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a2 [ THE OMAIIA DAILY BEI FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5. 19500. | Octbber 4, 19%. | prosnorous. What i% do by s who goes ¢ o the worl ruggle, to | stralght, honest, sincere man, whose word | tell the truth, but I am not making much | pi \ works for a day tioh &nd ad t e ” | go on and try |18 o8 good as his bond, and who st | of & boast ubout that, for with truth 1ying | an, ) o ) ' \ . | mive o to| %o 1 with i Read through rmany. Up in Minnesota they it iy me to find on thi An » ’ wrge a selection of kid gloves as this | That s ne f Y ten e the fool ent that says ‘Happy | man of my own K ible Dutch L ; St il [ N ated St to us romise of is the natlo no history.” Thrice No Dist noor Nadonatit, STl m and ¢ sl R geaxon Colorings, stitchings :ml bR ot gl t L 9n ' | tinpe the it has a great and I am going tomorrow into fowa and 1| {He tilorie ith Bt ,'l'”'l,",‘,‘h ,,‘: . e trinimings in all the new combina- | promise that can be kept and the other |glorious history, & history of RIOrious | am dotng all I can to see thut the house of | (00" LR UL IE L L L £ Woilis OR (e i It is a good thing to ren that in | own nation, but at all the nations. ThInk | and re-elects that splendid old Scotchman, | i ¢ il L st Laxative Dr o 8 Have you ever seen a kid glove that | e jong run the m truth storied Marath and Thermopylae. | Dave Henderson. In my own state, on the | o Gif“0 S(iss Ballnd iR in one Price you can wash? We are agents in |8 eifer companion the pleasantest| Think o the Romun peaple an they re is & man born (o Ireland, One o T i LA0 e gl nts ) talsehood swered, af nnibal’s victory, Cannac. | gjectors in this state of Nebraska, an elector i : ” 4 plause.) 0 before I start out to sy | & Omaha for this glove. Can be washed ‘11“\- is what be dane by fes ‘.m‘, of the proples of Kurope s -um‘m’( whom 1 begin to think will cast his VOle | 4 word for McKinley 1 want to say a word | Oftee Over 215 S, 11th Street ’ with soap and water and they will retain their oftness and " typifidthe pirts (het tmake OuF fellow | work 1n & whabg. way, some.times TaINNE | batore’ you. ok Hollandere: of Garmans, or | (g, Dave Mercer, becaure we need him in $6.00 A MON 4L o A it typified the ‘ work in a wrong wa s fal efore you as Hollanders, or Germans, of | (e house of representatives. we noed him ticity., They come in colors brown, pearl and black. Ask to see | of Ger valuable | back, but going galn, for- | jrishmen, or Scandinavians, or Czechs; We | with us in the halls of congress and more TH. them——price $1.50 per pair members of a commut bt they should | ward, forward, forwar our great | come before you simply as Americans, 8p- | than that we need him to eltnch and make DR. MCGREVJ » m - " ? itable fop |Ma¥e put upon the transparency the truth | elvilization, as we | was de- | pealing to our fellow Americans. (Applause) | gure of the victory of William McKinley We have a Trefousse Pigue Glove, two celasp, suitable for | ihat man must rely on labor and not alone veloped at | Out of th ruggles, the | We know no distinction of birtholace and [ for what earthly good would it do to re street or dress wear, in colors brown, mode, tan, red and black. b leg ";”' n it he wants to get ahead in | ovils and the victories of millions of men | care in no way how a man chooses to wor- | elect William McKinley and then par e worl I'his is an extra good | i of represemiatives Leave your Kid gloves here to be cleaned. The last paramount {stue that soems (o | 40ne Think of what Switzerland has done. | (hat he prove himself to be a good Amer- | Sioie WaREEN 160, Baltitan: t Switzerland could have had peace under the | jcan and nothing else, and then we stand | YVSACIO0 to% trre. (LUt el oliig:lo ket 3 ) 300, * ' “I am a great bellever in politics my We Close Our Store Saturdays at 6 P. M. igsue of the trusts. 1 am only golng to ask [ MOV ’[" et R R B ""“”"(' o ',:" Al i i ML LR s (R o B0 seif, although I sometimes think that we AGENTS FOR FOSTER KID GLOVIS AND MeCALL'S PATTERNS, | your attention for one moment BY | wIie. 06 vorlh. \“u-lr Wit SWitesrs | Western Man's Ilustration | bave a little too much political contention b L LR Ll Jed, Switzerland fought, Switzer- | That is the way we have got to ap-|in this country and I have mado up my 18 of corporate wealth which, al AR L ol g R AL proach every problem that confronts us. | mind that the sooner we get rid of that THOMP who dared to do the world's work. Think | ship his Creator. We sk that he show by | alyze his polict *of Trusts. of wl at_the little nations of the world have | his deeds the faith that is in him. We usk s by a shiftless and weakly wearing glove at $1.50 per pair. rrmount Issu ent out to face its mighty neighbors, soN, BELDEN 8.Co, i ¢ | And now for the special way in which We | and get down to a business basis in our we commonly unders ¢ peak- ‘1“‘1‘/.? 'l ’:; ":" “.""