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THE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1900 opponents to yield the sovereignty ¢ me back to my former state Situation is most critical at Manila. The | \f(ll’T‘ I\ \TR“\' ”’TTFR:‘ e Ml b o g t h red ar 1 with of caus Just surgents, abandon our soverelgnty or | has or ever could have. I alse suftersd t LE1Y LY M LETIE i that th o ar e T | rests g . n 't the | gcat nose without the |cede it to them? If that be not their pur GOOD LIYING much with constipation. 1 tried many dif ! sur al velfsmove nmect | 3 . il L0 eans of who believe that | pose then it should be promptly dis ferent medicines which wera recommended e e ) W v v ve were the insurgents |claimed. for only evil can result from th to cure the treuble, but these only made ; in : y Co o ) and prosperity. to a 1 that 2 that they should | hopes ralsed t opponents in the mis . me worse and my condition was more slug President McKinley States Issues of C B A0 TRTves meve o - grous | Tl of the | J . o Indipendat > such let me repeat [of the Filipinos, that wi r shcce glsh and weak than before. My stomach v paign in Forceful Document, | t repre tives p, nsurgen et {or e H which | the fac On May 26, 1898, Admiral I at the polls in November there will t Is Often a Cause of Bad Health, »as 1o such o weak condition that the least . e matter was fully d b St PR instructed to make no alliance | withdrawal of our army and of American and easiest kind of food to digest would get d with \ and promise of a hefr lat the fnha PR [ with any par n in the Philippines | severeignty over the archipelago — sour in my stomach and 1 had such a HONEST MONEY HAS MORE BATTLES TO W A Sesimed neur a1 hasd, T ited is may cor K back t would ty to maintain their | plete independence of the Tagalog et el ST Tk o go WOk and debilitated appearance that it i s | cur commissicners they would return afte de o the day when Ood gave vic: | cause in the f and he replied under | recognized and the powers of governmen Bealth & ]“;‘ . seemed as If 1 had hardly any bleod in my | consulting with their leader, but the ol ot or nd late of June £ 1505. “Have acted over all the other peopl ¢ the kol % ns caute effec npre whole body. Muscles were soft and fabby, Btntexmaniike Review of the Philip. | h Jrotect he - th “d | ing to spirit of department's inst pelago cc ed upon the Tagalog leaders. || ' Will be accepted at onee by any circulation poor and slow. Sufered greatly ‘ ot Sttunti n Which it s oxDF 5 caud: s the beginning, and I have The e t of belief in the minds of | Précticing physician. Co ' ! from cold hands and feet. At last 1 came Thnt Filipinos Were at s ol of 6 al with the ins he nts that this will be done has | '"8 Would demand that ily when across an advertisement of Dr. Pierce's. 1 \lies of Amer sloii It appears| TH® t i 08 | \with ar & squadron can already prolonged the rebellion and in » that e be chosen wrote to them for a question list blank | ter ¢ ihe | Of the 1s a rticiy th & fuce the ot Manila at any moment, | creases the necessity the 0anoe r its nutritive value and then for which I filled out and urned to thew, £ NI b ernment I directed General Ma Be [ put it § A useless until the ate |of & Inrge army. 1t 16 How - palatableness. So-called “'good-1\ing" stating my symptoms and pa To my (Continued from Third Page.) atmy and sen. | Mitary gove of the Philipy t United States forces to | peace in the archipelago an ¢ rees these rules. Meals are taken at great surprise I recelved by return mail L. risonment - amatior . nses lishment of civil governments and ha e, BOuS [Hithout reference to hunger the hest and most substantial advice that we i be ! ny motive b . | tained among other statemen . - ence ¢ of the insurgents agair physical requirements. 1t appetite i8 | gver before read. This advice gave me we sha hirk the mor in wh ol L OB SR el A " | mission. submitted on November 2, 1849, |offered by General MacArthur under m pensary Medical Assoclat Buted 1 S auLhoTIty J§ permunent inavoldihle t fersigned o ' With com- | Admiral Dewey. one of its members. said: | direction. But for these false hopes a con even %o great (hat I at once L3 ry part of Philly rmy. 1R chade bR tare, to all per: No nlliance of any kind was entered | Sderable reduction could have been had | 10ft off all former remedion To leave . cehle control o Ntene TRhomId. | roerty of de - AR 115 Witk ARUIBATAN Bof WUS promise | 10 our military establishment in the Phil- and tried Dr. Pierce's Gol {; ! o e t humantty, 5+ ebruary 4, 18 ye t f ! ndependence made to him at any time.” | IPPines and the realization of a stable ~I}v|n »“ml'h?! ”Nl& nnr])"n“l . hie t . . By et Gtates In wiihet & ¥ i i any t STRMENY would B0 4TFsN0Y At DA | Yleasant Pellets, 180 { D TR R DR LR toned” the s pucliy. ind. whol shall | demeral Morsite wrelved o the BRlTiet | SLEECERE S bl il iz about elght vials of the ‘Pel ! UL B S LU LR gente On-| d ot ninity days pines on July 25, 1858, and a dispatch {rom | Anti-Tmpertalintic Bubbles Pricked. | lets’ and tem bottles of the ]‘ {iie United Biate g AR raelves and i . 1 ‘\ vl At o ATV ustesery. | THE AmeEl re asked by our ‘Discovery,’ which brought cept Aguinaldo have sin, fon until the rebellion was suppressed and | 17\'n “shrrer i f P . , . e t i United States fn the Philippines to a small of health bilities an titeultie " T i { [ fufunde. The pr Al ‘:"""“ ,‘":'I""“"“r el "'\':"““ T | fraction of the population, a single tribe MIGHT 18 RIGHT." but one § wccentance | 1o’ submission The o ton 1a of ihe | 18 extended to all ALY _“‘"' to " deal with the insurgents under |OUt Of elghty OF more inhabiting the archi- not in mounopoly, but fn of the arcl es and | o Bt there has AR Tolat v \euinaldo. whe have become aggressive | P€Iag0. @ fraction which wantonly attacked medicine. The medicine that more ser mistraiive | e’ desiruyonoe " [ arin th I or fettve nostilitles are | AGuIDaldn R0 b e e army.