Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 21, 1894, Page 2

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A B . PRI fails to state t Tattooed Tom has falled \Y r \ fact renders it impossible to make a predic M I{I\LEY l\ DI“E Lr\‘\D 8. Summers. spoke for two|will be present and respond to the calls wntirely to reply to the pertinent questions | [}/ LUUI , A , [ tion with any degres of mccuracy as to the | J \ \ A I\ hours, and was listened to attentively, He | for corked up orato FG 0.5 FOR THE ARMY put to him by the people of Nebraska. He outcome of the present campaign. On the briefly reviewed the tarifft and financial policy This meeting I8 to be held at the west fswerts that Mr. Rosewater rehashed the i other hand, the republicans are conducting [T T p— | of the parties, and devoted considerable time | end of the Henson street oar line, where ten tale charges against Lieutenant Governor | me of their oli-time enthusiastic campaigns i to the atate, senatorial and legislative is- |tents will be erected for that number of ajors uynn which he has mll r|l r’n« K ‘v Startling Scheme that Has Developed in ar 1 are i wls_u;v.: rluv'“]«rl(vl :vl ‘»vv";“‘"" k Thirteen Thotishill People Turn Out to Hear | sues i 3 speakers. It is the intention to have from e present campalgn; but he fails A he result of the battle o ots two weeks 3 p alatable only to Tattooed Tom and his s hree noted outsid kers deliver ad- | wrm | promptly at 1 o'clock in the afternoon and Wiobaerving EUDDOVars, AnA HAL 4Bo. | sses In different pottions of the state, and Tammany May Have Some Trouble In | cortinua until 10 at night sod will be | lutely no honest attempt has been made o | HURON IS REACHING FOR THE CAPITO ‘ good results are already beginning to be | pAESENT T:\RIH"'A SECTIONAL MEASURE Bringing Them About provided for 25,000 people, and it is expected | LRNIYY 10 AR, ot oot | Work of Oumpilation Will Be Gomplatad by | the mame time. The festivities will begin | the Olose of the Year, disprove them felt. The principal caus easiness at | NEW YORK, Oct. 20.—Although Hugh | that fully that number will be n attendunce, | COMPLETE COMPENDIUM OF ARMY LAW | The ple of Nebraska are not to be de- | present on the part of r § arises — nt, the substitute for Nathan Straus as | The packing houses of South Omaha have - | celved by the dust raised by the managers of Jrom tue auleotion of it & S the present effort to place a dishonest mar : T i in the governor's chair. They will still stick | by-the 1 governor. The Scandinavians protes Not the Hopes of the Future—Not B M e e to xo unon the | UTOIsh the bread, coffee and sugar, to- | Original Text ot Al OMelal Ord: A=W 1o their text. They will ask that the charge Which Several € 1 ward Governor Sheldon von Bgs{stastory to the Barty has permitted his name to g0 upon the | gother with the necessary trimmings The h § 4 against Tattooed Tom be either disproven or L6 M ot what they term slighting of r Whioh o 8 ik there fs more than a possibility that | farmers of Douglas county will chip fn and * the Military Experience admitted. The innocence of a criminal or dre Busy. wationality in the matter of state appoint Which Passed It. trial for his shortcomings is not established menits, &nd the governor is oerthln to loke iy natelal bearing upon national | WPy, the fumihed crowdwith wiik o by any words of abuse directed at the prose the votes of many of t s propl But it is ;“ i " H\“\;I ima .'u |‘.| n fl,,”. 8| candidates have Gotermined to. open’ hows ey Tt attorney by the lawyer for the de SIOUX CITY, Oot. 20.—(Speclal.)—One of | almost certain that those of th andi- | NEW ORLEANS, Oct, 20.—Governor Me- | ) r. Grant will require the sub- | quarters on the grounds, where clgars and| WASHINGTON, Oct, 20.—The new army Ly | the greatest political sensations that the|Mavians who vote agalnst Sheldon will cast|ginley addressed an audience of not less|®ttution of some other mame upon the | soft drinks will be handed out. It is the it ! 2 ) LGSR R At tasie ballote Tof JAINER A, WAiE, e Semos |y 0 sembly ticket for that of Phillp Weissig, | intention to have five bands of music. be ilations are rapidly nearing completion, uth Dakota has ever known has | oeoy milries, th tiig EtetE: VoLl than 13,000 people tonight in the big| h Three-fourths of ti ¢ it ol e B B 8 NIHE HoTe v e T L whose reputation antedates its discussion [ #ides half a dozen singing clubs ourths of the entire work has beem Lt rted by rumors that have leaked out | the nine hole ise a slang. phras auditorium whi was constructed for . % _ &t y hoods against the men who are courage . before the senate police investigating com . approved by General Schofield. The balance enough (o say that & man branded from one | Within the past few days that at the next|this disaffected vote should go to the r exhibitions of pugilism. There was a com- | mittee this week. Weissig made a speech WEBSTER ON NATIONAL 1SS0S, 18 likely o be passod on by him within the end of the state to the other as a pliant (90l | sesaion of the legislature an attempt will be | fONICC 1t Wotld be @ hard makter for Shel- | paratively small proportion of negroes, the | in the assembly three years ago which w next two or three weeks. It remains then of the rallroads, as a dishonest man In S| made to move the capital from Plerre (0| poactically iitile doube . (et St St | audience” being composed in the main of |0 discreditable that ho feli under the dis- | Addresses the Superior Cltizel only to have th iy ' financial dealings with the state, as a con- | g o 1 FONE 10 SEIEL EPRRUORe 19 | practica ittle Dt et Sheldon will |\ siness men of New Ofleans and nelghbor. | Pieasure of Richard Croker, who refused to ject of Democratic ¥ n have the entire work approved vioted falsifier of census returns, shall not L 4 arly 200 mile Hlx, own wicossmor 1 e 10 up, dig | Uosined of New Orleans and nelghbor- lujiow him to be renominated. This year, | SUPERIOR, Neb. Oct. 20.—(Specialj— | the secretary of war. The advanced stage of be elected governor of Nebraska by their 8 ormer and was very anxious t e wl.g‘"]h:v ‘v‘ i I"‘vm”r; Al villages, and was conspicuously an in-| however, he slipped past the lines, and, With | John L. Webster spoke at the barbecue here | the work makes it probable that the new voles, the campaign managers are turning | sccure the capital when the state was ad st he republican state | telligent and eclative gathering, which | the aid of State Senator T. D. Sullivan, se- [ 5 & volume will be ready for distribution bef their attention to another branch of pure | mitted nearly five years ago, It Is expacte with_the exception of governor, will | i ST B0 A with its applause and |cured & nomination. Sullivan was also the | 18 afternoon. There was a large crowd d distribution before #tatesmanship. From now on until after |y o “aen o TS TRE G S SERRCR from 6,00 to 7000 plurality, and chis | T8 SRR TOAL WIS CPPIAUN an? |sponsor for “Silver Dollar’ Smith, who, if | Present. Mr, Webster said LGOI BESLEN e election every mile of B. & M. roadbed in| 1 UL run up to 10,000, Sheldon will reccive | discriminating in its bestowa 16 PIRLIOTN | Grant's intentions are rightly understood, | “Thero is not one patelotic thing in the| The new regulations are regarded as quite Nebraska. will need the most careful scrutiny | 8enatorial contest and that there will be s smaller vote than the others on the state [ was profusely decorated with sugar cane.