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THE OMAHA DAILY BE WEDNESDAY, S EMBER 5. 1900, ]mm all day and did not see the final ase CULLED from the Field of POLITICS |55 miiil i s Just before the 1 Charles R. Noyes pilbon 3 1 ' \ch ; two | very heavy fire and gaived o ‘ the | ferce volleys and rusbes m . my was gat tor m imp ther | Our men would not budge a O mote sl iote Ay p . A by Mr. Bryas wuse [ fire from the carly morning o , vited to nddress the great art ent ax the campaign progresses the t ' 3 . . his head i the clouds assumes | ness before retiring. 1 got a BN Oma futiding, Tw ngmen who were assembled on it Pk R - t 1\ o h nsent” of the Filipinos to our |[the arm about 5:30 a. m. in ¢ (" 1 Etreet | occasion LAl s bound r e " nt of those islands has been with. | vance, before we got inside th h paclty of pre true? 1 have alway About §:30 they found me in the Kew York y . ! campuign man ' nly a part of the tribe left leg and gave me a wound that Wannin ureenth Btreet who did ot 1 14 require While « el often e . the 1 ted, and that this tribe out of action. After 1 was hit AR aud it I8 pert AT % i e . oot rover t « more than 1,000,000 in a total|back about sixty yards, behind a Communiont % th news and edi- | the derellet v . SGNGE Datieh - A t a of 10,000,000 in those islands. |Where there were a number of other wound ‘ . 1 Sokial Tty 1" "Bmana | ever hn i t N ! 4 . encler y and v pirfit of Munchausen has re-[men. Finally, after great effort, I crawled it BRYAN AS CAMPAIGN MANAG) But there wa f the spenker Bee, Bditor bl Mgt iog-Supirdhoni- ted 1 y p - " Arth with powers more splendid | through ditches in the field until I got [ e L ] t i sing " n to Mr. Br efore or thi yroximately the | of range of the crossfire Janinens o ¢ . while Colonel Roose 4 o : 4 ¢ { atios o re not a half-dozen If that be true not more than one About twenly minutes after I was bit b o throlutely to the considetation Beyan . 3 nfederate foldiers who d Lt n in ten on those islands withholds his|Colonel Liscum was killed while gallantiy REMITT : ters intimately related with the Intere L 1 it I Mgt Ak that M n ettled. They know an accomplished “consent” and Mr. Bryan, with his head |leading the assault n the village. Our Ramit by Aratt. s i i ! Sl o h n they meet it on the highway. still in the deep blue sky, ignores the|command retreated finally under cover of IALT oent plamps ocepis » wolitics, My, Bryan ioproved the oppor: | o Pion Gevoly m 0 any mat. | o oia net have besn, 1o o @ few of us who have enough nine and hears only the racket of one |darkness. Only balf of the regiment was .'Y"”,':" inta: ph acce o | o T rooaien nput s Heec | BOF Gtecting compalgu epment o 8 SHBDUPH pature in us to feel that we are not There are, happily. Americans who look at|engaged in that part of the field. The next mana ar Fihicrn exchiung { : i the democratic | 3¢ there is auything in ¢ he- called ) rend our garments (rying to this as a practical matter and regard the | day the Japanese force fought their way y ] ] 4 to certnin dec tions of the Chi-| o ommitte o, 1% at the | gevern L#ine n Ly Mr. Bive a few Tagalos in the Chinese sea what acquiescence of the nine as equivalent to finto the city and the works were taken - cago and Kansas City platforms certain branches of the Work, | Bf the proper ple and nied to us. This may not be very t consent” of all and who refuse 1o ro- | after hot fighting in the streets, from barri ) NI OF CLEOURATION tn ‘dther Words, Governne Roowevelt SefoHm hwe CRRTERAY HYtian) D) Tts only condht nt and | Cis human. From Mr. Bryaws gard the wishes of the one, especially so | cades and from houses. The four parts of tate of Neprasks. Dougias Counly, re AR seain] L : . HLex | thers tn no other condi Neither pre L would appear o be loeical that ong as he is trying to people the sands of | the city were then placed under guard of Publishing company. being duly wworn, | (b o G S ek ingmen of the fusion populist committer | oadlticts . sresdit. enEAEvENALS, BoM cach state to get out of the union Luzon with the bones of American soldiers. | the English, Japanese, Americans and Ruse pays that’ the wctua number ol urd | 3 lukewarm, while no one hears of the affect or on Into it. Wwhen it sees fit to do so; but P slans. Evening n Voo, printed during labor aud having no concern with BTATEMENT OF CIRCULATION | | pealing to their common wense chalrman of the silver republican nu- | e makes it an independent, exceptionless hunt up the remnants of the Indians a 1 am disposed to think that we will keep | “Some fdea of the heat of the action may the month ¢ 199, was # W | their enlightened appreciation of tlonal committee right n «] heritage, eternaily vested tUrn over all this country to them Philippines, and have an army and & | be gained by the statement of the fact that 1 27,280 | juterest, while Mr. Bryan made an In-| oo this sort of campaign man- | and to spend. According to matter of but tardy justice v large enough to protect American |out of a command of 60 men and fiftee . 