Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
'HE OMAHA DAILY ) DAY, SEPTEMBE 28, 1900, CULLED from the Field of POLITICS Gay Decelvers, Al to stay forey n bu i of America Angninaldo and the Insurgents sympathy for mise tha realized llon alive. The American soldiers Hard Luek for Mosshacks o8 I8 upon your le give up what they turn ove which has and milllons ory cople I eca % " 4 Kinleylsm | rave ¢ ¢ S p fend t i < “ ; - “ an ag i " ) . : - - e and by bringing t patror A u . Iready had been wen 1 Mok ain H ats wh reiven the ma the Kan uvention for all bulld d Into v free silver p tions, wil What do rding n o plan 1hle governwent aud to v n o € - 1 . that lipinos independence. Will he o stable ernment without suj ey decline to ry SAFE MAN AT THE HELM i good governu Stgnificance o resident McKinley's upon them” And b Bos D it is Policy in China foree it upon tl Wihen Bryu but the “imper Webster carefully L now compluing ! ntiment. however, that he ¢ them independence with a protectorate. But a protectorate the reelection of County orney s uot indepen It involyes certain | Shiel rt of not compatible with | 46 Leart that ft Lim for an fmportaut h . Y ; 8 tor Tkt VAR It These public trust.” The duties of that office | their schemes of agr 1 r co that t men at work in a y stand. Cor call for something more than mind and a 1 ca on railronds in 1565 had currency standard, b leart., Mr. Shields has shown that he 5 . & i 1 o 028,924, That is to terms of a legal contr Am § e men found employmen 1 votes for a ! ake strong man. H ted slowly 1 vs in the third y of Mc- & step that, if supported by a majority ¢ and humbug. That party, it given the knowledge and common sense. What inder the most delicate cir K s administration than in the corre- ballots, will inevitably bankrupt a larg tlie people of this county want Is & man He has not flown in the face of | sponding year of Cleveland's last term. In number of ra whose qualifications fit him for the ment, but has been guided at | jap n ratlway employes received in s, for the ce and enable him to serve the county that he has qualities of mind Roosevelt never fultered going np San | Juan bill and he will not be deterred from continuing his campaign tour hy all the Bryanite hoodlums in Colorado et Just as Mr. Bryan was protesting agalust Bryanism being confused with almly und y cousidered, t whole talk of the Bryanite party about independence for the Filipinos is fraud % =adly lacking i qualities of legal | pe, Savet power, would not give the Filipinos ilse the wh what they are now demanding for them Qealings with China and 00,0001 #1590 the atADURE was DAFE Must dAmARe Huirosd workers Ars : for the simple reason t the party our foreign allies by what he percelved 000, &n increase of $77,000,00 not idle in regard to this threat iha 156k akd knows the Filipios are not gqualitied 4% Its couusel and legal adviser. 1If 1o be the controilivg desire of the people ~ Mr. Bryan's arguments are intended to bership of 26,000 tively at work thoy competency is the test the cholce will | of the United St create @ hoatile feeling between the men Railway ar ph Employe | od thelr Shields When Russia proposed that the fore who operate the roads and those who build ¥.eagus of 111 At their convent rly troops be withdrawn immediately frow and manag m. His habit is to point to this month they passed resolutior 4 CHEERY CHAFF. Pekin President McKinley, while approv- | the fact that railway ends were $25,- ing a dollar worth 100 cents th incalculable trouble for this republic L # lug the wpir of R a’s purpose, ¥ 000,000 larger in % than fn 1895 and to approving tariff that protes 3 | ing at Nebras| City says that “there unwilling that the United States should ask the workers how much they got of the labor, and 4. ng their opp prominent democrats ik . Py | were fewer shouts for opposing candi- | be the first to break th t of powers. | net earnings distributed among stockhold ates knows to be in favor ¢ ready to make the trip to the new lund | 0 oAk IV URBAN PUPULATION. | 400 14y ot most meetings.” Does this | He suggested such a tion of vk He:woulliniot mantion;tha feck finental to rallway or early in November THOTARNLON OF LU0 11000 comuuNINg EAR| S 00T H0Rt Oolonsl! Bryan has been BuRviAR 'RECROSNS (X8 b e Lasningibadinig Jermpst DRRLENC O LRANL,/ € d—Nelther given out are all from the citles, not meet th proval of the oth i vided for . ganization in eve i d _do countering shouts for his oppouent from | would safeguard American interes o B Aunce df Yound HOal : g e weathe his audiences throughout the campaign? | v not u the policies of \ lawlessness Colorndo Bryanites we sanlting the republican candidate for | for independence pnd that to give thew & do the re self-government, with a protectorate by | BOt the United States, ould e to it river country has been ‘e United Btates, would be to fnvite| . .01 enort of the Bryan meet opened for settlement There will be