Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 18, 1900, Page 6

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THE OMAHA DAILY BE TUESDAY, SEPTEMB on more strongly than GREAT BUSINESS 00 TLO0K ACTENMS S « far ‘\x‘ ‘ H:‘\ o s not Tl]e benatorial Racc Remarkable Confidence fn the Wi N of n Nation ontest Philadelphia Time not ala 1 by fal ¥ Oll There ie p man 1 A tas office | In commercial and tra reles when a na 0w off that maek and resume without [ more of them than Edward Ros more of water, ¢ such s nct the case, To be in the|!s pending. Sometimes this distrust goes tralut his true character, as it was |{OF of The Omaha Giee. Coming from a political awim oue must be on good terms |(0 the extent of practically paralyzing th losed four years ago, as & “fomentor | 100" R ;;‘ America a pennilese boy, he with the e. Rosewater hus always [busines i;”"--' of (;'\- country, but thi v e 8 by force of character, mental ability and been against the machine, consequently re- | Yar the business outlook Is vastly more Jeims t £ clus hatred and & frebrand of social | untiring energy bult wp one of the most. permed or . peioe) pine:, conequently re. il o it and woral | discontent,” successful and 1 ntial newspapers in his bosses and their henchmen. While steadily [t story of the republi thin our own S————— adopted country. The Omaha Bee has been advocating republican principles and labor- | both the grét parties had named the need fs THE BANK DEPUSIT TEST | made a great newspaper thro een at any time in h the strong ing for the welfare of the republican party, |t andidates and proclaimed their pla When the people are employed and [ Personality of fts editor, who has made he has on several occasions been summarily | fOFmS our nation for the f are able to lny aside for [ MO emies gh the medium of his kicked out of that party by self-assumed |(he organization of our government took 1 than any ot iter of his time leaders whose schemes have been exposed in | Position as the first credit ix Uit 4 . Although & staunch republican, Mr. Rose- The Bee. Mr. Rosewater, however, always | WOrld. Our national securities now con CORR thin 1 enfo leness due to business | water has never stopped at party lines in refuses to stay kicked out, and we now find [ mand higher ©s in all money centers o mmunicatl. ’ p must | depression o compelled to draw | Xposing and denouncing official crooke him for the first time un sspirant for polit- | Bome and abroad than the securities of [ matter <) dr et i ot | upon e keep the wolf | "*8 BOF in commending honesty and eff fece n at the hands of the party | Other government, and recently, when Ei BUSIN : . e i thie ; test of fm. | C1ncy In public servants. In pursuing this whose true friend he has ever been. He |laud offered a loan of $60,000.000, more than = 5 n to the currency on | : ourse the editor of The Bee has called wants to be United States senator, and|the full amount was subscribed in th addr . t those conditions | Proved therefore, I8 to be|down upon his head the wrath of half the ought to be chosen if we have a republi- | COUntry and more than half of it allotted Omaha md than wmrative exhibit of | politicians of the state. The Bee has been can legislature n winter. After a fair|to Americans wnk deposits, reflecting the ups and *u"’-.v‘v-‘l n!vpi cky editor slugged and and square contest, with John L. Webster | National credit and business confidence i O tie B N both denounced in the press from Ponca to as his opponent, the republicans of Douglas [aT€ the most gensitive of all things in ma I ¥ ¥ \IH - I”‘ 'l"‘ it mass of iy | pine Biuf. But notwithstanding bis seem nty, in primaries, have named Mr. Roses | terial affairs, and when we find universal Omahe of Baster of life thau they md frugal people who form the back- | ing unpopularity Mr. Rosewater is recog- water as their preferenco for that office, | business confidence and the highest stand THE S} $ fe enjoyed—what, indeed, can | bone of the nation's strength nized by his fellow citizens as a handy man The Coufier s always contended that |[ard of public and private 1it through 1 From the official figures out of the | !0 bave around when anything is wanted for fewer lawyers and more business men are [OUt the land in the midst of an earnest na Omaba. In splte of kicks and cuffs ad- needed in congress, and we would like to see | tional contest for the election of chief . | ministered while he was working night and Mr. Rosewater elected as one o braska’s [maglstrate it is conclusive evidence that uger involved fu|rency the following