97,180 | Liious appenl to their passions and pre Ll oo et 41 whether numercus or few, or Are goir essively pure v for we know, not as a dream, but | cers the percentage of casualties was i1 tha WA | ociivos. Tt Was & Silfig oohtewst, | ISCTIERS CRD B0 TRCE ¢ A R Wity nditions, bave only to " Iy ot based on abundant experience, |case of the men 20 and the officer pes 27,000 | K to be seen, but we have the teachings of | 5 i theif comsont, and to these things only t they will protected in mo other | cent 27,120 | which ought 1o receive the thoughttul |y o " 0o wi i it has never heen sontrols. atl oth 1 yan has figured o his world is %0 made (lat we have 0,000 | consideration of every intelligent citizen. | o e 1 the pust, Speaking of 1he | use a modern slang expression lealism with but little regard to human to Aght for what we get, and idealism| Sergeant Dorey of Company C of the 27 010 s 5 1\ Aotakt oF B h 2d there is nothing else to nature and the facts of American histor no title to what we think life owes us. | Ninth tells an interesting story. il is 27,110 ; reasons that led to the defeat of Bluine, | e gad (here B TR king man Were this a nation of angels, living on We had rather pay to maintain a suicient | crippled for life, having lost his left arm oot Bl B ko BNk (LA G el &, K, McClure {8 s book i e uniler this ldea is an {m- Ambrosia furnished by a perpetual auto- army and a navy for all future time than [in the Tien Tsin battle. His story of the 26,080 | 1t is o noteworthy fact that Bryanism Ident-making suys by i i don i matic supply matchine, rather than one of to be licked once. Nor do we think that | battle is as follows . { 0900 | 600y no antagonism i England, Ther Wb SRR M SETAEN to vondtisy [P A red-blooded Americans who earn bread and American institutions are likely fo be| “We started about 3 o'clock i8 the worn 20 4 TATO L% no very great Interest being munt \dential contest for himself. The wiktters Tttla thi fotached meat by the sweat of their brows as we endangered by the American soldier, at|ing and by daybreak bad marched four 27 400 27,420 | fested there in the Ameriean campuign, | 1ot iterest a candidate must h s of what Mr. L when we are, we mizht consider the idealistic views least, there is nothing o far in his con- [miles and taken the outer wall. The Japs 27 240 1 27,400 | hut, what there I8 felt is not at all an and the constant strain upon | yave fi acts, which are the monumental of Mr. Bryan a Mcient for our needs. duct that warrants rational apprehension | blew up the gate and planted their cuns 27 Id unbalance the most for eful | gy what Mr. Liocoln thought it there are of us some who are not dis- from that direction; rather do we look for [ on the wall and kept up a continuous fire, tal wanggn | taonistle to the democratic ticket. | 0 liact the world ha d. | evidence show conclusively how he ed to nccord the claim of statesman- danger from civil decadence in the centers | which emabled us to advance to within g _ i 1047 | Henator Depew, on his recent return | piaine would have been the | underst s doctrine. Mr. Bryan's idea Ship to him who cannot relate theory of gested populatfon where politics Is |ebout 300 yards of the inner wall, a mile Y sk v y7s | from Europe, stated that 1t would give |ukiliful management of a presidentiel cam- | of 1t was absolutely negated by Mr. Lincoln's with the unbending conditions of humat made a orofession. trom the first one. We tinally reached tha Net dally average i g | Ereat gratification to certain large finnn- | palgn for another, but he was dvarfod |acts. Those acts depled this doctrine, as Mr. life; who do not belicve a man I8 & sa trenches, but not before most of us had ROHGR o O o anid manulactoste hterests 1 4. | DY the erwhelming responsibilities of been wounded and five had been killed. eI i1 by Bhakn b | conducting the campalgn for himself, and | =——————r— - We got iuto the trenches und fought for all reme hin St diy of Avgust e n i Great Britain, it the re- |, o5y uned the supreme control of 15 ARMY CANTEEN. we were worth, but with the knowledge R A1 publicans were defeated this fall and if || truggle directed it absolutely from —_— that every shot must count as ammuuition Notary Publi a congress were elected which would re- | gtart to He was of ole mould, | Unreasoning At s n Benefic was runping short. The Chinese h, Kuos K —— J = == | peal the Dingley law and restore the [and wisely planned his own carnpalgn Institation. at the ends of the trenches, with which Hospitality is not entirely confined to tnee ) o side | tours to accomuvlish the best resul In| Philadelphia Times (ind.) they poured in a raking fire. We were up | Wilkon law, sinee upon the other side e i the southern states, King Ak-Sar-Ben | ¢ point of fact he had won his fight after If the good women ol o b=l Philadelphla Ledger ing power, more wheat will be bought [to our waists in water and had to stoop 1% xomething of n host himself | sturaping the country and lost it by uis| Christian Temperance union believe that | Secretary of Agriculture Wilson has sald and consumed. With pressing demands at|to keep from being hit. The sight of a head S p— renlization of the advancement the [ e o way home. e | Mr. McKinley should not be re-elected | with confidence that “we shall have dollar home and abroad and @ short crop, wheat |poking up called forth a shower of bullsts IPhe Hitistoal Peuts | United States has mude, not only 4% 8 |knew how to sway multitudes, and bone | prosident they are quite within their rigbt| wheat before the end of the year.” The Ix Ilikely to advance. In the two years|in its direction and thes Chinamen are : N ul festival has had a most | oolitienl but as a financlal and com- |could approach him in that important | in offering prayers for the resuit -‘m-\ de- | reasons which he gives for expecting & preceding the campalgn of ‘06 wheat|all good marksmen. I was shot in the Ausplelous opening. 1t mercial power feature of a confiict, but he was not triined | #ire. But to pray for his defeat because | rapid advance from 78 cents to the dollar touched bottom prices at 60 cents. The|arm about 11 a. m. and had to stick it ous to consider the thousand intricacles whicl | he has not abolighed the army canteen 15 mark are shortage in the crop and a populists made much of the fact and Mr lan day, as to move out of cover meant | Jop. | Tl upon the management of every pres- | Bot creditable to their intelligenc (| heavy demand. The shortage In the domes- Bryan asured the farmers that the mis- |certain death. Colonel Liscum was the [e8 SHEL COMPARTL 1b b CRBV LD DR | {dwntikl vontest 1t will be admitted that the offcers of | (io yield is estimated at about 100,000,000 fortune was due to the demonstization of |bravest of the brave. He led his men The republican primaries fo choose | #1404 that European manufacturers and | =00\ clure might as well have | the army, as a class, are intelligent and| bushels, and there is prospect of a sub- silver. Wheat would remain low unless we | Fight through the thickest shower of lead Aclegates 1o nominate leglslative and | Particularly those of England should de- |4 coionel Bryan in mind when he | U8 thy men, sinc """‘," unw‘rufih'ur the | yiantial shortage ubroad. The French should have 50-cent dollars. A great many ‘H have ever been in, and when we saw him coutty tickets are set for next Friday, | 8¢ # restoration of the democratic | & those lies ationt B oy | Daraicas and moral welfare of l'"“ (Den | minister of agriculture estimates a de- western farmers listened to this Idla chat- | drop we felt we could stay where we were A tariff of 1804, which proved a great |, FUCO RUb A SR RENE ine, a8 they | ynder their command. Their professional | ficjency in France of 30,000,000 bushels, and ter and voted accordingly. They have since | forever it we could but get a chance to Mark it down on your ealendar ; o i '_. % Fi KICAt Gt the one almost as well as the other. | interest, if nothing else, would require this. | ;4 appears from the official statistics of found out that Mr. Bryan was a false |avenge his death. I think we did, but it oon 1o them. Has anybody forgotten | ¢ vy hok et proved himself big | The active officers of the army are prac-|ihe world's wheat crop, compiled by the prophet and silyer fallacy as applled (o |cost us number of brave lives Ex-Senator Hill's compliments to Bos | the beuetit derived by forelgn manu-| oo o00) 4o conduct n presidential contest | tieally ,unanimous in the 1“""""' I" L:N‘ United States Department of Agriculture t {8 & boomerang. The conditions are| “The Japs are great fighters and will . i cturers from that tu 1 For years the canteen, or post exchange, as it 18 prop- | vy, e v country the d is now chan and silver did not affec I i of ¢ drop of te: Croker are poluted and direct, ‘There | factrers from that tariffs For years|eor “pyngelt and it is questionable | oy “raled’ “hae proved o most eficient | ejow tn bl g A ”]'",’ Siie Shoup IS MEVR 06 Bot KON AU [ IS O R T T L A e I8 evidently a call for the ) the eotton and woolen mills of England [ £ 0 0 p o ke tHs éxce "| below the average. Not only will the If any politicel argument is to be gotten |to an American. e a o I oy | etaiiant. T the firad. | " hether Bryan can make the exception. | ugency of mobriety, health and discipline | forejgn demand be brisk, but the consump- out of wheat prices the shrowd farmer 1 | — doctor In the New York democratic z : & — and the official statistics, which $how 8o of wheat at home is likely, in Secre- likely to belleve that, general prosperity| Another of the wounded men is Private Just what advantage some of the|constant “'"”""”""' of ""”‘“““"”)"" di*- | ary Wilson's oplnion, to be very large. having been established under the gold | Yon Schlick, who has been recommended # 1 | orderly conduct and desertion, with & cor-11 4t year the consumption of wheat at standard and partly, at least, b for a medal of honor. He was wounded owers expect ain by re : to L jtion o andard and partly, at least, by the con- n v ": expect l: :I""I im; "I"““- responding advance in physieal and ma- | o G0ty oy per capita, and Sec- fdence ft brings, the farmer 18 sharing fn | four times and still carries a bullet in his stump the state, He went through Ore. | they were opened, the idle labor of the | W1t “"“ ’['f"" Aol ol "" t 1o Ul | terial wellbeing, abundantly sustain thelr| rorary Wilson would mot be eurprined if that prosperity by receiving good price [ nck. 