The farmers' alliance. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1889-1892, January 14, 1892, Image 2

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    THE FAKME1CS' ALLIANCE LINCOLN NER, THURSDAY. JAN. 14. 1W2.
i
S i
! !
. Gm. lotto's I" Mm"!''
t rig. Fjrrpv driwr'
Kb or man life tide feat
Am! the far PlutontSB shsdows
Gather oa the ermine; blast
t thine ana. O Qiieea, aupport m!
Hash Ik? anba and bow tain er,
Bearkea W tba ireat heart srrreu
Tfcoa, and taov aloa, mutt bear.
fWarh mm4 and Trlrrmn legloB
Rear tbrtr e ii ht k bo mora.
Aa4 my rocked and acaiu-rrd roller
Strew dark Actlum's Utal abore:
Tkoofk bo (liltrrinc fuaria surround no.
Pronpt to do their master' Ut,
I moat perfah like a Roman
Vie ue treat TrlumrV atUl!
Let aot Our'i servtle minions
Meek the Hon tbmi laid low; . v -Twu
no foenaB'i arm that frtled him;
Tvas bla owb that Ucslt the blow
fna. who, pillowed oa thy bottom
Turned auld- from (lory's ray
Bla. who, drunk with ihjr caress,
Madly threw a world away. ,
Sbaald the baae plebeian rabble
Dare sssaU my fame In ltomn.
Where my nobla apouM, OctarlB,
Weeps within her wld jwrd home.
Seek herb! Say the coda hare told me
Altars, augura, circling wings
That hr bleed with mine commingled, .
Yet ahall mount the throne of king I '
Aa for thee, star-eyed Epyptlanl
Qlerloua soroeress of the Nilel
LUbt the path to Stygian borrora
With the splendors of thy smlo,
Olra toCawar crowns and arches.
Let his brow bis laurel twine;
I can acorn tha Senate's triumphs, '
Triumphing In love like thine.
I am dying. TPt. dylngt
Hark; the Insulting focman's cry.
They are coming! tjulrk. my falcblonl
Let me front them ere I die.
Ahl no more amid the battle
Shall my heart exulting swell;
tils and Osiris guard thee
Cleopatra Home farewell!
The above poem wag written by Oca
W. II. Lytle on tbe eve of the bat
He of ChicamauoNt. When it was
Almost flnihhed he dropped his pencil ;
and said to Col. Kealf, who hharcd the
tent with him: "I will be killed in
battle to morrow." He then read the
written portion and Col. Rcalf pre
vailed upon him toiinish the poem. This
the General did wM.h perfect calm: He
was killed in battle the day following:
just aa he bad predicted. There was
no. place in war for a man with such a
beautiful mind.
World's Fair linrampment.
The. arrangements for the old eol
Jiera during tho,' world' fair will be
very cemplete, and all will bo eftred for
who attend. The manager of the
Ijrand enonmi mi'tit y, aend a com
mittee to Washington and secure tent
And whatever is needed to be used for
their benefit, to that the old comrades
can go into . camp ana live over
ain their old days. A set of registers
will bo kept and all the veterans regis
tered, giving their name, company and
regitr.ent, their permanent address.nlso
their address while in the city attend
ing tha fair, in order tluit their com
rades may be able to find them. '
There will also be a bureau of infor
mation cstiiblihlicd, and all soldiers will
be informed where they eqn procure
places to stop at reasonable rates while
Attending the fair if they do not wish
to go into camp. Thousands of the
veterans with tlulr families and friends
will attend this print encampment and
the Columbian exposition. They de
sire to meet and greet their comrades
once tnoro before the final muster-out,
And they have requested that theso ar
rangements be made for their comfort
And information during the world's
fair in 1893, beginning May 1 and con
tinuing through the fair. The general
management of the encampment is in
the hands of well-known comrades, and
is endorsed and mrp irted by the lead'
ing men of the nation. It meets with
the hearty approbation of the fair
management, rind will undoubtedly be
carried through successfully.
Objections to the Date.
The Philadelphia Tress reports that
the date chosen for the national en'
cnmprr.cnt, Sept. 20, conflicts with the
time for the grand union of the Army
of the Cumberland atChk'lcamauga. If
both are held at the same time it is
quite certain that many thousands of
Western veterans and families who
otherwise would go to Washington,
prefer to attend the other gathering
And witness the ceremonies that will
take place in connection with the dedi
CAting of the monument upon the great
national park series of bat Jcficlds in
Tennessee and Georgia.
