The Wealth makers of the world. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1894-1896, August 30, 1894, Image 4

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THE WEALTH MAKERS. Angnst 30, 189
THB
WEALTH MAKERS.
Ntw Barks of
THE AJXIANCS-tNDBPBNDBNT,
Consolidation of the
ruceisilllcaMnsliIndepilea!
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
. BY
rbe Wealth Makers Publishing Company
uto M Street, Lincoln, Neb.
jiobgb B0WARD GnsoB,.. Editor
J. 8. Htait Business Manager.
S. I P. A.
Pnbltehera Announcement.
The subscription price of Thb Wiiira
Maker U ll.UOper year, In ad ranee.
Agents In soliciting subscriptions should be
very careful tnai au names torrau
imfled mnd oroDer wwtofflce given. Blanka
for return subscriptions, return envelope,
in ran ha hid an ft.tmlies.tlon to this office.
Always sign your name. No matter bow
often yon write oa do not neglect tblH lmport
mt matter. Hverr week we receive letters
Kith Incomplete addresses or without signa
tures and li la sometime difficult to locate
Ibem.
OHAVOlor addbbsb. Subscribers wlshlag
io ehange their postofflce address must always
give loeir rormer m wen as meir urawun
Ireaa when change will be promptly maae.
STATE 0FFI0EB8.
For Governor Silas A. Holoomb
Llentenant-Uovernor .Jambs N. Gawk
Secretary of State . ... alLABY W. MOFADDM
State Audlter Johk W. Wilso
Bute Treasurer ....... Job H Powsrs
Attorney-General Damibl B. Caret
Com. PubMc Lands & Bldgs... Sidney J. Kent
Mnpt. of Public Instruction wm. A. Jobes
FOR CONGRESSMEN.
Third District John M. Dbvibb
Fourth Olstrlct W. U stake
Fifth District Wm. A. MoKeiohah
Sixth District, Omab M. kem
LANCAST g B COUNTY.
County Attorney Fred W. Srepberd
County Judge. G. W. Bekgb
County Commissioner 6. S. Paswater
State senators R. T. Cbambehs,
J.Y. M. 8WIQABJ
Representatives A. C. Berrick,
c. 8. jobbs, frame D. Eager, jobm
H ABTLTBB, 0. M. DUBB. .
TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS!
' We are this week sending out bund'
reds of notices of expiration of subsorip
tion to our subscribers. The amount
that each one owes us is small, but in
the aggregate it foots up hundreds of
dollars, and to carry these delinquent
. subscribers is a great burden on us.
Very many have written us to not
stop the paper, saying they can not get
along without it, and will send in their
renewal as soon as possible. Now
friends, think a moment. Is It not easier
(or you to raise the one dollar that you
- owe us, than it is for us to raise hund
reds of dollar every month to pay the
expen?e of sending The Wealth
Makers to you? We know that times
are hard, but we also know that paying
a subscription 10 a newspaper is very
often a matter of neglect We know
that if you can be brought to realize
how absolutely necessary it is that you
pay your subscription as soon as it ex
pires, you will promptly remit and not
allow us to send you the, paper for
months at our own expense.
We know you wish to be fair with us,
but we want you to think of the inconveni
ence you are putting us to, thoughtless
ly perhaps, by not paying us the small
amount due us.
Our expenses are heavy and must be met
promptly. We are' depending on you,
friends, to do your duty. Just now, while
you think ot it, will you not sit down,
write us a letter and enclose the amount
due us, for which you already have
value received.
We are sure The Wealth Makers
is a welcome visitor to your home and
that you do not want it discontinued,
It 1b working for your interest, it is
fighting your battles. The kind words
you have said of us, through the paper
and otherwise, we fully appreciate, and
they encourage us to greater effort, but
they will not pay for paper, rent and
labor. We must have your financial
' support. We know of several leading
weekly papers in Nebraska that will
hereafter be issued monthly on account
of hard times. The Wealth Makers
'can not cut its expenses down in this
way. We must and will come out on
time every week, or the cause will
suffer. As the chief exponent of the
People's Independent party of Nebras
ka, The Wealth Makers has a re-
sponsiblity that you must help us to
bear. We have faith in you, enough to
IwIIata .hflf. unn will An vrtiii. rvflrf trt
the uttermost
There is no reason why the state
paper should not have 50,000 subscri
bers, and we intend to get them, but
you must help us. It will be a long,
hard struggle, but with your help we
shall succeed.
