M i 0m W1J VOL. XIL LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, MARCH 28, 1901. NO. 441 III II IW'II I f THE SUPPRESSED SPEECH Tfee 44rM f C K'-v-Mmaa treats Wbkh ft e peeler f Ik Hnu Ordrd teal Kerd. Tte readers cf Tie Independent will rnfnUr lie bitter discuf sion in the house. bkh canse car being a Hot before It wu end-d. over the fact that Sjx-akT Henderson i&sued an order profeiMtJt.; tte printing in the Con gressional lie-ecrd the remarks of Hon. Jcha J. Lecu upon th army bill. The fo!!owir.g S a rcpy of that famous address, which was entitled "Hanna im and Mc Klnleylitn in the Philip pic' are Blood Cousins to Weylerism in Cut." Mr. Ictz said: Mr. Speaker : To be or not to be free ii the ju-tion Cuba is asking in the lis:s::lr.g of ISkJI. just as she was aking this question about three years aeo. But when she was asking it in Ib'j she ha4 in mind the question of freedom from a hereditary despot. To day asking it she has in mind the tyranny of a majority, and that ma jority harice been -curd by bribery and fiih' and other means of cor repticg" tte- ,ters of the land. To lie or cot to lie s the question before the American people. We told Cuba and the world that our war against Spain was neither for conquest cor for the acquisition of territory, but purely in the cause cf liberty and humanity. In that declaration we care the Filipinos, just as much as the Cubans, a bond that we would use our strong arm to ecare for them the right cf self-gov-rnQtt. Why is it that thoe who are to fattening in the land because this government k its bond to pay principal and interest on government debts express no concern or solici tude mhateer that this solemn bond should be kept, as we pledged our selves to 43 on that night when we declared that the people of Cuba "are, and of right oaght to be free." I am no alone concerned about the -if.r of our own character and re putation in this betrayal of the people of Cuba and of the Philippine islands, tut I am much more concerned about the gradual dry rot that is taking place ia the American conscience. We could afford to b guilty of sacrificing un necessarily some of our young man hood, but me cannot afford to violate j rat: 'ally all of tLe ten command-rn-Lts in this brutal and murderous warfare whkh we are making In the Philippine ifclands. The lack of moral growth and the absolute hardening and degrading of American conscience that i manlfett today is the greatest menace to American liberty and Amer ican progress that this republic has ever seen. The encroachment made upon liberty Ly Nicholas Biddle and his gre-edy aociat-s in the days of Andrew Jaektoa and the threatened destrartiou of the union by the slav ocracy in th- day of Abraham Lincoln are d:aN of micor importance when ccmpr-d with the tyranny and crim inal ajrgreflon now manifest in every act and every word of those who favor th prew-tt policy of the federal gov ernment. For some time I have been accus tomed to liken our wickedness in the Philippine islands to that of England ia South Africa. Bat, speaking of the matter a day or two ago to a gentle man and his wife, placing the conduct of the to nations on the same level, the good wife of my friend Interrapted ts to suggest tiat the conduct of .England in South Africa was far more honorable than our conduct in the Philippine islands. She suggested, and I think with entire justification, that England tad the advantage over us. In that she U honest enough and frank enough to admit to the world that she is making war to the dath on the two South African republics not because of any purpose of benevolent assimila tion, bat parely and simply because it is her habit to go about the face of the earth seeking whom she may de vour. England admits that her pur pose is to secure possesion of the rich gold fields and other property which th Boers, in thtir search for liberty, had discovered. We. the good wife arrued. are mak ing war on the Filipino for tie benefit of a few of otjr speculator and gov ernmental Jobbers, and have our high er cScials in the national govern mrt prating to the world that we are daring it for the purpose of Christian civilization and for benevolent assim ilation. The difference between the policy pi England and th policy of America Is as wide as the difference between frankness and hypocrisy. In that conversation I tad commented on tbe iamefa!Ees and the barbarous brutality manifested by Great Britain In the last battle in which the lion hearted Cronje participated. 