There are many hundreds of old sol
diers who served in Ohio, 1'cnnsylvania,
Kew York and New England regiments
tinder Generals Hooker, Slocum, Geary,
Tyndale and Kilpatrick in the Eleventh,
Twelfth and Twentieth and Calvary
corps, who would enjoy as much pleas
ure in revisiting Lookout mountain,
Missionary ridge, Ringgold and Chick
Amauga, as they would in attending
the reunion at Washington.
"It is believed tinder the circum
stances." says the Press, "tRiat the time
for holding the Grand Army gathering
wiU be changed. Until it is, the feeling
of uncertainty will continue to exist'
Dodging; 1 Jul let.
During a shooting match in the pres
ence of the Governor -of Candahar the
latter noticed to his astonishment, that
the heads of sparrows were th'e favor
ite butt of the marksmen, who but sel
dom missed their aim. Whereupon he
declared that it was far more difficult
to hit an egg. Sir Peter laughed at the
supposition, but the Sirdar stood his
ground and the matter was put to the
test. An egg was suspended on a wall
Aud the soldiers fired at it, but, strange
to say, not one of them hit the egg.
The Governor and his suite kept their
maintenances and excused the non-success
of the firing party on the ground
of the difficulty of the thing. At last
A ball hit the thread to which the egg
Was fastened and it fell to the ground
without breaking. Kow the mystery
wa solved; the cunning Afghan had
used a blows egg., and the feather
weight shell had been moved aside each
time by the current of air in front of
the ball and thus escaped being hit '
The 8tat Militia.
The National Guard of Illinois is on
the qui vive to improve in every branch
f the service, and be able to do the
bosf'business to perfection in 1803.
A new troop of cava ry 1 In rwora of
errsn Station At Koglewond, on the out
skirts of Chic Ago. The LcfWature, It
to said, will be aa liberal to the boy a
the puree of the State will allow. This
is good to know. Then there to Csmp
Columbia to be erected. According to
the designs, it to to be commodious sad
comfortable. It to intended to Accom
modate 6,000 to ,OO0 men st s time, the
different States to send their guards
men ia relays, as instructed, when the
exposition opens, each relay to remain
a week. A barracks will be erected
for the dm of the officers and men.
Davag-hters of the CosfderrT.
The "Daughter of the Confederacy,"
t St. Louis, are raising a fund to e-Ublh-h
A home for needy ex-Confederates
snd gave a grand ball on
Thanksgiving night Their invitations
were sent out with A Confederate flag
in one corner. I-arge numbers were
sent to Grand Army men. and not one
went near the hall. The Union vett nns
have none but the kindest feeling for
disabled Confederate soldiers and would
contribute toward their comfort and
relief, but will not countenance the
further use of the Confederate flag.
The sooner the ex-rebel get this lut3
their head, the b?tter it will be for the
country. Tribune.
Army Personate.
Major It S. Vickery, surgeon, re
lieves Major C. B. Munn, surgeon, on
the examining board at Fort Monroe.
Lieut C II. Hunter is the Second
artillery.
Major George M. Wheeler, retired,
accompanied by his wife, sailed for
Liverpool recently.
Lieut E. C Uulloek, who ha been on
sick leave for some mouths, has re
turned to Fort Uiley with hi wife.
Mr. 8. M. Foot, daughter of Dr. and
Mrs. J. Brooke, has returned from Fort
Iilley to her home in San Francbco.
Lieut. P. II. Clark, Ninth cavalry, on
special duty with the German army, to
at Xo. 10 Friedenshtrasse, Dusseldurf.
Looking for s Cam plug Ground.
The Ohio Notional Guard to in great
need of a permanent camping ground
and cut-do. r school of instruction.
Adjt-Oen. Dill, Nurg.-Gin. Hart and
Col. 1'oilodc have been appointed mem
bers of a commission to inspect and lo
cate a site, within fifty miles of
Columbus for that purpose! Co. O.,
Second Regiment, oppened tho drill
Beaton nnd gave its fifteenth annual
ball Oct. 2'J. They propose soontovioit
California, and intend as v. ell a trip to
Chicago in t3. All the other cemtnunds
in Ohio ure equally determined aid prop-revive.
And this means consider)
able.
TI1K ALLIANCE.
A Horn Colonel.
