Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 20, 1890, Page 3

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| THE OMAHA DAILY BEE MONDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1800, . e e et S e e THE (AMPAKGY 1N MEBRASKA. The Three-Comered Fight from the Repub- lican Btandpoint. SITUATION CANDIDLY REVIEWED. THE Mr. Rosewater's Specch at Hbron on the Fallacies of Galvanized Greens Backers and Thele Doctrine of Repudiation. The following aldress was deliverel at Hebron, Neb, Thursday, October 4, by Hon. E. Rosewater andappeared in Tur Bes at the time. By repated requets from vavi- ous sectionsof the state the address is re- publisted inthis lssucof Tue Ber asfol- low: Mr. (hairman wd Folow We oW on the eve of the most important nwhich has evertaken piace in Ne- braskasinceshe enteredinto the sisterlood of states, and, whil this is alled an off- year,” the outcome of this dectin wil, in many wspects, be just 1 important as any sidential clection at which our citiwns Fiv participited. 1 hage been a republican, Jke the gentleman who precded me, ever since 186, and while I conld not, cast my vote in Nebrasica for Abraham Lincoln in 1561 be- cause this stite was then still a_torritory, 1 voted for Ulysses 8, Grant in 1868 and for y republican candidate for presilent > this state hasbecnin the unin, and 1 bave noregrts to offer, nor apologies to make for the course I have pursued, The repu blican party has as grund and glorious a record a5 uay political organiza- tion that ever mangzed the aflirs of a nation. It has been in power thiv with an interimof four, and the it been of great beneilt to enlighten people s to its merits as o maniger of ntional affirs, Duringihe four years of democratic adrninis- tration every effort was muade to uneurth fraud, to uncarth coreaption, to unarth dis- crepancies inthe mtional treasury which hiad been managed twenty- four years,” from Abra- ham Lincolndown to ChesterA.” Arthur, by the republican party. In that treasury de- partment, where diting that periol billions and billions of money had been handled, every dollar was accounted for, not a pemny wis~ missig, O, they did discover @ aiscepancy. of two cents and after diligen tsearch they found two pen- nies that hadrollelout in the vault of the treasury and werelyingunder a keg of win, With all thebillions that had been bandled by themen who made our greenbacks, and national curren and issuedour bonds, with all the money thut had been coined ther with all the vast sums that had been col 1 by theintenal revonue, the pexrcentiy losses was very much smaller than it had been during any admiuistration the demo- crats had upto 186, I need notsay toyou here that the repub- lican party has atall times been the party of freedom and progress. That is a matter of history, The democrtic party las been simply’ & party of raction and.obstruc- tion. "It has for more than o quarter of @ centiry been marching five hind the republican part championed by Lho republi opposed by the democratic due course of time when the plicy had_been accepted and proved benefcal; the demo- crats full inand chim to be the’ originators of it. Now righthere in the stato of Nebraska, which only thi o s carved orten years be- veform s boen party, it in the out a8 @ territory, during the throesof a great strugale for liberty Kansas ind Nebraska ~ contest--tho question arises whether the peopleof this state will surren- dor thogovernment, which has been held successively by republican administrations for twenty odd years, into the hands of dem- ocrats or men whoare i collision with dem- ocrats, I camot reviewthe history of the demo- eratic party in N ebraska, for it hasio history. With one single exception, that of treasurer of thestate, Mr. Sturdevant, it never elcted astatooficer. And that state ofiicer fulled signally to live upto hisantimonopoly pledge: Andnow we are confronted witl two pa ties inthe state; the demoeratic party, with astraight democratic ticket, and the people’s rty, made up chieAyof members of the farmers' allance, which is being stered toward the democttic camp, The [;rhu-\plcs these two parties are now supporting are in some respects alike; tho main objectis to down the republican party at anycost. The democratic party, I its platform, hus reiterated a great many stale old pratitudes, and some few new things that accord with popular sentiment at. the present tme. Some of thom ae simply de- lusions, i my opinion b last, sich 88 the unhmited silver colnage [roporition. I believe the siver lill pused y tholast congress 15 ample for all purpses. 1t assures an increase of our currency, backed by silver bullion of 5,000,000 every month, I do not believe that freo coinage would be of any benefitto the farmer, the laboer orthe merchant. 1do 1ot see why the government of the United States should pay move tothe silver kings of Coloradyand Nevada for their silver bullion than it 1s worth on the market. I'do not understand why Uncle Sam should take the bullion of the mining millionaires, coin it free of charge into silver dollars and band it back to them again aslegal tender, Thesilver bilt pssed by congress has no- toriously added ‘millims” of dollars tothe wealth of the bullion owners. That was foreseen by those who understood the law of supplyand demand, Notonlyhavewe paid for bullion mined in the United States, butvast uantities of silver imported from Germny, Tolland, Mexico and other foreign countries, have been sold for25 percentmore than their valtein themarkets of the world previous to the passage of thesilver bill, Now let me takea Lok at the inlependent peopl's party. At the outset it was an- nounced that this was a_spontaneos move- mentof thepeoplo, free fromall interfernce on the part of politicians. We were assurod that all theold methods of wickery thatthe party workers and machine politiians have used in the old parties were (o be discanied, and anew systemof very pure government substituted. Whit do we flnd! We find four or fivemen putting theirheads together, setting up the pins. We find packed caucuses and conventions, with the same old trickery. and worse bossisn than would be submitted to by members ofeither of the old parties. This was to be o people’s movement, and very nturally it was expected that all the Jeoploin synpatly witt it were (o have a air chanceof chosing its cndidites. Did they have such u chince! Theapportion- mentmadeby the bosses, or didator, as some call thom . was & most consummate piece of jugglery, Douglas county, witha popula- tion of over 150,00, and more thaa 15,000 workingmen, was given twentyfive dele- gates in thestate conyention, and Frontier county, with a population of less than 0,000, was given twenty-one delegites. Landster county, with a wpulation of over 7,000, was given twentyfour delegates in' the ople’s cowveniion, and Red Willow county, with a population of was represented by sixteen