|must withdraw from the ldermanic fOKot | logislation of ihe | of large numbers of additional section hands. | developments of the most startling character | ¢ Bl il i a8 “WHoua to Slbet | tran, 1 3, Behira SNATERAAT 6PANT4- FOBHL | Bare. ity oo L Fmani tiket, | i : : . The new B. & M. extension from Sheridan to | befora the affair is at an end gy & Somfortable plurality. Th lican state central comrmittee, presided and |Changes. howev s the possible | % Mol one. The last democratic mational | common law ot the army, based on expeti- DAt Sad Laverat thaqMnd. men lieve Den b b b e Rl L R q eorganization of the congressional ticket, | CONYention, that nominated Grover Cleveland | ence, orders of the president and of the War r 1 men have beer A and it need not. surprise the px ntroduced Governor McKinley, who spoke at | ) ! ot Seleased ‘from smployment. in blontana. L ecret, bu | b 4 The understanding (s that Mr. Grant will [ for president, contained two threats that |department, laws of congress, ete. They cover released from employment In Montana. But | Matter a seeret, but the politicians who have state if the legislature is lost to the [ much length. The substance of his address | require that Congressmen Warner, Cockran these thousands are badly needed In Ne-|been passing through the city at short inter- | Fopublicans, as was the case in 15890, when | was and Dunphy, whom Tammany had “turned | braska, and they are being judiciously ~distrib- | vals for some time past on their way from | 5tmes H. Kyle, populist, was elected United | "0 0 cpon o L down® for the reason, as alleged by Mr | Of (e country. One was the threat of free | precedence, appointments and promotions, ated along the line of the B. & M. in Ne ates senator to succeed .Gldec Moody Grace, that they had voted for the Wilson | trade, and the other was the threat of free [uniforms and equipments, furloughs, deser- braska where their votes will do the most | = 0 4 publican committes of Louisiana to address | s B et g . ¥ bill, be placed on the Tammany congres- | and unlimited coinage of silver. Before the | tONS, post canteens, ceremonies, pay and good. It will not do o bring these men to | Onnected with the furtherance of the scheme | MAJORS' MANAGERS DISAPPOINTED. |you upon a public question of great natlonal | Sional ticket. Only one of the nine con L g allowances, flags, music, and the innumerable | have discussed ore or less and ast session of congress had convened these the cities like Omaha and Lincoln, whore | e ,»‘.l"”n"'n that e it least s Asiaie | Mentioe of the Ne Mans Namo At | TPOFlance, which concorns alike not only | &ressmen who voted for the Wilson bill was :w Vit “{M :|.:-m 'd‘ IHH":I‘IV'{ "hj (¢ | formalities’ which govern every branch of an they would be compelled to reg e i, ST [ the prosperity of your section, state or lo-|BIVen a renomination by the Tammany de. army life. Indirectly, also, the regulations thus be Hable to detection; but these men “‘h"” "'IY Nl«“. i "."Fl[f"f'-‘"“"” k,'-":‘i'. i teacted No Attention. cality, but all sections and part in our |Mocracy. How the condition above indicated | Come from the wheat crop of the United|are awaited with much interest by the mil- o lrwv’l:wm\'lTll"-nr‘l\lh;u';'nKH’I‘| Phe seotlon gangs | the state, Watertown, Madison, Redfeld f;"':‘_’ 3 Tq ":!‘J rs "-YI—" A T“Ln. and [of 103 years, there have been forty-seven ‘,{{;‘ o ‘,Il’\';":‘l’_‘l“fi““;"l"‘ ]‘{":}f‘ ':-év.r”;m".’?“i $1 a bushel to two bushels for $1. These two ;vylnN\ the government regulations as well as ’ woticed. Th stem will | Plerre, Huron and even Sioux Falls were tussell were billed to speak in this [ years when a democratic revenus tariff pol whom Tammany has special regard, and | threats had entered the domain of live stock | the tactics .w'lql x!";fr”.’x ey Salira 1o e Bt Jrv‘h very anxious (o secure it. Plerre and Huron |CIty tonight. Majors failed to appear. This|icy has provailed, and ffty-six under the | Cockran e ‘14‘[’(‘::':'-"\,““”“!1"“' ‘:‘)'H'LI";:I'* and had destroyed every vestige of profit in| The War department has taken the great- mn, and every one of the men imported | Were the only towns which were really in the | is the second time Majors has been an-[Protective polity, apd a noteworthy fact is|pjjant“and may be pursuaded that it is hie | that industry. These two threats confiscated N»M“‘ i e L AL T from the Montana extension will vote for | race, however, and the fight betwen them was | nounced to speak In this city sim that the moat progreasive and prosperous per- | qury {5 walt a while for o distinguished an | DaiC tho values of the farm lands over 3,000,- | & board of three veteran offcers, Colonels the taltooed candidate, unless the honest | very bitter. Pierre had at the time a popu- lods of our history wero during the years|honor as a seat In congress, Cumings ls|000 sauare miles of territory. These two|Corbin, Gllmore and Babcock, now serving men in every little community in the state { lation of nearly 5,000. It was at the height | ¥ & fom when the protective party was in control | ot likely to be 8o easily (isposed of. Walsh, | L2TAts had shut down factories, had broken | 88 assistant adjutant generals, were detailed are upon the alert. It is also likely that|of the boom period, and the citizens staked | . '*YeF 8nd Russell had an audience of {and protective tariffs were maintained, and 5 Li:1: . \ banks, had ruined thousands of bright busi- [ {0 supervise the work Lieute nt French, ka0 who has been nominated in Dunphy's place 9 &' L r v o o vic an effort will be-made to import voters from all upon the result of the fight. They | About 400 in an opera house that has 1,000 | the most dlsastrous years wére during the [ may also be rebellious, while Dunphy's | 1€38 men and had turned a million of men, | ¥ho had recently completed his service as the Council Blufts side of the river. Several ed every merve, plunged the town |CAPAcity. Ona third of the audience were | free trade or revenue tarlt periods of odr [ demonstrated tenacity of what he contidors | ¥Omen and children out of employment recorder In preparing the new Infantry; cave Hopul 1 di B! ¥ y 4 well known B. & M. superintendents in | deeply in debt, and finally won. The load [ POPUISES and democrats. The meeting was | history. The foreign market for agricultural|to be his rights wili not help to make the “Congress convened and the two threats [8lry and artillery tactics, was given immo- this state