On a certain occasion a Yankee officer
cavalierly rode up to tho gate of the
lute Judge E. I. Bullock, during one of
tho periods of Federal occupation of
Kentucky, and asked a little colored
bov who lived at the house, to which
the boy replied in a matter of-courso
way: "Col. Bullock." "Col. Bui
lock?" I aid the Federal. "And how
did he come to be a Colonel, will you
tell mo'?" In. some wonderment, but
with positive assunvn'e, tho boy re
plied: "Why, ho was born a Colonel,
sir." And truly ho was.
Monument for Gen. Ilovey.
The Indiana veterans of (he late war
are already taking steps to raise a fund
to erect a monument to the late Gov.
A. P. Hovey. Tho Department Com
mander ef tho 0. A. It, Col. I. N.
Walker, has taken the initiative in a
general order, recently tosued. There
eun be no doubt of the desire of the
veterans and their friends to contrib
ute to a monument for that gallant
soldier and statesman.
The Toiler: Political rtnrUr hsv
6oen digging A grave for the Alliance)
for the Iset throe yer Tbe toots to
not big enough for a slnglo plan' of
our platform, jrel the clod are rolling
back oa the ring'ten end it loo let a
thoJgh they have dug their own
JTAVA."
e
Alliance ViodicaU r: The very fel
low who yells, "keep tho Alliance out
of politics" to usually tho man who
know that if the Alliance goes Into
politics it will turn b'm out anJ there
by oust him from a fat job. It to Ilka
the wolf asking to keep the shepherd
Away from the sbte
e
New Nation: The statement to
made by a Boeton broker that half
the bank of Boston have cashed
note made out by clerks and indorsed
by oUcUIa Then half tbe banks of
Boston have broken tho law. It will
not require many mora failure like
the Maverick to sweep away tie ou
tre national bank system.
New Nation: 'Failures, defalca
tions, suicides And trust combinations
multiply. We are the richest nation
in the world and yet we are not happy.
That we are wandering along tha
brink of a deep gulf goo without ty
ing. The sun of prosperity shines
upon the few. The principle upon
which business is prosecuted to im
moral unchristian and unjust, and it
cannot endure.
Pacific Union Alliance: The profes
sional politician may as well under
stand, without further questioning,
that the Farmers' Alliance and other
reform organizations are sure of thoir
position and do not intend to bo driven
from it They will continue to stnn i
quare upon all their demand, and
defend them to the last The recent
meeting at Los Angole leaves no room
for doubt upon this quostion.
Southern Alliance Farmer: It to all
very well to neer at the farmers
movement and yell "calamity howl.
era." Old Jioah was a calamity howl
er.' Jonah was a calamity howler.
Christ' chosen aoostlos were calamity
howlers. The signer of the Declara
tion of Independence were calamity
howlers. There wero calumity howl
er just bsforo the war bo jac plenty
of them. Ye and there are calamity
howler now, pnd there will bo calam
ity howler just as long aa there is
danger ahead, and there will bj dan
ger uhoad just as -long its there is a
great wrong to be righted. Now then,
yoll again!
Alliance Tribune: It is said that
John Sherman's portrait has boon
hung in the director's hull of tho bank
of F.ngU.nd. No place in the world
could be moro appropriate. For more
than twenty years ho has teen tho
faithful tool of the English money
power, nnd U the ucknowlodged head
of English tovyiiru that is a?uin rear
ing its head lu th s country. John
Sherman has b:en the main prop in
sunpott of tha English system of
finance foisted upon this country by
tho monev power tho hi-udfuiarlers of
hich ni-o in Lomb ird slreof, London.
and tho greatest" curse to our own
country of any man that ever lived la
Artillery OlUrers on Btep-Ladders.
The Belgians have adopted a de
vice for their artillery by which a bat
tery commnder can better direct the
fireofhi8 gunners. It consists of nn
iron step-ladder about seven and a half
feet high and weighing sixty-five
pounds. It is to be carried on the inn
munition wagon, and when set up it
serves as a point of observation from
which the commanding officer can view
the field.
Death of Two Veterans.
John II. Whitney died Sunday, Nov.
22, at his home, 37 East Twentieth
New York, from blood poisoning, re'
suiting from a gunshot wound received
in the buttle of Ant ictam. He was 51
years old. Bartholomew Buckley, also
a war veteran, dkd Nov. 25 at his home,
811 Second avenue, New York, from
paralysis of the right side, resulting
from a wound received during the war.
He was 09 years old.
Vansrir's "Oood Times" Fund.
Vassar is probably the only college
that has a fund to bo used In giving its
students "good times." For several
years past a sum lia been given lue
college by a New lork gentleman to
be used for such a purpose. It is known
as tha "f ree money," and when parties
of students start for a day at Lake
Mononk or some of the other beautiful
places along tho Hudson it is the "free
money" that turn the wheels.
