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Repel aban pais ] { ‘7 ” (ee ONE OF THE CONVERTS TO THE REPUBLICAN GOS- PEL OF GREED. The Awful Anarchist Plot—Re- publican Anti-Imperialists. General Apathy Will Be the Explanation—The Independ- ent Republican Governor of Wisconsin—Other Odds and Ends. Sr. PauL, Sept. 3, 1900. Charles Denby, ex-minister to China, is being paraded in the Republican press as a recent convert to the McKin- ley cause. A convert, indeed! Mr. Denby was made a member of Mr. Mc- Kinley’s first Philippine commission because he was known to be an impe- rialist. Since that time he has been engaged in writing of the advantages of imperial dominion. He is, as the Chicago Chronicle says, an imperialist of the most sordid kind, with no ad- mixture of religion, humanity, benevo- lent assimilation or anything but pure and blind greed. Witness this extract from an article which he wrote for The Forum, and which was printed in that magazine in the number for Feb- ruary, 1899: “The hard, practical question alone remains: Willthe possession of these islands benefit us as a nation? If it will not set them free tomorrow and let their people, if they please, cut each other’s throats or cut what pranks they please.” The Chronicle offers this pertinent comment: “It will be seen that there is no Christianity or humanity or duty or destiny nonsense about that. There is no fear that ‘‘the world would laugh at us’’ or that some yulture nation would swoop down and makea mealof the islands if we should ‘haul down the flag’ and ‘‘sail away.” “‘Denby’s policy immediately the sub- jugation enterprise was openly entered upon more than a year and a half ago was the most cold-blooded ‘‘scuttle pol- icy.” His policy was: Keep the Phil- ippines regardless of the wishes of their ten millions of people if you can make it pay. If you cannot make it pay turn them loose and let the people cut each other’s throazs or go tothe devil any other way. You are out for the stuff, and all talk of humanity or duty is mere stuffing for sentimental ears.’’ Everybody is now laughing at that awful plot to assassinate President Mc- Kinley, which was reported to have been hatched by Italian anarchists and which was recently unearthed by the chief of our government secret service. The prompt arrest of two of the desper- ate anarchists on their arrival in New York from Naples was expected to re- sult in some terrible revelations and create a sentimental regard for the president whose life had thus been providentially saved. But the thing has fallen flat. The real facts appear to be these: Natale Moresca, one of the men arrest- ed on suspicion of having been sent to this country by the Italian anarchists with orders to assassinate President McKinley, was a poor laborer in Na- ples. He wanted to marry a girl, who also was courted by another lover. Mcresca was the favored suitor. He decided to goto Americain hopes of making some money, and it was under- stood that the wedding would take place on his return to Naples. He _se- cured a situation as waiter on the Kaiser Wilhelm and sailed for New York. His rival wrote an anonymous letter to Mr. Byington, the United States consul at Naples, denouncing Moresca and another man, Guida, who also sailed on the Kaiser Wilhelm, as anarchists who were going to the United States for the purpose of mur- dering the president. The consul wired the startling news to New York and the two men were arrested imme- diately on their arrival. This appears to be the whole truth regarding the awful tragedy which was averted by the courage and skill of the detectives in the secret service of our government, There was a time when John Hay, the present premier of the McKinley government, believed what would be rank treason in one of the latter-day Republicans. In his book, ‘‘Castillian Days,”’ he says: “There are those who think the Spaniards are not fit forfreedom. I believe that no people are fit: for any- thing else.”’ Charles Sumner, one of the greatest of Republicans in his time, saidina speech on the acquisition of Alaska: “TI cannot disguise my anxiety that every stage in our predestined future shall be by natural process, without war, ana, I may add, even without pur- chase. There is no territorial aggran- dizement which is worth the price of blood.” Another old fashioned Republican, John Sherman, said ina speech at a soldiers’ reunion in Mansfield, O., Aug. 26, 1899: “IT am and always have been opposed to war in the Philippines. We have no business there, and I hope they will soon be left alone to govern themselves. Ishall be glad to welcome the day when the soldier boys shall be called home from the Philippines. We shall then again be the same great family as we have been heretofore. The war is not only an expensive war, but itis also unnecessary, uncalled for, and un- just.” Republicans everywhere appear to be om ; Sore RE petycomshtactenms result because of over-confidence. There is, they say, general apathy in their ranks. Several of the leaders have sounded anote of warning against over- confidence. Of course, this simply means that Republicans are troubled with apathy, not because they are con- fident of McKinley’s election, but be- cause they don’t care whether he is elected or not. Lyman Gage, secretary of the treas- ury, says that if Bryan should -become president ‘the could. order his secretary of the treasury to make payable in sil- ver all the public debt payable in coin and all current disbursements as well.”’ If this were true it would prove the loose-jointedness of the Republican leg- islation for the firm establishment of the gold standard. ° Nothing, says the Philadelphia Rec- ord, affords more convincing proof of the plutocratic tendencies of the Re- public party than the frank confidence with which Chairman Hanna goes from city to city making his levies for cam- paign funds upon rich men and office- holders who have obiained wealth and preferment through partisan favoritism. He told the Philadelphia magnates who on Saturday last were gathered to see him that Philadelphia would be drawn upon for $600,000. This is an immense sum. Ifthe sizeof the draft be any criterion of the real exigencies of the McKinley campaign itis an evidence of desperation. Edward Scofield, governor of Wiscon- sin, is a Republican who refuses to take his views ready-made from the head- quarters of his party. At the banquet of the Iron Brigade in Chicago some days ago the governor made a speech and raised his voice in warning against the growing spirit of militarism. He used this language: “The most highly trained army, al! the authorities to the contrary not- withstanding, can never subdue wholly an.army of intelligent men figh ting for their homes. This fact becomes more true every year‘and our nation will do well to head it. We have had a taste of war recently, which unquestionably has awakened a military spirit, and what we have now to guard ourselves against isa too great and dangerous growth of this spirit. We prefer peace and we are a nation whose glory is that when it does engage in war it is not for conquest, but for righteousness sake.’ He declared that ‘‘our path to glory in an honorable future dogs not lie through bloody seas.’ The poem entitled ‘‘America and Liberty,” by Professor Wilhelm Petter- son of Minneapolis, is becoming fa- mous. It contains these spirited and patriotic lines, which will appeal to every believer in the true American doctrine of human rights: Who said ‘Haul down our flag?’” No man Whose warm blood is American. “Thou Freedom’s noblest symbol, rise In growing splendor to the skies; | And be, where’er thou art unfurled, The flag of hope to all the world.” But, mark ye well, our flag must wave O’er loosened chains, to free, to save. And if they say it waves its folds O’er ships with slavery in their holds; And if they say it waves o’er lands ‘Where men in arms as conquerer stands, | Tis but a false, pretentious rag, Tis not OUR flag, ’tis NOT our flag. OUR flag must wave, where’er it be, For Justice, Right and Liberty. The Goodhue County News pays this deserved tribute to Governor Lind: “There is not a department of the state’s activity where his influence is not felt, invariably in the people’s in- terest. The secretary of state neglected his duty; Governor Lind called his at- tention to the lapse by citing facts without comment. Other governors never troubled themselves with the state’s affairs in the attorney general's office. Governor Lind, without offi- ciousness, has had more consultations with the attorney general than all his predecessors. Other governors have named railroad commissioners and let it goat that. Governor Lind knows what the railroad commission is do- ing and has made not a few suggestions upon which some of their most impor- tant initiatives were based. In the coal rate case, the Southern Minnesota grain rates, the Northern Minnesota joint rate case, he has been informed of every step. “Other governors have appointed their boards and then gone off and left them. Governor Lind never fails, if he can help it, to attend the meetings of the prison board, the charities and cor- rections, and soon. Thereis not an institution with whose workings he is not familiar. There is not a problem he has not studied. There isnot an interest of the state upon which he is not informed. There is not an interest of the people for which he is not zeal- ously concerned. “Nobody . knows how much he has done for the state, how usefal his labors have been. He is governor every minute and to every purpose.” The Des Moines Weekly Globe, a Re- publican paper, believes in imperialism and makes no secret of it, The paper speaks right out in favor of a change in our form of government. It develops its views in this wise: “For along time thinking people who have large commercial interests have felt unsafe with our present form of government from the fact that we are controlled by the little cheap John pol- iticians and ward heelers. Now is a good time to do away with our obsolete Constitution and adopt a form of goy- ernment that will be logical with our new expansion ideas and will give am- ple protection to capital. A constitu- tional monarchy is probably the most desirable plan that we could now adopt. Everything is ripe for the change. We take it that the great farming interests of our land will readily adapt them- casting about for some plausible expla- | selves to the change. The farmer isa nation which they may offer when | great lover of law and order, and anti- their fears have been realized in No- | monarchy is largely the expression of | vember. They are saying that they ‘will ww if they only succeed in getting q French revolutionary ideas’ suggested by hot-headed theorists.”” PLS. ‘ — FIRES FIRST GUN OF THE DEMO- CRATIC CAMPAIGN, An Immense Andience Comprising Persons of All Shades of Politi- cal Belief Listen to the Silver Tongued Orator's Remarks—Goes Aiter Roosevelt's St. Paul Speech Without Gloves — Imperialistic Policy of the Republican Party Denounced in Unmeasured Terms. Duluth, Aug. 27.