Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 2, 1900, Page 6

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6 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1900. ” o ; o QUESTIONS NE WILL NOT ANSWED, ]um stioning faith In his promise | ones, twos, fives and ter will b ox Y r th 1 nd willing - THE MAHA DAILY L | With something of bravado Mr. Bryan [ purpose to make a determined fight [ changed for certificatos of larger denomina ollar an inner )al - : AL nwu . 5 ¢ tions to meet demand. This prepatation plexion of the ban appoars . ROSEWATER, Edit [ has a number of times told audiences fagainst the gold standard I the party 1s | [O18 10 8 G i tate [that it wiil ot declaretor annexation to e - ~—==| that he is willlng to state what hisfguccessful in the election. In whatever| a1 business operntions will bo greatly wg Portland Oregonlan. naldo can blow his silver whistle undis- | the United If the country is ever (@ PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING policy 1 regarding the Philippines and | other respect Mr. Bryan's sincerity may | preciated by the public What shall ft profit a man to assist turbed | vecor egtal part of the counte that as much caunot be sald Presi- | he questionable, there can be no doubt Aguinaldo to a throne and lose his own You tell me that I must do the hand. )it must ¢ as t ree will offoring ¢ = - = 1 Queer Notlons of Conl Barons some thing by Aguinaldo. Well, whilo |the great majority ot its people. Should TERMS OF SUL IPTION o i Daily Bee (without Bunday), One Year. 86,00 | dent McKinley. Now as a matter o [as to his honesty regarding thiv free Buftalo Expre Job I am taking care of Aguinaldo who |the convention be silent upon this question }r,.x Bee and Sunday, One Yeur | fact no intelligent person who has read | gjlver fssuc The great coal corporations are very McKinley proj to establish order in llustrated Bee, One Year W | §unday Hee, Oha Year 200 [ the president’s letter of acceptance can | Those who think as the Baltimore Sun wturday 1ee, One i 1 among themselves to control the outpu Weekly Bee, One Yoar LS and prices of their product. But as to OFFICES policy. He made that so clear that no | be rudely dispelled if Mr. Bryan should | union and co-operation among the miners | States soverclgnty. Bryan proposes to Lo b Ll By (R TEL P | tied conditions, withow h no goverr gmaha; The Bee Bullding o ven. | 08¢ could misunderstand 1t ly.. elected. He will organize an ad- | for self-protection, that (in the estimation [ establish order in the Philippines, set mp . oore 0 b 0w febt, However wise od, can prosper South O City Hall Bullding, Twen- - M o ) ty-Rth an Nits But why is not Mr. Bryan equally | ministration hostile to the gold standurd u‘nn. coal corporations) i quite a different | a stable government with a local sel-EOV- g u Job if I am thrown out CRicago: 104 Unity Poilding frank as to some other questions which | and every effort will be made to find a | ‘M08 New York: Temple Court are no less important to the Ameriean | way to nullify the currency law of last 7 wiive Is the difference great enpugh to pay & man the dollar in the pocket ¥ Washington: f1 Fourteenth Street ' 3 Nation. ‘the Contey s i | N Sresamer to vote for 16 to 1, bring on hard times naldo Is unsatisfied I Bloux Clty: 11 Park Strect, people or instanee I March, to every feature and proviston [ .\ (ESEECS VRSSO L and throw himself out of work? ing to talk about the full dinner 2 CORRESPONDENCE Y would very much like to know whether | of which the Bryanite party is opposed. | ination for the legislature. It {s necdless | The idea is to return to the republicanism as if & man bad no ideas aboye | communicat Wil Ryl B R or not, if he should be clected, Le | ppe first step in this direction would be | to say that organized labor will have a|of Washington, Jefierson, Jackson and Lin- pail. But it a man | b torial matte * 1. Omaha i ¥ &8 ] - . Bee, Editorial Department would pay coin obligations of the gov-|tne payment of the coin obligations of | true and loyal ropresentative if he f | coln. The idea iu it we can’t have “consent™ without both the dollar ana BUSINESS LETTERS [ elected, His past fs bis recommendation |10 the south of with the Indians or in pail he wants to ki . Business letters and remittances should wnd the pRInting craft of Omaha will miss | Alaskn or Porto Rico, anyhow we must give to get off. It Would be | says: “If the bear has which upon the financial and business | 4o opportunity of a lfetime if they neg- | It to Aguinaldo, even at the cost of a finan- the Bryans, doubticss . o elgn that h will be taking care of me? Who is going | of declare against annexation, it will the Philippines, set up a stable government to buy my goods if my customers exercising a fundamental right. Our present with local self-government and United their ers? Who Is golng to get I8 to assist these ¢ n settl money out of the waviogs bunk when r own government maintaining much fn favor of union and organization | have any doubt as to his Philippine | qoes are nursing a delusion which will ernment and a United States protectorate. Bryan says it (4 monstrous 1o talk PERSONAL POINTERS out and will It will cost He hae been he Spanish ernment in silver, There Is a very gen- | the government in silver—the effect of | | b nddremsen e e TR " Com: | eral apprehension in financial and busi- | REMITTANCES ’ P Remit by draft. expross or postal order, | the fear 18 even now having an unfavor- | pan