'He was ordered o stay by a wounded Ko Inst wpring Just, bofore olection and | district was given employment und there | d¢rstand. 12 they think Russia fu par- | observation the consumption should reach seven for his wheat. The most powerful influence | comrade and place him in a protected 4 - { ar ithdr: 1o We think that the good people who are ke e . fhoe; 8 d h the state only went n little over 10,000 | was an unprocedented boom to the Eng. | ticulnr, s going to withdraw and lea bushels for every inhabitant. simply be- at work against Bryan in the west, where | Place. o carried his comrade 400 yards ? b G0 e T d the otliers 1n possession they will doubt- | 80 earnest in their denunciation of these | ;uy4 people have the money to buy. In he was stroogest in '96, Is the prosperity | 08 his back and received a bullet In his ts Do disuphointed, 1 1t comes to | Yel-orderad voldiers® clubs o not under | giher words, hard times have passed, pros- of tho farmer and it Will count heavily | Shoulder just before reaching the supponed | stand what they really are. They certalnly | oo, is upon us, industrics against the party that brimgs the menace | Piace of safetys While bandaging his the ocenn there has suddenly come 1% to be hoped It will prove a iccess from every polut | AR, There is nothing incredible in this Ee——— housel rd district most of the factories were closed when the Wilson tariff law went Bryan Iv golng 1o West Virginia to | into effect, but immedintely afterward cpublican. lish cotton industry. This was due Em— chlefly to American orders and every goes down in defeat the verdict will be | Press disputelies aunounce that the campuign I Kentucky 1s open, but ax no one Las been shot up to date out siders will not consider the affair as anything more than the preliminaries TRIFLES LIGHT AS AIR. Can it be possible that the Increase in | order that went from this country to|Same of grab “"""'"' with its present do not correctly describe them ”‘“:"I” are flourishing, the laborer s at of free s'lver and perils that such a policy | WOund be was struck in the jaw by another police court reventies during lnst month | gngland ook so much away from Amer. | D0M on Manchurla, Is in a condition | Corbia's recent letter explains the whole|youe “ang, with increased purchas- would brig in its wake Chinese bullet. Caring for himself as best * g ch good or the favor with ¢ hyde? d that ble : OWOT. glves such good reasons for t wounds of his comrade. Hardly had he Ijuly wnl“' an i wind that blows no- | Under the operations of the last demo- | ! = A which the Institution is regarded by those finished the operation when he was struck S The fusionist troubles this campnign | Who have 4 time a few inches below the L factories were closed, while those of | ur grenter than common. The effort| VKbt to have u modifylng effect upon an BELATED alamlty T A LK || st wount received. His ocers witnessea Attorney Generul Sinyth mays he In | ono0 Goo g Brance were | | agitation which Is, to say the least, inju | his splendid behavior and will sec that he watistled with his visit to New York, | oo ¥ : lists and the populist endeavor to secure | peran Washington Post (ind.) have received from their crops | N Tt of trumte it ed ay WK TNy Bryan, as o member of the Wiy [ )l hey can in their lnst year of fusion | All this is entirely apart from &8y po°| 1y ypite of the utter demolition of the We doubt it it will pay to renew the| SeTEeant Bickhort, another one of Cos [ «ans committee of the house the result of the trip. A menng: commi § the Rouse of Saumsd. many sorious PesponsfBiities’ in)| : ; shot through the I assumed man | great campalign of 1896; in spite of the un- farmers in Kansas or*any other state, The | ough ungs. The sergeant, tarlff law. He argued in favor of it |, 'mal appetite for ple was i o (Y 1'— sl s R that an ,.ym:.uuml "l'l'”“, for ple was | {jcylar all of military organization or | .. . ent which he addressed to the reside show how many scores of millions | It was the hottest fight I have aver been and insiste aat it wo! Mprove the {4 cause of the demise of fusion. discipline i one that he has wisely left] o pn g ynq by which he won the sup- of mortgaged indebtedness they have patd| !B #nd I saw a number of good, hot battles | and American lnbor. He urged that the As democrats survey the harmeny | ' the army to drag its personal ufm:* even @ beggarly array of shreds and swollen with thelr