i) 1 THE WEALTH MAKERS. Mav 17, 1S94 ; -- " I THE WEALTH MAKERS. Ntw 8erie of THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT. OnoUdatlon of tn . PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY The Wealth Publishing Company, tiao M bit t. Lincoln. Neb. ewoBO " BuRineM Manager. f ..'::::::::::AdTenii.iiut Mugr. -n.n Th f k I not to climb. Another's pain SotZmytood. A golden cbaln. A robe of honor, U too good a prl rJtimpi mr hasty hand to do a wrong . OVhUowman. This We gnfflclent, wrought by man launlc teej whothet hath a heart would dare prolong or add a sorrow to a strlcks soul That ks aheaungbalm tomakelt wholef Uy besom own the brotherhood of man. N..L.P. A. PablUher Anwoonoemeot. . wtii.ru The wbscrlotion P"' " MliMi 1 1 WP?F7J. Zfii ind lorooer postoffloe given, wanns fP?'!a STiiXnM. return envelopes, rin careful that that kU name are correctly i TSi iL'nnllcatloB tothlaomce. ALWAYS Sl i year name, ho matter nw oneVyouwrtonsj tare and It 1 aomsilmes difficult to locate i aid reuses or whmm "'""" cSaVoiofaddbbss. Subscribers wlshUg tn rh JnM ihelr wStofflce address must always SwS&fotmeweU as their present ad IrIL when changeVlU be promptly made. Tht twin-Han that took place on these Capitol grounds on the first day of this month was a scene worthy to take place In St. Petersburg, or In the capital of any Eastern monarchy, but was entirely out of place in an orderly, civilized Bepublic Me 4.-From W. V. Alien' Kanate pee'ch. THE "wagon brigade" convention plan has been adopted In Georgia. Eight thousand people In Paterson 7f. J., are In enforced Idleness or on a strike for living wages. THE Pullman Car company's works st Pullman, III., are closed Indefinitely, all employes being out on a strike. i Tuampli on the people all you please, iqueeze the life out of them for your profit; but keep off the grass. Two months in jail and a hundred dollars line, for attempting to speak for the poor and walking on the grass. The wagon brigade is a go all over. Ohio, Indiana and Georgia have al ready adopted it, and the other states stand ready to. Forty four thousand unemployed people have petitioned the New York legislature for work. They should go to Albany to get it. Kx-Cbiek Justice Maxwell has expressed himself squarely and strongly in a newspaper Interview in favor of the free coinage of silver at the ratio of W tol. ' See on our fifth page the double col umn prospectus of the new song book, "Armageddon." Send in your orders and thev will be placed on file and filled u anon as the book comes from the press. , Tbk Nebraska State Sunday School convention will meet at lork, pieor., J one 5, 0 and 7. Every school is entitled to one delegate besides the superln tendent and pastor. Etch county association is entitled to two delegates. svxator Allen has made another great speech in favor of a resolution he Introduced calling for a senatorial com mlttoe to investigate the action of the Dolice and the courts in the twatmeat of Coiev and his marshals. We shall print extracts next week. We have received a number of 1 t ers from our subscribers at king us for In formation about procuring Infected chinch bug. Directions ter ob'alulBi and applying the chinch bug infection taa be obtained by wr'.tlng to Prof. Lawrence lUuner, HUl I uWeralty, Lincoln, Ken. Wk call attention ot our reader to the Industrial legion circular else where published, and wk the Populist papers of the stat lo reprint it The Lgl)a should be orgq4 la ail the towns. It method ot raising funds for the aue mike the best pothl erg saltation tor political work, npwwswi .n. i.m Mw would you like ' the exhausting drudgery of doing nothing, loving wothlnr. Utl-f 'or sMalu? " That 1 what "A Bupernuoui Worn' n.akr of life, the rich society woman, spoiling life for hsfialf srd spoiling life (or huadtds and eves thousands of others, who musts sieve heap ua wealth for ae,JtvJ.i''a'JXv.Al Kerllsh writer -rwr. 8TEU80LES OF THE POOS. The railroads with one exception are doing their utmobt to keep the Indus trials from moving toward Washington. The situation has been for the Indus 4.1.1. r,t th west and northwest a forced chowe between degradation to the rank of paupers, or starvation where they . n-v.Ainine' themselves to a ride over the mountains and deserts which could not be walked, the railroads nav Ing refused to allow them to ride even in empty box cars for pay. Col. Sand ers and his band took an engine and wnAmntv coal cars at Pueblo, Col., without violence, and started east. The ..iimiul comnanv ditched cars ana en gines on the track ahead in three differ ent places to stop them, but each time the Industrials laid a track: arouna mo obstructions and steamed on. Tbey were finally captured by a U. 8. marsnai and Dosse. who met them on a train, and they were transported at