have already acquired proficiency | of debt which had been acoumulnted proved | SXOnsively advertised, but failed to. draw a | productions s one of tho delusions of free |way plain, = However. the main problem | Ontinued, and the devastation and the de. |diato charge of the work of evolving the in the management of the gravel train vote | the ruin of the place, however. Within six | CF0Wd: The mention of Majors' name did | trade. If it ever had any real substanc which will confront Tammany, if Grant's | 8truction of American interests continued. | Fegulations from the mass of material—orders, and thelr services will be fn lively demand | months from the dafe of the clection the | fio0 eliclt the applause which was expected by | against a good home market that has long | conditions are complied with is how to pro- | Hunger and poverty began reaching out their (laws, customs, etc. With a force of clerk: on election day boom collapsed, and the population is now | Ehe ||h1l|m;-r~4 of the affair. The democratic | gince diseppeared, . We have free trade among | vide for both Cumings and Warnor gaunt arms and encircling them around | he has been at work for months. The boar It is by such dishonest and disgraceful | barely 3,000. The town s without comme for of the Republican Wasp, who was o8- | gurselves throughout our forty-four states and it hundr 1 thousands fn every city in the | has frequently met to inspect, change or aps tactics that the rallroad and allied corpora- | cial or manufacturing resources and there | PeCitlly interested in getting up the torritories. That is because we are one fam- g JLL OFF, land. The hard granito floors of the city | provo the compllations. = General Schofleld tions hope to thrust an objectionable candi- | seems to be little prospect of improvement was especially crestfallen at the ri ily, one country. We are one natlon, have hall in Chicago became the nightly bed of | has also gone over each step of the work, ks down the throats of the honest people HURON IS COMING AGAIN. Al Washington Connty Turr ons standard of citizenship, one flag, one con- | Democratic County Central € housands, and_ the cold stone atef the | and thus the now book has been subjected to obraska. Personal villification in pro g idipd 148, 9 reezing place of hundreds of others. The | the most rigid st v el sheneat "bloetion methods, byt | Huron, on the other hand, although it| BLAIR, Oct. 20.—(Speclal Telegram.)—One | Stitution, ono destiny. That is why we have | Wants Bopulist Cundidates to Withdraw, soup housos became. the democratic dining | "rhe reguiaiions will. embody the experie not a word in defense of the serious charges | 1000 stlll for a time after losing tho capital | of tho largest and most enthusiastic repub- | o6 trade among ourselves. Our relatlons| e democratic county central committee | halls. Thousands of really homest and Ward | enoe of ypont 100 yeurs of souy 1t Tocon of corruption and dishonesty upon the part | MEUL 13 now beglnning to show signs of re-| lican meetings ever held in Washington | i [OFS/EN stites are necessarily different | yy3 g ypacial meeting yesterday afternoon, | tolling laboring men were forced into idleness | Stouban. a German. mobleman whe was. the of the republican candidate. Honest men | tUrDIng prosperity. and already manifests | county during any campaig § 0| trom our relations with one another. They| ‘T % WEE SRS YOO Uinuing until | &nd compelled to accept this chilling and com- | geilimaster of our revolutionary troops, made are maligned in order that dishonest men | 80 inclination to renew the contest with its Blair . mpaign was held in|are our commercial rivals. We deny to tho encing at 3 o'clock and continuing unti . 0 € A P - e ) fortless charly. What occurred in Chicago y i tonight. The ' occasion was the | 4 8, Pkl 8 | BI%015. TKitenui Feoort! ot Ao nuameiR1 eoni a0 | the first regulations, but (hey were very map” be elected to office. Honest business | 0ld rival. At the last session of the Iegisla- | speeches of Hon. J. M. Thurston and Dave| CrclSn States trade with us upon the|O0:d0. ~After a report of the financial condi- | ocourred in lke manner in every other city | thoge and. o part ot the tactics. In 13M men combine to make it possible for dis- | ture a bill was introduced providing for the | Marcer to the people on the polities feear | SAme terms we enjoy among ourselves tion of the commitiee, Chairman Miller made | in the union.. But this was not all of it.|Ganaral Winfleld Scott prepa the first honest business men to loot the state tre removal of the capital fom Pierre to Huron. | of the day. It rained hard and a great x‘l;ul‘d: CALL THB ROLL OF NATIONS, a statement in regard to the promises of the | There came a 'feeling of unrest and disquiet, [ yriel i net of regulations. and they have ury. Fortunately, the honesty of the p At first it scemed to \'Mm‘l\‘\ good chance of | poople had to go in the rain, but Germaniy ‘Here in the south your people have been | different aspirants for office, and the report | /ndlcating an undercurrent of disturbanc ®| since served as a basis to be bullt upon, 18 still true o the cause of good government, | SUCCess, but the refusal of the representatives | hall was packed to overflowing and many had ing freedom from taxation for ten, fifteen | was unanimously accepted by the committee. | oo, Promised voleanic eruption. Hunker | ogifed and enlarged. Successive presi- and the cause of good government wili | from Beadle county, In which the latter place | to loave for want of standing room. Ladies |or twenty years to those who would bring| coupled ltacif with discontent, and from the | gan(g nave made changes, as necessity arises. ultimately triumph 18 located, to support the anti-prohibitionists | were in attendance in large numb “Dave | their capital here and invest It in pfoductive WL AL UL AP L 0] union of the two sprang the Commonweal|pye “war department Issues general orders RAISING A CLOUD TO HIDE HIM. in their fight agalnst the state lquor law an- | spoke first, and when hs ontoeed hall | enterprises, With- all this work going on | What the committee should do to induce | e ore Cpey and Kelly Yere not envlable | overy day, applylng mainly to specifications, tke the cuttlefish that sheds an immense | (2B0nized the llquor men and caused the | the cheers given him were deafening. They | the leaders of the-democratic party are pro- | the populist candidates to withdraw from the ‘“h:‘:'l'""‘(j-r ;‘l'l'”' LG I‘y"‘""f,"*”‘.