1 bid made comparison between what took place in Cronje s last fight and some of the pictures of Rome in her pagan daja. when the threw the Christians, men and toretn, Into the arena to be torn and fed upon by lions, tigers, 4rs and oth-r brutes. In that conver sation I read and here submit a de scription given In the Washington Ev ening Time of the rTth of February, 1"0. which is as follows: "Crcraj surrendered. saying he wUfced to ave the women and chil dren. Throughout the week the grim old African lioa Cronje, with 3,000 n,es. held o3t arant the persistent aae'ts cf Ito.-ert 4- rj men. The Boer laager was on are mot of the time after the third day's battle from British lydiite shell. Fhot and shell were pvured into the laager by the British, and the condition of affairs in the causp of the iioer was something frightful. They had run entirely out of Vm. their ammunition tad given out. and the laager was strewn with the rcrpes of the dead. lying la the t-road light, unburied and festering. The wtcusdr-d were la awful plight. fce hospital corps waa Insufficient to atttsd to thcci, and tLey Ujr about the laager in heaps, some crying piteously, others shrieking in their pain, many silently enduring their agonies." Is it possible for anyone claiming membership In any one of the Chris tian churches to gaze on this picture of fifteen Britons murdering one Boer, and say that this picture is not far more disgraceful and savage than any thing ever perpetrated upon any hu man being by even the vilest or most brutal of the pagan Romans? Is there not much in this to justify Buckle's deduction when he says that civiliza tion had developed Intellectuality, but not morality: and If it be true, as my frleftd argued, that England has the adrantage over America In being frank in st pad of hypocritical, then what lan guage can be found strong enough to describe the crimes which we are per petrating in the Philippine Islands? Evidences are coming thick and fast that we are perpetrating outrages in many forms against the Filipinos, and that in those outrages we are violating individually and collectively the com mandments. "Thou shalt not steal; thou shalt not kill; thou shalt not lie; thou shalt not commit adultery." What a legacy will be coming home to Am erica in the spiritual and physical wrecks that are to return to us as Am erican soldiers. Comment need not be enlarged on this subject. I insert here a statement from the issue of date February 23. 1D01, of the Bulletin of the American Iron" and Steel associa tion, of Philadelphia, which is as fol lows: "Three soldiers from Johnstown and vicinty, who enlisted a year or so ago to go to the Philippines, are back at their homes, having been returned as invalids on the transport Sherman. They were not much more than sha dows when they arrived. All declare the climate in which they served to be something horrible, and that white men cannot serve in it over a few months and keep their health. The Sherman carried 800 souls, of which 297 were invalid volunteers, including 16 insane. "John W. Kissel of Edenville, Franklin county. Pa., who was a mem ber of the thirty-ninth regiment Unit ed States infantry. In the Philippines, has returned to his home on account of bad health. On the 6teamer in which he returned to this country there were 400 soldiers, the majority of them be ing ill. and 200 bodies of soldiers who bad died on the islands or on the way over Kissel says he has had enough of war in the Philippines. "A dispatch from Washington, dated February 18, says: General MacArthur has informed the war department that the transports Hancock and Kilpat rick left Manila "yesterday for the United States. The Hancock has the thirtieth volunteer Infantry on board, and the Kilpatrlck carries 400 sick soldiers. It may assist some to understand the real conditions in the Philippine isl ands If I quote from a letter recently received from a soldier who has been there long enough to speak with au thority and whose language is suffic ient evidence of his Intelligence. One extract Is as follows: "I wish I could tell you in person my impressions of this country and its people. You would be astonished and pleasantly surprised at some things. The people are constantly misrepre sented by men who have their own in terests to subserve and by men also who can see no good in anyone here. "In the communities below the mountain sections the people are law abiding, industrious, temperate, moral and religious. It is true they are in arms, shooting and being shot, but hep one considers they are fighting us as invaders and despoilers one can not blame them for continuing to hope for what Is theirs, or should be, if Justice prevailed. "Concerning their aptitude for self government, no sane man will doubt it. for they are, in fact, governing themselves at the present time, except In the untutored savage portion of