govern ment expense across Kansas to i-eaven. wprth, where they are to be tried. Meanwhile the fees for arresting them hav-A amounted to clS.OCO.and the ditch. Ing of cars and engines to stop them has nMt the railroad company 15,000. ine IT. S. government bss also to meet $!0 000 marshals'fees in the northwest, part of the cost of the effort to keep the un employed from congregating and mov ing across the country. , Kansas City is the meeting place where the score or mere of Industrial regiments and bands are aiming to come together. Home of the armies are temporarily broken up Into iquads fo get through by rail. 226 from Ore gon are this side of the mountains com ing in box cars. General Carter's regi ment of 300.bas been for the time being broken into squads in Utah, he and 27 of his officers having been arrested, the commander without any offensa whatever, without warrant and without authority of the law. Two marshals and several Industrials were wounded in a conflict precipitated by the officials in Oregon last week. Kelly with 1,350 men is floating down the riyer in Iowa. Gen. Frye Is in In diana with his men. Gen. Wilson of Montana has reached Minneapolis with 50 Industrials, and the city was greatly stirred at their coming. It Is expected that several thousand recruits will join him there. Gen. Randall, leader of the Chicago contingent, has been jailed for alleged unlawful speeches, r ree speech is a thing ofthe past and the future in this country. Itandall's army Is in Indiana. General Sullivan also has a baud moving In the same state. Several of the Commonweal bands . are now near Washington and In a few days will effect a junction with the Coxey army. Cleveland has'goue a lisblng. The senate is beginning on the batch of 400 Democratic amendments to the tariff bill. The House Is killing time and getting big pay for not protecting the people. LIES ABE LOSING THEIR POWER We clip from the telegraphic news columns of the Chicago Inter-Osean tba following venomous misrepresentation of the Commonweal and Us leaders, iust to show our readt i s what diabolism Is in and controlling the daily prees, the aseoclated news monopoly. TVipro ar nnlv nitv and svmnath v for most of ths gang of timid, cowed, filthy, and rigged recruits wno constitute tae bulk of Coxey's pretended army. But there are growing Indignation and nniTpr In th nnvrmuinltv at the Il'OtbV. anarchistic, and blasphemous ranting of Coxey and his greasy aids. The two columns and more of matter fram which this Is taken are crammed full ot villainous, venomous lyinc that makes all who have in them humanity and respect for outraged manhood wish they could get near enough this reptile to get a heel over his head. In another paragraph this slimy ser pent with multiplied voice has this to say of the men who arc poor but hon est and law-abiding, the men who have been followed four hundred miles and nleht and day been matched by the secret spies of the plutocrats, and whose ait have offered the hounds not a single opportunity to arrest them. The rank and file are here lied aut, a follows: They for the most part were men whom one would cross the street to avoid, day or night. There are sail to be among theiu a very few who are rvallv works i out of work, but for tbo moat part tbey seem to be the scum of tl..i p(i1. ami onuntpv U)waeitiea who will not work it they can help It, and oniy so long as iney mutt; wbiw iwi are mora irvnueativ soea la the poltoe courts than In the workshop. The f real majority of them are chaps, some of them aot oier a large portion not Ot r S. the Igaoranre ot all of aom Is as dcue s ii th dirt upon there The poller ware not to hiatus that they mmTA kt WHt!.v Irml liauaul btt WW TV. p. .H ,w wv.t. J ' . I t The Intelligent colored iaborlaf men who wr engaged upon their work along the tia of march Krv!y dlf ad to lmk at them as tby mot 4 aJosg, This soattsr. with cvluBj.t wore ot the same sort, U erst printed la the great dal'Us for al! city people to rea l, and Is then ma In the crest new week lies. bbU'q the dallies ail Publish, to act their Inhuman, devilish " wpr-d at tfvth upoa eouatry resdei The foregoing cllppta' are trow the Week ly UWr-O.ean ol May v It was this power tf the fid Jlly press to dvhe. ttif a monopoly and ia Its Interest Utptfb!j t d up ith v- a r'.:- r-t,Wrf te4,.,tfl wheel with a power which could not be broken. The Commonweal movement is an inspiration which I forcing national attention upon the destruction of our llbartles. and its power t call forth the sympathies ef the Industrial classes and bind them solidly together for political action Is spreading conster nation through the ranks of the proud rulers. OLD M&GHIIES 0B8TRTJ0T vBO-GRES8- . In commentlnr on the suggestion of the Dvid City Press, that Democrats of this district should