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e Bus be « jany h i e Loar. ¥ i ¥ ¥ i Fi 5 I . i AN r ross or postal order T i Compa Bl § SHING COMPANY Mh K CIRCULATION K, secretary of 1 beink duly sw pi The Dally. Morni i Sunday He ed durt 26,970 @7 27, 27,000 5710 20,505 3,000 tepublican city primaries foday to Kelect delegates to sehool board nom wating convention How can the flood of campaign ora tory he turned onoany wider without breaking the hinges of the sinfee givs Uhe thump of the Socont ns 16 drops into the crib sounds tie death knell of ealamity polities in Nebraska Towa democrats ave now tlling what congressional distriets in that state they are going 1o carry. After election they will be carrying a load of disappoint uient Bryan is a pha on the f fine fall weathier for 80 not nte ol — now wastin time hile he whic chasing might nt porch enjoying the present I Nebraska China is not likely to toits + sitting promise to punish those gnilty of outenges to protest while the international con atable is waiting with a writ of tuchient to secure exeentic AR the weather is generally cool dur fug October in New York, Boss Croker assures Candidate Bryan that it will not be uecessary to patronize the jee trust during his visit to that eiry —— Fhe newspapers in Nebreaska have o Just complaint over the conditions now prevailing shortening worth four I'hr 1s suke of funds in this way fighting oy touchin f fusion wou years ago the delinguent that they tux wr fusionists e pretty I were what s st ape n ounty pay roll hard for the licans instead ing campnign 1 how! the Popo Omaha presents soveral openings for eapitul sure 1o retuen good profits on in vestment. By getting i | ground Hoor With & new factory o bing house the investor will have pre-cmption of unoccupied tervitory Omaha wust go on with Its work of public fmprovement so far as extending 18 sow pavenment subuiitted is cones for these objects (il wil enge systen and replacing worn general approval of all clusses of voters The demoeratic committee Lis planned to have w simultancous rally in every town in the conntry 11 the call does 20t meet with a more general response tuan did the appeal for the formation of democrat chubs the spellbinders will not he overworked ———— The assistance which Govornor ter I8 veceiving in his canpaign elther the populist detocratic com mittee is not of the stennous sort, 'l governor s evidently running a hye with oo much wait up to ciable him 10 geL over the course Benator Pettigrew has hoisted the si ual of distress und s even willing 1 ex-Benator David 1 Ll showld come over into Dukota and help i, The senator sturted ont to ride back into a sen WL oseat, but was walking up op and stony toad before he bad pro e wool clip in the Wyoming amounted to Las it incereis the price of 1l las of 1l prosperity w e RO s sper distriet iy Not only 1 during recent years, hut sheep and of the wonl o than donbled sinee the days Wilson tarify 'roteciion and are twins ont in Wyoming Tammany denfes that it has given apy large sum towatd the democrntic national campaign . fund. No denial WS necessary. Aside fron the large suspleion that Tammany does not usn wlly care whether the demoeratic nu tional ticke: is elected or not, that or gunlzation 15 1ot in the hubit of parting with any the t sets the other onsiderable sum of way. woney THE GUEST OF TAMMANY Mr. Bryan will arrive in New York 1 and will be the guest I'n i Extraordinary preparation ndoubtedly e Wil be greeted by grent Vil e mineh en nslasn It d that the New Y M an's squire \nn A Michigan, th cratie party stands fo { osilver at the ratio « Vid or consent of a While this declarution ews for them, Mr. Croker and the hemanagers are appreliensive Wt Il ae My Bryan may | I 0" questions from the crowds nto another 16 to 1 declarntion, ai hey believe it if he touches on thit question all their efforts during the ust three months to keep the money ste out of sight s will go for nothing suid, however, that alrendy Croker has gliven Bryan the cue to mal viadism and the the trusts, particulaely the Intter topies of his talks and very the will 1 what M New likely dvice of boss But will Lann followed. difference 1t Biyan York there ny matier we whether ke in or lgnores the subject Everybhody Knows how that if every he and dent L wtands pre pexible hie also knows wonld s means ut the The n th nbsolutely ¥ represents into effect )t trust worthy opinion vote of New MeKin e that electorul York is for sy and Bryun's v lttle influence Indeed it will it thero will upon the xit wation effect publicans is quite possible that i~ be favorable to the TARIFE AND TRUSTS speech 1l suid only Mr. Bryan that 1f any article wmanufactured by w trust that aeticle iall at once be put upon the free list When Mr. Bryan comes to talk of trusts he makes the I ent Renutor