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OMAITA DALLY B 17, 1900 ,N&TMOnstersand MICTODeS. <aiihine'ver s e Wierta "cinis ot emoy {18 |yet a8 incapadl 1f-ge as ts Interfering with freed nder Jefter Bat (h6 9 nnected with it and the mischievous | (nildg yot SOme cannot b ves ® r Jackson or in the f the In than it would medicine, tried different doctors, but all advi hink crookedly or A frgle mo. dian wars on the plaine. O is s b been i t they could give wme was to make g : had J en s prin; a eirg " g How the Microbe Would Appear If 1 Ronsevelt's Letter of Acceptance Explodes | *"° wing them 10 be m fe intended tb \tely self. relatively not as | ns th the United Stutes “ e Microbe " L my pocketbook lighter. 1 then began r but deeming that they may, b ernment sh ntroduced throughout Jays of Wa we have ve regul fered signal service Magnified in Size to Corre: aking Dr. Plerce's Golden Medical Dis- False Theories of Fugion Part ! pment should be intro | 1ghou red ! L t Fugion Farty. arkening cou tor he territory, but only as the different parts | fOF every 1000 inhabitan There is n just as the Pawn ter spond With Its Power. Took four bottles without relief e et el "o became fit for it, and no sooner. This fs More ldhr" of a draft thun there i of ' esld ] Kept thaking 1 o all ten botties EXPANSIO® N iy minate d policy that has been pursued re iction of slaver ans d he world has Always belleved in mon- and got entl od. 1 can say (DAL SION OF THIS COUNTRY REVIEWED | 5.,y ¢ YN0 | T et Ot The. LeUHIERE gOFoNEEe WA Work Against Impesialls » and the friendly |sters—great dragons of the land and huge beople would take your mediclne instead — | all forms of strial con tion in par- complete self-government introduced for When we expanded over New Mexico and | tribe ns in the days of [serpents of the sea. As a rule these mon- Of fooling with some he acks that “Gavernment Withaat Connent of the | o 0 and en v nuuclation pumber of vears: in one part of the In- | Calitornia we secured free government to sters b been fairly peaceable, and beyond infest both t 11 and large towns Governed" in Applied to More 1n i3 Sccompanied by at ship 0 dian territory, it has not yet been n'm‘.'hfl-r- territories and prevented their fall ere are now in the United Sta sm- | frightening people occasionally, they have disease would fiee like chafl before the 5 in This Desnty i he great corporations denounced, the effect sced. although nearly a century has|ing under tb militarismy f a dictator. | munities of Indians which have advanced | done little recorded harm The real ca- Wind Tagais in the Philippines % ot x irse, to give air of insincerity o glapsed. Over enormous tracts of it, includ- p like that of Santa Anna, or th m at it b been possible to embody | lamities of humanity have come from the The use of Dr. Plerce's Golden Med I . [ the wh movemer Nevertheless, there (ne the varlous Indian reservations, with | perialism’ of a real er n the days of | a w in our political system, | smallest f of lite. The minute microbe lcal Discovery will lutely drive out H il | foo real abuses, and there Is ample reason g territory in the agsregate as large as that | Maximillian. We put a stop to imperial-jall the of the tribe becoming | has slain its millions upon miflions. If this and eliminate the poisons which corrupt 2 (Conttnued from First Pag e N these abuses. A of the Philippines, the constitution has [!1sm in Mexico as soon as the civil war|United State zens. There ar r | microscopic form of lite were depicted in siz the blood M nifnued from First Page.) | rude or fill-considered effort to femedy novor yet “followed the flag the army “Iuaml We made great anti-imperial- | nities whe the bulk of the ibe | and form equal to its danger and deadliness BAD BLOOD AND GOOD HEALTH : A\ be rulnous to gur finances. If we are to| nM Would either be absolutely without omeer and the civilian agent still exercise | istic stride when we dr the Spaniarde [are still too w it o possible to|we should see a monster which would dwarf cannot go together. But when the blood ol ARG TR t or else would simply do damage thority. without asking the. ~consent of | from Porto Rico and the Philippines and | take such a steg into insignificance all the monsters ever is purified and enriched by “Golden Med [} be based upon the gold dollar worth 100 Publicity Wil Do Much, he koverned.” We must proceed in the | thereby made ready the ground in thesc| There are indiv 1 ng the Apaches, | begotten by human imagination. The mi- ical Discovery "' the result is recorded in ' ceres. The stability of our srrency | The first g to do is to find we Philippines with the same wise caution, tak- | 1£1ands for that gradually increasing meas- | Pawnees, Iroquols, 8 il other tribes und health Bolls hiss been mreatly incronsed by the. excellent | facts, and for this purpose publicity as to |INE each successive step as it becomes de- | Ure Of self-government for which their|who are mow Unite tizens and blotches, pimples and other J Anancisl act passed by the last congP apitalization, profits and all else of import- Sirable, and accommodating the details of | ;“‘I“‘-"“""' s UL '{""‘ :"“‘ Ry ML RLL L R eruptions disappear as the ' But no