SUPPLEMENT TOTHE LCUP CITY K0R7RWIS1ERR. Friday, October 13, 18!t«. — ■■■■■ - ♦---» Prominent Stump Speakers on Sound Money, Protection and National Honor. RECENT CAMPAIGN ORATORY. Makers of History Record Utterances Which Are Bound to Live for Ages. W inti the Hcpnldlea n I’urly Hi and* l*’or. MAJ. MiKINI.KV. “Tlic political xitualion of the country U peeulior. We have had few parallel* to our prenent political condition. We have but one political parly which i* united, and llmt i* our*. (Applit’.iae.) Diaeord reign* in nil other*. Our time bouorad opponent, the Itcinocrntic party, I* torn and divided. Two national con vention* have been held by it and two national ticket* presented, and their p*at foriu* arc totally different on every xilb Ject and in alnioat every aeetion. The PopullMt party Iia* merged it* organiza tion into lliut of the Chicago I tern o eratic and Sr. I.oui* *ilver organization*, and their allie* are for the moat part harmoiiiou* except tliat each one Ir ia a di»tinet and different candidate for vice* pre*ident. (Great laughter and ap plause.) “Happily the Hepnblienn party wn* __ . .. I I.!* ...1 i I. I. ■ .. . to fact iimi in spirit, anil them were ■ever better reason* for aueb union, and never greater necessity for it than now. (Cheers arid erics of ‘That's right.’) It la wedded, devotedly wedded, to party principles. It stands us it lias always atood, for an American protective tariff which shall raise enough money to con duct the several departments of the gov ernment, including liberal pension* to the Union soldiers. (Tremendous cheer ing and liurriilia for McKinley.) A tariff that will slop debts mid deficiencies anil make the treasury of the United State* once more safe and sound in every par ticular. (Applause.) It stands for a re ciprocity that seeks out tlie market* of the world for our surplus agricultural and manufacturing product* without sur rendering n single day's wages that be longs to the American workman. _ (Ap plause.) It believes hi preserving a home market for the American farmer (applause), in the opening of the Ameri can factories for the American working man (applause), and the opening up of a foreign market wherever it cun lie done with profit td nil the great interests of the United .State*. “It is, too, for sound money (great eheenligli every dollar wortli 100 cento (renew' d cheering), every dollar as good as gold (continued cheering), and it is op posed alike to tlie free and unlimited coinage of silver, and the issuance of Ir redeemable paper money to which the allied party seemed iirinly committed. (Great applause.) It has ulways kept silver at a parity with gold. It proposes to keep that silver money in circulation and preserve side by side gold and silver and paper, each the eijuul to the other, and each tlie equal of tlie best, and the best never to tie inferior to the best money known to the commercial nations of the world. (f.oud cheering.) It will continue to favor a policy that will give work to American citizens (ap plause;. markets to American farmers (cries of ‘That's what we want.’), and sound money to both. (Tremendous cheering* and cries of ‘Hurrah for Mc Kinley Pi We are now convinced after three years of experience, whatever may have been our political relations in the Vast, of the iruth of the observation of Webster, made more tiian half a century ago. You will recall that lie said: ■That is the truest American policy which shall most usefully employ Ameri can capital and American labor and best sustain the whole American population.’ (Great applause.) “ Vttpiriillupt' mill tun unfit/'. tures will iirostier together or fail to gether. Kqually true also were the words of John Quine.v Adams, ‘That the ftreat interests of this agricultural, tuni ng and manufacturing nation arc so linked in uuisou tlmt no neriiianent cause of mosncrity to tuti“of tlieiii enn operate without extending its influence to the other.’ IA|iplatis..i We cannot have commercial growth mid ixpansion with out national ami individual honor. “We cannot iiave commercial prosperity without tin- strictest integrity Isitli of goveruiiieut and citizen, tlteipucd ap plause and cries of 'That'* right!') The litmttclnl lionor of this government is of too va-.t import uni' , is entirely too *11 •red to !