delegates. Siline county, with over 19,00 population, hud one delegite dess than Hiteheok county, with bher 5,700 populition. The objet of this oreymandering was manifet to cverybody fliac. sttoudod tho stale cnveutlon. The counties in the burnt districtof the Republi- can Vulley were given the preponderance of votes n order todefeat General Van Wyck's candida who was invineible withthe work- ing men of Lincoln and Omaha. Van_ Wyck has always been an antj-monopolist; he is a farmer himsolf and & member of the allince. He mpresented this state crelitably in the national senate, and enjovs a national reputation, He war sheived by this packed convention aud a man substitited Wwho has never ben & member of any legis- lative body, has never been tried in any pub- lic ofice except that of cmmissionerin a sparscly sellled county, Now, I have nothing to siy aginst Mre. Powers as 4 man, but of his ubility to admin- ister the offairs of thisstate we lave noevi- denceas yet, We havo no cvidence thit he is capable of maniging even & small farm, Bo faras can bo leamed he has failed to achieve success anywhere, and now he ex- pectsus to elect him chief executivoof @ state with nearly eleven hundred thousand populution and &1,000,00,000 of property, ‘Tho same may be saidof other candidates oo the people’s independent ticket. The farmers and working men have been invited o joln in 4 novenent (or beller goverunent d purer men. What Lave they bee of- ere Youhavea candidate for ongress in yéur district who, as [am told, has notsuch d rec- ord as woull be wnsidered pure and entirel. sudefiled. [ willnot goiute detalls about i It is not mecossary to do that, bat suMcit to say thit hohas been trusted in a public place that demands the most unbending integrity and requires & man of emperate habits and clear jidgnent. In that place ho has been founuutterly wanting. Now, hels togo to congrss. What forl Simply because ho livesin a sod home. Why does helive in a sod house? Whydo the farmers that live in bis county almost all live in commodious framo houses, rasonably well furnish: and these neighbors of Me cattle, sheep and poultry and why has he nothing to show for the in- f these years! If heis anexemplary mir, he oughtat_least tobe able to copo withall tho other farmersof his neighbor. somo calimity has deprived him of his mews of subsitance No one savs he has had twins every twelve monthsin his famiiy. aighter.] No one charges that he has anenormous lot of relationsto support, und sofar s I cin lewn the man is poor simply froma want of theft and lack of sobriet Is that the kindof a man tosend to thonatinal legislatire form the Second congressional district! T doubt it. [Ap plase. | L Right here 1et me ask youif McKeighan is clected tocongress, what will hedo therel For the nest two years, the republican ad: ministration will “ remain in pwer, and e the house of representatives is dem- cratic orwhether the house is republican, the piiciesof the republican party will pre. vail. McKeigha will be simplys dea let ter; he will haveno more todo with the ap pointment of a simple vilage postmaster than the cdty marshal of Hebron: he will have no nore todo with creating or estend- img post routes in hisdistrict than any me ber of your city council and perhaps not as much, forif they are ublicans, they may be ubl to wield so influence through repiblicnn repreenta tives of this st in the upper house, if not in the lower, Andif there are any otherthing to be dme in the district —if theroare uny other cities inthis districine inge wstofliee buildings, offices or anything requiring the expenditure of money in any diretion, you will have no possible chance of sewring appolitments or £ you need ney land appropriations through MeKeighu, Butwe will he told that McKe L great finncier; that the policies he will advonte i the national legislture will soon give the far west and working. men of Nebraska uibounded prosperity. Every man, wonan and chill is to have il the money they sk for. able to horow noney it 2 per ¢ The pealof the present tanft will give you trade, and you will be able to buy i cheapest mirketand sell inthe dearest, Now, what will it be in reaity? What woull be the eflect of two or three, or fiftecn Farmers wil free the MeKeighans in ahouse composed of 330 mem- bers with a republican senate and a repulb: lican presilent! Why, nothing. It wouud be like thodog barking at the moon, M Keighan would scarcely be lnown in the commiticeeven if he appeared tefore then, and s faras hisfinancial plicies—or falla cies, [ callthem-—are wneemed, they would simply be emptied into the congresional waste basket, The fiat money theories that Powers and aan havebeenad voeating in thestate ~—thatis. the thory of flat money--have been way back as 18572, When sorge F'rncis Train was a candidate for president of the United States onafiatmoney platfrm there were ‘only about 8,000 yoters in Nebraskn willing tosubscribe to such wild cat schemes, McKeighan, Kem and Bill Dech anlother candidates of the new party ever point backto the “gwood old prosperous times of 18 right after the war, when the) ther so muy more dollars per in circulation ; when the laborergot . £ o diy, wd the far it a bushel for his wheat, Let take a lwk backward and see how us the “prosperous old imes” worked. In the mid- dle of 185, when the contending armics marched lome from the battletieid, a million of destroyers of property came home and e sumed ordinary avowtions wherever th could find employment. When they came they found most” of the places filled, and wherever an oll soldier was given a place another man was crowded out, s presen tly we had 4 comtry full of unemployed men;in avery short period the men began to wanderall over this land in questof em- ployuent. Then begn the tmmp period. There welv tranps every where, Tranps on the public highways; people coild sarcely £0 with safety from one part of the country to anther. Ineverylittle city and big city scores of men were about the streets, sceking shelter in the jails sometimes rather than to sleepon the sidewalks under the open skies. Thelegislitures were obliged t enact laws to protect the pople from these tramps, This wasin “‘tiose good old prosperous. times' when the liporing man got$2.50 4 day, And about this time what were the prices of thiugs that the laborer and farmer had to buy! I went toworkthe other diy to inves. tigate for myselfand sce how prosperois the man was that got $2.50 a day and | found this stateof affairs : [ found ifhe was a married manand wishedto buy a calico dress for his wifehe would pay from 40to 60 cents a yard for alico, A cilico dress with hooks and eyesand one spool of cotten (which was 20 cents) cost &5.4); today you can buy the same dress for 1) cents, _Tu 1866 me suwck of flour costthe liborer $6.50; today he gets it for $3.50, Coflee was 45 cents s pound, today it is B0cents; in 1306 four pounds of granulated