The American. (Omaha, Nebraska) 1891-1899, September 21, 1894, Page 5, Image 5

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    I nVll Tf TUC TIPKFT tion- I know enough or my friends in
LUTAL IU InL I lUM-l. this tte to ay that they wllUtandby
me in using every effort to do what
ourht to be done to prevent Nebraska
Jack MacColl Not a Bolter This Year from MDg rla-wod with Kansas Col
orado and Oregon a state where in
vestments are injure and from which
cheap money flies, chiefly beoaue of It
dread that KpuHstIc principhs will
control and that the ordinary rule of
good faith will not obtain between men
engaged In business Lincoln Stale
Journal.
Nor Any Time.
Statement Credited to Him liiven an I'm
qualilled Iteulal.
Omaha, Sept. 17. Hon. J. II. Mac
Coll was an early vbltor at the head
quarter of the republican s'a:e cen
tral commitU at the Millard hotel this
morning. Colonel MacCoU as engag. d
for some time In shaking baud with
enthusiastic friends and in ikying his
A STOKV WITH A MURAL.
4,Tlie Major" on the A. 1". A. lo the New
York Sunday Adtertixer.
I have been a.-ked to bay soniethin
Pric-I Connolly (liarged With eu
Nellie llaunun will Not lie Tried Again.
Pl'Ll'TH, Minn., Sept. 17. Father
Connolly is now an exitmvlot, and goes
cott-free, and the binding twino fact
ory of the Siillwater iMinn ,) jn-niU-n-tlary
loses a laborer. Connolly had
ben sentenced to twenty year at hard
laW for the rapo of Nellie Ilannon,
one of his parishioner. Ho was taken
to Stillwater on January !rd, and im
mediately appealed to the Supreme
court, where the sentence wasset at.lde,
Last week Judge Lewis, of Duluth,
ordered County Attorney Dwan, of
Two Harbors, who conducted tlio proo-
.Mr4 detracts lanrelv from the value cution, to rem.rt within one week to C.
nf hi .tatement. ' O. Baldwin what disposition was to be
n v Ksth.-r Ducev said to the re-1 made of the cases.
"Your In- To the surprise anu cnagrin oi an
. . . v, ..,,.!. ; th A f A . but there are a (,m.bn wmi te be remarkaoiy wno nave wawucu uj .,. "
contentment a ueurei lucwi.r"" - - ,,i.
. . .i I f..w Pmhii ic romrressuien. inciuuin rut. J would be irreativ weaseu u r
entoiierforu. ... -r " .7" i- - - . . . - , , .... .... ..,., ,lf -,i,ii u
T notice Colonel Ma-Coli," said The Senator Pat Vlsn, wuoiain tryin to m could make a statement, out i auuw -
Journal correspondent, '"you are quoted string
the charge of Mgr. SU111 against
Archbishop Corrigan I In circulation
here, and atnorg the best Informed
there is little doubt that the moiudgnor
has taken a summary step In hi con
tention with the primate of New York.
A gentleman, who declined to let hi
name be quoted, give the assueauee
that he had seen letters in Archbishop
Corrigan" handwriting which, in the
oidr.ion of the eiieaker, gave weight
and color to the charge that are said
to have leen made against the Arch
bishop He added that he had good
reason to believe other letters of a sim
ilar character wire In existence. He
was not in a position, however, to pro
.liirw Biieh letters a fuct which, of
EsCAFLS THE TLX.
.iut in the various executive oi-
. w. ar,,T.,,r..H In the nn tliP A. P. A. Question, but that Is
ncers oi inoiviuu" -',( -
ww..,tirn of the eamDzn work. He not much in my line. I am a tolerably
wore a pleasant smile and an aspect of fair F.aptist myself, and my sympathies 1K)rtor who called on him:
in the interest of our southern not. hst Ui sav. You will rcauny see anu ar.uucm Kqiup. ...