a Iarge colony of be It took nearly 100 ballots to decide | ©¥¢P the smuller towns belng fncluded on the man to succeed Senator Dolliver. Tha election day coutest will be shorter | Te4%¢d li population S auce hypnotized every one within reach and sharper, but equally declsive for|CUFiNE the past ten years as in the two | ooy "coin and lulled into quiet the e rep srevious census periods, though of | were impatient wi the republican nominee v A v ) of | ost bolsterous opposition. If the peo 5 obid | o e call for McKiuley while listening to | th t a e Hon. J. Ham Lewis wants to have u | KDOWn in an unofficial way of the fucts |} sl 4l : Dty d 1 opportuaity to mend fence Bryau's specches they must be deter debate with Senator Stewart. How can | Fesarding the smaller cities and towns v v They prove that the citles have in 4 t was supposed that Bryan's appear b and Germany and creased fu population about the sume |\t W48 SUDK y v R eCELAlIANls that e policy. The peoy el vied el | course the percentuge is less. What Is iver mavericks he ined also to vote for McKiuley s 2 le" has an J. Ham expect.to ward off the ruin of | Indicutes that the same condition Is to | MIned also to vote for McKluley r,’ i argument as long as he parts his radiaut | be found there Most of the newly returned soldiers whiskers in the widdle? The increase in ten years in the ffty- | from the Philippines agree that the t f ar. and makes a more fu D o gover e e R | five large cities of the country aggre- | continuance of the insurrection there fs (e v eL e i e The Greek chureh is threatening to | gotes 4,627,953, The smaller cities and baye become & conver this time. The excommunicate Count Tolstol unless e | towns will bring the inercase in urban due lurgely to encouragement which the ! g ordinary campaigner making a s into Filipinos draw from the expression of il A ndidat X Ty the enemy’s country” would have left t recants objectionable utterances. Tol-| population In the entire country up to | gympathy emunating from democratic | everish days pre Jaration of | W t enemy cold and indif A veritable stol does not need this notoricty, as | approximately 7,000,000, if not mor his reputation has been made It is estimated that the total for the | sources in this country and that the|war against Spain it has gulded ' argu hich past expe t oot playing the role of we terner quickest way to end the couflict would [in & middis ¢ in the Chi 0 L safest or m oilvn dcoorsanislwl e daee plleviet mnalos be by suowing under Bryan and his | Bertae of (00 O for prest- | to shake han train pulls out and the penetrated in a day. If his speech did not I | pssociates, 1t 18 needless to add thut | gene by all who i ate, like the bird in ickoo clock, betray him somewhere his fate would have sandwich out of J, Ham Lewis to liven {is casily urban. Unless something can ST — country will show an inereused popula The Nebraska City committet made a | tion of about 14,000,000, 1 these returned soldiers, frrespective of |den changes of laws 4 yops back in his car to rest until the come inevitably the moment he set foot to | up the speechies of Smyth and Bryin. | be done to make the uow vacant 1ands | (o former party agiligtions, all prom- | e e | formance is repeated at the next station. stirrup. Governor Roosevelt's joy in a As an entertaining monologue artist J. | jn the west, which are largely at pres to help end the war by voting for m would » 4 SUCCOSS on 1 \u\u“ rid or s 1 4 i Ham would be a su uany vaude: | ent arid or semi-arid, able for agri- | MeKinley's re-clection | The country now has to thank Governor tivity, his unfailing high spirits, possib e | Roosevelt for showing how a swing around hi isfaction at being allowed to get out I'hie Lopting of Chinese Towns by th | AL oy the circ can be m anything but tame and do things after months of self-restraint ville stage. [ culture, the next census period will wit _— A . Since he set forth into the far west the gov- in an ornate executive office, seem to have = = ness a continuance of the drift toward | Nobody has yet venturcd to explain| i iization is shamed by the authenti-|er riences have been the most «x- carried him safely through the or Bryan has bid goodby to the front YiiizAtion potch until the few days before election Contrary to expectations, the uew st ture has not had a bilarious time thi season and the absence of the owner will ot make any perceptible difference. the cities | why our great trust-smashing attorney | cated reports, not only of looting, by e iresque yet witnessed in th The governor's picturesque flight through | re than a vear before | of the aliied forces in China, but also of the | cumpaign. He has made speeches according the west is not unlikely to have its effect | akt RamirAs puttakes oo w } chil. | to program, but they have been almest upon the men of the t dren, including thei n ighter, | the least noteworthy features of the tr technically known as without