support the Populist candidate for congress in order todefeat a Republican gold-bug protectionist, The Wealth Makers says in part: Party ties ouaht to rest so lightly on men that tbre would be no posMbliliy of fastening voters t a mure omce seeking machine. .. We would respectfully re-submit this for the prayerful consideration of the editor of The Wealth Makers Creto Democrat. The idea expressed in the above sen tence, re-submitted to us for considera tion by Brother Bowlby, Is an idea which we have held for a long time, and It is what led us to cut loose from the Republican party ten years ago. Since then wo have been politically, intelli gently free, and shall never again be long to any party or party leadors. Whenever it is plain to our mind that we cannot get progressive legislation through the Papultst party we shall leave it and help organize and build up a progressive party. Old parties are never progressive. It is the law of old party existence, or suc cess, that they cannot be. They always obstruct progress. Parties are first created, men are drawn together to form them, by a moral principle, by a recognized need of new laws for the protection of individual rights and liberties. Office seekers would never create parties; they always stav In one or the other of the old part ies until the new party draws numbers which seem hopefully near a majority, and coming then into a party created by principle and demanding certain definite progressive legislation, they find it is their Interest to fall In with the party demands; and so new party organiza tions, crystallized around and controlled bv ereat principles, in spite of selfish men which come to them, will accom plish the work they were created to do. But as soon as that work Is done they have no farther excuse for existence; their existence, prolonged by office seekers, Is the greatest possible national curse. The party which lives after the work which called it into existence is accom plished, lives for the offices, Uvea by the offices, lives through the power of de ception, lives to serve the professional politicians and business men who run It, lives not to protect but to prey on the wealth producers .and to destroy the foundations of liberty by means of class legislation. These we declare to be in variably the objects of those who control old parties, Old party platforms are constructed to hold in the party all who have been voting with it. No real re form, no great unsettled question which would divide its members, lose It votes and destroy the chances ot immediate sucocss, is ever championed by an old party. Increasing corruption is tbe law of old party existence. The Democratic, or Republican party as It was first called, came into existence to defend the eaual political rights of the people, to oppose the monarchial and aristocratic Ideas of the federalist?, who feared "the masses." It did a good work; It accompllsed its purpose. But it lived too long. Its northern leaders for party success allied themselves with the slave holding power; and the party, then more than a score of years morally dead, ought to have been burled forever by the war that It made necessary. The Republican party csme into ex- tat nee to limit slave territory and pre serve tbe Union. It accomplished its treat work, and a creator which the exigencies of war forced upon It. It brought chattel slavery to a perpetual and. and crave the ballot to the black nan. But it allowed the Sajl-ca- cias to dictate financial leglilatloi for the country almost from the date ot its accession to power, that mere is much mora reason for calling It the tlave maklsir party than the party or e mane I ('.lion. There ara three or four times as many properlyless people ia America who have lot their .reeaout, tholr manhood, their Independence tioc the war, a went liberated from chattel servitude by the war. And the million of wife slave who with hun ger eravlag seek and seek la va'n to Sad a master, are far worse- off thsa the bSaek chattel, whom it waa alway the waster' lakrert to keep sufficiently fed and comfortably clothed and saol trd and ia health. And th Democratic party, hsld to gether till now by the old ra quoatloit south and by ottU-e or the hop of otttoe and entlf i partisanship la th aorta, cat ma W ltlf as a national party no Us than it rival th tool of Wall Html, Thar) ha be a no progress whatever toward the Ulcmut of even the Uriff iutloa. It wt noopt pro gre bokrd, the McKlal tariff being tiher, notwithstanding iHmo tsralio oppoettloa, lhaa aay pravlou Ujpubllsaa tariff; and tbe Wiisoa bill with It 400 catt amendment, ot ratio eftl. U eofo4iy a high the Democratic party ever before en acted or proposed. Therefore, in view of all we have shown above, to our mind there is no good reason for staying in either