~ | the American troops in Manila while in has the might and power cuny, otner | by Admiral Dewey when ol embraced - within [ Hore is vevealed the spirit of the fnsurg. | [1EDtful possession under the protocol with to cure such a diseased con- st con- [ With honor irselves T order to m as much as possible | Here 18 revealed the SpIE 8 A re the | SPAID, awaiting the ratification of the dition as Mr. Fensterma gonclusion | o the inhabita * es resulting from th tg | oF r "‘ b H“'W" while we were still | {Teaty of peace by the senate, and which er's is the right medicine te ' 10 tha president sir it departure he | Arar the most thorough study of the peo ; measure for desitute Filiptio [ SRETEST T FrC 0 O o threatening our | amainst the United States. We are asked forms of diseasa. Dr. ! has beer) 1o Peitea: | plo of the archinelapo the commission re. | %oldlers during the transitory period which | et to tramsfer our sovereignty to a small mi- Plerce’s Golden Medical Dia- ! {ion of duty a R o pust inevitably qucqeet J 0.+ e [nority in the islands without consulting overy cures discases of the ondition of Spn s Thelr Tack 0f sducation and politieal ox: | Statex will pay 30 pesos to each man who| Filipinos at Captare of Manila. the majority and to abandon the largest stomach and other organs of ton thy e erfence, combined with thelr ractal and ¥ n good conditio On August 13 Manila was captured and | portion of the population, which has been digestion and nutrition. It fome from ls | | gulstic diveratfes. isouality them, tructions the commisslon. | o¢ this and subsequent events the Phillp- | 1oyal to us, to the crueltics of the guer- nables the fect dige technical obligation it y -t 18k of omposed of repretentative Americans of || mmission says When the city | pjlla fnsurgent bands. More than this, we tion and assimilation | Again, on November 13, I instructed the &« i elago at the present f} Mferent sections of the country and from |o¢ yanila was taken August 13 the Fill- | 4ro asked to protect this minority in es- food o that the body {s comminsie X t that xr of tham | different political parties, whose character | pinge took no part in the attack, but came | aplishing a government and to this end built up in nature's own and fobisdligg A Rernntt n, to co-onera ) \ ability guaranty the most faithful in- | following in with a view to 100ting the | repress all opposition of the majority. We only way, by food perfectly e Arehipelngoes tieo and | the | Sfaniia s o conter i I natriotic service, are now | .y and were only prevented from doing | aro required to set up a stable govern digested and assimilated expe bt astd 10 we 1ot owe | inuy ‘e ‘Thund nece Y establish stable government |, by pur forces preventing them from en- | mane jn the interest of those who have Organs remote from the SEpenten, but o 2 e ot give | m s G trol. fn which the inhabitants | (ering. Aguinaldo claimed that he had the | oailed our sovereignty and fired upon 0re often used to fnduce a false appetite. stomach are often involved with it fn dis pines whic | Lo return | o . ] b | Shall participate. giving them opportunity | right to occupy the city: he demanded of | yup goldiers and then maintain it at any | Food is not chosen with regard to i1 nu- ease because of its failure to supply ths them to the %oy uin Id | Should our powe bl to demonstrate how far they are prepared | General Merritt the palace of Malacanan | .oet or sa o against its enemies within | (ritive value, but for its pleasure to the nutrition on which the strength of each or Sl pry ouse N8 Morthe oihar | paDgremn the vl | tor self-government | for himselt and the cession of all the |4 against those having ambitious de-|Dalate. As a natural result the stomach is gan depends iolden Medical Discovery” pawer we have the res Bredily Japse. into woull [ Cpnig commission, under date of August [ churches of Manila, also that a part of | ¢ione“trom without over-loaded with a quantity of Innutritious cures these diseases of heart, liver, lungs, $ioliity of 'h we cannot escape e, If It did not Iner: | 21, 1900, makes a eresting report, from | ihe money taken from the Spaniards as | mhis would require an army and mavy |material and the body Is deprived of its kidnoys and other organs, by curing the o orh SN bl any i Gk e gthp 11| which 1 quote (he followin extracts spoils of war should be given up, and|g i 'jarcer than {s now maintained in the | Aue nourishment, Presently disease of the cause of disease in the stomach and its al thing but e ment In the future. | ¢ through Americar upation, thees- | Hostitity to A {above all that he should be given the arms | priinnines and still more in excess of |Stomach and digestive and nutritive svs- ljed organs of digestion and nutrition the (hdetats Gost of the wat, ape | and united PHilbpine comonweaith at afl | Jinst ns was origl- |of the Spanish prisoners. All these de- | ypat will be necessary with the full recog. | (éms bexins, frequently involving heart, “I have received more benefit from your questions we might vield They might be | concelvable it e by at ods of un: [mands were refused ‘ullwn of our sovereignty. A military sup- | !iver, kidneys and other organs medicine than anything 1 have taken.'