deposits. Their homes| C0lonel Liscum was the bravest man in effcet of n protective tarlff was to in into the disputes of the campalgn. As| . iohoo of his calamity argument remains, have put on an air of prosperity. Their | China. He led his men until he fell and 1 v v prosp Gl R e s el LY New York and the internal strife In|eny time, compared with any community | qooii qioq” ciore when he talks to the the chamge. The returns of elections held [ Himself. Lieutenant Lawton performed one 8%, A0 same M f AKCS. | {ele own party they muke up thelg|in civil life, 1s “a model temperance so- | p e SO LU P his Topeka since 1898 prove that many farmers who|Of the greatest feats of daring ever wit- words whnt fie thiuks of Boss Croker. | representatives in 1805, Mr. Bryan de-| o5 bkieted democratic vietory n | B0t we are all of us concerned that it | Toppe prosperity argument will not de- that association. It would be Jegitimate | Bad Just won and, though severely wounded, The bosse's oplnfon of Hill will be ap | nounced protection as wrong In policy character shall not be traduced. elve the farmer. He knows that the much- and might be polite for Mr. Bryan v.,““"'f"ll”'”'“'; heavy I».mr"- of --lmmlmllmn_ ot mrent the frst " ¢ ex-sennto A destructive of © Interests o e vaunted prosperity is on the wane, in spite show what causes have wrought so great hich the boys on the firing line were yer; I I thm th X nator | and tructiy f the Interest f th — DECLINING INDUSTRIALS. unted prosp yi J & B y celvi > las oo yei ully a cross-firo and could not move for fear e moctin e el 3 ow York 8 n 4 Out of |It has received in the last three years. fully tell the farmers that much of their 3 AN hiouse of ropresentatives during the two '\l,“\” ::“,.‘ s WALAR SR D IRA. 08 | 1o knows, too, that he has never had his happy fortune has come from famine in|°f being hit. We had to stay where wa | body, Mr. Bryan was a persistent and & There has been since August 26 last a| Bradstreot reports that there was a the world. But it 18 folly to tell them sneak out of danger when darknoss Theodore Roosevelt meant about leading | prominent advocate of free trade, Who Eduent in Cubn. shriukago of $167,000,000 in the value of [ &rand total of decrease in liabilities in that “the much-vaunted prosperity is on | C4me on in the present campaign. Before 1t I8 | poriod will see that he had no interest | Places will prosently be found in Cuban | yuy jarge industrial companies, which } the corresponding period in 1896 of $45,471,- licking in it. And it is not quite fair, over they will know more whout it than | whatever in the industries and labor of wan duo 1o the evil effects of formulde- | (e tudustries and Amerlean nbor, | 1 §°t More out of it than auy other | subject so clearly and uatisfactorily and he could, he proceedéd to bandage the cratic tarlff law American mills and observed its operatiom, that it again, this b L e of the democrats to ¥waullow the popu-| aicious and cannot be promotive of tem- oty Nomtted given increased nctivi though he has not exhibited any feag | ® | " | are the cause, When the combination ) Vtical consideration. The president has| heories on which Mr. Bryan based bis calamity talk, even in modified form, to|lUmbla's brave soldiers, is suffering from & | representatives, assisted in framing that | the employment of the army, but this Par- | gopiapa fact that nothing s left of the record books of the counties in which they | thoush scarcely able to talk, said condition hoth of Americun industrics | to those best qualified, and it 15 not falr | 0000 iions of them; although mot eff. The vaults of western banks are| !B Cuba and the Philippines. To my idea b prevails in the republican ranks . ; gl i crease prices, rogardless of the fact that | . Uioh peraile 1 e SeDUR | General Corbin says, the army at the pres- | {05 50 in lined to hark back to the old, families experience and are grateful for|@®ked them to do nothing he would not do Ex-Senutor Hill tells In unmistakable | 1o a specch delivered In the bouse of |y they have another guess coming | clety,” and whether we are milltariats or | ooy o sat then flocked with the populists have quit | Nessed. He went twice across the field we n 3 p p ] the Bmpire state. [ " ’ \ on prosp » land . much in need. We were at all times und wants womething from the New York|country. In all his speeches in the St audite (\n of the unusual and unmatural stimulation prosperity in the land. He might truth © at all times under = b v ooy | years that he was a member of that g S SNt SlGans SHaEe GPithih Ariunsrite Indla and short crops in other parts of | Were and, after lying in dirty water all day, emocrats never fully realized what | ew Do) Chicago Trib a ktrenuous lite until he 100k (he st | ver will rend bis speeches in that New York Tribune P o N ratarred Mook ot A {lures in the first six months of 1900 from the wane” when they are rolling and rol- public achools for 260,000 children. That | \"yoa1 capitalization of $1,011,340,000 128 underexisting conditions, to attempt 10| Philadelphia Press: 014 Lady (sterniy)es o bene S0 mue o general situation. As onvince the farmers that they have not [ Is there a bur attached to this | s fact s w noteworthy tribute to the bene A . ted by these corpora S0 much for the general situation. As to convince t n hatel, yolng they do now the Amerlean people. Deriving all his 5 . Indu Wy 7 DO | e mgricultural interest, a reliable news had their share of prosperity. All things | Man? > | peor ficonco of United States control of the 18- | (jone are steel and iron, tin plate, lead | “Summer Hotel Clerk—No, ma‘am, bu | tdeas from the traditional free teade | pana suRnr. tobneco, paper and rubber. Great aa | Feport states the notorious fact that In considered, the class that has fared best In| cun xend out and get you Wyt vou Owmuha now employs nearly 400 teach- | Luineiples of the democratic party he | B Valuew, 1t would be|the central west moneylenders who do the last three years fs that which has pro- | want ers I its public achools, to sy NOthing | fousit. geatously. aud. ldefatigably for Cruel Sos reater stll were the compurison made |business in agrioultural communities re- duced food supplies for the domestic and | of the janitors and other peopl od | s y Brookiyn By " g demand ore arkets. | A t o hizhest prices of 1848 or 1899 [ port a constantly Increasing demand to forelgn markets remarked the soctal philosopher w policy the results of which were dis The newspapers printed by Chinamen in [ With the hizhest pr g R y urns the farmer " e 8 B ey to complete the staff of the school patrous to Ameriean fudustiles and | Canto have beon: suppressed because they | An 1L, I8, {hore hus hesn a decline of 16| pay ft loans with the returns the farmers Certainly not,” replied the practical man tem. Few tustitutions in this section | of affairs, “but'T doubt if it could be any er cent from the stock market quotations 2 “ Al ———— | more unpop ' American abor, Even toduy, with all | led. 1f only we had a viceroy in Manhat- | PEF nt from the stock market quotation — = more unpopular it it were oan matob his showis his offorts to make so.called Tmporlnliam | 148 Wouldn't there be some sudden reforms | Of 000 EAT RES | Ly oe o have PERSONAL POINTE | ROUND ABOUT IN CHINA. Cleveland Plain_Dealer: “The aweet on Newspaper row Dotito sings u reat parody tha ] | the puramount ixsue In the campaign, [*" NP been the kufferers by this fall in selling| o dauger of be- | Kaperiences of American Soldiers tu | Makn & hite sid the sufar beett o the Bryan has had so many platforus | he cannc ‘ oid disclos ] values and what the actual loss will be (0| ‘The broom corn trust In in dange aAsh gf Ampionn 918 Ry | L canmot wholly avoid dixclosing the 1 0V ore g swept out of existence P “What 18 it called?" break unfler him that he s becoming | fact that he Is still an antagonist 1o the o the present holders of stocks should there | ing swept out o The first batch of wounded men from the | )0t g salled?’ A & e RENIEE J8.A30 man Jones was compelled to o @ 10 improvement in the condition of th chard Croker hus wagered $20,000 against Aalas ¥ G 1t as T Yam," replied the hee un gxpert ot gotting away from dauger. | great principle of American protection, | o eltiman Jones, & mpelled to con- |y, improvement fu the condition of Richard Croker h g B thianding Selanina dreieed NG LS o tront anobher dlsappointment when Mr. [ market, It is quite possible that a good | $50,000 with Louls W. Wormser of New The one which gave way Monday Is| 1t Is most natucal that having in view | ¢ Chicago Post: “Poverty is no disgrace, cisco on the transport Thomas & few day Indianapolis Journal: “That candidate arneglo announced that he would not take | deal of the common stock of some of these | York that Bryan will b the next president. | ggo Most of the wounded men partici- :'A-“k("i out and wouldn't accept his notifica- not the only Chicago platfortn which | what the democentle party has done | the stump for Bryan and Stevenson. Nr. | industrials is held yet by the promoters t This 18 how @ Detroit paper r | pated in the capture of Tien Tsin. To § “What ailed him? shows signs of weakness for the Interest of Europenn manufac. | Carnegio makes his campaign contributions | whom it was given for their services. They | moy 1, Johnson, the millionaire single- | Francisco reporters they related many fn- | “Ho sald he wouldn't impertl his country's tarere. in Hlio Dkt AN SAREiON A sy the | Al BO. etk | endeavored to sell it as soon as they ROU[ yiyer: e is as fuent as a phonograph | teresting incidents of the fight and their | festiny by becoming prexident on the thir: | teenth ticket in the field.” The cotton crop this year s 2,000,000 | manufacture R S0 1RAK LA 2 e |1t but were not atways successtul. To- | 16”0 Lliusinle as Scotch whisky experiences in a memorable contest h o wland, that every prooting Ca ty Proph . ward the close of the consolidation mania Captain Bookmiller of the Ninth infant Chicago Trib 0 " bales larger than last and Chaleman | industelal fnterest abroad should ook Cluctanati Fribune. oo [ e m ‘ket was gorged. Owners of stock| A Cleveland {laeriian dooiiac. thaLo AT BRI A P \]nv-'."u~-'m“u'l‘u"x'«':xm‘,;.';,,“:.