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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1887,~TWELYV PAGES. KELLEY, STIGER & CO. |KELLEY, STIGER & CO, — - — Monday and Tuesday, Oct, 24 and 25, Invite your inspection of their line of Misses' and Children's Newmarkets and Cloaks with Gretchen Skirts, &. We name below a few leading styles on which we will make special prices for the coming week, Misses” Newmarkets, material grey and white mixed eloth, check silk lined hood, with belt and fancy buckle, double breasted and ball hutfons, sizes 10, 12, 14 and 16 years. Price $4.75; rise 23c. A Newmarket,Brown Boucle Cloaking, with plush collar, cuffs and hood, double breasted with metal buttons, box plaits, in sizes from 12 to 16 years. Price $6; rise 50c. A Misses’ Newmarket, fine all wool beaver ro\[:\r and cuffs, light beaver fur and fur down back plait. This garment is in hunter's green and brown clothy, worth $20; wo sell it for £16 this week. L] A fancy light English Check Cloaking, with fan cape, shirred skirt in black, cat's-cye ball buttons, high rot in%‘collnr. 2 to 16 years, £10.50; rise $1,00, A black, brown and grey mixed Check Cloaking, with handsome cord trimmed cape, skirt plaited front and back, gathered at sides with an elegant cord girdle around the wai This has been a R t f Silk ading seller in the east, and is the most stylish garm :nt in Omaha. Sizes from 12 to 18 years. $16; rise $1.00. emnants o 1Ks. Children’s Gretchen's, in all the latest cloths, We name a grey and white mixed fancy check Cloaking, astrachan collar and cufts, hood lined with fancy silk lining, fancy astrachan belt, triple box Remnants of Velvets. laits in back of skirt. Sizes from 4 to 12 years. Price $5.25; rise 50¢. 2 ¢ Remnants of Satins A fine Erown Astrachan Cloaking, hood lined with red plush, double breasted with ball buttons, plaits front and back, a high rolling plush collar with belt to match material. Sizes from 4 to 12 b '~ years. Price $7.00; rise Toe. ¢ Remnants of Plush. Wealso have in stock all the latest styles in fancy English Striped and Checked Cloaking Cloths made with hoods, capas and Gretehen skirts, all of which we cannot mention in the space allotted | Remmnants of ALL WOOL PLAIDS, CHECKS, and STRIPES, to us in the paper. Remember, we a's) show an elegant assortment of Jackets in Kersey Cloths both black and colors, Astrachan Jackets from $2.75 and upward. We make a specialty of Seal Plush garments, both Sacques and Wraps, and are showing decidedly the best values in the city on Plush Sacques at $20.00, $25.00, £35.00 and $50.00. Our Wraps are all the newest and latest conceits in style and finishs We call your attention to our Astrachan Modjeska at $18.00. We have a Modjeska in Seal Plush, quilted satin lining, high rolling collar with Remants of HALF WO OL DRESS GOODS, plaited back and handsome ball trimming, $35; sold elsewhere $40.00. ¥ Remnants of JERSEY FLANNELS, In Ladies Newmarkets with bell sleeves and loose fitting fronts, we show the leading styles and make bottom prices for good value. On Menday we shall be prepared to show a full line of Seal Garments (warranted Alaska Seal and London dyed) from the old and xeliable house of C. G. Gunther Sons, 5th avenue, New York, from which we shall be pleased to take orders, guaranteeing satisfaction in every instance, not 0!!1{ as to quality and perfection of fit, but also as to extraordinary good values. s 1 Come and investigate our Cloak Department. Respectfully, In lengths ranging from 1 yard to 10 yards. Suitable for Children, Mines‘ and Ladies Dresses. \ The rare opportunity to buy nice geods at half price. No SAMPLES given of REMNANTS. KE”.E l STIGER & 00 CUHIB[ ]5“] a"d Dlldgfl SITBBIS KELLEY, STIGER & CO, ’ "y ' Dodge and 15th Sts. - - Omaha, Neb, r om [ member of the Carpenters’ union, one of its | rulers or governors—a society where the | men in Chicago are sentenced to hang. They | agitators and_ socialists i B y ) ITIES. doir furnished and_ornamented entirely i THEY ‘IGOROUSLY PROTEST. most active organizers and a speaker at their | unions or free groups conduct their own af- | said things against —capitalism—that's ail | foreigners, This s ....1‘":“ "“fl;‘.a‘.,-fl CONNUBIA the Japanese fashion is always a thing o mass meetings. Tairs to suit themselves. A free society bused | there was of it. The edict has gone forth | you stands a socialist who iwas® hore beauty i And Adolih Fischer, the printer, member | on the common ownership of the means of | that the labor movement must be crushed, [ and raised in this country, The The best of all interior decorations is of Typographical union No. 9. an able writer | existenco—the resources of life—free con- | and every labor leader must be arrested. 