It is of especial importance that the
circulation of Thb Wealth Makers
be increased as much as possible in the
beginning of the campaign. Jfom is
the time to work. Let us hear from
you.
Address all letters regarding subscrip
ts to Wealth Makers Pub. Co.
J. 8. Hyatt, Bus. Mgr.
1
AS the farmers have no corn to husk
they can give much time and strength
to polities this year. Let us all pitch
In to gain control of the government,
and then when crops are bountiful
Drioei will not make their raising un-
irontaoie. v
HOW FOB TEE BATTLE
We believe the state convention could
not have nominated a stronger ticket
than the one it has placed in the field.
We believe it is going to ba elected.
And with all its power The Wealth
Makers will work for its success. It
has not a man on it who can be called
weak either as regards intellectual
qualifications fr the office, or in the
matter of character. They are to the
last man, one and all, men of sterling
worth, man who command the oonfl
dance and respect of the people of all
parties, and with such leaders the Inde
pendents wll make the most vigorous
and enthusiastic campaign which they
have ever conducted.
Judge Silas A. Holcomb of Broken
Bow heads the ticket. His magnificent
physique and honest manly face make
him a man to admit. He is also a man
to trust, and, he will make us a grand
trovernor. He' is now judge of the
Twelfth judicial district, and is recog
nized by suoh men as ex-Supreme Judge
Maxwell as a man of excellent ability
Hon. James N. Gaffln of Saunders
oounty, chosen by acclamation for the
second plaoe on the ticket, is, we be
lieve, the best fitted for the office of
lieutenant-governor of any man that
could have been brought forward. His
position as speaker of the house in the
last legislature has made him familiar
wun tne triCKsauo. tactics 01 me euciuy,
and his parliamentary ability coupled
with his knowledge of laws past and
that need to Dass. will enable him to
serve the people as none other might.
Mr. H. W. McFadden. of Furnas
oounty, nominee for secretary of state,
is county clerk of Furnas county and is
an intensely earnest Populist with
gift for oratory.
JuoVe John W. Wilson of Keith
county now holding the position of
county judge, is the one-armed veteran
whom we selected as our candidate for
State Auditor. He is of heroio mold, a
man and a soldier, and will add strength
to the tioket.
John H. Powers, the most honored
and best loved man in Nebraska, was
the choice for state treasurer. The ap
plause which greated the grand old
man must have been sweet to him, and
he went on the list of standard bearers
by acclamation. He was once counted
out after having been elected governor
of Nebraska. The people will see to it
thiB time that he secures what they
give him and that an honest man
handles the state funds another year.
Sydney J. Kent of Lincoln will add
great strength to our ticket because he
represents the organized labor of the
cities, and in addition is a platform
speaker of great force and ability. He
is one of the best informed and best
grounded men in the party and will
lead thousands of voters into the Pop
ulist ranks.
Hon. Daniel B. Carey of Fremont has
grown up from boyhood in 'Nebraska.
He is a raagnifioent specimen of physi
cal manhood of most attractive presence,
and stands with two Dip feet under a
brainy level head on on every plank of
the Omaha platform. Mr. Carey will
not allow the corporation anarchists to
trample on the laws of the people
when he becomes attorney general.
Last, but not least, we have chosen
Prof. W. A. Jones of Hastings, as our
candidate for State Superintendent!
Prof. Jones has the bearing of a Roman
senator. He is a teacher of teachers,
a man whose power to solve the great
problems of tocology places him in the
front rank of thinkers. Prof. Jones
was for year president of the State
Normal University of Indiana, and
ranks with a half dozen leading
educators in the nation. The Re
publican party candidate for the
same place cannot be compared
with Prof. Jones in point of intellect
ual ability, and he will not be the
choice of the intelligent voters.
Altogether we have a most admirable
group of candidates, and we are jubi
lant over the personnel of our ticket
THE MOST NEEDED OF ALL.
