Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 12, 1900, Page 6

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[ THE OMAHA DAILY BE : FRIDAY, THE OMAHA DALY BEE GENERAL HARRISON'S PONI 1o, Brvan did not les ope | scene when 11 onl flghting goin il == | Doubt regard i uoand the PPekin PUBLISJILD BV p - et s the B Jinde " y % i " oo TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION He disapproves vl wosals I U orel « to the div 0w ool ( - y Bee (w NOS Une Year. § wetlng 1 I ey I the <« to o tradde f AN Bes, une iedr W th 1 did More —_—— OFFICES of the « n nma l teed i size ftcan best accom Seath T ity en Sulldine, T with a vi heen any plish the pitipose by coasing 10 encon Bloux Cily: 611 Park Street legal winds iu government de- | 1ONg ngo but for the fire in the rea CORRESPONDINCE the questions in y propose media — Communications r ¢ to news and ed aterles W _matter should be sddressed: Umaha | pofiey, These thal any fa b Bee, Editorial Departiment hallot hox and therefore should no n A Duteh-Ametican will blame the hunt Kent on Lo wddressnd: ihe Publishing Con General rrison desires wblican | e Bryan to popular pas- ! be gl and tiy the moon. bany, Omaha RIEMI A E : y d el 0 < 4 uy | - ted Who Is Hoshing 1t? mail accounts raanal 1| now i nowould thie wWegronnd and the ¢o o accolopnte | ¥0 d0%D with Mr. Woolley unl some Ornuh i s ox 1 . 1 3 werures im th t e n A BP0 rin THE BEE PUBLIY ernmental nsiness cond 8 lts deciing eorinh Htats ot Nebreki, ks Codiy. W dential cond o admitted that he WELCOMING THEM BACK SHiver Knight Recovers Sanity. Georgs Tasehuek, secr would he conld troy the Ot « anks i o platform ¢ 4 P Sedue c : ; One of the pian 1 the platfortt| yerdics aien 1 bl sl g saye u nctual’ im standard « er thin we value [ adopted car by Nebraska repub- | production of new gold during the last four oy WP Rk THE ) 4 on o v othe deceptive snggestion | leans in their state convention reads years Lus added to the clrculation about & ite month of September, 150, was as (ol | that Il ound and that the repub Ve invite and will heartily welcome the | much as the free coinage of silver would i 27,210 7 85 | Hean part en after def will still | re v 1o the republican rauks of former | have done. When Hon. Bill Stewart under 2 26, [} have st th enough to save the tem. Members of Ahe party and all patrioti Kes to flop e does not stop while hix heels 3 L2T,080 I 27,1 1 hi6 winall Dhttet + | ltizens who have been esiranged by |are in the air | ‘ 27,100 " 20,4 DX bl er not 1o al-| g106 allurements and Insiucere and unkept e 2 b 0. 27,015 | low “the nan with destructive tenden | pledges, for th 16 HAS. come Wheh (e Fusion style .vt'.A"gum-un 7 2 2 il el e ey i derewand | Of course the dewocrats do not uphold the s 27,170 3 In This 1 commend it=ell 1o all the b 1he AsMoEEREIE DAY campaign methods those who attempted 9 20, 1 sensible and practieal me Why eleet I 1 wid ety i U hat | 10 a8sault Roosevelt and tried to knock out | 1 to the presidency a man who must b | OSSN mes intc “;“'“”. tha Matk Hanna by dr ing a ten-pound chunk 1 6 y this invitation is being accepted, in the | of fee on his head, but orthy of note 1 put under v 1int, who in order to I 1 his head, bu is worth, o . : 1 \ sume cordial spirit In which it was ex- | that none bu Jocrats are adopting (hom | » wevent doing mischief must hav ! e assalle " » : tended, by former republicans and citi- [ @00 none but republicans are assailed " 2 his hands ted? Some of Mr. Bryan's | ferehst S 3 zns geney v who have ha¢ Weir eves L, ¥ supporters who admit that his election \ 1l finitet i A Sign of 1 perity 4 opened 1o the duplicity of the fusion iy s Times. Tota . would be a menace to tinancial and | Lllle Minneapolls Tin Le id and returned I p Wt leaders It is announced that the elish bonds yusiness security urge that the present ) t o > hoel o 1 e SO1L618 AL ARk It is ot to be denied that wany voters | allotted to this country have been taken el guag | congress should enact further currency | S ool 0 LE e e | uD and that major share of the consign GEORGE B, TZSCHUC] legislation that would prevent him doing Ty i ying tpon: th | ment was purchased in Minnesota con Subscribed 'n_my presence and sw 10 flver ic ying upo! e promises | oo g 1e tent dish betore me s 0y