the slighte rov Dis- | After his platform addresses he has jumped held in contempt. On cities in excess of the growth of the [tory in September, 1850, Smyth did not | patches tell of peace n Chinese | off the car and proceeded to the real busi- d gging his knees into the ribs of the wi r of tting acquainted with the cow- plains horse or gripping the rear rail Movements of large | t general waited | like those of individuals, are not with- | tackling the starch trust. Although the |out a cause. Ordinarily the growth of | starch trust annexcd the Nebraska fac country Is looked upon as an unfaver- | wake up to the fact until September, | coolies killed by the invading tr nd 14 I { d not have dis. | the m rociou able sign. If the eities were growing | 1900, and probably would not have d e P e T TR T T S e e e and the agricultural portious decreasing | covered it then were not the November | o 4 ¢ e of the nal foolishness of speechmaking out of ha eminently character his trust-smashing excursions 1 ! : o outrageou e, ot ih ¥ in population there would be cause for | elections staring him in the face. Euronssn soldler 1ly the Russians ¥ has got down to the more in- man. In circle-swinging, as in m of swapping experiences other undertaking ers, miners and plalnsmen who the train coasts down the Great Divid Bryan Las come to Smyth's women who com be remembered that Bryan came to| e — It fs Iasting eredit of the American ¢ orld erald is be on elec 1€ | and e troops 0 o bronchos If there had been an the rut tion. however. dous not exist. The| The World-Herald Is beut on clecting | and Ja roo v ame court luvolving the validity of N thae [the fusion legislative ticket, which [are heard concerning them and that they e les are inercasing more rapidly than | did their best to put s to the looting waximum frelght rate law, b 3 Ahsgpstispil b i o put a S AT AT ) e early duys of the republic and | Would mean the cholce of two fusion | ay, gepials of reports of Russian outrage RSONAL POINTERS, AMERICAN GOODS ABROAD ERIPER 100, b4 GRS | 1 18 becoming more congested, | ¢RAtors to represent Nebraska | frst heard are heard no lopger. The | Washin The World-Heruld, there- | lamented Colonel vefore his ) ’ They Overd etition in N genuine arm | this 'his Smyth's rescue in a case before the su. | BCHuine alarm In T »w that the state officials and clorks ¥ tho Fomily of beal b who are paid by the state for doing th A A oAl & work of the state, have completed tl A s o e (PR AT 1 2 t t i | I spend : half a billion | 1 fore, n be expected glve free a an interview | States 1 and Dixon line labor of compiling the popocratic can paign book, they can pr to return to the w 1 . . X mocrats huve cpublican Y sgland must now spend an immense repariog for the nex wgreed in r s mer returning from draw the taxpayers’ money . t o substitute for the Goelx ¥ | haps rst trip abroad o i v oinlibnanaiiey l 1 to sccomplish the W # n they were unable 1ares where they could breakfast | London is to have a benetit theatr S g in a more polite manuer performance for the Galveston flood s ¢ , " Locrats of that te who hay ferers the middle of October, although | ' \ profited by the Goebel are willing the flood catastrophe occurred more | W ment $ MNEEY | condemn it providing they Keep con than two weeks ago. This has been lug Pur-| 101 of the election machinery - y 9 e r Ignorance chus wt all itomobile teristic of London enterprise, but never too late to enlist in od cause, | factured goods from fore ) TR ~>|nl\1-Hu‘;‘; .'n s ‘~ sman —— ywn industries have expanded until n were | h Wellington s gr One result of the trouble in China s | Wost 1 Kupply the o importauce of the about to exhibit itself in the rise in|#md export A h the grlp for the leading the price of tea. While part of the [The growth of manufacturing industri NPT T scarcity Is due to the shortuge of the [ has inevitably been followed by 1l Japanese tea crop, the Tlen Tsin cara cities, Smaller citles £ g ¥l fong the result 17 t 8 o ! van route by which Rtussia has secured | oy i b lies th v durl ' ! ; i CASTOR I its tea has been closed and will force pWeasure of less extensive manufacty ¢ J. Sterling Morton to the amp Rul s . ' ! 4 ."‘-‘1‘.1”:“:1‘ sim “i\x.“ l\\.ml r\yt‘ th I]LX“ R The Answer to Huse Appeals [ A . i ed that regis For infants and Children. lecessors 18 one not of degr pected to be diluted with an extra quota | 50 loug us the conditions und . which |y Sashare 1 Ohe A o Mo e 5 e | Hprn y 1 ¢ : Boears the y ek £b tha & e cacups | the workmen labor are steadily iwm- | Kin © have pever had a man before | the Am g, thank God ere e as b fall = of water or the fad for small teacups | the Wwo Sy LS RS (A0 BAS A AR DWIRCH | A AL Mapk Sod - X : an sewing machine into { the mest | Bignature of With the remedy for evils may again be stimulated. proving, 0| of prosperity. aud not only that, tut the | some of the other great nations advanced patious of Europe was upbili