* M e T SRS B LB (Rl v B L B et distribution ot~ Genorals Merritt, Greene and Anderson, [ port of authority not our own at thus pro- | THE PROSPERITY OF AMERICA writes Mrs. N. Bernier of 461 Eim street dent sy strongly thit "he Can find no appro- | in . forbiading. our abandoiment «f g i i Wemitfly Tmproved | who were in command at the beginning of | Lo o js the very essence of militarism, | ¥I¥eS every mam the opportunity for good Oshkosh, Wis. “I had liver complatat for ’ priate answer but the one he has here | archipeligo. We cannot from any point of e, This fmprovement is fur- | our occeupation, and until the surrender | (yih our onnonents in their platform op. |11Ving and almost every man takes advan- the last ffteen years, complicated with U o the responsibiiities of Fovsr: xew of ingargents. Larke [ of Manila, state that there was no alliance | £ 08 F BEEORE S s would of | {age of the opportunity. The average lab- dyspepsia and gall ston I huve doc- The treaty of peace was concluded on De- | Ment which our woverelsnty entatlt and » long for peace and ure | U ive” lnsurgents and no promise to [ Dote ot oEoh T L P vt awen | OFer in the United States lives as only very tored with seves of our prominett deosocs comber 10, 1808, By its torms the archi- | \le oontnrmanee of our tatianal duty wi wulfgenta 1ot sarrendering | them of independence. OB August 17, 1898, | (LT prosperous people can live in Europe. He and not one of all of them have done mo pelago known as the Philippi fslands was | prove the greatest hle si to the people tivided Iny mi wguertilla | Goneral Merritt was instructed that there | lives too well. It is a singular thing to the good, or began to do, what your medi« ceded by Spain to the United States, It was | O the Philippine ixlands k T timent gen. [ must be no joint occupation of Manila | No Surrender to Murderers. ay, but it i3 nevertheless a fact that one cines have. I have used three bottles of also provided that “the civil rights and po- | Satisfled that mothing further could berobbers SEAEv 8108 o B ox- | with the insurgents. General Anderson.| The American people will not make the |of the greatest evidences of national pros- Dr. Plerce's Golden Medical Discovery. one 1itical status of the native inhabitants of the 8¢ orplished in pursuance of their mis | [ en vaptured of | ypder date of February 10, 1900, says that | murderers of ouresoldiers the agents of perity is found in the great army of dys- vial of his ‘Pleasant I llets' and one bottle territer ea hereby ceded to the United Stat R \dered tuken e oath ofihe was present at the interview | (he republic to convey the blessings of libs | peptics which are being newly recruited of Dr. Plerce’s Favorite Prescription, and degiring to place hefore the congress the | allegtance . All northern Luzon ex ) § | e e t 5 il i shall b letermined by the congr | fept 1wo provinces substantially free from | between Admiral Dewey and he |erty and order to the Philippines. They every day in the year by good livers. The have gained about eighteen pounds since | Fleven days thereafter, on December 21, the | TeSUlt of thelr observations 1 requested | {0 L0 (T oG nle busy planting and ask- | jnsurgent leader, and that in this |will not make them the builders of the new it trouble is that when a man wakes first began to take these remedies. (us L following dircetion was given to the com- |'he commission fo return to the United|ing ior municipal organization. Hailwav|i,iorview Admiral Dewey made 10 (commonwealth. Such a course would be up o the fact that his stomach can’t be say truthfully that your medicine fs the mander of our forces in the Philippines States. Their most intelllgent and com- |t FEERTaph H o M 4V monthe. | promises whatever. He adds: “He (Agul- | g betrayal of our sacred obligations to the | abused with impunity, the damage is al- best I ever found for liver complaint and * ¢ ¢ The military commander of the |Prehensive report was submitted to con-|.%, ) ctive in deading [paldo) asked me if my government Was |peaceful Filipinos and would place at the ready done. He has joined the army of dyspepsia.” N A e v o e A G Helgh o o e om: | koing to recognize his government. F|mercy of dangerous adventurers the liy ptice, the people with “weak” stom- There is no alcohol in “Golden Medical that in' succeeding to the savereignty Civil Commission Nawmed, other Ph fslands lttle dist Iite |answered that T was there simply in @ mili- | and property of the natives and foreigners He can't eat much now without it Discovery,” amd it is entirely free from Bpadn, in severing the former political rela In March, 1900, believing that the insur- | yjers civil goveinment eagery | pary capacity: that I could not acknowledge | 1t would make possible and easy the come rts him. His stomach seems unduly dis- gpjum, cocaine and all other narcotics. B e poleent e T oAl ehing | rection was practically ended and earnestly fawalted, &8 5 Four srars of War Wit pis government, because I had Do authority | mission of such atrocities as were secretly fended after eating. There ure bitter ris- Sometimes the dealer, tempted by the Trnited Stites i 10 b oxertad for the secur. | 4esIFing to promote the establishment of | oW Gseness i BAVER DEIIGNGs VR TR 6 do w0, planned to be executed on the 224 of Feb. Ings and belchings, a constant feeling of Iittle more profit paid by less meritorious § { the persons and property of the peo- | stable government fn the archipelago, 1| <tabwlary and militi, which should be o Posers for Popoerats. ruary, 1899, in the city of Manila, when |discomfort and weight in the region of the medicines, will offer substitute ¢ ' ple of the fslands and for the confrmation | appointed the following civil commission: [ anized at once, will ‘end this and the ter- ’ sdverekrich b ly the vigilance of our army prevented | tomach. Probably, too, the liver becomes “Golden Medical Discovery,” claiming thal of all thelr private rights and relations. 