Tn our state platform we have de
manded the Initiatfve and Referendum
method of legislation, and if the Popu
lists elect a majority of the state legis
lators in November next tbey are in
duty bound to submit this question to
the people. The demand has gone up
from many separate counties and has
been made by the State Federation of
Labor; and it cannot be doubted tnat a
majority of the people would vote the
power to make and veto all laws back
into their own hands. This country
has been gotag to the dogs so rapidly
in the last generation through the per
fidy of corrupt leaders, the work of cor
poration lobbyists and the spirit of
party, that this return of power to the
hands of the people is the only hope
left us that the nation can be saved and
our liberties and rights restored. The
people are not now the government
We have not been selecting and electing
men to represent and serve us. The
selecting is generally done by rings of
professional politicians, tha rings with
in rings reaching down to every voting
precinct. Blinded by pfcrty prejudice
and ignorance and foolishly entrust
ing all power to office seekers the well
meaning voters have been made the
tools of designing men who sought place
at the publia crib, and class legislation
which eioh have been paid to furnish
the corporations, capitalists and usurers,
bras amassed the wealth, the prinoipa
resources and capital of the country in
to few hand and left the masses de
pendent and destitute
.With the Initiative in the matter of
lawmaking retained by the people, all
the people, just laws alone would be
enacted. And if every other enactment
of Importance must needs be referred
to the people for their acceptance or
veto our representatives would be shorn
of their power to traffic in laws and lib
erties. It would no longer be of use to
hire lobbyists to corrupt legislators, nor
Lfren to distribute passes and pack pri
maries sou ounven nulls. i. icmuiwimb
salary and the honor of being trusted
to a certain extent by the people would
be all the inducements placed before or
left within reach of men aspiring to
office. Bribes, plunder, power, would
all be out of their reach completely.
Party machines would no longer have
power, or existence. The good people
would no longer be by them divided,
As fast as any great question or meas
ure secured by agitation and education
a majority to favor it, they would by
petition bring the question to a vote of
the people and without possible obstruc
tion, entanglement or crossing political
interest, the question would be voted
on. The common interest would thus
be made the law instead a class inter
est. .
This one plank in our platform should
draw to us all men who believe in a
government of all, for all, by all. We
are the only party which is pledged or
which will pledge to do away with
party power, destructive party divisions
and all possibility of party corruption,
ring rule and trade politics. Come,
friends, oi all beliefs, Republicans,
Democrats, Prohibitionists, bimetallists,
monometalist8, and all, come and help
us to restore to the people the means of
direct legislation upon any and all
questions upon which we differ.
WRAT IS BE ALL AFTER?
The Reverend Byron Beall has a per
fect right to preach political sermons.
In fact it is his duty to preach them, if
he has any duty to preach at all. But
he should preach the truth and know
what he is talking about. We cannot
think him excusable for his ignorance,
if Ignorance it was, which led him to
assume that Tom Majors, the notorious
professional politician, corporation
tool, blue-shlrted demagogue, preparer
of a forged census certificate, great
ooker playing gambler, oommon liar,
etc, has all the character qualifications
necessary for a governor. Majors is
about all that Beall assumes he is not,
and he has none of the needed" virtues,
honesty, unselfishness, hatred of mono
poly oppression, love for the common
people, zeal for the embodiment in law
of the new, broader conceptions of
justice. No, he is not "that noblest
work of God, an honest man." Nor is
he "a man of intellect and
generous
culture, in touch with
all the best
both church
movements of the day in
and state, a manly man."
But he is an old settler, an old soldier,
an ewner of a farm, and he wears a
colored shirt If the Reps win they
will also want some one to pray for
them.
The reverend maker of the needful
Majors character also dropped into the
dirty political work of besmirching the
character of Judge Holcomb, the Popu
list candidate for governos. Judge
Holoomb has passed through one state
campaign and no word was spoken
derogatory of him by his political
opponents. It has been left for "a
minister of the gespel" (God save the
gospel!) to charge him by insinuation
with having a consuming ambition and
with the crime ef performing some pro
fessional work for a railroad. Judge
Holcomb's ambition did not lead him to
acoept the nomination for governor. It
was forced upon him. The firm of which
he was a member did some time ago ac
cept some honest work from one of the
railroads. The cases were pleaded, not
by Judge Holcomb, but by his partner,
Mr. Kirkpatrlck, now a member of the
firm of Darnell and Kirkpatrlck of
Lincoln. But in none of these cases
oan Jud?e Holoomb's honesty avid in
tegrity be impeached, nor did a penny
of railroad money come into his hands.
No record in any court in auy county
in the state of Nebraska shows any
pleadings in any corporation case made
by Judge Holcomb.
Mr. Beall is to some degree excusable
for his igor nance. A man of intellig
ence cannot talk with him ten minutes
without discovering the narrowness of
his mind and the limitations of his
knowledge. His misrepresentation of
the Populists, to whom he attributes
fanaticism and disposition to promote
strife and 'curse the rich simply be
cause they are rich,' seems, however,
to be pure cussedness. And what we
know of him during his residence in
three counties,' Butler, Custer and
Lancaster, makes it probable to our
mind that he is capable of it. He has,
In all the time we have known him and
of him, been a strong Republican parti
san, and for a minister of the gospel to
be such in the notoriously corrupt days
f that party, proves him to be either
mentally or morally unsound.