knows would be disastrous 0o that Be 18 elsoted \ pretty hard proposition proclamations twice & woek payanls to The Bes T Bavlishing Compa able effect, The question is one that - Lot us elect Bryan and the silver cén- in Manila. But the average 2 " Do, gress that will go along with his victory. golug to think so much al " t Only 2-cent sta ed in pa | = = week, was the o mafl aceounts, Personal checks, except on | Mr. Bryan could answer without any | NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS York Sun Let Omaha or Fast h f ¢ keep up a scare in business, abandon happen to Aguinaldo as to for the A T TG A AR Y | explanation A mere affimative or | Nothing succes 18 like success, This| Under Bryanism every fmp prtant Indus- | pacific expansion, encourage riots, get a about what will happen in thi r ' | negative reply is all that is necessary. | is again exemplificd by the success that ‘;* 'k" '“" “'m!l would I‘; made lw(v“vl & | tew anarchists in the supreme court, shut We go on the principle in th STATEMENT CIRCULATION ' > W ot answer the questio! — s o bantiv shock such as business never felt in | yup the factories with threats of frec trade, that if a man doesn't look out for him Btate of Nebr an C [ But he will uot answer the question. | hus ""‘:“"‘ the musical festival and | py country's entire history. Any tarift| break up a fow banks with fear of the sil- self nobody will look out for him. A George 1. I retary of The Ihere is another matter as to Which | Ak-Sar-Ben carnival just brought to a |agitation, any panic ever lived through was | ver basis, tell the world that four years mauy people think highly of self-pre Publishir o Uiy sw " 1 SRve e '_'”my_” Wy, the views of the popocratic candidate | close in this eity @ summer breeze to the killing tornado of | of prosperity at home and honor abroad tion. That 85 what Aguinaldo did whe gomr o v|; Datl M would be Interesting. That is the dis Both of these ventures were under Ylhv\‘l(y\.ln policy against the country's in- | don't suit us and have a change all he took $400,000 of Spanish coin and sailed onal v-vH‘h: 'h'-‘ Svening nday Tiee, y r " ; i 4 dustrios around. It will be a tough dose, but Alt- away, leaving the sacred cause of fre 1 | reflectively t the month of September chlsement of colored eltizens he on by their promoters - rour ¥ ing i fr e AR franchisement of colored citisens 10 the | taken by thelr promoters with misgly Does any sensible man, whather he owns | geld and Tillman will be happy and Agui- and “consent’ to Its own resources 3 ¢ mages.” "“Why I'licse citizens are being de- | jnge as to the outcome in some quarters, or $1, want to bring on such a catas- asked a g “Oh, you like 1 of their constitutional right of | but the unprecedented record made by | trophe? — better when yo em made,” wa suffrage by discriminating laws. The | euch of them proves again that in the rejoinder ness circles that he would do this and | yqairs of the country every practical [1ect to organize n Fred Youngs club and | ¢inl and industrial revolution here at b It would be agreeable t t by hase. The bear Reagan of Dayton, O st railwa ited States and had be, t thirty-five years = irnegle emplates 1 inect his steel works ling the emj 1 his trafc I General Palinbs dummy Nebraska corporation and be W 5 I : 3 : 2| principle of the consent of the gov-|lexicon of Omaha there is no such word Toutsvills Cou | much ‘the master of the situation as it Loy ) ‘;‘ ’(‘ e K“‘]"”"" v 0 | erned I8 being clearly violated in their | uy f. Let it not be forgotten in reviewing the : now. Tho factory cannot be taken away [ Matstchuseils, William E. Russell, painted iy | case. But while Mr. Bryan is most s One specially signiticant feature that “""l“’)'hv late General John M. Palmer ladelphla Time ; b bl g ool . ek "’\‘" state house in nd will be hung in 9 en a pension o I onth was There | omethin pathetic and much aGea ove 0 the original owners or an Citous apply this principle to the romark: o f ose actively | Liat when & pension of $100 & mon d Doric hall a th t the other pas tou 1 i) ¥ 18 remarked upon by all those actively | yoieq nim tn his old age and poverty he | that is instructive In the scene that will | body e ol IS NI nts in the Philippimes he hasw't | engaged in the management of these | made the request that the amount be cut [ soon be witnessed in Delagoa bay when the After Mr. Bryan had appealed to his bl 4 a word to say in regard to its denial to | enterprises is the better feeling among | in half, as that sum would h to | Dutch battleship Gelderland will receive on [audience not “to subject themsclves and | Christopher Columbus Langdell, the re Suitso | his colored fellow eitizens in the south, | the Omaha business men and Omaba | satisty his simple wants. What a contrast | board the former president of the late |thel nirymen to the extortion prac- [tiring dean of u;: Harvard Law school, was | to the action of a judge who has a salary [ Transvaal Republic to carry him back to [ticed by all the ‘trusts,’ in order to main- | the first to revolutionize the old methods o '| of 7,500 a year and who yet brought suit | the land frém which his forefathers came [tain one trusi, which has one factory in | legal Instruction and substitute the case Mr. Bryan will continue to ignore | work together for the advancement of [ 1o compel the payment of $100 a month | 250 years ago | their city,” he said: “I want you people | 8¥stem for the textbook. He is 74 years old | these questions, They are not vote | the eity, which a commissioner of pensions held was His departure dates the failure of one of | to know that if we get control of this gov- | 4nd his eyes are giving out 2 | | This feeling seems to Indicate a re. | excessive the most respectable efforts of a liberty- [ernment the federal administraticn, as well | John C. Wingate of Wingate, Ind., owns 27,490 | wiio are loyal to the government, | people generally, prompting them to catehers hN20 = pe 1Z8CHUCK LABOR WOULD SUFFER. viveiand Surengiisiing ok pUBIC K91 Wo the Yew Navy. a land far removed from interference, as [hands upon the starch ‘trus How will | elect two Harrisons president. It was made always necessary for adequate support Chicago Record th SO4L60s | e — 1 —_— loving people to establish a free nation in | @8 the state administration, will lay its | the famous white beaver hat that helped to S AN OTE 16 E ok » : fondly believed, and although he re- |the federal administration do so unless | for Mr. Wingate's grandfather, Christian September, A D Hon. James H. Eckels, who was comp- | g every public undertaking. The ques The naval neuvers at Newport Sug- | tyrng in defeat, leaving behind a few rem- | congress s given by constitutionai | Coon, who wore it to the old Harrison rally JIENGATE | troller of the carrency i the secoud | tion asked I8 not, Can it be made a |KCSt that the submarine torpedo boat may | nants of his people. he goes with Ronor and | amendment a_ power over commerce and |on the Tippecanoe batilefield —— e | Cleveland administration, says that 10| gyecess? but, It must be made a suc- | yooq .‘””MN“”‘ ‘,] h'"“;”“mm. ookl -|:>,Ill’_\ In the effort that the Boers made | manufactures it does Dot Possess now Now it No political mavericks on the eattle | the minds ot those who carry on the | cese, and what are we expected to do | still in the experimental stage, but the 3 range this year they have all eome | affairs which make our business world | 1o nelp it along? | performance of the Holland in approaching up to the republican corral | Bryan is assoclated with uncertainty | 1¢ this pivit can be waintained and |0 Within striking distance of several of " the vessels of the blockading sc 0 — [and doubt. 1t will not do,” says M. | wimulated Omaha's immediate future [ (14 h ing squadron i is in Washington that a cry has colonization success of the first order |The state of Nebraska may be able and |gone up asking the district commissioners marked their endeavors. Even after the | willing to drive a starch factory out of | to suppress the hus ¢ and love-making grand trek was made and in order to secure | Nebraska City because owned by a “trust.” | that goes on in public, especially in street the isolation the sea forbade them te® en- | The state of New York may have the|cars, theaters and public parks. And con joy on the coast, and they passed into the [ power to close the Oswego starch factories | ur s that its possibilities are large. it A & ! ) | heart of Africa and established themselves [because owned by & “trust.” It never | g 1 Nebraska prafvies will raise still or Eckels, “to say that these futerests are| promises as great strides forward as| Sham engagements of y . Sir Claude Macdonald, the new British o 3 o s s! o | Sham engagements of any kind are rarely | on tha banks of an unuavigable river, thelr | will consent to exercise that on the banks of an gable river, thelr | conse o exercise that power. How | &0 - A At ki | minister to Japan, and, during the trouble | s is not in session either more crop this year—the largest yield | seltish and ought to receive a lesson. | paye been made in any period in the | effective as tests, but if the Holland were | gimple tustes, their persistent industry |can the federal government close those 16 Pali the Bogllils rerresentative Lher to do in real warfare what it demonstrated | ang unwearying patience found their re- | factories or stop the shipment of their |, ..o coider at the ‘k,‘ of 20 and was vllm it :m.m' |m\;‘ done lrfl' \U“IWI»HW ward. When, however, they haf™accumu- | products to purchasers in other states 2 é destruction of at least one first-class bat- | Jated wealth enough to attract the roving | Mr. Bryan pr eral g ; i ¢ e 1% W HEats ate 1 enough to attrac o 1o ) yan proposes that the federal gov. . { and determination among its citizens, tleship would be recorded to its credit. It | ayg of the British their real tr hles began | ernment shall lay its hands on trusts’ Roosevelt day, which comes ‘Chursday. | would suffer so much as the laborer, for — Is interesting in this connection to mote | 4i1 over again, and the unhappy discovery by the enactment of laws which shall “dis- October 4, is the next red letter day on | he must have steady work, day in and | A VISION OF 1805-15% that France, which has kept well in the lead | of gold hastened the disaster that has over- | solve every private monopoly which does :u‘x,’.,n‘nuy sousmatiug, has four of these | taken them. There is no blight can fall | business outslde of the state of its orlgin." boats in service, with eight more building upon a country or region to be compared | He should tell how he proposes to pre- or projected, and a program which calls | with the possession of i ot gold ‘wud Em——— mt of business oper S mes N ( e country and articularly | g 8. ool stion. 