dEASnge Mid WOt 19 | any harm. As a practical statesman S A i '“ MC¥ | win and lowa, eviden by th i a0, M. B HUNGATE, General Harrison regards this as a de- | o0¢ DY poepocratie: prophe 1 Tec- | Americaus of these three states. A gratify (Seal) Notury Publie I'ie Bryanites will now have to call | in their wonderful fakes about the al- | leged disaffection of ex President Har- |t 18 rison. d —— & If the leugth of time it has taken to|e ord of the past four years | and on s proved to ing evidence of prosperity is this that will impress the people of the father land with the advantages the northwest rs to the lndustrious and the other hand the pledges of the repub. | pmigrant lHean party have been serupulously ful — filled, carrying with them the restora Some Boxe conld he . Baltimore tlon of business confidence, the reopen eptive suggestion and would fake the them beyond possibility of controversion bsolutely sufe course of kee ut of the presidency highly itlonal legislution, to give great urity to the wold standard, nacted hy - the ping Bryan In our judgment improbable that any ad the falsity of these prophecies, while on erprising wt Home, American by burnings at the stake, we present congress |f Judgi come Is any criterion that supply depot | Bryan should be elected, but at all| ., . have s Xer T ught to he a good thing whei i e | eve: he ; st I ployment labor and the revival of |cught to be dealt with before those in ough e A good thing when it flually | events the way to unquestionable se |, o0 Doty i nale el el e il endit, arrives A Campaigning 1o e With brickbats seems democracy’s long suit this year | d about the only forcible argument | the party has W St Joseph may have a bigger pull witl change of ity s to defeat him | o of degraded true these exceptional in but thelr perpetration, val of the communi tures possible only barbarism and Le utrocitles are repub- | siences in our land in a s For anyone who left the republican General Harrison believes that o 06 because of hard times the dministration this fall would renew return of I ®ood tlmes under a tainly * an administratic conditions from whiclk | leaves him without | with the appr es in ¢ have escaped and there I8 1o one which they ir, is enough how us 1 excuse for remainidy away liose opinion as (o this hy Dette . fat there growtls of the primitive DR o s better |y nvone who left the republican party | 8t there are g kst o claim to consideration, for few men | " ey e €T T loxs fony | FUTABEEY vel to uproot from our own ) the country have glven more care. | " 1578 because of the groundless fear | highly civilized and intelligent country, v v . % that there was not gold enough to main and that this native wissionary work could th nsus man than Omaha, but Or leads it by ha | good wargin in the weekly | 1able of packing house products Governor Re o sevelt’s drawing powers s 4 campaigner are not lessening as he travels eastward, although the pace set in Nebraska 18 just as bot as it coul be made. —_— Topeka Is enterts thlef assoclation whose wmembership | U vers Kansas and Indian Territory. | [ This I8 an improvement on some of the | W other anti conventions. The democratic n has called on the tl 1 jonal democratic clubs | tb throughout the country to indulge in a | Stands higher in the resp grand rally on a designated day thing desperate is needed, surely a Eaeae none will question. Omaha s already receiving applica tions for bonds expected to be author- tzed by bond propositions to be sub. nltted at the coming clection. sredit could not receive a higl Omaha's | le ; e Now that they bave discovered some ful attention and | plied in the “full dinner pail, peal to the workingmun's stomach, In Intng an anti-horse | ¢iblem. for slckness committee | his position will have a good effect upon | Some- | fidence of the country und the honesty | o v tribute. | | study to econoic onditions than Benjamin Harvison, utly we said that there i« mueh im tain the gold stundard is reminded that | very well torcible clvilizing the increase of that circulating wedium | ©f the beathen of distant lands. precede auy Fanatle with a Club, Buffulo Express Bryan is more nearly right in his than Mr. Cleveland was in s ‘ariff theory, but he would work quite much harm to the people and as little