TIE PULLMAN IHVESTIGATIOIJ.
The cross examination of Duke Pull
man is revealing the old hypocrite in
spite of himself. He was before the
committee of Investigation Monday and
was forced to admit that the oempany
had not lost money, notwithstanding his
statement during the strike, but instead
had declared and divided among Its
stockholders the regular eight per cent
dividend on a capitalization of $36,000,
000.
I he company's original stock was
11,000,000, in 1867. It has paid from 12
to 8 per cent each year in dividends
and has accumulated besides a surplus
amounting to $25,000,0$0. In the last
year $2,800,000 have been paid In divi
dends and Pullman admitted that his
salary had not been reduced and that
there had been no reduction of the
salaries of superintendents or foremen
The burden of the slack times was all
forced upon the shoulders of the under
workers and wages reduced below the
bare living point in order to provide
millions for Idle stockholders and the
regular fat salaries for the overseers.
It was also drawn out of Pullman that
his professed philanthropy was not in
the interest of his employees, but that
work at starvation wages was given
them as long as they would stand it to
keep them together (because they could
not easily be replaced) and to save the
damage to machinery of the plant which
idleness entails.
Pullman thought the eight per cent
dividend should be paid the stock-hold
ers whethar the men could live on the
wages it left them or not He did not
know that the wages had ben volun
tarily increased by the company. He
did not see that a reduction to starva
tion wages in connection with $2,800,
000 dividends and undiminished salaries
for the bosses, was a matter to arbitrate.
He held that "a man has right to manage
his own business."
The investigation will do good. It is
holding up to the people the question
whether rich men who are not produc
ing the wealth should take it from the
producers in the form of dividends, and
compel them and their families to suffer
need.
Through all warring seas of life
One vast current sunward rolls,
And within all outward strife
One eternal Right controls,
Right, at whose divine command
- Slaves go fiee and tyrants fall,
In the might of those who stand
All for one and one for all.
James O. Clark.
THE HEW SONG BOOK.
The new song book, Armageddon,
is being enthusiastically received. The
book is larger than we expected it would
be. It is a book H by 8 inches in size,
considerably larger than the ordinary
song or hymn book, contains 138 pages
ef words written for tne times, set
to splendid stirring music, solos, quar
tettes for male voices and four part
songs, with preludes forjthe piano and
accompanyments. The book contains
67 songs, 54 of which are sheet music
simply reduced a little in size of page.
These 54 songs would be worth as sheet
music not less thai $17.00 but are here
given in permanent book form,
with 13 other songs not set with ' notes
but most of them (chosen for their
merit) to be sung to popular patriotic
tunes, such as "John Brown," "Hand
writing on the Wall," "Red, White and
Blue," "The Suanee River,""I's Gwine
Back to Dixie," "The Star Spangled
Banner," &c.
A considerable number of the songs
in Armageddon are already widely
known having been Bent out as sheet
music. Among these are "Get Off The
Earth," "We Have the Tariff Yet,"
"ThefjTaxpayers Settle the Bills,"
"Battle Hymn of the Workers," "God
Save the People," and ' That Honest
Dollar." The celebrated song "Hay
seed in His Hair," we have also secured
for this work.
Among the entirely new songs found
in this book are "If I Were a Voice,"
"A Politician Here You See," "It Stuck
in His Crop," "Sunrise on the Hills,"
"The Road to Freedom," A Drowning
Cry," "Armageddon," "The Rallying
Cry," "The Pauper's Last Smoke,"
"Only a Penny a Loaf," "Our Line of
Defense," "Plenty of Room," "Old
Error's Mists Are Sweeping By,"
"American National Hymn," "Jeans
Pants a Comln," ."The Money Power
Arraigned," " Timothy Hayseed," and
many more
Ail these timely enthuslog splendil
songs and more for 35 cents. By ihe
dozen at $3.60. In lots of 100 to 1,000
sent by express at special rates. There
is no investment that will equal putting
some money into this song book and
getting singers started to using it It
will draw crowds and kindle irresistible
enthusiasm. Address all orders to
Wealth Makers Pub. Co.,
Lincoln, Neb.
"Rise like Hons after slumber.
In unvanquishable number.