1t : A an | rorism to which defenscloss people are <ib- | Would not our adversaries have sent |only Wil be the iy of the communder of the | HOn. Willlam H. Taft of Ohlo, Prof. Dean | Foriam tg,which, daleniiems PRS0 N0l | hewes's fleet to Manila to capture and |the attempt to assassinate our soldicrs [SIukgish, and there fs a feeling of lassitude ft fs “just as good.” Substitutes are al- T o O O B DEO [ G O aree. T thomey b e | S L o o o IC1L | deatroy. the Bpaniah sea powsr thure; or;|and all foreigners and plilage and destroy | With headache SIRYS BURPIRIOUS: Y LG ORIZWRY £0; U8 WU GOMB.NOR AR Insidete or conatarare. bib ug | Wrisht of Tenfiesses, Hon Henty T | Wiuter and will permit aarly mite- | dispatching it there, would they have [the eity and its surroundings. In short, hese are only a few of the signs and of the cure you seek is to get the medicing gome not s Invaderk or congiierors, but 48 | 5t vermont and Hon. Bernard Moses of [ nance of order a ; [ dispatc i . friends, to protect the nutives in their | rial reduction of United homes, {n_their ¢ personal and relig tates troo Aployments and in their | California. My instructions to them con- &% S Tithing the tslands over to a cotar] s rights t d the following of Tagalog politicians will blight fair pre Py PRITIRPING" Contllanto alned the following | pects of enormous fmprovement, drive out | would they have directed it to sall? Where capital, make life and property, secular and | would it have gone? What port in the In order to facilitate the most humane, | ‘D religlois, most insecure: banish by fear of the proposition of those opposed to us fa | SYmptoms of a disgased stomach Involving which cured others—"Golden Medical Dis: to continue all the obligations in the Phil- | the other organs of mu--s‘n-lr; and nu'ruu:n. covery,” ippines which now t upon t ZOve Discase won't cure itself, so it's . . 3 n Bt oI T"huuzmg e ."';h.: “trom | folly to neglect treatment thinking “it will NOT FOR SALE : i Danish by fear of | T was opened to {t? Do our adver- | principal, which now exists, to that of be all right again after a time. Dr. Piorce's colebrated work, the “Peo- e imon W h Bave alded Ammer- | saries condemn . the eypefition under the ty. Our responsibility is to remain,| Disease never stands still, so that every ple's Common Sense Medical Adviser,” is cans in the well-founided bellef that their | .ommand of General Merriit to strengthen |but our power is to be diminished. Our |day's delay in using the right treatment not for sale. 1t is sent free on receipt of withdravn it after the destriction of the Spanish fleet; and if the latter, whither (the secretary of war) will instruet commission * * * to devote their at 1 in the first instance to the estab- governments in ands, hoth in the | entl pacific and effective extension of authority | lishment of ~municipa su throughont the e islands and to secure, | which the natives of th With the least possible delay, the henefivs | TS RAd, T8 TS iees, ComBnnies., Shete | beople are not now fit for selt-government | {FRE S 0501 ant ocean and assist in | obligation 18 o be no less, but our titie (Weans a worse condition stamps to pay expense of mailing only, of a wise and generous protection of 1ife | own incal affalre to fhe fullest exient 17 | and reinteodice some oppression’and cor O mph over Spain, with which na- |18 to be surrendered to another power,| “I Was a great sufferer from dyspepsia This valuable guide to health contains 1,00f . n loca lrs to extent of | Lition which existed In all provinees under | our triump er Spain, & | & # stile go pages and 7 . 4 and property 1o the inhabltants, 1 ap- | which ties are capivie and subject to e | St "insineent kovernment Guring (e | fon we were at war? Was ft not our | which is without experience o (raluug, or | 0F OVer two years, and I was a complete largo pages and 700 fllustrations. Send 31 pofnted In January, 1885, a commission conslsting of Hon. Jacob Gould S-hurman oight months of its control. The result wi ult will | |0 (et duty to strike Spain at every [the ability to maintain a stable govern- |Physical wreck,” writes Mr. Preston . one-cent stamps for the volume fn cloth 8 e | e hoint that the war might be ment at home and absolutely helpless to | Fenstermacher of Egypt, Lehigh Co. Pa. binding or only 21 stamps for the book fn n- | successfully concluded at the earliest prac- | perform its international obligations with | '1ad many torturing, gnawing and aching paper covers. — Address Dr. R. V. Plerce, e the rest of the world, To this we are op. | Dains,—I think about all that a dyspeptic Buffalo, N. Y. e T e A hetin | And was It not our duty to protect the|posed. We should not yield our title while “ultivation than ever bafore. New forestry | ives and property of those who came|our obligations last. In the language of . ] Fegalations wive impetus to timber trade | Nves ARG PIOPORL O e fortunes of war?| our platform. “Our authority should met | tions. and when they make treaties must| We are gratetul to our ewn soldiers ant 1 reduee high price of lumber | A , { keep them sailors and marines, and to all the brave ! A ! | comtd 3 » come away at any time|be less than our responsibility,” and our 4 customs collections for last quarter | Could we have come a suivinia DEnisa; men who, though assembled under many 'I"I”"\ 0 per cent greater than ever in Spanish | petween May 1, 1898, and the conclusion of | present responsibility is to establish our | In which ‘a careful study of their capacities and observation of the workings of native of New York, Admiral George Dewey, U.|control show to be consistent with the 8. N, Hon. Charles Denby of Indiana, | Maintenance of law, order and loyalty At DRI W ETEeMERR BE MIShIk 1 ¢ Whenever the commission s of the B A0 cester of Michigan and | opinfon that Me condition of affairs in the Major General Elwell Otfs. U. 8. A. Their | islands is such that the control of adminis T o E en L kin e the L foltD iration may safely be transferred from mil- m;,.l‘lh,lly,:'m et In yl;m’dl,l.