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OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDA OCTOBER 20, and he is right In with this Lineoln ring He was in with the impeached state officials that have been vindicated by the deposing of Judge Maxwell, and that have been vindi cated again by the last republican tion, and when such a man is governor what Bafoty have your people got for the state funds? For the loss of $300,000 or there abouts, that was deposited down there in that bank and in others, you will have a direct tax; and the question ls, “Are you ready to uphold the credit of the state by | electing a governor that will see to It that every dollar due the state comes in, or are | you going o elect a governor that will to it that not a dollar the boodlers have pocketed goes out?’ (Applause.) It is a monstrous proposition that a mar who is notoriously unfit to be trusted in pub- lie positions, who has himself honest In all matters he has had charge of, should be made the chief executive of a great commonwealth, and placed in charge of mil Mons of your money, including the patrimony of your children, the ool funds, which ought to remain and which onght to remain inviolate for all time to come. When a banker loans money to anybody, the first question is whether the borrower is an honorable man, whether he is a man posed 1o pay his debts. When ene banker recommends anybody to another he first in quires whether he fs an honest man, whether he has iftegrity. No man with any of our banks, and I ma would recommend a dishonest man to em- ployment or appolntment to a position in a other bank. If any bank and say, ‘‘Now, h I want to employ Mr. Brown as my paying teller; will you slgn a letter recommending him, or will you recommend him verbally for the place And, If that banker knew that Brown had ever forged a paper of any kind, or that Brown had been an associate of forgers or embezzlers, or that Brown was a gambler he would not r mmend him; he would not think of it. But they will recommend a man of that description for governor of Ne- braska! (Applause.) ONE STANDARD OF Why should there morals for business for public office? What is the character and position of the man who is to sustain the state’s credit and reputation? When he was lieutenant gov ernor he associated with himself a young man by the name of Walt Seely, who was notoriously a fixer of legislatures, what might be called an *‘0il roomer,"" doing the crooked and pernicious work of the corporati undermining our whole government—that man was his private secretary, But Mr. Ma jors sald in oue of his speeches recently that Walt Secley was fs d upon him by the populists. Well, that conven which shown dis state 8¢ lis associated 1o exception, man would come into a re. MORALS NEEDED be standard of and another standard | one is very singular, isn't it? I don’t know where any other man in public office would take as his confidential agent somebody whom his ener recommended to | him—political enemies or other enemies What are the facts? In the legislature of 1891 the senate was populist; the senate of 1893 was not populist; it was organized by the republicans and democrats joining to- gether, and its acting president was a re- publican. But Majors continued to keep Seeley as his private secretary, nevertheless; and he cannot charge that he was fastened upon him then by the populists, he? You canuot charge that ho was ignorant of Seeley’s rascality; because, during the ses slon of 1891, when ator Taylor w ab- ducted from the state house. and when Walt Seeley camo to him after Taylor had left the state, three weeks after ho had decamped from Nebraska, and asked him to sign the | voucher for the pay of this man who had been abducted, when that man Seeley got him to sign this fraudulent voucher for $75, and got the money for it and pocketed it, Mr. Majors could not plead the baby act, and say that ho did not know that Walt Seeley ‘was a bad man, and that he was not fit for his private secretary. He kept him in 1893 Just the same as he kept him in 1891 Well, what about this Taylor youcher? Mr Majors has said, and he has said it publicly here bafore a thousand republicans in con- vention assembled, lifting up his hand and calling God to witness that he was tell- ing the truth, that every word he said could be verified by the records, and he said it here in the Sixth ward, that he hoped to be paralyzed, that he hoped to die on the spot, if he was not telling the truth, that Taylor had served sixty-three days in that session, counting out the Sundays, and that he was fully entitled to the whole amount to which any other member was entitied, that is, $300, and that that §76 was rightfully his. WHAT THE RECORD SHOWS Now, what is the record? Here is the record. (Holding up a book)—Here is the volume that contalns the senato journal for 1891; avery page from beginning to end shows on the one side the day of the session, on the other the date. For instance: On page 518, it says “Forty-fourth day, March 6, 1891, and s0 on. Taylor disappeared on the 15th day of March, when they were in the fifty- third day of the session. His name does not appear again after that date, although the sesslon continued to the sixty-fourth day, April 4, when the legisiature adjourned. Now, then, Mr, Majors knew just as well as I did, when he called God to witness that he | was telling the truth, that he was telling an untruth This book shows that when the Newberry bill was pendiug in the senate, when they had closed the doors of the senate by his own order, and kept them closed, that Taylor had gone off to Omaha ed over to Council Bluffs, and finally arried off 10 Chicago, and disappeared in the end away off in Oregon. And I say that Mr. Majors knew that a speclal engine carried thres men from Lincoln to Omaha to see that this man should not back—a Burlington engine (applause); a Burlington engine that carried Dorgan, the keeper of the penitentiary, and two other men, and brougnt them to Omaha, and had this men sent on beyond the confines of this state. Now, any man that will tell such falsehoods, calling God to wit- ness, Is not fit for any public office, or for any place, even the lowest, that the #tate| could give him. “Amen” and ap- plause) But Mr. Majors is still recommended 10 hold up the credit of the state; he s an | honorable man, as you all know! (Laughte »1 Yes, indeed. But he has a very vague kind | of memory. For instance: He knows just how far it Is from Peru to Lincoln. 