Shake to earth, your chains like dew,
Which In sleep are fallen on you,
Ye are many they are few."
TEE POPULIST HAND BOOK.
The Populist Hand Book for the cam
paign of '94, prepared by a special com
mittee selected by the state executive
committee and complied by the secre
tary of the state executive committee,
gathers Into small compass and cheap
convenient form the damning record of
the frauds in the state institutions in
the hands of Republican officers, their
extravagance, and what was brought to
light by the impeachment trial. It also
gives the vote on the Freight Rate bill
facts on the silver question, etc. The
entire matter of the book has been
gleaned with much labor from the re
cord! and is matter of fact.
The contents of the book are given
below: ' ,
The Asylum Steals, History of the
Boodlers' Trials, Penitentiary Cell
House Steals, The Impeachment Trial,
State Land Steals, Failure of the Capi
tal National Bank, Investment of the
Permanent Snhml Fund IjuriilitlTa
Appropriations, Deposit of State and
CountyFunds. The Attempted Printing
Steal, The Half not Told, The Maximum
Freight Rate Law, What Populists have
Done for Nebraska, Populist Vote in
neDrasKs, facts on tne silver question,
Two of a Kind, Omaha Platform.
Order of Secretary J. A. Edgerton,
Lincoln, Neb. Price $1.00 per dozen
copies.
The Republican party expects to be
returned to power by people who can
be duped by its promises. What are
they based on? Nothing in the way of
change, absolutely nothing. The Re
publican party charges all the present
paralysis of Industry aflfl commerce'' to
fear of "dishonest" money and tariff
reduction through Democratic legisla
tion, yet the Republicans and adminis
tration Democrats have voted together
upon all financial legislation and the
tariff bill passed by the Democrats does
not reduce the tariff in the aggregate a
sum worth mentioning. It is a good
Republican protective measure. Calam
ity has come upon us, not through one
party, but by the acts -of both. The
people now must have assurance thc.t
the party they vote with will do some
thing to save us from monopoly enslave
ment. It must propose something new
and reasonable. Tariff talk is played
out Mere partisan denunciations are
not satisfying. Performances are call
ed for. And plans that are new and
pledges that can be relied on are neces
sary to restore confidence to the voters.
The Republicans have no such plans or
legislation to propose, and hence can
not win the intelligent to their ranks.
Come into the Populist party.
Hon. O. M. Kem and Hon. Wm. A.
McKeighan have been renominated for
a third term in their respective con
gressional districts as the candidates of
the People's party. Mr. Kem was
chosen by a large majority of the dele
gates, and Mr. McKeighan by acclama
tion. Had they not made a satisfactory
record in Congress they would not have
received the strong endorsement given
them. We may safely predict their re
election. Judge Stark of Aurora is the
man we have pitted against Hainer in
the Fourth district. He is a very strong
popular man and a thorough canvas of
the district will we believe ensure Judge
Stark's election.
Congress has this week adjourned.
Will some one who has had the pa
tience to burden his mind with tons of
tariff talk and to go through the record
and count up the thousands of private
bills and discover the class favoritism
of hundreds more, please Inform us
what equitable legislation they can find
which will even make a beginning up
on the credit side of the books? And
we have been paying each of these
hundreds of lawmakers $5,010 a year for
serving the corporations and moaopo-
lists! If Congress had not convened for
twenty-five years the gain to the people
would have been simply incalculable.
Trial by jury was one of the safe
guards of liberty and guaranties of
justice established by the founders of
the American government. But when
it came to interfere with corporation
greed these monstrous chartered bodies
demanded of the courts and have
obtained an expansion of the injunction
jurisdiction to cut off the rights of
organized labor, the judge assuming to
lay penalties upon those who violated
his autocratic decrees, and that without
jury verdict after a formal trial . Take
away justice and the means of obtaining
it and force will be the only weapon.
Ros&water succeeds in making Ma
jors out a liar in his ' dramatic defense
of himself and attack upon Edward on
the platform during the Republican
state convention last week. Rosewater's
legislative record bears the light a good
deal -better than Majors' census record!
The congressional committee which
recommended that the courts of the
District of Columbia take action to in
dict Majors and his associates for forg
ing the census document had for its
chairman Hon. Thomas B. Reed.
President Gates of Iowa College,
commenting on the- charge against
Prof. Ely brought by state superinten
dent Wells of Wisconsin, has this to say:
Of course his teaching is dangerous,
otherwise it is not good lor much. Tne
truth is always dangerous. There has
probably never been a time in the
history of America when the fullest
truths in regard to our political, indus
trial and social life were so dangerous
as tney are today. Hut there Is a
further question, dangerous to what?