signiticant table hus | day to promote the Transmississippi Exposi- senators next winter, His \w:' acquaint- [Bot ouly the people of this country, but all | “iy¢ Lie continued demand of the demoeratic | been compiled, covering the banks of | tion, he did more than any other man te ance with public men, his {ndomitable will, |the peoples abroad, accept our i trial, | Whe party for the free coinuge of silver and | the United States make that enterprise a success, and we have his tireless energy, his fine business ability, | financial and business conditions as | (U} Sainty thus ff given the power| NUMBER OF DEPOSITORS. noticed that when avy important delegation his loyalty to the state of Nebraska and his |anchored on a basis of substantial and en ; rtain i« I is sent to Washington or anywhere el capactty for getting everything he goes | JUFing prosperity Tribune: “What did vou strike anything for Omaha, Edward after combine to make him an ideal rep-| While the presidential contest may some- | thiz man for Ked the pagistrate its tinaucial policy into effect. He cor- | gE@RT <o ies water is usually at the head of it resentative of this great state at the na. | What restrict the volume of trade the Ry e ectly suys that i the party 16 sicers | Trost eompesios 5 ] Being a power in state politics for over & tiou's capital tation will hardly be perceptible, and our 1 brout e i e L BRERS. crrevirres business men of all classes and conditions | NSt ls your name e | 10 its championship of free silver it fs u | Savings sorivennl i | should be prepared for the most prosperous |y 29,040 | Menace the welfare of the country 2hit | business son ever known since free gov 47, in it forfeits all right to In PRI ernment was found in the new world. It i it |easy for men of ordinary, and even more A bl D DEPOSL A merchant and manufacturer of Omaha, e single move of this admints. | 188 Ordinary, business intelligence to % | president exuggerate when he says that R "Vx- one of the most progressive In the city, . ¢t been an endeavor to|® Eeat tidal wave of business prosperit P | pres] & 5,10 0,116,140 | furnishes the following six een reasons for i | pass by them without reaping the bencfi 2TA00 | (e suec the party representing 1d private 214,442 418,251,267 | re-electing President McKiuley to on le it Yoy ”(‘ l‘l“\' A‘,“".K,”{”;' gent reward it offers to all who under winciples of the Kansas City plat 724,117 | again i : S L ! 3 Savings T b t way of life than they ever its work 1 When they are suffering have given the country unprece Remit ft, expres stnl of prosperity aud brought to our Brly 2ot atar m s a whole more of the cou © huportant than this? * CIRCULATION svertior Roosevelt does not in the | Feports of the comptroller of the cur least overrate the d Bunks 1804 that party would spare 1o effort to put Sk s PUL| National : 1,424,9 support on any ground. Nor| | does the republican candidate for vice swift mutations in business affairs. Busi ness does not seek the merchant, or the ol A : ianufacturer, or the publisher, or those | she ¢ vast and delicate machinery of our com- | lrerease dep $1,748.506.599 policy ¢ ‘w ‘\ erican people to ‘«‘..K‘.‘:\,. Who K56 SRR eE 1 0y ST BGR I 1iis plex industrial life, It is a curlous| Average deposit in all banks: Third—He has mainl i L b A d 18- | trial pursui Trade must be sought by | Tretroit Fr i © phase of the present campuign that | 150 20 | 1899, w4802 | Proviston : i in absolute freedom. The Philippine prob- | are unequal to the employment of the best | *lerk—Male or female AURGKTE | Bryanite party were the most vigor. | Bryun indiste, so long as the gold stand- | Pisthess admis Because as 1o trusts there are | yain to fail, while the more energetic and — . | oty Tonit s ago in denoune. | ¥4 prevails, how will he account for | yiey—There ha t 4 1 i H‘;.rfir. | i 2 7 | ¥ 1 . 8 & stando 3 o pstomers an on ing the doetrines of the party as|the Increase of 2100547 in the number [ ministration since sitice q tiy e "m’ W:“ | In the olden times mers and 1 of depositors having money in the [ Lincoln's there hay such great form would unsettle our whole govern o by has knew b As for the Philippines every made thinkiog y mental system and disarrange all the Totals 74,690,408 $4.008.00 i knows that it is a cardinal | lem will solve ftself with time skillful reap a rich harvest of prosperit D. Plerson in N h sumers sought the merchant or manufac- [ For The Paramount ha 4 ot democrat or repub- | yyper. All that has perished. The country rsome tro banks to thefr credit in the MeKinley | €608 to deal Pk 13 ha . ne tr Sixth e ha een ¢ of the whole | year 1809 as compared with the demo. gt Al br f the wh cratie year 18947 The publie sl ve open again The sehool experience is open all the time L4 A menace to our governmental system, cindsie yet the party hus not renounced a single p merchant no longer comes to the city at ¥ devil with aftright | Twelfth-—Because of the admirable DIng- | pat 1608 A¢ ase his stock of country. He has known no north, no south, ley t LA 1 [Sracad phsiod bl Al 1" ley tariff bill, so generally acceptable. Under |goods. The commercial man learned to per He has done » cement the nation tos the president’s reciprocal modification the | g, st dity o what he de d train stopped, t How will he explain the increase In|gether than any other man since the civil 195 (HAC duty {oF him And what : e — doctrine cnunciated in the Chicago plat Omaha's industrial consus promises | form, Mr. Bryan is today attacking to take the rub out of Omaha's popu- | the conrts as earnestly as he did four | lation census, years ago and in all respects the party Dingley law is an ideal one both for rey the total bank deposits from $2.874-|% cnue and protection | Seventh—If he has favored friends he has | h 3 o ¢ not punished enemies, but has held out the period under the heneficent fnfluence of | giive branch to all disaffected persons | republican policies? 1¢ his policy has not been mainly How will he brush aside the increase | #nd direetly the cause of makin in the average amount to the credit of ‘;”" s il “: ”i“ 4 e 11t possible to reach that i 3 m heapne « oduct and Wit the price of hard conl going up- | national interests and welfare in Bryan- | “f depositor from $520 in 1894 to | iy end, once accomplist Sth e MR BB 8 WS | e i § “"”: S ward the announcement that warmer | jsm, can uow give it their support. 02 in 18097 | surrendered OFY: 1D BEGUMING the Sniopetk= | SSRE own conmuimers and n Ihe bauk deposit test of prosperity | Ninth—As to expansior should be applied by each individual to [Man In the United States ucts sell profitably in the markets of the o'errun o S 1l obant manutkots i Fifteenth—Be e the Chinese situation [Ct8 sell pr A LERE TIRER fthe | o Girmers fortunes ripen fn the an expansionfst. Why s demands tried statesmanship. The president | WOTId b byt | Dystruction dire threaten the he your household a bank deposi Y 80, | aent be 5 5 wnd Secre fay have handled it thus fa bere 1s now but ons why. taf the MsLE i S agime \ \ ! It 30, |4t ‘ve: bde alko?: Whether retary. Hay have handled it thus far || There 18 B 0 00 Y G obtatn cus- | SAlVation ies alone fu silver mo rs and consumers, and that {s by the | sired is now offered to him at his own od “What! The same tale that | store. The army of commercial men finally ard before? 1 Thirteenth—Because of the currency | grew to more than a quarter of a million of QYL youdan: anC oDTITeske il d lawe enacted under thie administration, [ expert business men, with their salaries [ We only’ hope ‘twill last for four Which put the currency in better shape |and large expenses paid by the consumers " than ever before but today, by combination of capital and i1t 0406 to S0 s, e same ——— lis us great a menace to the govern 406 to §4,608,000,005 in the sam Adlal Stevenson seciins to have gone | mental system now as it then was, It into eclipse without waiting for the | is dificult to understand how men lke constellation of Novemher 6 Olney and Schurz, for example, who in | - 1896 could see nothing but danger to the | Fourteenth—Because of the excellent ge- |1abor, the vocation of the commercial man | porore (he ph ¢ Mol d ion of H John Hay as secretary |18 largely ended. We have reached the [Methought a voice up yttorm L i R e iy Now that Weh R epared to sy Why does the audier 1o get oitsiie s 1 of the great nations in maintaining the | lowest prices to our ither i coming is doubly weleome. | Governor Roosevelt's discussion of ex making our vast and varled industrial prod- | Whether the banks with workmen's 2 door in China pansion is well worthy of caveful read ing by those fumilinr with our his. | Hmself. Iave you or any member of A Colorado man has just sold a mine 12,000,000, This does not 100k 88| o jn this respect and what be says in though the gold standard had killed the | farard: to mperialism® and “militar mining industr | ism™ is pointed and incisive. He con * ! to their own tribes and at the suie THE NEW SCHOOL YEAR. to spread abroad his beliefs in a f in your ward or precinet’ Bvery good | |ana t W . i m 3 4 0% e either to guarantee a stable gov The advent ¢ S RAW A ¥ | and better life. We progress or retrog republican should enllst In & repubilcan | HM¢ either to g able BOV-| The advent of the new school yer 18| tor we cannot stand stitl. Do we wl nth—Finally 1se McKinley has club for this eampaign | ernment amonyg these tribes or to guar-| yarked by the re-enlistment of the | eurh 1 low does your balance compare with |chant or manufacturer, | the 10 the entire satisfaction of at least two your bank book previous to President [ World's market for his pro 1t s thirds of the Amcrican people and also with minister, he is willlng to brave forelgn 'e @pproval of the sharpest diplomats of 4 the other natlons interested. It would be langerous (o change presidents for the ising thut has become one of the most accomplished of modern arts in our y , 'he y - | Sigh for their pr days to come progressive newspapers. The daily adver- | §i their pro) . | tisements of our prominent merchants are [ N &7 the sh let the substance now read with as much as the political B iMbetIAlk0 AR bt fh O 1ind vkt e oy T the | nowS by the politicians, as the markets by ' our ambition with a Chinese done well and can do still better and is the o rting news by the lov- ide interference - the farmers and sporting news by the o | antee them aguinst outside interference | army of public school children for an SHEANH AL, DUERHY bast. saan (o the ofce ow before tne ‘peo. | ig fArmeFs and sportlng newe by lhe lov: L) England does not propose to allow th | is the only certuin way of rendering it campaign in the public schools. | Pieiokitho URILMINLALER and fresh as the most sparkling news in the ' Thls IS an Cnited States to have @ monopely of | ICCCSSITY TOF our republic to euter o & | The public is too apt to overlook the h—Because imperialism as Here i3 the one reason against re-elect- | juplie journal, and they reach every home election excltement this fall, but will have a political show of its own ints may sl MeKinley's election? g g people, extreme climates and even 2 als 4 this country, these times and the ing President McKinley. Tt is very difficult | he lund where customers or consumers carcer of militavism. He also poiuts | wignificance of this aunual event in the | administration is a myth, & boges e Rty sor il AR LB G . . £ s o | can be obtained. Indeed, 50 well has this A f S lt | out that it the Filipinos are entitled 0 | pistory of the community, because at | cantu sullusd Lt L R eo ecialties | independence they are also entitled to | tonded with s e o ¢ e anding and the volume of his business " wded with so little commiotion. standing and the volume of his busin No man with a dozen lines of business Now we are told that there are no|decide for themselves what form of As & matter of fact, however, the | persisted in abusing its subjects in TRSONAL NTERS, |are now accurately measured by the extent | 5 PR T Dtaiinidlihiar )ne Sitin Tie trills about nor Poynter. e is| government they shiall hay public school army includes recruits | Cuba? — With democracy it s sor a| 00 60 Bath) e (had oF B RENETtBIE he history of this coun- | B Who docs but one thing and sticks to likely to have val chills, however, | Governor Roosevelt's letter admivably | from nearly every houschold in the city | question of whether the act eritielsed is ed for $100,000, ,,\\";""\,3"‘5.]’,.' ;".',!,"\'." "ot a1l classes and | 't Mark Twain says: “The fool saith: ‘Put About the time the election returns | Supplements tut of President McKinley | comprisiug the flower of the comiug | rizht 0 Wroug, but a set determination | ng weather bureau appears to be about | conditions been so well equipped to con. | "L thY €EES in separate baskets wo that | and together they preseut the stwongest| generation. To the deill and discipline | to object to anything and everything | ready to concedo that the summer {s over. | sume not only the necessaries but the [ [ich S DRedieh Ao rest are unharmed: ——— | and most convineing arguments in sup-| of the public school we must look for | that is done by the vepublican adminis-| Oom Paul and John Bull have each |luxuries of life as they are today, and that [ = By 00l B0 B watch th 'mu: The popocrs an asserts there are | poet and Justiication of republicun pol- | that preparation which is to make the | tration ymething about the other during|calls for the best efforts of the intelligent | o We have put all our eggs in one basket We simply it glasses - nothing 4 progressive business man. The rich no frills on Governor Poyuter. The | § young ma 1 ————— aadar ¥ 3 ¢ young man and young woman useful o Ok ey aur. bual | 1y ) hsefu From Ple to In of thirteen samples of milk taken |€st harve ver known in our busl else. All of our brafns and rky and money | are devoted to that one thing. We do not proprietor of the paper has good and | aud industrious citizens | Washington P at the railroad station in Atlantic City | Affairs I& now about ripening for the b suticlent proof, however, that at one A JUST ARRAIGNMENT If any one thing marks the advance-| The Hon. George L. Wellington first sus- |on June 18 an analysis ss men of this country, and those Who | yeat the nose, the ear or the throat, We pected the admintstration of mperfallsm | twelve were adulterated with the poison- | best understand how to reap and garner it | muke a gpecial study of the eye alone. 1t time he was in possession of a sting of | g [ the . 16 ? L] One of the prominent and active “anti | ment of the present over the past it is 5 W s - ingratitude I Db, Will Everett of | the development in our system of free | ¥1en he found he was not getting all the |ous coucoction known as formaldehyde, [Will be most enriched by the prescnt ex: |your eyes trouble you fn any way we want imperialists™ is Di illinm Everett o A . ; ) patronage to which he thought himself en Oscar King Davis, the war correspondent, | C¢Ptional tide of national pre to talk with you about them. If you do Massachusetts. He is supporting the | education — brought — home to rich | tiled |[Par st Armshbaleem ol B e o 3 not need glasses we will tell you that. We ticket ot the “uational” party and in uu““‘l poor alike No institution can Graclous Col Ll make no charge for consultation owe in has shown that Colorado republicans have been hold- ing the largest attended convention held by the party since the silver craze swept over the state Lvidence is accumulat ing that the Centennial state is swing ing back into the republican column, Ihe republicans of Lincoln should be | careful when they have their initial parade wot to carry any banners which will offend the Bryan element, which is 0 touchy that it objects to anything burean great credit for its work at Gal-| alone He believes in seeing actual con- emphasizing republicon prosperity e veston, where hundreds of lives were saved | ditions and is thus no stranger to the ing displuyed on the streets of the capl. | Preathed uore of u spirit of vivalry y — by warnings of the approach of the torm, | poorer quarters of Baltimore, whither he and antagonisi, and of that kind of | The popocrats are not making much |given for several successive days before the [ goes often with notebook, open purse and headway with the returned Nebraska | arrival of the hurric The bureau could [ many a kind word. Why He Jumped the Pt personal friend of Colonel Liscum, who was W York Sun address a fow days ago he criticised | compare with the public school system | Thdianapolis - Tous killed at Tien Tsin, and had loaned the| rhe Hon. George Fred Willlams has boih McKinley aud Bryan. In regard | for the ineulcation of democratic ideas,| A life-long democrat gives as his reason flm' llnwI saddle on the day of the s0l- | gpeet of foolscap on his knee and a fountain dier's death J. C. Huteson & Co. Consulting Opticians, 1520 Douglas Street |0 the latter he was especiully severe, | because the school recoguizes no class |for voting the republican ticket this year lis past | distinetion, except that of intelligence, |©OF the Arst time the disappearance of | AU the Philadelphia City hospital the other | figure after figure and all the umbrellus In pen in his strong right hand. He jots m.m.\ | ) ps fn bis locality, when, as he says, | day a party of good peopie came in to cheer | Dedham are put up as they pass him and m-«\ scoring Lim on the husis ol sed as @ fomentor of class batred iudustry and merit | under the last democratic administration | u the poor patients with music Faney | glowing smile. He has just conceded lowa and a firebrand of soclal discontent, Omaha Las always taken special pride |1 fed two or three tramps every day happy feelings of the patients when these | to the democrats. Immortal Williams! Dr. Everett sald: “le has tried to[in its public school system, inviting - o singers struck up | Happy, bappy George Fred! Credit Where Credit ix Due. | Vireak the news to mother set section against seetion, state agajust | comparison with the schools of other %t Bacl Plonesr Fros fireak Lha Dowa t9 | versity studies sociology not from books | state, class against class and nation [ American citics, and will expect the| People who have had little faith in the [ . President Gilman