law can secure our finances against [ Ance to public is the most usetul meas- OUF policy 1o the peculiar needs of the situa- | D108 I‘:“ ;'.M» bl B B LR L e ’*"\:r;‘;:';li e *“' i ihdike impurities which caused be efect of unwise and disasirous manage- | Ure The mere fact of this publicity would ton. But as soon as the present revolt is | hee 48 FaPIdy 4% AeF own citis | blood are now setvitig in the atmy and them are removed. The neat in the hands of unfriendly adminis- | in itselt remedy certain evils and, as to put down and order established, it will un- | AL she K ESE b s v 12400 A LR R - P . t | ot course the presence ot s 1o the and in congress and oceupy high poe Kin is healthy, the flesh tratore. No party can sately be entrusted o othere, 1t would in some cases point out doubtedly be possible to give to the islands pr | and in cong nd oceu, &h 3 1 | Philippines during the Tagal insurrection |sition both in the business and political is firm. The dull and slug #ith the management of our national af remedies and would at least enable us 4 larger measure of self-government than P 4 & b Ad Rl Sl bl . \ AL | | bas no more to do with militartsm or im- | world. The svery reason why as rag gish feeling is & thiog ot . fairs unless it accepts as axiomatic the [ !0 tell whether or not certain proposed rem- Jefferson originally gave iisiana 8 of . e her every re as rap L B die erialism than had their presence in the|idly as an Indian or any iy of Indlans the past. The appetite is ruths recognized in all progressive coun- | ©4ie8 would be useful. The state actiug in Acquisits “la P ! ¥ AL . as essential to a sc ad proper | 118 collective capacity would thus first find . b | Dakotas, Minnesota and Wyoming during|becomes fit for sclf-government he or it 800d, sleep is sound and re- & avem of Nuaves, . fn thuie: senel JIORer | (0t the facts and then be able t take sucy | ThE Bext great step in expansion was the | the many years which clapsed before the | should be granted the fullest equality with freshing and labor an enjoy- \equisition of Florida. This was partly ace | final outbreaks of the Sioux we definitely | the whites, but there would be no justifica : e S Vindom d o iy ment instead of a burden ST |:n i .'K'” i) e .:, ot o By Weatits, Byt ‘move oan Yo dbte | O iest and partly by purchase, [ put down. There is no m litarism | tion whatever in treating this fact as a “It gives me much pleas- difforent stages of development, dif- | | 50 0 o s one 4 vdrew Jackson being the most prominent | or imperialism in garrisonin y t11 | pason wdoning the wild tribes to v to ort ferent countries face varying economic con regulation, by close supervisiou and the : Wbl 4 G A L S ot qn until|reason for abandoning ild tribes t ure to testify o the merits aitions, but at every stage and under all | UNSPATIOE excision of ¥ Dr. Bisions Quites e under President Monroe, the aftertime|fsm in sending soldlers to South Dake Exactly the same reasoning applles in » ce ™ ! 1ant element | “ITuctive and anti-soclal elements. The| ircumstances the most important elemen tent John Quincy Adams being active [ in 1890, during the Ogallala outbreak.|(he ca n securing their economic well-being s |*" cal Discovery,” writes Miss Annle Wells, of Fergusson's unhealthy, de. DBUre i the acquisition. It was tak n}nrdvr 18 restored than there was imper work out their own destruction | —— te St4te SOVOTDIRSES o0&l d0 & ETIAL of the Philippines. To turn over ¥ 4 2., o | dek1 “ana: whiers they dee o co-operate | D fecuring the purchase. As in the case | The reasoning which justifies our|(he slunds to Agulnaldo and his followers Wharf, Isle of Wight Co i Ll L ORNEEIENR b Al Mep i "¢ [ of the Philippines, Florida was acquired by | having made war against Sitting Bull | would not be to glve self-government to Vo, 1 cah say homestly asd sustrinl ;: Jerity and & sound curtency | While paying heed to the necessity of|Burchase from Spain .and i ”“"1"5’ the | also_justifies our ly\“\\‘vi che mll the | the | under no circumstances candidly that it is the grand- That the former 1a Jeopardized. not merely | K€ePIDE our Louse in order at home, the | minoles, who had not been consu :‘I in | outbreaks of \‘uum Ao and his ,' !.:w"r« | would the majority thus gain self-govern- est medicine ever compound- fRat e formur s Jaosurdiutc, not marely | Amebcen: tuople ok ot, (1, (hey Wik (o tus | Tebelled dnd waged war exactly as directed, a8 they were inst Filipino | ment, They wou ply be put at the ed for purifying the blood ot tnsoting Nukoce, 'The tusihess mun and | Bi0 tHeir seltresy vefrain from doing | S0me Of the 1. ..