\“j?" m- | 11Ty (o civil control they will report that missioners a joined ‘to meet at the | SOnclusion to you (the secretary of war) with their recommendations as to th earliest possible day In the city of Manila | It Hhelr pecommendations as to th | he factional strife between jealo | chaos und snarchy and will r justify active intervention of our gove ment some other. * ® * Rusiness — and to_announce by public proclamation, | Of Central Kovernm i ol | history and August collections show fur- | ..o without a stain upon our good name? | authority in every part of the islands. | Those who profess to distrust the liberal | Standards representing peoples and races their presence and the mission intrusted to | the purpose of taking over the control ther {ncrense total revenue for same | Pe4 ‘ gk strangers in country and speech, were yet them. carefuily settine forth t while Beginning with the first day of Septem- | boriod one-third greater than in any quar- | Could we have come away without dis No goverament can 80 certainly preserve | and honorable purposes of the administra united in the sacred mission of carryin the mility government already pro- [ Der. 190, the authority to excreise, subject | far ynder Spain, though cedula tax, chief [ hopor at any time after the ratification |the peace, restore public order, establish | tion in its treatment of the Philippines are | United ": ‘. s ‘."l o (i ORTTINE M9 slamed 8 to be maintained and continued | 10 My roval, through the secretary of | j,yrce anish revenue, practically abol- | 0"y o “Soqce treaty by the senate of the |law, § cor to the besleged with a success that is *d | war, that part of the power of government tice and stable conditions as ours. | not justified. Imperialism has no place ko lony as necessity may requi shed. Iiconomy and M . I ency of military P A Tolier o i sttt s ‘ o now the cause of a world's rejoleing. o a loviate the burdan ot | in the Philippine talands which 18 of a lekis- | Wi\ arnment. have. orested ourolus fund of | United States Neither congress nor the cxecutive can |in its creed or conduet. Freedom is & Rt d LB S 4 tion, to establish industrial and com- | 13tive nature 18 to be transferred from the | §7000000, which should be expended in much lhere has been no time since the de-|cstablish a stable government in these | rock upon which the republican party was| ° taxation, Htary g 9 | Ther tng for our material blessings, but hould mercial snerity and to provide for the | WIGATS | Kovernor of the lslands to| (Wl raeded public works, notably improvement | (i ruction of the enemy's fleet when welislands except under our right of sov- | builded and now rests. Liberty fs the|IDE for our materis RHES, DULING BR0N Yeons and of property by s commisslon, to he thereafter exercised by | of Manila harbor. ® * ¢ With proper | Structl 1 Mo Phtlinoinnlsreignty. Niriabthor A& ot et | i b the |Te0lce in the complete uuification of tha r 1y Lo fourd conduelve to these [ them In the place and stead of the military | Gieiee and facilities Manfla will beeome | could or should have left the Philippin elg ur authority and our flag. An | great republican doctrine for which the Bhoble ot allicestlonaiot un oot e e e Koveriior ”\uuhl such rules and r »uanMl*lJu“( port of Orlent archipelago. After the treaty of peace|this we are doing. | people went to war and for which 1,000,000 25 Banbilyidevelorani tn elin dRat tav 5 ) i commiselgnen Wi cieavor, Ml | acribe. until. the sstabilshment U Commission Fall of Hope was ratified no power but congress could | We could mot do it as a protectorate | lives were offered and billlons of dollars | 0 RAPPILY, developed | aarte oA dal tiak of ‘the United Brates non in control of | centrul government for the (slinds con-| The commission {s confident that “by a | surrender our sovereignty or alienate ajpower so completely or so successtully | expended to make it a lawful degacy of all | ®o W P8 S0 T TS B B thie Philippines, to dsceriain whit amellora | templined I the W3t forecolng paragfuph | yugielous customs law, reasonable land tax | foot of the territory thus acquired. The as we are doing it now. Aa the sovereign | without the consent of master or slave.| the °PELCTAUIAN of ol “ifletences, h ) i the condition or the habitants an r ntil congress ah. otherwise rovide ” P . " P t to da o ol * e ca ate actiol and shape | There a stra of ~concealed hypocrisy col on devotio e fia 4 » B T rmenta i oLt Crder may be | Exercise of this legislative authority will | and proper corporation franchise tax, im- | congress has not seen fit to do the one o1 | power we can Initiate action and shape | There is a strain of ill-concealed hypocri bty ooty ool s e 3 * pse nelude the malung of rules and orders the other and the president had mo au-|means to ends and guide the Filipinos to | in the anxicty to extend the constitutional praciical uc for th's purpose they wiil he making of rules and orders ha sition of no grester rate than that in | the other an v | shown by the men of the norih and southeln Pro e N rantively ‘tho exinting. wo and | Ing the effect of law for the raising of reve- | g5 o oo T B0 e, will give less | thority to do either if he had been so in-|self-development and self-government. As |guaranties to the people of the Philip- 4 ! Folitieal state of the Var ou Hlatjons, Y taxes, customs duties and fmposts averag, L state, glve les S 1ch 1o ‘was mot, B0 long as.the|s protectorate power we could not Initiate | pinos, while their nullification is openiy|th® Spanish war, bave so strengthened the Jartieuiarly as rtegends the forms of local | the appropriation and expenditure of the | apn e and with peace will produce | clined, which a | A h o | ties of friendship and mutual respect thas kOLernniont, ‘the comini ation oo gusiies, | public funds of the islands: the establish: | revenues sufficient to pay the expenses of | sovereiguty remains in us it Is the duty |action, but would be compelicd to follow | advocated at home. Our opponents may |16 oF (ERAVD 0O FIAEAL respect tha e ‘Colloe tien of (iEtome and Other taxes, | ment of a system to secure an effclent civil ¢ the exccutive, whoever he may be, to and uphold a people with no capacity yet | distrust themselves, but they have no g B Ottt and the heed | Borvice; the organtgation ann eamu rtroah | eMcient government, including militia and | of the e . ML CRE | RS R RS R RS ANLRINS SAPARATATAL | QIR TE N TR SR TS AT tion faces the new century gratefully