6 ante e P n of mines of gold and | vent the consumers of starch in states cut ment of business operations means th 1 th untry an ¥ V| for the construction of twenty-six more | gilyer, Peru, Mexico, Nevada and India are | side of N oA ot e \("”""k' f\*'"l" o disappoiut” the curtailment of the employment of labor, | > aska in the years before the G1G0= | LRLOER U30b-" | illustrations of the fact, and if California (o the National Starch company and having anites as a ~:u.;~|.u|m_\ settlement of [ \oith attendant distress and idleness, 1] tion of 1806, The exhibit too de-| PTOBRIN HAIN ROBDERIES, nd Australia have escaped the cure, it was | jts products shipped to them. If the men the coal minery’ strike. The hope of | 1ok upon Mr. Bryun as the most dan | pressing to e extended over the en- | | because nature bestowed a greater wealth |and women of this country were to agree the Bryan ticket lies in distress and | gorous man to the labor interests to- | tive period, a mere glimpse being suffi-| Esay an Rolling OF o Log When You |2 (helr wheat flelds and vinevards, ‘The |t use less starch or no starch in their LALGHING MATTER. calamity day in public life.” cient to recall the d through | Know How. full weight of this affiction of gold fell |ghirts and skirts they would harm the | | It would seem that every intelligent | which we have happily passed of republican votes they have produced | for the greatest sufferers will be those | ace. What Omaba has done it can in several seasons | who most dependent upon the 1arg- | 4o again with the same co-operation —— | ost daily activity in business. No one almost continuous active service for twenty-five yes He has been in the diplomatic gervice only three years One would su; that if anything were | eheap in the Klondike it would be ice. In deed, according to all reports coming from that frigid region it has been supposed that | there is ice to burn there. Neverthless an | ice machine has been ordered by a business | house in Dawson City. Ice is now 5 cents A pound, and & hard winter coming on Omaha's enlendy Mark it down if you [ day out. le has no veserve capital|{ On another page will be found a brie have not alveady done so, | trom which to draw and the curtail-| vision of the terrible distress that over- —_— Philadelphia Times ‘;""” the \"‘“;': republic and insured har fgiaroh “trust” far more than it can be| Detroft Journal: “He asplres to be the " . . it destruction. Whatever issues of the day |harmed by any federal legislation Mr, | champion 't t, The Commercial club should keep | Why s it that train robberies seem to n harme a al legislation Mr | IRIRE o S S lub should keep| ' o nan must see the truth of this.| Contrast with this retrospect the evl | norease in frequency and daring and that T TseTh il etes ok s\ | cloka eauR AR ISGEEHN RN belt, enande ! JH v : ; || ties the primal cause of the war was gol pyce starch. The consumers do ‘hat ct or possibly & 2 dences of prosperity now to he scen on | thelr movement is from the west, where | \le3 th boycotting of starch. The consumers d What cun labor possibly gain through | d i OF ProRpaHityAtiow 150 i ful | the open plains and {AbopuIALadL: suntan | The English fought for the mincs and the | ot think the price excessive. Chicago Record: “Joe, I'm delighted to any policy for which the Bryauite party | every hand, happy bomies, hountifu BUere’ fouRhe or 1iberty, and the Korale| o Sepes St st vy (her atigraey | S6eFOU k T & G x regions enable the thieves to make good : “Well, I'm glad you're pleased stands? For three yenrs labor bus been | crops, overflowiug granaries, revolving | {0 CBle e THEHS 10 e KOO causo has won. Ignoble ax have been many | general of Nebraska begin this antl- | Vs since we met before you've got as rly remunerative | mill-wheels, buzzing fuctorics, DUSY | gquare mile can furnish a posse to pursue | °f FnKland’s enterprises no one of them | tryst suit he has made a mess of it For | buld ui Tam cauals in infamy (he destruction of this |ne has irritated some men in his own| g e ’ noble little nation. Compared to it the o8- |giate whose votes he may need. He has | wiionii think son-d Wve in more comfartabl gressions of Warren Hastings in india; the | 410 fn trying to pacify the Nebraska City | and stylish quarters than this. right on in its quest for new jobbing houses and factories for Omaha. The procession is alrendy started and should nog be allowed to stop. y i it well employed at f Medical authority says It Is bad for | Wages. The effect upon business and | working, crowded marts. Who nnIIM’ulmI |\|“? telegrajn and telephone wires the henlth to' go to bed with an empty | enterprise of the success of a purty | want for 4 momlent to turn back the ;(“';;'nn“:;:r 1;:;\:;;::. .ly’;:.y.‘:'»:( '...:d..:"u';‘\;(“ » stomach. In democratic times, how-| Which advocates debasement of the| hands of time and exchange again the SELRARTIR TInTKeR DYt AURIH0 cawkEdiss <1uy'm{’lull\nn.llxwm Acadia, which, alas .1.-. s | people, shown again that while profuse n:-‘lm”?::hu‘\j‘ .,‘.