ttedthat vourcalllne and war claims, and I do not therefore deem that It Is no email matter for mo to would not be tried again
n,u havp been sure had vou It oolitic to enter violently into this Kiv0 judgment when the name and the The case attracted a great deal of at-
,n th trms Drooosed to vou by controversy, and your Uncle Randolph act8 cf my ecclesiastical suierlor are tention at the lima of the trial, and the
O . . ... I i .Ll !..! . ..!. Ij f . I II l 14 ..I ,1... ui.i.ut n.lll mw na a
T H 11 .q I n IM I H HI II U UU Ui.U VI tTV. . . I w. h - T V I 1"- -
. M ' ' - - " 1 I
epect could have acquiesced In?" say, w ith vigor, or he stays out uut i
"I do not know who has quoted me as may at least relate an Incident bearln
making such a statement, " said Mao- on the question what I witnessed down
rnii nhnncrW the stub of a cicrar from at Alexander the other day when I at-
,.l v.1a mmtVi tr tViw other Rnd tended a political tratherin, I was sur-
D1UO UIO auwufc v I -
swinging one long limb over his knee as prised to find there a great many Irish
KOMISH lXTRHil'E.
he tilted back in his chair.
"I have never made such a statement,
because there has not been the slight
est ground for the making of such a
statement. No proposition was ever
made to me by any of the railroads
through any of their managers looking
toward the conduct of my canvass as it
might affect railroad interests. I made
my fight for the governorship fairly,
niw.nl v and above board and there aro
i .l,c mtfu.QD T a ni in v f i-ionriti I the
JUU liCOl Wi;ilUD, 0J ItU HO 1 ...j . . . .
are concerned, on account of the result.
I believe that Nebraska is most vitally
interfit-td in the election of the entire
rcnnMinun t.W-lrot.. You ITiaV OUOtO me J"61 JUty
great surprise to a great many who be
lieve the priest guilty as charged and
who consider that he should be pun-
Summary Dismissal ef I'elice OIHeers In kjhed to the fullest extent of the law.
SU Louis Alleged to Ik A. V. A s. vthor Connolly Is now out on 1,KX)
ST. Louis, Mo. Sept. 12. A regular k for acn injictment against him,
upheaval of the iwllce force of this city . d ln s, paui at probont. What
rcpuuncau h j , kl ticket. There.
as being heart and soul for it from head l"" J. T , . fK.
6 , fore Mister Prisldent, I move yez thai
to tail. You may also quote me as Bay- iote, ausicr i rwiuc ,
, .,,.., .L(,h.n,i our eotheemed citizen, Mr. Patrict
anii Dntr.h. I sunuose thev are mostly
old Union Army mercenaries, who iook piaco at tue mreuug oi lUD Attorney Uwan's motives were ior vno
havln no home to go to just settled like board last night, no less man twenty- ne has taken ln the case aro un
o,.? Btnrb-hrAfWthA war. Aovhow. four memours oi lue ioruo ucmg buui- known to vour correaiK)ndonl wno
lM RHUV ' 1 . .. . . , I
i hafa h wrv T Kized ud the old bums, marlly dischargea without notice oi any thnklf jt saf0 t0 Bay that had Connolly
Well, after the business of nominatln charges being preferred against them. hoca retriej in Duluth ho would wlth-
the candidates had begun in this con- It is claimed that two thirds or over 01 out doubt have been again convicted
t,-f.n on nl,i Trlnhman cot ud and the men dismissed are members oi tne unie8gli0iuethlni?unfore8een arises, this
said and I will repeat his language as A. f. a. anu tnat muir uouiif:" cnds this noteiious case, ana anotner
near as I can remember it: in the aiiegea list oi mumiHjrsu.p priestly scoundrel escapes the punish
"Mister Prisldent and glntlemln of that organization recently pumisncu mcnt whi,.h ho evidently deserves,
PnnIntlrm: Af vez olase. OI wud by the Western Huwiman, a iwoman ZENITH.
im-i,tn call ver attintlon to the fact uainonc puoucauou 01 i.u en,.
rt i,r U . Kt.ronir Oirish Catholic Chief of Police Harrigan when ques.
"""v . . .. . . ..V- Jl I
vote in this county and remind yez av tioned as to tne reason ior toe uudhu
of these men was very non-eomimimi
and stated that he had simply done as
the board had ordered him to do,
denoe of two rears and let, fie wants
this eriod for foreigner extended to
ten year, and the educational and
property provision Inserted ln the
naturalization law.