<|~‘»,..w rebelled and waged [ and American alike 7 | merey of a syndicate of Chinese halt b cods, 1 suffered terribly with R S el [T M ation in the worl | ¥of i the Philippincs. The Semigole war | The only certain way of rendering it funder whom corruption would flourish far heumatism, and pimples on | uestion, but no man‘s Interest is so great | Th® hiStory of the nation is in large part | lasted for many years, but Presidents Mon- | necessary for our republic to enter on almore frecly than ever it flourished under the skin and swelling in my ns that of the wage-worker. A depreclated | the DISIOFY of the nation's espansion. When | F° Adams and Jackson declined for a mo. | career of “militarism would be to aban-|Tweed, while tyrannical oppression would knees and feet so that I GHHENEY “mekns. Toss ahd of .llh»‘r % O ‘.n,, first continental congress met in Lib- | MOt to consider the question of abandoutng | don the Philippines their own tribes | ohiain to a degree only possible under such could not walk. I spent DSIIGSS S, B4L 16 INeRia GUiR satiering | NT 0N 4N thirteen original states | Florida to the Seminoles, or to treat their {and at the same time cither to guarantee|an oligarchy. Yours truly | about twenty dollars pay 10 (hE 'wage Wovker, The. eapitatist will| Jeciared thismseives a niation, (H6 westwand | SOn-cotisent o the government of the United | ¢ R tes Lt Wt en R e Tute: THEODORE ROOSEVELT. ing doctors’ bills but re- T e e e el alat s | limit of the country was marked by the | States as a valld reason for turning over the | to guarantee them againat outside inter — - cived no benefit. A year or [} wearing ansiety and the loss of many com. | A/¢6BaDy mountains. Even during the rev JIRT R ) S | te . o s ol Bl "',”"h PROSPERITY IN COLD CASH |crobe has this in common with the fabled two ago I was reading one of vour Memo- forts, But’ the wage-worker wiio Toses his | O1UCIOUATY War (e werk of expansion went| OUF BeXt Scquisition of territory was thRt ) &7 i carry LR monster, its food is human flesh and Its randum Books, and 1 decided to try Di wages must suffer and see his wife and | O = Kentucky,.Tennessee and the great | Of Tex el A S BTl [l e o] Report of the Comptrolier of the Cur- |drink human blood. It fattens on sl Plerce's Golden Medieal Discovery Wildren suffer for the actual necessities | POTBWESt, then known af the Iilinois coun- | been W o o iy | e Wil Vie At ke reney ix Hard on the Bryan- ter. For centuries medical science fought and ‘Favorite Prescription, and am e ’ of life. The one absolutely vital meed of | .'Y: WeTe conquered from our white and In- Texar kb Then came the acqul o IRTRNGE (B reaily oRa BTy W6 ite Clain his microbie foe in darkness. The pres- tirely cure ouf whole industrial system fs souna|0!aB foes during the revolutionary struggle |8ition of Californla, New Mexico, or A TR B bl ence of the foe was recognized, its dead Of all prevalent forms of blood disease money | and were confirmed to us by the treaty of | Nevada and parts of Colorado and Utah us whible P it L '“ Wi The one suprepie test of prosperity is|lipess conceded. BUt it was ever an inviss corofyla is the most intractable. Dr. Q L r— | peace in 1753. Yet the land thus confirmed | the result of the Mexican war, supplemented | ¥ bttt iade R CRIN= |0 money in the bank. This is a self-|ible foe, unknown and unnamed. Today pjarce's Golden Medical Discovery has & re- was not then given to us. It was held by |flve vears later by the Gadsden purchase ey's policy in the T 108 | ovident truth. If a m family is well|geience with eve power increased a mil- | markable record of cures of scrofulous dis One of the most serious problems with|an alien foe until the army under General| The next acquisition was that of Alaska, [absurd when it is conce hould, | (jothed and fed and in a comfortable home | lion fold finds this lurking foe, Knows it eages, remarkable both in the number of which we are confronted under the condi- | Anthony Wayne freed Ohio from the red ured from Russia by treaty and purchase, | 10 quote the language of the Kansas City | ,ng pegides this he can put money in the |and names it cures and their variety as well as in the tlons of our modern industrial civiliza- | man, while the treaties of Jay and Pinck- | Alaska was full of natives, some of whom | Platform. “give to the Philippines first a |y, must be admitted that i« pros- FINDING THE FOE fact that these cures ,were effectsd many tion I8 that presented by the great busl-|ney secured from the Spanish and British | had advanced well beyond the stage of sav. | Stable form of governmen rous is the first step, fighting it intelligently |times in cases where all other treatment { ness combinations, which are generally | Natchez and Detroit | akery and were Christians. They were not Not for Aguinaldo In the following unparalleled showing of [{s the next. We know this minute Of- had proved utterly inefiectusl l known under the name of trusts V569761 Bepaniion | consulted about the purchase nor was their | 1f they are now entitled to independence, | the increase in the number of deposits|ganism lurks in the alr we breathe, the .y cured my lttle girl's scrofula with your The problem is an exceedingly difcutt| o0, = o B0 FEEEREOR o [acquiescence required. The purchase was | they are also entitled to decide for them- | from the dark days of th ocratic Wil-| food we ent, the water we drink. We|.qoiden Medlcal Discovery, and -Pleasant H ane and the diffculty is immensely aggra- | .o 0" HICEE FreiHeRt SOEeRsin, (e [ made by the men who had just put through | selves whether their government shall Le | son bill regime in 1894 to the glorious days | know the object of attack Is the blood. ' peljets, writes Mr. FEll Ashford of vated both by honest but wrong-headed | & \de In cxpansion that We |,y mphant war