and ot Mic amprovem ey will report | of municiral and departmental govern- | constabulary.” They ‘‘are preparing a [uphold that sovereignty und i oword a A LS OARL. DTOs | RIGHY. S0 (BINGESY Lt S PU | hopetully, with fncreasing love of country, Sranubiie smbpaven atlons and re- | ments and all other matters of a civil | stringent civil service law, glving equal | tacked to suppress its assallants. Would | tect both ourselves ar Filipinos {rom | triotism of the mafority of the people, who | WRRIYILY IR INCYeMsing love of country, fhetions and witl T nd such execu- | nature for which the military governor is . litical adversaries do less? being involved in dangerous complications; [are opposing them; they may fear the thve acticn as muy (om tmie to time seem | now competent to provide by rules or | 0PPOrtunity to Filipinos and Americans, | our political o . : T T e e P e ALt ¢ imperialism with the help-| W\th high resolves that they “shall not per- 1o th wise and usefnl orders of i legislative character. The com- | with preference for the former where | Answer to Silly Charge i '1 " l‘ o s yorss romn (,'. SBRAPIaITS ROl ish from the earth* Very respectfully o commbssiorers wr hereby authorised | misslon will wiso huve power durine the | qualifications are equal, to enter by lowest [ It has been assorted that there would [Flllpinos until atter their trouble. had [ ,\‘l-lllplillm in llu;’ir I|i\n\l~_ but 111 ey |y, WILLIAM M'KINLBY to cantet Ruthoritative ith any persons | wame period to appoint to office such officers £ s Philippines | COMe. Besides, if we cannot establish any | do, it is because they have parted with | § i il resident in the Islands from whom they | under the judicial, educational of rank and by promotion reach the head of | have been no fighting in the Philippines | ©" " e s riadl By 5 i ——— okt of may belleve themuelves able to derive In- | survice syatems aiid fn the municipal ‘nd | the department. * ¢ ¢ Forty-five miles | if congress had declared its purpose to| BOYSrRment of our own without the con- | the spirit and falth of the fthers and| Work om Gering Canal. formation o suggestions vildbie for th ftmental governments as shall be pre- | of ratirond extension under negotiation | give independence to the Tagal insurgents. |42t of the governcd, as our opponeats con- | have lost the virility of n’m founders of | GERING, Neb., Sept. 8.—(Spectal.)—Werk PRy may ‘choose to employ as ngents, as | will give access to a large province rich|The fnsurgents did mot walt for the ac- ['end. th "'“; :"' not "4)‘“‘ h a stal the which th prof {0 repre-| s progressing rapidly upon the construc may he hecossary for (hix purpoxe. | t Respect Life and Liberty. in valuable minerals, a mile high, with|tion of congress. They assumed the of-|Sovernmeat for them or make ours a pro- | sent tion of the Gering canal and there {8 ne Wity destre that In il thele relation | Until cougress shall take action I directed | strictly temperate climate. * ¢ * Rail- | fensive, they opened fire on our Army m;:?:‘"n.““hv””.- IVIuV(h'I;»- consent, and Record of Republican Party. | question that the line will be finisbed in tommissioners exercise due respect for a:l | that road copstruction will give employment to| Those who assert our responsibility for |Be 'Irw A :Jym‘u ‘m\ 1‘-’) : :"\“ll;-' nor i republican party does not have to|time to furnish water for an extensive the ideals, customs mdl.n stitations of the | K}‘[‘I’:-n:-‘l~;r> ':‘\1"“.“-“ i many and communication will furnish mar- | the beginning of the conflict have forgot- """"" H" “" pe “‘l'“ ’[-' b ["' LBl 1Y its devotion to the Declaration of | tract about the town of Gering for next ] Dhastaing upon AN occasions the Just and | ba mposed the Ket to vast stretches of rich agricultural [ ten that before the treaty was ratified in|dstume it. W could not matntain & p0- | jnjopondence. That immortal instrument | SPring and the territory will sottle up this 1 herefcent intentions of the goverrment of [ 1o person shall lands. " the senate and while it was being debated ‘n\c’rnw‘i b o .“H“‘, M‘\m‘m”“ fop | Of the fathers remained unexecuted until [ Winter. Something like sixty teams are at the Unlted Btatey. It vlas oy wleh and | e it "hehats Bonous,dis process of |~ The report states there are “calls from | in that body, and while the Bacon reso- fudioe vt Rk SIRE. T wars " Oup | the people under the lead of the repub- [ Work, but Messrs. T. C. Heury and E. beciation that the commissiners may | lw; tha ate property s 0t be | 4 | conflicts and possibly cos vars. O i YAt o DA recetyed in i manner due to the hon- | taken for public use witho 1t just compen: | a1l parts of the islands for public schools, | lution was under discussion, on February Tights in the Philippines are now free from | MCAN PArty in the awful clash of battle Miller, who have the work in hand, have 1 oved und Authorized representatives of the | sation. that in all criminal proecutions the | school supplies and English teachers, | 4, 1899, the insurgents attacked the Ameri- Gl | turned its promises into fulfillment, It|not yet been able to secure all the force £ Amaricnn republic, duly cemmiptioned lon | acotisad, shall snjoy the right | greater than the commission can provide | can army, after being previously advised |Outside nm-rr-'-n-w‘vl and. wii mn'“-l"l" “0 | wrote into the constitution the amend-|desired. The prospects now are that there ant of their Know led skill and in- | and public W, to be inforn 1 X 3 rese elation. They would not > e i tenrity an hearers of the good will. the | nature and caise of the 18 until a comprehensive school system is | that the American forces were under or~!:"‘ s tree i any other retariond Yot | ments guaranteeing political equality to| will bo public works of one kind and an H srotection and the richest blessings of a | confronted with the witnesses ag rganized. Night schools for teach Eng- | ders not to fire upon them except in wn-]""“ ‘H‘ ll\. ‘H “"[ ’. BRIl .wnH v erican citizenship and it has never | Other in progress here all winter, so that 4 {iberating, rather than & conuuering, na- | Bl B0 Ay o o P ovar £ °ts | lish to adults are being established In re. | defense. The papers found in the recently [ Will DOt Elve Up our own to guarar 1 | broken them or counseled others in break- | there will be employment for all who want T e YR [ have ™ (i assistance of colinsel for |sponse to popular demand. Native chil- | captured archives of the insurgents demon- . 