1 | question s now befo sople, ppen wood fire, but do ot be led into the J , fore” the people open wood fire, A St. Paul Mass Meeting Pleads for | and for years an ardent supporter of the de- | tracts between the federated associations. | know these men are true-hearted, hones | and it is going to remain hero until it 1s set. | & fEW years ago. > of using onc of the hideous gas imil tHe Lites of tho Anavohists mands of organized labor. Thus ending forever the conflict between | men, who were working in terests of | tled, and it doesn't matter howmany menand | _ Phacbe Hicks, of Petersburg, Va has mar- | ol ©nle ™ umble, unpretentious registel : And Michael Schwab, member of the | capital and labor and abolishing poverty. | tI low men, and [ -duy that their | women are hanged while we are accomplish- | Fied & widower with thivty-one children. She f iy rar pette i s Bookbinders' union, and assistant editol Dl ks bl “"\l“"‘-:;]fl'llfi“' Boni is 8 disgrace fo_ iy ilization. ''r} Plishing the end. ' We are not_here so much | 18 his eighth wi 1 P wood cut into intricat " German labor paper, an orator of great | wage-slaves, we begin to perceive why the « of the violation of any law; | 1o protest for those iy cnator Hawley's marriage to Miss Hor- LAt bt f y PARSON'S LETTER TO CONSTANT | U0, ks moctings und organizor of Shfoiters.of Tnbor, why tho povarty.breed: | and yet those honest Amorican. citizons M | scven more lives i not s mort pa ook | nere it s st will take place beforo congress | Srabesius ure noweften uppliedto the upbe —_ WORKINGMEN AND WOMEN. ers and crime-promoters are 8o bloodthirsty | sentenced to be hung because they spoke their | prevent the rulings of the courts of Tllinois | opens in December. P avias, s giving thiom any - owrved BHULY Mr. Schwab, preceding the 4th of May, | in their denunciations of the anarchists. opinions. It seems fo me that by these things | from becoming law. If they become Juw | Mr. Murphy, of Royalton, N. Y., and the | that may be desired Resolutions Asking for Clemency— | 14, addr in company with myself, the | With greetings and salutations from all | eve crican who has liberty in_ his heart | they will be used in cvery casc where alabor. | Widow Hagers, of Springbrook, met by | T R B ERE e hard wood The Claim that Innocent Men iron’ molde: : . Knights of | the prisoners, yours us ever, for ibert, T Oued Ol S MOk L UIOnd REE g A I ORI 3 chinoe a fow nizhts ago in tho Lockport po. |, venecrs of t ooty be BHpLes cvering v ,abor, W o i ternity, equality. 5 ARSONS, y violence, ¥ the ballot. "Remember, T e Lt AL b A ade, ) Will be Murdered at it tho. exieplons of the - McCortnick | A round of applause followsd thexoad- | upan the frcedom of speoch, frecdom of tha | fch6 shetker who attracted the most | lioe hewtiuariors, WIS e b JRey (550 | patnted wvaod work of an ordinary room s the Hanging. reaper factory. F » at trade union | § \d Hon. Thomas Lucas, of Minne- | Press, rests the liberty of America. A great Chi C was George A, Schilling, of b LG ) 1 | to give it the rich appearance always associal d . 8, Of N ahd ¢ g v 8: i licag smber 9 sopped the question through the bars and | ¢4 KIS O meetings us follows: Furniture workers, o tow by trde und labor | e und cry has beeu raisod that these men | Chicago, member of D A. 34 of that | Bopped fhe fuesion, trowel The U, (o | ed with sihard wood tinish, 2 motal shovers, lumber shovers, carpenters, ety the last Minnesota | Jyore carrying arms If they did, und I deny | city, and a well-known friend of the | Justice Hickey married them. . The “‘heirloom business” is not so flouris! St. Paul Globe: The gay frescoing on | bakers, butchérs, Knights of Labor, brick: resentative in the He 'snok that they did, they had a right to under the | anarchists and socialists. Mr.Schilling o o 5 the big | ing as it was, and ‘ancestral? clocks ang e Ly b makers, fresco 'painters, and many other islature, rose to speak. © 8poke | constitution. " If the people of America could | speaks slowly and in & moderate b f | People get married at some spot ont the big | spiuning wheels, purchased at four or five the ceiling of Turner hall was not much | iy (M 188, "and on that night good deal of fervor and - earnest- | know the whole truth, und the fucts were not | vojce, standitlg with' his hunds crosed | En ot ol e entor of | Lmes their worth are relogated once mol in keeping with the sober dress and Iressed s 1,300 eight hour | ness. 80 wrx-x‘lp.l_,\: .Hnsuru‘-d h:\'llu‘( mlm‘n.- press, ln'h\r:: Kl hands crossed "{“‘.’fb‘l‘“fi 8 "Alllhtlflflylll”()‘l th ‘"n}).: ntor of | ¢ attics mm‘n“,“. rooms. ? i solemn faces of the 400 men, women and rik Decring's reaper works, five HON. THOMAS LUCAS. no American citizen would stand by und see . 2 Ll ol Sl bbbt s MO8 | Gash curtains of rich but_thin material a § ks distant from the Haymarket meeting. | T can hardly realize to-night that I am in | these innocent men hung. My triend OROE A, SCHILLING, persons are apt to assume that shoe-blacking | 25404 from a slight end at the top of thy children who met there last night 0| My Schwab is, s is each of the eight prison: | What was once free Americ Mr. Severence was followed by Dele- | the sont oy st remarked. that I am tobe | I as old as Ham, son of Nowh. Buta War X swer all the purposes of o protest nguinst the hanging of the | ers, an honorary member of the bakers' and | | To-day we find that it is a crime foraman | yute Pucrell, of District assembly 49, | bocoming wmimns: puy (i, fot desirious of | saw (N, V) dispateh tells of, tho martoss oh pretuier i ' .5 0 | as are all the ors of us, NG On the night of May 4, , these con- s L4 : A e tha said, U cd d in your g Union of St. Paul, indorsed by the Love mase nicelinirs. were addvessed by | Spoke thelr sentiments and exerciscd their | Knights of Labor now in session at | fertaiuly choose the latter. The public press, | hundred people congrogated to witness a | S0 A 0.8 ST LT B lianod an Trades and Lubor Assembly of St. Paul . Schwab in the interest of the eight-hour | right to free speech. h{-n the meeting )nu{ .\lmncuxmll‘s Fibjact i this case, is not treating the | marriage ¢ remeny sy ':h|lu..rbxl.|,;,u‘.lrp::lx.|\.:v R taliod Bt With muoh bress, tHey: KEGE $ RSB nt. begun to disperse the police came up and EGATE PUKRCEL They could AV il Dekid ke QUL DXLCEON) 4 z the place ¢ regulution o and seemed to be heartily in accord with 'he same is true of August Spies. He ad- chatged on e, ¥ ‘We have not come here so much to protest ,“:J";‘m‘ ":{.‘;' ‘,‘,‘" have been fairly tried by a | transpires that the bride was a lad, and that }:‘l‘:l'l'l'fi“‘“l"‘lbll"‘.“llmi‘fkf"'_““o:m“‘"‘“’“ LUNCUR the announced object. dressed some of the meetings where Schwiab | At that moment a bomb was thrown. Who | against the judicial murder of some of our | g, Gf VAICh Gvery man - was prejudiced | the cle ; rsonated by a lay- KvoldiovotARaInG £ U room WItHIGEH Binil Congta spoke, but also many others on behalf of the | threw the bomb? There is no evidence to [ comrades, but to warn every one of you what | fht Cooinonmgy oy Lotest ngainst turning | man. The chan programme w Avold_overloading your r O “mil Constant,a member of the trades | (FiThour movement, He visited Omaha at | show that the condemned men were in any | it forebodes for the future. * Tt is not so much | e, Go0K county Jail into a slaughter-house, | caused by the groom *“backing out™ at the | ments, Mo matter how hundsome FC FCe and labor assemblies, presided at the | the request of the Knights of Lubor, and | way connccted with the throwing of thit | for their opinion, us for the active part they | {ji0 3 G "l‘")l"{\_‘; of the people of these | st moment. are {""‘.': "|“ e Wil mecting and opened the proceedings by | ddressed them on the eight-lour move- | bomb. 8 man should come in | huve taken i stiwing up the masses i e | il g exge L 0 MO AFEIOL ] A woman told Mr. Shell, at the Swnor took groat pride was once compl 1 ¥ | Ment: nlso the Knights of Labor at Grand | here while T am speaking to-night aud inter- | interesta of the wreat labor movement, that | KUptY 6F auy crime. 