the archipelago. The least government is the best for this people. To change or force a change to the American plan would be folly. These people are sat isfied to be let alone and to live as they have been living. Give them proof that we are riot here to despoil them, and peace Is assured. Tbe morality of the people has suf fered through the soldiers. The sol diers look upon the women as common property. Even some of the officers appropriate women to their lust; yet the people stand It, for they fear to offend by complaining. The Ameri cans have brought the drink habit to these islands. They have promoted immorality, and their conduct has brought shame to many, but they say, "That's the way with the invaders of every country." and there Is no re course for those who come under their control. The commission Is the whole thing In Manila. Everything is done in the name of the president of the United States. Great is the president! Great sums of money are spent here. Some day great scandals will grow out of the whole business; It is Inevit able." What American can read such a let ter as this, bearing such evidence of fairness and keen observation, with out feeling that Hannaism and Mc Kinleyism In the Phyippines are blood cousins to Weylerism in Cuba? What American can read this and feel like voting for hundreds of mil lions of the people's money to be ex pended in criminal aggression and murder in the Philippines? Less than a year ago I warned the country that when you cut down the military appropriation from 128,000, 000 to $112,000,000 it was done to de ceive the taxpayers. I then asserted that $128,000,000 would not cover the war expenditures. A few days ago, when we passed the deficiency bill, af ter tedious interrogatories I succeeded in forcing the chairman of the commit tee on eppropriatlons to admit that It was necessary to make an additional deficiency appropriation of $21,000,000, which, added to the $112,000,000, makes the appropriation for this fiscal year ending July 1, 1901, $133,000,000, or, in round figures, $110,000,000 more than was appropriated for war purposes four years ago. In other words, we have entered upon a policy which in one department alone will require more than $100,000,000 of additional expenditure from year to year for many years to come, to say nothing of the additional expenditures of scores of millions that will be required in the naval establishment. It would have been far better could we within this congress just closing have spent our time discussing and developing the post-check system, which would have facilitated and sim plified the sending of money by mail an urgent necessity, as every business man well knows. But we have been so extremely mad with this business of taking on the title of "world power" that we have gone abroad minding everybody's business and neglecting our own. I introduced in the house the post-check bill, and Senator McMillan introduced it in the senate, which was a measure indorsed by the business men throughout the country and in dorsed by the leading newspapers throughout the country, yet we could not get for it even a moment's consid eration. Many other bills have been pigeonholed and our homes and our families have been neglected while we have gone to the other side of the earth imitating the monarchs of. Eu rope, and with them pretending that in some way we have received a divine commission to attend to the business of governing the other nationalities of the earth. WHITE SLAVES OF THE SOUTH Their Condition Hundred Times Worse Than That of the Black Slave Before the War. The condition of white labor in the south, especially in the cotton mills, is horrible beyond the power of words to describe. The labor unions have not a membership large enough there to force the passage of factory laws as they have in the northern states. The result is that capitalism in its most horrid form rules without a law to check its greed. Democratic legisla tures seem to spend all their time to secure themselves from "nigger dom ination" and let their own race be come the slaves of northern capital ists. Mother Jones, who has been making a visit to the southern fac tories,' describes some of the things she saw as follows: "The miners and railroad boys of Birmingham, Ala., entertained me one evening some months ago with a graphic description of the conditions among the slaves of the southern cot ton mills. While I imagined that these must be something of a modern Si beria, I concluded that the boys were overdrawing the picture and made up my mind to see for myself the condi tions described. Accordingly I got a job and mingled with the workers in the mill and in their homes. I found