“” “'m‘“;n“lt‘l" | have to approach the problem there In the | politics the better for all of u Ing one to auother fs idie it ot ol e Aok " “ 1 Philippiues. In the first place, as I am | “Now, I listened with a goud d r. MoGrew at age o THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE DRY GOODS HOUSE IN OMAHA. L ol sorporitiess do syil, 1E|YIOION 6 AR aby: tokriey wndindepebe: | UEENG (S IUATING Whehe 10 08 MR | torans to O e et el dl UL ke ¥. M. O A. BUILDING, COR. 16 AND DOUGLAS TS yo our will now, and understood the [ B¢t & people holding its own, holding what | expression of one of my ranchmen to un | erences to my young friend, Bryan, in his | s o oo —_— — circumstances, you would never go back to | it deems most sacred for its own | inquiring anti-imperialist, a wise man | capacity of prophet gt large for populism | SPECIALIST R g i P 7 R— 14 | fomo of the conditions that preceded the Take hrolaaidl (i “""‘l"l“‘ ";‘jj; from the east, he asked him why his peo- [ in the United States. 1 don't want to say | fn the trentment of nil forms of DHis 106 OUEh vider G 7 T ves PRLLIAE O | NIGHANE Wt of consolidatic Take, for | Ancestors sprung--Holland lolland had | 1, “yore expanstonists and he said: ‘I'lan unkind word about Bryan, I have|EASES AND DISORDERS 01 WMty . i pay the obligations of the government. No |y, igp0e, the great rallway lines. In hosen merely to follow the path of ma- | ) to]) you; because out here all who are | kmown him intimately for many years. 1|ONLY. 26 years' experience. 15 yenc ""'I e o Uil Ry o v i 4lobd "," own state of New York at one time in order | torial Lol i would :"" ¢ been 09| not women are men. (Laughter.) | was in the house of represe:tatives when | i Gmnha elog horse and man, In sashcs and | the cred the pensioner, whoever hel,, o, ¢omn New York to Buffalo you had to| revolt of the Dutch against the might o A8 1 am addressing an audience of men | he got there and emained after he de s . badges of honor wi Mldes and bugle may be, 1 (o get 48 cents or to get a doltar, | 1 &9 {ror Now Fork 1o Buls liftereht | Philllp I1 of Spaln. Do you think that it | and women I do not thiok I have to nru'm}tv..xl"u; ik “:‘;.:.q' Applkse) <ed 1 doht VARICOCELE AND HYDROCELL Then ftellowed the black horses [ 1. is dead to this extent, that nobody ven- | BE LS R T U terior and | Was for the material benefit of the burghers | yna fact that we cannot in any manner | propose o be caught saying an unking | (O FERMAVENT CURE GUARANTELD bt bl o, iy ity o argue on its behalf. 1t s dead | ol oy ag costly to travel or to ship | Who stood with their wives and children be- { uiitk tho work In the Philippines. Wo | word. not even in disparagement of s |1V, A FEW DN wiout autiing e i aas Sl el LI b el they pay the detns | g, 1ny (hen as now. There bene- | bind the walls of Holland, fighting with|ure there and we have got to do it. Peace | youth, because you know and I know that | NATURAL CERIS ) ! ping. The candidate r nerousiy, | in 48-c dollars we care mighty little SuM Iran tHe coBdolANtS whole | the Spanish soldiery round about. For gev- | pag ¢ during the last century to large | he will be old enough before he is eleeted | COVered. CHARGES LOW % : ampaign hit.|as to the precise argument by which they | yovelopment of highly speclalized, hig enty years they fought. For seventy years [ goctions of the earth because the civilized | prosident of his country. (Loud laughter SN’"IHS i witlo Pt ¥ he gave full atten- | yeach the conclusion that warrants that|.ompolex modern industrial civilization hey suffered and wrought great deeds, and | yaces have spread over the world's dark | and applause and cries of “you're dight.”) | disenst b ited trom th IR ring haodkerchlefs In the | conduct. (Applause.) tended to produce these great ager consequence that lttle people settled on | places. It s & good thing for the world [ “But what does a common, ordinary | blood » |/ windows ahove, treets. Behind ‘the Some of Hryan's Prophecies | of corporate wealth. “Fhere has been good lowlands they have won from the North | that France should be in Alglers, England | man like Governor Roosevelt mean by rul No “BREAKING « . b o I want you to do from the material | there has also been evil. The man who ¢ they won for m«-uwlw--’.m undying | in the Soudan, Russia in Turkestan. ‘A |bing it on a prophet like Bryan? Doesn't | iscase wii e v Pe. L WEFE < AP SOR ipoint 1s to exhu Mr. Bryan's pro- | nies the evil is just as foolish as th name in the history of mankind good thing for the world and above all for | Governor Roosevelt know that the proph- | more | autul blkale, The:nhaer cies of four years ugo and then compare | flimboyant person who thinks that i Country of Glortons Memories, | the people in those place ecy business Is the most precarious b ,‘f‘j' A ] H'\" g oy o R g i e e o . Tr ave WER OVIY BT B UOW | gy oo wo a1 5. eph | 5 1 OO B3 Lhe Phlgpinent | Bk tha ammbody eves Entre e | £ R A o the direction of Marshal W. S, |fillment. The spirit moved Mr. Bryan and | evils y have got to b cut out. They are |\ “\ian ity greater than the republics| A dut A you, ch we camnot af- | his life. \ere never was but one se the Veterans' drum corps set the | he prophesied that unless you had f tlver [ BOIDE to be cut out, (Applause.) 1| of Switzerland or Holland. 1t will be an ’”‘“’ k14 Ly ""'_"“'”‘ LA Ll "“1”, || SEGPICRAREREIN Y Wil L L ”1!4‘&!