“”1",'_'“",{4ly‘lfl"]‘,:,':": ‘,',:.I“\.v‘. ever, many people are forced to the con. | Currency and free trade would in-| prosperity of the present for the POV-|of the victims it wiil be hard to find an- | oo PR ';;;:}*“:;‘:"_‘\:' . ’::;x-'yji';‘;'t;" in promises to destroy “private monopos | Who Ao be such as to work great in-|erty of the past? other reason 5o satisfactor ThiAlo, AUAL Hey0pium WA in “m‘ i 1es™ if elected he s unable to tell the way e Bt toms et das Keep the two pictures in mind and| There is not an fustance of resistance | pipg it S fiP QPN SO0 AR FEER, 00 | in which 1t 18 to be done oJrasnington, Star: SEC some er, fes 1t 18 n poor clection when our voters | ent, Therefore the workingman who|ask yourself whether you want n | belng made and thieves have como to kuoW | gomg part by the conditions that created e TCiBAN ol UL IS TR S Gl their orger, up!” will be d ’ them, but th W Sout A Wa pened ong. are not treated to the opportunity to | considers only self-interest—to whom the | change. promptly obeyed and that no fleld fa so| neM: Put the e Rallin g ATSIch IRAR HEYRRIAARRIonE U ¥ S—— 5 iy ly unjustifiable, based upon a false | progressive Strides of the Isla express themselyes on a few bond prop- [ most important question is that of prop-| afe for their enterprises as that offered | ,isioment of causes and conducted with to| - Toward Independ: Boston Transcript: Minnie—Carrie other view than the annihilation of th Philadelphia Ledger. ‘!‘?‘\”v’”»“v "l‘ :rlw ]\\vr l{vr:w: \“! of her I public. 1t {8 probably true that the -| The complete ascendency of the nation- | Hattle—And she has so many of them' £ o thia el iofia B store or put up a good fight with a high 2 i y 3 Y of love he must bestow contributions for the relief of the Gal | Waytman 1o & lonely street seoms. to b | lEh expected to attain by blufing wha | alists in the approaching Cuban constitu- | W \nrm alth I he must best veston flood vietims as $6T2,476 and 1t| Sovn o0, L terror when a train robber, | (0%t them so much blood and treasu tional convention s not surprising. The | "PO" M is probable that almost an equal amMoUNt | who is supposed to be infinitely more | ey ‘)""” phasiins 4|“M'I1kn jation. | convention which organized the government | Dutrolt irce Press: She-What are you Wt her military operations should cc » United States was dominated by the | thinking about Harry? in money and provisions has been con- | desperate than all others, approaches. The | pibuca (o the burden of eontem ot ‘\ ROR11 ab sharvintiegnAtAe. e ANIGoR) nRLodhY Al | Hpking Sae8 [ ributed. direct to the cities afficted, | spectacle of one masked man with a pistol | por pelier 1 P || late revolutlonists. It must necessarily be | gy "iren't"vou afraid of overtaxing your tributed ¢ policy has invited is righteous und | the case when any dependency succeeds in | brain, dear? just deliberately robbing fifteen or twenty men, | many of whom have weapons, has been re o | separating itself from the mother country. 3 4 - K i it of sub-| \e Bocrs aré blotted out of cxistence a . s the power | Chicago Post: Rriggs—Look here, you've | civilized world such an exhibit of sub-| puaied until it has become an accepted | o nation Bt thdin nhw‘“h’ z...‘"q‘".. ‘t_* Whether the nationalists will use the power | | Chicags Fosti Triggs oGt pere, Fhu | stantial sympathy called out on short | belief that train thieves can practice with . e de- | given them in the institution of the gov- | guwed fo. | | sequences of such a condition, evitably = jury to labor. This i3 already appar ositions. The chances are tl ¢ 1900 [ erly providing for himselt and his Governor Sayers of ‘Texas reports ”.l. ‘n‘ ”"',,"“, ”T'n on a train. The .man will be no exception to the rule | family—should refuse to support the | fwount of moncy st e D e o s ——— | party which offers him nothing to pro The appeal of Bryan and the national | yiote his welfare, but whose policies, on committee for the formution of Bryan | (e contrary, would certanly bring a ve- and Stevenson clubs evidently fell on | yyen of the unbappy conditions of a something worse than stony ground—it | foy years ago. did not have even an ephemeral growth, | —————— Where will anyone find in the whole | it e | WNURSING A DELUSION. Aguinaldo's private se i fense s an Inspiration for the lovers of ! y . . 4 . | e lovers of | erp scretion and judicious tol Griggs—Well, after T had seen her once : notice in response to the appeal of a |impunity upon the fear their namo excites. | |jperry that lifts Colenso and Splon Kop to | ohemert witldiseretion'And Judicigusstols | GRISER=VI QUL SN0 AaG oS N [ paign are those who believe, or profess One of these days some man will muster | oo (AL O COIENe A6 SPIOR KOP 10 | erance toward defeated parties the future | S0, (OCT,) on the Philippine question. 16 will not | 4 pojieve, that Mr. Bryan, it elected, | up courage. to shoot, and shoot firat, aud| )T, Oom Tail on his ses Journey to Taols| T hy il 1t is posslble for the rullog equire more than one guess 1o settle [ o 100 LR irow the gold | —_— on the day tho Irst (rain FOUber 15 SHOC| 1o canmres it Hhm e JourReY (0 T101- | party to bring about diffcult If not strained | Philadelphia Pross. Wife—0l)t Jahm, he whieh presidential candidate he would | o ¢ b ; " | Chairman Jones of the democratic na- | down the number of the acts of brigandage | rexpect of civilization. and the little bang | TC/AH0NS with the United States by de- | MERRS BAve mids ‘ HEx standard law and put the country on iy ooy pittee, Van Wyck, the demo- [ will begin to decrease et that man| of dar en with th o o | manding the withdrawal of our protectorate | “uband--You hat's sur like to see elected. cor basis, The Baltimor ; 8 : e S iy vlinactune : of daring men with their glorious leadors. | pafore there 18 reasonable assurance that a | prising good new ) The Ba hurry up and make y w ’ sllver basis. cratic mayor of New York, and Richavd i make himself known, for until| joubert, Botha and De Wet, have gained an the view of such people when it