8 ing them. It will not gulded in its | work ‘ .’ b " - Dis defense; that cxcessive ball shall not | dren show aptitude In learning English; | strate that this attack had been carefully | United States Has Good Title, onduct by one set of principles at home J fn ,",'mhl"h th r,‘.“”.» t v: 3 l"r |m1 or oruel and unasunl punishment tniloieq: | Spanish ts spoken by a small fraction of | planned for weeks before it occurred.| oo ¢ 4iie ig good. Our peace commis- | And another in the new territory belouging | .\ ppg opt. 9.—(Speclal.)— was ra " ”'_ :‘ % ':':‘ o ”"' I“’ Cfthat "o person shall be put twice in | the people and in a few vears the medium | Their umprovoked assault upon our sol- | g nore palioved they were receiving & good | 10 the United States Iward Nels who lives seven miles Sala Do $20.000.000 to oarry out ite pr. | doapards for the sume offense L% COM- | of communication In the courts, public [diers at a time when the senste was | title when they concluded the treaty. The| If our opponents would only practice| oy 0ot or this place, started last night D The ratifications. ware exchanged | hess againat himaeif: that righ offices and between different tribes will | liberating upon the treaty shows that no |, ooy(ive believed it was a good title when [ @8 Well as preach the doctrines of Abra- | ool 0% 5oy o hicwite to the asylum. \w“h"-l' i “| Shalse it s i rl‘““; secu Kulnst unredsonable search be English: creation of a central govern- |action on our part except surrender and|yo u pyiireq it to the senate of the Unitea [ ham Lincoln there would be no fear for |yt "G0E 7 M (T B8 000 (0 P00 months ) D e gy, | ten and Spain on the T1th | selznrew shall pot he vlolated, (hatnLher | ment within eighteen months, under which | abandonment would have prevented the |groio."tor ity ratification. The senate be- | the safety of our institutions at home or | Mrh Selfon | hospital at Omaha until re- ikl April, 1899, the Phil exist A8 8 punishment rime; | substanttally all rights described in the | fighting and leaves no doubt i auy fAlr|}iovq i wag a good title when they gave | (helr rightful influence fn any territory | (0 N (0 B (R0 AL FUTENS HEER e As early as April, the Philippines {10 of attainder. or ex-postfacto | bill of rights in the federal constitution, | mind of where the responsibility rests for | ("o 0 5 b o B cont, and the con- | over which our flag floats Aghied h commission, of which Dr. Schurman was | liw shall be passed: that 1o law shall be rican blood Al 4 h f vortn Taiog | 10 her RO insane i jeavored to bring at Dbt bridg i e fracdom bf Specih oe |are to be secured to the people of the | the shedding of American blood gress seems not to have doubted its com- mpire has been expelled from Porto Rico o D e hnte by repentod bonternoace | B 'the press, or the rights of the people to | Philippines and will bring to them con- [ With all the exaggerated phrase-makiDg | pioioness when they appropriated $20,000 1 the Philippines by American freemen ' Carpenters Quit Work, D e loms, renresemorenees | peaceably agsemble and petition the gov- | tentment, prosperity, education and polit- | of this electoral contest, we are in danger | foo" "ol la by e ‘treaty, 1 any whe |The fiag of the republic now floats over| CHICAGO, Sept. 8.—Open hostilitics be- with _l"““"“ RUAIOND, ERRPAA 8 R ""l R O Tt It HIAL [i1og) anlighisnmant” | of being diverted from the real conten- [, . o™ R PR on Dell " thesa islands as an emblem of rightful sov- | tween contractors and union labor were re T T PR R P ment of religion, or prohibiting the i y . | tion & bad title, they were not ereig Will the republic stay and dis- [sumed yesterday when at noon about 2,600 :‘h‘.nh ~|w\|u"u(lll|-lu i an }v‘ hx-lvn-\m‘ 0t | frea oxercise thereof, and that the fre ‘llll RE WAS NO ALLIANCE AT ALL. ryan Must Shoulder Blame. title 18 kinat I THen Tion T that to their inhabitants the blessings of |union carpenters quit work. The contractors t be offered to them which they would | exercise and enjovment of religlous pro . o e N 4 te ee Institut | o & A s . 8o great was the satisfaction | [*%8ion and worship without discrimina- (Ne Sort of Agreement Existed Between We are in agreement with all of those|under which we hold our territory a y. education and free in i 8. or [ refused to accede save during the summer. coey S0 & L L oEi0n | e rants Alell farever bs RIlawas s . away leaving them to anarch rs and Fili who supported the war with Spain and|guired since the im- | The carpenters had returned to work for of the Insurgent commissioners with the ginni g of the gove form of government proposed by the Amer- | Advanccment of Ddueation | This shows to my countrymen what has | also with those who counseled (.hu- lrnn- ment and under which we have exercised | ¥ _““ T ST e R :I\W,‘“;v‘r“ tors Ilyx:rh-lv’rx‘:‘rlul :W'rml;'u ]lmm foan commissioners that the latter sub- | )t Will be the duty of the commission to |been and is being done to bring the benefits | fication of the treaty of —peac PO | full sovereignty and established # [[/RRA AMALIGAR BUS ween duly | their unions, although the ~bix _butldias Titted he. proposed scheme to me for an | Miamete and extend and, ae they find oc- fof liberty and good government to these | these iwo great casential steps there can|ment for the fahabitants [and desertion—the American verdict Wil be | rades strike stll continues, affecing 40,- REAval and my matioh ibsvaon: s shown | HON Riea laugurated by the military | Wards of the nation, Every effort has been | be no issue and out of these came all| 1t i3 worthy of note that no one out op duty and s Iy “’ ", 1 e re- {000 men AR SN AR withorities.” In dolng this they should re- |directed to their peace and prosperity, | of our responsibilities. 