For the Increase of the army he only
has a general alleged need. The fear
of the eorreHndent are the echo of
foar which have taken possession of
many breast ln the last ten years, but
until another rae of statesmen are
elected to congress we will never ee
such legislation enacted. Ormifcu Mer
cury. ( onl rolled l.j The A. I. A.
Sl'PKKlOK, Wis., Sept. 15. The can
didate who arc now contending against
each other for the honor of represent
ing north Wlconslo at Washington
are Judge John J. Jenkins of Chlpcwa
Palls, who was placed ln the field by
the republican party; ex-Mayor F.d
ward C. Kenuedy of Sujnor, whom
the democrats thought would lo the
best man for the place, and William
Munro of Superior, the populist lender,
The political situation in the county
is a peculiar one. The American Pro
tective Association still holds control
of affairs and will dictate the nomina
tion this fall. The antl-Amerlcan Pro
tective Association element threaten to
launch a ticket of their own or fuse
with populists. Since the American
Protective Association has worked It
self into power the old warhorso jk1
ltlclana have been obliged to take
back seat.
can County Central Committee and uch
other buslne a may properly come
before the County Convention.
The representation in aid convention
will he as follow:
Nine from each ward In the city of
Omaha. Fourteen from South Omaha.
Five from each Country Precinct.
The place for holding caucuses and
primaries will be announced later.
Cuas. Us ITT Chairman
J. A. Tl'CKEK Secretary.
HUME IX POLITICS.
to that illimlnt in our body
ing that my friends stand with me anu
will be found on deck working heartily
for republican success ln the election of
Tom Majors as governor, and for the
success of those associated with him on
the ticket
O'Halohan, be placed In
that
atrick
nomination
MUST DECIDE IT.
for Sheriff unanimuss, and I call for a T10 a rchbisliops to Consider the Liquor
second." Question.
The motion was seconded, and Mr. New y0RK September 14. The
As a citizen of Nebraska, - iZ. step on our part, solely Inspired by the
Pastoral Letter From the Pope to the
Cardinal Bishop of Perugia,
"You are well aware, signer cardinal,
that ln pursuance of this impulse of our
cart, wc wrote also to the
emperor of the illustrious German na
tion, which, on account of the dilllcult
position of the Catholics in thatcountry,
called for our special solicitude. This
A Protest.
Omaha, Septomlxjr 17. Editor The
Amekican: In an editorial ln The
American last week I notice that you
refer to Satolll as "tho American
pope." It seems to me that the Italian
po)o in America would have been more
to the point. We, as Orangemen, do
not believe that any man who has not
compiled with the naturalization laws
of this country is entitled to bo called
"American." Foreign born I toman
Catholic priests, as a rule never become
citizens of tho United Slates and there
fore aro not entitled to such distinc
tion. AnOuanuemaN.
ST. LOUS ITEMS.
for sheriff. This business attended to,
a German fellow citizen rose and said:
"Mister Bresident und Shentlemens
ov aer convention; i rise me uj
told vou dot a lartre und responsible
as a taxpayer of the state, as a man
who is in somo degree identified with
its interests and anxious for its pro
gress, I believe 1hat the election of
Judge Holcomb would be a catastrophe
to the state. which every republican
oV,m.),I An Via host, tjl nrPVPllt. In mV
x t :n bavs der taxes
own town ano in my own county i win - .
. .i streight.
pieoge toe vote a m euui u. , dherefore, to blace in unanimous noml-
puoucau ior repuuiau fop dor offlce 0, Treasurc.r dot
"I am not much oi a speaner mysen known citizen und tax bayer, Fer-
or I would at once tske the stump, Dut , vnn IIoffmever. ov der First
olic societies will have to be considered
at the annual meeting of the Roman
Catholic archbishons. which will be
held October Ifi, in Philadelphia.