\\-! SR 1o v for the Union Veterans' Repubdican | the wage worker would stand idle in the | Oratory, but by common sense and r evil day for mankind it this republic | 'S1ands In the interest of tlfe islanders |and those were the old Iebrew prophets | 15 ur 1 club and the' Kirst Nebraska voluntcers. | mArket place. That was the prophecy, The | tion. And one of the first things to do is| o %) (B0 FARe B0 (L (000 | only as-those are In accord with our houor | and they won out because they dealt with | Vigor and \ The younger veterans wore khaki utiforums | fulfillment was that the wage worker has |t0 make up your minds that you want | miain Con B0 B0 T 0 great world | 4nd interests. To see to it. We are ““"""“””“ and millennh nd they left| Ban it and their tattered battle flag came in for | had more than double as much work as be. | B®tHNE rid of the cancer to avold Killing | o There are h tonight veterans | 10 P¢ excused if we do not make It better | half of the world believing that their pre g geNorBUa ADPIAUSC The Third Nebras- |fore. That was the way it came out | the patient. (Applause and laughter.) S Ha BLyIL WY, A WO WRRY ENET UL ‘[t\r the islanders that we have taken | dictions had come true and the r « STRIC ][m Utk il g Ftia AGd 5 HUF Vatavatis: LoTIBvA ThE tHUTE Aud he prophesiod again that it we | Tavie Aa B 16 Guaokery D s YEat ahows (hok 1 the Frirs St trioa | charse (;r x)¥h§~|i.x“;‘mul)““] -)!mll umk] are still looking for their fulfiilment ment, kK Bladder T G wake 11t bette e fislands shall have such Bryau'y Detest &s Vrhoen In the second disision were Rough Riders' | products of bis farm diminish in value, and | plex means that there will probably prove | duty, Let me ask apy man who fought [ LrY 4% tt AL throweh | Tho great trouble with Bryan was that bbbl lubs from various towns In the state, both | In vour own state of Nebraska they have | no one patent remedy to cure It. At pres-|in the civil war if he recollects certaln | ouig never know under the leadership of | e 88V bis prophecies too short a reach cHARCES LOW. men and women taking part. The Third | iucreased from 16 o 60 per cent in the | ent it has been left largely to the differ- | ncidenis of the years '61 and '64. Do | ® 0 FOORE TR PRNEE B TCRCRrailiP OF | Instead of telling us what was going to | Conmultation free ity lvision, under Marshals Sundbiad and | different products ent states, Under the decision of the su-| you remember when you were called ‘Lin- | ¢ (AWt B UREEERERY ROCTORL WA happea in the next century, which he might | Medicir te e 4 Getzschman, contained marching clubs of | “And Mr. Bryan prophesied agaln. The | preme court and in accordance with the | coln's hirelings® (Volces from the audi- |yt 0 e there—inconcelv. | Ve done, because it was near at haud ',‘;:";";‘», rendy tor AR L varlous natlonallties and the Epworth | eavings banks attracted his attention, and | obvious purpose of the constitution the |ence, “Yes, yes.”) You have heard more | it (I GRAIT TOTRS CRETECARSONISINT | g ho could have kot his work i before | g to 15 T R LR Su 3 league. The Dou county Rough Rid- | he sald that it we did uot have free silver | states have control of the corporations. | recently of soldiers being called hireMngs. | {0 oo howe words to any man ““m-k“r the thing came around, he undertook to| Hih & rham 1 18 St ers and the Traveling men's club broughl | the deposits of the savings banks would | I am going to give the natlonal side of it| A million men iu blue were then kuown | poymcced Chinaman or anyone else (f 1|'e!l us what was going to happen mext RN up the rear. The marching clubs and mis- | diminish, and in Nebraska they have in-|in a moment. I am not famillar with the | 45 ‘Lincoln’s hirelings. Do you remember GANBOE. ThaXe (hdm »d and 1 can make | YeAT «nd the result was that New Year's |~ cellanecus organizations made up the other | creased 25 per cent | constitution here in your state. 1am fa-| (ho people who cried ‘peace, peace, when | (jem cood ' day played sad havoc with the prophetic ?[‘fl[@ division “And he said that the amount of money | miliar with it in my own. Two years ao | there was no peace” Do you remember | ol literature of the last campaign, and now | a When the parade had passed the spec- | per capita in circulation would diminish and | 1 ran for governor of New York. Agalust|he people who said that the most righteous| RET€Fs to Respousible Hecords. he has left that capacity. 1 have traveled @@M@M@fi@fi \ tators made a rush for the four meeting | it has increased from $20 (o $25. | me ram ex-Judge Van Wyck. He was the | or wuprs was worse than the most un-| 1 @sk Jou to turn to any responsible | now thousands of miles and talked to mul places, already overcrowd or knowing So far as Mr. Bryan said that things | vomiual man (bat ran. (Laughter) The| righteous peace; (hat the bloodshed that | Bictory of the conditions in the Philip-|tipijed thousands of people, and I make | their misslon hcpeless went their various | would go down, he failed in his prophecy. | real master and leader of the democracy | wag split would more than offset any gain | PIDes; to any such book as that by Mr. For- | (nis statement on my faith as a citizen ways. The curbs and sidewalks on Six- | He sald that mortgages would go up and |of New York, a party in which imperi teenth street were lined de Farnam and the latter thor on a carnival appearance teenth. There were no les people on the streets in ad thousauds who were wedged iuto halls whero the candidate appeared. SPEECHES AT THE 3t of the Addresses I Governor Rooseveit and ator Dollfver. . H. H. Baldrige gracefully his task of presenting Gove to his first Omaha audience of the candidate fell upon syn IFortunate is the