and the stability of the gold standard | has taken the foundation away from D¢ | under the false silver argument who left the republican party in 1806 because he wante which e Bryanites attempted to tile and disparage, as stmply an ap- | have To anyone trust theor achan, gard to this General Harrison said n the ms ate govern s full dinbes biaks SO0k aadi f the trusts by his attempls to carry it he ful 1\| ;'"" h1"< L'_‘l"‘ "'I‘ & sordid | yyont, four years' expertence lias dem- |our, regardless of who:was in the way s splritual slgniticance for | opetrated that the change has been for | The is one to be dealt with It meuns com- | o worce rather than for the hottor and [bY A statesman, capable of exumining a S hooling fand less | (¢ jugtead of refofm the abuses for e o e o ‘“"‘"““‘ ',‘"‘K,'",'" children and more margin od of o \e in a o | SSTaMY ISk d0 U0 Ly iNg to d0PRe0d, doldinal ! Ined of continue in am™wven | oo proceeding grwdually, and, when neces . ag! worse degree under the fusionists sary, making compromises 1t cannot Harrison's annouucer For every reason advanced in 1806 to | safely be left to a fanatic with a club. tuke votes away from the republican |The system on which a considerable 4 1| candidates there arc sixteen reasons this |0F e coun Linid ‘on- . 4 canuot wisely be changed by Domnybrook O | veqr for the re-clection of President Me- | gy methods Kinley and the rec [ by the elec agement of our s rust questic ie spiritually Inclined. ot for the tamily ork for th merly cowp! of ie republican campnign. No citi industries ar mption of Nebraxka nd sineerity of his views and counsel 1QUF TE OF THE RAILROAD, n of republican national, 1 tickets, ‘The banuer of the republican party is great enough to state and 1 | | A Judies 0 | ¥ GROWING MORE RECKLESS As the close of the aches Mr, | cover every patriotic citizen in the land, campaign ap- | and especially in Nebraska will rve- | \”- cruits be welcomed without regard to|® 9 | traveler revious party affillations? w York court is m which in Briefly placed his valise upon une of the car seats alled upon to sett] rests every railroad Bryan grows more reck 88, Bvidently realizing that he has St the respect of most of the thinking as an evidence that the latter was oc a6 Wlss. datinits tha & ; | substantial, conservative citizens, he 15| The United States certainly has reason and u.m]. temporari) departed. - When o ue else claiming the nawe, the fusio oA g i b1 v ned he found that aunother pa ! § tha nawe, the fusion ating his performance of four years to congratulate itselt over its part fn the | [FRIEE 00 OO S0 SRS sts have suddenly discovered that the | Paris exposition. This country not only | o 2 LAR SRR MBI B Word “populist” is among thelr chooony | 460 10 #pbealing o popular passions | Paris expos by nat O | SO ATl coneanind Tn Al se R e l" : A ’l' :"""‘ [and prejudices wnd in endeavoring to | lends i the total of awards, but leads | upon, as the evidence shows, the owner of isete, ough never before did they % i o pVery (o 3 11 th bag, after mandin, the eal in ¥l array class against class, His present | In each and every class of awards from | g [ deign to use it for themselves. & 1is present — ! - [ Ihe first debate between Mr., Rose ¢ water and Mr. Hitcheock will take place In Omaba Saturday evening at the pa vilion tent. Under the moditied ar-|) rangements no tickets will be required, Jl, but the seats will be thrown open {o 4 comers. le P ol — who People hear Bourke Cockran | efMorts in thls direction are as pro | tlonal campaign, showing him to be no | tnother spasm fn European ‘n..- rauks of the employed and to spur |1ty and quantit tivity In his behalf, valn, fell upon t r and smote Lim hip and thigh. A suit for dumages for u sault and battery is the resul | Undoultedly the ge will hold ihe de ess disposed now than he then was to | Over the menace of American competi “'Nl(mn (1] on the ground that rssault rovoke laboring men into a frenzy of | tion, but under a republican adwminis ;:-*‘ Rl ";‘"\‘:}' and “\”” i e 3 mertts of the case wi utred for supposed wrongs, to stir up | tratlon the industrial life of this “"'“‘!