Should the Satolll ruling be extended
desire of seeing religious peace restored
to Germany, was favorably receiver by
the august emperor, and had the haj.py
result of bringing about friendly nego
tiations, in which It was not our inten
tion to obtain merely a truce tLt
would leave the door ojien to new con
whatever l can ao or wnaievur i uuusaj yard,''
to stimulate republican interest ana to G , enourh. The name of Mr. Von
elemend in dls city und goundry vos (an iraprobable event) the Denedlctine
gombosed ov Shermans who always Abbot of St. Vincent's, Pa., might have
und vote der dlcket Uy cho0tje between exclusion from the .... . . . . . ahoilt hv th. mnv.i
T . ! 31 k.LLI I . . . . . ,i NliliW. UUI m 't -V
lagusme Krcu uauuuu, direction of. any iwman atnouc so- ,ianUa a Mi ...im and durable
. .. .... , . .1 ' ,
clety and the withdrawal irom tue con- lmportance of thl object
trol of his big brewery. . . estimatod bv the wisdom of
4 V. .v., In nrVirkan hn.nrll t.ViA rllHt.Inil'H of
dinand von tionmejer, uv uor riioi. 4g a l-ast KesoiT.
Bishop Hirth, of .the Roman Catho
lic mission ln Uganda, Africa, Is find-
the empire are placed. We are
fident that they will extend to
con
us a
Possible Plot to Kill the PoH.
ROME, Sept. 12. Two men, supposed
to bo anarchists, were Sunday night
observed by the pontifical patrol to bo
lurking ln tho Vatican gardens, where
tho iope often sends tho day. The
patrol pursued and captured tlio men
as they were scaling the walls sur
rounding the gardens, after having
thrown away tho arms they carried.
It is not known whether the presence
of the men in tho gardens was a result
of a plot against the pope. Tho police
refuse to make any statement.
Then t&tion, I have concluded that it is neces-
Brown . s to nrint the New Testa-
peace
such a result will be fortunate also for
the empire, which, with Catholic con-
v a j I
gram," said ne as ne reacneu uown m nominated for county treasurer
his Inside pocket and pulled out a k liul American named
Western Union blank, "to the republi- a rfend whoge interest8 he wished ... . . Prot,;Stant8 are gl)read. the empire, which WIln u, co...
-atifinat.inn mpP.tinr to beheld at 7 , ' . " , . . . sciences at rest, Will linu, as in uiuu.
" a --r to aavance. uuuresseu liio wuranuu , oMi-vuhprii. i nfl cninr reason is
Lexington, Neb., my own town, this mode8ti y to this effect: that we cannot orevent our oeonle from
"Mr. President and Gentlemen of the peadinj it; everybody wishes to know
I Convention: I am greatly pleased that bow to read for baptism, except women
you have seen fit to recognize the great and 0id men. We are therefore prcpar
worth of our Irish and German fellow lnff an edition with notes from the holy
I - ... ....
citizens,and speaking tor mysclt nothing fathers." One can appreciate the bish
in
Omaha today. The paramount inter- friends Mr. O'Halohan and Mr. Von London.containin? 1,511 complete copies of Pope Leo Xlll., edited ny ttev.
ests of the state demand the election ot H fT e And now tx ive our . T,t.imnt.. R.10 volumes Joseph E. Keller, S. J., with the ap-
evening. It ought to give the He to
any suggestion of lukewarmncss on my
part. It is as follows:
Omaha, Neb., Sept. 17, 1894. Capt.
JNeb.:
C. W. McNamar, Lexington,
V11 .. A Un i fl .in flnn vnnAf-
"iJ has eiven me more pleasure than to ' troubles when one hears that
that imperative business calls me to vote for the nomination of my good junelast 89 boxes were dispatched from gla, and Is found In "The Lifoand Acts
past, Its most faltmui and oevotea sub
jects among tho sons of the Catholic
church.
"From the'vatican, August 27, 1878.
"Leo XIII., Pope."
This Is a paragraph from a "Pastoral
Letter" to the cardinal-bishop of Peru-
Hill not Exclude Saloon Men.
Dayton. O. Supt. 12. Most of tho
closing day's session of the Ohio coun
cil of the Catholic Knights of America
was given to heated discussion upon
proposed amendment to the constitution
of tho order excluding saloon-keciHjrs,
bartenders, and distillers from the
order, which was defeated. The Rev.
Father Myers of Cincinnati represented
the Roman Catholic saloon-keepers,
and the Rev. Father Graham made the
fight for the bishops.