50 50 police court lately, that she had been twice | OWner took great pride wwns ofico ‘oMbl roading:a. Rapids, Mich. Mr. Spies was also editor of | fere with this meeting, and some gentleman, | they are to suffer death. Suppose thit they | guanced by bl ol u s wis entirely in- | | iod, both husbands being sons of one v Tosaly L Tt alooKs s ust il rpet LETTER FROM A. R. PARSONS, a labor paper. His whole life for a infuriated by his act, should get up and shoot | had killed the policemen at Huymarket. In- | g0 g DI ¢lamor, brought about by | ygiyer,"hut not the same father. - Eighteen RO AP I i B0 i ¥ which he preceded with the following | s been devoted to the furtt Nim. Undor that infamous decision of the | furiated by the invasion of thieir right to meet | piie cabitalis S, 80 'Ill"' our J months after the death of the first she mar- | hine cent store.” And 1t did. Jhisbacl J ¢ TOLOWINE | fhtorests and aims of organized lubor. court of Iilinois T could be hung for the mur- | there to discuss their gri- cune - they had o s could slecp peaceably on t Tiod the second, who refused 'to support her, | Windows looking over e same vietv ot itroductory remarks: Oscar Neebe, who did not know of the | der of that policeman. and moral right to resist tnat invasion. A e oVl ; and she desired the magistrate's advice on | alike in hanging, by eir re) on ced ¢ people think the anarchists | Hay ot meeting till the next day, and is | There has been no conspiracy proven—no | The hanging of these men will not intim Au’]frfl:,‘.‘"'(’,f‘;‘x'r‘t“ “"f“‘l‘“'i;"‘"_l"”"‘ de O iae ality of the marriage. The English [ Varicty is shown in the furniture about thg wood to the'labor movement, | now in the penitentiary serving a fifteen | tertimony to show that there was . conspir- | date a single one of us. T would go to Hay- | {206 EPGT, 0% (HIHIOR Voll WL s6e Lhat ¥ Ulow hier to marry two brothers, | reception rooms; the ornaments on the man ey iy i St Dot oo | years term, was found guilty by the court | acy. The only man that ever had _anything | market to-morrow night and address a meet- | LoCY, Srelehoq their imagination in every ther ste has done so is a legal conun! | tels and cabinets ure odd: companion-piec o show that they ave in | and jury of organizing the grocery clerks, | to'do with the bombs was Lingz. He' made | ing in as positive, as vindictive terms, us they | f0"uive‘at a decision Sustuim “,‘“"‘; "‘,‘j"“ 't | drum. have been bunished fr the walls, an orror T wish to read the following Jetter re. | the ~ brewers und bukers into different | bombs in certain place,but he left the meet- | used, and I'would have no fear of the coli- | 4t the lower conrt. Mectmis imilar to thi Lwant my nuptial rights! yeiled a man | Where two or more 1 yesterday from A. R. Parsons in re- | unions, increasing their wages and reducing | ing at Harmarket long before the bomb was | scquences. Saieiayer ot ings similar to this | "L ebL Y day” ufternoon, | Sarpets aro sean, Tho floors ware ne © 1o 4 request from myself. their work hours from fourteen to ten. Ho | thrown. Fielden said *“Throttle the law! RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED. Whioraithat dolsion b Ealoreaind, (GVOIyC || iWhatls' ‘the mntt it lundsomely made up. ~If thero are no sm T ¥ i was also marshal of some of Chicago's | Kill the law!” and I on the stage to-night sn; 7 R g i e 2 hiere tha condemned by the rep- What 8 o children about the floors are bure and rugge T'he letter from Parsons received | oroator g stab and throttle and Kill the infamons When Delegate Purcell finished, | resentatives of labor. We did have a meet- | Fightst ",‘“;‘ o thies inetikealand If a fine, hardwood surface is not practice with considerable enthusiasm by the 8 LABOR DEMONSTRATIONS. cision which p.q'm»m the law. [Applause.] Chairman Emil Constant came forward ing in this city of Minneapolis that did not )wvv--lylm\n-“ be n‘h!” L”;‘» l\:-‘:";:.':‘«“-::h o the commonest of pine is leveled with putt, meeting. 1t was dated at the "Cook | o iga tinuer by trade and amember of his | _ 1 say that every free man in America has and presented the following to the | 8e¢ m"}"h‘r‘ L"“f"?fi' .;‘-«..'.