>e the football of party politics, ttireat applause and cries of 'tjood, good.’) Tin It. puMi. au party has main tallied It and Is pledged to maillMiu it. It has more than once stood between g.sal faith and dishonor and when it gave no tiie e.nitrol of tip. government our mitt.noil honor hud never before low it ao Inalt nn«l tiu*|ii -tooted t \pphtttac.) The Itepuldi*an party is pbolgtsl to main tain the credit of til* govertiineiit which ht Ultimately aviated with Its sjxticsa name ami honor, and ltd* it wdl do utt’ det .my circumstance, aud at any cost. (iirt.it cheering I "It laved the .re*lit of the government la the day a of tlo- war to It* utmost t... •too to preset* e I be got eriooelit IIm-11, • iinh. under t|i*l it was Imp oily eti •bled to d>> follow mg that mighty •lIHg.b* it iiflrd t.tir tf-till higher than k h-.-i ever ls « before and to. tv it muni In tin- eldest and w>.tltl.l-st na ttou* *.f th* worbi tAwil.its. and o of I U.u « tight ’i It i> |',.|g,,| li. Maintain it*. - rpt..l the , nrr. 0.1 •# ih, t-otnlry «f s bai.-«er f-iw »r kind tb ll baa b-11 tw..) by o iti.e,,) ait lb..toy It wab I be »bl gr. volx. b 4. last as gobl itsl has kept .1 as tt -.l as • * t tls. ll ha. Maiotaiu-d ..ini 1 «»< A Met MX. boot* . si 1. •er or ia|«« wi.it to g . I-1, sol it w ill M lake any Iw k. ihl step, ttlt. el ap §•#«*» and cries of tb -si |.S»|'t So (•Hi ever newt out of p air wbt- b (eft »- k.»|Bilh.m a is* -rd •• the |t> ob b»*n putty it‘ib s s( IA»t y right '1 'm« giv«i w.t d >.« w•* ai..»* than two thud* pwld **. «»» - u« * ■ MM 1 redtt nnlarwtdMsI (be h .to r n# tin «*n uusodn.t lb isa.lt) in l>. 104 mveti * i-.lttb-.y. .*/-■ , * than it bad • Vet basoy bvtofe tbs. w’ goon better •mpbet-wl and b * t#r p.t.l ib.w . 1 • t I* i(U, * th yttniiriUi tu .1 ry putt of the republic mul in no part an bile working man w ho wanted to work. (Tremendous applause.) Hryan I'or Flat Money. EX SENATOR WARNER MIIJbER. Mr. Hryan nt heart care* nothing for the free coinage of silver. Mr. Hryan is first and Iasi a believer in fiat money, mul he in only using the free coinage of silver to arrive at Hint finally. This is u serious charge to tunke, but if I cannot prove it I w ill apologize publicly for it. In the Septemlier number of the Arena —Just last month there is an article on the currency by Mr. Hryan. in which lie criticises Mr. Cleveland severely for using bonds in time of pence, and espe cially for selling them to a syndicate, lie says: "When the Flilted States, without waiting for tin* aid or consent of any other nation, opens Its mints to the free and unlimited eolliuge of gold iind silver ni the present legal ratio of 1li*n I it will bring teal relief to its poo pie, and will lend the way to the rest urn tiou of bimetallism throughout the world. It will then ho prepared to perfect its tiiiHiicinl system by furnishing u paper money invested with legal tender *|imli ties and auttleient in volume to anpply the needs of the government. Its nuper money will not be loaned then to favor ites, but will be paid out in the expenses of government, so that all muy receive the Itenollte.” This is fiat money, pure and simple. Mr. Hryan proposes to stop taxation and pay the i \peoses of tin government by printing lint money. This government once launched iipoii that boundless sea would ns certainly fall and go down as illii tile French republic, which wiis set up nt the close of the Iasi century by a lot of theorists ami revolutionists. They issued during a few years forty thousand millions of francs of tint money culled ussigiiats and mandats. They gave a legal-tender ipialily to it, but while It could [my debts they could not compel people to take it in pur chase. In other words, they could give legal-tender quality to the money. Inn they could not give purchasing power to it. From day to day it was issued, until limtlly It all disappeared ns utterly worthless. Not n single franc of it was ever paid or redeemed, and the |«'op|e who had parted with their property for it were rendered pnupi rs. '1 heir property was gone and the money they iiad received was valueless. Shall this lie « lesson to us? And can w" contemplate the probability of pulling into power as President of