that children of six and seven years of age were dragged out of bed at half past four in the morning when the task-master's whistle blew. They eat their scanty meal of black coffee and corn bread mixed with cottonseed oil in place of butter, and then off trots the whole army of serfs, big and little. By 5:30 they are all behind the factory walls, where amid the whir of machin ery they grind their young lives out for fourteen long hours each day. As one looks on this brood of helpless hu man souls one could almost hear their voi6es cry out, "Be still a moment, O, you iron wheels of capitalistic greed, and let us hear each other's voices, and let us feel for a moment that this is not all of life." "We stopped at 12 for a scanty lunch and a half hour's rest. 12:30 we were at it-again with never a stop until 7. Then a dreary march home, where we swallowed our scanty supper, talked for a few minutes of our misery and then dropped down upon a pallet of straw, to lie until the whistle should once more awaken- us, summoning babes and all alike to another round of toll and misery. "I have seen mothers take their babes and slap cold water in their faces to wake the poor1 little things. I have watched them all day long tending the dangerous machinery. I have seen their helpless limbs torn off, and then when they were disabled and of no more use to their master, thrown out to die. I must give the company credit for having hired a Sunday school teacher to tell the little things that "Jesus put it into the heart of Mr. to build that factory so they would have work with which to earn a little money to enable them to put a nickel in the box for the poor little heathen Chinese babies.- "I visited the factory in Tuscaloosa Ala., at 10 o'clock at night. The su perintendent, not knowing my mission, gave me the entire freedom of the. fac tory and I made good use of it. Stand ing by a siding that contained 155 spin dles were two little girls. I asked a man standing near if the children were his, and he replied that they were. "How old are they?" I asked. "This one is nine, the other ten," he replied. "How many hours do they work?" "Twelve," was the answer. "How much do they get a night?" "We all three together get 60 cents. They get 10 cents each and I 40.' " In the old days of African slavery there were many northern Christians who would not eat sugar or wear cot ton clothes because it was produced by slave labor. In these days the apos tate sons and daughters of these old fashioned Christians take the divi dends wrung from the toil and very life of white children and go to Paris to spend the season. Where is the spirit that animated the church when it fought black slavery? A POP PHILOSOPHIES He is Pessimistic mod Fears That Capital and Organized Greed has a Cinch on Things. Dr. W. P. Brooks of Cook philoso phizes thus: "However much we, of the people's party, have reason for re joicing over the good works done, it appears to me that the candid observ er must see and feel that to achieve the reforms sought for through any political party, under whatever name it might chance to bear, must ever be futile while the enemies of reform re main so strongly entrenched behind the battlements that are wholly imper vious to the searchlight of Intelligent reasoning. "When we take Into account the fact that 25 per cent of the voters are de pendents, I. e. they look to the com bines of corporate capital for their daily bread as well as the rags that partially cover the nakedness of their wives and little ones, how ridiculous is the idea to think for a single moment that you can get any considerable pro portion of this vote by argument or reason, when the word of their masters goes down the line, 'Do not let your vote dampen the fires under the fur naces.' "In one large factory, I am reliably informed, where over 3,000 were em ployed, 37 asserted the right of free men and voted as they pleased; on the morn.ng of November 7, they were called into the office and found their discharges waiting them. "Fifteen per cent of the voters are owners of the corporate wealth of the country (about 83 per cent of all the wealth); 60 per cent are small traders, farmers, etc. Were it possible for us to hold more than 90 per cent of this class of voters, it might then be possi ble to accomplish needed reform; but this even is out of the question, be cause of the fact that the 15 per cent class can put money in the hands of a few sell-outs, sore-heads, and aspir ants for office, and draw from the 60 per cent class enough to make their majorities as large as they wish. "And mark you, my dear sir, the dependent voter is increasing much more rapidly than the others and they are being