1 think he ought to know, he has traveled it a good | many years back and forth. He lives in the | town of Peru. Now, enant governor, he might or might not be led 10 miles for traveling back from his home to the cap- ital and return. The constitu that point. The distance from coln s Just seventy-three mil tance from Lincoln to Peru is, about the same as it s frc Peru to Lincoln. (Laughter.) But Mr. Majors eonceived it to| b bis idea that instead of 146 miles he wa entitled to 288 miles, and rew §28.80 mileage. 1 have the documents right here in the auditor's report. He drew $28.80 mileage in the year 1891; but, , his cousclence smoto him and he knocked off elght miles. (Laughter) He drew 250 miles, 10 cents a mile, and was traveling on a pass all the time. (Laughter.) It is a little mat- ter, but it shows the utter dishonesty of the | man. Thore Is mot anylhing smaller than that as | know of, excepting to come to Omaha right after the numination and get & brand uew pass from the street car company w can er was come a here Cries of as liew n ls silent on Peru to Lin and the dis- | 1 belleve, just he n the year 189 | 1 think there are five or six | and short on land | these | 1t they | the | the other way at Lincoln when they elected and ride back and forth on ft. (Laughtar.) Yes: a man that will want to save § cents in Omaha while he is here eampaigning is a rfully groat man, isn't he, for gov- rnor? (Laughter) Why he was entitled to that pass 1 have not yet discovered. The other day [ was in the town of York and to my very great surprise I found that was a suit pending in the county of York against Thomas J. Majors by a firm in York. That sult was begun about a year 180 se Mr. Majors had bought yut & stock of goods in the town of Bradshaw in the county of York, and deeded some prop over, and in that trade agreed to give he party In exchange for those goods and hattels various pleces of land, amoun n all to 810 acres. The plaintift sues Mr Majors for the recovery of seventy-tw Mr. Majors pleads that these pieces of land— | that the deeds for each of them say seventy or elghty acres, or less, You know that in a great | many deeds for land the “more or less’™ urs; but he thinks that is about as little “less” as he could make It (Laughter) So he says that that man has got all the land he is entitled to, but he Is seventy-two acres short, Well, you how it is: Mr. Majors is long on mileage (Laughter and app ) He is long on double pay and short on ve racity. (Renewed laughter.) THE STORY IS A LONG ONE. T cannot go very far into the details; t is an abundance of material here; it is juestion whether you would have the time (Cries of “Go on, go on) I shall try to present the moral side of this cam paign, We are all getting a very g of bad advertising out of this calamity sade from other papers in other parts of the state. They denounce this movement of the business men of Omaha as a mean, selfish, and entirely unjustifiable combination or ¢ epiracy against the other people of the state, who have equal interests in the welfare of Nebraska with them, Whether that be true or false, the papers of the state are denounc- ing it, and, assuming what is asserted to be ue, they declare that our credit will be in- jured by it a good deal more than by any- thing they could show hereaftor. After Judge Holcomb is elected (applause) these gentle- men will have to send word to their castern friends that have been induced to send scarecrow letters out here, that this populist was elected because a bad man was \ candidate on the other side, and that that very bad man could not have been elected because he was bad, because the people had 10 confidence in him, and that he tried ta do the very (hings which would have injured the credit of the state a good deal more than anything that could possibly happen under the two years' rule of Judge Holeomb. I have thought a great deal on this sub- Ject, and I wahit to say right here that i know that my personal in interests are all rwoven ts of Omaha and Nebraska In this world and all 1 expoct to have right | I have lived here for thirty-one | years; dollar that I have ever earncd | that ever borrow invested right here in Omaha. I have raised my family here and here I ex- pect to be burled. There is no aspiration of mine and no hope of the future that is not bound up with your city. L do not believe that is true, of many men who have signed this business men's manifesto. If 1 should leave this city I would leave all T have be- hind. If are to be struck by calamity it will strike me harder, perhaps, than any one man in this city. How would it be with | some of those capitalists and investors? have no property anywhere outside of braska; I have no-silver mines in Mexico; I liave no iron or coal mines in Wyoming; no land in Texas; T have no ranches in Mon- tana or Idaho; no town lots in New York; have no banking capital anywhere. The prominent men who have Joined in this manifesto could leave your city, abandon all the property they own here, and still live very comfortably during the rest of their o you must realize, and I suppose you will admit, that if [ am willing to stake 1 1 have on the future prosperity, all I can hope 1o have upon this contest, upon tho clection of Holcomb for governor, that I have confidence in him, and that I have mo | fear of the terrible results that are dowed by the gentlemen whose names | re on the manifesto. (Great applause.) I know further that I have hever gone out of Omaha, anywhere on this side or on the other side of the Atlantic, that T hay spoken for her, and up for her and for Nebraska; and I know, too, that other gentlemen who have made hundreds of thou- sands—almost millions—in this community have not stood up for Omaha when they were out and abroad. (Applause.) I know many times complaints have come to me that some of these gentlemen discouraged capitalists and investors from coming here by telling them that this is not the place to go to. No man can show his face to me anywhere that can charge me truthfully with such a thing. (Applavse.) Well, then, what are we confronted with? The great and all-absorbing question that I regard as vital today is, “Shall the people of Nebraska govern themselves, or shall they allow the oligarchy—shall they allow a com- bination of corporations and railroads—to dictate to us how we shall vote and whumn we shall elect, and who shall rule over us?" can do It this year they can do it for all time. If they can do it by dictating to their employes they can do it by slaving their employes. For any man who will vote as he is ordered is brought down | to the condition of the South Carolina ne (Applause.) His vote don’t count BETRAYED BY REPRESENTATIV When I was campaigning two years ago got g with a populist Genoa. You know that I have always st up for sound currency, honest changeable dollar paper. 1 ha up against the fiat money s the free usions, and I stant up for it today plause) But T will not stand up for any thing that will use th of money and wealth to enslave the (Applause.) I say, then, I met this at Genoa, and fter we had been talking a good while, and I had down In the argument on | question sald: “Wwen, 1| don't I have a republican, but | I won't go back to party; I t gol back into it until my vote Is counted. Oh" I sald, “what do you mean? ot the republican party the pa stands up for an honest ballot and a fair count? “Why, yes' he sald, ‘that Is all right, but you don't understand me. Our | don't count here i way." He| “SIx years ago voted one way | and our legislature voted other my vote didn't count.” 1 was du i It was true; bad the peop! ae and the legislature voting wor there t seems that ng to mora seventy-two acres see re a n- you st and my with the in-| All I have s | re. every every dollar has been and could also, we fore- | not | stood | en- ) 8. | 1| at a ex- controversy a money for dollar, gold, silver stood all silver (Ap- mes and power man g in borne him money he care been that wo Is that vote some sald we here, way; founde voting the we way, v United States s made populism rampant in this state, the people of Nebraska have been deprived of self-government. Where will it eud, if we permit this thing to go further? L deny, in the first place, that Thomas J. Mujors is the legitimate nominee of a re- publican convention, He nominated by nright fraud and bribery; he was nomi nated, in the first place, by sixty delegatos who had no right or title to their seats, who were put up in the house of J. H. Ager, a lobbyist of the Burlingtou raflroad, four days after the convention of thefr county had met, aud part of whom were not selected until nator. And that is what be- was do e |1 h | state would elect him. the night hbefore the state con here In Omaha (Applause.) 1 deny that he was nominated honestly, because Mr. Jack MacColl told himselt that he had paid between $400 and $500 rail- road fare to bring delegates down from the Bikhorn valley and other parts of {ae state. They were elected to vote for him; they had come here to vote for him, and the next morning they voted against him, and were bought up with money or something equiva- ; and T say that fraud vitiates ention met and never were announced. me ent to mone all things. But, led into nominating this man by all the gitimate means that are in vogue in orli conventlons, if no improper interferenc taken place, and no bribery had been re- sorted to, I still would stand before the peo- ple of this state defending my position that even if the republican party had been a dishonest man, a man who has disgraced the state, n man who has violated his oath of office, is not fit to be trusted with the po tion of governor, and should never be elceted governor. (Applause.) WHO WOULD TRUST HIM? Where is the moral side of it? I want to ask you, gentlemen, would Mr. Kountze, would Mr. Millard, would Mr. Henry W. Yates, take this man and put him behind their counters and trust him with $30,000, or with $5,000? Never, (Laughter and i plause. Yes; t gentlemen have got a high standard of integrity for merce, and a w standard of integrity for politics. They ccommend and support for mayor of Omaha a rank populist, who was discredited by all honest people they were willing to have him elected mayor of Omaha, although they knew that he was not a straight man They were willing to ruin the credit of Omaha by having such a man for mayor; but they are awfully afraid of having an honest, straightforward, upright man, who has done his duty as judge fearlessly and without partisan bias—they are afraid to have him for governor! (Applause.) I ask any minister of the gospel, T ask any good Christlan, T ask any man that has any self-respect or pride in the good name of the state, would you put a man Into the gov- chair who established in a room adjoining the state senate, the senate chamber, a dram shop for debauch- ing members, who had a cupboard full of liquors in there during the entire session and had Yale lock keys given out to mem- bers and lobbyists to come into that room o can ernor's | and carouse and drink while the session was in progress? befc Thomas governor, and (Applause.) Mr. Majors was a good prohibitionist dur- g the time prohibition was agitated, and