ol ssachusets tical remedy Muggests for protected b tarift a very real and vital Iswile his proposed remedy wttack upon the policy of pro I8 simply an tion by the party that is as wuch devoted 1o free trade as iU ix to free silver. Mr Bryan knows as well now as he did some years ago, when he omade the declavation, that trusts cannot be de stroyed by removing duties on tenst made articles, ome of the trusts have no protection under the tariiy and others could exist without duties on | the articles they produc But how would the policy proposed by the Bryanite party aftect lubors Suppose that policy were put into effect and the American market was thrown open to the cheap lubor products of Fur what would be the eff upon American labor? Possibly some ol the combinations would sueenih under the forelgn competition, but would American workingmen protit thereby? Ax a matter of tact, the proh able, it not indecd the inevitable, out come of the democrutic policy wounld a reduction i the wages of Amerl e lubor and a large addition to the number of the unemployed 1ol this point of view Senntor Hoar is on tirely correct in saying that when Bryau tulks of trusts he makes the tarit a very reul und vital issue ON THE DOWN GRADE Bryanism is on the down grads says the New York Tribune. “That is one of the most obvious features of the present campaign,” It goes onto siy ‘I is also, theoretically, one of the most deplorable, because the reference Is i merely to the waning strength of My Bryan as a candidate and his lesseni hopes of winning even as votes nany which should but of and as he had four ye s AgO matter lowering the candidate Joicing manrked of tone the utter r his ances of sup porters, and the lowering of the grounds Jpon which appenl I8 made for: publi ¢ In the last few weeks this desent of Bryanisi s been so rapid Hong 4% 10 proveke curiosity reachied or b yet lower depths By It st t 10 sounded that this ntelligent to the utte hins been noted hins Mo, Rryan during the past ive or six weeks Woevers person who ven attention Afrer notitient which My pevialism” 1t wa mo address was aluost wh devoted to a dis cussion of * very rally andidate thoughi that mocratic I mduct his cain of paign on than that four o intended uppeal 1o the intelligence nnd reason of the people vather than to their and prejudices intent uft Possibly 11 waus | original abandoned speeclimaking tonrs that the false peviadisin st and ewpty cry of litarlsin impression upon the public Loped for, Mr niliar and reprehensible miake 11 mind that Bryun re turned to bis f tacties of four yeurs ago in appealing 1o class hatred and endeavoring to array utoof the element elen of against an one other people in some respects he lust been even i den o thagrantly th 1 the for exumple this year recklessly national campalgn in nt that ns the plates erecting forts near all the republican party THE OMAHTA DA | Begantsm. A« & tending Anancint jour nal suys, “industrial affalvs cant ' ford to ¥ nie tod « ¥ fon ' young gentleman who has no 1 o science than t ind conntrs 1 labor. The pu i oval of our gold ward 1ix mphiatic ‘ ton as o muke the trial veryhody who cut view th wiith a clear v n st s st ik lositig gronnd Lot re no effort to k t on the nstantly fap ng npon ¢ % involved in it AN UNASSATLABLE 110CKET The republicnn legislative tick been Lefore the people of Do county now ‘ more than month Not a wo has heen suld any 1 sponsible person. either in polit har mony or opposition, derogntory to the character and qual ms of the can didutes of which it is made up. On tl contrary, it iy i« conceded universally feiend and foe that the republican legislative tieket 1s the strongest, clean est and wost representative of all the clements of the party that hus been presented to the sulfrages of our voters in the history of the stat The ticket I8 representative not only of all the elements of the party but of 11l the substantinl interesis of the com munity, With every man upon it trust worthy in both private aud public busi ness, The professional men wid th wiage-workers, the mereantile cluss amd the manufacturers, the tavners aud builders, the native-born and the for cign-born citizens have each and all been deawn on for thele best repre sentatives, who, when elected, wiil con stitute & delegution at Lincoln in whose hands the great interests of the com munity and of every meinber of the community may be sufely placed Such a ticket should commnnd the cordial and active support not only of every republican but of every citizen of Douglus county who wants th standard of our legislative bodies el vated by the election of a delegation that will retlect credit at Liocoln both upon themselves and upon those w i send them ther SPLCULATING IN POLITICAL FUTURES No one need spend any tiwe tigoring ont whaf will happen to the country i