‘,",,‘\'.‘,f,,. L1 wes of the democratlc nutlonal co avor upon the possibility of the| Mr Bryan has not sald anything in the |y 0700, T e o | woman 18 justied in acolding her hushand | #aid the portion of his regim ithom | Fiines M08 0% bl Mtional com-| with favor upon the possibility of the | o Ll S oocnonio independeuce of the | ISR coat them nothiag f make an- | HOO8 es homo drunk and buses her and | Was ordered to supgort the J W | B onlas Oratar=thy: Hiame it T don's mittee smiles s he counts over his | succe the democratic party & hox. which 'ts' worth $4.60 mors | tioipated gains when they sre Wnable &9, oiiien "and 3 Washington justion has | 8dvenced loward the wall," he ssid, vand | talk anything else puv narc Qi Nebraske hog SR8 WANER: B4 sell it for what they thought they could # . Kked by the trolley | 10 our misfortune there was a consider per head now than it was four ye declared that profanity evoked by the tro L I are no poorer than they were, how- [ able spac hetwe e Japanes oops | Washingt Star: “Well, uncle, “which another twist to the antl-trust politienl | forelgn natlons ure ot in the lonxt con- | 1t 1s really not nice of the Nebraska hog | Toc¥ 4re ne poor car transfer system there fs also justifiab ble space between th panese Lroopk | 4o vou prefer—the white man of the north ove and our force. Our expericnce was to meet | or the white man of the south? asked the campalgn, cerned regurding our tinancial polic to be so vory valuable Doubtless much Kk has changed hands| Fatteh Singh Rao, son of the Goekwar| 5o qine e from a considerable sec- | 1dle one The adoption of free sliver by the United & e g he last year for the | of Baroda, who hus already been through | sc BURC R CrE EOEN & o e mud | .. Bos. T'll tell yo' jeu’ how 1t in. was the ; 0 versity of Bombay, W renly. “When de white man am eelin' gooc Ihe state house muchine I8 not play- | States would make no difference with | Kansas City | shares of the seventeen corporations are|a course at the Uni ity of Bor 11 | yillage, whioh might be calied & subsrb of | b 2 L' Ros: Naite man am ¢ »«'r:nf"a': | ey \ g0 to Oxford presently. The young prince " A 3 } Ing as strong a part lu the present cam- | goeland or any other Kur | In his speoches Mr ! tre- | the subject of continual speculative dealings | go to 1 pr t the city proper white man am feelin’ wrong | don' w o ng or any other Euoropean pow P q J | hor . |is molng in for a wmilitary profession and oo nuffin' to do with him nowher palgn as formerly, The machine was On the quent reference to Abraham Lincoln and | in Wall street There nlu- l“‘ oock o7 4 " . ‘.' . 1 . 1 ‘rl “u art cavalry ‘l‘ "'"‘" 1'“;“;" lost bl |M‘ "'1'”""" » v > of order to | his utterances, but he has not yct seen |#loned by the 8 has beon 18 18 76 SRS ‘ " | combination of bravery and recklessness. | HE MOCKING BIRD. |u.||. ‘4.||'| ( x.l v to start with and Gov- | qige to them. But when “the question | 4" quote the following bit of terse coms | vided between a cor number of | regiment in the Baroda army He led us in the assault on the village and - ernor lni\nh\|w~ S0 t-\1>\' tending to of our fisenl policy is concerned, When [ mon sense from the martyr president | persous. Those who have lost the most aro | When George and Edwin Gould paid the | died soldier's death wimost Instantly Norman Robinson in Boston Transcript. perintendent Lang that he has not had | ho question of the American tarlf is | “There s no fear of th . | thore who bought a year ago, lisliked to | dobts of Count Castellane to prevent the | Poor fellow, he exposed himsef unneces- | Sweet singer of our summer land o qeestion o erican f M ero s no fear of people losing | th « - fiRe & time to fix it [ presented, then there I8 @ matter (hat | thelr libertios. Wo all know this to' ba|sell at a loys and who have held on in the | salo of that worthy's castlo they stipulated | garily. Wo were golng againat an enemy | Who tWIEHL JouT gifted tongue Woat —————— touches them profoundly the cry of demagogues, and mone but the |hope of a risc that the money—about §1,600,000—should be | that could not be seen. The houses were of | guch’ golden threads could w along R T Lo ) Ignorant will listen to it Whatever may have been the actual 1088 | paid by them to the creditors direct without | mud and they had been loopholed, so that | The bright embroidery of your burnished I superintendent of Ihe democratie purty has never been | through this Aecline in values, none of It | pasging through the count's hands. The [ when the advance was made not a Chi sony ay the friend of American In Time for the Concert, | has fallen on the poorer classes of the com- | Frepchman seems to have found a 4 | man could b# seen. The fire of the