drawn from the 60 per cent class so it Is only a question of time before It will be unnecessary for the 15 per cent class to spend any of their money to elect whomsoever they choose. "I want to say right here that par tyism is the poisonous upas tree where hang the bones of all the world's greatest reformers. Parties are breed ers of dissension, snd discord and rey the shield of the greedy gourmandizer who devours widows houses and way lays the confiding and the unwary. Our government is really nothing more than individual rights surrendered for the common good; and when these rights are dispensed -by the govern ment (people) so as to make the burd en (if there is a burden which there should not be) no harder for one to bear than for another, then every member of the government should be satisfied. ' Everyone who believes in the prin ciples of the people's party platform, adopted at Omaha on the 116th anni versary of the Declaration of Indepen dence, knows, if he knows enough to know anything, that the only sensible and legitimate meaning that can truth fully be put upon that instrument is that everything of a public utility should be operated by the government (people) for all of the people; and that "equal rights and equal privileges be securely established for all the men and women of this country. "This is the. exact doctrine taught by the fathers who forced the adoption of the Declaration of Independence; and, though we have listened to its reading on every recurring Fourth of July from that day to this (except since McKinley brought it into dis repute) , there are fewer people propor tionately who believe in the self-evident truths therein, than there were on that memorable day when the old Liberty Bell rang out the glad news to the then anxiously watching and waiting people. "This being true and I fearlessly assert that it is how in the name of common sense can you ever expect to win a victory over a capitalistic foe who has no love of country, except for the amount of dividends he may be able to declare? Think of the absurd ity of going up and down the land preaching the doctrines advocated by Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln, under any political party name, when the 15 per cent class, who own the wealth and control nearly all the ave nues through which we receive intelli gence, ridicule any doctrines we preach and denounce them as vision ary, chimerical and impracticable. And, too, when many of us who have for years tried to organize communi ties and put in operation miniature governments practicing these princi ples taught by the fathers and incor porated in our own platform. "Many of the preachers of equal rights and equal privileges have joined in the cry of our enemies and say the scheme is visionary, proving conclu sively that they themselves have not faith in the doctrines they pretend to advocate." - ; THE CASTELLANE INSECT American Plutocrats and Their Silly Dartghers are Responsible for the Creation of such Creatures. Little Boni Castellane went into the home, of an editor whom he accused, of allowing a paragraph to appear in his paper in Paris and slapped the editor's face. Then there was a duel and the editor, who weighs something like 300 pounds, was wounded in the thigh. That is a way they have of doing over in Paris, but if that little French count who Is less than five feet high had come Into .The Independent office and undertaken such a performance as that we should have laid him across a pair of knees and spanked him until he blubbered. After that we should have wiped his eyes and told him that It pained us more than it did him to have to chastise him, but it was to be hoped that tho infliction would help him to lead a decent life. The Chica go American in commenting upon the affair says: Little Mr. Boni Castellane is not an admirable human insect. A young and vigorous man selects a fat man of sixty, slaps his face and brags that he slapped him "thirty-five times." Next he shoots the fat man in a duel. After that he strikes an at titude and announces that he "reserves similar slaps and similar duels for all who may offend him." There is no doubt that Mr. Boni de Castellane is , a preposterous human chinch bug. Yet there is also no doubt that we Americans are preposterous when we laugh at France because of this Cas tellane insect. Not France, but the United States, Is responsible for Castellane. Wise Frenchmen long ago decided that "nobles," prancing about, brag ging and dueling, were not worth hav ing. The French revolution cut off the heads of a good many of those foolish nobles, and cut the combs of every one of them. If we had left things as the French revolutionists arranged