to restore the union and | stat & kg 1 6veP took wad taken by the purchse of the or unstable, civilized or savage, or | of McKinley prosperity, the most mar-|We know that as the microbe is bred Loulsiana tarritors. This sa-ealled Toutal | free the slave; but none of them deemed [ whether they shall have any government | velous of all s the increase in the num-|from foulness it must be fed on foulness. |ans, which fncluded what are now the |t ecessary to push the doctrine | at all; whilesit 1s, ¢ Ily evi- | ber of depositors and in the amount of de- | frence, we know that the microbe finds Raney, Hunt Co., Texa It has been tour vears since then, and there has mot heen f 1 tof th 1 tent that ut b ts in the savings bank b ¢ it the microbo A0ds any return of the disease.” §titos oF SAFkuusas; MIFSBUPE: Tollkiats the *“consent of the governed” to a con- | de hat under such conditions we have posits io savings banks of the country. | o Jodgment in the body when the blood| & wolis “Golden Medic T i narkanaas, Missourl, LOUlSiAld. | i sion mo fantastic as to necessitate the| no right whatever fto guarantee them | These banks are particularly the ones|is purc. Keep the blood pure and you! fRere ls no slcohel i @ % Bt and South Dakota, Maho, Montana ani a | LUFRIDE over of Alaska to its original | against outside Interference any move thau | where the wagearners of the country put|shut out the microbe MR b et gl L large part of Colorado and Utah, was ac- | "¥Ders. the Indian and the Aleut we have to make such a guarantee in the thelr savings When the blood is impure mnature at ”X"‘\'}"": 'I“""'""".'“"V_“A "»:" ::‘:'r‘ :‘“' o ‘ | quired by treaty and purchase under Presi. | {Hirty vears the United States authorities, | case of the Hoxers (who ore merely Mr. Bryan says the people are not pros- | opce beging to show the red danger sig- Al e el I_‘I‘"L PPt ahe g dent Jefterson sxactly and preclacs as the | MIIary and civil, exercised the suprems | Chinese analogues of Aguinaldo’s follow- | pero So say all his calamity followers. [ nyls, Boils, blotches, pimples, erup-|® ;ul‘;ly.‘..' (or \r erce's 0 .:\; e Philippines have beon seanired by trects | authority In a tract of land many times|ers). It we have a right to establish a| We commend to them the following officlal | ions begin to work upon the skin surface, Pt i At P8 I IRARLY Tt and purchase under President MiKigley, | 1areer than the Philippines, in which it|stable government in the islands it neces- | figures from tie report of the comptroller us signs and symptoms of the corrup- L) .f 3¢ ";"y'“““’ .I;:.ur’:x b il The doctrine of “the consent of the gor. | 1id Not seem Iikely that there would ever | sarily follows that it is not only our right| of the currency of the United States for | (ion of the blood. When these or any signs (10" 10 N IERS. (b th oo T R | : " c lbe any considerable body of white in-|but our duty to support that government | 1560 They are unanswerable 5 b1t ity KpHUtL L UNE BELDE | ReITy LHEPE 8 HO; RAVARIERS (DUIIS RUs HSNCZMNI | ernea. the doctrine previously enunciated | b 42Y it Bl . of blood twpurity appear, the use of Dr. o low i an oven exchange. The medicines 4 i by Jefterson in ‘the Declaration of Inde- | habitants e LR RSy REOW: ALty TOTAL UNITED STATES Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery 18 con- oo qu e A the reaso You will never find our Doc- LEtb R il | Coming of Eawalil. sustain it themselves. How else will it tal No Bidntly. FeBkImaHAU) kn 70 mOND DOWerTD m‘;“""' 'xml‘ L “n‘h'h| fet .’:: ¥ . i as not held by or by any | ! e’ Stabist The e we le t | Banks ) i 3 celling a substitute is only becay ' tor out. He is here to give |other sane man to apply to the Indian tribes | rly thirty years passed before the! be stable? The minut leave it it| Banks, Jlig8 and porfect blocd-puritying medicine i | less meritorious medicine puts a littls more profit into the dealer's pocket. His gain 18 the customer's loss. o ") in the Louisiana territory which he thus | BeXt instance of expansion occurred, whi ceases to be stable. State and private | advice without charge to those |Jtouired and thers wis no vote taken even | Va8 over the island of Hawaii. An effort| Properly speaking, the question is now| T ! who need him—to those who |of the white inbabitants, not to speak of | *38 made at the end of President Har-| Dot Whether we shall expand-—for we have Savings 1 consider your ‘Golden Medical Dis- covery' one of the best medicines on the face of the earth,” writes Willlam I an and trust cos 5 rison’s administration to secure the already expanded—but whether we shall \ . y DON'T THINK OF BUYING } », |the negroes and Indians, as to whether they | 500 dministration t 1 he an- | @ ¥ Totals ter, esq., of Red Oak, Montgomery ccunty don’t, sometimes. He doesn’t | Were willing that thefr territory should be | Pexation of Hawaii. The effort was un-|contract. The Phillppines are now part | Increase depositors lowa. “While in the southwest three years a work on household medicine when you ' always recommend the Aver ‘I\nu'-_wl successfsul. In a debate in congress on of "l"!"""