the Puited States a man who holds such views? In my humble opinion there is hut one wuy to bring us hack to prosper ity- ,111,1 ti, ihe onlli of nrogress. and thnl j* to return to tin? nyntern of nilininlM trill ion which has been of such great benefit to iim in the past, and to follow In that path, to follow the lamp of ex perience, To do that every true, honest American citizen, without distinction of party, should unite in this attempt at restoration, and should by un overwhelm ing majority stamp out now and forever tlie heresy and the folly of a cheap oud debased currency. llryan as an Orator. IIKNIIY I». KHTABKOOK. But Mr. Bryan I know somewhat, and find in hi* habits of life many things to admire, lie is a man of undoubted talent, a talent for the stage, perhup*. rather than for statecraft, lie is a kind husband and an indulgent father. He docs not smoke or chow, drink or swear, steal or gamble in short, he has not a single redeeming vice that I know of, unless it might he lying; and even there I have iiad spoil* of thinking lie believes himself. Moreover. Mr. Bryan is a man of rare eloquence, although anyone read ing his speeches would be pardoned for doubting the assertion. Ucdnoeu to cold type liis words become mere rant anil riouibust, while those self-same words, spoken in Bryan's voice—a voice us mellifluous ns the sweetest pine in yonder organ—would stir your heart, just as would the voice of n great sin ger, by the very quality of tone. Add to this a handsome, graceful presence and a lire and energy of action, and you can imagine that it matters very little to Mr. Bryan's audience what Mr. Bryan says, so long as lie keens on saying it. The mistake he made in Madison Bqnare garden was in the attempt to ar gue. He ought never to do that, for the divine attribute of reason was left out of his mental makeup. But, my friends, there is not a word in tins encomium which would not with equal truth and appropriateness apply to another famous Nebraskan, whose ex fdoits are inseparably linked with the listory of Omaha; whose habits are as regular as the sun. whose character is as impeccable as Bryan’s own, whose presence is just os handsome, whose 1 towers of speech were formerly just as great and have wrought many an audi ence to tears, to laughter and to fren zy; a man who, like Bryan, was pos sessed of a talking devil, and who today, iu Madison square, New York—that bourne from which no Nebraskan seems ever to return—if feeding breadcrumbs to tile sparrows. That man is Ceorge Francis Train. And it must lie remem bered that Mr. Train once ran for the prealdency, jn*t ii* .Mr. Bryun i* doing, on n ticket of Ida own. 1 any that tin ticket on which Mr. Bryun ia running for (lie prcaiilency ia eaaeutially Itia own, although two other gentlemen have been euanally mentioned in connection with it—one trying to get off and the Other trying to get on. Here, you oh aerve, ia a sort of political eerebtia. with not the beat of feeling tictivecil tile ca nine collateral*. Mr. Bryait’a predict! - nn-nt ia not without i-inhtirraaaineut. lie uniat feel aa bewildered with tliene two ttplH-udagea a* the proverbial cat with a like uiiuilHr of tail*, lie he a probably tin vailed ti|aiii .Mr. Sen all to atny where In- ia. wlu-rcaa Tom WuImiii wanta to know. He wanta to know tthere lie ia "at” ||i> umit* to know whether lie ia n candidate fur the viee-preal Mf Ml » H>« b |* |4 Mu# M#ltr f, «bb It Mf MtHk** 4 41 f« 4U U$ hJfrilfcM 11 #1 f*? *1 nil Ibftt **»*i|*t ||tw| It M/i* Ibu m» i tuMtibniJ i dfenlWf# If# Ud* M Mil * lb *4 iHil b#HiUlMft< L | M fill* t iwMOOtlwd 0*4* la*, V* AN EXACTING PATIENT. | []/] OCT A po..