“' but ~often establishing precedents for the alount of dark feld Lo elude purssir tng | 1088 of the measure | camo trom republicans, populists and demo- | posing to tear down our protestive tariff | legislative ticket. A messenger brought the | {h dunge! platform were forcing to the sur- | Stire army. All this material was digested Majors contingent, in its desperation, is try It is now understood that a combination | crats alike, us he is the most popular ca 1di- | and nundate this country with fore gn prod- [ news that a special committee from the pop- [ part?CeHAE BECAEE WEHE in 1881 and again in 1889, but the daily ore ng to throw dust and dirt all around by | "2S been formed between the promoters of | date in Washington county that over r or|ucts to displace those which thess very |ullst céntral committee was in waiting and [ = A8 Had e : ely faded away when | of the last five years have required this fabricated affidavits and campaign fakes, | the capital removal scheme and the Black | office. | manufacturers propdse to make and which | ad a proposition to make to the central com- | ¢ ore came the coal strikes of West Virginia | €W volume golten up expressly to discredit anything | Hills politicians, who have hitherto opposed | When Thurston was announced by Judge | the people wers whling o tax themselves | A speclal committee was appointed | ang Ohio. These had not been subdued when [ Care has been taken to base the regula- that may be sald by Rosewater and chargeq | the proposition, by which the Huron men alton the audience kept up a de afening | to establish. Call the roll of ‘the nations. m the democratic body to confer with the | cama the railroad strike of Chicago, The | tons strictly upon the text of original o by The Bee Several of these bought affi- | A8rée to support Colonel Davis of Laurence | che for five minutes. Thurston was in|Which a for _protection? Germany, ists, and an hour later the meeting was | |ike of this had never been known during the | 1ers, laws, et 50 that the personality of davits and letters purporting to implicate | county, the Hills candidate, for the senator- | Poor condition to speak, but the longer he | France, Italy, Spain, Mexico, Canada, South | called to order again to listen to the proposi thirty years of republican rule, The former | the revises might mot find expression. This the editor of The Bee in alleged conspiracies | ship in the coming campaign on condition | 5P0Ke the better he appeared and the more | America, Portugal, Demmark, Australia, 5 strike at Homestead bore no stronger com- |Nas freed the book from all appearance of and plots against the natives are fo be | that the Hills men join them in their plan. | [Meresting he bocame, Tiurston was often | Switzerland, ~ Auscria, - Hungary ,| They were to the effect that if the demo- | parison to fthis than a Nebraska summer | Dl a text book of views and observations sprung within (he next forty-eight hours in | The counties in the eastern part of the state | Iierrupted with prolonged che which | Sweden, Norway and the United S crats would place one populist on the sena- | zephyr bears to the destructive power ot a |©f those who have done the work, and has the Burlington Journal. If there had been | have always been friendly toward the removal | Ver® not given any other speaker durmg the | America. Which are against protection? | torial ticket the populists would endeavor to Kaonsas cyclone. But this was not all of it, | onfined It to a succinet statement of actual anything under the heavens above or under | scheme, and with the assistance of the Hills | SAPAIkn. At the close three rousing cheers | England, New South Wales and New Zea- | get the other legislative candidates to With- | The commerelnl agencies of Lun and Brad. |orders and laws, with the language lterally the waters beneath that would successfully | representatives it is hardly possible for it| V°r¢ Eiven | tax arift for. revenue only or tariff. re-|draw. The democratic candidates for state | street have reported that the destruction to | breserved as freely as possible. The book impeach the Integrity or veracity of the |to fail. Thurston on the Tariff. | form is almost exclusively an English dec- | éenator proved all satisfactory to the com- | business and shrinkage of values reached | Will cover about 276 pags including an editor of The Hee it would have been found | The residents of Pierre are desperate at| LYONS, Neb., Oct. 20.—(Specal Tele- | Oration. How stand the people of the world | mittee and thjs proposition did not meet | the incomprehengive sam of $12,000,000,000, | ¢laborate index of reference and cross ref- f.fi'l llr;‘::ylwurl u’ylkxnnnu‘l\m,' '1‘( »;H‘I‘lm ?'""i[{ the thought of losing the capital now, and |gram.)—One of the largest crowds ever as- | r-u\wrm'q’m ti v“’",\bx.:fi:'“':“:<» \:u:‘x;r]);‘ sre-in :‘l"‘l‘: m\\\‘“.L : llim»“rlv;-»;yv ;v the ,{v,-;..ll com f or 8 sum |1v.n|\"\ |uz|‘l to f;mr, times vn;_v na- rence - = ie fake mill at the ard will | aro doing thelr best to eftect some arrange- | st " ! 3 5 | fuvor of protectic 00/ o ons are *e was read, and after general discussion | tional debt at the close of the war of the KN 3 > S " ook to ereate o diversion by producing ISR eb s dito afcnhme, Tenke 1’(:"”"”" I i e iiths ant kil oy nat it to, whichy should be added those | no action was faken, but the whole maticr | rebellion, and sl this financial destruction T R 0. simile letter signed by K. Rose- | it b A aoho afternoon 1o hear Hon. J. M. Thurston on | Americans, whgse numbers are not known, | was put over untfl next Tuesday evening at | continues S8 1T 9 R water (0@ man named Goddard, emploved a5 | (1 canitiin e e eantar Tt oyl | the issues o the day. " The speaker dis- | who, while living under our fag, seem 0 fol- | § o'clock “Truly It may be sald these two (hreats, | MIs Pollard Will Have Trouble Keallsiag a detective during the early part of the last |, ¥ion Which the legislature can take is to|CUssed the larilf and money question. His flow another. This.is how tho world's. jury Dr. Peabody spoke before the committee | of free trade and free silver, have brought O AR08, 708! + Tlowayer, sveston of the logislature with & view of | bl 'the question to another vola of the | WEuments wore clear and convincing. Mr. | stands. The. préseal, tarifft law is not ke | In benali of the populists, but his remarks |more suffering and hardship, more devas-| WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.—The ~Breckins 8potting oll room lobbyists and exposing [SuPRIt UA€ ANESTON ain that without | Thurston ald it was tariff that had bullt up |any of the early’ measures, but is one in|wWere not entirely endorsed by the two other | tation and waste, than all the wars and |ridge-Pollard casc is now formally out of boodle members. This document will doubt- | PeOPI®. A few even maintain that without| the industries of the nation and that prosparity | which the changed’ conditions of the country | populist members in the room. The gen- | famines in this coun! since the Declara- | court, the notice of appeal .given by Colonel BRNRDS thrtures dnito" soms it very violating the constitution the removal cannot| would return when the industries were as-|and its marvelous growth and development | eral sentimeit among the democratic mem- tion of Independence, And stiil congress con ! 