“"" “"'“'"7‘ To surrender them | . ago, 1 got poisoned with poison ivy. The can get a good one free, Dr. Plerce's Com- 7 ? +553 . February 2, 1864, one of the leaders in o) would be to surrender American territory £ Pd " 8 Medieal Ad contains 1,008 * o | The great majority of the inhabitants P National poison settled fn my blood and the horrors mon Sense Medical Advisor contain med!-.!nes, because the Ayer { white and colored alike, were bitterly op- | POSIDE the annexation of the islands, They must, of course. be governed pri-|State and privat I suffered canuot be told in words. 1llarge pages and over 700 illustrations. It medicines are not “cure-alls.”” |posed to the transfer. An armed force of | Stated: ~“These islands more than | marily In ‘:‘f e Bl LB ALl E o R e thought 1 would go crazy. 1 cou'd do noth s sent free on receipt of stamps to pay ex l‘erhnps if we tear a leaf |United States soldlers had to hastily | 2000 miles distant from our extreme west-| Zens. Our first care must be for the peo . ing but scratch. I would go to slecp pense of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent ern boundary. Wi have a serious race | ple of the islands hich have come under Totals B 5 5 | sent into the territory to prevent insurrec 4,550,406 $4,6:8,095, scratehing, would wake up in the morning stamps for the cloth-bound volume or only fi h b1 et T e i b I aits ¢ P rom his correspondence it will |tion, President Jefferson sending these et laolb Llb AL L AL AL L b b L el oA N te e Conglt ie &) Dankar. and find myself scratching. 1 seratched '21 stamps for the book in paper covers 'y 9 A troops to Loulsiana for exactly the s 1o favoe at sodibg to ‘otr dombatis thbrio| TEBIROUSISORRIEN: HE L A e N gaa | et B0 T 16 - | tor eight months ot been for your Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y ' show you what we mean. Here AR08 PBLOUIBIABLIOL 48k ""'.‘l somane [ mongrel population of this character. | Within the memory of the present genera- | 4 B0EY 1 sooy | o7, altib monshty, HAGHH Dot e 2 chi b k b 9 ERINE UL RUE o - tered Since the democratic days of 180 o qom—————————————————————————————————— R ————— is a letter which came last |that President McKinley has sent troops to [ OUF Sonetiion SR aoi e SR fo et Fhieys mha bedadiniaieras Mo 14 i non s AamorEALls CRYR ol RN e | e = ) " st ated | @ colonial establishment territorial ests of their inhabitant nd that | ha 2 “ [LURON A8 | o mkied to ateet the governg N ecognized and called out, “Raldwiy March. the Philippines. Jefferson distinctly stated | & €o0° € o8 m“m" e ‘.“”‘“'7"”)4 R PR TR s on of | DOKitors in the whole United States astembled to greet the governor and shake | fecognize 4 1!11‘:;.”‘.”3“ called out. (_anl\ll i that the Loulsianians were “not fit or ready | EOVerment we migh establi personal or partisan politics in their ad-| This bumber more people have had|bands with him. Those who could do | came quiet. Captain Iler came in just th “Dear Dr. Aver for self-government,” and years elapsed be ar e he population, be s pa v helr ad | so grasped him by the hand. This ended and the officers tonk some of the | % frals oney to deposit during McKinley pros- 8 . “ |an oligarchy, which would have to bLe Ministration must be entirely eliminated, | mon leposit duriu L ) dvic le boy. |fore they were given self-government, Jef- | A" ¥ he ; t p que experiences of this Sunday in I want your advice for my little boy re they were g 3 nmen supported by armed soldiers.” Yet Hawail| We must continue to put at the heads of | Perity the unique ex He is getting very thin, e has no a ferson appointing the governor and other H n ¥ s no appe @ aiow s ek rs In the diffe tite. He is fifteen years ofd. When he |oficlals without any consultation with the [ a8 now been annexed and her delegates affalrs in the differ station, but they were later released er was the only one of the crowd who celved a severe injury. One of hls op- ponents got him betweon a door and tha ot ¥ The total amount of money deposited to | Dakota nt islands such me y A i d v \e eredit of the people was $2,874,589,406 . , , . abl 3 Sl alTreA: ternito have sat in the national conventions of |5 General Wood, Governor Allen th ! Brynn Kansas. door jamb and was doing his best to com- was four years old he had lung fever, but |inhabitants of the newly-acquired territors. | FHYS FHE T Lhe SECIORL conve ot o2 | Judge Tatt 'and it In“a most fortunate | iD 1894 ST. LOUIS, Se 16.—Mr. Bryan ate | press the junk man's ribs when he woii his health was good until two years ago. | The doctrine ihat the “constitution follows | i h S fo 0 16007 (€ s AL 608 LOR008 xbowlbe v Dulled oft bY one i Ferers friends. 1His Since then he is failing fast. The doctors | the flag” was not then even considered either | Pressed in relation to ollgarchy’* and | tHing that we ars able to illustrate what| ¢ A s NOWIDE AD | anded services at the Centenary Methodist | [ulled oft by one bi Ferer's frlends —liis here say he has the Bronchitls, i epits | by Jeferson or by any other serlous narty | "armed soldiera” are not now serlously | OUSHL to be done in the way of sending | Increare o 1most §1,750.000.000 to the | .\ op today and spent the remainder of probably be selzed with a painful shortne:s all the time awful bad. The spits are big | leader, for it never entered their heads that | entertained by any human being, yet they | ofcers thither by pointing out what ac.