sugrsold for a dollar, today he can gettwelve pounds fora dollar; candles wero 40 cents a pound, today they arcls cents; rice was sell- ing at 20 cents apound, today it is S cents a ound; vilegarwas % cents a gillen, now it s 30 conts; te £30 n pound, today it is Ip veus £2.20a gallon, now it is % a washboard sold for60 cents, now it nts; one cadly of matches sold for XN, now it costs 40 cents; coal oil was sell- ingat $1.40a gllon, now itis 13cents; soap was [71g cents a pound, now it is 6 cents; an ordinary bedstead cost now he can buy one for § to 4 othe fumiture in~ the samo proportim. The com- monest kind of an overcoat cost £20 to £, andnow can bebought for &5 to#s, In 180 all the clothes that the laboring man had to clothe hinself and family was three tines as highas itis now, andsomeof itfive times as high duving those ‘good old times of pros- ) erily Aud whenever vou wanted to give areceipt to myboly forid cents you had toputa stamp on it; if you had a check to draw ona bank you had to pit ona stanp; if you wanted tomakes deed to a piece nP property there hadto bea stamp onit; if you wanted to take out a life wSurnce policy there hal to be & stawp on i) if you wantd to send a messag by telegraph, you hud to put o a stanp. Every bottle of medidne bid astampon it, every box of matches had & stamp on it, every photograph had a stanp onthe tack. Thero werestamp duties on tea and stamp duties uponcoffee. In aadition to that, there was an income tax levied on wage workers and salaried men, and onall clisses, These are the good old prosperous times that the gen- tleman wants to return to. I for myself, don't want to see them again. [ think the laboring mun can better afford to work for $1.50 and 8$1.7 a day, when a dollaris as largo as & cartwheel 'and will buy more things tha it ever did at any other timo in the history ofthe United States, than to go bick tothe time of §2.50 per day and b almost st nd half the timeout of em: ployment, llfl»pmum Lok atthe condition of the mechanic of 1860 and 180, The highest pricoever paid in Omuba forskilled labor was $6 aday tobric) layers forten hours’ work; today he gets $4.50 for cight or ninchours' work; the machinist, theblacksmith and carpenter get almost the samo wages todiy that hedid in 1866, The rinter eans more tolay than hedid twenty- ve yoars age; and the men of all trades ithout exception are getting within 20 per cent of the wiges that were current of 1560, Aud I wantto say right hercthatthe libover of today is befer off thanhe ever was. Heis botter clothed and better fed; his children 0 to better schools andhis fanily wears better materials; they livein better houses, have more leisure and arebetteroff inevery respect, and their con- dition has oeen improved under republican adninistntionsgand s. [Arepublican rule for tweuty-fived yearw beupp nuse.& W bt are we promise d nder the diy o jubilee his come! We are promised great things, but what kind of prosperity will we ctwhen the stock of currency is® watered n this cointryand the dollar won't buy auy more of the neccssaries of life than itdid at the close of the war! They say to thedebtor class their salvation isin qeltlnnuurn money intocirculation, I never had any moey (o loan, I belongto thedebtor class, 1believe I ampayiig mor interest thanany oue man in the “state of Nebrasks, —but~ I have bormwed good money and [ projose to y back the kind of money bor- rowed; ifI had borrowed wheat | would want to pay my creditors back i wheat, and if Thad borrowed com, 1 would wantto b them backin com. No man who is in debt todiy has borrowed his money twenty-five years ago; all of us who @ in debt have had to borrow within thelastive or ten vean, and the money we hive borrowed was worth 100 cen s on the doliar. Shall we now say to our creditors, “We propose to repudiate this debt or py itwith the now kind of money that is not worth 100 cents on the Gollar ** Don'tyou see what calamity woull befall tho country ifthis first scheme of paying debts would by cartied into effectt Withina quarter of & century the republi- can party paxd off all bu t abou t $100, 00,000 of tho §£2,300,000,00 of its bonded debt,and it has raised the national creditabove thatof any countey on the globe, If you water the stock of _money the credit ofthe mation will be weakened if not de- stroyed, Thiscountry is now saving hun- dreds of millions a year by the reduction of interestrates on the public debt—national, stite and municipl. Stall we now g0 back and vecklessly deiroy pablie con- fidence ! In 1877 during those prosperous times I vor- rowed €000 at12 per cent compound inter- est, and n six years [ paid 10000 intereston the loan. AU that time 15 per cent the logal rate of interst in askn, Two years ago [ borrowed §200,00 m an insumnce compny ot 6 pr cent. Depreciate the natinal currency by infla- tion andtheirrate of interest will bo raised to10 percentor they would foreclose when theloanis due, Righthera let mecall your attention to this fact: The salo of acommodityand its valuo isgoverned by the laws of supplyand de- mand, but money isuot governed by the Laws ofsupplyand demand, and the reason is ob- vi Whenmoney is abundantevery body isspeculitingand Wrrowing money bec: hethinks he an make more money. He on- gages insomespeculativeenterprisein which heexpects to turn over his money, and heis willing to pay the mney lender & high rate ofintevest. But speculation isdull, business is quiet,andl there isa lae amount of moncy w loanable at low rates of interest This has leen the state of affais for the last five or X years, The rates of interest have gradually gono down. Svery body who knows anything about finan- cial affairs will agree with me, that all over the country there has been a gradual reduc- tion of the interest rate, and today there is a very large amount of money loaned pon farms inthis state ot 7 per cent, andoven at 6 per cent interest, and any man who has ool security ean get loans renewed at thit rate. But the money shavers, men who loan money upon chattel secunitios, and the mid- Alemen betyyeen tho legi anker and the borower, have ben charging? and3 percenta month inthis state. For that the renublican party is ot responsible, Nebraska now has on her statute books strong usiry laws, and in s plitforn the pirty is pledged o make these usury laws still more stringent through the nest legislature so s to protectthese people wlho arewilling to avail themselvesof the protectin afforded by better lays. But, wsa matter of fact all this hue and ery about cheapening money by filling the country with greenbacks, isa delision. 