of Johus Hopkins uni | | against nation. There never was a man | Bew &chool year to maintain ity repu- | Weather burcau service should give the whose uiterances and whose weasures | tation for superiority and progress, tal city : : civil war, the war of class uud sections, ———— | H R A 3 | not prevent the loss of life, but had its| Two brothers named Delmonico, Ialians, Cuba gets ahicad of the United States | which Is worse for us than any external [ volunteers who served in the Phllip- | (0 0 e more generally heeded the | in New York. objected so stronely to the in holding s election first, hut by do 1 . A that the causes [ Pines Fhe soldiers who kuow the norror would have been greatly lessened ging of a nelghbor that they fi 1 sin conditions there have no sympathy with Ing so it deprives itself of the pleasures wade s fear the demovratic party Beiilioct i shots out of a revolver at him, one of of 4 more extended campaigu, If the | four y¢ the fear that Le would | the fusurrectionists, even though they Thaiar which killed him. It Is not known whether i e e oraci e husinoss lutcronts of the|way ave questioued tho advisabllity | Probaly the mess briliant. comment on the Delmonicon aro interasted In tho organ It's chilly, No use tho' shiv. A ¢ : tlie y sident McKinley's letter of ac ance | EPINding industry or not maneuvers I progress in this country | country; the fear that he would set the [0 waking the islands a part of the [ President McKinley's letter of tance | they will loarn several lossons that|farmers against.the merchants; the feur | United States. They know, however, |1t that of Senator Jumes K. dones, chalr- | e promimcas san Branciace alieniate X ering in a summer suit when a man of the democratic national committce. |have expressed the opinion that Mrs. Nellis that the first onslaught of the war wis y: may prove useful for the future (hat he would set the west against the A et i R B He condemns the president because he |B. Craven, the notorious Fair estate claim. \ handsomc light ot medium WEigll‘ —— cast; the fear that he would have a eems to shrink from an avowal of his|ant, is merely felgning insanity as a m Douglas county populists should pre- | firebrand going all through the country [ before the treaty of peace was vatitied [ policy of imperiali But why should | of escape from the penitentiary, to which LR U A i e e R L R top coat will give you so much M SR D R L e AR e o o comfort at so small a price, We ounty conventions this week. In the | {s somewhat less virulent in the present | taken place had congress passed n reso- | pined opposition sees fit to charge him with Kk for $100,000 in payment for b lexicon of the local democracy the only | campaign than he was four years ago [ tion declaring its intention ot relin- | imperialism ix no reason Why he should | services in i case settled before he entered N have an attrac(ive line Of coverts quishing eventually the islauds to the nit the truth of the charge | office r the work in that office in the pare in advance tor the throwdown | —are not yet deid, are not yet remove nd they discount the assertions of they are sure to encounter in the fusion | It is a just areaignment. Mr. Bryan | Bryan that no fusurrection would have ([ 500105 Wy, useful purpose the populist can sub- | in fnciting sectional and class hostility length of 11 ! natives, The First Nebraska boys who Facts Soon Vor ame length of time as was devoted to the B B P R Doy TR D RN aaetite s o s o ot ana| whipcords, Fall overcoats in medium shades dates masquerading under the guise of | opportunity to do so. In Lis speech on ord Roborts complaint that the treat- | CRETEY he will recelve $1 f datm. ouiIalr 4o da o I8 L tioach ¢ il Vot o it s suhority st L Raborty Conpluin et e trat, |70 B e reproeaiaven o :,wuf‘.‘oxfords, with both the regular and the rag- | Qistinet unc inding that nothing of u | November the Boers was able to the author- | countries at West Point, admitted by the 4 2 Vi 5 Dryan und hin followers now i gty | 1AL Merttting g suibe of — Sthen 0wt o ot i | oomany oty o ke oo | Jan sleeve, Whatever is right you will find when Europe borraws money from the The Philippine commission is prepar ntion from the charges made by Mr. | ernme ! United Btates, Formerly thero was uo | 2F: Bryas tovk ‘occaslon fo suy somo urdett-Couts, conservative memver or | prestient of Eowtor, “cute wioins, +| hepe, No clothing fits like ours, | ing two weasures which will go a long . . . : : A Parliament for Westminster, and others, | brother of the president of Costa Rica, and more vehement ery from that guarter vay toward convinciug the people of the [ Lot et o ration of the British mili ’ Ponte, the son of the Venezuelan than that the conntry was in the grasp of i b cluss antzgonism. In his specch at Co islands that they are to be treated fairly | apy hospitals in South Afr P forelgn money lonners and. all the ¢ SO0 ARG A, IR BEROUN B and even generously by this country 1t LRE Kotten how | A brouzo bust of -..'