party which calls to its lcadership its highest and bes hood,” satd Mr. Baldrige, “th #tauds for something and mes The Iife of such a leader for stronger thun any written de have with us as an honored needs no party to voice hi glve form to his principles wll that 1s best aud highest in Abaticas | politics and statecraft. H were Lis motives when he York from all that was fou department. As assistant navy he devoted to his dutic most disinterested energies 1f his culture, his attainm bis urbanity dash and herolsm are of the are proud of it. As he led Rough Riders up San Juan he now show the way to tho Let us follow his boom and once more to victory. I have the honor to | OUr people. present to you the governor and the next vice president States. Marvard Men Glve Col Governor Roosevelt rose an followed his example. The patiently acknowledging the and was finally on the poin his remarks when a new disc Twenty Harvard men, with w gave their college vy foot bull days, and Theodore col v ; o saw the months of waiting in the (renches A. class of 1880, smiled in appreciation | " @ COMMUDIty like ours. With honesty |the first quality needed in a mation, in a | K When he could finally make the governor spoke as follows alrman, and You M of Nebraska, My Fellow Am peal to you less as republ citizens of (his great count that in this vear we have the same right to appenl 1o all men without political past as was had in years ago. Then, as now, the wero so great that they questions of mere party amly “I have to ask you to loc sldes of these iss what is even greater than th the moral side, the side of and honor of the nation on the n fal side. 1t ) en of erican labor, diffcult to know what {ssue to discuss be p- | ot the g fathers and grandfaihers bore themselves | ren of American “ i) cauBe our opponents change the pa ,“‘,t { | man-Amerlcan Republican assoclation as|becded o two-thirds vote it failed of pas- |\ "ino older :,.,“ I appeal to you to see | lowa's dunior S or Discus Ine | o— A nu"‘WAY G|RL 4 tosuo w0 often. (Laughter) But I am ||y, Tched through in the parade, ‘that|sage and the democratic leader, Mr. RIch- | pyi"inis nation does not shriak from its | suex of the Campuign in & . st ; l . abor and not legislation brin +|ardson, In opposing the passage of the | vessssesccrcoee ) ong of elaborate ¢ orfectly willing to meet them on any fssue RS BuCC:ss, destiny; tha eats all questions with P o Sonta P 4 s k { it '¢ | Now that ought o be put i this way, |amendment, quoted with { ¥ It s y uent Speech. f r : $ it they will only stay long discuss the economical and tlofis when they don't dare themselves? Repu lican Stand “Take the question of free of you are foriunate enough Mr. Bryan, if elected, will tions of the natlon in gold wish he would divulge his Mr. Eryan will not. (Laugl ! proval from &|,ourage and firmness, and, mind you, there | FAVUR WUN fl" MEH'T . (Laughter.) What need is there for me to | 'hat the best of leglslatlon cannot bring | democratic paper. suyivg that the demo- | \ro'iwo things to keep in mind about that At the close of Governor Roosevelt's NEXT ATTRACTION t n toancial ques. |PUCCCss save tothose who labor, but that|crats could not afford to pass that con|[n"ihe firgt place, to treat it a8 Amer-|speech he hurriedly descended from the " # e Atd o and until i {0 discuss thesp | P04 legislation can make it absolutely tm- | stitutional amendment, because it they afd | {5 the AFRt Pace 1 FRCL T UL SO | seeh he Bhrriadiy esconded from the .fl The Dish siands | "Enn“‘"“ T" Gfl[l | possible for the ablest labor 7 produce (80 it would take ‘J\- |.1\|~l lasuc out of | mugt is not the spirit that depepds upom | bis way to bis carriage to visit other halls quality achleved in : AR any result. (Applause.) “"}';'::“";‘:’u_; -"”}"\": ":‘ I‘uk“v““"“ color or creed or birthplac It depends | Chalrman Baldrige, as soon as quiet had the brewing of RORTH 00 KAk no doubt how we stand. We stand on the | 'O &d¥ance the remainder of th €0ld stundard, and we stanc Atlantic seaboard and in th talns, anywhere. (Applause. tunate In having issues wh thin in any part of the coun and laughter.) “Some people say that the dead The sliver issue cannot be dead when people are uncertain as to " Pill may meet with a misfortune and then It |when a generation arises content to rest|a bandlt to whose wicked will the Tagalogs | traveling on an Inherited constitution oou's S is the duty of his nelghbor to stretch out|on the memory of what its forefathors | banditti on the n bow, | (Laughter.) Do not gripe nor irritate the alimen tary ¢ promptly nal. They a , cleanse effec . v o us he nee by ving o8 do d fm. (Appl o nit ot the man of mere refine- | I have grown to appreciate as that type of [ or an orator, he seems bent on ha = b d Rive comfofl lies down you need not carry b pplause | community s n have grown (o app [ | you beltove me. The only claim 1 have ever | § 1412 Douglas Street. el. 1081 Bold by all drugglsts, { © of the east, s . » | The timig onel eiin g SR They knew Sl Gitn e v is ad | midly honest man {s of but littie | ership in them. (Laughter, cu as ) £ west, surely you are mot of the stamp to | The: a Croton reserva vmpathy Toat " icans f'"‘“ a8 | And courage and honesty are mot enough | shall square with one another [triumpb. They saw the days of Appo- |FeF o wy :h”m‘ £ ‘w ‘H "‘:““A ll They Y;fl\l‘ b O l”f\_f "K“' ;‘f “l Apath Typleal of th rv highest point of try, for 1 feel|py thoimaelves. T do not care how b \Fb “Let me point out just for a moment |JAtLoX; they saw the flug that had becn | A o st aslde | with dellvery pipes out in the direction (f . ¢t flee, on sale b P e L LR (he mational attitude of the (wo parties |rent asunder made whole without a seam. |{rom the contest and let stronger and [ of every human misery. They alwazs keep ([ “Cliiund & Smith, 13th & Douglan, regard o thelr | porn foo] A-natural. | the nations! & braver peoples reach forward for the vic- |1t full cnough for all. 0MANA 4 nse. Com- |them. The states ea QoURtrymen: T apbesl to.¥ou DOW: ¢ “American labor today strikes for higher| . e wunsvended wll | mon sense, courage, honesty—those are |some of them, effectively; the nation must |had weaklings for sons; that where they b IR e oantury: to .T.!.hf.“.’. wages and my sympatbies are with the la AMUSEMENTS ) ation the qualities needed in any natlon and no |Jjoin. It can only join by a constitutional (d1d the great task we shrink grom the| o~ M 70 Wo 0 o0l FEERYY T8 P o\lurm;( people of the United States. | hold | { €\ Just LWO | pation can succeed without them any |amemdment, Such an amendment was in- | lesser? No. (Cries of “No, no."") | ¢ | that the whole problem of clvilization Is to | \ tertal side, and | ¥ | the American flag has been hoisted with t Woodfard & bl il T than the private individual can with- | troduced into tho last house about June 1| Appesls to Young Men. bomor it shall mever be hauled down." |False the level of the world. I hold tha ann s A e © material glde, | out them meet success " o te | » A5, 90 RANSG. X » whole problem of can soclety 18 the groatness | W‘.'\‘““ meet success that is reaily worth |of this year. It Teoelved & vote from ““l 1 appeal to the young men, I :\mn-ul‘ (Cries of “No, no, no.") ”"" bol "I'“ “‘r ;"."I'I"':"“””“[m e Tet, 1011, Now for & montent | "< s E republicans but two and against ft was | oo 500 T e hold of thelr to 1ft up and increas e \—unm.. YT \ elected McKinley the farmer would find the | “The very fact that the problem Is com- | men's souls they were true to thelr publi rophet. they could get from it You remember | Man, describing the conditions before and | [ qon't belleve there | that? Do you remember when the people | 8fter the taking of Manila by our troops | woulg aughter.) The mortgages of this state | (laughter) was the Hon. Richard Croker. | who stayed at home in the north and re- | 8ud I ask you to turn to the report cabled | opinjon on any practical question of Amer awve diminished in amount by nearly 40| Mr. Van Wyck and Mr. Croker were €x-| fysed to hold up your hands offered aid | bY the Philippine commission consisting | jcan business. (Loud applause.) If old er cent g treme in their denunmciation of trusts, of | unq comfort by their actions to the cmemy | f Fepublicans like Judge Taft of Ohlo and | Noah, the patriarch, had predicted a drouth Aditton stothe | Matter of Fasion. corporations. They went much further | uq (he flag? Do you remember that? T'W""“* “':lh" that K?“"{" ex-confede rte | tustead of a food and had advocated a “Whe b % At than I was willing to go because I was | (voices Yes, yes.') It sounds comic|Soldler, and see in the letters, of which |gystem of irrigation fnstead of building g e it er, ot ou (| ey T Tt e - tenae 0 | L "on o, Lomi, aun oy Soae |1 4 aore sy peksso 3 b S o °, AL, i, e bt out that we were prosperous he answereq | 1¢€0% to square with my words. (Pro-|phunce some of the war cries of our political | 10 8nYy respons ble man, see the descrip- | have disappointed his relatives than has PAVILION | ttat it was not the republican p i % “Imv»-wl applause) Well, 1 got e opponents will sound. Do you remember |tons of wild corruption. Look at the|Mp Bryan flim-flammed his supporters all Siaribeton. Miv i ’".Y‘{_hI'\:’“m‘:h On Tooking into tho matter the greatest | Che vour political opponents of that day 1']\”';\:"'\\( AKUI‘quml. Do you r-!'x\-'m'u r. Tl over the country. (Applause.) The result to admit that there has been a tusion be. | €Y1l ! New York at that time in comnec- | ,,iq (hat Abraham Lincoln—$ad, patient ln‘l\l - was about a )"I‘t ugo, ‘\I\ en ARUL- | (3 that they had to huve a new paramount tween providence aud the republican party. tion with corporate wealth was the fact | inighty Lincolp—us he struggled and suf "41‘“,\\unn r'-lr{nv;xlulfznl' Bue {AA».\*'lh‘ ssue and for no other reason on earth (Laughtsf) T democratic party has that the corporations which were wealth- | foroq ‘for the people, was striving to make -L'j* do you nr;.. oc u;ulv;‘uml '.""f""," than that the other issues had become o fused with everything else, but somehow | %t 804 Which gobbled up the franchises | pimgelr an ‘emperor? (Volces ) | SulRen YeiRLcty: silnded Wnihistanie ] ongeninienticakbie) (il bas never managed to comnect wiiy | M8t Eave them all, or practically all their at'is what THoy aald., (Applause.) ;::“Im ’m.n" nl "nl:l‘- mlx:nm.m m'! 1‘ who had anything else to do providence. (Laughter.) ALAIDGE ARG HOIAQRLURIO AL 1D sald he was (ryiog to build up an em- | Phiippinest (Laughter) Do you reco Wages Higher Than Ever Hefore. “I don’t wonder that in the hard times, | PUD/Cthe street rallway c pire. * They said i thelr convention {n|luct his career? Blarted an Insurrection 3 SRt S " | 1868 that owing to the triumph of vou and | 50M¢ ut for $400,000 to Spain Not a remember one hing tha r ryan when Uiugs were looking pretty black, housunds like you, this hatiod met amid | GC0TEe Washington, gentlemen. (Cries of [dwelt upon. He said that it the gold| NEVER FAILS men turned to strange gods. It has al- thousan ke you, na et am 4 | a living man that | give 10 cents for Mr. Bryan's CD a8 far as | that is the only thing that went down.|!sm has reached an extreme deve oughfare tooi | west to Nine s than 40,000 dellvered by ars of people ace | nor Roosevelt and his praise mpathetic ears. panies plished [ | ther corporations using the s v tock hold of that problem in no vindictiea claratio 0 i 4 t SEha no- | standard was established in the United t type of man- [ oo 'Y in no demagogle spirit. We took hold of |y "o b of ite Iiberties and the ruin of | “N0.") At that time he became a B tan : & Wt type which | pass DeCR 80 since the day that Moscs | iy tne only spirit in which it fa safe | i "ot B 08 bt O i, every | dict Arnold—but I must not do injustice to | States labor would find itselt altogether | 10 releve pain of any kind. There's only wns something, | 2oke the decalogue. I don't wonder that| g deal either with the corporation or a | gl (" (ENUION | ENERY. WG SVETY | Arnold—(luughter)—Arnold stayed bought | ¥Ithout wages and without cmplovment. | —one remedy which always does this ms a plattorm | o CD ® man feels gick and doesn't Know | priyato individual, elther with the FIch | s fatit. heasted to seo or care where na. | —(laughter)—Aguinaldo did not. With the | Yet Mr. Carroll D. Wright said the other | A MULL'S, " We | WHat 15 the matter with him and cannot kgl 0. BRA-OF. 0N 5 irit of doing h exacting justice fn return 0 man or the poor man—the s |find out that he should try quack medi- | juetice and v [ ¢ines, but if Lo trics it again I question | we,put on the statute book a law, which | bis intelligence. (Laughter.) It the peo- | i) doubt peed some modification igh and clean | no slough of despond out of which we cssence has given to the stale @ law rescued New | 14¥0 80 paintully emerged, it they want to | called the franchise tax law, under which | in its police | 40 b8t why, under the constitution, it 18| wo put upon the assessment roll nearly cretary of the | D€l inalicnable right to do it. (Laugh- | §200,0 perty which had hitherto {ter) It s of no avall to have good inten- | jmproperly escaped taxation. That does s bis best and | | tlons 1f you have not common sense to put tional greatness lay was against you. Lut| money of the Spanish government, in the | day. and he is the greatest living labor | y e HANING PAIN KILLE R. thank heaven for the iron in the blood of | €auivalent for his trousers pocket, he cumne | Statistician, that the present level of back under our protection, nominally ‘.,\ American wages is higher thun ever be thut women bred men in thbse days, men Mith us, and then two months aflec | kaown in the hlatory of our lndu who came forward unfalteringly, ready ‘-H‘ \“;mfflu \‘\nh Hn, remi u-.‘-.r the »:’{h-\l: ll\»‘;(:l\u h"t:\“:fl:‘n"’ ”‘;m-";n‘w:“ ’ monia op capsieum. -~ $1000 Spanish armies, to join forces agalnst us, 8 of labc nstead of be g niohed QU %0 and Hle wize mld‘"““' o “;VIN m:mn?fl;”: o ”“;.\W'M Ho/ chavgn, tourtiniss 10 06 year, and | have been multiplied in a thousand dive dridgint orwrlte T Lightaing edivins B ot et e e ot tor the | broke falth three times, and he sold out | tions, so that I may safely challenge th Qei, MuRsAM A IoWE) Ry bk et R at for money once and once chanzed after [#udience to name one ble-bodied mau in | PIONEER KIDNEY CURE s guaratieed 10 right, to fight for the umion, for liberty 1 Y $rek B AR R P e and the greatness of our natlon, ho had gotten the money which should | the city of Omaha who is today without not mean that we have solved all the| _ have guaranteed that he wouald not chunge. nything for his hands to do.”" (Long and iite {niisktara ‘vhun into effect—not talk about them, but | problems in connection with corporation What the Fathers Won, | He is the head of the insurrection loud applause.) his boldness, | *° them but it means we have taken a longer stride [ “If our fathers had flinched, how would < A voice in the audience: ‘How about th Qualitics Needed In Nations. toward the solution than ) far as 1 am | we feel? How 1d you all be feel'ng to | miners in Peansylvania? guest one who 8 creed or to He stands for re Not only does it instantly reliove ail paln trial lite but n permanent cure alwiys folows it continued use. Contalns our fathers; thank heaven for the fact 0,000 of pr elty of (he atriots, west, and we 1 his «| “You know it is sald in holy writ that | @Ware, has yet been taken in any state. |night? Peace! Would peace have come | 'Read what the Philippine commission | wr. Dolliver—Exactly, How about th v A% CREOTINE h Y 9 S t ¥ Eontins how the friendly natives that trust|gepikes? I will tell you about the strikes il i hill loes | the Lord cowmanded His people to d Bosses and the Trust from that? The history of this contineat rikes you ahou I thut my Kiduey Cure , 8o does | : o | e 3 « been a | t0 our good faith are tortured, have their | gupil Ry iBLtat Aiithe AD se who follow, | FiEhteousness. Not to talk rightesusncss—| That was done while we had control. | {rom that day to this would have been a kes occur In republican times. (A will cire $0 per cent. 4 4 tongues pulled out, their liwbs broken | I v v story @ \ea angling wars betwe:n plau it will lead on | to do it. That is what we want to see t very time Mr. Vam Wyck, in|history of mean wrang 4 : ‘. b cad on 1AL ¥A5E 1 0ae In| At that very time G Yok I e contederdolon, Wa a0t Pece and | ¥ith 008 of ironi are Iaid ca Dot 0o8ls| demacratic times s sirike Gosuss it s a s ctly the | speeches, and Mr. Croker, in interviews, | because they have been friendly to us. | (o pr Al Hiansdnilioa of New York | $ame quallties are needed in a people, in | because speechmaking s not his strong | ¥e 89 It because men dared to go to war to| Catle, U VS, BAER JEECCY O UM | to provent a reductlon of wages; In r of the United | & Dation, as in an individual In the first | point (laughter), had been demouncing |And it ‘and have it perwancny. (Ap-| 850 FCEIMEED (AAE B T ovar thuse | TblioRy . slew: NLDIKeR .ate uiads co.. gat vlace, hon N = 5 plause.) We hold our heads high tonight. | *PCRles Is tha © should turn over these | another increase. (Applause.) Go back place, honesty. Nothing takes the place | trusts In language too extreme for me to people who have been tortured for thelr A OB bt Iaxs Lol | of that. One of the least admirable quali-|be willing to use it. And at the very time | \We hold our heads high as citlzens of | over the indusirial history of these times o and crles of *good, good.") In of &)l (orms of kidney aint and 0 lustances the most werious forms 0f Bright's disease. If the disense 18 com ited wend u four- pil | red | {riendship to us to be tortured agaim by |and verity wht I hat republ ince, vial of urine thes in oople e delflc ¥ were thuy danounc ey | this Dation because our fath.rs dared and verify wht I say—that in republican ounce, vial of urine. B:thia - dincca | I8 Any people is the delfication of | that they were thus denouncing that they | 4 Hlod and dla: bocaise they suffshed | tbpnmsniwho Dayh besn: Aghislnx. 0ur ao)s | timas. thasnrablam cf. Amenitas. dabor. is i B R andidate stood | T Bmartness unaccompanied by a sense | were in process of becomiug the two |aud died and did; becaus Y diers for two years. Liberty! Aye, the|to get more. In democratie tin th and advise you fres demonstration | O\ MOral responsibility. Honesty first, | largest stockholders in the most iniquitous foun yeArs of Ardenine hastesEbanlycOR L L R B 1ibehiy sush | axioblam whish Atsafioes tehier bhs to sive what to do. . ) gy | Honesty In the payment of obly he United States—the fce trust. |Kuew what it was to walk all day under | Y 8 3 | problen o merican labo o0 solve | Urnyo totb ent ¢ gatlons. | trust in the United State 0 1 | ! as they have never known or dreamed Gwiic oA ok tie i ble remnan = "r",t“\;:“r:“”r":‘“lnnwlx all through, for the mation and | (Applause. That is, they added to the |the scorching midsummer's sun and to lle ¥ amed of—| is how to hold on the miserable remnants | 4 'l gectae, ane vt G 1o o | it shall be Iliberty under the American fia f hat has left Th J for the ma sty sublio denunolation. o 18ts private 1~ [ out on the frozem mud in the winter nights, | '* 53 8. | of what it has l¢ here never was a | '¢ man. And honesty s mot enough. | public denunciation of trusts private own- | eyl L Peace, peace, good will, good govern- | gtrike that you didn’t find the political | ’ ‘nn-nl. an increasing share of self-govern- | jea tic party on hand ment—all ghall come, but they are wow |promptly, with an expression of thelr sym by incapable of understanding and it shall | pathy d that is the only 5 at has got to Ko courage. Courage in the man |nation’s public men—honesty=—and use that | when you could not tell why "‘"h“"\...m.- because our flag floats over the ‘\1.’.?&. l‘:\“‘]flm:‘ ha ,’:...- '-lyln ’-)‘1::.,7'(:;"“‘ to face difculties and courage in the na-|in its broade sense. And you can get|seemed to happen. They saw the dark b an la i I ot medical 1d110¢ fion aving banne s of the democr ultimate bene! e Roosevelt, B. | t anywhere and least of all| ‘I spoke to you a little while back of [and sleep when and how they could. They himself heard comm A ! {8lunds democratic party so far as the history of B tlon. Honesty and co e % | o solution of suc yroblem as the years of defeat. They saw the blood of | 1#) democratic p ar & o en and Women nesty and courage. Honesty in | no solution of such a problem as the trust . Brava b hed llke water Oh, my fellow citizens; oh, 1wy fellow | the country goes hey are always ' on WHITE ericans: 1 ap the currency and courage in ux.mu; to do | problem from men who do not appreciate [the bravest and best & | “()"S A e Americans, men and women of the mighty with an expression o pathy our duty in the Philippines pplause.) | that hodesty demands that word and dced [around them and they saw also the splendid | . Ighty | hand with an expression of sympath COFFEE. YOu canuot do anything with |on the trust question. At present the|ABd BOW are we to anbounce to the world (Laughter.) You save gof to adq|states alone have the power to deal with |that the men of the mighty days who were t stake | the saving grace of common s a0t deal with them, | qual to the dificulties of the times have 1864, thirty-six | pim Issues a | tor's crows. Surely you will stand by aklen) afl Cixiliantiag: | your duty. And I ask you, oh, my fellow | | was struck by one of the inscrip- [cast the vote of every democrat save six rip- | I8 a litte bit lttle bit | tjong upon a transparency card in the G ey OpCy domocrat sive 8iX|inanhood to bear thomselves us their (DOLLIVER SPEAKS AT TENT |couakes whero dwell the whies o o ap enough on it Matince: 2, bix my word for that. It is in the Congressional Record— the votes and the speeches. I think it 1s June 4. Your cOngressman can give you the copy of the Congressional Record Deeds, not words, are what count. I have told you whem you know the deeds you do not have to pay much attention to the wor So much for the material side of the questions at issue. S e e Heware of Quackery. o know whether | 1t 18 @ safe rule to distrust any public Dy the obliga. | ™30 WIth a patent recipe for bringing or In sllyer, 1| the millennium. (Laughter.) We have been knowledge, for |® K000 many thousand years struggling Bter) Thero 1s | WP 10 Where we are and we are not going distance Y on it on the | 1OWard the millennium in one jump. There o Rocky moun. | *11l b # K00d deal of walkiog before we ) We are for upon &ccepting a man at his worth as & | been restored, iutroduced Senator Dolliver | wan of lowa, refcrriag to bim as ono of the | | " *I see there my comrade, you of the|standard-bearers of the republican party, isky face, the brother of this mam with & | who, by his faithtul and intelligent work in | white fac bearing® the button of the|congress, had won laurels for himself and Grand Army. 1 fought beside men of your | famo for his state. Mr. Dolliver sald in | color, the Ninth and Tenth cavalry, down | part 1 at Santiago, and let me say here that I| “Ladies and Gentlemen: It is & very [ think that it Mr. Bryan would devote less | great pleasure to have the opportunity of |attention to (he imaginary rights, or|making a speech under this big tent and | d Another Big Show Tonight 815 ‘ DEBRIMONT, 1 Co., BEERS | | THE STAR MILWAUKEE DE LAUR SAM MOIHIS & | get (nere. We can take strides in ad vance, but we can do it only by facing Great Thinws aud Greater, ratber the imaginary wrongs, of the browa | in the midst of this demotstration of pa- | PR WATEN) MALE sug B AV RN, hich don't wea | conditions as they actually are. | “One moment upon what is greater than | man who is shooting at our soldlers in | triotic enthusiasm, but I am a little sorry i accounts for the high 1 | IRENE and ATRICE itry. (Applause Now the chicf factors fn the success of | the materlal side. It 1s a great thing to |the Philippines and more to the wrongs|that my friend, th favor in which these Franb=S VT HA= L0 any man will remain mow apd in the fu-|velong to & Drosperous country; a coun:|of the meh on whose hreast stand scarsme as Le did, for I am afraid he has done i 200 MARIE TERI, o wllver lssue 18 | 1. 4y they have always been in the past,|try rich in mine and factory; in farm and | gained as they fought under the fag, but [ me more harm than good. The fact Is that | el enings—1ic, 26c. , BAMILY | the man's individuality, energy, honesty, |rauch and railroad. It {8 a greater thing |who happen to have been born In certain | whatever capacity I may once have [ A B R LiRDURN bow the candi- |\ cinoss thrift and resolute endeavor.|to belong in & country that has for its |of our own states; if he would devote at- | for making & speach, six weeks on oF OUR OW LUTTVLE FRANCES Blatz Malt - Vivine Non-Intoxleant) = | Nothing can take the place of these quali-| background the memory of great decds|tention to the wrongs of the black Amer- |stump, five hours a day, has left me tles. Any man may stumble, any manm|valiantly done. But woe to & ecountry | icans herevather than to the fortunes of | reft of lungs and all other vital organs, Invaluable SummerTonic |124. Miaco’s Trocadero other side of the o ‘ : ALL DUUGGISTS ¢ o kbt his hand toward him and help to put him|have done and shrinking itself from doing |his work would bear more useful fruit. (A 2 u\-'r\l]\"lr.w it you will .1-..u.. the e New Pal f\l Burlesque, ¢’ | V. 3 p world olce: “TI rue. pp! se honor to listen to me propose to say a THE IDEAL BON TO BURLEBQU KRS i Gently yel | on his foet. And woe to the man who re- | the rough work of the world. (Applaus.) |voice: “That is true.” Applause.) ¢ 1 proposs to saY | e liidiae nlmf,-“-:x{:l Ly 1 1508 to do that duty to a neighbor. You “Again, it Is with the nation as with the | *I appear here this dvening asking for the | few thirgs without pretending to be elther VAL. BLATZ BRE can help put him on his feet, but if he|individual. The man who counts in the | election of a man, who in the last four days [a hero, as my friend has proclaimed me ut .‘\“4 ;’.. st burlesque company on i roa atinees every afternoos Beats now on sale. Bmoke If you Ik Prices 10c, 20c, 30c; matinees 10c and 20¢ + 4 ‘ + + i chairman, introduced 5 i ! ’ M ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ OMAHA BRANCH, | ‘H,y...w. ng Matinee, Bunday, Oct, 7. Hig | and laughter.) He has got to do his share. | ment, who wishes 80 (o live as to experience | American citizen which makes a man f: A . 2 centsy You cannot by legislation make & man|only the soft side of life. It Is the man | proud of belng an American; & square, [ made In that line ls that T always try to ..m.....“..."......m t \ : :