1f we hal” tody three tines asmuch morey in the contry as wehavenow, the dobtorclass would get no relief hecause money wonld beloanel at a much higher rate of interest than it con- mands now. Our friend Ken in the Third district ints with pride to the $1,500 nehas on his farm, which he topes some diy topay off by borrowing money at 2 percentof the nutional governmentto the extentof one- half of the appraised va#ic of his tand. Now Mr. Ken's 16) acro farm is assessed atih peracre, or 340, Under his own proposi tion ¢ wouli only be able to borrow £10)at 2 per cent, topay o a morteage of §,500, W would he do with#00 in paying offa 1,50 mortgage! He would haveto raise £1,100 somewlhere else. [Appluse] ifhe could not raiseit, he would laveio inflate the appraisemens of that propertyup tothe full 400 tosecure that loan of §,500 (which would be more likely than anything else because that would ~bethe most common course pursued) and what wouldbe theresult? The government would lave a farm for sile after a whileand Kem would be somew here else. [Appluse.] But probably not in congress, In the Argentine Republic the same thing was tried recently with this result: The people of the Argentine Republic, taking ex- ample from owr tiatsystem during the war, issued a currency which the government loaved at 2 per cent onfarming land. Ap- prisers were appimnted and - everyboly wanted to bean appraiser. It wasa profii- able business, better than going to cougress a good deal. The appraisements wero made alout three times the vilue of the lind and the government, lomed the farmers money and the farmers failed topay the 2 per cent interest when it cime due, and thegoven- ment now has got. the land. ' Inthe mean tine the Argentine RRepublic was filled witha vist quantityof irredeemable corrency. They 1ed $189 per capita, gold went up sky high and the country was speedily bankrapted. Today the Argentine Republic is completely wrecked and everythingis almost ata stand- still. That isexactly what would follow the adoption of the wildsceme proposed by our alliance leaders. We were told today bymy friend, General Van Wyck, that both parties have puisued the same financial plicy, Thatis trie, and noother policy could have been pursued with sufety tothe people of the United States, Cortainly thedemocrats would have pursued adifferant policy from the republicans, if for no other reaso than to differ, but when they came into power they found they had to do precisely thesame thing, Notbecause Wall street orderedit, Thatis simple nomsense. What is Wallstrectanyhow ¢ A lotof reck- less speculators who go in ror making the largest amomt of money in the shortest possible tine, men whogmblein old when it is at a premium, inrailroad stocks, telegraph stocks, mining stocks, and every speciesof collateral, They don't care how much youinflate the currency —the more thebetter.” Wall street was behind thesil- verbilland wanted free coinage; the conser- vative people of the country do not. Wall street. men make millions one day and thengo onbearing down and depreciating the stocks that they bulled upand make more money, Wallstreet was in its gory during the in- flation period between 186 and 1873, Wall street, was just booming. The gold exchange made millions and millions, but 53 came_a day of reckoning. = The Northern 1PuMIC dubble thathad been in- flated by JayCook eollapsed and hundreds of thousauds of mer all over this country were absolutely ruined; hundredsof them com- mitted siicide to escape the disgrace; many of them weronot. sble to face their families, who had been veared in magnificence and afiuence. Thousands migrated out of this country and sought to recuperate their Talien fortunes abroad. No one who remembers this panic and collapse will want anything tike this financial scheme so highly recom- mended by our fiat money agitators, It any one was wantea to goto Grand Tsland 10 manage the sugar beet factory, you would look for simeboly who had ~ Some knowledge of making sugir from beets ; if & manager was wanted for the Omaba smelt- ing works we would want somebody who un- derstauds the handling of silver and gold ores and knew something about chemistry. Ifyou wanted somebody to runa great print- ing house you would want somebody who un- derstood printing, or at least the manage- uent ofit But when you want somebody to manage the finances of the nation you hive gtto g to o dugout aud get aman who never handled a thousand dollars i his life. Although the American people can truth- fully boast of having the moststableand re- liable currency in the world, every paper dol- Liras good as a gold dollar, and gold, silver and paper interchangeable without discount orpremium in every section of the country fiom Maine to Oregon. We are constantly told that the administration of our finances is going from bad to worse from year to vear, thit theindustrial dlasses and the soldiers have never been able to keep & correct ac- count of the few transactions incumbent on a county judge in the scttlement of estates. Such goniuses feel perfectly at home in the discussion of the most intricate problems of national tnaucicry. They know just how nuch and what keind of currency the govern- ment. should issue, and how this vast rev- enue of the government should be collected and disbumed. Compred with them Salmon >, Chasse and all his suc- cessors in - the treasury were mere ninnies. Aud these reckless assertions ave believed by - thousands of misinformed farmers and workingnen as gospel truth, Now what i3 the histry of the ereenback and our bonded debt When the war broke out, the confederates left tho treasury empty, I heard Gencral Howel Cobb, Buchinan's rebel secretary of the treasury, make a speech in which he said : !These Lincolnites whoare going to Wash- fugton will not find any money, 'fi didn’t try tleave themfany." Foopenly boasted that they hid_robbed the uwasury unl left it empty, Thatis the way Lincln found the mational treasury when he s tarted out to pro- tect theunionagainst its con federate enenies. He appealed to the patriotic men of the coun- try andcalled on them for aid. Every rich uwan ormoderately weallly min who came forward andoffered to' lban money to the government was blééa by the people jist as much 88 9 'he had enlisted and shouldered & muskol for withont money nobody could have kept thesoldiers in the field, and when the giedn backs, or demand notes, were first_issued they were accepted inpay by everybody. |But democrats wd flatistscharge that they soldier gotone kind of payamd the bondboler aiother, That was nottrae, The government issued its I. 0. 