.-r- V ' Ul TOW BuMi J We spioodid BargaioS iP Household Goods "We Have SKATES For the Boys and Girls, rang- ing in price from - - - We Have SLEDS and SLEICHS Juet the thing to gladden the heart of any boy during this fine skating season. We sell them at all prices. We also have an assortment of Toys which you would do well to call and 6ee in making your purchases. Lobeck Merchandise must be conducted by the courts of the state, unless the accused be a member of the Supreme Council and the act charged against said supreme member be committed as such and not as a member of a subordinate or state council. The presidents and executive boards of states have the right to deal with all councils within said states to or ganize and suspend either councils or members, and to bring to as speedy a trial as the circumstances warrant, without any interference from the su preme office. If, however, for any reason, the state officials refuse to afford relief to the accused or accusor within a reasonable time, or either party is dissatisfied with the findings of the state court, then and only then will an applicant to the supreme body lie. Hrovided, however, that whenever the existence or usefulnes of the order Is jeopardized by the Incompetence or malad ministra tion of the state officers, the supreme may Interfere when the facts warrant the Interference for the good of the order. But let me reiterate what I have often stated, that no accusations founded upon mere hearsay, gossip or newspaper reports can be regarded in the supreme office as charges, nor can the supreme officers be expected to act upon them. I would add. in conclusion, that no member of the order who has a good cause need fear for the result, provided he follows the constitution and code to the letter, while I regret to state, many a good cause has been lost be cause the constitutional methods of re dress were ignored or overlooked. The pronounced war openly declared and bitterly waged against the Ameri can Protective Association by the greater portion of the public press, when the order was In Its infancy, has practically surrendered to the pressure op public sentiment, which is largely with ub when not biased by party af fections or strong personal interests, yet other means more deadly, because more subtle and disguised under the mask of friendship, seek to accomplish what the press failed in; either by dis rupting the order from within or di verting it from its original purpose and making it a tool of some political clique or party. This smooth profes sional politician, usually a parasite of one or the other of the old political parties, who comes among us commis sioned to destroy us, and who, like Judas of old, cannot receive the silver pieces of political preferment at the hands of his masters until he has be trayed his fellows. More real injury is done to the order by a score of such f ellows in one month than th priests of 1516 and are always on the move, QQa a 01 TIC uJ) IV I V F 1516 Rome could accomplish in a lifetime, for they destroy where they cannot pervert to the uses of their masters. I am pleased to learn from many sources that these Benedict Arnolds of A. P. A. -ism are being unmasked In In large numbers and their member ship in our beloved order Is being ren dered intolerable to them. Wherever the loyal members of the organization perform their duties and regularly at tend their councils this is invariably the case. Treachory has no show where patriotism and honesty are on guard. I am far from being an advo cate of drastic remedies, but when one of these spies or traitors is discovered no lawful method to rid the order of his presence Is too strong to be applied. In many places Judas has come among us, and being unmasked before he accomplished his sinister purpose or else disgusted at continuous failure, has retired precipitately in order to avoid expulsion. He will thereafter be found, for a few months at least, at the head of a new organization that is weakly imitative of the A. P. A. Our only regret should be then when such persons rid the order of their own per nicious presence, they frequently take with them members of our organiza tion who are less discerning than they are patriotic and honest, yet It has been my experience that the worthy ones usually return to the parent fold, while the unworthy, in an insignificant minority, plot themselves out of or ganized existence In a very short time, Illustrating the old proerb that "birds of a feather flock together." Let me urge the members of the order to be watchful of such fellows without engendering the spirit of distrust be tween friend and friend. By eternal vigilance only can we preserve our order pure. Councils cannot be too caeeful as to whom they admit to membership nor too discrelt as to whom they commit the lnentity of members. State doun ells, In particular, should refuse to fur nish to all persons not absolutely and legally entitled to receive the same, names and addresses, of subordinate councils or the location and night of meeting of said councils and the officers thereof. An Imprudent neg lect to observe such precautions has caused much trouble in some localities that might well have been avoided. An Incident, to me of the most grave Importance, but which does not appear to have engaged the attention of the order ae completely as Its significance merits, is the new Fenian movement, which originated with the Irish Na tional Congress at Chicago, September 26, 1895. The movement is especially significant to the patriotic orders owing to the fact that even the most 1518 Capitol Avenue. Near Sixteenth Street. and new departments are being added every week. We are now STOVES! We have sold a large number of our different kinds of Heating Stoves, which have in every instance given the best of satisfaction. IXL. FNGES. AMERICAN VFNTILATOR. ST0VE5 i; GREAT WESTERN OAKS. THE MOST COMPLETE IN THE CITY AT rOVUL,Alt PRICES. There is not a better Stove made than these. for heating dwellings, stores and public buildings. See us for estimates. and 1518 Capitol ardent agitator tor Irish independence, as well as the most Ignorant of that following, have at last conceded the inpractlcablllty of their scheme. It needs no clairvoyant gift to detect the true bent of the conspiracy hatched at Chloago. The purpose of Ihe move ment is to Instruct in the manual of arms an elementary military tactics every papist who is capable of carry ing a rifle. Even now, large companies are forming in every dity of impor tance and armories are being stocked with military equipments. Even were the purpose of the move ment what it claims to be, the presence in our midst of these military bodies, added to the million or more members of papal secret, religious and benefit societies, the greater proportion of which are armed and drilled, consti tutes a standing menace to our nation, which, although perhaps in time of peace is Innocuous, in a notional crisis would be sufficiently strong to take ad vantage of critical conditions, and clashing interests to demand conces sions from the nation that would ut terly destroy our non-sectarian repub lic, or establish In power an adminis tration subservient to papal interests. A war between capital and labor, a conflict with a foreign nation or a fight founded on sectional or racial interests would provide an opportunity of which these battalions of a papal despot, un der priestly domination, would not be ow to take advantage, and with such an opportunity In view these battalions are, unmistakably being organized. In the early paragraphs of this com munication I have advocated the sup pression by act of congress of all mili tary organizations whatsoever, yet if this cannot be accomplished at an early date, I strongly recommend the mem bers of patrlotio orders to organize military companies independently, under a separate ritual, pledged to the preservation, by force of arms If neces sary, of the Constitution of the United States and the republic as it now ex ists. While I, with all other men of reason and Intelligence, am apposed to anything In the nature of an A. P. A. militia, as being contrary to the spirit of the constitution, I am strongly of the opinion that if congres s refuses to suppress the rapidly increasing and in cendiary army corps of the papacy, now organized in all its military splen dor and insolence upon American soil, if our national government, by Its cul pable inactivity, gives governmental consent to such an outrage, it Is highly necessary that the patriots of the na tion should take such self-protective measures as are not inconsistent with their duty as law abiding citizens. I draw the attention of the order to this matter in response to many appli BANQUET LAMPS. Glassware, Water Sets, Tableware, Vases. Rogers Plated Knives and Forks, Rogers' Tea Spoons, Rogers' Table Spoons. Plated Knives, Forks and Spoon9 in Sets for the Little Folks. AN at the Lowest Prices. The Popularity Of Our . . . Silver Dollar Flour Continues to increase, and after you have tried one Sack you will use no other. Avenue, OMAHA, cations received by me from various members and councils for permission to organize military companies, and while It is beyond my powers to sanction the organization of such bodies within the councils of our order, the supreme jur isdiction extends no farther and cannot forbid, nor would It be liable to oppose any such movement prudently con ducted. The fact should be borne In mind by those who, frequently with the best intentions In the world, would graft upon our organization side Issues, that the American Protective Associa tion is purely political and dependent entirely upon the ballot-box for the ac complishment of its purposes. When I look back over the last few years generally, and the past six months in particular, and mark the progress of our order; when I see the results of the labors of Its vast army of workers, politically and socially; as I watch the intellectual and patriotic awakening of the people from their sleep of a quarter of a century and the rapid strides that the nation as a whole is making towards the perfection of its political machinery and the perfection of its politics, I feel that although the purposes of the American Protective Association are not yet nearly accom plished, the organization has written a page in the history of the republic that time will never efface. While I am convinced that nothing of its kind so perfect In its mechanism or so far-reaching In Its effect has ever been devised within the history of the country, I am of the opinion that much of the funds of the order are used In channels which yield absolutely no re turn. One of the greatest drains upon the treasury of the order is the annual convention of the Cupreme Council, which constitutes a burden to the state and subordinate jurisdictions that might well be dispensed with, at least one year out of two or two years out of three. I mean by this that I believe biennial or triennial sessions of the Supreme Council would answer all the purposes of the organization at a half or a third of the expense now involved in annual sessions. At the same time, I believe your supreme officers would be enabled to do much more effective work in a two or three years' term than they are enabled to do at present under a system which barely enables the officers of a new administration to acquaint themselves with the routine and dotalk&f their offices before they are compelled to prepare to yield their positions to possible successors. The