says 2 ee! ol Wife—Good news A k he arrives train robbery will thrive, b ! stable government has been set on foot in ife e " sl A Croker, the democratic boss of that imperishable renown, i Husband—Yes. It shows it has som “If Mr. Bry 1 presi gt ¢ defendants legal R - — ik p E g wool in it. I never believed it hefore, 4 city, arve all now defendants in lega CONCERNING IMPERIALISM, RYAN ON STARCH, The nationalists are, it is said, In favor dont gud both branohes CONEIESS 1 Gtions brought under the anti-trust of independence at once, the withdrawal of [ Washington Star: *What id vou expect were controlled by the democrats during tn that Rise Above the Clatter of [The Nehraskn City Ineident as it Ap- | American troops and the immediate removal | 19 prove by that excecdingly long-winded argument of yours?" asked the friend his administeation it 1s not probable that The worst deluded people in this cam this country to make a few speeches | stricken communit Ihe seven new members of the school board to be chosen this year would by themselves almost make o majority of that body. The necessity for illing the places with substantial and trustworthy men Was never greater . o trust matter, as in othe laws. In the tru Campatgn Dru ™ pears S Dista Away. of all American supervision or control. If | “ didn't expect to prove anyihing' an & ctod ‘b, thia| here re woveral boams a the detno Washi. “ton Foat Chicage "Pribune the convention declares that this shall be the | swered the orator. “All T hoped 1o do was the currency legislation enacted by the) oo oo It we can get a five minutes' hearing| MF. Bryan went to Nebraska City day | relation of the island to the United States| !0 confuse the other fellow so that ha Pifty-sixth congress would be repealed a—— in this deafening din which our estecemed | before yesterday to talk starch. There |, qelicate situation may arise. The United | {hing.» o c ‘hat T didnt prove any: Large crowds come out it the rain to|0F that a free coinage act would be | yrow do the populists of the west who demccratle contemporaries have T Ii® In that town a starch factory EIVINE | States must be the judge of the stability T ocToR e 3 ; ) assed. With his party divided on the |, Bryan like it to have|oYer the question of imperialism, we |employment to 300 persons, It Is the chict | of e new form of government. The Cuban shchle sce and hear Roosevelt I'he repub. | Pissed. A v are supporting should like to suggest that they would | INAUStRY of the place and the citizens think | v resolutions, for obvlous reasons, fixed no lieans of Nebraska are in earnest this | inancial issue, it is doubtful, to suy the | gy Croker dictate one of the most |y "G ™o moderate their vociferation. | MUch of it. Over a year ago the Nebraska | time limit for our occupation of the country. | pher clin E 4 o > evan' corporation w 3 A8 linging to the wall the woodbine least, whether Mr. Bryan would make |y, 000t cabinet positions in Bryan's |rhat there is imperialism in our presen rporation which owned it sold Its property [ \wo gigclaimed any intention to exercise Strong more than i perfunctory offort to secure | e i ease he should be elected? |and past policy, we do not pretend to | !0 the United Starch = comy a tho | control, save for pacification, and when that | 1fas felt the eald kiss of the frost deny, The president has made w tapiff | Procoeds were divided between the stock- | iy yeeomplished, to leave the government | Phe wmimn e whon il e toer P4 for Cuba and the Philippines, und regu- | B0lders of the Nebraska corporation, which| g control of the fsland to its people. By |The wealth of foliuge the summer gave lutcd in those Ixlands othcr par(s of (h| Y88 diseolved. Subsequently the United |qyo (GO 0N eations with respect | ACTORS bare fieldn the startied auall Four years ngo yesterduy the aver- | and sincerity of the many declarations | Gy g promise muchinery of govornment which; under the | St87ch company sold out to tho National | o° hivi’ara limited to the time of ita oo- | | ILUINE Whistie clear their moliow ca age price pald for hogs on the South | of Mr. Bryan of his hostility to the gold b RS S constitution, le within the province of |Starch company. That concern owns or | cupation by the United States. Under the | High up in n {zure. while at morn | T o - leon conucientiously | COntrols all the important starch factories | | Omaha market was $2.04, Yesterday the | standard and his devotion to free silver Before talking about the McKinley | cong . That he has been conscienticusly “rances Winn, in Globe-Democrat year and no little things like o rain can prevent them from doing honor 1o % thelr vice presidential candidate, free coinage legislation Senator Hanna makes the ungualified p i e s This fmplies a doubt of the honesty |, goptjon that he knows Croker has | . | resolutions reaconable time must be given l}'l]: hulous ’,‘,“I',‘{"“:,H‘ "ind cavght within advised in this, we do not for a moment | A8 SQURSTY the United States to test the stability of | The v e maze Recently the populist rney general of | ypy govornment to he organized. Should | The spider spinw, & thousind dew-droy averuge price was $a.131,. Do the | For four years he bas been talkivg for | pguagers shuking down federal officials doubt. Whether he has been well ad,ised farmers and busitess men desire to re- | slver, denounciug the gold standard a8 | (he popocratic organ should publish the |L0uio wnother matier. Unless imperial- ;vlny:‘);w v‘;\-g..:.