-;1 ey O Whets g to lisonso mel Abw't | stainod and waxed, T e e e H -ade a e L8t ove Rlon s hed Rl e s egrod af he question o ed | 18,80 HL BN A “ foned" 1 Z 3 on fine ‘linen paper, in Parsons’ own | George Engle, painter, and member of his | —the law that robs us of our rig % of Titi RS ; e, should have prevented the general | Who's goine to interferc with mef_Aint my | Just uow. hey = Y hand—a beautiful specimen of penman- | union, was noted for his carnestness in or- | Faises up monopolies. Iwantto say that I | courtof Illinois und in the so-culled anarehist - assembly from expressing publicly irl thirty, und don’t she look it? " Neither of | Bomo rooms were furnished before iy gunizing the workingmen and addressing | am not an anarchist, but Lam an American | cases was entirely influenced by an inflamed | © ey o hespressing publicly whit | Us got uuy folks! What dang folderol is | wsthetic craze set in, with hair-cloth furn ek g . | labor meetings. € | Gitizon, and as such I speak here to-night for | public sentiment brought about by the capi- | W&% It cvery an's heart, ey were fraid | ft, K00 ALY The marriage license law | ture, pictures in the regulation Puisox GrLy, 20, Ontoaao, I, Oct 18, 1867. LT caly sy tho preservation of of the rights of American | talistic clamor for the blood of some leaders | 1 Would affect the respectability of theorder, | Hhis, Whwiowil FTae MITCHEE piany and sofu, cut-glass_chandele M. Constant, Dear Sir and Brother: | Of myself Iwill only say that for twelve | the breseruetion 8ol e MNP SiCCn | of the labor movement, hiving us its object | Liobonly regret it,but Lum heartily ashamed JustEon “will be a | tinkling drops, ‘heavy curtains looped bacl Your kind letter of the 1ith inst., concern- | years pust T have been'a Knight of Lubor | Slg"Cthine in your hoines by the very | the checking of its vapid und peaceful growth. | fhat questions of expediency and respectabil- | 1f rumor is to be credited, thore Will be @ ] over lace ones, and all. the other adjuncts o ing the condemned anarchists (0 called) is | wnd for fourteen years past a- member of | {6 SUNORC TR J00RGnE i uinat. We bellove, further, that the trial bofore | 1Y should prevent men from doing as they | wedding from the British legation beforea- | 4y, ichest _patlor” of the past, 3'?(3‘.‘}11'5...1'.1‘.’ ‘_:'luu‘:::l;ll ,un;‘wxfkuu: p‘-opl“: :l-:“i;f"'|“"l2‘li:;‘l“l, }r"::i’(“a \fi‘l?r'\“n“';“m“m"‘l“r‘:;s‘;}:l' But these newspaper men—those public | Judge Gary's court was not fair and impar- | :€ in ~ the ~matter, I haven't | other twelvemonth, us w wealthy Washing- 1 4y 01 it nay seom, such rooms hav flm}xs’ J J your proposed mass mee 5 4 ) C! '8 Frederic Bryton married Ada Trimble re- 1abor | cangly. Mrs, Bryton retived from the stage b LHeRs L Tl o s | tial and the verdict rendercd was therofore | ®, €reat deal ~of faith that ony | ton bachelor, who hias been attentive to Miss : pEgon; L I in St Paul next Sunday (October 16) we | many imndred labor meetings in all parts of | lucators—they aco the men whe have, been § U & he verdict rendered was therefore | o¢ thece protast meeting will ‘do_any | West for some time past, is stated to have | tain solid stateliness of thelr own, and rathe join in fraternal salututions. This is meet | the United States in behalf of the eight-hour | the Pt lools 0CHRERE WD VIR YRR | Tihnerotore we, citizens of St. Paul, Minn,, | ET¢t good. Task you, from now on,to do all | followed her abrond this summer fortho | g 00w eihn that marks the modern draws &nd propor, as the present unhappy situation | movement. I have visited many portions of | ' Mureety T, O DR A ™l the | i mass meeting assembled, earnest i | in your power to sée that the sentence is not | purpose — of urging his suit. - Bo | § 3 of the condemned men is the result of their | the United States on invitations of the | WhOUSIRLEEr WA BN, RRLTSGH (" hut | the governor of Illinois, Hon, R. Oglesby, executed. You can do it by such protests as | this as it may, the bachelor in A . fctive, earnest, increasing labors as_organ- | Knights of Labor and addressed them. On | {AWRINTS WG B G0 0 khoke at. the | use his prerogatives as the chicf ofticer of the Let them be held in cvery city, and | question, who has hitherto shown a decided | A beautiful and enduring work for women Jaers, orators and_writers on behalf of the | Sunday, May 2, 1586, I addressed the eight- | Whot WoRH I BIRIREE RIS SIEE Sopich | state to prevent the execution of this unjust | 16t 8 entative from each city moet in | preference for his own country, to the as- | who can paint, even if their drawing is rathes abor movement. 