7o) ¢ 1. hiv picious, but Inasmuch as Governor Crounse | D¢ made at all. The Fluron men have con-|sufed that protection would be continued. [are utterly ignored and forgotten. Its au- |Ders was thal the Hopulists pull off all can- | siomes Lo ioie ot free (rado and. froe siiver | Breckinridge at the close of the trial hav- was let into the secret of the object of God. | SUlted the best constitutional lawyers in the | There were Ia delegations from Oakland, | thors do ognize nor appreciate the | didates for office in the county. In order 0|10 the hour of its adjournment. The first | "€ been docketed and dismissed on mo- dard’s employment before ever he begun |State. however, and are satisfied that the| Bancroft, Decatur and the country preeinets. | manly indep ce and dignity of Amerl- | glve the populists a chance o comply with | aet of its legislation was to strike a blow | ton of Calderon Carlisle, Miss Pollard's his operations the fake will explode harm- | legislature can make the change if it sees fit. | The bands of the above towns and the Glee | can laborers and cannot understand that the | these desiros the whole matter was deferred f‘; ,', and ”..',”, elections, by the repeal | coun Counsed for Breckinridge failed to losaly and prove a boomerang. As a matter |1t I8 certain that the issue will be raised | club of Lyons furnished the music. business policy of the country upder which | until Tuckday night. 3¢ all foderal eloction laws, The committee | follow up their notice of appeal by further of fact, Goddard came within an ace of bait- | at any rate, and that there will be a des- RO AT G G o a | have had such splendld pros- — on elections in their report said: ‘Let every | proceedings within the time provided by ing Majors' man Friday—Walt Seely—with | perate fight before it is settled elther way. 5 hureta Dquonoe: perity s not to be determined on OPPOSED TO JAYNES. A resonRiTuCHs .asures be wiped | 1aw. The general opinion here is that Miss b iigar Ditims, aud only: fulled ‘Becadse 1) ke STANTON, Neb., Oct. 20.—(Special.)—Hon. | the lines of sectional traclorhe reconRiTiicy 0N o ; prejudice, which hizby i Skon o o | Pollard will be unable to collect the judg- SIS (110 iven to'thio gang by . local paper, OVER THE LEGISLATURE, John M. Thurston delivered a masterly ad- | appeals to the hatreds of the past, and not LB L bl It out thel ent of $15.000, a8 Colonel Breckinrldge I dress In this city last night. A large tent | the hopes of the future. The law is a nar- State laws like that of Alabama, of which | ot known to have any property which can ‘ . 3 | row and provincial measure, unworthy of 3 he attached to satisfy it - had been provided for the occasion and seats | ([ o2y Darty in whoss nmame. it swas on.| THIFLY of the republicans of the Sixth ward re said: ‘It neutralizes to a great ex-|Pbe attached to satisfy it. arranged for hearly Lo00 people. [The tent | acted and whally unsuited to the needs of |have bolted the party nomination and hava in- | tent the curse of the fifteenth amendment Some Fostal Changes. 4 |Frasieronae - BL00¢ QU | the count Nor a he masses of the|duced Gould P. Dietz to shy his casto the blackest crime of the nineteenth cen ' ASHINGTON, 20.—(S) Tele. R RD . o la e The politieal conundrum—Which party will | distinguisiod speaker was very much worn | {5, v o aaascs for e the ]ml“l:"nll |r.|“1'. o :n e "|'|r, O ury. WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 =6 w’-‘«ml Telo- CAGO, Oct. 20.—(Special Telegram)— | capture the legislature?—1s the thing South | Out. but he made a strong argument in favor of | g o izens didate in gram,)—The postoffice at Montrose, Sioux South Ghrolina sald: Our siruggle has boen |county, Neb., has been discontinued. Mail = 1 fied with wha § been done. Congress has o the debate, Congressman Talbert of President Heary W. Yates of the Nebraska| payota politicians are tumbling over each |TePublican principlo He was repeatedly | 4iio oinioa ey prople. it i tha | the councilmanie race. This was all done at e National bank surprised the local bankers ut| giior (o solve, That the complexion of that | Grrerill deniomred e s oopeeeh A 5| sacred trust confided to it, excited distrust | St4r chamber meeting held Friday night in | ytyled the lost cause. It mas have boen |will go to Gilehrist the banquet of the Bankers' club, given at| ) qo will not be so deeply tinged with repub- | well recelved by the immense audience. It | #MONR the coustituents of its members and | Idlewild hall, at Twenty-fourth and Grant | lost, but it was the cause of liberty. If| A postoffice has been established at Gun- Kinaley's lonight, with the declaration that| 2% s deaviningodiwih re bt b G ELG R L | tmpaired their enterprises and investments. ts, by men who were invited some are not ready to give liberty to us, we | der, Claytom covnty, Ia., and Anton, Gunder- I e b Desn. a el S licanism as in 1892 is evident That year | “The country has not failed to observe that | Last Sunday afternoon these bolters held | are ready to fight again. We are ready to|son commissioned postmaster, years he thought the welfare of the state was fully. foursAirthy of the entire legislature ‘was S RS TS Ty a great change in public sentiment is ap- ret - meeting at the house of Chris | give black men their rights, but this| Postmasters have been appointed as fol republican, and i that year only one or INLAND, Neb., Oct. 20—(Special)—Thurs- | Parent throughout: the south. Nothing has |Specht, where they declared their intention of | is a white man's country, and white men |lows: Nebraska—Lapeer, Cheyenne county In question and he would vote the republican | counties in the state sent fusion candidat ticket from top to bottom at the coming elec- | In 1890 there were eighteen counties whers | me ‘more gratifying than the action of the |of C. L. Jaynes, the regular candidate, who el ¢ ot va- | Occurred of late years which has been to|plunging the knife to the hilt in the vitals | must and shall rule it.” But enough. Was | J. L. Lamz, vice H. M. Coulter, resigned Ievpayenineshatanll auithisinlnoonasic this repeal of the federal election laws pa- | lowa—Nugent Keokuk county, W. P. Brit- tion. the democrats and republicans fused, and one | @0 With an attentive audience, some of whom | planters of Louisiana, who, If 1 am correctly | walked away with the baggage at' the repub- | triotic? The conscience of the nineteenth | tain, vice James Harris, resigned Comptroller of Currency James H. Eckels | county, Sully, where the democrats failed to | had come many miles to hear the doctrines | informed, have turned away from the demo- | lican primaries held a few days ago, The | contury answers no. | Miss Annie McRae, a clerk in the classified and J. Edward Simmons of the Fourth Na-| put up a ticket. In that session, after much | of republicanism as explained by Hon. Danlel | ocratic party, with which they have spent |line of action was designated, and then a Then came the new tariff law, framed on | service, Treasury department, was today tional