President MeKinley Noy enjoying IN reee by The coutinue cted the Votes cast wiber 6 will without disturbing intervuption, business will 1ts the will be vl with market—in tory & of the gradual naturally e prosperity we nre on even way currency maintained on the gold stanc out a ripple fact the affuirs but steady sulting from th i the money present satisf iin, with te will ren improvement weration of republican policies, The reelection of MeKinley entails no speculation on politicul fu tures, In contrast with this, no one can tell just what would befull the business world it Bryan should be elected. An industrial disturbance could be counted ou to a certainty, but its extent, s verity and consequences are the sub jeet of conflicting guesswork by the most experienced and most far-sighted observers. The questions the political specilators are trylng to unswer on the contingency of Bryan's success are How great and how sudden a contrac tion of the enrrency would be produced by the prospect of redemption In silyer instend of gold? How far would man utacturers be fmpeded and labor thrown out of employment by threatened tarift reductions? To what extent would fn vestors hold aloof to awalt more set tled conditions? reaction Would the fmpending panic shply o recurrence of protracted fiuancial steiu produce o ot geney and how long would it tuke to emerge from the depression? While th varions prognostleators ave not agreed on their answers, they are unanimous on one thing—that our present pi perity would receive a rude shock from which covery wonid be slow and painful Why, then, should the American peo ple speculate in politienl futures? s it uot better to keep the prosperity we have? A hero in a smull way was dev a In this city by the fatal aceldent en gulting two men in a cesspool Raturday one of them losing Lis life in his effort to save the other. This exhibition of self saerificing bravery on the part of wn supposed to belong to the elass of hardened eriminals woul wipe out the stains of the worst record and deserves at least passing notice One thing that should be put down on Omahn's ram for the early future the consolidation of some of its char table institutions. These institutions ire for the most part doing good work bt they are often covering the same field und duplicating the same Let them get t ther and systemntie their efforts o little Letter The only positive remedy for trusts offered by Bryan is to take off the tarlfy duty on every article produced by a trust. But the artieles controlled by the most odious trusts are not by tari du all. The more statesmii i ques ust tion demands n'th ke atten nit e n ever receive from Bryan lurge elties and gareisoning (hem with | and hix one-idea followers soldiers to he employed fn suppressing S labor agitations, Certaluly dew The bext thing that could possibly can reach no lower depth thin this Lappen to Nebraska this year would be Mhere 15 no doubt that Beyanism fs | 10 have its electoral vote recorded for on the down grade and there s every | MeKinley and the republican ticiet, 1t reason to believe that 1t will steadily | Would mean wore for Nebraska to go lose ground from now on to the day of | Fepublican by ralsing the state In the celection, but none the less republicans [ S¢ale of public estimation abroad than should not nbate thelr zenl or lessen | ALY other achievement it could accom their efforts. 1t I8 mportaut to keep | PlsH in mind that what Is most 1o he (e Chkian T t nsin: sired ut this election Is not simply suc Cleveland Leader. cess, but a success 80 overwhelming as| What silly things we often do when we to leave no chance of the survivul of | t4he ourselves most seriously! It would be | luteresting to kuow it such a refiection ‘ TLY BEE: TUESDAY. A Fatul Blunder Washing I o Fry Sympathy for Smatl New pork & As to his cor alone wh and 1 mpathy with the The way of the 16 RIways insiructive iy o big no sympathy f edifying speculutors tellows g Peddling A in Advm Mi ] . Mr bri the republicans ¢ ginoing to accoun tor assured defeat ¢ ground. He has not furnishe ustances Hut tances of ing the voter unt f b howave 1 ur bribe ind are ing an inte to secure a Brvan u of ar promise, spe when Mr that but o1 Bryan Wha bribe & Up the I Repu nor Scare ng Ever since G in Victor and \tMr kb beer eve t was hust!e someone threw a ice of anna the dem re need of olllege boys at Ann supplied that ueed. It prise that when for ten minutes Mr himselt thro okin Bryan ndidate has The extent for sur the hooted him Hryan should have bhorne coolly and smilingly ghout.”" It was just what he had be and probubly prayiog M 18 100 experienced a campaigner not the of eplsodes of that He ne Mis B ratl in s being mobbed Arbor 1o som 18 no ause for. o appreciate value haracter. or exclaims e scoundrels, ba quie His real eling WINS HIS LONG FIGHT, Plngree Carries the Michiun Chicag. 