1t is, of course the studied, | hour demonstration of the Cincinnati (Ohio) | {WIEECk B ICE S FER S Bl dloud, | verdict. Springficld on a given day, and lay those pro- | tonishment of his friends, early in the sum- | weuak, is making artistic friezes for the wallg urpose of our persccitors to mislead and | Trades assembly, whtich had invited me for | JLS RS firy) and which Chauncey | The adoption of the resoluti | tests before the governor. | The expenses of | mer, suddenly announced his intention of go- | of their pet rooms. Strips of carbridga cceive the uninformed to prejudice and ex- | that purpose. Tuesday, May 4, I returned to | Parsis Ha W Wy W WER (518 Have ho adoption of the resolutions whs | carrying the appeal fo the United States | ing ubrond. Though stillin Europo at the | paper of a proper tint should be used for & Sito them wgainst us, To this end the cap. | Chicago, and that evening myself and Mr. ( Depew pictured to sou and thet hat 1o Buve | moved at once by Mr. Stone, of the St. | court will be greater than any of you realize. | present writing, Mr. — has written to his | ground, which, after the painting is I ishe ist press, as a rule, pervert and distort | Fielding were attending a meeting held in | o S5V 0 bursts I will be heard from Paul Trades and Labor assembly, and [ We have employed four eminent attorneys, | relatives in Washington announcing his an- | should be smoothly mounted on thin, fi sverything concerning 'us, and_manufacture | behaif of the sewing girls and the cight-hour | Wheh the ¢ were carried by a rising and unan- | Mr. Tucker, of Virginia, General Pryor, jicipated return at an carly day. cotton, and fastened in place on the wall b; and scatter falschoods to suit their evil de- | work day, when a committee from the [ (aenin, i vote. A copy will be forwarded | New York, and Captain Black and Mr. Solo- | * The engagement is announced of Miss [ means of moulding strips on top and bottom, signs. Thus they create @ ‘“‘Gorgon | market meeting came in and invited us to DR. JULIET SEVERENCE. to Governor Oglesby, of Hlinois, | Man. of Chicago, and I am told that the ex- | Priscilla H. Braislin, professor of mathemat- | The upper branches of rather high growin monster” and name it un- | speak at the Haymarket. My wifcund two | Mps, Dr. Julia A. Severence of D. A, | and another will be sent to the con- | Lenses of printing, alone, will be at least | jes ‘assar college, to Mr. Timothy Mor- | t 1d shrubs should be chosen for th archy. But every intelligent wage. | children (agirl of five years and a boy of | 103 "Milwaukee, the noted female labor | demnod s £15,000. Every man, woman and child, who ke, M Miss Braisiin has | designs rather than flowers, so that tha worker knows that this is merely a capitalist | seven years) with several ladi nt tivmibna S ety ate Raih demned men at Chicago. isafriend of the labor movement should g ) .d with Vassar | sprays will appear somewhere about the mask to cover up their designs upon orgun- | ot the sewing girls' meeting. This meeting | 2 , was the next speaker Mrs. : The next §1;q:|\\.-x- was D, A, d, the | make a fice and contribute a mite to the | gj 5 There is a ro- | height where the eye is accustomed to s¢q lzed labor. The experience of myself and | adjourned about 3:30 o'clock and, accom- ance is a speaker of great ability | Chicago socialists, and a member of Dis- | fund. connccted with this engagement. It | their originals. t condemned comrades affords undisputable | panied by my wife, my two childrenandMrs, | and _her remarks were greeted with | trict Assembly No. 24 of that city. M y 5 s CILES. seems that in her youth Miss Braislin was —— roof of the purpose of aggrandized wealth | Holmes, we went to the Haymarket, and | much apy b he began by likening | Seid is a young man, but he speaks with Tt was after 10 lock when Mr. | engaged to Mr. Merrick, but for some reason nd of Cathay. o crush out the aspira ‘“‘""‘.r“r the working | these ladies and children sat on a wagon not | the present labor movement to the abo- | a great deal of forc Schilling