‘ sult to annulthe T.vv;' ..;’;\. rarchic conditions arise In the sland after | i < und sparkle, Jewel-liks vert buck to the conditions of 18067 a conspiracy and proclaiming his de-| gopedule of assessments levied on the | jsm s to be found in these directions, we | (o SEhIeskn I IREOR L8 TRE FICER the withdrawal of our troops it would be a [ Alonk rvonds and in-the hedge row ———— termination to get rid of it It given the | fugion state appolutees in Nebraska. |should hesitate to look for it at all. in [{anh ompans, to Sare 1t G0 N now situation with which congress would | ;| Lita t1a1f ponsIat ADiRA St. Joseph muy have hypnotized the | opportunity. e forced the Kansas | yccording to reliable reports the fusion |our opinion, however, it is there. | —which is defunct and cannot be resur-|DaYe to deal. Under our pledges we can s with Dlood-red shining petioles " ' i 2, ’ aa' n condition to lils . » than the traffic will| But Who are democratic leaders that | o™y BEIET N0 TN to restratn | DOt FetAin troops indefinitely in Cuba. Geu- | vrown wink'd Berenice’s Hhtly toich consus man to list it with a bigger | City convention, as a \ssessment is more tha i [they should cast stones at condiions | freS bY AR OrAC Of court ARG 10 FOSUPMR | oral Kitabugh Lee, fn a newspaper Inter- | Rudheckias e Aty Rooiit population than Omaba, but 1t caunot | aceeptance of a nomination, 1o specitic: | ey Which they have done ko much fo bring | \hG, Unlied Starch compuny. which is also | yiew "iy"aported as saying rushed T produce the statistics of school enroll- | ally reattim the free silver plank It is said that this litigation was instigated | ”' I‘ not know what this government | The BTGEUELE BOCR Prgs (eIl of Tnuect Nife by Mr. Bryan. Certainly the people in|¥!! d0 If & government which rejects all | ihrough misty dlstance far away o e Nbraska. City were not the . | connection with the United States fs or- | Creeps up the dark'ing twilight silently stigators, The factory buys the corn of | E40ized and the withdrawal of our troops [ AT d ends the sweet October da the neighboring farmers and nearly one. | | | demanded. 1t may be, If there is plain in- | | third of the inhabitants are directly or in | | | | about? Look back two years unl say The diticulty encountered in securing | who were most active, most indefatigabl ) I3 and most persistent in their efforts 1o plunge the country into war with Spain clatw, party stands now Wit Everybody knows that Mr. McKinley wa tion precisely where it stood in 186 | all-pervading prosperity ith every- | vorge to that war, and that he resolutely The musical festival, the Does the Sun think that in all this Mr. | one steadily employed at good wages the | gor his face agalnst it up to the very last and the Ak-Sar-Ben carnival have com ' hus been decelying and mislend: | inducoment to lay off to serve the coun- | mowment. 1€ he had been supported i his and gone, but their influence Wil re-| {10 i free silver adberents? Does it | try as a registrar I8 not very tempting. n‘"'I'I"";l"lt\"“:‘“‘f‘"wllnin i Hls Bumax . | g his free s ) predilections by the democratic leaders main. They have served to show what | jeljove him capuble of deliberate and | SU———— Soagress, this imporialism of which they A R TR T stabllity of the new government is assure Omaha can do when all pull together | Lopiitent dupliclty in this matter? . And | ‘Fhere has not been a fal for many | {OFeonoiain w0 Toudly would have be.n | Lo O e A ot ot o aagone | Overt, unmistakable acts of proscription and the lesson should not be 10st 10| ir wo how can it have confidence in his | years in which the soll of this state has | made impossible. Senator Proctcr was one | 1igh high prices lest it should provoke com O oppression directed against Spanish pub- the future. v A ol 2 It he is | been in such good condition to go into |of the fow republicans of real weight and | potition does not cost much to equip [ects or others, any curtaliment of thelr 0 u e sos as 1o other questions? I 1 Pledges a# to othor.quel | winter as the present. This m consequence who helped to precipitate the |4 gtarch factory and It 1s impossible for | ¢IVil rights by the new government would capable of betraying the faith of his '“'"\] R ot axt outbreak. No one In Mr. McKinley's cabi- |4 “(rust," even if so inclined, to prevent|DOt be the government which, in form cr . p ot | long start for a gooc e ot desir some 40 ) was contemplated by our inte silver adherents, why not also that of *UV | ot desired war, although some of the|(ne purchase of the raw material by a|Practice, w i - : | Nebraska 1s prosperous and bids fair | gocrotaries feared that it was inevitable. | competitor. Corn is too plentiful for that, | vention in Cuban behalf. We must see to has always been a feature of our itics, but he keeps right on trying to | to keep along the same road. The agitation wag conducted chiefly by This move on the part of the attorney |it that the country has a fair start in fres optical business. It's our guar make bimself a factor in the national e & vy democratie leaders and organs, and most | ge filled the people of Nebraska City |Just government he constitution to b antee of absolute satisfaction if eloction, The best way for Croker to| N0t be # perfunctory effort that A% » Who Does Thinks. of the glory and the sorrow and the dis- | with consternation. They foresaw in his |Adopted may ]I‘|“ fair l'l’mluxh on n«l face, glasses are not right we will 1 s s president would