bank of New York, both democrats, | scrapping and unseating of republicans by | M. Nettleton. Although suffering fr cold, | their lives and announced their | meeting was held at the residence of P. 0. |free trade principles. It is a law to en- | promoted from $1,000 to $1,200 per annum. Yero the gueats of honor. They probably did | the demo-pop combination, the republicans | the speaker made a splondid and convineing | Unconditional support and endorsement of the | Hanson. at which time the bolters declarod | courage the greater importation of foreign [11. V. Dresbach of South Dakota was pro- not relish Mr. Yates' declaration Nearly | were left one vote in the' minority. That | argument, which was followed by Hon. S. W. | &reat doctrine ol Amofican protection to| that their organization ehould ba known as | made goods in competition with home made | moted from $900 to $1.000 per annum every prominent local banker was there and | was senatorial year, and the democrats | Christy in a short, sharp and instructive ad. | American industries, and thereby allied them-| the Sixth Ward Republican Reform club. | goods, It is & law fo give employment to L e e & majority applauded the Omaha banker's|and populists together elected J. H. Kyle t0 | dress, All of the county candidates were S¢lVes permanently to the republican party.|Three day ago postal cards were mailed to | more men abroad, and to fewer men at home - worfevaalltiento Malgibe:Offlet, declaration. the senate. This year there is fusion be- | prosent and enade brief remarks. ~“You need no assurances of the devotion of | the faithful ones, and the invitation to attend [ It |s a law to add to the enforced idleness | WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.—The attorney Mr. Yates said in part: “Owing to the | tween the democrats and populists in the fol- | © 2 | republican party to all the material in-| was extended to them. Friday night when|and distress of American workingmen. It |general has received a letter from J. Adam ambition of one of our young politicians, & |jowing counties: Yankton, Minnehaha, Bon Meiklejohn's Fino Reception at Albion. | ests of the south, o onme can charge|the men bearing the postals arrived they | is a law to furnish to the consumer English | Bade, United Staies marshal at St. Paul, large portion of our people have been carried | fomme, Douglas, Aurora, Brule, Faulk, Cod- | ALBION, b., Oct. 20.—(Special Tel, that in all its industrial legislation for a|were let into the door by Doorkeeper Han- | made goods, ta the displacement of Amer- tendering his resignation on the ground that over to that mongrel conglomeration of poll- { ington, Roberts, McPherson, Edmunds, Wal- | e iy ore | third of a century past it ever overlooked a|son, and there they met Fred W. Lessentine, | ican made goods. It 1s a law that has met AP uRiatant Pl i o 2 b | ington, ] gram.)—The greatest political gathering here : itine, he cannot consistently comply with the pres- ticlans known as the people’s party. T evavth Maao Hutih (Renninatin and Obarlis singlo southern Interest. In the stormiest|as chairman and Charles V. Mos as secre. | the disapproval of the leaders of the party Sty 1aita A A e} B % What tha neonles tarte 1"y ¥, BAtLe, in 1590 | 0 vears was addressed last evening in the | years of sectional prejudice, moved by no| tars & 4 . : Ay en | l0ENt's loster of 1886 in regard to federal o now peop party 18 in| afic 16, Against one or two counties in 1590 years of sec! v , ™ ¥ o |tary. Among those who were in attendance | that framed it and enacted it. It has been | oy holders taking part in political eca Iinols, but In the south they poso s repub- | \yre the democrats falod (o put up a ticket, | OPera liouse by Hon. George D. Melklojohn. | other consideration ‘than the good of * the|wer T. J. Lund, a defeated candidate. for | donounced by the democratic leader of the | Ofice holders taking part el lieans, while In Nebraska they have pul up | (here are this year eleven such, as follows: | MUSic for the occasion was furnished by the | wholo country, the republican party has| the council nomination, ke Gard, W, . | south as ‘A mongrel piebald of patehes and | PiEns: His resignation has been accepted an entire ticket under the heading of the | itel 877 VRO VEAT SR TRETL B8 TN, | Republican League Glee club and the f\mlnn‘ sacredly guarded the smallest as well as the | Grant, Lon Carry, Attormey Fitch, B, R, | pusillanimity, a grotesque hodgepodge of | New Postal Kuling. , donated two beeves, six shoep o o f 8 rtors | Appe 8 MEjadios ¢ Pas Tammany's candidate for the mayoralty, ha ix sheep and two Removal ters to the City- | But at the worst this will \ffect the | Appenls to thé Prejudice of the Past and Friat e fowd Which | C4lves, while the merchants of Omaha will | Great Care Heing Taken to orve thy hey have a material bearing upon national | SUpPly the famished crowd with milk for of One Hundred Years, last session of congress. | important, as the new tactics embrace the has been made to keep the were a menace to the wealth and prosperity [ all questions of military discipline, rank and one part of the state to another on business e cam- paign has opened and has failed to appear. Sixth Ward Repablicans Name Auot - - == Candidate fo 5 GOSPEL OF DISCONTENT. Hot Fight on the RKesult of Which a Sen- Selnsts Jox Ehe Connoll. —— atorship 1s Pening. Henry W. Yates Dius the Calamity Cru-| SIOUX FALLS, 8. D., Oct. 20.—(Special.) suders' Wail in Chicago's Enrs. democrais. Now these people. or this party. | pumlls “Rrockings, Beadle. Clark, ~ Spink [0pera band. " AU an early hour the people | greatest interests of tha south g Ball and John Lueas. pretense and pettifogging, a nondescrpt | WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.—Postmaster c M t the t t | Grant and Clay. This neglect on' the part | from town and the surrounding country be- | My fellow countrymen, the question of | a4 Soon as the gathering was called to| Abortion of Mcompelency. selisness, cows | oroy wrin, fasuealan Conasutinx ol Rerd L of the democrats to put up legislative tick- to gather here and by B o'clock the|the tariff 1s a business question. 1In the|order the first thing that came up was the | ardice and treachery as the outcome.' It tor Airaxy b s tod N damocrat 11ving than 1. I have voted the ( Of the democrats 1o put ub leglelative Lisk- A street in front was pac ea | CTUCNTU Twords of ‘m {rue American, Who | uncovering of a mumber of Dolltcal soren, | was denowncad In congress by Harier of |afler an address inbel may be pasted on the ulemm;mm ticket Yor thirty years, but this | 716 ANE A6 ERECRI e A oketlons closed his address with a strong plea | spoke as a seer and prophet forty years ago, | after which it was decided to enter Mr. Diots | Ohio: ‘If passed and branded as a demo- o cuhiRa, ShYeIONe, (ARANT L ARGIS i lable to advocate any wild and impractcal #scheme. 