'hrong b ure. The special session of t lature, ¢ Wednesd: terday afternoo assigned to It i There was no re for debute. The reforms under cons de had been discussed for years, vernor P having made himselt their active cha The total disappearance of opposition to them in his own party and the complete Yichigan legis fljourned yes performing the tasks ¢ gubernatorial message. for delay, no wened arte t ration Bred ness of his success whow that he was right fand reasonable in- his contention that the taxaiion laws of Michigan permitted injustice and inequality. The call for an move extraordinary session wus a shrewd On the eve of a presidential election the opponents of the Pingre to heed the demand ity In taxation. resolution and two bills were The resolution meusures were certain for uniformity and eq One by the legislature for the submis: to the voters of & con stitutional smendment giving the state board Of ARKESSOTS DOWET 10 UESERS COTPOTAte Prop its actual value the sam under which othi I8 assessed r extsting law wted provides and property Iroad, telegraph and other quasi-public corporati have had to be taxed specifically and, while the rate of general taxation has inc 1 the por As for the clnl charters Und, phone ons rato of the taxation of the kind of cor. te property mention bills af 1 has been lowered passed, they th the Michigan Central Lake Shore and Detroit & Grand Haven and Milwaukee Railroad companies and provide for the payment of fairly estimated damages for the loss of the privileges and exemp tions enjoyed by the companies under their v Thera 1 evidently no trace of in Justice in this repeal. The companies will reorganize under the general railroad law of the state and be on footing of equality with their competitors Possibly Pingres would have had his way long since had he been less aggressive and | 1ess prone to fmpute unworthy members of his party who v tion his wisdom repeal motives to ntured to ques He is entitled to the sat tstaction which his victory vields him THE FULL DINNER PAIL | Signtennce of the Emn Defined by Beojamin Hurriso Philade A Tress | Ex-President Harrison's interview of | Wednesday, In which he announced his purpose of votlng for the re-election of President McKinloy, concluded us follows “The full dinner bucket 1s not a sordid emblem. 11 has a spiritual significance for the spiritually minded. It means moge comfort for the man and family | more schooling and less work for the children and @ margin of saving for sick ness and old age There is not a workingman in the United States who will not admit the truth of Mr. Harrison's remark. [t has doubtless been proved more than once in the lifetime of every one of thew. An empty or hult empty dinne L small wages, or the loss of wages entirely, and that means be cutting down of household expenses A deprivatlon of comforts, fewer conyven ences for every one, a lowering of t andard of 1iving and a surrender of plans for betterment in the future. The empty ov half-empty dinner pail typifies all this and sometimes wmore. No natlon van per manently prosper whose peopls are wot well fed and well clothed. Intellectual as well as 1ateril progress is based on a well-filled stom which nourfshes brain | and body ! in this country there is no better indication of how the people are fed than the state of the dinner pall which holds one of the chief meals of the day Mr. Bryau, In some of his later speeches tried to ridicule the full dipner pall | arguuient by asking whether the American | people are gluttons and if the culy way to tnfluence them 13 to appeal to their stom | ud apy Mr. Dryan knows t dix pail Implies and his | w ¥ on 1 incerity and superf intelligeut Amorican | workingman cut Mr. Bryun's fiip punt remark and will recoguize th spiritual slgnificance’ of the full dipner | pail which ex-Pre 1t Harrison points out. He knows that {i expresses comfort at home, welldressed children at schoo the family pew in the church and tha to every man who knows he is having an opportunity to use the gifts with which nature has endowed him. Mr. Bryan stands for none of these things, and hence nee e can | dinner no “spirttuality’ in the full OCTOBER general feellng of satisfaction which comes | 16, 1900, } ‘ wrison of Markets lowing Is & paricon s. taken from the Aut Herald W W Vhe w Banl St ‘ N NATIONA RET NATIONAL et $ 1 5 | R DEMOCT ADMINISTRA- 1 HEPUBLICAN ADMINISTRA bk Ly i (0N . . . country 1elie ' was | ¥ a f Mr. Bryan's wealth w result i v ! been beuefited by the universal sit subject ) e as much more@than ar o fal 8 His per cent of galm 's teveloping in onal 1 t he civilized worl Courts of nations v VIow hosen Fortugal a to arbitrate regarding covered terr The decision ably the and pro rival natfon are multipl pute between German, 1 Spuin ence