finished his address J(M“)h the engagement was broken off and Mr, Work World. class for a better existence. Take the records | ten feet from the speaker’s wagon: through- | Jition movement of forty years ago. DAL SE Labadie, of Detroit, Mich., also a_dele- | Merrick ‘married some one else. In the | o there was a count Wi tried to mount of each of us—the entire eight—up to and | out almost the entire mecting, until wo ! e e e is agr Jnotice the absence of po- | zate to the general assembly, was introo | course of time Mrs. Morrick died and two of | “ipg'y'y 5 preceding the fatal May 4, 1686, E 1 Ctirted o our way homo and ware whitg | Quoting the words of Gurrison, when he | It is agrecable to notice the absence of po. | gate to the general ussembly, was intro- To a vast financial hight, s HOUNEYEIOLN ghare N Y th mobting 2 police Woi 2 Al y the daughters of the family became pupils at Mitkiowic Shows: Samuel Fielden as vi : i@ hall at an adjoining stroot corner when | Was in jail - for making abolition | licemon ut this moctipger, 1 the potlec wld | duced to the audience wnd bowed his ac- | Vi and close frionds of Prof. Braislin. Bubiho clover irloiyiopMdowios the Teamsters’ union as far bacl %0, ae- | the bomb exploded. speeches. “*“The time has come when | {063 0N Haen o bloodshed or violence, | KnoWledgements, but did not make & Not long since their father again proposed t0 1 For he thought, in Dhuth that he, forsooth, tively engaged in organizing trade and jabor | The Haymarket meeting was called by del- | no honest man can be out of prison.” Fielden s3id *“Throttle the law! address on aceount of the lack - | his first love and was accepted. - Mr.Merrick | * Had proken the Chinese wall L unions, addressing mass meetings of work- | egates of several labor organizations to pro- Tt seems to me to-night that the time has | killit.” He followed with another j Paul Meyer, of D. A. 49, of New York A wealthy manufacturer at Holyoke and is | Anq Jaid on the land his grasping hand ingmen in Ohio, Indiana, Michizan and clse- | test agamst the clubbing and shooting of | almost arrived agnin when no honest man | “that'part of the law which deprives us of | city, spoke in the German language for | about sixty years of age. = His family con- | *“With true adventurous gall. where on behalf of the ecight-hour workday. | eight-hour strikers by the police the day be- | can be out of prison. our rights, which throttles and stabs und | fifteen minutes, and Charles Guefke, a | Sists of four boys and three girls, And he calmly said, while his face was red The few days preceding the Haymarket meot- | fore. Judge Gary ruled that any one who stirr killsus,” We have here to-night representu- | member of the German carpenter's un- s e From pride at his discretion, ing for May 4, 1586, he was after his day's | The prosecution wholly failed, as the rec- | up discontent among the laboring classes was | tives of the pre Suppose that these gen- | jon. St. Paul. also ndiressd. the meo HOME DECORATIONS L put i my thumb-—just 1ok at the plum work of twelve and fourteen hours labor us u | ord will show and s the court concedes, to | uilty of murder. Under that ruling I plead | tlemen here are inder instructions from their | {on ¢ il 4380 tddressed the meet- T have in my possession. stone yard teamster engaged at night time | identify us with the action of the person who | guilty. I would iufuse into the working men | employers to strike out everything except | 1M t his native tangue. ¢ Handsome lamps take the place of gas en- | For you can’t deny thut Viceroy Li organizing and addressing the Butchers' un- | threw the bomb. The bomb thrower is still | a discontent that will never restin any in- | that which is iinflammatory. Isay “Throttle | After the adjournment of the meeting | ;0" e “show” rooms of handsomo | Has lost the land of Cathay, fon at the stock yards, the Lumber Shovers' | unknown and unidentified! We have been | dustrious man until he has a home and plenty | and Kill and stab the law, the law that makes | # considerable sum, to be devoted to the | }gugeg, i And Il show you all, both grcat and small, union, Malsters and Brewers' union, the | convicted by a prejudiced jury, from serving | and freedom for himself and family and is no | monopolies and