of the old parties; and it would be worse than folly to return to either of them. Progress by either is impossible. We need to vote not simply for honest men, but for men who stand on an honest platform in a progressive party. Fusing with an old party is death to a young party. . One man in Merrick county last week sent in his views of candidates and pro posed a state ticket made up of Popu late and Democrats, naming the men. To him and to any others who may wish to fuse with te old parties we must say and say emphatically that our columns are not open for anyone to ad vocate what we ae absolutely certain would destroy us as a party. We do not question tbe sincerity of our corres pondent But what are we out of the old parties for, and why did we organize a new party if either of the old parties would tcrve us? Another thing. Let one man seriously propose fusion In our columns, and we should be Hooded with communications against fusion. It would be, we think, the worst possible waste of space to do It. The party that will trade and fuse with another party has no principles. And as our party is a party of principle, fusion cannot be considered a party question with us. EARLY 8TATE CONVENTIONS. The People's party state conventions dates already published are as follows: California May 22, Indiana May 24, Illi nois May 20, Ohio June 0, Minnesota June 10, Kansas June 12, New Hamp shire June 14, Texas June 20. It is our opinion that we shall make a mistake if we put off our state con vention later than July 4th, and we urge the executive committee to care fully consider the advantage of decid ing on that date, ' We need to begin early in order to become perfectly or' ganlzed and to provide for a thorough canvass of the state. The people ate now wonderfully stirred up and ready to listen to the discussion of remedies for tbe hard times, low prices and in creasing burdens of the working and debtor classes. Strike while the iron is hot. Place before the people definite, adequate, plain remedies and show them the causes of the present condl- tlons and they will flock to our stand ard. Tbe old parties hold their conven tions late in order to more easily de ceive the people. We should hold ours ear) y to better educate the people. We should also nominate our men first, and they should be our men, to avoid any appearance of fusion or trading. If we delay our convention beyond the first week lo July it will have to be put off till tbe last of August, on account of harvesting and stacking, our people be ing In great majority farmers. That is too late. THE KINGDOM, HUMAN, DIVINE We commented on a paragraph last week which we found in The Kingdom, a sentence indicating that one of its eiltors accepts and teaches the gold money superstition, an error which, accepted as truth, is the present econo mic and legal defense of usury, or inter est, the Immorality which has become respectable since the church teachers and preachers, ceased to proclaim the law, allowed all In the church to take usury, and so made it respectable. It Is of course optional with the Individu als who possess the gold,' the present so-called "honest" (!) money or redeem er cf sinful money ('.) whether they shall charge (Bible) usury for It or not. But it is not optional wltn the man who must borrow money whether or not he shall pay usury. And the man who supports the gold monopolists, like the priest and Invite gees by on the other s'de and leaves his neighbor to bo rob bed and wounded by them. It was a great disappointment to us to find such ocla), fundamental la justice supported by the new paper, or piper with new name and widened jur- pose. Hut we wish to lay to our read er that it Is, nevertheless, the beet religious paper they can find anywhere, and we advise every family taking our psper to ubscrlbo for The Kingdom al to It they are financially able to do ao. It li only one man's writing which w consider unchristian and harmful, one man out ot the twelve. The board of editor of The Kingdom consists of 'resident Geo. A. isle of lowaCollege, a grand man wlia ope a unprejudiced mind; Prof, George l lltrtva, whoso lctur we ar prlsllng and who I tearlcg awa th vU ( taconsclout tradlttA and formalism, and dispelling tbe Igaoraac ot the church regarding to teal law and th true, embodied go 11; Uv. Thomas C Hall ot Chicago, a Wader who Is tar ia aJtanoo ot tho whose faith no relation to 11', to busies llf; iUv, Dr. I.tr I.. Wsl, ta Jdlaaatpoll preacher; lltv. If, Stroag ot New York City, author of liar Country" and ' The N Vrs Us, tl lay Mill, the ntt Chrlslisa tangeitst iUv lr John. P. CojU, th fopular Maachusetu preacher who It knowatarand wtdby tl lecture on Christen Sovlohgy. or true social !ao; Prof, J Mv, I'rofoitor f Political Kaon o a y la Iowa ColUgw And . U . f'ttif'B