enemy | That enrollment of nearly 20,000 children, | mdusteies. Tts whole | which ix greater by several thousand [ 4 warfare against our fndustrial pro than the enrollment for I8N0, The | pessy and necessarlly dnst the in puazle 15, How can the sehools have o- | erests and welt nest round bale trust stock and then gives | Novem! Let it be understood 1 contrary it might 1 advan schools or the past year shows a school | and s not ¢ Jittle throat! How can it ba carcer huw been | Bultimore Amerlcan [ munity, — They do not put thelr earnings | nirg at last was quite accurate and our losses were | 8o full of rate, exultant minsirels stako 10 China about the time the curtain | speculate they do so in other wa i (AR RIS AT e IIRTR LS and then held our position through It way be rather hard on a commander-in- | who have bet stocks would go | A TEAmBAL A SN0 ARLREIC S o s | the yellow men on our front after some | % & T A LR PDUEIIAAN - SaionN), AR v i | excoedingly warm work You inusie leksons Up in heavens Farly in the advance they hit me twice, | once In the right hip and once in the left | L hear you when the whippoorwill . all on hix coy mate at twilight « leg. This was when we had got within 150 nili Vwlight on the re of American labor creased steadily in stz while the consis | That party, under the leadership of W, | population of the city has fallen’ |00 Bryan, 1x not different today fnan chief to arrive on the seene of action Just | they did not and men of means who can af as the fighting 1s all over, but, unfortu- | ford to take chances and have made mod tr Chicago. He editor ot ———— whitt 1t has been 0 the past in respect | W1y, the proceedings, under the cireum. [ erato investments n these industrial Attorney General Smyth, Nebrask to the poliey which Lus made this uy. | *@0¢e8. could not wait to bo carried on | They will not be distressed by their W great trust smasher, gives it ont that be | ton the foremost among the ndustrial b P AT Mr has learned several things about trusts | wud commerclal powers of the world | Fhnt's the Question | Bryan ought to rejoice, for he abominates | hemia which we could not cross in the face of the | And sometimes ull night long vou sing durlng bis expedition after the octopl | 1t is now as 1t ever hus heen the enemy | Chicago Inter Ocean [ the former. But. while he takes great com ve says the children of | ferce fire. Our lonoss, which, an 1 said be- | Voicts it 4ol o (o hie' sprif, tn Wall steeet. This i cortainly sur- [ of American industries, American lnbor | '-|" i sl "'H' uited Sistes ace in uc. | fort Iy ruined crops ar 3 closed |"' ories | th ey y away all the m;\l‘;‘w'u- fore, were vory b avy, oscurred »h‘h- we Wanigat chirater (1 thas A s a cord n China. This condition is regarded | gnd impoverished farmers and workiogmen, | honors in South Afri were crossing the fleld which the Chinese prising. Everybody i this neck-o-woods | and - American materlal progress. 1t [ i (gl gine This cindition ta rekardet | and impoverished farert S FBorHES hools eud bear off the 5. They are|were in a position to sweep from their hubes are in thelr nest thought the great trust smasher knew [ does not work for advancement, bt for | | England and by the democratic new | He gloats over & drop in the price of the lawgivers, the magl s, the success- [ trenchments. In fact, they had us at thelr s hird, T Tave thes bast all about the trusts long ago and that | retrogression Its policy Is not for 48 tva cheg in the Scan strictly according to etiquette When speculators and men ealth | M i Taliho nnd Ho. | Y8rds of the village. 1t was impossible to| And when the rosy touch of day dinavian . Itallan and Bo- | 4 jve the Chinese out, on account of a river | the castern fringo of night away | t o thy your pers in this co The British editors, | or cotton. A shrinkuge of $167.000,000 in | ful Larr and she at- [ mercy, practically, during the entire day, but | he could tell where to strike a vulnerable | growth, but for decline. 1t appeals to |10 particular, confess their amazement ans | the relling value of “trus K iy @ it © Dutch Af- | the boys of the Ninth held cvery inch of t polnt in their urmor blindfolded. Cun it | those who would go buckward, rathep | CHagHn that the United States government | matter of some moment vidence | ric f an exceptionally able stock, | apparently untenabie ground they had | & bird ~we jeed thy wong ’ be possible that he sl wore to [ than to those who would go forward, | 008 treat P o S T o T PP A B e e R i i ‘u?kr 8 0 e SEE M g i " by courteously and sympathetically, But why [ But it Is safe to say that of this declive In | drawing strength from | and not ex- | ordered to fa ac went into the et s polic U J ) f | learn about the trusist Its policy Is reactionary and revolution | poyp dprices Mr. Bryan will say notbiug Lposed to the devitaliziog iuflueuce of clties. | bands of the eurgeons after beipg i the radlé-son K vach note some shadow lie Thou bringest musie fresh from paradised