to the Caroline islands wa wd by Pope Leo XIII in 188, The Meulty between the 1 t 1 Germany in 1589 was referre held In Be of President Cleveland's ud arbitration treaty be conference lin. At the ween United States was signed in Washingt By an act of congress passed | president s authorized entatives of the America, Central Haytl nter Washington. The be discussed of measures the the se With BOve to an wational ¢ very f\ has 1 that shall tend e and ral state the prov ing of International concord teen organized this countr fitting that Philadelphia should be as the s of this society, for its ver uame signifies brotherly love. 1 promote the prospe o American view of was an lllustrious member of th of Friends, whose distinguishing chara teristic is aversion to strife and the cuiti- vation of peace and fraternal relations among mankind In well-ordered society the disputes of individuals are settled not by recourse to a duel, but to the law. Would It no be a blessing to humanity it national cor troversies were composed on the same principle and that the just cause of & nu BRYAVS NEW SMENACE" nk ® Searchlight an the Bogey of Milltarism Kansas City Star It Mr. Bryan was correctly reported in the Indianapolis Sentinel on the inereus ing menace of the regular army to labor, he laid himselt open to the vigorous at tack of Governor Roosevelt at Fort Wayne | last night he real object for perma- nently increasing the army, Mr. Bryan is reported to have mald, “1s to intimidat the labor element when it presents jus complaints. The idea Is o erect forts near the large cities and with the forces lo cated in them meet all the demands of labc There are now more than 100 milltary pokts in the United States, garrisoned by 14,000 men. A large number of these posts are in the west. They were used as fron tier stations in Indian warfare. Rut it is true that there are garrisons about most of the lurge cities. In fact, Mr. Bryan's | warning comes too late. Fort Sheridan is near Chicago: Fort Thomas is across the I river from Cincinnati; Jefferson Barracks lare near St. Louis; Fort Snelling is near St Paul wnd Minneapoltar Fort Logan near Denver; Fort Crook near Omaba, and Fort Leavenworth “menaces’ Kunsas City Portland, Me, Roston, Providence, New York, Philadelphis, Washington, Atlanta Detrolt, Austiu, San Dicgo, Suu Francisco Salt Lake City, Little Rock and Portaud Ore. il similarly “threatened | But it wust be remembered that man of these cities have been o “menaced by the military for yewrs. Yot th ' babitants are apparently as free f bitrary and despotic rule as tho people of Bloomington, 1il, the peaceful home of Adlal Stevenson, which has no soldic near. Fort Leavenworth was roady to in timidute the workingmen of Kar City war with Spain the garrison at Leaver worth cousisted of the Twentleth reglment of 600 or 700 men; now there ure wbou soldiers at the . Do Kansas Ci workingmen fool any less “‘mena w than In 18977 The talk about the im | pertling of liberty by the regular aray | absurd | 1t would tax Mr. Bryan to dozen cases during the la | twenty years, when the regular soldie Lave been used in labor troubles. In ¢ cago they dlspersed a mob that was | terfering with the United mals when the governor of the state had fal [ they were called for by the goveraor of in the Philippines. It is wor that the “menaccd” cities are ug to | et rid of the p san Ar Tex., ratsed a loud protest when It was propos {to reduce n of Fort Sam Hous ton; Galvestol ! the wame when the | question of taking the diers from there was discussed. Mr. Bryan will not find his army post menace f2sue popular The Army do Philadely Record | According to General Davis | on that island, numbering about 3,500 troops, might be safely reduced to el pinies or even less. All that 1s really nee! iu fact, is & nominal force of woldlers, whows only duty would be to take care of the foris and guns at San Juan. There is no need for an army of occupation on the island since the Inhabitants desire only to live in | peace Lnder the stars wid s on should licated by & court o Then to 1 as well @ pr vad amicat . while pro ceting Kl f the would the strong, sin loes n will be firmly established on the 1 the spirit of the gospel w the minds and hearts o standing ar WUl yield to per of arbitration, that contests arried on in the council chamber ) the battlefield, and decided by the I oat W very questionable, the redress of the laborer's They paralyze Industry, th fierce passions and lead to e de n of property, and, atove all ! in infileting grievous injury on the * himself by keeping him in e torced idlencss, du which his mind is clouded by discontent while brooding over his situation, and his family not infrequently suffers from 1l es of lif It would be a policy favor quarrols Justment labor the ado strikes and and case 18 of the were