money tf us saved could be converted to much better and more useful ends and the valuable time of the members of the supreme body saved. It is with the greatest satisfaction thf,t I have observed that not only the We Soli r ii J ii i rtniin n UAU iiiiiiiiii n wiinii Company, NEB. Increase of the power of woman in poll tics, but also the rooognltlon that or ganized agitation for equal suffrage is receiving at the hands of the press and public alike. The fret that the claim is being regarded seriously is certain indication of its ultimate success, and I trust the order at large will turn its attention to the cultivation of a fiold from which so rich a harvest of pa triotism and reform may be reaped. Although great results have been and can yet be achieved, not only by individuals as organizers, but by the noble and disinterested patriotic press, I am pained to oqserve that the latter has neither been patronized as it should have been nor supported as its untiring efforts In the cause give it a right to expect. Thus, for lack of the proper sinews of war its usefulness has been Impaired and it has failed to accsmpllsh much that it might have been enabled to ac complish had It half received the rec ognition it had a right to expect. As I am no longer the proprietor of a newspaper of this class, having dis posed of the Patriotic .American because my official duties have occupied my entire time for many months past, I feel that I may speak as strongly as I like upon this subject without the fear of my motives being misconstrued, and I assert, as the result of many years' personal and costly experience In the newspaper and patrlotio fields, that there Is no factor that tends so much toward building up and maintaining our councils os our A. P. A. press. They may justly be termed the apos tles of our principles. Yet, as I have said, the usefulness of our patriotic newspapers has been weakened and their influence circum scribed by ihe unfavorable conditions surrounding them. If they are to sur vive and become permanent they must be In a position to compete on terms of equality with the ordinary weekly press, and must be prepared to supply the public, not only with matter that is at least 90 per cent, editorial, but with the most costly of all, the essen tials of a well-conducted weekly news exclusive, authentic and unimpeach able news from the most reliable sources. The reading public are quicker to draw their own conclusions from a well digested news item than they were a decade or two ago, when the editorial pen drew their conclusions for them. My knowledge of the necessities of our patriotio press, in order to put it upon an endurable and substantial foot ing, prompted me both at the Des Moines and Milwaukee sessions of the Supreme Council, to urge upon that body the establishment of a national organ and prlntlng'house of the order, offering Our stationery Department Is under the management of Miss Esther Fried, and the line offered Is Complete. Books KCreraHoliday Books Envelopes, Writing Paper, Blank Books, Etc. Hit) Celebrated- rj SHERIDAN COAL Nothing better in the market and delivered to any part of the city. ... JIN I WE OFFER A LA ROE LINE OP Carpenters' Tools, Builders' Hardware, Tinware, Graniteware and Woodenware. centrally located, founded and main talned by stockholders composed of members of patrlotio orders and man aged and directed by the A. P. A., ex ecutive board until such time as a fusion of the patriotio orders or a mutual basis of co-operation should be agreed upon, when the enterprise should past Into the hands of a board of directors composed of representa tives of the amalgated bodies or from properly selected members of each order. A newspaper so established would be head centre for all news of Interest to our order,' and Instead as would ap pear at first glance of entering Into competition with the regular weekly patrlotio presR, would be of immense benefit to it, and by furnishing at a nominal cost all the current patrlotio news, either in the form of plates or printad "insldes," would enable our over-worked and under-paid editors and publishers to place into competition with the regular press a newspaper In comparably superior because reliable and independent in its tone, at a much less cost. At present nearly all the news that reaches the orders has gone through the band of one or the other of the reg ular news agencies, of whom I regret to be compelled to acknowledge, the Jes uits have become the predominating power in the editorial departments. The above Is one of many substantial reasons why such an organ should be established. Yet another reason Is that a tithe of the revenue derived from such an en terprise would more than operate the order independent of per capita, and yet leave a handsome dividend for the Investors. But the chief and most potent reason of all Is that such an institution Is ab solutely necessary in a crisis line the present, when the papacy and other enemies of the nation are bending every effort (efforts in which I regret to ad mit they are only too skillful and gen erally successful) to prostitute the pub lic press and the bosses of the parties to their unpatriotic and nefarious ends. We need such an organ to keep tab on our legislators; an organ that will as certain the truth and speak it, unedited either by priest or monopolist; an or gan whose voice our people will credit and whose unqualified independence and veracity the people at large will eventually appreciate. The matter was placed In the hands of the supreme executive board by the supreme council at Des Moines, and by that body entrusted to me; re-endorsed by the supreme body at Mllwaukee.and I urged upon the councils to take im mediate action for the purchase of Concluded on page 8,