make to se Vashington Post astrous complications resulting therefrom [ action the closing of their factory {he | but a reasonable test of its practical ex avold unpleasant publicity would be to an as presi £ ’ 14 Aotlon the closin R actory an o u . . ¥ publicity would be to| "EL T8 LG legislation, but & per- | 1¢ Mr. Hanna has really settled the coal | may properly be credited o them. Th: |destruction of their great home indusiry. |cution by oficinls must also be made. The keep his hands out of the presidential | P ers' strike he has accomplished more | war brought us Cuba, Porto Rico and the | [y order to soothe this excited community |fact that the late insurgents, those who sistent and determined fight, with all | min | v y ther tleal establishment | election, elsteut & WE ¢ his adminis. | 8204 than all the other politicians com- | Philippines and, as an inseparable con-|if possible Mr. Bryan went to Nebraska | were actively or a\l;u'ulhlmull\ -"nwu afl ither optle lishment in the power and intluence of his adminis- | FE0 comitant, all the diffculties—includivg im- | City day before yesterda He told the | in the revolution, will inaugurate the new the state, a8 we own our own The Englisn press Insists that in the | tration, to restore the free and unlm | G perialism—that now confront us people that the attorney general had com- (order 18 not in itself alarming. It wa uctory. We examine your eyes edicts promulgated Ly the emperor of | ited colnage of silver. This is the be Pro I‘I':l.hIol'rll'i::"l':n';":'nr’. This is merely a word in passing. We | menced proccedings “not to destroy your IY’II\IY‘MM- :{wm:lylmlhll';l\' often has a . 9 Bror- of O 3 e . have always felt sure that the uproar in|local manufacturing establishment, but to|sobering, restraining effect upon partic 2 . China ordering the punishment of - | Met of the free silver men \\)l«v‘|.mnx|.<'(| College education mll.\‘ml lm lv:-rm', © & | 0 was of purely partisan (nspiration and prevent the manufacturing establishment |to whom it is intrusted. They wish to ou are right Leyond a shadow of ers in the outrages committed on for- | tute a large majority of the Bryanite | girl's chances of l'“““"m““”l h' "'““"‘ U contrivance, It does not surprise us, there- | from entering into a trust.” That is not |succeed themselves in political control, and a doubt, and A fair price eigners the hand of the United States | party and it is well-founded. They | the question whether the b Of 8heRte | (re to Aind the democrats bewailing re-[a correct statement, The Nebraska cor- | this moderates thelr policies. Immediately diplomacy ean be seen. If American | know most thoroughly the fanatieal de- [ 1* &% equivalent for that of & good match. | J/ iy of which they were the most con- | poration has not “entered into a trust,”|after the election of delegates to the con & PEAS; spicuo cause. We insist, nevertheless, | but has sold out its property and has dis- [stitutional convention, when it was clear . S # SHa g \ine held estraint in Money to Move the Crop. picuous caus insist, r as proy R diplomacy ean accomplish the result, | votlon—now being held in vestrs Fhiladelphia Record, that the demoeratie howl about imperialism | solved. 1t the courts decide that the cor-|ihat the nationaliste had triumphed, the S0 0 ¢ g e | L . how much better it will be than to |order to begulle those who put the bogy | pho qemand for small notes usual at this | is injudicious and impertinent. The situa- [ poration which now owns that property |tone of their newspapers moderated i R dopt the European plan of forciug an |of imperialism above the question of cur- | time of year, whether for moving the crops [ tion 18 bad enough, but those who d.d o |shall not do business in Nebraska it can| A cowstitution will be framed for Cuba Consulting Opticians o 4 5 . b oy debasement—of their leader to|or for carrying the elections, will be met |much to create it should accept the re-|do one of two things. It can close the fac- fA government, republican in form, will be unnecessary war In which: thousauds of [ rency debaseme o ool BTy uble at the fede ubtreas- billty an v suduct | tory, which would barm Nebraska City [established. It is one thing to proclalm a 1520 Douglas Street . A nes alivbn Suinlthansbuso di anigk: une | WILAOME SN ral subtreas- [ sponsibility and leave others to conduc Lves wust be sacritieed? free silver and they huve the most un-| o™ small gold and silver certificates— | the protestation greatly, or it can sell tbe factory to &|government o s dymasty; it is snotber ment, election returns and other evi- | Chicago platform He has repeatedly dences of population to maintain the|said in the present cawpaign that his | competent men to serve ay registrars at on the financial ques- | the coming election is another sign of part of the newly formed government to have the women of Nebraska been com- |Preserve order and to protect forelgners, SIaioing ol tha® Kitordsy Eenarall ot | that we will retain troops on the lsland ’ trust” prices of starch, While the m for the purpose of protection until the S dication of disorder or inability on the directly interested in that factory. Nor Boss Croker cannot understand why “Money back If you want it" be sbould be dragged into national pol A the “anti-lmperialists But the Sun is seli-deluded It wonld make them go. Our facilities for correct fitting are excelled by no ree and the glasses we give

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