A Remarkable Woman.
That remarkable young woman who
went among the Knrpathiuns and wrote
a book on her experience is bringing
out a new addition of the Work with
late porsruit of herself and a long pre
face.
She isn't half as pretty in this pic
ture as she was in tho kniekerbockers,
jaunty jacket and boyish hat in which
she made her trip.
Anthoress of "ltfulnh."
Mrs. Augusta Evan Wilson has
written novels enough to fill a long
library shelf. Her favorite book
"Beulah," which brought her financial
Independence at a time when her cir
cumstances were not exactly pleasant
No subsequent work approached tha
sale of the one mentioned
Her Father's ltlocrapher.
Miss Ethel Barton, daughter of the
late James Tarton, will be her father'
biographer. She holds his desk with its
wealth of letters and manuscripts to
make 6uc.h disposition of as slit think
wise.
on batl ra to Another. Tba Internal
affair of a country may bj oa th
verge of dissolution, ruin And col
lapee At the ban ia of traitor la it
own household, but in tha sntirlpa
tlon of a foreign foa All to forgotten
or condoned by the men who. from a
material point of view, are to loaa all
and win nothing. Considered in tha
larger sODsetha possibilities of tha
instinct patriotism to A virtue to be
extolled. In line with tbe evolut on
of the race, it ahall yet ignore geo
graphical limit) and break through the
confining barrier of n&t onal bound
Aries And political prejudice. Claim
ing tbe entire eart i a a field for it
operation, it ahall lose the n tme -patriotism"
in that of cosmopolitan
ism, " and ' love of country" in that of
"love of humanity. In tbe mean
time, however, it shall not be exempt
from imposition. Mercenary mounte
bank and political pirate to further
their own end At tha expense of the
individual and tha country of which
be i A citizen, will manipulate this
passion, which. 1 but an extension of
the Instinct of elf-proervAtlon. To
guard tha interest of a cIai whose
wealth make them Independent of
the weal of tha majority, tho very
virtues of a people will be trans
formed into vioo and turned into
weapon to rob them of their homes
and liberty. This bas bejn tae
history of the past and should
form tho lesson of the future if not of
the present There ran be notb.ng
easier than the inflaming of
the burning passion of . patriot
ism. It need but to blow hard
enough auch stock cant as "should de
mand a retraction, "foreign inva
sion." 'the dignity of our govern
ment" "insult to our flag," etc. His
tory is full of such wicked wiles. No
Boonor are tbe people of a country
aroused to the danger of some misrule
at home thaa metaphorically speak
ing, tbe agent of the class which
benefits by auch evil raises cry of
Fire! fire! Look yonder!" . Thi i
why Dr. Johnson feariessly said that
"patriotism is the last refugo of a
scoundrel," and why we say that the
Chilian "war snare" was a forgery and
a fraud, gotton up expro-sly to divert
the mind of the people from the con
sideration of great or evils and more
insidious danger at home. l'aoifio
Union Alliance.
Maiag it m I B.
Andrew Carnegie, tha millioaair
Iron manufacturer, il ei up tbe two
old parte in the following - terse
Mrs beiran to dicua tha Doaeibliltv of ,,Jrl WBen b ' A P ilician
a fusion between the People', party n,-v ' '
f uoivtu 1 1 "J a "-v u w. as siuu wvwjv
A waf ISKIi raeloa.
Tba smoke had not cleared awn) I
from th recent battle of the ballot .
until lMtnocraito Ana KepuDitcan pa
And the VemoerAU in this state next
yew
Fusion bas been a baneful influence
In this reform movement ever since it
begun. Nothing retarded tbe growth
of the Greenback party so much as
fusion, and fusion finally killed that
party as aa osganlzation. If there
ever was Any excuse (or fusion which
we seriously doubt In this reform
movement it certainly has now reached
the point where there can be no
reasonable argument produced in
favor of any combine whatever with
either of the old parties, and that
nine-tenth of our people share in
thi "opinion there to not a doubt in
fact all true reformers will earnestly
oppose anything and everything that
macks of fusion.
This to a question that should call
forth now a moat vigo.ou denuncia
tion from our People's party papers
an i workers In thi state in term un
mistakable, so forcibly snd emphatic
as to leave no doubt aa to the position
of the new party teinguarely la the
middle of the road.
These thought are not suggested
by any fear of a fusion but with the
view of Averting complications liable
to arise from the schemes of unprin
cipled and spoils-hunting politicians.