tlW?VW of that principal branch of ethics; Rev. Geo. D. Black, recent editor of "Gospel Liberty;" Prof. John R. Commons of Indiana State University, one of tbe ablest of the young political economists, a strong advocate of Proportional Rep resentation and the author1' of The Dis tribution of Wealth." Revs. H. W. Glea on of Minneapolis and Rev. J. N. Brown of Kansas City are the remain ing members of the board of editors. This paper, Ths Kingdom, is tbe only paper of its kind among the many religious papers. It is not Infallible; but in its ethical teachings, in its dls cusilon of .applied Christianity, it is a vast distance in advance of the religious press and preaching of the rest of the world. We say this after reading four copies of tbe paper. And we urge all our people who wish to take a religious paper that preaches and teaches savin jr trutb, truth for this life, truth that is needed to save society by dethroning business sel flannels, to send to the pub lishers of The Kingdom, Minneapolis Mion , for sample copies of the paper. The price is $1.60 a year. We shall propose a clubbing arrangement and shall probably be able to offer It with l he wealth Makehs at a reduced rate. We are glad to tee that The Repre sentative, organ'of tho Farmers Alliance and Peoples' party of Minnesota and edited in large part by Ignatius Donnel ly, is greatly extending its light and in fluence. Any paper edited by the great litterateur must build up a large sub scription list. Last week a special edition of 100,000 copies were printed from new type and sent out from its new office at Minneapolis. The office of the paper has just been moved from St. i'aul to the greater bnslness center. Attorney-General Olney would bave the government loan a bankrupt, stock-watered railroad more money than it is worth at two per cent, per annum for 100 years. But when the People's party suggest that the govern ment loan its citizens upon good security money at the same rate it is denounced as paternalism. The ad vantage of a government postal system and business is tbe advantage of getting the best possible service at cost. A government banking system and railroad system would save enorm ous profits to the people and preserve our fast disappearing liberties. A MAN Is in duty bound to 'obey just laws. But which is the more sacred, property or life? Is it better fer the men who can find no work to preserve life by begging or stealing? Which is (he more degrading? Mr. A. O. Lehiier says that the Pop ulists of Valley county are on top and will stay there. Get off the grass and die. THE MAT MAGAZINES. Tbe Review of Reviews for May is an interesting number giving the news of the world, with editorial comments, and tba substance of the articles in the leading reviews. Scuibner's for May contains choice fection contributed by George W. Cable, and Octave Thanet, and Inter esting descriptive articles by Edwin Lord Weeks, Philip Gilbert Hamerton, John G. Bjurke of the U. S. A.; a paper on Working Girls Clubs by Clara Sid ney Davldge; a paper on The Kthlcs of Democracy oy F. stlnson. and much other valuable matter. The Cosmopolitan for May contains twelve principal articles, eleven of these being beautifully Illustrated, also book reviews and several very interesting articles on the progress of science, How ells' Altrurian Travoler letter this month describes plutocratic housekeep ing in New York. Jame Wnitcomb Klley ha a delightfully reminiscent Illustrated poem of boyhood life, en titled ' lp and Down Old Brandy wine." Other interesting article are "Siam and the Siamese-' "The Struggle for Freedom In Kansas'1 and "Kngland' Litest Conquest." The Arena for May is a most excel lent number of that best of magazine The most Intending article to u are "Kmergency Measures for Maintaining Self-IlespecllBg Manhood," by the editor, Mr. Flower; 'The Philosophy ot Mutualism"1 by Prof. Prask Parson, and "A Revolutionary Kali way Com pany," by Albert Griffin, The railway rfend to I To Gu f and lator-mie Hallway. Me. Flower' caper contain pa ssges which we ball next week quote, Tbe Arena I now th largest monthly review publlhed, A ymisg man at the Lincoln Nationalist Club Sunday before last said he had bu reading th Arona but three wek and It had made a I'opulUt of him. II was lust beginning to live, h said, and hi Inieas earaeetn and nthulam showed It. I " MIR. HI J . TO TM POINT. ' TauraaJWta" I boing used a a tear word by the goldbag press, jut as they onoeUMd the word "socialism and "aaarcby," or a Ik a word "aboUtlooUt" wa ud thlrty-tlw jar tgo. Th llm ha turn now when all tatolllgeat retomor ar proud to x t ailad social ist, And It ha hevota fully under stood amosi th peopl that If aay set of uia may proterlj b callvd aaarvtf WW, It Is the goidbugs thtmselws and those who support their