1f others would | o the United States disputes the fullness | I BEAIBNL both:aparohy ARQ imperials | oW o P 7108 RIS BIOUNAR ne gard as of first importance the extension | yheir advance! . ot Lo shirk the obligations fmposed by the war| (BB S il m Train Robber Must Die. May 5 N —Schurmun, Mintln: ¥ | an of first importance the eXteulon | their advancement and well being, not for | shirk the & P b |and integrity of the n at thel I opasanup Raghernst Riec % of the 4th recelved You are auth r il be free to all and which shall tend | our aggrandizement nor for pride of might, | and the treaty, we must decline to act|is the real Issue on this subject? Whether | United Staten and China, or ywh a8 “Black Juck,” the noted :‘-" oy r'__"v.“\‘r’ i |v£ v "i "'H"' ¥, power m fie | "i ..,'w].‘ for lm ,l' itles ;;v”.‘m‘,.‘ n- |not for trade or commerce, not for exploita- | further with them and here the issue Was | it {s paramount te any other or nc | untry has been fully advised of the ! “ of o) ,-'"Tf“, (v#-v_ ”V-:r‘ of the president, pending aet Tatannie | S B Jom e prdinary: yocations € @ |tion, but for humanity and civilization and | made. It is our purpose 10 establish in|whether we shall be responsibl of the United States in China, and | Jouthweat for seversl yesrs. shall consist of a governor general ap- | tenty should be at once given to af- | for the protection of the vast majority of | the Fhilippines a government suitable to|government of the Philippine 1 be fait y adhered to as alread r which in New Mexico 18 death '] pjntad By, the Veneral o geh- | fpedine Uil opportunity to all the people of | the population, who welcome our sov- [ the wants and conditions of the inhabitants | sovereignty and authority whi / e AR TR TR LR g Ay, dcauire the use of the EUS- | arejgnty against the designing minority [and to prepare them for self-government |io guide them to regulate ation fs filled with grat bat the ple. the qualifications « lectors to b officers and employes of the [ Whose first demand after the surrender of [and to give them self-government whed |gafety and progress, or wheth and, ameng them many of our owr CABTOILIA., carefully constdered and dete States, both clvil and military, | Manila by the Spanish army was to enter | they are ready for it. That I am aiming pe responsible for the forcible a who for two months have been sub The Kind You Have Always Bought the governor general to ha o | be impressed a sense of the duly | . gt Boare the veto. Judiclary strong and independent, | Not merely the materinl, hut | the city that they might loot it and de- [to do under my constitutional authority | irary government of a minority to privations and peril o at e principal judges apiolited by the vrests | the personal and socinl rights of the peo- [stroy those not in sympathy with their [and will continue to do until congress | sovereignty and authority on o pitiless hordes at the Chinese caj 8 ;;-v‘;v ;!('_h“l:fl ot and_Siidges b .}'mwh“ B -;!”l“"w a ds o 1 to treat the m .'?‘L”r‘ | selfish and treacherous designs shall determine the political status of the | with only the embarrassment of a pro al, exhi g supreme courage iu the fa o R ol e T4 'he president’ earn ot ety b 4 UURRCLT le of the | Nobody who will avall himself of the | inhabitants of the archipelago. tectorate which draws us into their trou- [of de have been enabled by Qod's favor CASTONRTIA. | i'nited States ure accustomed to require |facts will longer hold that there was any | Are our opponents against the treaty? |ples without the power of preventing them. | to greet roe s and find shelter un Tie Kind You Have Always Bought E—————————— | (rom vach other, J ¢ the oity |8111ARCe between our soldiers and the In- |If 50, they must be reminded that it could | There are those who two years ago were | der thelr own flag srethe NOTE--325 prizes of Greenbacks and Gold | o¢ Manila o the 1505 ot inat’ 148 oMY | surgents, or that any promise of Inde- |not have been ratified in the senate but us on to war with Spain who are| The people not alone of this land, but ot | Justere will be paid for truthful letters regarding | «luded with these words pendence was made to them. Loug before [for their assistance. The senate which | unwilling now to accept its clear conse- | A have watched and prayed through of g ‘ experience In coffee drinking. See swto- [ cFhis cite ‘:fl;:!"“;‘l‘l‘l-‘-yl;“ I fmurchet | their leader had reached Manila they had [ratified the treaty and the congress which | quence, as there are those among us who|the terrible and vrotracted agony of the cas—c TA.. ment in this paper October 3, he; \|nre‘ ablishments and 1ts private property of all | resolved it the commander of the Amer!- |added its sanction by a large appropria- | advocated the ratification of the treaty of a3 sufferers in Pekin, and while at Tha hind You Have Aiways Bougnt Boxes of Gold fescriptions, are placed under the, special | can navy would give them arms with which | tion compri senators and representa- | peace, but now protest against its obliga the dark tidings seemed to make all If you miss the paper write to the Pos- ’\""":"h':"’ :.-'m""' faith and honer of the | 1o fight the Spanish army they would later | tives of the people of all parties tions. Nations which go to war must be vain, the rescuers never faltered in tum Co., at Battle Creek, Mich, I"Believa that this pledge has been faith- | tUrB Upon us, which they did murderously | Would our opponents surremder to the | prepared to accapt its resultant obliga heroic fulfillment of their noble task