Hill Succeed Satolll.
St. Louis, Mo. Sept. 17. Private In
formation from Rome is that if Mgr
Satolll Is made a cardinal Mgr. Tom
masl. subsecretary of state at Rome,
will succeed him ln America.
the repub lean ticket from head to tan. L. , t. an onnn haWfi Hm1 Rvmmfitrv.T ., .v. f. r.u n,i th nmhation of his eminence, the cardinal,
nv. rwittim i nnec- til T hfl I LlVItVV w ! ml J I I J 1 1 liifcl 11 I 1 1 if luLll VUO I'VIJ muuhi'vii---.
banc an auiuo mreiocu kia i , , 1 " i - . XT , mu ,
hoflp PB,vft tn namfi lor road sunervisor a iya nnnt.a ninrr Pan 'a K.n a. ftrcnDisnoD oi i.xtjw iurs. xuu uwi
ua, ww . w 1 I ;i;UB, 1UU UJjn.O wu vuiuiuk I i
I shall
election of the republican ticket.
FSIe-nedl J. H. MacColl. the sterling American
"I am especially interested," said 'Put out that darndKnow Nawthln!"
Colonel MacColl, "In having laid before yelled the friends of O Ha ohan. "Pud
tlio nnnnlA of wfistfrn Nebraska that
the success of the republican ticket friends of Von Hoffmeyer and out he
f Via .nt. nv nrntlnn went, heels over head. Order being
f irrition PntrnriSnS. Jn this sub- restored, a large portly gentleman rep
v. ' 'tj . I
ject the people west of the one hun
dredth meridian, irrespective of party,
are most vitally interested. By con-
ties, and 25,880 separate. copies of the
Gospels and Acts.
Hill Retaliate.
Terre Haute, Ind., Sept. 18. Quite
.. . I .31 .1
a sensation nas oeen caused oy me
action of the secretary of tho local
resenting the distrlbutln depot of a New lodge of the A. P. A. in turning over
York brewery, said: to the Roman Catholics the books and
"Shentlemens. dot vos veil done, records of the organization, so as to
in his preamble to the letter states:
"The rights of the holy see to its tem
poral power are held up with all the
firmness of him whose 'non possumus'
will never bo forgotten."
With all this, and thousands of other
proofs, tho Roman church claims that
she is not In politics.
fly V. X. lh: Klvli-rf.
St. Louis has five colored councils,
Tho A. P. A.' (and there are 35,0)0
In St. Louis) will not forget Sutton and
his art picture, Nana.
To help Rome win a point, John T.
Sutton played a nice hand for a Protes
U nt, before an Irish Roman Catholic
judge.
For Jesuitical meanness and falsa
oaths, trickery and deception, see the
case of James E. Tracy, reported ln
these columns.
John T. Sutton say that ho I placed
In an awkward (H)oltlon and that ha
must stand In with the police, Ho
must be running a disreputable business,
otherwise he would not want to stand
In with them.
Council No. 32 of St. Louis Is tho ban
ner council of Missouri. 1 have been an
A. P. A. three years and I neve" - '
nessod before such grac r.Bive
and well-conducted work ln any council
outside of Missouri as I did two weeks
ago Friday ln that council.
Friends, tho two Chicago newslwys
selling The American every day on
the streets of your city, nood your full
supjtort. Tell all your Protestant friends
of them and their pajor. We are A.
P. A.' tried and true. We will re
main at our guns, ln spite of Rome's
threats and persecutions. i
Henry C. Walker is a hustler. He Is
deserving of great consideration from
the friends here. He remained
ith us, whilo our friends ln great part
seemed to have deserted us, ln this our
hour of troublo and persecution. We
cordially thank Friend Walker for the
reat show of esteem he has accorded
Wo may to ln a position to re
pay him some day ln more ways than
one.
I see by a St. Louis paper that Al.