Alliance Tribune, Kan.
lican parties of to-day ei'Ier. If one
of the -outs' be will say that the ins'
have had' cont ol too long and have
become corrupt and that a a new
broom weep clean, a chaage is de
sirable. But ask him which., if any.
of the national laws or form he
would C'lHD"" ""' ' 'nnb.'
Am latereedaig Development.
How can this world be made a
better place to live in beginning
with New Yorkr This is tbe broad
platform of a movement just organ
ized. Tbe first public meeting was
but lately held. It I a novel under
taking and the end will be sought
through mean aa novel.
Tb Southern Alliance larmer:
Suppose a member of the church,
would consort with sinner, and At
every opportunity proclaim the fact
that relirioa is on th down grade,
and that the day to not far distant
when every tabernacle of God in the
country will be closed. That the
church, as first organized, was right;
but the preacher are all hypocrites
and since they have got to medd ing
with tbe stairs of sinner and saying
that a man must believe and be bap
tised before he can be saved, it is high
time that it went to pieces! Now.
would you not denounce that so-called
church man as a wolf in sheep' cloth
ing, end decide that the sooner he is
dismissed the better? Would you not
say that if he can not believe in the
creed of the church, and have proper .
re 'pect for its oficera he ha no busi
ness to claim membership? This is
just the way with those Alliancemen
who are consorting wltn politicians
and enemies to our order, who delight
Primarily it will not have anything
to do with man in the next world, j t0 abuse and slander our leaders, and
For the present man a a grown up ridicule the Ocala platform. They
The Sent'nel: Rev. Thomas Dixon
of New York Hays: The movement is
in its Inst analysis the religious naturo
of millions of tho undo:1 musses who
compose its rank and lilo. Not, a
inglo one of tho problems that gavo
birth to this movement has ba 'n met
as yet 1 hey have not even been
iven a heiring. They luv.o bocn
hooted out of court by hired assassins
thought in the older parties who
tight not for principle but foroHUo.
n cp'te of gjod crops, gambling in tho
ire:id of the starving world still holds
i h dl on tho floor of your exchanges.
onservatives may hoot and pooh and
ah, but the movement is ona of ro-
istless power. You had ns well try
sweep back the sea with a goaso's
ail leather as to try to slop it with
ho pen of ridicule. You had as well
ry to (.'.urn Niagara with an anathema.
T'no Alliance: Tho highest ln!u:io-
lon that rests on every Allianccman
s to dispell tho gloom ol icrnoranca
hat envelops tho minds of his fellows.
n n Republican form of government
vhero tho sover.'lsnty rests with tho
leopie, therj can bo no prosporit ,'.
o justice, no liberty, unless the
ninds of tho people are enlightened.
i'ho people tan never maintain thoir
ighti until they kno.v them. Tho
mil that hangs over t'i.e industrial
lasses of this nntion to day is the
lirect soriucnce of ignorance. Look
ipon that royal edifioo with Its Gothic
ttics nnd spires pointing heaven ward.
hut is the abode of the nabobs of tho
inotcenth century. Every brick in
hat st ucturo is the fruit of humau
(ffort, every sill, beam stud and tenon
s the price of toil. Then look upon
hut tottering hut, and leaky roof, and
iolt s in tho s'do to adra t the chilly
vis of winter. That is the humble
loiue of labor.
Boost t'p One Crnali the many.
Wo understand that there is a gen
tleman in North Carolina who says
that if the Alliance ever succeeds in
getting through its platform that he
will go out of business. He is en
gaged in lending money. Now that
would bo awful. A man having a
largo quantity of money actually
threatens to go out of business. Per
haps the sun would stop a day or two
If he was to quit lending money at a
big por cent Tho electricity might i
refuse to do its duty on the telegraph
wire the milleaium may be delayed
several hundred years. Last year
when there was a proposition to reduce
the interest limit to li por cent in our
Siato uomo of the , money men
threatened to leave the Btate. They
actually frightened our legislature.
We are not -tuck" on tho low .rate of
interest to any great extent rather be
lieving that the proper way is to make
plenty of monoy and reduce tho in er
est by the law of s,PPly and demand,
but the idea of a man "having plenty of
money posing as a martyr and asking
protection is enough to rrako a totnb
stono hiu. ill, and tho legislator, con
gressman .or senator who fails to act
so as to protoct the weak against the
strong, or fie poor against the rich, is
not the man who is carrying out tho
divine law. But just think of the poor
little legislator or congressman who
stands by tho rich nnd helps them and
sayii to tho poor, "go forth and gel
rich and then I will see that your
wan's are utto ded to."' Johnny get
your gun: Progressive Farmer,
Th Foundations of C'ensolatlon.