a gond drinker at about the same time. That not uncommon for gentlemen. A rtain correspondent, whose name ought to charged me through the with going the Omaha brewers and asking them for money contribu- tions for the election of Judge Holcomb. Now, I say right here that there is not one word of truth in it. I have not called upon the brewers for Judge Holcomb for one penny, and in fact T havo not ealled the brewers in behalf of Holcomb at have called upon the brewers this season for a contribution, and I got it. I called upon them to contribute to entertain ne republican state convention, and they contributed §100 for that purpose. But some of the gentlemen on that manifesto would Such a thing never was done J. Majors was licutenant is a disgrace to the state. be Ananias, Lincoln Journal to upon all—1 once {not contribute a dollar to pay the expense of a great convention, although they would be willing to pay $50,000 to corrupt the yoters of this state and elect Thomas J. Majors. (Applause.) I want to say further that T have reliable assurances that Majors has himself sought tho support of the brewers, and, through his emissaries, tried to secure their influence and made pledges to them that he wouid appoint anybody they might name for police commissioners if he could get their political support. But where was he four years ago? He was in every state convention held in this state before prohibition was gubmitted He sought to force prohibition upon us by lis vote in convention and in the legis- lature and now he wants the support of the vory men whose business he sought to ruin He was the man of all others who made the fight against Omaha in every legislature and convention. He was the anti-Omaha candidate for governor in 1892; and the re- publican convention that nominated him was located in Omaha against his '~ will He did everything he could in- side of the state central committee to prevent it from being located here; and yet he comes to Omaha and asks business men and workingmen of Omaha for their vote: A man ought to be at least half way consi: tent and half way decent. CAN YOU AFFORD TO DO IT? But let us go back to the moral question: What will you say to your boys; what will you say to the now growing gemeration of republicans? That you are going to advise thom this time to vote for a man whom vou would mot trust with anything, whose pledges have been violated time and again, whose faith was broken with the state, whose record is disreputable and moral conduct is reproachable? has been charged that M. has been maligned; that he misrepresented; that there have sonal grievances to air. There 1s whatever in that. Majors himself, he declared in the state fiiteen years, he Bee, said in the in Fremont whose It Majors been per- truth although ention that for had been hounded by The Sixth ward and said it again that up to 1892 he had the best of friendly relations with the paper; and, in nt, there has been no hounding, there has been no personal gri Two months or ten weeks ago, before ever Mr Majors was nominated, Mr. William A. Pax ton called upon my offi and asked me whether or not I could be reconciled to Thomas J. Majors; that Majors was here in the to Le reconciled, bas been s no ars, any evi ago, me at 0 ity and willin and do Mr this thing I wante Paxton th house poutically; and 1 said 1 and there, and if he is in cannot tradict me, that [ nothing to do with Majors; that 1 no personal grievance, and no quarrel, that he an man, that his ord was bad, and that I did not want a | lefensive campaign for the republican party. and dld not believe that this to would have but was unc the people of (Applause.) Now, question that rises above all things is, shall we say to the people of the state, and to the people of the United States, that, no matter how notorieusly bad a man may be, how disreputable his conduc how dishonest he may have proven himself sitfons of high trust, that because partisanship we aro going to ourselves to be driy into a bull pen railroad bullwhackers and surrender rights s free railroad and moneyed HONEST Everybody sake in ot allow by our men to manage concerns. MEN WILL B knows .that I offered for the of the republican party to support any moderately clean candidate for governor; there Is no hostility to railreads there s no hostility 1o any of the men who by the railroads; there no hostility to thelr officers as individuals: | but there fs hostility to their methods, to their interference, to their hundreds of men over the state to Justice, their hiring men to pack con ventions, pack legislatures, and pack juries; and you know very well today that both the demoeratic and republican parties have been dominated by the same pernicious - as railroad are emplo s is e hiring to tramp to pervert fluence until volt to For once of us that we propose governor the (Applause.) Another that r cand offices the clean men, of ample of anywhere. sylvania licans Ameriea. rockrooted have risen in re- bind them. those the masses break the bonds that we are all going together, don't wear a brass collar, and for to elect a man for railroads do not own or want ‘: o of this people to other | thing say we pra to the republicans they want the ates for governor or must put up reputable and they must set an ex m 15, instead of setting an ex- boodleism that Is unexample (Applause.) The state of Penn- | has as good a class of repub- | any state that you can find in The of Pennsylvania 1s a | republicad state; and yet what | did do? Penpsylvania gave to Ben-| Jamin Harrison 63,400 majority, and elected | Pattison, a by 17,000 majority; the republicads ¢¢ Pennsylvania adminis tered a rebuke to bbodlerism, they adminis- tered a rebuke to uncleanliness and bossism, and defeated a candidate who | was just like Majors—not quite | s0 bad, but pretty bad. (Applause) The republicans of New York in 1882, if T re- member right, the interf of | federal