trtttorou pulUjr. Ha "la.'allsraod anarcwl.r are fast disappearing from the list of epithets tbat abound in the columns of the goldbug papers. In applying tbe term "paternalism" to the principle advocated by the Populists our oppon ents show dense ignorance and stupi dity. It is indeed paternalism when tbe government grants subsidies and bounties to corporations to enable them to carry on business, or when we "pro tect" certain manufactures by the tariff law. But when the iwinlfl nrvanlo fnr their own protection, a co-operative system of conducting business in which ail are equally interested, as, for in stance, the postal service or the public "j vut u i m uut vawi uBi" lam hilt frnliTnnlitm ' Many well meaning people object to the seclalistlo principles of the Podu- Hsts on tbe ground that ''If ycu could divide all the wealth equally among our citizens in a year some would be 'beg gars while others would bo million aires." All this Js true. But Socialists do not propose to divide the wealth of the nation . They propone to consolUa ie It under one ownership, and the owner Is the national government, which will hold it in trust for the people forever. It will therefere be Impossible for men to squander their capital and beoome ouraen upon tho community, as tbey frequently do now, for all that anv one can spend will 3 his proportion of the income, or product, of the capital of the nation. Socialism means ''government ownership of all capital and govern- ment operation of all industries." Some people thing that if the masses were educated there would be nn annh thing as want, and they refer to tbo un educated horde which constitutes the various industrial armies. Here again taey display their Ignorance. The ma jority of the roving industrials are bjtfhly educated, and much better edu cated than our lawyers and politician V and bankers. Better educated because) usefully educated. Some of these trampy are educated to shoe horses-others are tauors some are enuinnn t,a n 4i4 mechanics. Some can make shoes and build houses. The time is surulv log when all will hold In contempt f"8- tnat ciass or education that merelv fiu a man for over-reaching" bis fellows, but does not qualify him to add any thing to tbe comfort and. happinehs of the race. As we now abhor (he forel and monte man, so will we some duy abhor the man who is skilled in negotiating deals in stocks and bonds, or who organixs syndicates and live Id luxury off the products of other peoples ton. Many thoughtless oconle think tW because a man has worked hard to ac quire his millions that be is rightfully entitled to them. This I la nn ewnr The pirates of old worked hard and took great risk in order to acquire wealth, but that fact did not justify them In the eyes of the people. The bank burglar works hard and takes great risks, but that does not entitle him to the wealth he acquires. It is not the particular procesa by which a man cets his wen. th t.hut. .,!.,.. w the unfairness and injustice, but the fact . u vu M V UlJiOblllULrA tnat he gave no value to the world in return for it. Djn't understand me as wishing to abuse these capitalists and corpora tion kings. They are merely the loci- cal product of an illogical and unsclen- tine industrial system. Edwin Lb Fevre.' IT IS COMINQ. BV .1. ARTHUR XIKiKUTOX. How bright, how sweet, this world would i If men could live for others' How Rweet, how bright. How full of liKbt This life, If justice, truth and right Wert) once enthroned, It meu were free; If men would all be brother. .Ud In this nothing but a arrant" Mut wrong ko on forever; Must poverty Forever be And aelilnh greed and tyranny' Must bate aud strife be still nupreiu. And love and prai-e cent.. nvi No. l will not believe k. No. Uod UH return somewhere, brother, Somewhere, nooietlnie, The ra e will climb Atxive lu telBiihneM aud crime Will g. utler, nobler, hiipir jtrow, And inn will love each other. Th morn Is rlotog eoft and bright; The way grow brtohl twfuw u. Cbter, brother cheer. . Throuya doubt, through tear. The ofld krow. bttr, jem liy jtr ana rest u bright a day f tuht Win unread Ua white whins ir . 1 Favor th Dan. sv iu vLiu, Xb., May I, Yl. Kdltur WtuLttt M akehs: TheOalo plan tor attending thnau? convention 1 just the thing. Nolol V , better could poealbly Us lopWd not leg tbat WOUld tUOr aUra! Itim.a I puopl. thta H see loaf I1b of lent B H se Ion llBMof tet as uoorWd. rls i tosf ) ing. all coBVrteg toward t. 1 Tfrwtt very quarter oft f Will, W Kg UK hand playlnj liven renter slate. It would N ihsAii it would b pleasant. It would' slsnnly hv gram?. W muotdo Iv, ltspotfttlly v J. I'.Mtni'iuj The Chkama Ltnilte.t fUatlvl - GWrs to th Notth-YYeelvra lla f surtHMMd sid nwrvUts to Chicago " etrn rlt.e A. ii lltildliijr, t iwiti Afetv l o, nth loth eti-t,LwA cWb, ts t 1 0