1 do not suppose there s a better againat very member who is a candidate for | ¥VF¢ of a majority in the legislature, and the 1 he Inrerest of Good Gov proment, campaigns and it anlih‘flw\»k |nr|. {8 not '\ t | Mr. Jaynes. % A Imlu‘l:\h.-i. and our managers in both houses the legislature, though I have been threat- | POPulists are just as sure of winning the | y " pLATTE, Neb. Oct, 2 beyond the need of intrenchments or fortifi- ot 3 as drivelling fdiots. 3 fight. Both sides, however, seem to think i i L J 5 cations. God grant us the wisdom and virtue b nis TOUR. Ranator Millstsatalof dt: ‘16 1a’the most eaed that this action would make enemies. | [0 |0l v | Cot®at worlk, as the best | The popullsts held the largest political meet- | to press forward on the shining path thus| . remarkable measure that has ever found ntul" [ki"h:f;h‘lr i ‘t"m; ”[~H|U| ST l; speakers of both parties are busy stumping |inE here last night that was ever held at this | opened plainly before us, to the end that our | Great Crowds Greet General Harrison on | jiself on the pages of the statute book of any BRS 1hal thises’ witl b thousands o sound | the sate place. The speaker of the ovening was D. |labor may be fully employed and fairly rec the Last buy of His Trip. country. * * * I make bold to say hers demacrats like myself to do the same." | Without a doubt the hottest of the fight Is | Clem Deaver, candidate for congress, who|ompensed, and that age after age may wit-| ROCHESTER, Ind, Oct. 20.—Plymouth | today that that bill does not reflect the senti His remarks were greeted with applause | i0 this county, Minnehaha, and particularly | talked straight from the shoulder on state | ness the rapid and substantial progress and s the most northern point in the state on | Ment of 1,000 people of the United States and when it subsided Mr. Yates spoke on | this city, the home of Senator Pettigrew. |and national questions. He strongly advised [ growth of our people in all the arts of peace, schedule route, and while the train was | BUFke Cockran sald of it: ‘If it will not the money question. He said the mainten- | EVEry known string is being pulled by the | the election of the populist ticket in the in- |all the elements of national well being. being shifted to the Lake Erie & W | increase the receipts of our custom house by ance of a gold standard was absolutely nec- | epublicans to placg and keep Senator Petti- | terest of good government. Some republl- | Governor McKinley was given a supper at | . Irdan ‘sl tha - $ estern | g vast stimulus of business at our seaports, ossary to the welfare of this country. He | 8TeW high in the favor of the voters, for it |cans admit that Holcomb will carry the pre- | the Hotel Royal, and at midnight left on a | F2!!road at that point Generar Harrison was | then our theorles are false, our pledges ar did not fhink that the bankers would endorse | 18 understood that should the republicans get | cinet AL | special train for Huntington and Charleston, |taken in & carriage to the court house square, | false, our conelusions are faise; then we must the Baltimore plan; except perhaps its un- | control of the legislature Senator Pettigrew | Pops and Uemns Entertained W. Va., where he speaks Monday. where about 5,000 people were congregated, | ¢onfess that our agitation '"'l Omia e Chse derlylng prinefples, and was against the | 18 to succeed himselt. On the other hand, | EpAR RAPIDS, Meb.. Oct [ was a campaign for power and office rat ssuance of more flat money. Thers were | {he combined forces of the democrats and oy J oty | ian a \{u«nrm\h struggle mprove the 1o existence more than $1,000,000,000 worth | PoDulists are earnestly striving to injure the 0 S5 AIERA il ¥ | dition of the people of notes against a ,..,\‘.,\"v g0 small that a | Senator's chan of ‘success. No one will A a crowd here this afternoon They topping when he arose to speak. He began | Two years have |twu|~|lv\ fl‘m ‘v banker with no larger relative surplus would | 48 slvl t‘llvdrrluklv‘ to guess \\lm;l w‘n. were mostly populists and democrats ‘:»): Ir'wlwl-n'h\u'm ;h.l‘ hk';“::u;l |;‘“K.'.;. li' y..l.” ze :'r”.l:‘ .\I.'u] .)1;-|"r|.‘| \;: \:”4 de ‘\u : ed 10 shop. result in this county - wi he. Hon. George D. Meiklejohn addressed the . » i . lat the task of speaking to he people in | trade, and yet the exports of Ame Rand. Yrohat uwabop. The domocrats and . populists have | citisens of thie piace st soenitdreased the | NORFOLK, Neb:,’Oot. 20.—(Special Tele- | northern dndlana In two days was too mach. | ducts have been increasing at th Lowa Fay Famlly Burned to Death. | also fused on the county ticket in (his The city hall was crowded, and as many | Bfam.)—R. B. Caldwéll and F. Colpetzer of f: I' rd 'I»;lnum- ”l er ’n'mw he said Iwmln more lnm\ s:w;u'mnl-;m a ‘v‘ b v y Fhile tteres osi or PR b a gathering e ) extending through many counties in | Carlisle reported to the senate of the KNOXVILLE, la., Oct. 20.—A farmer and | COUnty. While the bitterest contest is ovor | more were unable to gain admittance to| Omaha met a gathering of business and | ! i ¥ : United 1 Yen | the logislative tickel, the Aght for county | the hall Mr. Melklofohn was warmly | traveling men at the tlty hall, and a *Busi- | Suthern Indiang last weck and from his|States that if (his new tarift law w Als family were burned to death today ten | opiceq is very spirited and the oute greeted, and made a fine speect 8 , ; A V| experience yesterday and today In northern | adopted it would create a deficiency of §30. miles south of Knoxville certain, The prohibition county convention i Lid, [asm Men's assocfalion,” on the Hnes of the | Indiana, that there was a most phenomenal | 000,000 annually. In the face of living facts called for yesterday, was held, there be Andrews Popular in Frontier. ‘tlvln)n uffair, was'organized, A, J. Durland, a | interest among the people at this time upon | and unparalleled distress, can such & tariff | 20.—(Special L As General Harrison mounted the platform AR A e e IMITATING OMAHA SCHEMERS, the crowd began to cheer vigorously Administration Men at Norfolk Organize n | Majors Protective Associatior "W d B 3 y 1 4 2moc) sing | Public questions, although it was what is|measure be patriotic The votes of the ing not over twenty present me of the MAYWOOD, b., Oct. 20.—(Special Tele nown administfation democrat, being | Publl 8 m tho vol SERIES NO. 41-42 more radical ones urged that a ticket be put | gram.)—There was a grand rally at Stock ‘;i:lf( L ”f‘ yoar, ¢ m...n-x]m‘)1..‘”‘.”:\;“1 | huners .‘.‘ulllvnv“x‘wv-“nwurwl-'_ man at Le com A P onservative element carried the > rN X s est was cau by the dis- | ing election will ans A | st | Andrews. Ninety per cent of the inhabitants iy o, recent democratic legislation, as well as|the coal trust, the iron trust, and whisky | hIOTHERS! MO]HERS “ 3 X | . T | of the county were out. There is hardly a publican at Stockville, from the long suspense and uncertaiuty be- | trust and the sugar trust, and stretched their | THE AMERICAN h\C\CLOPMDIG PROGRESS OF THE CAMPAIGN. [ Sereon I £hia part of the county against| CURTIS, Neb., Oct #0.