Sam Small aays that Sam Jones says
that stagnation is the next station to
damnation and adds that agitation i
on the road to salvation. In corrob
oration of which we rise to remark:
For political regeneration the Alliance
mut avoid old party affiliation which
is contamination, and must keep up
ag.tation with exhortation to effect or
ganization against old parly halluci
nation, lest procrastination bring
stagnation preventing consolidation.
To avoid obliteration, extermination,
annihilation, Helen Dammnatton, we
must mako fortification against the
enemy' machination, by con ultution.
co-operation and unificition with kin
dred organizations and by avoiding de
falcation, stultification, defamation
and vindication will reach our desti
nation, which is tho station of politi
cal salvation.
Rev. CoL Elliott F. Shopard. of the
Mail and Express New York, shows
that Tammany Hall raised for the lust
election $1, 100.000. Ho gives nn
itemized account of this amount,
which has not boen contradicted by
the Democratic press. Likewise
Charles A. Dana and Pulitzer charge
in their papers that $1, 400. 000 was
raised by the I'latl Republican ring to
elect Kussott, nnd this statement has
not been denied by such Republican
papers us Col. Shepard's Mail and Ex
press. It thus appears that ?., 600.
000 has been spent this year in cor
rupting voters in New York state
alona Still in this state tho socialist
laoor vote increased by many thous
ands. Industrial Educator.
animal will be left to the care of the
various agene'es already at work for
his welfare. Tbis particular reform
will deal with children and the first
efforts will be directed to secure pub
lic park and playgrounds for tbe lit
tle ones. The aim la to wipe out the
slums and make over tbe being who
have been inheriting them. If the
child can be got right tbe man will
take care of himself.
No such movement can succeed in
any city in this country, in New York
least of all without attracting the at
tention and exciting the emulation of
other cities. A combination of like
forces would be a powerful Influence
in the city of Wheeling, which has
some evil of its own to deal with and
Is not dealing with them. Wheeling
Intelligencer.
The Alliance Advocate, Wash.:
Tbe government ownership and con
trol of railroads to one of the growing
issues and ideas of the country.
Centralization in the hands of all the
people (the government) doe not
seem to be aa bad as centralisation in
the hands of a few individuals, with a
power greater almost than the govern
ment Itself. In Australia the govern
ment own the railroads. It only
costs a person (6.50 to ride 1,000
miles. Commutation rates for local
service are still lower. A workman
can ride to and from his work a dis
tunco of 6 miles for 2 cents a trip, 12
miles for 4 cents. 13 miles for 6 cents,
24 miles for 8 cents, SO miles for 10
cents. Yearly tickets good for 80
raile trips are sold for 117.40. This
is the kind of centralization we need
lu this country. It centralizes bread
and meat into the mouths of the work
ingman's children and clothes on their,
backs, And yet low as the rates
seem to be, we are fully assured that
there is a fair profit in the business.
Statistic prove this beyond dispute.
have no more business in the Alliance
than ha a coffer at religion or an
infidel in a Christian church. You
can always tell a man by the company
be keeps, and when you find an Al
lianceman cheek by jowl with the old
town poUticians, you may just set him
down a an enemy to the Alliance at
heart
For tbe German.
The first and only work eTer written
on currency reform in German to "Geld"
by Robert Schilling. It ia a translation
and enlargement of hi"Sil?er question"
and sure to make convert The retail
price ia 25 cents, but it will be furnished
to reform organizations and agent At a
greatly reduced rtle. A sample copy
will be sent for IS cents. Address
Axliaxce Pub Co.,
20tf Lincoln, Neb.
WIND MILL.
10 DOUBT
BUT
A FACT
THE PERKINS
Is the Lightest Rannlna-
Wind Mill now Made.
TRY IT I
After oi years ef success la the manurav
ttreof Wind Mills, we have lately made a
complete change In oar mill, all parts being
built stronger aud better proportioned and a
self lubricant bashing plaeed In all boxes to
save the Durchascr from ollmblng high tow
ers to ol lit The lame principal -f self gov
erning retained. Svery part of the Mill ful
ly WAHKANTKD, and wLl run without mak
inir a noise. ,
The reputation gained by the Perkins Mil
in Hie past has Induced some unscrupulou
persons to imitate thi mill and even to take
our daub and apply It to aa lnferiornull Be
not deeeived. nose genuine unless stamped
aaoalow, We manufacture both pumping
and geared mills, tanks pumps eto and goaf
era! Wind Mill supplies. Oood AgeBta want,
ed. Send for catalogue and prices. 41-8m
PKKK1XS, WIND MILL A AX CO.,
Mlshawaka, Ind.
