago than Mr Rictunn CROKEU Col FELLOWS and the other influential leaders passed the word along the lines that CLEVELAND and STEVE SON were 4o be supported heartily and with no ropinings The discipline which prevails among the Tammanyites Is like tbat of an army and a thorough singleness of purpose prevails high and low |