|credit of the peos le who had bank accounts | . gav with relatives in this city. He 'of breath every time he thinks of his nar thick, and white, Yours truly, ® new territory should be governed other | 8Te Precisely the objections urged against | tually bas been done L o & h yas ”""{' ,‘h'i country W% | left at 9 o'clock tonight over the St. Louls | Mrs. MAKGAREL MURPHY, | than in the way in which the territories of | {he acquisition of the Philippines at this Fine om, by Merit Syatem. ;‘ ‘u_:.‘l"f” "" ules of a democratic ad-| g "gan Francisco road for southwestern March 30, 1900 Kinbrae, Minn { Ohio and 1llinols had already been governed | YeT¥ moment. We are making no new de-| The minor places In their administration, | ™GTENOR 0 0 cast {g.|Kansas. where he will spend the next two| 4 | under Washirgton and the elder Adams; | PAFture. We are not taking a single step [ where it is impossible to fill them by na-| NO' G018 has & i » "1 days. He speaks at Galena, Kan., at 2 | 4 And this is the way the Doc- | the theary known by this utterly false and [ $hich i P “X P '“-*”'l‘“’"”* tives, must be filled by the strictest ap-| STeted |0 fle AEKToNAtE SROLEL ¢! ':‘L}‘ o'clock tomorrow afternocn and will m‘l\kn- 7 i or our traditional policie From the be- | plication of the merit system. It is very 20 DL IBARR O : Y | geveral short speeches enroute to that g 5 misleading phrase was only struck out in ¥ i ount of each b f ¢ tor answered Mrs. Murphy : i T Oy e e | ginning we have given widely varying de- | important that in our own home adminis amot ".'." .m‘."m account has in reas Tt . [itanes b x| Brees of self-government to the different | tration the merely ministerial and admin- | TOM 3520, in 1564 to an average of $602 TS Dy Maans | e et ot o he e[S o s Eoviranent o (e ighen | trtin The morely minhieialnd vimin: | [0V, 8, G et i Wi T 13 rcnes The best and Lungs, in which we trust you will find | . % | » simple truth is that there is noth- | tirely mom-political, shall be filled abso-| VN Will say that the promises of the|qs to the cause of their ill health. If they | quality of just the information you desire 3 Parallel is Plain, | ing even remotely resembling “imperial- | lutely without refercnce to partisan af- | Tepublican party Lave not been fulfilled? | yould start to treat their kidneys with 1 D T R R e oo The parallel between what Jefferson did [ism” or “militarism’ involved in the pres- | filiations, but this is many times more| 10 Will say that the advance agent of| poley's Kidney Cure the weariness of body | maple crutch, sperity has not visited the American ired islands, | and mind, backache, headache and rheuma- | r pair, 1.50. [ The merit system 1s in its essence as demo. | PEOPIC under the republican administration | (jo pains would disappear. Myers-Dillon | per pair, $1.50 with Louisiana and what is now being done | ent development of that policy of expan- | fmportant in the newly ac this Cherry Pectoral for your son, giving ) &8 your Som, RIVING | i\ yhe philippines is exact. Jeflerson, the | sion which has been part of the history itin moderate doses. Then procure » ! sod preparation of codiwer ofl. as | @uthor of the Declaration of Independence | of America from the day when it bocame | cratic as our common school system, for | O President McKinley? | Drug Co., Omaha; Dillon's Drug Store, CRUTCH TIPS 25¢ Scott's Emulsion, and give him that, ag | a9 of the “consent of the governed” doc- | a nation. The words mean absolutely noth- | it simply means cqual chances and fair R e fouth Omah A Paie, P i = o A e T | 1 AR AribAL o ous Sresaat ‘soon | iag o TURN OUT TO SEE ROOSEVELT| W ar, Postage, 3¢ WSS giving him such noutishing foods as rare | {he establishment of & government on m- | the Philippines; for this policy is only| It must be remem! monsense grounds in the new territory and | imperialistic in the seuse that ed always that gov- Row ut n Ch and oh. | Tweltth and | The Aloe & Penfold steak, lamb chops, good milk, cggs, etc, helr Congregntions | The Jewish church near efferson’s | erning these islands in the interest of the = Clergyme “apitol avenue wis scene of @ bittar Above all, keep him out of doors all that | he ro'led at the sticklers for an impossibic | policy in Louisiana was imperialistic; only | inhabitants may not necessairly be to gov- Gathor atrthe Stations to Gantel Sty imht, which wan ‘prec'ple | Company the weather permits. There is nothing | application of his principle, saying, in lan- [ military in the sense that Jackson's policy | ern them as the inhabitants at the moment Shake Win Hand. | fated by the proposed vxpulsion of 8. Ferer. ’ that will do him more good than plenty of | EUsKe which at the present day applies to | toward the Seminoles or Custer's toward | prefer. To grant self-goverument to Luzon | a lower Farnam stroet junk dealer. Mr Deformity Brace fresh air. Let him live out of doors all | the situation in the Philippines without the | the Sloux embodied militarism, and there' under Aguinaldo would be like GLENDIVE, Moni, Sept. 16.