Cantwell, son of the West Side (Chl-
ago) brewer, is dead. Al. served a
term ln Jollet prison. He was a gam
bler and all-round rowdy. He Is the
man who knocked me down, and kicked
mo ln the faco when I was down, for
selling The Chicago American four
months ago In front of WooH's clothing
store ln Chicago. This was a nne
peclmen of a Christian to dictate io me
as to which paper I was to sell la tho
streets of an American city, my own
country. These are the kind of Chris
tians that Rome makes. But Al. la
dead now. He tried to rob a saloon
keeper. The latter shot him twlco la
the breast. Too bad! Al. should have
lod a bettor life. Parochial school
training probably was tho cause.
all
ventions and in private meetings they
have placed themselves on record as in
Dot vos a goot lesson to dose vellers enable them to expose the membership,
who been alvays bersecuting us mit der but the members of the A. P. A. now
Fears For the Nation.
'An American Citizen," writing in
the New York Tribune of recent date
favor of tha irrigation of the semi-arid uoly Kno Noddingism." openly declare that they will retaliate volce8 a fear which has become quite
. . . i a. T a 1 I . I 1 - 1 I ,,r -.11 I),,-. mf'n-k-il . . . .a. v.
m- V-rt ttv. rAirr.r.fo 1 ClrCl-Jb llltt- LUIS TX JT A UUD1UCB9 18 O ttUUUt UUO ICUJUiai Vi WW x -- la v-- otgrf ftV WQ irOUD-6 HI LUC It
1 r I i 1 t !, , V .1 - TT MntUfom I 0 to In h -irvliA nnfkQ rim tint tin a In . i a i t i -.1
and that the soil may surely give forth revive u. uuijr xvuw uu. - concerns tne inuux oi tue ioreigu bio-
1 aont say any mm mybuii. rur iuc uae puunu dvuouid. 403 ment In tulS COUniry. J w renieuies;
a. TT 1 T , -I 11 -111 1 V.rt irvMminAnf- StnA n f hn nam.
, i i a ? i i Tiresenii vuur u ui;lo ivau is oiuiuiy i w in lto kuo vi umm.u . uv v"--
f in-lrt.inn nrnHsfi9 ire watchin developments. paign for county offices,
of completion.
dow ln process oi completion, ine
water is there and the engineers state
that they will be able at a small ex
penditure of money to assure the results
desired, but for the funds we must look
SATOLLI VS. CORRIGAN.
A Roman Lie.
Terre Haute. Ind., Sept. 16. The
The Papal Delegate Files Charges Against Rev. M. M. McEvoy, pastor of St.
the Archbishop. Joseph's Roman Catholic church, as a
Washington, D. C, Sept. 15. The preliminary to his fermon today made
to the east and foreign capital must storm that na8 brewing in Roman the extraordinary statement that mem
come to ieDrasKa to carry out me Cathoiic ecclesiastical affairs has burst,
plans which have been projected. Th e lg no wer any doubt that Mgr.
"I am confident that the selection of Satolll, tho papal delegate has taken a
a populist governor would materially course that may lead to the disciplin
hinder, if it would not altogether pre- ing of Archbishop Corrigan, of New
vent, the "floating of irrigation bonds York. That charges have been made
for the western part of the state, against Archbishop Corrigan concern
While the question of irrigation from ing his opposition to Mgr. Satolli was
the standpoint of national assistance to admitted at the papal delegation here
the state is pending in congress, we today. The admission did not come
must look to ourselves to initiate this from Mgr. Satolli himself, but from a
movement, and we cannot afford, in member of his household, who has been
thoroughly conversant with all that
has transpired and all that has been
discussed in the Satolli home.
The attache read over the newspaper
this great financial crisis, to throw any
obstacles in the way of securing a
market for the bonds, which will quad
ruple the value of our lands and assure
a yearly crop to the people of the west- articles recently published concerning
em part of our state. I shall be found the charges against New York's arch
working with all my energy for the bishop and merely said: "That charges
success of the republican ticket, be- have been preferred I know to be true,
cause I have been a lifelong republican, but more than that I cannot say."
believe in its principles and am as good
a republican after as before a conven- New York, Sept. 17. The story of
bers of the American Protective Asso
ciation had circulated reports that
working girls who were Catholics had
been instructed to poison one person in
each Protestant family. Ho said he
desired to direct attention to this as
showing the disreputable character of
the organization.
A Joke on Leo.