“,,mu be & happy outcome of ealousy and all the bad passions in|try wiil go right on expanding in qual- | hgwever, if the court, ventur v. The best paid labor | strict limits of the case, decided upon th in the world will continue to make the [ Yalue of a yulise as an cvidance of a |8 4 10 that the siloat but ton of seat | grand prizes down to honorable men- | This rvesult s likely to produce countries ounced und flagrant as in the last - | Hons n the idle and vicions classes to ac It is ‘This has already | best goods. should remember the speaker's own | POF2¢ frult in several acts of violence | y KAREFESEARACHA UM obeprlovally vine warning, uttered fn this city four vours | VAT TEPUBIICANS wid more ix to be | BY good fortune meither Governor | meets upon (e railvond cars, s cicvicre, ago: “L appeal to the people because 1‘"“1‘”"“‘ ided | Boosevelt ROE AHY m""”""” of his party | oy There 13 no | )t cour hich can trust their intelligence, 1 o not | UOVEMOF Roosevelt, in a speech ar | bas been serlously mjured by the as | Likes the val valld llen unon the belleve they can bo seduced by omney | 708 WASTE, Indian, ou Wednesday, | saults made wpon him by democratic |soat. It can be set aside if the newcomer Sy : ¥l referred to My, Bryaw's assertion that | hoodlums, The significance of the at- |15 50 dlspoxed, and non-inferforonce with P R T | the real object for permanently diu. | fairs, small in themselyes, lies o the fn. | 't 18 Purely a matter of cour Wikl g we want, therefore, i3 a judicial « uion “Inspect your ten-dollar bills” i q | CVOUSIE the army is to intimidate the |tolerant spivit of democracy which | oo TG0 subject, and i 1 Warning given by the local popocrathe| MU cloment, the democratic candi. | DFOIpES such outrages, while the lead | <ooms ought to b favor o f t OFgAn agAINSt u new counterfelt ten. |40t #a¥Ing that the idea Is to erect|ing lghts of the party ure pretending | validity of the clai 8 it o dollar silver certificate, Four yeurs ago | [711% near the large citles and with the | to preach liberty and o ery agaiust jm- | 86 v R A there were 1ot cnough ten-dollar bills | 70708 lovated o them resist all the | perlalism Where nothing is reserved, and whera the clreulating i this vieinity 10 canse any. | 900Ands of labor, Governor Roosevelt ——————— Iret comer secur be one any troubl [ declured, what every sane wan muse| The st ok in Om vience | allowed (0 make good ! de- | —_— | know,, that there is not a shadow of ex- | With the State fair has Iy 90 by | pOSIHAS Upan the seat tiny y Stock recelpts at South Owuly cop. | €48 OF Justification for such an usser- | the sule of the bulldings that were |38 evidence of | ' : thuue 1o iBereuse and ety rocor o | 108 1€ 13 the most veckless, the most | erected 1o house the fair is his persons ative, w waraing | being broken with regulucity, i 1o | SWarranted and outrageous utterance | DIOUERE lere six years ago he has alre pon the ground gratifying to the local contingent whjep | M¥ 2 has yot mado and strikiugly | Vage 18 not great, but au the fule was D e ALOD P Y R el depends upon the meat packing jnduspy, | 4enotes his demagogic nature and his | the inspiving occasion for the birth of R his view of and the price which is recefved top 1, | Willingness (o employ the basest and | AR-Sae-Ben the people of this city ave |0 o S E T al l stock, compared with four yeurs ayo, ix | MOSt Iguoble uppeals in furtheranec of [ doubtless saticed that they zot [ tho traveling publ Il rise 1 1 & cause of congratulation to the pp. | M8 inordinate ambition. Every intel- | womey’s worth hig blessod. 1If Rfines Lilmselt wimp) ducers {ligent man knows why the army was " RD— it e i il Increased and he also knows that 1t jx| N western I"'”" AR Dalil LEGinn [ A e p wilh cant b Bryan has gone 1o the predicting [ROt to be permanent. As Governor | “S0clation furfihe beneilt of dtx com-) BT Tt of seat vuierva business again. He will better confine [ Roosevelt sald, the ariny would he re. | PO1H1OM SSR00 A8 @ penalty for doitk | on as usual and tru L g bty predictions o What would huppen | $1eed it the fusurrection i the Philip "-’”'""“ b Itw whiare of the busiuess al- | he seltah, inconslderaie - o In case of his own election, for thut con. [ PInes, to which yan and party ("”T. ‘ |” = “‘," s w;”“ ‘4 o L oRoasion, : tingency will mever be brought up to | 48sistants have given ald, were to end, | FUHT0Ad manuagers probably would not confound him and he can live ou I the |0 any event the term of eulisiment | M IS @ pool. as pouls are llegul, but Jigliuar Slukon & Olpan Bt blisstul belief that the event would have | of auite ouedalt the soldices i the "_'"";m'. It laoks much ke the old | AESESH A, S tr er dou happened I the voters had complied | Philippines expives July 1, 1901, gy | S0 W0ACT I BOW Han B A e Bl with the h:\rm- ...n.mrhrm. lho lih‘.:ll‘l for '::'u.l: to: 4oy \Iwuli' Hoth the fusion and republican ol ‘m ,‘I'”v‘ cany Breast o 1) TH_“,.'“‘,““‘ Au inventory of the military strength | If o the meantime resistanco 1o Ao, | 02 “, ‘1,'\\ ‘:‘1 :"‘::“;ixu,,h“““ LnfPio e the holdub and how the truls waw robned of the Department of the Missourl shows | ean authority shuil ¢ {6 I3 entigiy | TEUSRLRE (L SHERHLEN (DR con. | oficer it Whoox, plannei the tolds und that all the troops embraced within its | sate to predict that no tucrease In the | vongjons had not pald sufolent atten. | MK bp traing o T Jurisdiction consist of but tour troops | urmy WIll be authorized. Mr. Brsun | o in the seloction of elestam 1o e, Jale of cavalry, three batteries of rtillery | has several tines spoken of “the xrow- | Los Wt condiio o 4o ,m,‘.l‘;‘.'l‘l",;: " s and seven companies of infantry, or | g practice of calllig fn the nrmy fo | got Rue they may possibly Jenm e g fotal of sixty-five officers aud 2,050 men, | settle Whor troubles” when the facts | oy pogience Kansas Clerar Fhe territory comprised within the de partment contains several million popu lation, yet our Bryunite friends would have us believe that we ave in imminent dunger of having our liberties ] by wilitary oppression. i destro; are that federal troops have been em —_— LEANSAN §ITE. tot, 3o \ ployed only twice in conucetion with | German papers say the United States | the police to assist her in fid labor troubles siuce 1 nas hindered rather than helped the | V' Gert Mome” Armiregitional, o ! There I8 a considerable Dutch popu- | powers in China. This comes with poor | Kolng_ta Colaradc’ or Wyawing to wick lation In Michigan and in appesling to | grace froin a power which was only | heard from him since Mr. Beachani fs ite matural sympathy with the Boers [uble to get a bandtul of wen ou the | Ffglody Wik many yeurs, o FE ! OCTopER 12, 1900 PP PO THRIETY PEOY LTI Would 1 Converted tu Dolinrs o L1 I Abiam S Hew u o mer ) rece na erview that danger t us n from every though « but o1 ! ' o scaling down of ful democr # has had few men It will bo impropef, in salue of the doll Appraiser Wilbue I of greater practical d Hewl | retivement, to ook wj Waketun s t ; v letter wh ! ' sion of character. his utterar o 49 W parting counsel t recel from hoades, conta e General Palmer's life mention the democra b whom he has bee e following additional for deg a5 an fncident in accord with his char o life He su ors of savings ban nslde he ma requert that the amoun rlues whi t carried into effe i lepositor had put into this ba s hat sutm would be enough to would produce § " i during the vear 1870 $440; in 1875, $45( mect 1 M (t 1o now therefore, that there is no longer any 1388 (be tepositor had w ! nd ] but it will not Le principles for the of those who afe |bY the bur ren possib! ase haviag un earnest, to come & v Wo are compelled by |Ortzinal " hould « patric « v othe welfare his every consideration of homor, of duty and | interest ur hile he i able to give thought to of interest to repudiate Bryanism and all ,”‘ I 8 good exs e of what thrift ny sub, that it represents the part of the people really acce ’ ( Al Palmer's la litical utterance Wil the d rats of ountry hecd [ and the owner of bank b P Imperfalism is a false alarm. The coun- worthy sages? Or will they spurn them to | ¢ exchangeable into b ot ut wot, nor are Mr. McKinley and his ndvance the political fortunes of Bry on the face of the glone h followers, believers in fmperialism ind Stevenson, Tillman and Aligeld, Jones [ PATILY of an American gold niry Bryan is the high priest of popullsm, & and Croker . stiver policy means, If put bl - hat thi positar could withdra ” P - T cipa 1 interest in legal te WY, 08, WHYE HE GREAT QUESTION. fonul bank notes, convertible > ) < on the dollar. Wha An Easy Answer (o of Meyan's [ WHI the Conntey Accent Besan o the 5o S0 B Comic Conundruma. ] Light of 1 edges bank Cepovitors throughont the countr New Youk Tribune | ndiciapolis News (ind. ¢ GHENSY U daFalaad i e ! Why is i1, demands Mr. Bryan, in his | i question to be decided at the [ | AAE finest high tragedy, “crown of thorns aud |a g election is not a question of ross of gold'" mauner, “why fs it that the | litice, but one of domestic pol NTHD REFLECTIONS republican party allows the trusts to| oratora and spellbinders may | BTOW We do not know that he expected | wax eloquent over the Philippines, but e L Free Pross Tatlor~1 w any answer to be given, save that whi wha American people want t v ke your m re f he presently supplied in his own inimi-|is what Mr. Bryan proposes to do about | . q * . tably illogical wa It he did not it was r. They have seen him insfst with t v ' then mokt kind of him, bocause it might be a | his old sirenuousness that the fnan- | oo : i : trifie difficult for any one else, especially | plank of the Chicago platform should | g il ks 18 ¢ for a republican, to give an ancwer that | afirmed In express terms . would be satisfactory to Mr. Br it nration of this year. They ; b i money he v sas always a trifle jarring to sensitive [ber that he has seid that he wou nerves to be required to respond, caie-|cease his war on the gold stan Philadelphia Pr S0 oTd¥ gorically and courteously, 10 the interro- [he had succeeded in overthrowing skipped. T1 thought ' he “suid ' bef o gatlon, “Where did you get that ha have not forgotten his repeated : i e v somethi Novertheless™ it 18 the indefeasiblo | tions that the ould be 1o v Wi wbd “langet’ tHeqis birthright of the Yankee (o answer one |under the gold standard and that the only | HOUKD Perhaps that's whilt e m uestion with another. Wherefore, it Mr. | system under which prosperity « Dot Jonr " ¢ Shall 1 deta Bryan should press his conundrum too | manently exist was free . n oflicer | ithne ¢ renuously for an answer, same desperate | the aystem repudiated by the American peo- | Cubiain it woi'c do to ha & identl republican might be moved to ask iu veply | ple four vears ago. Even now Mr. Bryan is | jshr el 1 detili with citf why the preat statesmen of the democratic | going about the country de ing the gold | tur party, in framing the last democratic taridl | gtandard : : law, were so uncommonly regardful of the Here, then, {s Mr. Bryan's record. Here | ¢ iHES FOst VIt the n i toi welfare and of the desires of the Sugar|are his pledges. Will he be true 1o his rece miarked the Laugh(c repeoeniaioe of tru Or, coming down'to the present|ord? Will he keep, or try to keep. his bl family : moment, 1t might be asked how the fore- | pledges? These questions are of vast im- |y, li, Kmarkel fhe sarcastic man in wost leaders of the democratic Party In|portance. Durlug the last three years we who ean tpset the n the chief city of the chief state of (he|have had great prosperity. Kvery predi 5 ; union come to be so particulariy interested | tjon that Mr. Bryan made has been falsified. Ire Shronicle: < ‘Avelibinder scema in the Ice trust and how the chairman of | 1)o the people think it would be well to elect | 8y a8 At o Rt the democratic national committee hap to the presidency a man who m le such a £ winid e that Mr. Bryan bas changed. Al on well at that fashi ble cagter pens to be so Intimately connected \u'h}‘,“\,,”* mistake about the effect of a fis up ne the Cotton Bale trust. 1t might further Le | ca)l policy? Do they think it would be wise ' Waihington Star B o TRy asked It any trusts exist which more di- | (o change a system under which the coun- | patrio PR AL rectly affect the comfort and welfare of | ry hay prospered, to turn our finances up- | g\ “hoild, sae wo - answered the people than these, and It ever any (rust | gige down, to change radically the standard us Crilltnntly L more wartonly and wickedly oppressed the | of valuo, thus unsettling all values to | trusts he is uble to contro people than the one orgunized and main-, chance a serious panic? There is no reason [ | ... o ned by Mr. Bryan's most earnest sup-|yo pelieve polis Pres © dau | porters. Or, yet again, sceing that Mr.|reqqy he i beaten out on the imperial is rdinz school Bryan and bis friends charge (hat (rusts | g and hes all bue abandoned it What | N eI ReT letters show that she Lasn. u outgrowth of the Fepublican policy [ it he do about silver? il ppeling or gramma of protection, and would be abolished if time the Bryanite policy of free trade were | BRYAN MUST CARRY NEW 1VORK. : adopted, It might be asked how it is (hat wivashington Star: I am 4 man of few Great Britain, the birthplace and home of | And His Chance of Doing It in Ab T s el free trade. is also the birthplace and homs | gns in & Killioh;s caller, with a superabundance of assir of trusts, and was “plastered all over with | Detroit Free Press ( dem.) ance I've got a whole lot to say teo y The mi d-campalgn canvass of the coun- #nd the fewer time | you interrupt me () (rusts” years before Mr. Bryan and his | i GG s L friends ever took to hunting the dreadful |ty made by the Now York Herald glve ootoy McKinley 208 electoral votes, B.yan 168, ttshurg Chronicle “China (s on & s v 21 dov he dcub state basis t 117" asked Mr. Dukan Such inquiries might, however, be deomed | With doubtful, the dcubtful siates being asin t asked Mr. Dukan flippant, and there Wiere- frivolous, mot to say tore unwerthy of g0 grave a theme fore it might be better to propound once to Mr. Bryan this answering question. | |0 Bryan Why does the democratic party allow so |mittee’s many of its members to have corns ldaho, K ican nat WHY WE F L GooD, weat of with the th Pleasunt Things (o \ the American \ation, not be tr New York Mall and Express | spoct, all We are 75,000,000 and we feel good tained at former statement is buscd on census ¢ vietory culations and the latter cu common con- | reasonabl sent. Before wo get down to details it 18 | extimate well just to take ourselves In a lump and | gjther wi enjoy it. A century ago there were not |curate %0 many of us as there are Dutchmen in | tiny Holiand, and now we are the second the world in population, and the d resource We rub our | cerned, 1 power of first in wealth | 1daho, Indiana and Montana he repub at | toral votes for McKinley and concedes 11 vada, Nebraska and Utah states certain to go for McKinley can- | Ty, whether the doubtful states, s their electoral vote for fonal committee claims 266 Wonder, then, it that ne s Sixteen” with 44 doubtful. In the com et PPInON'S doubtful column are Colorado,| ‘“pyan ntucky, Missourl, Montana, Ne-| “Yes Sixteer Whiie the judg a politician who classes Miss.uri doubtful states and Indiana with J « ‘1 prince’s firat Tuan NIGHT IN T S Iy nes Harton Adame in Denver Post curfew talls the knell of parting duy cated with a great amount of ro- | The evening shadows blankel all the towr the information that can be cb- | The wears (hic) husband hom: d takes this time indicates a republcan in fear lis waiting wife may call he Herald's estimate scems mcre | Hll‘[-“(v s o1 A 1 % ehind tie billbeards on tie vacant lots e than the matlonal commit.ee's | “irhe'hoidup crouches with his bag of aand but there i3 mo probability that | And clustered 'round the corpulent jack 1l prove to have been whoily ac- | pots . . it anxfous men with pictured cards ir hand So far as the presidential contest is con- | And lovers strall heneath the starlit skie t 1s & matter of no fmportance | And feed each other's ears with honeyed called, cast McKinley or not. | The arc lights spit and sputter overhead eyes and wonder how it all happened. That |1t has been apparent since the campalss | Y ramoare X I 8 one the ain also fs a detail; the main point s that |began that Mr. Bryan, in order to be | Bwines Poensnts from o leral dread o we are here. Seveuty-five million Ameri- | ejected, must carry either New. York or Bis bedt capsdomiciled in this republic turn. | three states In the middle west. Ind.ana, [ WithI the warhee houxe the snowy shict across the Atiantic, a glance of good nature |in the opinion of most politicians eorn- | Yungee wetn, ¥ e the bellicose mil across the and good-fellowship u tary powers of Europe and republl 1s of ASiR. | four wee at the worn-out and dying natl | We are very big, Lut we are Dot un- | Obio, Mic | wieldly. We are stroug, but we are not Aominate however, muscle-bound; our nerves our | the evide sinews. Our interests are so interwoven |ing and and at heart so harmenious that In & |carrying really national matter the voice of 75,000, | may, 000 people apeaks