1. That was all" Jt had to give, with the prormise that it swould be re- deermed in money, constitu tional money, which means gold or silver win. = Had the soller been able to lold his greenbacks, he would _un- doubtedly have beo ale have redeemed them in gold or silwer, How were these bonds disposed of 1 Jay Cookead- vertisel in the pajers all overthe country in- yiting everybody that hid any money willin togriveour country credit to” come forward and subserive for the bonds, wd the bonds were taken not only by rich men, but by wage workersin all the large cities. The savings ot servint gils, mechanics and laborers andthe sivings of (he merchants went fito those bonds at that time There was no discount made, as we are wld. The gvernment gave this bond in good faith and redeemed it in good Faith, We have been told that every little while resolutions have been passed through con- gress pleding the natin to redeem those bonds in goll. Very well, suppose the gov- emment had not done so; suppose it haa been in the condition of the Arzentine Re- public; suppse ithad ben in the condition of Turkey 3 suppose it had baen in the condi- tion of Russia today, with its carrncy de- preciated andits credit brokendown! What sort of prosperity woild we havel Was it not the very best knd of financierng toassure tnecreditors of the Unitel States that the government would redeem those plectzes in- the only money that passes current assuchall over the wo Itisnottrue that the sollier was pail off § for $16 inthe be- ningof e war, in 1561, gold was only ligh L1y ibove par wd prices were 1ot high._Just_beforo starting for Hebron R v T foundin an old bible, tyyo $10 con- federate bills anda oldletter which I had itten from Omala in 183, tothe Cloveland Herald, Onthe bick of it there happened o be themarket quotations of Cleveland, f October 187, X notice wheat §i e bushel; corn, 3 but quoled at c; ogas, 1Te 18 lard #11;a0d green apples, £2'ana ) abarrd; petroleun wasof coirso still v high inthosedays, 6) cents, and soon. Whatdoes that show ¢ It shows thatin 183, whilewe were in the nidst of war, prices were still low; thatthe soldier when he sent his wmeney home-for he was boarded and clothed by the government At his famly loughtthewr thing preity nearlyss chep then asnow, When theinflation wasat its height in 165 and 184 the greabackhad depreciated, but the soldier did nothold on to it that long, his Jamilvhad got through with it . Al the talkaboutthe nbbe: orthe producer by the retirement of the greenback aud issue of bonds is thesheercst rot he Largest amount of greembacks that Was ever outat oie time was 430,000,000, Today there are still §50,00,100 of green- backs in civeulation and in the treasury. So we haye retired just $07,00,000 of green backs and intheirplace hve adled over 210,000,000 of goldcoin and $£30,00,000 in silver coin and silver cotificates 1 our stock money. ter w and of the sollier The fiatist cdamorabout our national bank currency is equally aburd. The natimal banleshad over three Mundredond fifty mi- lons of curreney at onetime, iow they have less than half thatamount out and theyare surrendering it at the rateof £2000,00 a month, Stillthere is no contraction of the creulating medium. For every $2,000,600 of nationul bank currency sirrenderedand can- celled the treas fssuing $,000,00 of sil- ver certificates, which are secured by bullion in thetreasury vanlts. 1 want tosay tothe farmers because the farmers have been told that under the admin- istration of the rpublians everything that they sell nas been made cheapand every thing that they buy madedear, L don't thinkany party could contwl the pricc of wheatin Liverpol, orthe price of cotton oruny cluss of conmodity that was exported, I quote from @ paly in Fot Dodge, Ia., who mde & wmputation to show the dif- feence in prices in the lst ton yes: self-binders that sold 1n 1880 for £315 are now selling for $130: com plantersin 153 sold for 80, now they sellfor $40; riding cultivators in 1880 were $45, 10w they are $2; sping vagons, twoseated, 3100 in 1880, §i> now; ils, por Jeeg, &5 1013=0,83 nows milk-pans, 5 per dozen dn 1589, 81 per doen now s birb-wire ten centsa pomnd in 1880, now it is four cents s pound notyithstudingthe barb- wire trust, which ought to be woted out. Therels no question aboit_that. The demo- craticparty said_thit, but they weroin power four years and didn't’ do it. It1s aquestion simplyof locl legislation, Now [ want toask inall sicerity what is proposed to be dime by ourfriends on the people’s ticket. We were tld in the st place that ftvas it a pirty, it our chuie- mon_here has furnished me with & liter that would indicate tiat they are a puty. He liad_been an organier of the famens' alliace up_toavery recat period. He was alrue and_trusted manin thealliance and didbhis work, [ presume, faithfully,as members of the allince in this sectin will certify. He hs seen fitto remiin A mpublican insteal of conneding himself with this *s pituncous movenent’ and what isthe nsult! He gots lis walking papers fromthe secretiry of the state farmers’ allince with the information that his serices us orgnizer would bedis- ensed with bocao holad gne inio a iit- cal organiztion, because heremains identi- tied th the repablican party. What a pece of arrogance whatinsolmce. the alliance has of allegianceto anew party, or any other party when he went into It and he does ot newd to go to Autoerat Burrows toget a periait to step into the re- publican party orany other party, but it oly shows with what intolerance and narrow- minded spirit the organizacionthat calls itself o man who has joined taken an oblization the people’s pariy is bing lndlel, What do “thiey propose! A glmce at theic platform or declration of principles will suffice, They delare that “every man o the footstool of the earth is entitled tosome land, and they are in favor of giving every man, and | suppse every woman as well, some land from which he or she can draw sustenance. But [ want to know how many members of the new party, or how many candidites on its ticket, arc ready to give one single acre of their farms to anyone cse. Iwantto kiow what sort of principles they are enunciating tofavmers, Nearly all farmers T kiow would like to get more land, but I don't kuow any farmer who is willing to giveany land away. Yet thousands of farmers hayesubsribedto this new rinei- le taken from the gospel of peace of Saint Bollamy, ~who proposes to let the goveriment own al lands and feed all thepeople of the United States out of one common trough andhave them all sup- plied through pipes, very much as thepe- troleun is pumpei direct fromthe ol wells to Philadelphia and thescabowrd. (Laughter and applause.) Thisis the new wrinkle andthe first step is for Unelo Sam to take possession of all the land. The farmers irt Nebraska say amen to that! I have no doubt there are alout 23000 homeless wage workeas n thestate ready to take some of yourland if you offer itin _god faith; they will agres fo cultivatoit orget some one todo itfor them. Theo ar some popositions in the alliance pltforn ‘with which e all agree, For myself, T think I hwe been —if T dosay it my'self—amorepersisient and uncomprising agitalor of antimonopoly princi[mcs in this state thian any alliance man from President Powers down to Mr. Bur- rows. I have adyocatelregulition in sewson and owof swson, but in 1852 when the alli- auce put a state ticket iu the field just asthey havein 1890, [ entered my mostsolemn protes t against going for relie outside of the present Kzruu!ur creating a fow party, because I lieved then as 1do now thatthe sirest way to achieve results, and bring about reforms and_doaway with the abuses that the peple of Nebraska have suflered from, is throgh the -msliuf parties; that if the ' republican party bad fuled todo its duty, there was an easy way to remedy it Ifthe democritic party has put up men who were better qualified and more trstworthy, vote for them and vote down the bad men Oneof theprinciples [ have advocated in wl'local eledtlons s this stais has been—an houest democrat is preferable to adishonest | republican. I have preched that doctrine | and shall preach itnow, but lalso want that | doctrine t be applied the other way, 1 | wantan honest repablican tobe proferred to 4dishonest democrat when such is runung | for congress, lam stlll on that same track, T bave not varied at all. Those | beople who have accused ne and accused | Tae Bee, insomemstances, of having veered [and changud wul gone to Wall street, are common slanderers, ~ Wall street bis no more contwl overme now than it had when Tue BeE was iuits infincy, In he twenty jears * that Ihave conducted apaper 1 have never advoated filt money, nor principles of ropu- diation. When Twas poor asn chutch mouse | and it debthead over heels, in the crash of 1573, wd when I had & morgage plastored over my head, T sull advouted the honest piymeit_of an honest debl, andl oppsed reenbickism then as Ido nov; itls no novel | doctrine in this state, it is simply galvaniing | i oldcorpst, and it’ has bren sigialized by the monination of Allen Rt _fof congress, | ind hostands forOld Greenback from away- | back. [Laughter] Allen Root issound on | anti-monopy, bithe is loomey asn belbug on the curreny @nd money question. [Laughter.] On nilrou leghlation] anjust 15 strenu- ous asanyhody, it T woull like to know what the alliance leaders propse tdo. They bave o policy, they hae not pledeed their candifates for the legishiture to ay poliey. silvation issure.’ T hive sen men stand on that jlatforn, andl have helped eloct them t thelegishture and gne down to work with thern, ind WiAt was tho result? One man weald introduce a railvad regulition bl of twonty-five piges, and anoher man would introduce a bill of fifteen piges, anl eich one would want to brag that he had introduiced the great anti-monopoly raiiroad regulition, ind when the time came forthemto agree o anyone measure they wereall divided. It is only by dividing the farmers on these grat isuies that the rallroads havebeenableto runthe state. Hadthe farmers gono to work both then and this yearand attended theres pective primaries of their parties evory where, they would have carried the republican converi- tions overwhelmingly and ~would have dic- tated mny ticket they saw fit, andtheycan ot mike any more favorable platform than the pltforn of the republican par It wt ony pldges the prtyto reluce nilrod ratws to the leveled ratesof adjoin- ing states, bt pledges itto swo thatthe firm- ers have therightto enct elovator and haul corn toand from the cdevators onthe same conditions that the ecevator owiers have now ; it provides that rilroads shall beleld amenable in every way for damages to the people,and it is in_ every way asradicl as any piitform that has ever been framed But what asurance have withatour candi- dates, it eloted, will carryit outl Show these men that thereis a piblicsentiment behind the platform and they will be obliged to cary it out, wilingly or wwillingly. I myself haven'tany faith in their raiiroad commissioner system> 1 beleve the people shouliregulite the rates o rallfoads by law, but there is the dificulty. The present miltvay commission lay was passed by the votesof famers s wollas milroal cappo and these farmers clained toknow whatth eabout, Thenew party leaders 1dly about usury sharks and all th of thing, but we have not heard a singlo neasire proposed by which they are going to do away with these Shylocks 1 kuow and realize itis farmuers to got togetherar one thing, bt certainly withthe new Mo: 10 lead then out of the wildermess, with the men who alvocatea financiil re vilution, we ought to know what whef wo may expect. Theyknowhow to run the whle goiern- ment;whyare they not capible of runming the Nebrask legislature suficientto et to- stherand siy, “Here is what we wantthe liture to do " Andif they had a certain nilroul bill or my oher-that was viry difieult for i agree upon any bill specifie, and the men were pledged tovote for the meusure, iftheyhad that, all therail- wad govemors in the state could't stop it from becoming a law. But havesuch me ures heen proposed? Not at all. Th rnning justlike a herl of sheep. 1 thivk, considering the ewormous amonnt of labor I have done on behallof the produc- ers and working peoplein this state, and the fight [havemadefor years against railw monopliesind other menoplies, it might not have been injudicious forthe leaders of the alliance movement to confer with me and atleastascertain tow far T Bee was disposed togo with them in the movement that they hid inaugurated. No ereatcaptain has ever ventured into a war without first. securing alltke alies that he can possibly enlistin his cause, and without fisst procur- ing the mecessary wunitions of war, In politis mo prudent leader woull venture without firstenListing the lewding papers, or at least endeavoring tohave the molders of publicopinior. inactive sympathy with any movenent they may desire to undertake. But Mr. Burrowws wantsto biild up a new paper of his own; be wants not only o begranddictator of the new party, but he wants to have thoonlypaperthat the famers will be allwedto real. I expect to see @ law passed by the mext legislature that no farmer be alowelto rad wmy other pper but Mr. Burrows' piper, and that every farmor be sent. tojail for six months every time he 1ooks at acopy of soue other paper. [Laughter.| When the farmers have friwds they ought to try to retain their friendship and not cast off the old friends for new ones. They wantthe workingnen b join them, but theirconvention repelled them. This was shown in the people’s convention. The work- ing men were playing with loaded dice. Van Wyck was counted outof the convention so 85 to have the president of the allimce made a candidate for governor. They wanted the workilg man tojoin them in the crusade for cheapermoney and cheapning the dollax witnwhichhe biys bis foud and clothing and in prof of whit they thowght of the workingmuan, they nominated a state ticket therewithnot a single workingman on it The candidate of - the workingman is o lawyer and he is & sot o @ walking _delegate. How do they ex- ]u-cv. togetiwenty or twenty-five thousand aboring men to jin with them to flect men who have nousefor the labring men, Do they realizethatarepeal of the tariff laws of the United States would setadrift hundreds | of thousands of working menand place themn abroal as tramps just @stheyweroright afterthe war, Fellow citizens, I have covered agreat deal of tenitory, but in this movement there has beenso miuth fallacy and so much misrepre- sentation that it is impossible to answerone- tenthof it Forinstance, wo are told that in thestateof Illinoisthorehavebeen more convitions than in the whole of ircand, whenin fact Illinis _is themost pros perous statein America, Weare told thatNebrska farmsare rpialy passing through the sher- if's hands by foreclosure owingto the uni- versal destitution of our farmers. I have just reccived oficialstatenents from fifty-ive” out of the cightyeight counties showing the number of farn foredosures in Nebraska duringthe year endingwith June last. Thisreportshows thatthe totai num- ber ofimprved farms offered for sale under mortgige foreclosure in the various counties, including those in the Unitel States court, in the 3 counties is %97, partlyimproved farms. 117, wimproved farms 318, mking a totil of 2 farms offered forsale under the ham- mer. Outof 45,00,000 acresof ld, which would representat least 150000 farms of 320 acres each, out of that vast number 1,332 foreclosures, Gratingthat the balance of thecounties would be pro rati—and, for instance, Douglus county isnot represoted here,aud [ know our county has very few foreclsures because the lnd in Douglas county is to valiable-I say the total farms forechsed wouldnot exeeed 1,60, or prob- ubly Il per cent tat the outside Of that number 1 motice that Holt county husthe largest number,up in_the sand nills,and thereare farms 143 offereld. I know the reason why, 1 an't gointo detalls and ex- plainit hers, butit is known thit a great many worllless plecesof land are nortgaged, and mortgy for all they are worth and the ownerssimply walk away and forget to pay the intorest, A great many of these tuems represent the same sortof thing. Menhave goneto work, forinstance, ind made avery small payment, and fallel to come to time on futire payments and have given up their farmms, buthis letter dos not show that the farmers of Nebraska are goiig to leave tne country, orbecome tenants ;thereis noproof vhatever. Soitis with agreal many of their m statenents that we can not possilly ebut. Likemy friend, Calamity Weller of lowa, these parties attribute their failures and nis laps whether they are due to the want of persorial thrift, drouth, hailsorms, or any oler cause; to the mismanagement of our nationl fininces. They propose torevolutionie everythingand are joing 1 give e\'l-v)'lmd[)' walth, pros- perily, happives ani-chidren [ supose [Laughter| and everything e to make people coutented, Idon'tk are ot able to give toour peopleil th. only elect their men tooffice, In conclusion let mesamonish the farmers sud laboiog men o euulate the plicy that Demis Kearney pursued in = Call fornia, The Kearmeyites wanted legisla. tion aganst the imuigration of the Chinese; and Kearney and the hoodlums started the w ty, “The Chinese must go. "’ The Keareyites had votes and both parties wanted the, vots, but they said Y ou mus! get that anti-Chinese plank in your platform or wewill vote for theotherparty,” Tue re sultwas that Lotk partiesadopled the ery, They say, *Simulystaud on air phiform ud | | holdthe Balance of | havedictated any pe “Tho Chiinese must o, and in less than six months the natynal conventions adopted it and ongres enacted |t intolaw. Why cinnot the farmers say to both partis: 'You give us this or takeyour | chances of defeat, notby & now party, but by our poing on theother side” The farmers or and cortainly could loy wanted o any re form wanted, orany rodress sought, ifit was reasmable, Fellow dtizens, T hopo thaton the {th of Novemberyou will exercise the privilige of citizons with Julgment and conscientionsly and not rush headlong, simyply saying, “We wanta change and it dor matter if the man is a yellow dosr," but clect good men and hon orable menand the state of Nebrasks will see it that your taxe are lowerand your roprty proteded as well as men who are ntersted in good government would want to haveit. [Appluse. | Y —— The Way Made Clear, Onoof the most serious obstacles to sue cess in the wayof man is planted right in the middleof thoroadto helth. Howto re. storeand (o maintain a regulir habit of body and digestion ist00 often a source of needless and, unhappily, of vain iquiry. Itis not necesary (o inveigh against drastic purga. tiyes, They who have used then continu. know the comsequences. A mmedy unites theactionof areguliing med{ cinefor the bowels with that of atonic both for those organs, the liver and the stomach, is Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, sanctioned by the best medial authority, and reciving daily the endowsenent of our'fellow comntry: men, With this eflectual, thoigh gentle, laxative athand, it is wssiblo to defy those changes of tem perature roductive of consti. pation, aswell s constidutional attacks of biliousness, whith best evin people _natur. ally healtly. Malaris, dyspepsit, rhenma: tismand kiney troubles an remedied and prevented by theBitter ————— EXCITE MEX GOLD, TOVER Rich Finad nnounced in the Awe Duckle L T, Mountains. The solo topie of conversation is the golddiscoveries in the Arbuckle moun- s, an Admnore, . T, dispteh to tho heago Tribune, [t has long beenknown that the precious metal ex. isted there in pying quantities, but the hostility of the Indians has prevented explorers invading thatsection in great numbers, oy of those who have se: ly entered the forbidden teriitory being murdered by the Indians, who cardully guarled the treasire. Not. withstanding the dangerof the under- taking reports continue to wme from the Arbuckle mountsins of wich finds in that section of the country. l'ouy months ago J.D. Wilsonand 8§, . Ford, exporienced California miner, quietly pemctrated the mystic r theit return organized a company com: posed of nine of Ardmore’s best white citizens and thirteen Indians with o cap- italstockof $1,000000, and then going before the Chickasaw legisliture suc- ceeded i having the mining laws amendedand the charter passed, giving them theexclisive mining right for all mineralsin twentyfive miles square of thehistoric Atbuckle comtry, Hwing secured this grant Tishomingo was se- lected as headquarters for the company andpre paratios put on footto develop themin Filteenor twenty goid leads havealrady been brought tolight and there is sid to o silver, copper lend andconl in abimdance in the limits of thegrant. While the vorkof investi- gation and securing the charter was in progress the pablic v lept in the darkandthe ficts have just been made public, causing great excite ment. A Pure and Reliale Medicine—A com. pound fluil extrct of wots, leaves, barks and berries is Bunlock Blood Biuers. They cureall discasesof the blood, liver and kid- neys, eion, and on ey A Fair STeep Walker Rescued, The other morning about 2 o’clock o negro man who was walking down