—Governor | Feruiis fHends Fylled 19 ot inof! (o that is possible. By carrying out these | change of a word, “though it ts acknow:- | is no more danger of its producing evil self-government to an Apache general suggestions we shall hope o hear soon that your son is improving in every way. Very tnuly yours, April 5, 1900 1 C AvErR" You see, it wasn't only the ! Th pe 1 Baldwin arrived the interior of the little There was no specchmaking during the | (iR, il ‘mas < of siruggling, seratche el 18 Haw b ation | 7‘7_0’Sh Aver medicines that we recom- One of the absurd storles put in circula- fitted. In Newburg there are very fow men continued Then U'll have to work for|to greet the governor and to shake his . 7 EiWErecom tion by his political enemies is one accusing of German parentage at all, and fn the Bryan harder than ever. If he wins and | hand Our New §2.5 08 granting as the other faction wus dotermined that Manufacturers, roservation | Roosevelt's special train left Bismarck this | he must go a row resulted which the poli~e 1108 Farnau Steeat, | day, but there was some handshaking with | ing, biting, puliing bumanity. He started the people along the route. At New Salem | In to clear out the bullding, but some one | two Lutheran clergymen, with members of | mended. The first idea of the |gyeodore Roosevelt of expressing anti-Ger- county from which Judge Kruse was what you republicans say 18 true I'll get| At Dickinson a stop was made for an | Doctor was to cure that boy. |man sentiments and discriminating against pointed I suppose he was the only German my farmhand that way without any trouble | hour to wait for the passage of a heavy | 16 lsatl \ | T . . German-Americans in offictal appointments. at the bar. I did not in either case appoint and on my own terms. And just now the | freight train that had the right of y|of onk tan sole leather soles—a shoe I'he result is told in this letter: € he right of way | morning for Miles City, 300 miles distant. | had to suppress, When Tmergency OMcer CULLED from the Field of POLITICS their congregations, were at the st The story was brought to the attention of the men to represent the German vote. I farmhand question is the paramount issue|in the opposite direction. Here the Is o genuine box calf with hest quality worth more than £2.50—-and one you “DEAR D | Mr. Roosevelt and was promptly and vig- appointed them because I thought in char- with me. If you run across am idle man|tors of the Episcopal, the Methodist and 5 2 \ ! My |T”7,v ?,‘\,\”.,,‘ improved so mach | orously branded as a campaign canard, acter. temperament, capacity and profes- dou't fail to iet him know that I've got a | Presbyterian churches, with members of | would pay 50¢ more for and be satisticd since | received your advice that T want to Writing to Louis Viereck, editor of Die r!m:nl training n:.y_\ we p’m.» best men I job for him | their congregations, were presented to | --a shoe that has the fitting propertios of B R ol Camn Verelnigte Staten Zeitung, uuder date of could put in as judges. Of the two highest Governor Rooscvelt on the station platform. | ¥ o " 30, he only weighed so pounds, but now “The charge that | am anti-German is so I8 filled by a gentleman pamed Heins, who €oss in life?" a writer in Success asked | the town generally were alvo at the station | popular toes this is the first time a he weighs 82 pounds; and all this gain absurd that it is difficult to discuss it. As ;\ of G mn'x de ent. When I appointed Benjamin B. Odell, the new political leader | to see the visitors genuine welt soled shoe has ever heen since the 8th of April. when § first began ‘umm of fact, very many of my closest and him I did not think of his beiug of German of New York, who promptly replicd The day was clear and cool, the first|® . 1o follow your directions warmest friends, soclally and politically, descent. What I thou of was that he To do well the work assigned, to build | frost of the season having fallen during |Offered for §2:50—but we bought ‘em to « Please let me thank you again for what | are Germans. Many of the men who have Was the best architect I could get for the Up & true character, to make the most|the night. Those accompsnying the av- | gell at this price, and sell e we wil you have done for my boy the most intimate relations with me, offic- position. When I put ex-Mayor Schieren on of one's faculties, meeting oblieations to |ernor today were United States Senators | July 17, 1900, MARGARET MURPHY ally and privately, are Germans. My sten- charter commission, and Otto M. Ei God and fellow man Hansbrough and Carter, ex-Senator Wilson grapher, who is taking this letter, is of architect, on my tenement house ¢ Mr. Odell, like most great leaders, is|of Was e e Je o e Drexel Shoe Co., York and General Curtis Guild, jr., | lieutenant of | of Boston. There was also on the train | Perhaps it was the cod- rman pare liver oil; perhaps it was the taina before & One of my cight cap- Mission, 1 did not appoint ntiago Fritz Muller, was a they were Germa them because simple and modest as a child. Tis sudden | of New % but because I thought promotion as the truste y . derly. Henry Bardshar, who they were men best fitted to do duty in Thomas C. Platt has not t L " endy—Sent free for ~ s Danss s T German. My orderly, Henry Bardshar, who 