power, now being in Nebraska by democratic bosses just as bad as it t was in New York by repub- | licans; and, notwithstanding Folger al clean man, a man whose record nobody could say a word; but, because Folg had been nominated by the influence bossism and federal interfer the publicans of New York rose enmasse burled Mr. Folger under 195,000 major! And then they from it as Pennsylvania has done. In Pennsy last year Galusha A, Grow was elected con- gressman at large by nearly 200,000 ma- jority, notwithstanding the fact that the year preceding Pattison had been elected governor, and is still the governor ef Penn- sylvania, Let Nebraska republicans show that there is as much mettle, as much in- tegrity and as much decency among them as there is in Pennsylvania and New York and when they seek to foist upon us a can- didate that is entirely unfit for the place, let us administer the rebuke at the ballot box; let us stand up as republicans for prin- ciples and see to it that these principles are properly represented by the candidates that are given 1o us to support. MAJORS AND THE PLATFORM What are principles good for? Nothing at all, unless the men are to execute them What is the good of the republi platform today? The platform it Thomas Majors was all would he be good for on that platform (Applause and laughter) It is an insult to common intellig for us to say that that man would do a solitary thing to re- deem the platform pledges except sign appropriations for all the ringsters. (Ap- plause.) And, by the way, look back just a bit; you are paying $125 a day to the con- tractor of the penitentiary, to Mosher, who is himself in the penitentiary over in Sioux Falls—you are paying that right alon and when the last legislature tried to r peal this contract and place that institution in the hands of the state, what did th do? The house passed the bill, and, through Majors and the gang that was in the senat that bill was sidetracked and never saw day- light; and if Majors is governor any such bill will be vetoed. That is what they want him for. Yes, Mr Paxton, who is a good friend of minz, and whom I respect in every way, excepting in this present campaign in his effort to fasten a blackleg upon us for gov- ernor, says: ‘‘We. want him, because he will veto everything,” Yes; I think he will veto everything. (Applause.) He will veto the maximum rate bill. T sent to Washington, three or four days ago, or a week ago, and 1 asked there at the su- preme court rooms how soon the maximum rate decision would te made by Judge Brewer, and he sent word Lack that he would have it in about two weeks. Well, T think the two weeks won't expire until about the Tth of November. (Laughter) Now, suppose that that decision holds that the bill is de- fective in some minor parts; supposs, then, that we say the next legislature shall amend that Dill and put it through and remedy the defects. What will Majors do? Oh, he will veto everything; of course, he will. He will | veto it | Now, is it to the of these mer- | | ose to to state elect high and ample when [ ki state is she deninctat, 50 3 Delawmatre Thomas of the rosented which is nce used was agalnst all of r an y Jus vania nce, recovered Dr. M | | an state right What | is a right zence to e by little be try by, interest chants and shippers and bankers, even, that he should veto it? 1 do not believe it There are business men in this town, whole- sale dealers, that were crazy to have that bill defeated when the legislature® was in session. The same men, the biggest ship- pers in the town, have assured me since that the bill would be a blessing; that it would establish Omaha as a good distribu- ting center, and woull make every man that is a shippar free and independent. Now, today, the shippers only live and exist through the favor of traffic managers, and those who have their disfavor might as well We do not ask the rail- roads to do us any favors; we simply want to the honest, fair, square thing by every shipper, and let us treat them the same 1 in favor of confiscating eny man’s property, whether it be the prop- erty of railroad or any but I do “Live and us your created g0 out of business. them do am o other corporation; corporations to say try to make corporations want these servants. law ervient all th pl they and don't These charter, were and they ought to the law. But they y hang up our law defy our laws, and they fasten upon us laws which do not want; for instance, when the people had voted the n to ereate a railroad | commission, they immediately defiance of the peopl railroad commission alive, though it penny to the state; three men drawing $2,000 a year, and but leg- state house 1 by by 10 be subs re above law, at thelr ure, we as, down proposit created and they have kept that is | not worth a at the state hous they ging for the railroads and for the have been doing nothing else thieves. STAND THE simply v the FOR idea governor who will see institutions are properly conduc we a man down there is in league with thieves and public plun- derers, end will continue the system of rapacity until you have got to levy a direct tax of perhaps half a million dollars to re- cuperate the losses that we have sustained? 1 say no Intelligent, no self-respecting busi- ness man will go on and put this kind of governor in that chair, no matter how uch ““scarecrow’’ 18 held up before him The rallroad managers and calamity cru saders tell that you must elect Majors the redit will be ruined. It Is all moonshine. The eredit of Colorado is good just as good as the credit of Idaho or Mon tana governor of Colorado 1s a list of Idaho is and of Monta Qur selllig go and Idaho and Wyoming on th There is not a particle of diffe the credit of the ome and the her, where the parties who a have security, and when they any security they cannot borrow, and that ls | all there is of this whole credit business. Let us stand up for the eredit of the state. Let us stand up for the public morals. Let us not discredit the state in the very eye of STATE'S t CREDIT. s: Shall to it that the ted, who Now, is we heve staty shall or send a 1 you or state's the ‘governor r the governor jobbers a an combined Jesus of Nazareth STORY democ rado basis. 1ce between edit of the o borrowing haven't got | a a are s In A same city and man We | &00d, and | within remedy pate corporate power, p within y business, our own bidding Fellow the history of the state, time larly very found (second quarter, is beautifully those prominently connected with the of the period. Every Bives Don: can THE HISTORY: THE omist Publishing Association ] pan ) Melntosh, BOH n Natfonal Committee, THE te THE graphic THE the nation ocannot respect, ng men of this s No tate wil Tet by having a governor whom we whom all these people those who fssued this manifesto an improper candidate. even admit to be UNITED AFTER MANY YEARS us have a | at the head of the Institutions that t look upward The hope of the coming generation Is In when we have clean government | such a governor, we will know 1 tutions are If that th destroyed; and votes n m tress. u variety the number V. plane theological concludes a Mediaeval thrown Rev. paper on fore the Re: ‘ ‘Advanced style I an 0! in sate governr the next two in our own h he people, froe h * bounc (App citizens, i rporation to defeat this the « than r the be far care of the &ul emp of an ol of an irresy corporate oligarchy. | as patriotic, 1 duty 1 the state by and rlessly in the elec chiet and onorable enace this preferable forel and, ands don't years ands, 1 plause.) a h will bjects of to ror autocrat Let wolding of executiy tion bodings BOOKS AND PERIODICALS. covering province in a n ance Smith Hon. for Chr doctrine. paper Clty,” ity in on Jes 'he | or. and ode addres 0" by Mabelle ! convi do the magazine tten_only alon yeloped presented in condensed S0 as to prese ence of all important throughout the world, and t only a pract ot short sketches, gether with the copious illustrations, render exceptionally attractive Under the caption of ‘“Heresy and Schis in the current The Nineteenth Century replies to a recent paper of Rt lite upp contributes an an of Lenz's trip China, William P., and very strongly points to a higher tanity than Pring “Mutual which in Nuni turning ed me ide: one, and does special dia more ical E behave It fre combinat can coerce and the arse, lect we > corg attend 10 y and “we will attend to ours, grea fon be ot Germany be t Bov buy ce of the people it will continue to dominate the state for years this commonwealth a mere province condition Hussia would paternal re We shall be in no b the under than at our insti Holcomb, himself | have the them from this yoke and say to th of ations ur own and do in nt 1 crisis rnm cap en ot duced to r czar of It the under conscienceless the a of “World through les all of which, Desid the co Aid 1 me appeal berty-loving eitize uph high-minde, in Among the prominent features of the Sep tember Outing is the complete Prophetic Uri L0 " by William Hinckl New Football Rules” by Walter Camp, another chapter Awheel, Gladsto h middle i rish Priest in England Be Jrmation.” Woman' \ber'” its an A lines, Review in which The ldler designates its Sep tember edition, find Wor teresting contribution Criticism, ism is usual may be placed upon it ‘What way, found in The History styl. & Novelists of how what nprehensive o current movements arranged 0 as to chronicle , but a handy reference book ho and Nation,” Warfare with thorough seminaries, Re versity, story, piet ference administration throughout touches pape ties,” shows all addition | terials of nature order, incre human tributes “Ca t WOMAN Company, 1009 Walnut S THE CLOTHIER lished at 13 Astor Plac THE DOLL'S DRESSMAKER—Jennie Wren, 35 Bast Seventy-seventh Street, New York THE MUSIC REVIEW—Clayton F. Chi WOMAN'S WORK—T. L. Mitchell, Ga. THE HARVARD GR —The Harvard ation, RHODES' JOURNAL OF BANKING—Brad ford, 78 William 4 THE Bradley Company, BOOK delphia BABYHOOD- e information convenient in works. 1 illy in such tra number Justification of ane not artic| nortl Agnost scientific tra by v. J. A. Zahm “Bet Ports, ‘American in univ, Burope; queation “Assin Smar! the entitled William sing its ef wants an able pap alistic Monopolie MAGAZINES S PROGRES AN 0. Boston, Mass. Rhodes & Co. York KINDERGART S NEWS—John ekman St YCLOPE rretson Y 1 ¥ nt THE DL THE Scott Cassell OMAHA lishing Streets, Omaba. COME and series. *hrist authors translate to bring back the K underlying Champagne Cook's P BESOT —E Applegate. UL Cal N h Street, Omahz HOTO Street, New —The Outing 11 Fifth The L and 13 Tre INETEENTH ablication Co W STE Publication C York 8 MAGAZINE FAMILY Publishing ( DRUG Company BOOKS "ORTH—By E Herbert D. W 50 cents. Ho on, is a story Judea. It state in th the characte spir rents and lar lay. A judi It is scar bring out the loyal human and tha i to love FROM Pa portrays beaulif Htwar presen th Who are s a fallure, err & ( story as a that luate Sprin Avenue, SCIENCE QUA RE that is it no The present 1) contains 224 pages, and portraits ted wit Donahc W to t le on Lern icism,” ining of Not the Admin to al Prof. of milation t in e und, s, RECEIL —Won D FURN DU. EN N th R furnishes t ye n oe’s he e re ical trative marked dif- methods 6 and of “New of wealth to be the ma redistributed to shapes ai tivene and Prof. J. er VE an Philadelphia SHER—Pub- New York. ot claim is a magazine for the whole cc for any section of it published in New to its Catholic character, it political, England, and always trie in_economic, and religious matters so broad fair as to interest every reasonable A notable nonth s entitled “The South May Save the Journalist. a pled for more in is a brilliant and stirring article Dame Lucile Lovell has & beautiful short and thers are good res and plenty of light reading as well in this number. Among the interesting pa tember number Quarterly, by Ernst Freund, points ta the this respect economic pers in the Sep- May immigration Nationali 5 tl Ds TES' MAGAZINE ' Magazine Assos EWS York SURANCE ECONOMIST:- Mass. Wanamaker, Babyhood Publishing Company, to you 18 to do your credit ot d of dire “The “The and Tour the good to- ory a wumber of phere of Krapotkin in_the light is ages uteresting is the overs we Advanced very in on erary 1 rel desultory will e f Current the very of the particu- the to number of events Magazine that Though nd Ameri- this esiastical uni- Science La; of similar mith in a Wealth 1 n serving nks con he title Progress Sum Athens, Street - Milton Phila- De | | Strange Btory from Real Li'e that More Than Rivals Fiction, HOW A HUSBAND FOUND HIS LOST WIFE { i | NEW YORK Melbourne, Tie 1s Shipw: a Wil E Helena, Richard first faithfy burly | him and of a century ago in Southampton time lieved the al. with her 40 yea ke 1 d Uay but d Their Oct Australia, Mont V. Boyd, 18 it twenty other dead The man bearded sinc: she had grown 19 and met in but nd mance was begu w years had She ¥ ys Toge in Keal Life. ward § 1 th all Bac cach ha oo his plump n nearly Sheffield was a bluff and honest man, in Doy or of g | told h for a too, Ellen and w young ways him, The ors The saved washe until him a pernil He hunge Me hand could that | with liove Th I ook to sure memor Monta: twenty and of thi: report. Sheffie wrote e 4 amazes story man, Porter' parted more. crossed east t M now ter house Frank men’s by De the g DIC REVIEW O CURRENT Cox & Co., Buff The Econ- New York ric Publishing Com- Hugh b. Bol a RAPHIC TIMES imes Publishing Association, Y Pu ri. W mont CE mpany. The ompany Omahi Ninth BIVEL dizabeth rd. pughton reproducing $ ne prefac rs of th of % u ely in more | ty [ divine n in ty PULLMANTOWN the b Tt MAG the Fremont T Druggist and ) Stuart Riverside 1444 South he UTERLY: B B AZIN. Mc n-Ameri- Thir- Photo. lishing Company, York International News C. m Ginn Boston. Leonard roadway Leonard roadway, iodey Company, T York. Pub Jackson Phelps paper Miflin & Ci the tempt, age th of the literally lays, dre sing to the re ndship character ire provin an Extra Dry Imperial is pure, rkling. quoted th the of vely hapters B Charles s shams model inspir gard th o equal Jelicious lay “0n dr wine on eht though steali lark omple way we started Monday night provisions. Frank that I | He sai island of catehit 1 did most at tim island on Mr. yacht h for it ah his wifo had Id-time rival and Porter told him ma gone th er But the coursc Edward Shemeld young prosperous 1 the victory and the aptain of a sh , but his ship loa spirits, and W merchant 1an, But in the Willlam of Southampton loved pretty Ellen Marshall a hard fighting rival and had than did the sailor for his business wa nd the girl street Thought htal T ther old his wite f b 1t wife had and had b m seen a quartor young girl Sheffield loved b of love did not run sm Port 1" " or wa nd he prove 10 off England, young sea His hom at Southampton and there he met pretty Ellen Mar She was a bright-eyed, hall full and a bluff sailol were married and set up a littl fe and sure ¢ y It was a jong v heartbroken best he could and sail struck the vessel and wreck took to cap a bo: had r i to wretc Mrs. young bought a sma never married 2 chest five had Pritehard, | matter anything st of the acres at a ed, The rest 1 t until perfe New uthamp d th th 5. band's memory. heffield a Boyd's brief one. Wore Trousers, The most Suffolk count occupies Riverhead, is Grace Smith, owned by J. al F at Sunday ing, Wo had a ni W rly to reti walk at Barker t yacht g In a w towns on Long 1 sheriffs, head hart ing provi a napt ing at pirates island Nugent made pri board and on wite cared waited that and disas! had been yags Ho cheere a small boats n stuck to He clung for ship, calling passing He n the rrible Southe experie ma must ) wor ithern ad cast him. ars m gone Sheflield ther man first, but man left [ A Por at heep farming fe became more While ge some months nda concerning which had go fr H la i London it a and Prite and he com lena, which The reply w 1 shown d up see cit n I h found in se was a widoy 1 was living w hat as she 1y comm had n w of the ship n. e could sell t find herself she had run to it at Sho had b hastened 1o unit It was decided to old his Au: water, and him. The Wall street th meet Stole Ya Like n M , Long Isla a cell in the a i3 t Shinnecock Hil Barker, aged Both were puffing cigarettes. station agent at Shinneccck Hil's. The arrest was made on board the yacht, near Cedar Harbor. They were charged with stealing Mr. | Welsh's sloop yacht from its anchor conic bay An additional charge of masquerading in Miss who made island, two tire was made a y Sherift Robert it The facts lead following story i Mr. bad dinner we re Bar and we a g hen irncd thie the beach. I hore I 1 the take a on Wing anch that W it a capital idea Mind you it, but merely order t¢ 1 donned t There we On Tue was af that we had nd that there g ug, until of the cooking We were on uesday night v liscovered on missing, and and He la 11 i recovery. Deputy Sherift rned that the ya that two you! eastward, and h; s to last three ough m»u\m married when Bdward's ship was ehartored for Brasil | and his wife was nearly | d his y schooner live, was a whole cloth Mrs SUBKS ke the We went it weeks ter woul o Away 10t and all days i to aven vo-ta ™ Am nees Kk le co Americ ! He saved what he onl ward inqui oft broy, for rd ter ng thr two 10K S Edward and home y wife a Iward was awsy on yoyages his worricd al- overtake three allegorieal Ktatues of lowa, and Victory, the figures will all he modeled from the figures of real Towa soldlers. In the words of ex-Senator James Harlan, the tor of the day at the corner stone laying, ne of them will be dummies, modeled m the bodies of good looking hoodlums picked up on the strets by the artist, to be dubbed “ideal soldiers,’ but they will be of the actual bodies, limbs, arms, and faces of soldiers created by God \muu.