Franklin stret, just about Governor’s street, sav annde woman standing on the cornice of the Putnarn boarding house, says a Richmond, Va. , special thoSt. Louis Republic. ' Thenegro to Mr. George Bannister's place, and in- formed hin of theperilous position of theyoung lady, M., Banister hastened aromd 1 the houso and saw the voung ladystanding like a statve. Under the glare of the electric light, he noticed thatshe was wleep, hereyes bing open, buttheyseemed tobe fixed on some ob- ject Mr Bamister and anther man stood onthe pivement with outstretched arns to ateh her il sheshould fall, and ordered the negro togo into the house andawake tain Putnam. Thecap tainhastily dressed himself and went to th&window which was just hack of the fairsleep walker and taking her gently by the arm, pulled her into the room ani escoted her to her aprtments, The sleep walker was Miss Clara Shavw, o. of the aciresses at the Comique. Thi momingshe lad noknowledge of what hadoccurred amd her companions do not liketo say anything to her about it, - Ayer's Pills, being convenient, eMicacions, and safeare tic best cathartic, whether on landor sey, in dty or count Tor constipa tion, sick head indigestion, and torpid liver, they never Trya box of them; they are sugar A Remarkable St Bernard, A few ovenings ago & gentleman, in assing through the common on his way home, wis atiracted to the north fenco by the howling of adog, and recogniz thedog s belnging toRev. Dr. H. M Dexter, says the New Bedford Mercury. ich izalarge St Bemard, to boin distress, and, knowing he was vilued very highly by his owner, the gentleman went around to Dr, Dexter’shouse and sent thecoachman forthe animal, The coawchman went to thecommon and heard the dog hovling, Ongoingto him he found the dog was notin distress, but, having found by the sideof afence a man dead druunk and helpless, his natural instinet bade him stay by the man and setup the howl for assistance, Van stantly. (el Houten's Cocoa-—Delicions, made in —_— Bought Oly mpus, An Englishnan has bought a part of Mount Olympus in order toprevent ity descoration by an enterprising firm which proposes to erecta hotel there Judgement thoull be displayed in buying medi- cne above all things. In selecting a emedy forany disease, youshould be positive that it contains nothing inju- rious to the health. Many remedies on the market leave the patient in a much worse condition, thin bfore taking them, S S. S. fs purely vegetable, and perfectly harmiess; the most delicate child can fake itwithabsolute safety. It contains no mercuryor minerals of any kind, and yet it never fails to cure the dis- tases it is recommended for, Dook on Blood and Skin discasesfreo, SwiftSpecilic Co, Atlanta, Ga JOSEPH BILLITT'S STEEL PENS. GOL.D MEDAL., PARI3 EXPOSITION, 1889, THEMOST PERFECT OF PENS. 3 e —————————— | 'Omaha Manufacturers, - ] | Hoots and Shoes, [ESRETOR - s TR | KRR ENDALL, JONES & CO, Wholesale Mannfactarers of Bootsé Shos Aguita for Boaton Rubher 8hoo Co., 1103, 1104 ana 1108 Harney Sireet, Ouahn, Neb. Iowers. FTORZ & ILER, i Lager Beer Brewers, 181 Narth 18¢h Street, Omahs, Nebd, —_—_—— < urn’lflv. FAGLE CORNICE WORKS, Manafacturers of (alvanized Iron (ornice Window eips and metalio skylights. John Fpenoles proprietor. 108 and 110 8outh lith s treot. i} Ar(lali' Material A. HOSPE Jr., | Attists' Materials, PTanos and Organs, | 1518 Doug\as fireet, Omahs, Neb, ©oal, Coke, Eto, OMAHA COAL, COKE AN l') LIME CO, Jodhers of Hard and Soft Col. ) B B Cor 16thand Dovglas Sireots, Omahs, Neb, igars. TEAN, ARIS THONG & GO, Wholwsale Cigars, 03 N fith Street.Ullellol’ 1439, —_— Goods and Notiomn M E. SMITH& C0, D1y Goads, Furnishing Goods and Notions Cornmerlith and A Sireets, PR Soonasdluchd e KILPATRICK-KOCH DRY GOODS CO, | Importers and Jodbers in Dry Gool Gens' FumlshingGoods Comer 1ith and Haroey Bireets Omats, Nob. Furniture. DEWEY & STONE, Wholesale Deilers in Furniture, Farnam Strect, Omaha, Nebraska ouAuLg:s'sinvx:'an. Furniture. Ommnh, Nebrasks. R Grocerle McCORD, BRADY & CO, Wholesile Grocers, i 1ihandleavenworth Streds, Omila, Neraaks, ARSI} Lunber, Bte. rehon sl FIRE IS ST G W. DOUG LLAS & CO.y i Dalersin Hiedwood lumber, Yard 1310 N, 16th 8t., Onaha. JOHN A.WAKEFIELD, Wholesile Lumber, Et., Ete Imjported and Amerian Puriland Coment Sl qen's for “"""""“'v':".'.",“i"‘,{: menl, and Vi CHAS R.LEE, Daler in Hirdwood Lumber, A quot looring. fth 1 D¢ i N o, iain, Foprata, O FRED W. GREY, Lumber, Lime, Cement, Elc., Etc. Corner 9th anda Douglm Streets, Omaha. ———————————— Millinery and Notions, 1. OBERFFELDER & CO., Importers and Jobbus in Millinery, 28, 200ana A2 South 11th itreet. e Quin Notions J.T. ROBINSON NOTION CO., LR Wiolesile Notions andfurnishing Gools, 1120 Harney street, Omiba. = CONSOLIDATED 'l:ANK LINE CO., Wiolesile Refined aud Lubricating ils, Axle griase, olo, Omaba. A H. Bishop, Manuger. CARPENTER PAPER CO, Wholesale Paper Dellers. Camy m mice mtock of printing wraping and wriling peper. Bpecil atttiongiven W card paper. —_—— Safes, Eto. A L. DEANE & C0,, Genenl Agena ot Halls' Sales, #1 and323 South 100 St.,Omaha — H HARDY & CO, Jobbersof Toys, Dalls, Albums, Fancy Goods, e Eurntsbing Gouds, Children’s Carrisg o 1208 Famun sticet, Ouaha, Neb. Water Supplies ., U. 8 WIND ENGINE & PUMP CO,, Steam and Walr Supplies, Halliday wind mills. 018 and 120 Jon Iron Works. | PAXTON & VIERLING IRON WORRE,“: Wrought and Cast Iron Building Work, Engines, braas work, general foundry, muchine sd blackspiith work, Ofice and wo | Ry and Iith street, O { —- OXA!I:A"BAFE & IRON WORKS‘. ] Manf'rs of Fire and Burglar Prool Sals, Waults, fall work, iron shutiers md i escapes G. Andreen prop'r. COr. lith andJackin St — e gy h, Doors, E | . M. A. DISBROW & CO., F Wholesale manufscturers of Sas, Dours, blinds and Monldings, Branch ofice, [#th and Izar streets, Omiha, Neb. * South Omaha, UNION STOCK YARDS CO, ¢ 0f South Omaba. Limited, NEBRASKA National Bank U. 8. DEPOSITORY, OMAHA, NEB, Capital. - - - = $400,00Q Surptlus Jan. Ist, 1890 - 87,800 Omcenand Directors - Henry W. Yates, "residen 1awieS Reed, Vice-Presidont; James W Savag i Y Mors Joh8. Colis, R'C. Cushigy, 3. N Fatriok, W. 4.5, Elugios, cubler. THE IRON BANIK. Comer 11h and Farnan Sts. A General Banking Busines Transacted FOR MEN ONLY MAGIC CURE EgrLostor FATLING NAN- HOOD: Genenl and NEE VOUS DEBILITY, Wewkness of Boly an Nind: Effectsof Errors or extssesin Oll o Young, Robust, Noble MANUOOD fully re- slored We guiraiteo overy case or mone: undel. Sample coume, Hive days Trow uent. 41; full courne, 8. Securely seled fro obser vatlc Cook Re uly Co.” Omaha, Nel Oflice. Bt. Clair Hotel, Cor. 1ith and Dodge S§ — We O ffer for Sale, Four thousand ton eholce Biled Hay, F, Boars, Strange's Siding Laton or ol stations, on 0, M. &St IR R, in ot tosull purc 5 prlces rogulited by thy market il aud see us, STRANGE BROS., SIOUX 0ITY, LOWAL

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