The commission appointed by the
president to investigate the Pullman
strike "has received evidence whioh
proves that the A. R. U. strikers who
were upon organized labor committees
have been blacklisted. It is with the
corporations (our real rulers) a crime
which cannot be condoned for men to
stand by each other as brothers in re
sisting their oppressors. It Is a crime
to love justice and help one another.
Subaorlbk for Thb Wbalch Makum
1
Labor day at Lincoln U to be made i
great holiday and political blow out
See elsewhere notice of It The whole
city will turn out to hear Senator Allen
and "Cyclone" Davis, who are to speak
at Lincoln park in the afternoon. There
is to be a big parade, floats, and the
rest, and the crowd will probably be
the largest ever seen in Lincoln.
We have received an interestlsg
communication from some one writing
front Nellgh who signs himself "Jun
ius." His proposed communication
we shall be glad to receive but our ryu
if to require the real name of contrlbu-
Iam Kit f i-lr . . .
mm m tnlron . t.tii. (if
,HIU VUUIU
will please take note of this.
Prof. Commons calls the teaching of
Prof. Summer of Yale, "the sociology
of pigs." Commons belongs to the new
school of economists; Summer to the
old Iron-law-of-wages school. The new
school economists are anti-monopolists
and teach that natural monopolies
should be municipalized and national
ised.
Congressman Lafe Pence of Colo
rado was given a grand reoeption at
Denver on his return last week IV his
crowded with prominent citizens an
eloquent speeches and welcoming songl.
greeted the young defender of the peo- -pie.
We have the tariff still. The Demo
cratic party has proved itself dishonest
divided,tpoweriess to fulfill its promises.
Its promises aie valueless. It can no
longer be trusted. It ought not to nave ,
been trusted so long. I ha sooner voters v
get out of it the sooner will it be gotten
out of the way of the march of progress.
If the farmers of Nebraska who have
no crop to gather put in the time har
vesting voters for the Populist candi
dates the results will be to them many
times more profitable in the end than
to raise a bountiful crop with the price
of it In the control of monopolists.
the wealth Makers would not
i 1 1
favor if our subscribers would write
delivery of their paper. You will get
The Wealth Makers on time, -or
we'll know the reason why.
Don't forget that our new song book
is something fine. T we years work in
it A collection of thrilling words and
new music written for the times. Just
what is wanted to lead our hosts to
victory. Order at once of The Wealth
Makers, Lincoln, Neb.
The Crete Vidette is trying hard
ta get Populist papers to strike it,
and as it has found we will not waste
words with it it has begun to misrepre
sent us by leaving out part of what
modified a statement we made.
The good times are coming. Yes,
when we, or a majority of us, find out
what causes bad times and put through
legislation to dethrone monopolists.
The People's Independent party i
the anti-monopoly party. The old part- ,
ies are the legislative tools of the mo
nopolies. Which will you support?
The new song book, Armageddon, is
ready, and the campaign now opens.
Send in j our orders. Thirty five cents
a copy. Six copies for $180.
Thb Rocky Mouncain News reporta
that a fusion committee was at work in
Grand Island to get the Populists and
Democrats united.
"The old is collapsing; time is chang
ng; and new life blooms out of 'the
ruins." Schiller.
ft . a to Ta ana a i Ait nnn iia-tria snnuir
Allen and "Cyclone" Davis, on Labor
day, next Monday at Lincoln park.
What possible good can it d ) to vote
for Majors and Moore, the notorious
tools oi the corporations?
The new song book, now ready for at-
livery, is immense. Fire in your orders.
Thirty-five cents a cooy.
"The path of the just is as the shin-
izg light, which sblneth more and more
unto the perfect day "
Now get to work. "Peace altr
war." "Who would be free himself must
strike the blow."
CAMPAIGN SUBSCRIBERS.
A great many of our subscribers have
paid for a copy of The Wealth Mak
ers to be sent to a friend during tbe
campaign. All those who are receiving
the paper and who have not subscribed
for it personally will know that it is be
ing sent to them in this way Read it.
No bill will follow, but you will be noti
fied when time for which paper is paid
for has expired and if you do not renew
your name will be taken from the list.
Who Wants tbe Jubilee Singers?
Local committees wishing services of
the Huckins Jubilee singers can secure
dates by addressing state central com
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