them the curly headed Castellane would never have been heard of. He would at this mo ment probably be taking twenty cen times' worth of absinthe up at the far end of the Boulevard St. Michael, hurting nobody, damaging nothing but his own poor little alimentary canal. It is our stupid, rich, snobbish re public, with its foolish, rich, snobbish girls and driveling society, that is re sponsible for the Castellane insect and many similar types of nuisances. American "society" loves such crea tures; American girls admire and mar ry such idiots; American dollars give them an opportunity to make nuis ances of themselves. American citizens, instead of laugh ing at France on account of having its Castellane, should apologize to every Frenchman they meet. The Black Flag The tree of corruption is bearing its fruit. The governing classes Have raised the black flag and are looking for loot. Their prey is the masses. The peace of the world may. be riven asunder. " -5 What of it? The nations are out after plunder; And those who oppose may as well stand from under Until the storm passes. J. A. Edgerton. THE WORLD'S IRON. Our Race with Great Britain fr Leader ship in the Commercial World. "Four, hundred years ago the entire world produced and found use for six ty thousand tons of iron annually; to day it produces and uses forty million tons every year, a growth so marvel ous as to surpass belief were it not verified by figures which cannot be disputed. Four hundred years ago the United States were not in existence; in 1585 iron ore was discovered in what is now North Carolina and the first attempt to manufacture it was made in Virginia in 1619. In 1643-45 a blast furnace was built at Lynn, Mass., and three years later a forge was erected. Interference by legisla tion of the British parliament stopped the work for a time, but it was re sumed later, and in 1740 one thousand tons of iron were produced. In 1790 the United States gave to the world 30,000 tons of iron, and was exceeded among iron producing countries by Great Britain, France and Germany. In lbOO it produced 40,000 tons, tieing with Germany; then it went forward at great leaps until 1870, when, with an output of 1,670,000 tons, it had passed France and stood second to Great Britain, the leader of the iron world for four hundred years. For about twenty-five years the two great nations stood in this relation, the Unit ed States gaining a little one year to lose it another, but in 1890, after a Titanic race of over one hundred years we forged to the front and led the lead er of the world of nations with the production of 9,202,703 tons, an in crease over the British output of 1, 308,489 tons. We held the lead for three years, but in 1894 we lost it to gain it again in 1895, to lose it in 1896; but in 1897 we led again, and again in 1898, and in 1S99, with our output of 13,620,703 tons, exceeding that of Great Britain by 4,315,394 tons, we have put our great competitor out of the race. This excess over Great Britain's prod uct is greater than our entire annual output of but fourteen years ago. Ver ily, for the youngest of the great na tions we have done exceedingly well, and we shall hold the position we have reached because our youth gives us the advantage of illimitable fields of fuel and ore which are as yet practically untouched and easy of access, while those of the old countries in compe tition have been worked almost to the limit. Under such conditions, it is safe to predict that the United States will not only lead the world in iron production, but in time will supply all the nations of the earth with their iron. That this country has so rapid ly reached first place and already pro duces nearly thirty-five per cent of the world's product is earnest of what it can do when its full energies and re sources are brought into active opera tion." W. J. Lampton in AInslee's. WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE Urges all Workers to Make one Earnest Final Effort te Wipe oat the Party . Debt. TO PRECINCT COMMITTEEMEN: No letters have been sent to you since those dated February 1, 19oi, unless, perhaps, you received one of the letters sent to workers asking for pers.nal contribution. The returns from the letters sent out the 1st of February were barely sufficient to pay postage on the whole lot; hence, I can not afford to send you another letter. But here is a suggestion: There are 1,420 populist precinct committeemen in Nebraska; a small part of that num ber have already sent In collections; the remainder have done nothing at least, no remittances have been re ceived. Will you make an earnest ef fort in the next two weeks to collect and send to me not less than 1? And make it just as much more as you can. If you have already done your part, pay no attention to this; but if you are one who has done nothing THIS i iEANS YOU. Whatever you do act promptly. CHARLES Q. DE FRANCE, Secretary. 