The pope is said to have made an
awkward and amusing mistake when J.
G. S. Cox, editor of the Tablet, a Roman
Catholic newspaper published in Lon
don, England, was presented to him.
Catching of the words of introduction
only the announcement that his visitor
was the editor of a celebrated English
paper, the popo with a radiant smile
said, "II Punch." The pope must be
pardoned, however, if he does not read
all the Roman Catholic religious papers
sent to the Vatican.
this correspondent proposes to stop
Immigration, change the naturalization
laws, increase the army. Regarding
the first proposition, he would pass a
law excluding all who can not read or
write and also those who have not $100.
In this connection the figures of the
immigration bureau at New York City
are interesting. From January 1 to
November 1, 1892, 274,000 immigrants
landed at that port. Of this number
59,000 could not read or write, and of
the 202,000 immigrants over 20 years of
age only 8,000 had 1100 or over.
In the census report we find still
more startling figures. Over one-half
of the 73,000 indoor paupers in this
country are of foreign nativity. These
foreign paupers, it is argued, came to
this country within the last five years
In other words, the immigration of the
past five years furnishes as many
paupers as our whole population does,
Even making all allowances for the
error of deduction, the result is ap
palling.
The correspondent rehearses the
wrongs of preventing a native under 21
to vote while a foreigner of that age,
but ignorant of the language and instl
tut ions, Is allowed to vote after a res!
Interest in the A. P. A. Reviving.
ROCK FORD, III., Sept. 18. Interest
In the American Protective Associa
tion is reviving and tho organization
throughout Winnebago county has
taken on a new lease of life. Reports
from all over the county indicate that
it will undoubtedly be an active and
controlling clement in the political
campaign this fall.
Red Hat For Satolll.
London. Sept. l.'i. A special dis
patch from Rome says that Cardinal
Gibbons and Archbishop Corrigan will
be present at the consistory in Decern
ber, when Mgr. Satolll will receive the
rod hat. The special dispatch also say
that Mgr. Satolll will then leave the
United States.
The time Is not far away when the
Roman Catholic church of the republic
of the United States, at the order of
the pope, will refuse to pay their school
tax, and will send bullets to the breasts
of government agents rather than pay
it. It will come quickly as the click of
a trigger, and will be obeyed, of course,
as comirg from God Almighty Himself.
Mgr. Capd.
Call of Republican Convention.
In pursuance of a resolutien adopted
at a meeting of the Republican County
Central Committee, held in this city
July 14th 1894, a county convention is
hereby called of the republicans of
Douglas county, Nebraska, to meet in
Washington hall in Omaha Saturday
Sept., 29th 1894, at 2:30 o'clock P. M.,
for the purpose of placing ln nomina
tion the following candidates for office,
to-wlt Three State Senators, nine mem
bers of the House of Representatives,
one County Attorney, one County Com
missioner from the first Commissioner
District, one Assessor from each ward
in the city of Omaha, South Omaha
and each country precinct, and for the
further purpose of electing a Republl-
HARMStiS.
Thomas Jefferson warned us against
just what has befallen us. He said: In
proportion to their numbers they (for
eigners) will share with us the legisla
tion. They will Infuse into It their
spirit, warp and bias Its direction, and
render it a heterogeneous mass.
Madison said: "Foreign influence Is
truly a Grecian horse to the republic.
We cannot be too careful to exclude Its
entrance."
Van Burcn said: "Foreigners will
render our elections a curse Instead of
a blessing."
WHITNEY.
SCHOOL
SHOES.
You need a strong, durable Shoe
for School. We have
Boy 9' School !hoes, lace . . .
Vouth's School Shoes, lace ... 21?
Child's Kangaroo Calf. Sprluu Vif ,-,n
Heel at 11.25 mid
MisseV Kangaroo Cair. Spring Vi flfl
lhel 7
Child's Seal Goat, Spring "?")
Heel CllttJl
Misses' Seal Goat, Spring i flfk
Heel 7-.iyC
Misses' Donuola. Patent Tip. i (if I
Spring Heel atl.S5to
'You will Get Good
Value for Your Money.
W.N.Whitney,
103 So. 15th Street,
OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE.