Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 10, 1900, Page 6

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i THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1900, out N 1 e 3 Gordon keopln ” 1IN ke nding t Kly sores, & be manner of continenta s i Burope o I rather have a 1 at the sam . New York (0 ac- grehiem defeated o polls by put ts ur morning ¢ ame thing opinion thar fown by militariem " beadline wit e-bellum days whew the at the free coinag \ repub- | public domsin in the cattle country is announced tha I-hot the boast of some of iis MAKE TH WSE REPUNLICAN they believe in ed wrtisan | offices show th left means commercia ! 0 o ante | rapidly being taken up. The west " majority for the that one southern man 5 t atoment is could whip five Yankees, That did |4 WAtter of Supreme tmporta (he Country Bultimore Americar As the certainty of McKinl tion increuses, republicans country should, without lessening the activity fn behalt of the presidential ticke devote more time and attention (o th work of guaranteelng a republ Jority in the national house p tatives. 1t is, of course, of ance that the chief executive be a reput Hean At this Junceure, when a chang of administrations would b incaleulat disastrous, involving new and radical partures in economical policies, revoln tions in diplomacy and an entire readju ment of foreign relations, tho re-electio of President McKinley is of first import ance. That assured, the conduct of tk government ior another four yea 1 settled in advance, and commerce business ¢ 11 kinds may lay the accordingly But, if the full fruits of » be gathered, the next house 1 for wo 1 most | expanding commereially and the eatt | bad been carried by the not amour t much, because 1 But an explana. | 5 4 mere Inton; but wheun e ! 4 [ toual dish They « : ty. He | securing free rauge on government land rew Iight on the question. It one Georgia man ting for a president wd wll o citizens, privat \ been | men cannot afford to take the chances of Wi 0 be the vital Issu " «| a8 in the old days There belug tically no opposi- OF for a member of congress is equal 0 Counit | and e . i » b Noitoors vote was light n men in New York tha doubling of New York Washing Bloux €1 all the vast power his conn tinning the « conditions of the | of vowdylsm at political rallies Up 1o date democracy has a monopoly t was the comical part. Now the sad » boast, aud tha 18 matter, for : e bat this is & year when imperialism that not only e sonul opinion, b 0 be the awful dread of the democ- but It goes to the idations of the hief exeeutive of the nation o past thres s With this evid publicans are perfectly willing that their | ., Alism ¢an come in more thun Kovernment, aund if con would signal Bryan should e p maintaining a rren toFia Mutter & e Radren tely s the count 1 hefore him Me, Beyan cannot fall to « should have all the rallies and {one way. It can come in the way of an the day when this 2 republic in Bee, Lditorial Department basis, They say: “The discern, however reluctant he may be the specches they pleage. The |armed uprising, led by great chieftain, fol- bame merely and when inlism would rhid Rt ud uncertainty inevitab niting | (o do so, his less g cliances and now publicun party is the party of frec|lowed by an exhaustive civil war The be SHIbISHES mire cno plbusinens lettersand K ibly ing | to do 3 lessening chiances and now, 3 e ilver | OhCr 15 by taking one right afier another ~What pertaine (o tico exter Jang Umang s R insidiously from the people until they are Alabama and Mississippi, and Louistan REMITTANCES, as disastrons the business of the | charge bis defeat to the corruption ol frec soup. sluves. and Texas, and South Caroling, and North ¥ e — Tho fathers left as a beritage to the Caroline, and Virginia, and Arkansas, and from st i n woulid be alimost four years ngo, he is preparing to I, but not of f | Remit | aft, expross or postal order, [ country as the pas oerelon of voter ; payul o Bee Puoiishing Company. | /'L 6 n & AENSHI 1 % Chebral Reports from the Transvaal ave (o the | American people the ballot, holding that ft Ilorida, and Tenessee, in large measure mal] o ORRT Cheskl Croupt K AR LA R L effect that lrge numbers of Boers are | was amply sufficient to settle all disputes, That goes to the very fntegrity of the Ymah sl CHeOKS, eX I'hie representati I fight is going agaiust him, that his % all trouble, keeping o . republic, and we have not heard My umah Xeinges, N0t ccepted : now leaving that country, many of them troul eeping IR mind CHRG the mRe Ly ! 50 it in the THIE BEE PUBLISHING CCMPANY of Maryland stute th cause, it not alves lost, 18 hopeless pier ¥ e Bours | 107ty must rule and that the will of a wa- yan complain of it in the campaign T saead | Lo oitnn vonl ih the \ Thiere will be 110 buying of votes by the | headed for the United States. The jority of patriotic men must be what fs He i8 frightened to death, apparently b g Tiint - i phesoNaton e e nere g | 4T€ ndustrious and frugal and all Who | best for the country. Now, by certain pro- About imperialism. His party organs | rga B, Tzachi i i . 1 : el ] e . "' with to come will find plenty of room |cesses which the democratic party has a ”‘.f"”‘-""'”' the country are frightened to pin ands,” they say a8 e there will be no cocrclon of voters by { re ol Bt TE e dial weleom | patent on, the vote of Georgia is reduced to U¢ath: those emigent statesmen, ex-Gos ! d [60,000. That means that a great many ©rBOT Altgeld, Webster Davis, ex-Senator | o b0 " i : the polls and that u great many thousands CSf1 Schurzand the Springfield Republican |,y ©1 FERCR G SOTETRER ¥ L TIORR © - braska I8 making Bryan specches over|more have not interest enough fn the coun- “T¢ ! frightened out of thetr wits lest | 0, AGHIEREFCEI W Do WOPIOTAIY € treaty, the adoption of which was | fally studying the situation. They are | h | this country be given over to & despotism | el i) e UL o \ the state. There is a fellow feeling be- | try and in the state to take the trouble to | developed among the democrats to ¢ urged by Mr. Bryan himself. The course | comparing present conditions with the | express their wish at the polls and ruled by the iron hand of that despot, | ., i tween the exieutenant and the ex FA&L c6utd b Toabhd: o l" Yy the sountey MOKInley. But that several states jn |y country carrying out the work colonel -both resigned and came home | S TR0 e 0 erente It It extendeq 1O South only have to cast about one fn | jilCh i emburked it it on &8 y i b g h war will then make itself felt in the before the men In the ranks we I¢ | no further than the Georgla state line. But ' 4% MANY votes Lo get an elector or &, . "y to be mustered out in electing a president and in electing con- CPATESSMAD A8 the states in the north 40 | usual constitutionnl safeguards for lite, | clines grossmien Georgla claims the right to haye ‘DAL 18 looked upon as a mere incident, | | it Tl ————— muen Georgla claims t o ot St wess and an micessant agitation which wi Hberty and property, and in determin —_—_ eloven congressmen and thirteen eloctoral Ot WO'th mentioning. M Bryan, who fa | , /8% PRI e 4 o m Sume Consolution In Sight b thoughtful, who thinks ost every. | JO fomost calamitous in its effect so0 | 108 to give the Fllipines as great a share AS 10 THE BALLOT “™ philadelphin. Ledger e | St e Stk Ay tHifLYS : not even once_ thaukht of It | YOI be little worse (o buse Bevan elects toral votes. To get the thirteen thing, has not even once thought of it I legislation may be made ineft Mr. Bryan shiould find a hopeful augury | 41X clectoral votes, o %0 far as we have heard, since the open- | AR it Will be to e t th ive by bad execution. The intent of tn the fact that e price of kold ax mens- | electoral volen In Georgia and the eleven jng ‘ot tha campalgn: neither has A, | IDIStration (i # by an adverse majori congressmen Ge casts 60,000 votes, bUt gopurz; neithor has that blatherskite with | |n {Be house. In Mar o | Now York §ot her thirty-six electoral (ne awful mouth, Bourke Cockran, It f¢ | (Droushout the country, (i ibliennt Politenens of ¢ anters lmv- « and her thirty-four congrossmen, cast {should devote themselves seriously to t s as an unavoidable result of the war | republican cployers. It fs unneces complete | ning . with Spain, a war decided on by hoth | «ary he pagple are thinking. The | f Lieutenant Smith of the Iirt Ne parties. Our title lax been confirined | farmer and the wage earner ave care of the present administration in putting | conditlons of four years ago. And ik wi armed insurrcetion, in establish | this investigation expands and becomes 7,400 27,000 ’ ¥ nigEnt + 27,200 27,500 | 0K & government founded upon our | more carnest the caus teyanism de REA appropriations, usele delays in (he osition of public bus 245 | of self-government as they may show six clec 28,810 Br ey | themselves capable of. commends tselt to our sober judg 15 belng o wise | lawmakers o enacting the present ured 1o silver fs steadily ting I lot law was to facilitate the voter in {and prudent method of meeting the Wit - 1 N ool - ere any other country but this, people t responsibilities which have de- | giving expression to bis choice of can Washington Post In 1806 1371351 votes. The Incrense Ovr would Eegin to conelude \pat (jr o :|: {work of electing congressional candidate | didates and prevent trickery and manip- | e Manley meets the generosity of Vice | 1896 in the vote this vear will probably be gorry frauds on the face of the earth the | 100 fMUCh importance cannot be accorded 164 the BT AR TH « | ulation desxigned to mislead the voters. | fent Johnson by placing Arkansas in|more than the total vote cast In Georgla. democratic party in the United States ia | POCRUSE a8 it succeeda so Wil the second egacy of the Spanish wi the Bryan column. There js danger of the | We see then that it requires only 3,816 votes administration of President McKinle silot law was enacted by | 5 the very chief nt bailot law was enacted by | o aien managers becoming overpolite. | in Georgla to make an electoral vote, while & success, s | volved upon the United States as sworn 10 the bogy of militarisin they Ihe pi | foker A nation of 75,000,000 people ne a republican legislature, but approy | P fenr any dunger of military despo. | DY & populist governor. There Is no bl Sle L Sttt il RTNFUL CHATTRR # ks wouisville Courler irna 6 [ ~ . . - B | {iai, <eithifts ey 5o w1l A plopow | GueRtion tHAE e {ara vnt {MpROYEmMBHE |l o ORI SO e e Tuln the poe A p 11b d R d City Nephew - What d The campaign for the auditorinm must | 1oy on the law which it superseded and thy b c l 1mdain ecor Pillsiiry s a nh especlally as congress has full sition of the democratic party on the Friar Hevro e be waged without cessation until the | howar to control it | its provisions, If lonestly enforeed, are |meney question, “We favor,” he says, “all I thix part of the tyne returns clineh sue | fair alike to voters and all parties kinds of money—silver, gold, any kiud of Washington Post (ind. rep.) off fixhing when he's wanted morey. That s our policy on the money | As a matter of fact the existiug conditions passed from the state of a national deblor | P Mrs k question.” This is, perhaps, to be inter- | in finance, commerce and Indusiry furnish to that of a creditor nmation. Instead of | (hitg! 2 cash [ the new ballot Jaw forget the glaving | jroeq by the light of Croker's assumption | the republican party with all the material borrowlng from Europe we lend to Eu- | "4 | defcets of the old pictorial ballot law, in | that Croker fs the democratic party. Cro- | (hat it needs or that it can creditably uti- rope. We have funded a debt ot 33000 ‘ oy da it | inflicting which the fusionists over- | ker is conceded to be in favor of any kind |lize. Mr. McKiniey's administration has, up 000, beariug 4 and 4% per cent interest i & wil ople | 4 ; ot money » this moment, been attended by extruordi- into bonds bearing 2 per cent st it sound | renched themselves and finally had to g ; , 3 st Hor S L e UL LB PRI o will sacrifice their interest 4n sound nary and opulent achlevement, The con- than was ever before realized by ane coun. mas 1 ask w The effort of the local democrats to | Money and take the risk of financiul | tcknowledge thelr mistake. With th Hot Work the Firing Line. duct of our financlal affairs has been try in time of war—and our new bonds now | o4 i A aking still on the statute books the Philadelphia Ledger crowned with @ success of which every command a premium of 4 per cent, being | PUiN e Canvasses and estimates made by re substantinl citizen is, according to his visi- quoted highe: rop: b e LU ) gher in proportion than the Such expression v conclusive an he people who are finding fault with Two Omaha law wols have 1e to swer to the claim of the Bryanite cam Agn managers that most of our Ger law. ‘That the proper caper it the et 8 an citizens are fearful of so-called fm students are 1o tanght by ohjeet lessor perilisi and militavism and therefore 4 s old law eXtort cnmpulgn contributions from re. | A0 business disaster. As was sald by e ofticial ballot this year would as unwicldy as it is now because the se- No, wtraw ' est, a beneficlary. We know of uo curitles of any European gover i mbassador to Germa s o SHADTS Rl iy ] luropean government. W the pavilion tent is too transparvent to | AMbassador 10 Germany, 1t is a eal & i i ¢ the | ¥ cnable each party to claim an assured | gopartment of legitimate activity which have collected, without friction, without | . Wi il s, umny to say that the citizens of Ger- (ol law permitted the repetition of the |yuccess in the coming election. 1f elther | nas not thriven during the past three years, dficulty, and without the seandal oo s | VeT Yo RIS CRSUIAY the | names of the candidates under each con- | were perfectly -A“l]‘;i vx:.'”m;- {v w‘r\w- Our manufacturing enterprises 'have ex- single defalcation, the largest revenue in Perhaps that's why they are t, it would be justified In aban- | pibited a remarkable growth and a corre- our history. D, " 3 intruthful, " answered the hostess doning all further effort to win votes, but B T as sponding prosperity. Agriculture was never 30, 1900, our internal revenue amounted to | o005 MG 10 i either Is showing any such confidence \ u ounted to | to avold being rude iy ) i Rt & AT Ve Lo BRRen thes tifioh Wi neither 1” ! I:. ml h « m\'l :.‘ 0|50 well established and so bountifully re- $205,313,107.57, and the proceeds of our WL g wh ne thme they could | hundreds of thousands of soldiers, raisec | LT Rkt OIS ChEEATY ARG o And, what is more to the pur- tariff on imports amounted to $271.927,-| FPittsburg Chronicle “That's w have spending it it the voters would | by the conseription of able-bodied weu | it now is printed but once aud the | working hard, and expect to keep on doing . this vast wave of profit and encour- 774.32 only give them a chance | “ean be seared from their alleglance to | chances for confusion multiplied 1 the day of election ment has covered the entire country-- $51.89. W publicans by means of the tion on | How. Aundrew D, White, the American il (TPt mt — man orighn, who rewember vividly With a nice, fat surplus in the United | great military establishments of the | vention Jabel by which they had been Buates treasury nnot help [old world—vast stunding armies of [ nominated. Under it the fusion ticket making a grand total of $567,240,~ | 1 htter pros g L fv.“m'h ":"’.,hmm i : SEsmsaEsiap Pl AL have created since March 11, hat.” added Hulket, “is what the Lit ———— o o f) q is possible that experience with the i north, south, east and west alike. The this vear, 323 new natlonal banks. Thess |Of the tree remarks when it sees the spe republican principles by the t the It s p ar 88 jie B FPFew) J . Ne8e | )i der a » 6k sty N WEERERA THRE Ty S0TiDly o ml e e S : e TRy aiit0se Satatn | Has B :" v vl::l]n:; “r lem, .r\unullpl"‘mrv‘ul 'rrnm’xom’.r.;w-., to Texas, bauks have been established throughour | "9°F APProaching o ted Ntates ds ssury, ‘ ) *hiladelphin Ledge gaze upon rich harvests. he cotton mills the ¢ —8 cap y ) cotton be shut off. ANl that Germany | gop g hrief co of time, to add to the | points in which it can be still further | g express messenger on the Burling- | of the Carolinas, Georgia and n.--xnbul:«lxx: s:lr:.u::'z"::n) s:rr,"onul«l m|‘|’::‘:u:|tl|‘ ..:!ul::'n:" Gl B R R et L has to do is to keep on good terms with improved. But to return to the old pic- | ton road who discovered that there were |states have been converted into gold mines. agricultural districts, and they give mot | MWife—Thirty:nine dollars and a halt Wiiols Baw 4t 18 san have. all ‘the ot torfal ballot would be o step backward | two doors to his cur and that be could |The farmers, from Ollo to tho Pacific, only facllity, but protection. They are, in| Marthbyayhat 0 vou met Tom\(6 Bemg b ot MM RLAED ) L e e ot [which the people would never tolerate, | */IP Ot of one with bis gun while traln- | bave pid off thelr mortgages, are at lasi fact, tho eymbols of our tremendous prog- rman citizens, who, 1ke thoge of robbers were breaking in the other may|independent, and now see before them un resw and development. They tell a tule, |, Chicago Post: “What = the best-paying = laltimore, have given thoughtful con have solved (bo hitherto fnsoluble problem | era of assured prosperity, Labor is every- which, in the extimation of serious men, | [URIeAs you Kiow of™ asked the file | sldoration to this matter, know there ls THE COUNTY ATTORNEYSHIP. of how to fight this kind of miscreants. His | where in demand at excellent wages. Capi- accuses and forever silences the silly rig. | +Promoting. replied the state lexisia up such danger to our form of govern-| One of the offices to be filled at the vln‘n W 'h;"l |‘;[1‘.4“»p“ A l‘h» 1A~j|xmun|u tal finds remunerative employment on every marole of the cheap and shallow exhort SORBROMBIIY, L enterpeisest = i ‘wose the | coming election fs that of county at.|nd can donb e %0 improved as to|hand. The whole country is a beehive ers from the stump. From March, 1503, to | -kl BroR D o lexiain went for a partisan purpose t ke the cxpress car, which is usually the |and honest effort has its sure reward March, 1897, there ; ik | 7 {a Doaiiie 6 ennbllG: ere 158 national bank | thve micas ires Bryanit ty alleges, They know that | torney. Jor this position the republic- | arst part of the train to be attacked, & | As we seo the matter, the republican fallures. From March, 1897, (o Maroh. 190 hind Chicago Times-Herald: A gentleman wt t of the administration warrants|ans have nominated Jobn W. Parish, afvery dangerous trap for the robbers orators have o meed to go a step beyond there were thirty-four fallures. He Who | wore eheiean whon whiskars and A chach charge of its opponents that “im-|Young lawyer of good standing at the . R = these eloquent, conyincing facts. They cannot read aright the meaning of these | mult went fnto a Chicago library the o : 008 i Lins | bar and in every way competent to per- | ot the Sliwhtest Dunger. commit an uopardonable folly when, in- facts and figures is beyond the reach of | 4ny and, appronching of the att Patiatinm ok MBI SRER 10 B | C T it dtikiés Wehick: Wit Minneapolls Journal stead of poiutiug to the substance, they common sense and reason | snis dn the clzeulaty ptesald ever been thought of, and they also I port | Mr. Bryan said at Washington, Ky.. Sat- | ontent themselves with barking at a fool Here, in a nutshell, is the record of the | Homars Rubaivat and ‘Omer's Ho evolve upy day that the government cannot be con- " know th sresident MeKinley is the [devolve upon him. jur ish shadow. Compared with their sy republic d o de | know that Presiden: ) v eir noisy repu n admintstration \ml,hx ml Me- | T TUERE BE LIGHT. @ substan- | extract from tho Treasury department's tial interests of the American people 1t | ¢ n Brooklyn Fagle |record is an ant t rabbl e r' ¥ IRdann direeidy i v m to A rabbit'’s squeak. fs mot made up of conjecture, prejudice, | (an vou 1ot see. my brothers, how gre | Look, for a moment, at that record. Dur- partisanship, or any other manifestation of | , this nation grows ocratic play. —_— our government Bryan bas discovered b bes : There are no more thoughttul, sober- 530 ing Mr. McKinley's administration we have empty tomfoolery. Emerging from lis century of toll a e ¢ be s under- | led and careful people than German-| periority. His opponent, who is run. (00 the subject. It is not necessary for Mr martial throes s ! taken a bigger contract than he jm- | Winded and e Daoy | 34 A é Bryan to protect the people of this coun- S e = | tlow fn the vear of miracles, the fatefu be deluded | ning for re-clection, has made a record | = | ninety-eight R ar. | 7Y against themselves. There Is not the B . o s With little effort it became the peer of an of lamentable failure. The Bee bas char-| giop oo danger that they will ever want PERSONAL POINTERS, DIAGNOSIS AND REMEDY. bk 7 ¥ AL P ! - wal of the greatest, with ample acterized hlm as “incompetent, irrele- | empire and he g authority for the propos! Medfenl Definition of Bryanitis and | | vaut and immaterial,” this verdict hiy- | tion that there will be mpiro 11l they | the Proper Treatment. eane YOOk petty wrangles and lat 4 A 3k Ieok want it. Then what is he fretting about— | Medical Brief for October dinsensions go ———— ment and progress, in all respects, o unless it's votes | Bryanitis Is a complication of diseases What the people of the Second this countey and it Is not to be doubted | *Pinion by every juror who has mau hed | e 2 | In little more than a the British | comprising opposition to averything 1o the | " Forn i s oy, W08 Young. with | that most of them will continue their | his bungling operatious and costly mis- | Dec sed Borrowing in Nebraska, ‘[“,,\,.“ ent has expended $10,000,000 fn|ghape of practical common sense. We let not well enough alone, but needs | gallant little regular army a body of 10,000 to 50,000 volunteers, Intelligent Mannfacturers of scarecrows should submit new samples at onee to the popo cratie committee. The designs orig tually intended for this campalgn have not proved effective with the voters he object for which the local popo cratic organ is laboring is the defent of the republican ticket, so it may be ex pected to do all it ean’ to bolster up re- | publican dissension That is the pop last wan in the United s who| Ascompared with his oppouent ou the | verted iuto an empire unless the people|aug ridiculous vociferation, the smallest Kinley, 80 far as it touches f f o ' Mr. Pap.|¥ent an empire. That's the first sensible [ would attempt to change the form of | fusion ticket the candiducy of Mr. Par- | W 40 STRHE, TUHE BE POl S0pn e | 1sh appenls to the support of all classes | perialiam: That 1« true and it s the com of voters because of his pronounced su- | plete answer to all else that he has said agined and now gets up and makes cam. | Amerieans. They will not palgn specches Lefore hreakfasi, The | DY the false cries of the Bryanite party republicans are keeping everghody busy, | They know what republican policies and W. 8. Stratton, the Cripple Creek millfon- aire, is to build in Denver a new theater capable of seating 1,800 people ahoaratio ataedlmakam. 1nalids winciples have done for the develop Popocratic. spasdiupakass .inoluded REASN | ing been rendered In the court of public con gressional district want in thele repre Rentative to cougrens is a wan who can | alleglunce to the republican party. 5 accomplish something for them. 1t fs —_— I'he office of county mortgage record of Nebraska for the first not a question so mueh of his oceupation INSULTING AMERICAN VOTERS. that can be economically or eXtrava- | six months of 1849 ani of the present year 4 L : ored and the taxpayers ! : And here we mean to stay, my ch or previous coudition as of lis avllity, | Mf- Bryan says there aro Americun | gantly admlulstered and tho taxpayers|,. ... .o .ces Charles Kendall Adamis has retired from | fanatical folly, better sulted to the miadle | ™ '8 WG meatly (P ftax, my boys, righ ——— voters for sule. He tells the world that | must foot the bill. This LIl has never | fijea i | the presidency ot the University of Wis- |ages than American clvilization of the |And no American now lives who savs we've ot are men in this countr 0 | been 5o expensive the returns so | Amount $11.64 T | consin and will go abroad for his hewlth, | twentieth century. too much land Omaha's postoflice recerpts contipue | (DEFE 4¢ men in this country who will | been so expensive and the veturns ko | RO i Sypbigle gy e o el i e TR R, pis continue | heir votes for money. In his [ small as under the present fusion in-| satisied 14,120 | which has been bad for two past. | S er that the Filipino should [ As we crossed the Rocky mountains, now to show a steady increase, the daily ig- | ™" 4 i Th atl {h thatanimy Amount $14,630,804.5: | He has not actually resigned und Dean E. | feel kénship with the present popocratic | — We breast the surging waves, come for the. pust gquuctes 'i\“.'.dm'\ speech at his birthplace, Salew, 11, | cumbent I hat a reform in the admin ’('\';I:\"yr\‘ ‘"»»‘.‘.“m. gty A. Birge will act iu his place organization and leaders. They are both | FOT 1‘3:;' 1:;‘1;\;‘:1, mr.q \!::., glven, sacred wit $1000. No such rocord as ihis oy | e sald: “1f the election were held to-| istration of the ofice I8 urgently de- | \FIOTIELE ; The railway car which was for some|examples of retarded development. It is graves VA% | Jay there I8 no doubt that wé would | manded is conced hand, and | As we fought to free ourselyes, hovs, now L y Town nd ity | time President Kruger's headquarters near [ @D anachronism, reversion, degeneration, to | we fight to free the world, made before President MeKinley staried iy ' have o wajorlty in the electoral college | the only way to effect this reform is to | re- | clect Mr. Parish, the republican candi 4 American Investments, Buffalo v 5 aAlates dar 5§ wanageient of public prosecutions. ‘ New Orleans for animals for the South The disorder is acute and virulent, but |, 15t then expand ttorney 1s one | The following gives a comparison of the | yerican campatgn, and New Orleans peoplo | seif-limited in its nature To rest content with hirteen stutes wa do not see why other folks call the War| Radical treatment of the disease consists | We rafsed them up to forty-five, and ruel in always voting against the financlal and thank God: here we are ant $ 5,001 | Machadodorp was & splendidly decorated | Propose that a nation, fast becoming a Providence unfurled 3 Chattel mortgages | aftair, two guards wero continually at the [ Ereat world power for good, should adopt | For we are strong enough b R Land on the popular vote. But the filed 4 | doors. but Mr. Kruger seldom went out policy of contraction, isolation, debased rogs the sea I'he school board is the body on which | Publican managers are now collecting | date, who can be counted on to serve the | Amount .o 8 8 | except for his morning bath in the sulphur [ money, tarnished credit, fgnominy, among [ AN (o ntendu 1t whall be N stly, conselentlously and | “Witiea priugs, close by other nations Amount 3 B~ mbe bible nressnted by the Harvand Re It we believe in the republic, it we cher- [ Thera's anti-this and ant! tha erican ide ciple Time rol ong publican club to Governor Roosevelt, for | 18 American ldeas and principles, we must | , 4 /70,1 RANOY iarenis g to Ex S . A4 o e o aa mon our patriotism, and, whatever our Wanslo lorious song Experimenting fn sugar bect culture | use by him In taking the oath of office iu ":':‘ frideat b The Heiision'a glorious song: ; good for membership in the school board, | candidate for the presidency it reflects | ! 3 { the Tid on a fly-leaf the fuscription: *‘From Har- | HAS uptive diseass | yor jonger he divided’ by the hatreds of adaptability of the land In this vicinity | Detroit Free Pre vard men to & Harvard man of whom all | Which has attacked our politics, not a the past B part of our bone and fiber. | The advocates of tsolated The result of the election will tell the | blind; world whether we are sound and strong. ' | far for mking (®8 there are the b | | | “mortkages satisnéa With the same oid flag above us, b | 1t s the advance agent of prosperity sty the management of the public sebools | from the monopolies a large campalgn | people b devolyes amd which controls the expendi. | T They will buy every vote that | with intelligence. i pen WOND ture of more than $300,000 each year, | C410 he bought.” If there be any ground The best procurable ability is none tog | fUf 1his statement of the popocratic — e | ¢hiely upon his own adherents. The for the purpose of growing sugar M8 | Even those who knew the wonderful re- | Harvard men are proud.” ahlfatinacs 'an his means that o beet sugar factory | ciperative power that the American peop'e | Dr. Paul Haupt of Johns Hopkins uni- | located in this city would have no difti-|have shown In times past following a | versity, who secured for Yale a collection | L period of financial depression comment |of Arable manuscripts on his recemt trip ! Vix-Senator Gorman hus concluded that | republican campaign managers, it the he wants to veturn to the senate bad |huve, as Mr. Bryan all corrup enough to swallow Bryan and Kryanism, | tion fund, can use it to advantage only ———————————————————————————— culty In securlug the raw material re The principal impedinient in the way {o | I buying the votes of men who are with surprise upon the remarkable develop- | to Europe, bought also for & Baltimor EEAULYING his ambition is the chanes [ supporting him. How many Bryanite | Quired to keep it running. Omaha Lus | goat made since the turn of the tide four | collector another collection of Arable and that Maryland will go repul) [ Gemocrats, populists and frec silver re. | had several projects for the location of | years ago. Each banker who spoke at the | Turkish manuscripts valued at $26,000. Th s 4 n again, | - ol facte In succession for several | meeting of the a ation in Richmond | last i to be preseanted elther to Princeton R b | Bgsririens Aed. ave for sale? Afan.|Such a factory fn su | for severs | publicans, so-called, are for su e 4 | had special knowledge of the district from |or to Johns Hopkins Bourke Cockran has found thng cou. | ifestly, in the opinion of Mr. Bryan, |[years, and the time seems propitious | "y reported and, withoutsexception, | prof. Daniel Protheroe of Milwaukee has bating his arguments for MeKinley foue | there is 4 very considerable number— [ 1fow to interest capltalists And §ecure 4 | o testimony that he bore was of the most | jugt returned from England, whither he years ago I8 (o0 much for bix strengih, | enough, he evidently fears, to dereat | factory before auoti cxpires. | gratifyiog nature. What these men pre- | went to act as an adjudicator at the Royal J —_— |sented in the more general terms used | Nationnl Eisteddfod at Liverpool. He is s The o8 » nOW trying to co 1 ik bankers were coudensed by Uuited | (he only person not a resident of Great nance of the financial Lonor of the coun. | would be suceesstul it the election were | Th l”‘-“”’“ e " Ve 4 I1- " | States Trensurer Roberts in a treatment of | }:L..,m)»«:..x PR N RS G T try as he did In 1886 he would doubi- | held at once, but In the ensulng four | frovert the argument that the ilip bject thut covered the entive union. | (hat position. Oue of his compositions, w s got along better weeks he expects the republican man. | PInes were annc xed because we needed | ppere is plenty of money in the country, | chorus for fomale volces, was a test plece the territory. ‘The facts are the Phil- | evidence conclusive being furnished by the | ar the eisteddtod The ocmpress dowager G e Mting him to compass Lis do- | IPpines need the protection afforded by |fact that it is cheap enoush (o attract for Grlona) Thack Hasilnme: af isattean | eigners, Germany alone calling upon us the Unlted States In order to prevent | ¢88er many alone cdlling upon us for foa ) \ L1$20,000,000. Our exports have been the territory falling into the clutehes of | 1 ecodented and we fan hoast coutrol of 1t he would stand up for the mafute. | him, He professes to believe that ——— agers to buy enough voters who are merchnt of San Francisco, 18 preparing to rect in Golden Gate park thero the highest | lugpole in the world. Tho giant pole will be 230 feet high and from It will wave an incompetent attempts At government by |Vots supplied by farms, mines and manu- | 3y S 0 0 roet loug, with: stars | [ A fucturing establishments. The people of | ot poie Colonel Hastings, who We hear that same old wretched story: Draw acknowledges the recelpt of the fuvita tion to veturn to Pekin to board with | Certainly My, Bryan could not have | the allled powers, but owing to un.|considercd the bearing and significance | Some other power or belng blighted by |seme of the world's most Important mar familiarity with European cooking she | of his declaration at Nalem. What still prefers the simple bivd's nest ¢ does it mply? In the fivst place that this country own $90,000,000,000 in capltal hore are many ousands of voters | SRR ey aro annually producing 2 | ¢ ’ on of this | ers turned up at the ankles. Sleeves turned up —— who are dishonest and conscienceless f L SR at the wrists. You men who haven't found record, being more than 18,000,000 hushi- | pational treasur 1 1 Douglas connty republicans never had | so far as polites s concerned —men who | Wt 800 T L e had than ever b v th e tax law (he amount | A v : a legislative ticket up for their support | huve no principles, or who hold them | .m I ‘H'm ‘“ “},,, e A R s 7 e o bivk s In ‘\":_\ X k .‘ veis | us out, have su fered long enough. composed of men as well qualitied or ax | i such eht vegard -t they will well| 390 O FEEEEE R O te stringency in our Anwnclal w 000 15 harged agaiust the Manhattan Elo- | This is merely a hint that your misery Feprese e o e various elements | them to the highest bidder. n the sreates pre 5 vepresentative of the various eloments | thew . Fi 38 10 Srovineq the bellolas of. the: Eavarnment Lo may be ended without extra cost. ax that nominated this year. ‘The con- [ond place that there are among his | MUVICE (A WA R U FLC KOOGS L Kok e 1o Metropolltan Surface Raitroad | | y trast with the democratic candidates | supporters men who think so lttle hich “. 4” ,‘\ il g x‘ kets ; asis loaning ompauy, e thn §60.000 wentnst rn-; Like our clothing, no underwear fits like could not be more strikin | party allegiance that for a pecuniary | (ion e pot veyersal ¥ would sar $200,000 against the Kdison Hiumis | ours, and trom 500 a4 garment to $5 a garment e — | ratlo \ fve th votes 0! producing che | ¢ ' consideration they will give thelr vot v we can fit you to your perlect satisiaction. Willlam K, Vunderbilt aretved fn New | any i money or of making serlous « ik in the . iminary sparein gy stent ider which we are operating To i ) | system under which are operating, To |, on " Gonn., on Sunduy with his auto, and Union suits l you preler, | after stabling the machine went to get u of the Chinese cuisine ad compan enrly $600,000 frem what vatlon Polk county, askn, Which is o the | to the oppesition. Thus M, Bryan not | Ageer protracted | habit of piling up popocratic pluralitios, [only iusults Amprican — voters 88 i | (L puypeachinent proceedings ngalust | change ft would be saying to the rest of the has paid off $351,601.74 worth of mort: | whole, but he divectly and distiuetly ve- | pojiq Judge Gordon sevm about fo ma. | ¥OrId 0 the most direct wanner possible | 4Her SUEERE THS PRI WOKE 1o ket | . . e iave heen. B \ts upon the hones A sincerlty o [elther thut we did not recognize o good guges more than have boen fled since f focts upot the honesty aid BICOTY of | goriulizg und the Judge will Lave an op. | fener (W8C we did ot recognize o G0od | D10C0y o open on Sunday, but ater some | the advent of the republican administra: | his own supporters, stice 1t 15 only such | oviunity of explatning I court many |out ordinary bustness sensa snud that we | Hme 4 local Figaro was induced to o 2 9’ o tion. Tt s about thwe for Polk county | that the republicab managers would | poegiiae transactions whieh have marked | were capable of plunging voluatasily from | '© .’|,< “\ and inke ;“y_',\{\pl4;mm.lm.n.". , to break away from its idols and look [need to buy, Moreover, it Is u plain in beard, He received o dolng the job | | 4 9 = i .| the heights of prosperity to the depths of A g after its material interests, DR IR T AR B LbERY. o 1:.[\: :‘vl;u:;:':ln.‘_:"wr l{::w ;;:.ll;”r:l L’;; monsiary. calamity for (e fuu of e |40 40 uot learn wil nert ey ihe iden- | St R. S. Wilcox, Manager. & H sbock, p maha's Only Exclusive Clothicrs-for Mcn and Bays ‘ . .

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