\‘ o shorman OU!' 25 per cent dtscount sale on men's ingn of the people went abroad tc In addition to the $1000.000 alrcady ap. | 2merous we ‘ among the wen | of Mussachuselis will ho preseated interest, Now that the United States L ) o por. thng dn 1 waw even wown Bagrant: 4| propriated for rouds, like amount s | £ Cheles iy Sy B anes B Bt sty o e i fall and winter suits, is booming, Get in has, under republican rule, aecvmulated been set aside for harbor improvements | 4o on British prison ships at the | gift of school and college m sutficlont woalth to becomo (he hatiker | 148 PUFDORe, reforring (o the wnfortu | u¢ anila, By far the most important | Cape o e Tt v " e before they are all gone, Good ones now of Burope they growl and say thag if | 201¢ conlict, with the fustinct of the |y tne proposed reform in tasation G m— —— at Phillips Excter. and was for several | conditions were what they should be | 9FUul demagogue, as if the republican | ypger the Spanish system of personal Philadelphia Recor years on the bosrd of trustees of the|fOf the woney would be kept ut howe party were in some way respousible f01 | guxation labor bore most of the bur-[ In the treasury statement of fore M ) 0| L the grievances of the miners. Hix speech | gonw, & burden which the well paid | meree for elght mouths of the cu _ Mr. Bouss X 1 A year ago the populists aud the o [0 the commercial travelers at 8t Lous | juborers of this country would tind op | 795 0 ’.'[:""‘f:‘:"““;"‘) e while smsorts | Feceipts were \ $69 $7-50' $9-35‘ $II.25 $|3.50 a"d lled silver republicans Iu this county | 18 another exumple of his efforts 10| progstve. 1t Is proposed o wipe out | for the corresponding period were $564 4. | EOIE ngain | ust, 101 y o lined up for o fusion ticket over | array class agalust class, Indeed, ho system entively and substitute taxa. | 034, The excess of exports over those of the ¢ louded with democrats on the distinet | has made few speeches i the campait | gon on property thut will relieve the | frst elght months last year ds no dess G060 5 ; $ls 00 - . . serve ds to vote for democratic candi- | put he is not overlooking any favorable thing in bebalf of a plank in Lis plat form and to make a direct appeal to A was grossly ¥ Ar thing in 4 way even move fagrant, i school otland and ¥ promise of un equal division of the ap. [0 which the disposition to incite class | o workers o s A BRI R L BE A B pointive offices which might be cap | hatred has not appeared e r advantage in oxcess of exports over im- | tured as the fruits of conquest, Wh Dr. Everett was quite right, theretor MeKinley offended democracy | ports shows & sain over eigbt months of| Bum rks about the Amer however, the democratic nominees read | in expressing the apprebension that the A, He bus actually Insisted that | 1890 of $73.636,820. That Is to say, our ex Yy an Hawa e e thelr titles clear the promise to divide | ‘auses which four years ago led thought | the government of China, as one of the | 1o ,"1‘ X '," ¢ A NS ko p ssion rownln ln 0 the spolls was speedily forgotten. With | ‘nl aud couservative men to fear the | conditions of evacuation, wust protect | orme et o ene . “There | Honolulu pa present day picture 9 oy another campalgn in sight the dewo | lemocratic party are not yet dead or [ he native Christians, How wany years | has been a substantial g \ It in less attractive colors o court s W crats will again be long on promises !t | emoved. They are very much alive | since was it that these same dewmocrats | 'ured exports, while cotton, with much |are ruoning double time b up with R. S. Wilcox, Manager. " v ghte hipments, shows an increase in |business and the orgies ¢ 1 female their allles will only swallow the bal: | ind very active. They are Nkely t| were insisting the United States go to :I"Mr"’:lx;u'm' i e &), laoneal “L' | e M" (GA8 A1 88 0E DRUISLAS TABRIA| Omaha's Only Exclusive Clothicrs for Meco and Boys with equal political blindness, | manifest the mselves before the close o l ar with Spain because that counts | joged of over $34,000,000 | double-column slug heads 1n the press

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