—The largest gathering to listen to a political speech that ever assembled in Duluth was that of this evening at the armory, when Hon. Charles A. Towne opened the campaign in an address in which he replied to the recent speech of Gov. Roosevelt delivered at St. Paul on the occasion of the na- tional convention of the League of Re- publicans Clubs, and arraigned the ad- ministration policy in the Philippines. The audience, which comprised persons of all shades of political belief and many scores of women, listened attentively to the silver-tongued orator’s remarks for more than two hours and frequently throughout the discourse the applause was deafening. i The speech, which will be used as a campaign document, is considered as Mr. Towne’s greatest political effort. At its conclusion he was tendered an ovation by the multitude present. Mr. Towne will leave Tuesday or Wednesday for Idaho and other Western points to enter actively into the work of the camapign. Mr. Towne opened by expressing lack of patience with any one who believed in his “party, right or wrong,” or “‘any pres- ident, right or wrong,” considering the latter simply another statement of the divine right of kings. He then said: “Numerous questions are involved in this campaign. It is rare, however, that more than one great issue is decided at a time, and, as a rule, one subject of inter- est is uppermost in the public mind and chiefly calls for discussion and decision. This is especially true in 1900. The rela- tively secondary matters, important as they are all, have reference to policies to be pursued by the republic, ‘The issue of first moment, the one that temporarily dwarfs all others by comparison, is whether the republic itself is to continue. Because of the magnitude of this ques- tion, which not only the Democratic plat- form but the public concern declares to be the paramount issue of the campaign, because time will not permit a full dis- cussion in one meeting like this of all the subjects embraced in the party plat- form, and because I design to use a good part of this address in commenting upon the speech mainly concerned with this topic, delivered at St. Paul*recently by the Republican candidate for vice presi- dent, I shall devote the greater part of the time to-night to the Consideration of Imperialism. Let us first inquire how the question has arisen. It is one of the paradoxes of history that a policy of subjugation and conquest should have been the inheri- tance of a war of liberation.” He then reviewed at some length the causes leading up to the chief events of the Spanish war. He took up the insur- rection in the Philippines, which had been raging for many years, sketching it brief- ly, and telling how brilliantly Dewey and his sailors engaged the Spanish fleet in Manila bay, and continued: “It was thus as a mere incident in the prosecution of the war for the liberation of Cuba that we found ourselves in the Philippine islands. It is claimed that cir- cumstances were such aS to compel us, with due regard to our interests and our international duties, to pursue in those islands thereafter the policy for which the administration has become responsi- ble. A brief examination of those cir- cumstances will suffice to show that the policy adopted was not only unnecessary, but that it was in the highest degree dis- advantageous to the United States, while involving the utmost cruelty and injustice toward the inhabitants of those islands and violating every principle of good faith and the honorable traditions of American diplomacy.”’ He said the coming of Aguinaldo was at the invitation of Admiral Dewey and that he was to be an ally of the Ameri- cans, quoting from the naval records in support of his assertion. After again re- ferring to the different situations in Cuba and the Phillippines, he said: “But the statement that we never prom- | ised the Filipinos their independence con- veys a false impression. Our conduct was such as to estop an honorable nation from urging such a plea as a justification or excuse for attempting to subjugate the islands. The Filipinos made no secret of their object in rebelling against the Spanish government. What they desired to do was to form a government of their own and to be absolutely independent of Spain, The representatives of the United States in the East know this object per- fectly well. The Filipinos proclaimed it to the world. “It is important to bear in mind that the Filipino republic established under the leadership of Aguinaldo was a gov- ernment in fact, recognized throughout | the Island of Luzon and several adjoining islands to the south, capable of preserving order, collecting taxes, maintaining edu- cation and’a complete system. of public | administration, raising and supporting an army which for a considerable period numbered 30,000 men, and conducting war | according to the humane principles of modern law. “It is the fashion among apologists for the administration's policy to represent the Filipinos as little short of barbarians | and savages, and as wholly incapacitated for the work of self-government. Fortu- | nately the evidence on this subject to the contrary is readily accessible and over- whelming in quantity and certainty.” He quoted from Lieut. John D. Ford of the United States navy, Gen. Charles ‘A. King, U. 8. A., and others in suppSrt of his statement. Then he went on: “It is impossible to determine the ex- session of the Philippine islands, It is clear that Admiral Dewey for a consider- able period after the battle of Manila bay had no knowledge of such an intention. Gen. Anderson, who took command of our land forces in the islands about the first of July 1898, says in an article in the North American Review for February, 1900: ‘I was the first to tell Admiral Dewey that there was any disposition on the part of the American people to hold the Philippines if they were captured.’ There will be little dissent from the pro- Dosition that if he came to Manila with such knowledge the most obvious consid- erations of justice and fairness required that the Filipinos be speedly acquainted with it. Yet they were permitted to in- culge all the illusion of hope from our supposed friendliness to‘their plans of in- dependence with which their proclama- tions had made us familiar.” After describing the strained relations between the Americans and the Filipinos after the capture of Manila Mr. Towne said: “Our opponents aré in the habit of re- ferring to the outbreak of actual hos- tlities between. us and the Filipinos as though the latter were the aggressors; and much is attempted to be made out of such expressions as that ‘they fired on our flag.’ But, of course, since we had se- cretly formed a determination to seize the islands, it is apparent that whenever that design became manifest or we at- tempted to put it into effect the Filipinos, if they were in earnest when declaring their object to. be independent, would resist it. The development of the hostile design was itself an attack. The wonder is, consider- ing the tropical nature of the islanders and the long continued course of our , mingled Reticence, Ambiguity and Offense, that they were not betrayed into vio- lence long before any physical clash ac- tually oceurred. As a matter of fact, however, a shown by Gen. Otis’ official report, our troops fired the first shot, and the Filipinos stocd on the defensive. “The plan to possess the whole Philip- pine archipelago and to subdue it if neces- sary by force of arms was bluntly set forth by the president in his instructions to Gen. Otis, under date of Dec. 21,.1898, which were embodied by the latter in the famous proclamation of Jan. 3, 1899. It is important to bear in mind the time when this proclamation was made, as touching the question of the president's right to issue it, its responsibility for the warfare that followed and its relation to the general subject of arbitrary power whose increasingly easy assumption and exercise are the invariable accompani- ; ments of imperialism.” He then discussed the protocol and the ' treaty of peace, and the proclamation of Jan 1900, at Manila, which he declares out their fall vo! But they fear the act time at which the authorities in UNDISGUISED = GREED OPENED BY TOWNE |sccmcdrsume ace’ es|THE DEWEY HOMESTEAD “is of the very essence of imperialism. | cued from an ambush; a hero who boasts | does not want; a gentleman who charges Divested of its cant and made over into plain language, the proclamation tells the Filipinos that we have seized their coun- try by brute forcé and propose to hold it, and that they must submit to our pre- tension, yield to our assumed authority, or be shot to death. It boldly proclaims the right of conquest, the Highway Robbery of Nations. “For the first time in American history » it is asserted by the responsible leader of a great party and a president of the republic that we may rightfully wage war for purposes of dominion and to acquire property in the land of other nations, and jurisdiction over their liberties and per- sons, by the mere test of superior strength, It violates the most sacred tra- ditions of our history. “But what is probably as sinister in this proclamation as even this flagrant indorsement of force as the basis of po- litical authority, and as significant of im- perialistic tendencies in the executive, is the cool assumption by the president of the power to act before the execution of the treaty. The treaty was not yet rati- fied. It had not, indeed, been approved by the senate, and might easily never have been approved, since the final action of that body is said to have been taken by a bare majority of one vote. This as- sumption of power, admittedly before the treaty conferred it on him, and where the exercise of it was certain to involve the nation in war, as it soon did, was the most prodigious.” Taking up Gov. Roosevelt's speech, he declared it to be “‘enormously disappoint- ing. Neither in matter nor in manner is it worthy of its occasion. In respect of argument the speech is, with rare ex- ceptions, an alternation of evasion and assertion. In spirit it is a compound of scold and scullion. As to its facts, it abounds in inaccuracies which, if acci- dental, are inexplicable as coming from @ man who has performed creditably in history and biography. But the world is accustomed to inconsistencies from Mr. Roosevelt. It has long looked upon*him as a predestined and incorrigible eccen- tric. It has given up attempting to ex- plain him or to reconcile him with him- self. It is quite impossible, whether it would be worth while otherwise or not, to make an entirely satisfactory diagno- sis of a civil service reformer in partner- ship with Thomas C. Platt; a citizen sol- Mer who ridicules the volunteer; a leader in battle who finds glory in being res- of shooting a fleeing foe in the back; a candidate who poses to delegates and galleries to obtain a nomination that he six and one-half millions of his fellow countrymen with lawlessness, dishonesty, and cowardice; a statesman who, mount- ed on a hobby, rides roughly at grave questions in economics and politics, swinging his partisan lariat and yelling like an intellectual Comanche.” Mr. Towne then read quotations from the St. Paul speech of Gov. Roosevelt, ! which he said showed the truth of what he had said of that speech as a whole. He argued at considerable length against any possible constitutional right under which the United States could hold and govern colonies, ridiculing the alleged claim that this right was given by that provision of the Constitution which gives congress the power to make all needful rules and regulations respecting the “ter- ritory and other proertpy” of the United States Grounds for Apprehension. Fred—Do you know that I am half- afraid to propose to Belle, the more I think of it. Defined. . Mrs. Jones—This paper speaks of a “lobbyist” as though it was a term of Dick—Pshaw, man! Why are you eProach. faint-hearted? Fred—Because, from what she said Mrs. Plagore—Of course. A lobby- ist, I take it, is one of those. deceitful last night, I have got an idea that she men who sneak out between the acts will decline to accept me. Dick—What did she say? Fred—She said I was a “poem.”"— Minneapolis. Woodward & Co., Grain Commission. dututh. - for a drink, claiming that they are merely going into the lobby.—Philadel- . phia Press. | penefit to her, and I contident l tiemacice of the Tonsorial Artist. 2 pearson meee ey Wcuse where George Dewey was born December 26th, ‘ovey family until after the death of the Admiral's« ossession of Captain Edward Dewey, who sold it to- . R. Gordon, Esq., in the;summer of 1889. Mr. Gordon» moved it to its preseat site in following February, 1890, and has occupied it until. the present time. Mr. and Mr - ordon are unfaili in their courtesy to the thous-- ands who visit this shritie, the k :. place of Admiral Dewey. A recent letter from T. R. ( n to the Peruna Drug M’f’g Co., Columbus, Ohio, reads as follows: 7 “It is with great satisfaction st I'find myself able, after an extended trial, to: write you in this emphatic mann f the good’your Peruna has done my wife. «She has been troubled w ''v catarrh from, childhood, and whenever she has a cold, or any unusual con: ‘tion of the weather, it was worse than usual, and seemed more than she cou'd bear, The dropping in her throat at night pre- vented refreshing sleep; in fact, ws-had-come, to Took upon it as incurable, and fron» the many remedies used in vain we.had reason to, “We are thank tul and Bappy #0, say that ye:tr ‘Peruna’ has been of great Jook for a coinplete and entire cure. High praise is not too much to bestow upon your remedy.” T. R. Gorvon. Address The Peruna Medicine Co., -Solambus, 0, for free book on catarrh. English-Made Mummy Cloth: 1° Sir William Bailey, head of the weil’ known Albion works, at Salford, told sy bi good story the other day. A certai/| Manchester merchant saw a mummy i Egypt and brought away a portion of! - the mummy cloth. This was handed to ' a buyer of a large Manchester ware- house, who was asked if he could tell where it was woven. After examining it carefully with his glass, he said he thought he could put his finger on the mill where it was produced if he could borrow the piece for a few days. After- wards he reported that it was made where he had thought, near Oldram. Manchester men are known to be acute. —Liverpool Post. The above picture shows ti 1837. It was occupied by the father. It then came into the its present owner and occupant Don’t be fooled with a mackintosh Gor rubber coat. If you wantacoat| est storm buy the Slicker. If notfor sale in yous) town, write talogue to ‘A. 4. TOWER, Becton, Mass, ABSOLUTE “Is this a tonsorial parlor?” asked the hard-featured man, thrusting his head inside the door. “Yes, sir,” answered the man at the first chair. “Come in. You're next.” “I guess not. You'll want to know what makes my hair so harsh, and try to get me to have it singed, and you'll want to part it in the middle, and charge me 35 cents. I think I'll hunt a barber shop, Good-day.’’—Chicago Trib- une. SECURITY, Iam sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. THOS. ROBBINS, Maple Street wich, N. Y.. Feb. 17, 1900. Genuine “Very Little Space. “NM[y parents may come between us,” 9 Carter’s Sig mney do ne retes, not. “ey Tittle Liver Pills. And he pressed her still closer to his manly breast.—Philadelphia Record. Must Bear Signature of Carter's Ink Is Scientifically compounded of the best materials. If your dealer do-s not keep it he can get it for you. A Reaceful Exit. “Did you have any words with your mistress, which caused you to leave your last place?” “Niver a wor-rd, mum. Shure an’ Oi | locked her in the bathrom, and tuk all | me things, and shlipped out as quiet as | | yez plaze.”—Harper’s Bazar. H FOR BILIOUSNESS, FOR TORPID LIVER. 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