-,- Himself to defend lowa and the ation. They will be placed on and around nis monument simply s representatives of eir comrades and will not bear any name insignia to distinguish any of them from th who are held to be equally torion Hamlin Garland should be 1 with this lowa monument. It would hard to find a better realization of the pel which he preaches - Toa cures b Al drugg History ne fr r | l all mer il » ¥ kache. Trial The mill 2 la carte Detroit pay his bill he Here, landlord,” he much; I won't pay What's the matter very obsequiously the bill is too much sharged $1 for two e ATe eggs S0 searce? n—no, hesitated and lord, millionaires are N m the east took a western res Press a meal \ says the aurant n he landl exclaime i sir, " and whe called for the plied the land« You've got gs. What's that stammered but ut_astorm | The sail lost wer wreck and the n - {fof ican want 0 he turned uld n d to a ght Australia 1l ranch near Melbou Success was slow, erratie. ugh wa. wave r [ find town oget help and ook was landed friendless and coast and to find that of his cious] be ot proofs bu ut his old t he g0 Sheflicld found 0 bougit om a e wrote wyer, t e land nmunie neat igh pric i Hele Hele the t ted year: wreck h hem for. rich off wit th ralian first office, w an; nd sailing Southampton, and is 19 years old arrested on Tuesday night on a sloop yacht Welsh, who has a summer 3 ,\ms. Is. miles e gainst Newton As het acres of land in for a song land to oy k the was worth r Boyd rd wrote to Lawy ds to the lands and as silyer na ame about quite naturally icated with, s at ad Am b h They started west at once SHE WAS A PIRATE BOLD Y capt for another 1 with " 1in Sh 1 o1d M lawyer Mrs She lome ach ic e the fabrication n faithful to her hus- Husband and wife so long lives tle in Montana ranch isfled that her husband was re Then she took the desds for the Montana lands and came to see what o was once and 14 came interview, in very in many ye; the county fafl says the New York R corder, unusually pretty dau of George Smith, ain teresting prisoner captured In at| he h- of | Skin This extra- ordinary Re- |nvenator iy the most wonderful discovery of the mge; It has been en- dorsed Ly tho leadingscien tific men of Europe aud America. Hudyan s urely voge able, Hudyan sic Prematuieness of the dis. charge in 20 days. Cures LOST MMHODD I H Canstipation, n Falling sations, Nerv- oustwitching of the eyes and “other Puits, Strengthens, fnvigorates and (ones the entire system. Hudraw cures Debility, Nervousne kanissions, and developes and rectorcs wenk Organs. Paizs in” the back, losos by day or nightstopped auickly. Over 2,0 private indorsemen et mpotency in the first seminal weakness and cured in 20 days by the very was made by the specialists us Hudson Medical Institute. L In the elrongest viiallzer made. It'is very power ful, bt W & packake, of 5 i sealed Doxes). ntee given for a cure. It you bny nd are ot entiraly cured, eix more nt to you fren of all charge. Send for clrculars and testimonials Address HUDSON MEODICAL INSTITUTE Junction Stockton Market, and Ellis Streets, San Francisco,Cal. DOCTOR SEARLES & SEARLES, SPECIALISTS, Chronic Nervous [’rl\'dlc Uma\bs Consultation Frey scases of the nose, Throat. Chest,Stomach, Liver, Blood and Kidney disca Lost ~Manhood and all Private Dis= s, sne was | eases of Men, w of Brookline, Barker was the st o ot S at Pe- Smith | £ up to the arrest n her e Ker 00d home i ted tha ank bay sail in Mr I it Jok aftire, o toak y aftern would to Ko 1 be lit felt like but ur when caj Monda nt offer way n ent put men boug g ad took time and drank col w are best told in the words of Miss Smith, | tota the ol m out together sid W W W 1y it b t t nd in g Harl on boare | a 1 t n be ¢ tle ¢ nk to tn otifh of int were nt ¢ Nugent crable 18 too have illing Ish's rank wrded of A his av i « |u ning. helped Cedar a at to Rive e uyh ot launch from the custom house land ¢ Harbor, Loat was launch ot th f young Her VIwI [ Both Miss Smith ation very ¢ a pac dlsgusted for county ners X and which tol be the capture 3o curlous Sallors' building statues, bronze rsonation smoking a clgare and the pair a very gay t \soners were t Quogue, and pl yacht. They grand jur took her ar ly, and calin Kage of cigarett when he inforn did not supply Modeled f 1 of monument n the Des " ature t s lald sit Moi character medallions, battle embellishments. at rait sighted n ) overhaul the tw ar 1ed pers and went in search of the Cedar and ns on an in male attire a at tte look ime ken b aded n were rest ly ask her [ il I and 1 med clgarettes n Life. lowa the corner of the nes ot Outside the nes s 1 as if they re L g inc th that st old recently, ot Judge ity to await arcer sherift much the pris- Boldicrs' of capl- will on who yester forty odd | and ot oth the 1 Call on or address, | Dr. Seatles &s2ariss, 1H3 Farasn 850206 Onvin N =—=THE nie TRANCISCAN DROPS .2 Yegetable, Prepares from the original formula pre ed in the Archives of the Holy Land, hav. an authentic history dating 600y ears, A POSITIVE CURE foz all Stemach, Kidney and Bowel troubles, especially CHRONIC CONSTIPATION, Price 5O cents. )1 by all druggists, ihe Franciscan Remedy Co., 134 VAN BUREN ST., CHICAGO, TLL. 4 for Circular and Hlustrated Calendar. WE GUB I you dou't TN ¢ Primary, 8:condary andTer. tiary Casesof Blood Poirou belizve wa can cure your cas o t our office and e wh in’ten “days 't It wi Consultation free. Correspond DINSMOIUS REMEDY CC lc.Omaia, 120 Masonio Tempia Chicago. lllfll]lfl Made a well M TRABEMARK 4 E6ISTERED, THE 6RRAT HINDOO REMEDY PROBUCRS THE AVOYE v o vl but wur goTaud siza Terilien guaranice Ty an (Al o, LUt Tor drctist ey O Dricutal Medioal Co, SOLD by Kuha & Co and J. A Fuller & Co. Sis. OMAHA, NEB, .,_u i il 'l.m repens € %0 404 Danmta e, , Cor wath sud Douglast