any b ption a s the name fmplies destructive, a constructive peace and of the I arbitration settlement disputes bles ot NO STOCK \ Contra expendit awarded LI the the great the worl affectod It needs time order |string a railroad tending tructs in Such corpo nnt [ Washir ure by b tor oh d-is by the not ttached 18 not to bus the regu transuction $4 iy of more than pa h on transa account of th here shown to be the p t l ine Is a contingent ane, want of even t neces sl stride in the clusses if is now of Int of for between capl ings 1 result this method oring which the galning ruational the ad and from while © aggressive conciliator in the former welght of the welght of the » availe wo rbitration s the result 1 by the by t IN CALAMITY, ox st ern fo el m rails involving been Ratlr of industrial new “ing attention, not ¢ mugnin her the o the have jus Penusyly a bit at 1o breunse but to ra place of A Breates iy uproar The un ending p and litteal buys them There it. The Pennsylvania laying politics, but at It makes the con ar course of its affairs 18 significant in hibiting an utter dishelief in the dire fore bodings now heard from the stump in very part of the falr land. Clearly the Peunsylvania railroad takes no stock fn the calamity shriekings of either side. I foresees no crisis next month or there flor. Whattever the outcome of the elec- tion, this corporation will keep on doing busiuess us heretofore. It is evidently KIVIng 00 mors thought to the idea that wreck and ruin will follow the success of party out of power than to the equally absurd theory that the exlstence of the vepublic will be threatened by the re- | election of the party in power | The Pennsylvanla Railroad company, fe | common with conservative husiness inter ests generaily, doubtloss prefers and ex pects the re-election of Mr. MeKinley, but it 14 sensible enough to know that the country will be sufe and the government will live whatever may happen at the ool i PERSONAL NOTES, | Sir Thomas Lipton Is prepared to furn | our next lnteruational insie | There is Tesson (o belisve that Genarg) | I 11 devour thut Chrlstmas dinnar | at Pretoria ¢ high prescuted with flowers, Krupes, oo . " 1 a sitk hat. He couldn't get mare fassorn stand twenty-three fo four for Brys I twelve undecided, seven of these being unfavorable to MoKinley rectors fo m out evidently had a busi {he United States troops made & fine appearance at the review which General It tendered the forelgn commanders | ot that the Dewey gift house has allen into decay Is denied. It in stated that *the only neglect Laa been in the matter of the grass, which bas not been cut while the admiral was away summer | The New York man who experimented on | Bis face with & chemical preparation war ranted to remove the beard without & razor | has acquired some information us to the ac tion of certain acids on the human euticle which will be of advantage to othor adven turers a8 well as bimsell ! CIPY GROWTH CHECKED Trend of Home Owners Toward Sub webeon Henithy Slgn f} i of b oin ry as a a vaintained. It is aiso u o 1 hait " 1 ) large apid than 1b . even it W, mo part c i wos & t for . to suburba riably & a " who A few veurs wgo would have t likely to mab i P wie quarters ¢ have also moved t pla " a me large ¢ and b employes have fol Altogether the shif " a healthy sig bs mean fewe tettar olatice fop the Erowth End tratsin of the rising generation CHEERY AUTEMNY CHAY m re addre \ - such a ting | | I—that Is to s | of course wered M Detroit Free Pres e—That boy of mine {8 smart. During | Wt veur u lege he made enoukh at poker to pry Lane—Indeed. What bust e vou g ing_to put_him into Tnc olls Press: He had come home late previous night wnd was telil how 1t happened “You really ought to have marrled that little Miss Jones nstead of me, * she safd last Why ”* he demanded “Oh, ‘she's such a credulous little thing % the mir reh w ¥ Know, koel Chicago Pos At any ra Conslderable 1k mar krentest tri Bt line Ies tn cnrrs Ing o purse contuining two recipes wnd thr mples of dress goods (0 her hand 1 weems o be an invitation v on the et GREATER AMERICA In greatne The u stately troe In {t shall troubled nations find Tho highest virtiues of munki It shall not gain by wpoil and Io Ihe wqual ranch of 1mb and root What naturc gIves from curth and alr What God bestows, shall b s +h high and crowlig higher & mighty arms of g Jow Shall hide them elves with foaf and flowe o Talthtul Abers I'he people. by thelr wi Bhall fix thie Lounds of goverime: 1 The firm restr imon we BERIAH F. COCHIAN, Omaha, Nabh Children’s Eyes and Noses o lifetis {0 uhle Laeh ebild’s needs must b idied and 1 os tited with ex actne We examine the child then, If glasses are o factory. In no other way ean vou be sure of having them just right J. C. Huteson & Co. Consulting Opticians 1520 Douglas Street