1836 So. 25th st., Lincoln, Neb. Mr. Whitfora's article relative to the party debt, published on page 6 last week, deserves a second reading by every person interested in our-future success as a political party. He justly points with pride to the record of Ar lington precinct, and remarks that if each "county would do no more than the litl".s twnship of Arlington in Warnington co"1 -w'w. have enough to pay cVeT J," ,;,. '"A3 our indebtedness, but a nice little ruw to begin the fall campaign with." An inspection of that part of the following report headed, "Total Receipts by Counties," shows but ten counties with a credit of over $20 each: Antelope, Clay, Cuming, Hall, Kearnay, Lancas ter, Polk, Saunders, Washington and York. Twenty counties have contri buted nothing; eleven have a credit of $1 or less; forty counties have a credit of more than $1 and not to exceed $10; and nine counties have a credit of over $10 and less than $20. Or, in other words, nineteen counties have a credit of $10 and upward, and seventy-one have contributed less than $10. There are fifty counties in Nebraska that can do as well as 'Cuming county has done contribute over $40 each. That would give $2,000. And the re maining counties can certainly raise enough to wipe out the balance of the debt. Suppose we list the forty counties as follows: Banner, Blaine, Boyd, Box Butte, Brown, Chase, Cherry, Cheyenne, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Dundy, Frontier, Furnas, Garfield, Gosper, Grant, Harlan, Hayes, Hitch cock, Hooker, Keith, Keya Paha, Kim ball, Lincoln, Logan, , Loup, McPher son, Perkins, Phelps, Red Willow, Rock, Scott's Bluff, Sheridan, Sher man, Sioux Thomas, Valley, Wheeler with a toss-up between Custer and Thurston as to which shall be the fortieth. (Just now, too late for this week's report, comes a remittance of $34.70 from E. Taylor, chairman ways and means committee for Custer coun ty, with a list of 56 contributors. Hur rah for Custer. She will be one of the forty.) Now, the forty counties named can raise, of course, as much as possible, but suppose we rely on the fifty others to each raise not less than $40. Can they do it? Will they do it? Louis De Wald, fn a late letter to The Independent, says: "Don't you think old Cuming has done pretty well toward paying that debt? I wish you would wake our workers up a little. It is a shame if those accounts are not settled. I am willing to go begging here once more If necessary, although I hate to do it." Would that there were a DeWald in every county! RECEIPTS. Previously acknowledged $536 70 To" Tuesday noon 92 55 Total $629 25 COUNTY OFFICERS. Previously acknowledged $ 70 49 (No receipts, except under head of "Individual contributions" and "State committeemen.") LEGISLATORS. Previously acknowledged $ 11 00 (No receipts this week.) PRECINCT COMMITTEEMEN. Previously acknowledged .$133 15 (Contributions under this head will hereafter all be acknowledged under head of "Individual contributions.") STATE COMMITTEEMEN, STATE OFFICERS, ETC. Previously acknowledged $135 40 W. O. Dungan, st. com., Kear ney county 9 50 (A. B. Norlin, $3, treasurer; G. W. Tillman, $1, clerk; J. H. Robb, $2, judge; Supt. Baker, $2; Pat Hecox, $3, sheriff, 50c; all Minden; $2 in committeeman's hands.) John R. Thompson, dist. judge, judge, 11th dist 5 00 INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTIONS. (Contributions of 25c each, unless otherwise specified.) ADAMS Previously acknowledged, $5.75. (No receipts this week.) ANTELOPE Previously acknowl edged, $27.65; J. D. Eckhoff, Bruns wick; Edgar Elliot, $1, Neligh; E. W. Briggs, 50c, Royal. BOONE Previously acknowledged, $6.95; Wm. C. Emery, 30c, Albion; Henry Arp, Petersburg; Frank Kier nan, 50c, St. Edward-. BOYD Previously acknowledged, 75c:. A. L. Nickerson, Mankato. BUFFALO Previously acknowl edged,. $4.55; W. Stark, Nantasket; John Holl, 50c, Shelton. BURT Previously acknowledged, $7.30; Robert Hanson, 50c, Lyons; list of four by George Osborn, 50c, . (An- drew Morell, 50c; C. H. Anderson, Norman Kregh), all Oakland. BUTLER Previously acknowledged, $13.83; J. T. Feather, Ware. CASS Previously acknowledged, $7.50. (No receipts this week.) CEDAR Previously acknowledged, 98c; -G. B. Campbell, Belden; W. C. Kelly, ,55c, Laurel; Wesley Tinker, Sam Peterson, St. James. CHERRY Previously acknowledged 50c. (No receipts this week.) CLAY Previously acknowledged. $17.30; R. McFarland, Thomas Ken nedy, 50c, Deweese; J. P. Nelson, El dorado; A. Populist, $1; "Cash," 50c, Fairfield; list of three by A. Wilson, $2, (M. F. Herrlngton, Frank Casper), all Harvard; Nils Anderson, $1, Ong. COLFAX Previously acknowledged, 75c. (N receipts this week.) CUMING Previously acknowledged, $44.50. (No receipts this week.) CUSTER Previously acknowledged, $2.25; J. C. Pollard, Merna; W. D. Hall, Sargent. DAKOTA Previously acknowledged $2.20. (No receipts this week.) DAWES Previously acknowledged $5. (No receipts this week.) . DAWSON Previously acknowl edged, $3. (No receipts this week.) DIXON Previously acknowledged, 75c; F. M. Stewart, Allen; Nels Her man, Wakefield. DODGE Previously acknowledged, $3.50. (No receipts this week.) DOUGLAS Previously acknowl edged, $2.50. (No receipts this week.) DUNDY List of four by J. W. Kin sey, for Indian Creek precinct, (T. C. Kinsey, H. Fish, J. Wakefield, 10c; S. Borderson, 5c), all Benkelman; J. E. yiM-xs-e.,,. tT . previously acknowl- J 1 uo 3-g T r,kll'L",,50n, Geneva ".doz. 5-graint 'y acknowl edged, V flirdul ; by John Scheuneman, ooc, ,v.... r.S. T. Doher, 10c; G. O. Miliei ..'v., C. Davis, D. Baker, J. F.'w it W. E. Ewing, Ed M. Husso.. 39c E. Whittaker), all Franklin; list 0c fourteen by O. Pool for Antelope town ship, 50c, (E. D. Jackson, S. Current, H. Pool, D. Detrick, Neils Ostergaard, Eric Dahl, C. A. Carlson, $1; Geo. Hansen-,50c; H. B. Lorain, Hansen Bros., 50c; J. L.- Cornell, 50c; J. II. Current), all Upland. FURNAS Previously acknowledged $6. (No receipts this week.) GAGE Previously acknowledged, $2.30; B. F. Baker, 50c, Liberty; Jos eph Synovec, Joseph Gacek, Wymore. GARFIELD Previously acknowl edged, 25c; J. L. Coon, Burwell. GOSPER Previously acknowledged, , $2.65. (No receipts this week.) GREELEY Previously acknowl edged, 25c; T. C. Phelan, 50c, Bray ton;" list, of four by J. R. Swain, coun-. ty attorney, (James B. Barry, G. C. GilesMJ J. Kinney), all Greeley; John Devlne and J. A. Foster, Greeley; list of four by E. W. Jeffers, (J. O. Jeffers, J. A. Jeffers, Clarence Jeffers), all Horace; John Mcllduff, $1, O'Connor. HALL Previously acknowledged, $17.50; W. H. Mader, Grand Island; Lewis RIckard, $1, Wood River. HAMILTON Previously acknowl edged, $6,25; Wm. Steele, Henry Smith Hampton; collection of $5 by'F. L. Munn, Trumbull, for Scoville precinct, names of contributors not given. HARLAN-rPreviously acknowledged $2.75; E. H. Batty, editor Alma Rec ord; J. M, Vaughan, Huntley. HITCHCOCK W. H. Thornhill, county clerk, 50c, Trenton. HOLT Previously . acknowledged, $8.25; John Alfs, jr., 50c, Atkinson; S, L. Conger (second contribution), Inman; S. G. Lambert, Little. HOWARD Previously acknowl edged, $18.45. (No receipts this week.) JEFFERSON Previously acknowl edged, $13.05; John Moles, Fairbury, $1 for Independent collection. JOHNSON Previously acknowl edged, $6.30; "Box 56," Elk Creek. KEARNEY Previously acknowl edged, $26.25; S. M. Fann, Axtell. KNOX Previously acknowledged, $8; "Miller township"; list of three by Joseph Kalas, (Anten Houzvicka, Frank Grbss), all Verdlgree. LANCASTER Previously acknowl edged, $28; D. Hendricks, Bennett; B. F. Springer, Firth. 'j9BjtL smi sdjaoaa o) i$ pa2pa -IMOU210B XisnojAaij NlOONn LOUP Previously. acknowledged, $1. (No receipts this week.) MADISON Previously acknowl edged, $3.50. (No receipts this week.) MERRICK Previously acknowl edged, $1.50. (No receipts this week.) NANCE Previously acknowledged, . $4.75; Frank Downing, Fullerton. NEMAHA Previously acknowl edged, $5.50; H. G. Rhodes, (live stock and grain), Howe. NUCKOLLS Previously acknowl edged, $2.25. (No receipts this week.) OTOE Previously acknowledged, $6.35; A. R. Malben, $1.50, Palmyra; J. V. Moran, Christopher Schlitt, Geo. H. Peterson, 50c, Talmage; list of eight by W. A. Hickok, $1, (John Sie mens, Geo. Doxtater, T. D. Sabin, 50c, Joseph Hendrick, Chas. Cowles, W. P. Reilly, J. E. Brisco), all Douglas. PAWNEE Previously acknpwl edged, $3.25; J. L. Clark, R. F. D. 3, Pawnee City; C. G. Nash, Summerfield, Kas. PHELPS Previously acknowledged, $2.75; Jacob Leacock. Bertrand; G. W. Severns, H. E. Ericson, Holdrege. PIERCE Previously acknowledged, 75c. (No receipts, this week.) PLATTE Previously acknowledged, $7.75; G. W. Phillips, Columbus. POLK Previously acknowledged, $20.15; list of eleven by E. A. Walrath, $1, editor The Democrat, (Keene Lud den, 50c; H. M. Powers, 50c; Wm. Campbell, A. F. Nuquist, J. P. Heald, 50c; Geo. Ward, $1, G. F. Nelson, 50c; "Cash," 20c; E. L. Hallquist, J. J. Kep ner), all Osceola; collection of $5 by J. W. Lanham, Stromsburg, for Pleas ant Home precinct, names of contri butors not given. RED WILLOW Previously ac- . knowledged, $3.30; G. C. Boatman. 50c, McCook; R. A. Green, McCcok, $1 for