1 a A8 irned his head. | tocay one Joseph T. Ferris, wh with | Sew Catalogne ready Cherry Pectoral. Probably it (2i"%lih me more intimately than any one those two special positions, exactly as I He is well poised, of even disposition and | Gosernor | dpiisdtle i et e asking. hout the ampaign, was a Ge thought he same thiy [} w W nte Shoe ase. i “ . about Mr. Crim- has a complete mastery of himself, He {& was both. But, more than cise throug Y my v v himself. He is | when he Kilied his first buffalo. In regarg A ' man. a mon of ap “Acht and Vierziger.' Mins of the charter commission and Mr. good listener as well as an excellent julge 4 B Tegard either, it was the good, sound Tyl ghout my work n the police depart- Miles Tierney of the t ot house com- of men. It fs said of him that h advice the Doctor gave in the ment the two men with whom I was thrown mission, who ate of Irish descent willing and a v ssost companfonship were Arthur I happea to have pecullar sympathy with Omahn's 1419 FARNAM REET. to this in Mr. Ferris sald: I was is as | with him when he killed his first buffalo and he tells me he has the head vet and to execute to the minu y nto ¢ alls as h w o is 1 1 N - — first place. We are here to v-r.:n Briezen, a German, and Jacob R. Riis, a German soclal customs, German literature to his m.‘lv..«y il vlh ‘:‘ il pab takeapuibioy fon Ufl'y One UVBIS'WK At Sale serve you in jusr the same way, 'ane. 1 have constautly gone on the prin- and the GOTWAD wAY of life and sturdy char- possible, but always suiting h man to| _Governor nt Witew (4 We bave struck the keynote of and \\;.' will tell vou the medi- ple of treating every man strictly on his acter gener ally. 8o 1 "lw.!r‘ if there is any the position secured. It is to his efforts| MILES CITY, Mon se 16.—The Rooge- | % o e D M‘” eyl f 2 merits as » man, paying no heed to his creed body of my fellow citizens with which 1 am largely that Joseph Choate, Elihu oot and | velt special train arrived g o oess I onr art departm cine for vour case or tell you or birthplace. 1 never discriminate for or R YA the '”:””‘I‘ Horace Porter owe thelr exalted positions, | a0d remained an hour. It then proceeded | Drings new surprises for our customers A i against & man because he is a German, an fact is that socially and politically altke I for he advised and urged them to aceept |to Billings, there to remain during th he many bargains offered during on what medicines to avoid. rlshman or a native American, & Catholle Am incapable of treating any man except rather than to allow infer ’M’,,, n to be|Nis \t Miles City a number of people ‘il stock art sale—you have never b Five out of ten of our cOr- or a Protestant. My most Important ap- On his merits as & man, whether in my clhogen el an opportunity to purchase pietires = . olntments here have been the judges. I regiment, or when handling the New York — = < respondents need a ‘1‘““’.‘— Gve eithar appointed outright or nssigned bolice force, or as governor. It hus never Dick Croker's candidate for g CARTOILI A, at your own price—we offer every pl rather than a prepared medi- o high courts somo eight udges. One of entered my head to take any position, save New York is a very vulaerable pe . a discount of 10 1o 1 de : f hese was by birth an Irishman and three to push forwa ent men, no matter what He has been a consist " ) cine, and we tell them 80, If ore by birth or parentage Germavs. [ their parentage estry or creed, and o Brockway, the br the doctors only Kknew it, We 114 not take the fact into account one way Stand straight against men who are not the State Re ety The Kind You Have Always Boug! | ture in our stor A B |60 per cent-ineludiug all copyrighted ignat | ts:[""m and imported pletures—make your s rmato . A et ¢ our b se decent, also disre ling every ¢ N’ arhots s . leetion now while the assortment are working with them ecvery the oth I appointed all four becau Al Isregarding v hose cruelties became a state scandal and CABTORIA. © I thought them the best men. The throe sideration aused Governor Roo. fire bim Tho Kind You Have wars Bovght | 4T8¢ dav. Germans were Judge Werner of Rochester e Stanchfield refused 1o support Rryan four onrs the | d Yoy z gl - . . PES v chberg of Newbu d 1R } H. Cook, a well v populist farmer years ago. H lenounced 2% gnatere i P OMPANY Judge Hirschberg Newburg and Judg pa Iy desnursatl eieg. J. C. Aver Ll ! Al ruse of Olean. 1o sach case among the near Carthage, Mo, said Biban day for orendisiies L TREIEARE 08 I HR y ST > q - - American stock, who were also well fitted all the Carthage papers for a farmhand tacked their mothods in court and has ay et - fmfi.\:.’"x A‘:sfl"'l A 4 Aver's Sarsaparilla Ayer's Har Vigo for the position. 1 appointed the thr and still 1 can't get one. What's the mat- peared before legislative commitiees in op Boars the L WU Havd Aiwajs Goug | 'lfl‘fl “‘ M “‘3 no" Ayer's Pills Aver's Cherry Pectors! ( men 1 4id simply because, after careful ex- ter? Is it a case of republican prosperity ™ position to the employers’ liability law and | 3goatare Z > Ayer's Ague Cure *s Comatone | amination, they seemed to me to be the best \When assured tbat be bad guessed right Be other labor unlon legislations \ of > A =