Montion Farmers' Aixiakob.
THE PERKINS
TMPEf BUY ITI
The Farmer Advocate: Why was
'am;ibell defeated in Ohio? Just bo
auso Ohio is essentially a Republican
Into, fecund, because tho defeat of
IcKinicy nu ant Republican annihila
ion. Third, because Wall street and
ho Pasto'.n IVmocracy wanted him
)ea:en. as by reason of his silver plat
orin ho was in antagonism to their
tearest interests. Fourth, because hi
wccsj would be tho triumph of a
irincip'.e waich would completely
ihehe a New York or Kastern candl
late. nr.d rerder his nomination al
nost a certainty. Fifth, because his
lection m ?;ir.t tho defeat of John
Indebted to Crunk.
Every time we strike a ma!ch we
nre indebted to the men who have
studied stfionco for the rnero
iovo of it. Tho men who worked
away nt coal tar "just to seo what
was in it" made the whole world
their debtors by discovering' alizarin,
tho coloring principle of uiudder.
And to those men tho world is in
debted also for aniline, antipyrine nnd
more than ono hundred other coal tar
products. Scientists, wondering what
was in crude potro oum. found paratino
and vnsel.no. Pasteur wondered what
caused fermentation. lie found out
r.nd brought a new era to wino mak
imr. Tho singing and dancing of the tea
ksttle attracted the attention of a
bra:n, unu wo have as a consequence
all the applications of steam. Tho
swinging of a chandelier in an Italian
cathedral before the eyes of a young
Galileo was tho beginning of a traiu
of thought that resulted in tho inven
tion of tho pendulum, and through it
to the perfecting of the measurement
of time, and thus its application and
use in navigation, astronomic observa
tions, and in a thousand ways we now
pass by unnoted, has been of such
practical value that the dobt to scien
tific thought, even in this one instance,
can never bo known. Science, in it
study of abstract truth, is ever giving
to man now beginnings. While the
devil is engaged in finding mischief
for idle hands to do, science is etern
ally at work finding something useful
for thorn to da Aluminum Age.
An American Frlner,
It has been an open secret to the
intimates of Princo William Astor for
a long time that ho was exceedingly
anxious about tho male successor to
his vast estate. Trince John Jacob
Astor, the father of the babe born
lately, is William Astor's only son.
Ho bas always been delicate and at
the present moment is convalescing
her man. the arch financial enemy of j from a severe attack of typhoid fever.
- ... ' , , . . . r . ti
tle p. oplo nnd the yielding, cunning
ool of tho m-mey power.
"LOOK YONDER."
' Woman's Point of View,
"But what on earth could bare In
duced you to marry a man so utterly
your inferior?"
"My de-jr girl, I never met A man
who wasn't" Judy.
Using th People's Pa.rlolljm to Avert
Their Attention.
Considered as a means of diverting
public opinion, there can be no more
powerful factor than that of "pride of
country." In the presonce of this
passion, once aroused, the most vital
interests of a country are flung to the
winds when it is given out that an ex
ternal enemy bas designs upon its
homogenity, or ha in any way fallen
below the common standard of such
international courtesy as is due from
When looking out for a wife for his
son ono of the first considerations
which Prince William thought of was
that she should come of robust stocK.
The beautiful Ava Willing, of the aris
tocratic Philadelphia family, became
the third Princess John Jacob Astor.
The marriage took place Feb. 17. The
Willing men have always been noted
for their splondid health and superb
physiques. It is said of handsome
Tom Willing, an immediate relative
of Prin.-ess Astor, that he liked
nothing better than a good square
fight nnd in his early days he was as
strong as an ox. The Astor baby, is
strong liko the Willings. Chicago
Sentinel.
"Vonsreanco It .'U.ie, i-n,tli the Lord."
John Mattel, wilh his wifa and in
fant child, applied to the authorities
last night for food. He said ho was a
striking miner, and had waikod from
Coiinollsvillo to this city, having tasted
nothing for forty-eight hours. The
mother was too weak to suckla her
babe, and to save t.ie little one's life
Mattei said he had cut tils linger and
all wed the child to drink his blood
The coup!e were torribly emaciated
nnd tho child was almost dead. Pitts
burg. Pa., D.spatch, Oct. 27.
Let plutocracy and its minions be
ware! Lot tho politicians sco.Y and
tha reptile press revilo tha reforms
demanded by the poop.e. Lot.tho pul
pit keep silent and tho church shut i s
eyes to the poverty and miseries of tha
poor. Let greed and avarice continue
their sway, and as soi m Go.i rules
they will hear in tho near future some
thing more than tho low murmuring
of iliseontont uovv scarcely heard ab.ivo
a whisper.
'Ihe plutocrats and priests wero ar
rayed against tho people of Franco,
but tho French revolution came.
Tho put ence of tho great Arnorican
people the great common people of
this country is wearing out No peo
plo with such resourcos and possibili
ties have suffered ns our people. No
country has ever boen cursed as we
have been cur ed. No nation ever
wont down as aeep in poverty, in
crime, into political slums and deg
radation as uro we to-day and tur
vived. Will we awaken, and shako off this
lethargy? Will we arouse to tlio dan
gers before us, or will we slumber on
until all of liberty is lost? Alliance
Tribune.
"The National Itanko ?I;it tio
itacause government money is more
stable and convenient and because by
this system monoy is farmed oat for
private gain, and as a means of dbtri
butionV is unreliable, unstable and unsafe.
The curse of an unstable currency
is a blight upon tho people, aud that
is what wo have to fear and combat
witn respect to the national banks.
They' are, of course, sellish institu
tions, and have the power to contract
or enlargo tho currency which they
thus control. And this is modulated
mere or loss, by the fluctuations of
trade, tho uncertain output of the
mines, and varying according to the
speculative interests and caprices of
tha managers thereof.
Xow the volume of our currencj
should not e governed or determined
by any such contingencies, or bo da
pendent upon private interests in any
manner whatever.
To avoid nnd remedy thi the gov
ernment ailords tho bust method,
through its own anthorLel issues, at
tainable. It has tha greater virtue of stability,
nnd its legal tender quality is beyond
dispute.
It has a fixed value, and. therefore
is not liable to tha objections which
bank notes provoke; while the fluctua
tions of trade cannot control or alter
its volume.
luis Is a great desideratum anci
ought to go far in not influencing
public opinion us to bring this result
The Toiler
The prosperity of tne tailor opens a
large fiold for theorizing on tho sur
vival of the misfittist.
If you are run over by a hearso it is
almost a sure sign that there will be a
funeral in your family.
Some men must think that the lamp
of life is a spirit-lamp, judging from
the way they pour in the alcohol.
When thoreisno hawk flying around
the biggest thing in the barnyard is
the strut of the smallest rooster.
sSi SWEEP MILL
Sent on Trial.
T'TJb.
RlVf
HERMAN-:-BROS.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
FOR TWO H0RS:S
Fuily Ciunranteed.
Grinds EAR CORN
AND SMALL GRAINS.
Special Cob Break in Dnvico
and oecoliar draw of Grinders. R
ftivM Uftfor VV'nrli. Itlnrn'N
r It, with team work tofU
Ten ill tba a any other.
ILLS.
THE FOOS M FG. CO. Sprinaf ielrf.O.
nlntninar
U1U U1J.U
!
to)
Hats
Cans
mm
Goods
BRANCH HOUSES:
BEATRICE, GRAND ISLAND, FALLS CITY, WEEPING WATER AIsD
AUBURN. 19m3
Special Attention to Mail Orders.
PRICES LOW.
1017 ft 10 0 mm. LINCOLN, NEB.
FARMERS !
BUY
YATES BROS.,
m m
Solid, Whole Stock Kip Boots.
Name and price stamped on every
Boot Evidence ol laith m the
quality of the goods.
ED. G. YATES,
1129 O Street. 1129.
Topeka Advocate: Whenever a man
is found who still worships at the old
party shrines, he is patted on the back
and pointed out as a level headed man.
Let him cease his idolatry and he at
once bocorues a crank or an anarchist.
WE HAVE GOT TO MOVE
SO WE OFFER
The Following Inducements:
Round Oaks, Cook Stoves aud Ba?e Heaters at a very low price, Washing
Machines at $4.50 each. We handle the
American Round Oak and Red Cross Stoves and Ranges.
We ask you to call and be convinced that we can sell you goods
Cheaper than any body.
1210 O St. J?. S. WHITE.
(Successor to Krusc & White)
LEADER IN LOW PRICES.
i
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