keeps the laboring man in | defense fund of the anarchists, was Tho wood of the Californis re How he gave it all away." Wagonmakers' union, the Cabinetmakers' | on which every workingmen or member of | longer the slave of the monopolist. T see | slavery,” just as Fielden said. Let the en- | raised at the door by voluntary contri- | jately como. int extromo f D Ohbinor | While thus he cricd in fervent pride union, and many other’ eight-hour meetings, | Kuights of Labor or trades union was loowming upin the distance the storm clouds | tire sentence o to the public, and there is | butions and be the sale of w0 booKS | wael of Woeme Cxtreme 8008 At thought of his luck and skill, He, with Michael Schwab, August Spies and APTORILY CHALLENGED! of a greater revolution than was that of 76, | no harm in it. = There are two kinds of 1aw | containing a history of the trial andthe | - amkof il sorts. Neither Sulisbury nor € ! mybelf, were the invited speakers of the Cen- [ Thus, through us, the coustitutionl guar- | The tyrant is not King George this time, but | in this country—one for the rich anarchist, | comeatine ot e o veniote totore Faqee | Wronght iron has entively superseded brass | “3you1q take the Mitkiewicz pill, tral Labor union of Chicago, consisting of | antee of free specch, free press and public | a more formidable and outrageons oppressor | and one for the poor anarchist speeches of the anurchists before Judge | for articles of household use, in which an ar- 3 twenty-three trades unions, at the great | assembly is stricken down, and the blood- | than any monarc that ever sat upon the | The papers in this country have used more | GAvY when the sentence was passed upon | tistic caranco Is desirod. cight-hour demonstration held April 25, 1886 | bought right of American citizens abrogated | throne. The minister in the pulpit, largely, | violent language than the anarchists ever | them. So-called India chairs are popular; they are —one week before the Haymarket mass | by the courts of the law. the judge on the bench, and the p of the | did. And why are they not tried and hanged ~ R made of natural bamboo, the pieces ' tied to- To part with its meeting—where 20,000 organized workmen | As to anarchism, that is a speculative phil- | country are his willing tools. His name is | just the same" as the labor agitatc The new theater in Odessa will o opened | gether with thongs of 'leather and draped | myus Mitkiewicz is in & fix, apsembled to proclaim the eight-hour work- | osophy which all of us hold to be the ideal | Kin Monopoly. We want a peaceful | Pinkerton thugs can enter any city or town | this month. No less than 1,200,000 rubles | With rough and very bright-colored fab- And filled with natural ire, day 3 state “of human happiness. Anarchy—from | revolution—a olution by the ballot. | in this country, and shoot down the working- | were spent in its construction, and inside and | ¥ And the viceroy's nawme, perchance he‘( ke the record of Louis Lingg, the young | Greek derivation—meaning: Ah-uo: Archie- is for the advocacy of the | men,and nocourt canbe found to convict | outthe fittings and decorations areof the | The whilom craze for Japanese decoration lim, sarpenter, not twenty-one years old, buta | ruler. Hence anarchism is u society without | wage slaves of the United Stutes that these | them. The newspapers say that all labor | most sumptuous kind. has rather died out, but " bedroom orbo # | Was never Li, but Liar. WANAMAKER & BROWINN, PHILADELPHIA, HAVE AN AGENCY FOR THE SALE OF THEIR CUSTOM - MADE CLOTHING At 1511 Douglas Street, Omaha, Nebraska. Which isunder the management of J, M. Mitchellbwho is a thoroughly con%fietent cutter and fitter. Mr. Mitchell has the largest and finest display of "cloths to se4 lect from in the northwest. His prices are from 20 to 25 per cent cheaper than elsewhere, and in fit and quality his suits and oyvercoats are the equal of those turn< ed out by any establishment in Omaha. Compare these prices for fine custom made goods. Business Suits from $17 to $28. Dress Suits from $30 up. Overcoats from $17 upward. Full Dress Suits a specialty. All suits made from measurements taken by Mr. Mitchell in person, and satisfaction guaranteed, WANAMAKER & BROWN, Tailoring Agency, 1511 Dougilas Street, Up-Stairs