through the voice of the | In orde Our population i #o linked and president bauded railroads and telegraph wires | remotest and navigable rivers that it can move as | ing Its vo one mass, and its sirength is felt through | sists that ific, a glance of hope aud helpfulness Jgentiment must take place during the nex thorefo New York and there does seem to be the petent to form an opinion, is lost to the [And prowlers pick cigar stumps from the dirt Which, later. we will get in clgarettes action in | ‘Anwl o'er his fragrant, greasy steaming can i | n oparty. A sweeping r it it Is to be saved. Illinos Wisconsin and Minnesoia, | 1, motsture joints where glasses clink wo are safely republican, uniess all hear nce of the campaign is mislead- | As (hrough the dimly-lighted streets w i ool | wa the probability of Mr. Biyan's | yen curse expanston a'er their luger beer three states of the middle west | With tongues expanded tll they scar , be dismissed i can talk r to win, then, he Of mystery stunds the hot tumale man s flush with cash of candldate To drink with them the red-nosed roun ers press And in their slangy eloquence dilate Upon the ballot’s guarded sacredness And ask the bummers to do all they can To land thelr pure, unspotted, honest man must carry possibllity of that s 'ate’s cast-| te for Mr. Bryan. The He:ald in. | there are no signs on the sur the arm of the president face to indicate that New York 1a doubt- | o niont creeps an; the hackmen at ¢ Ther nothing that may ful and this view of the case I8 the re- | enll ateted of 75,000,000 people who ¢ |flection of the general opinicn of ob-| Thelr sicep-banked eyes with chilly finger ABG,vigoTaus KRG RAPEfMl AR ASRIY 1M Fy | phenomena. The re- | e cieed away with rattling wheels telligent, with a of humor and & | publican majority will be smaller than 1t haul happy-ko-lucky spirit and dewire fo think | was fn 1506, but it will be a majority ot| The meu with tangied legs home from well of thelr neighbors and (o have their |go at 1 and possibly more The fired barkespers closs and lock thelr Il of them. Our ati No mar nzs | may take nelghbors think w faction is born of the knowledg that t 1 s capable of forese:ing what place during the nest four we themselves to 10-eent beds be are coming our way; that there are Bo [but there Is every reason to belfeve he weary cop in darkened hallway snores grudges to be meted out against us and |1 Ictory has already been gaincd \nd dreams of clues he sees not wh ] s o g 2 a he wicked town relinguishes fts ainm WHsAG JUaE Ko MaMREE 8 ok e T8 Al To catel a nap the day begin fidence that everythlag we bave done to ~ ——— date 18 promise; our real performauce 1 With difidence we appropiiate to & words of Gibbe yme;’" we chend the the eanth ¢ vilized portion ahead selves the fairest part “PERSONAL NO university, Baltimore, is th instrument of its kind in the valued at $10,0¢ sons havo testified to their friendshiy their fatber's physictan, Dr hweninger, by appointing him director and head physiclan of a hoepital they have endowed at Lichterfeldt, near Berlin One of the trade papers expresses itself in {his unsentimental way: “The money spent The Ko ks are of the right glze for lothes in wasn boller in the days 1o come, and the sack te earry them i Hpper hold Lord Roberts ha ed from a London Tndiag ies. The cases of the time esentod by Field Marshe rt nix faithful and unwearied personal i out the South can Pay lost as much ns auy other man in Galveston business men of the city that if the f Galveston get off the island, other peopl will go thera and build up a city, as its maintenance as a port for the west is im | peratively necessary. | ot . .. are stubborn truths. This fits our shirts s well as they fit yon—and we haven't found many whom we failed (o fit, The custom shirters say that men yet Cready made” shirts ave cheap shires had ours in mind We don't know of le of merchandis chock full of goodness for so little money as our White and Colored Shirts at Guess they arti iy RO S $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 2.50$3.00 the custom shivter a dollar or so more it you want to owning, King & Co., . R. S. Wilcox, Manager. Omaha's Qaly Exclusive Clothicrs for M¢u and Boys

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