—(Special Telegram ) | fore any legislation was accomplished. He | Briarian arms around the congress, and in- | N EN [ — Andrews. Frontler county will bo the ban-| _m L s intimated that it was also caused by the|troduced into the bill such wmendments as | To know that a single applica- Bomocrats and_Popullsts Making & Des- | nor county this fall for the republican ticket. | v s, 188 been & 7at republican day for| o ogone™ ncortainty or fear that the party | but $60.000.000 into the treasury of —the | ti f the Cuticura Remedies will DICTIONARY. porate Fight in the Niate, - - | Stockville, the gjkire, surrounding county | roposed to go on with its tinkering. | He | whishs trut and $25,000,000 Into the treas. | tiOn of the Cuticura 4 CHAMBERLAIN, §. D., Oct, 20, 8 ; \[ll;‘{"l“l"{ -]hv- l{h»nmvumn Club and many from syrraynding towns being here | said the democratic party had launched its|ury of the sugar tru Then eame the tax | afford instant relief, permit rest I PAUL, Neb. det. 20, [Speclal. )—§ > lisf O -y ndrews, who ad ship, but almo: betol € eel was wet z 0 m W tribute i v 4 200 Pages. 260,000 Word: One of the most luteresting and vigorous | &% PAUL, Neb. Oct. 20.- ‘:l e :'I ”*I: io “";',.‘ H ‘“‘ l}\”\'_ _“H“ . '.' ! i b 'Ilw" it M .:"‘ bade her 'k “ AK AJiak | oo miga? of 4 v o tdbute 1o be | and sleep, and point to a speedy political campaigns ever waged in South aul wa eated to another dose of republl- | dre iem NP9 e ) 4 o RN AP Y€ Poars- | exacted from every household in the land A Kota is Row 10 peox and will not termi. | ©A0 oratory last night, the speaker belng V. | Short addresses w also made by C. ( From Plymouth the route lay southward. [ty fill up the deficiency of the treasury—to | and economical cure of torturing, SAOTRYCIIVE AXD TNNIOC nate until the |‘mn~‘uxu;- on the evening o 4 ward of Curtis aud A. P. Wells of Mc-| At Rochester General Harrison found o |allow this free trade hobby to live, At such | diefi ; H. Stone of Ord, who, together with Judge 4 S| ng, ing, burning an Wan'ohe of Ord, who. together Wwith Judge | k. Brass bands from Farnam and May. | Sreat crowd walting In cager expectancy. He | eritical time in industrial America 1n such | Gisfiguring, itching gand 4 Mine of Knowledge and a Mint vember 6. The democrats are making an | gqqress the republican club, Judge Wall | W00d, with the Curtls Glee club, furnished ko about fifteen minutes, dwelling chiely, |a tax patri The anti-trust people will| scaly humors, and not to use (,wm""‘_. Ml or unusually strong fight, with the intention ef | did not show up. Mr. Stone spoke for about | the music for the occasion as before, on the tariff question wer, NO. Within a monih past the eloc- | ghem without a moment's delay \ e. giving 38,000 republican ma rolllng up, it possible, their customary vote | two hours to a large audience democrats Stayed at Ho Politieal & Disturbed |tion in Maine, siving ey t il i There are more things lustraotive, usatul of ‘ahont 38.000 In the atats. Hare sand thers | u ks adl ne How | jority, was evidence that people did not be-| i8 to fail in your duty. Cyres { | [ s - . s Jot, 20.—(Spe T WACO, Neb., Oct. 20.—(Special Telegram.) 4 t he | and entertaining in that Baok. WEna. ¥ 1 thar ataa arraar car A Pleased His Populist Fric ATLANTIC, la, Oct. 20.—(Special Tole-| | 1 there was anything patriotic In the| made jn childhood are speed e e Caliiat e Lo St AR AR 0l e OLUMBUS, Neb., Oct. 20.—(Special)— | gram.)—-General Weaver made a speech here | —There was a large republican meeting at faction of congress. 'T Difean’ pruratiy, | economical and per mnenr A Lhius ¥reat work, now for'tho rirat tme || power should the popullsts succeed in pre- | Senator Allen spoke Friday night in the opera | in the park this afternoon, which was lis. | this place IM?'M ””-\‘”'L Tlambe ;‘u]‘ VAR CRITIE OL SRME AR DY [ S i a00 P i Pl within \ho' reach of everyone, s & venting the republicans from securing a | house to a crowded house, giving \ tened to by a small sized audience Rain | Was in attendance. Among the speakers | Wwas a declaration that e Bold throughout the world. Porres Da n nulgue publicatton, for it 1a it ‘the SAME U " by s . TRINE. HOUNG, giving evident eeting ' were W 3 an 1. Charles H. |batriotic in the action of that congress. Ne-| o ‘oM, wole pre ey & perieot dictonary and i eomplote eyl Sear majority on Joint ballot in that body. | gatisfaction 1o his populistic friends. Judge | broke up th meoting and it was adj urned Foxe W. 5 s R0 Hian, (CHATIERSE | Ho e ar, i) Sl Kar volne .,1 e oo o pretors, ooy, A e e . he fact that a successor to Senator Petil- | Hensley has started on his electioneering [ (0 the opera house RAS, SURDON 21 the : and sed . t the same sentiment: ‘N : patriotic In g Ouly that number of the Look corroapoud- | | grew is to be elected by the tegislature next | tour, expeoting 10 make a quick cany g| Lave been the basner ¥ay in the county for | 1o the BN SHAMS (M9, QONRAFHRe | " ine wiih the weriea nuniber ol tho coupos winter makes tae legislative fght exceedingly | the Qistriet, e @ Quick canvass off o rusion ticket, but the affair was purely | tion he action of that congres INE Sundays nd Throe Week-day coupons, bitter. The opposition to the republicans is " I prveprron S aaiacd populistic. No old-time democrats partici with 16 cents in coin, will iy 0us pari using every means to capture the legislature P 8 s 4% pated republican NORFOLK, Neb., Oct. 20.--(Special Tele If tired, aching, nervous mof of The American Encyclopedia Dicdoa: and thereby prevent the election of a repub- | TECU H, Neb., Oct Special Tele Sy R e 4 king great " m.)—Judge § Holeomb addressed era knew the comfort, stren Ary. Send orders 10 Tho Bes Oos lican as Pettigrew's successor. The populists [ gram.)—Congressman Bryan and Hon making gr t ] A M a ssident; J. B. Simpson, vice presi- 84~ Faclal Blem Auordors should be addresssl ta pre Wwaging a school house campalgn, and | George W. Cornell of Auburn entertained PAVID: QiZ¥ o ipecial becye, W W largs aud) the 2ink i this ally vitality 16 Outionse ¥ d go assemblage of persons of all polit- | - : ould never be without them - have a number of speakers constantly on the | good sized audience in this city today. 'An | 138 assemblage of 1 all polit on Thursday, Novembe followed by Hon. J. M. De- § woul DIOTIONARY DEPARTMENT stump In every county in the state. What | open air meeting was held and musié was | ical persuasions gathered at the opera house | which time and place all of the re J Holcomb, notwithstanding & . every way Wio purest, avestest a they will acomplish is uncertain, and this | furnished by the Tecumseh Military band, |last evening to listen to an address by Hon. |nominees on state, county and eity tickets | poor voice, made & falrly good impression. | best of plasters.

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