« U/ crouK< TREE suvee qp<; spectacles I [j (i PtH)BU. I *VKAtTH f Or. Hrynni •• Thoro, *lrt gnr.o nt tiny ohjoot, your w allot, For Inmtnnoe i It IooUh oh largo again, doesn't It'/” 11 nolo Snait ” At ay ho, hat It dooma’t wolgh nay honvlor.” -TWi'flxo Inli'i OrciiD. Congress, cun yon no, thus fur and no further, us hihl down ill this written doc ument. We mimcil mi officer to execute tic laws, lulled the President, conferring il|KU< him certain powers to execute mol curry out the provisions of Congress, ills powers were conferred and limited by the written eoiisliluthin; it had never Iii'cli doin' before, Wlmt Ihen? Still n further check In this new experiment. To what tribunal or wlmt umpire shall it he referred to decide noon the question whether Congress goes lieyond its writ ten license under this constitution of the United Slates, and to what umpire shall It he referred If the President shall fco beyond the powers conferred upon him hy tills constitution of the United States? We had created n congress Independ ent of the President; we hud created a President independent of the con gress, within the powers conferred by the written instrument. Then the fath ers decided that another check was necessary; tills President mid this Con gress, that we have set up, may go tie way of the French republic, or the Itoiitun republic, and of other systems of government that have Im-cii formed; even with u written constitution they may agree upon a certain construction. Wo will set up le-re a tribunal, far re moved from political contest, the Su preme court of the United Stales (ap plause), with power to say to the public body and the representatives of the state and the Senate- "Thus far shall you go In dealing with the rights of the peo ple. tints far and no farther, and we hold that you are forbidden to do these things hy lids constitution of the United States.’’ (Applause.) They said further that the President, occupying the office of the greatest i>o tciitute on earth, with these great pow ers conferred upon him. he may trims jcivM* thiM constitution of th<* United States, and there is no power to inter fere with him as it stands, except by wav of impeachment before the Senate, and if the Senate and the President agree, that isiwer would Ik* futile, so that we will name this great tribunal, far away from partisan politics, far away from the passions of elections, fur away from the dictation of party conven tions. and Mu- decision of this tribunal as to what may Is- done, or wlmt may not lie done, b.v the President or the Con gress of the United States, that decision shall he tinal mid binding on all the people of the United States. (Ap plause.) 1 KV.1.-4 io,1..|,'l Tn first place, we have this extraordinary proposition made. We find the powers conferred upon the President of the I'nited States to execute the laws of Congress in these two things: we find that by the law of Congress the Presi dent must see to it that the mails of the United Stales, the communications be tween our commercial tjeonle. shall In kept open; that the mails shall go at nil hazards. (Applause.) We find t ongress providing, a* be tween the states, that the President shall execute Liu- law regarding the free trans mission of freight and merchandise from state to state. We find tills power re sisted. and find in the declaration of tin party platforms made at Chicago a slate meut in effect that the President of the I’nited State* cannot execute the fed eral laws; eailllot execute the power conferred upon him l>> Congress and thr Constitution of the I'nited State*, except iiy leave of tin- governor of the state (applause), and tins is declared, fellow eiliaens mail; It well- this is declared l.v a issly of people ihnl eaiue together at Chieago and declared that they were Jacksuuliiu Ih-moerata. t Laughter.) Win. gentlemen, in IM-’tlf, .1 <.tin C. Cal houn advised that a convention gather in the state of South CnroliuH to cop aider the <|lie*!lun whether President Jackson cmild 1-teculi- tin* l.i\i tor the collection of tariff, this high |W«ledivc taiifi. and l > execute the tariff law in the state ut South Carolina That con 11 lit loti 1I11 lilh-l that the ft-Icrsl gov ernment, through it* Pirsid, ot, had im |HiWer to execute that federal law In that slate without the hive of the got* ru nout of South Carolina What did Jackson do? These people call lie IliM lv« « Jiftt IxfrUtlUlt I IcHUm MI*. iii*| | »|s itl III.* • i»t»l IN f.»rv die i,iu- i i'it«l t-f Jm k«'ii ofijifM < «»il, llti'ii in »•**ini**sin»l uf tin* ■ Ur il<- h|U 111« » w ill ihf litfiiluk t*f fNillth (*i V ' tijtu«, in tU*’ ttr«t iiwh*’. (A|iulaiw) i In tin* ijiiiip i|«* N* tl»v Inn • I .1 C lfl.il nit ||o« III lit! iltlt f lftM ut*if |f» larU-r \i %t Nr of vt- ti-«i lki»’ *»f I Nr *UI« * uiotUbb* oil I Nr *»»-••! •*> nt|| irHltAlo «t IlNlH olllilH# i|v4|(|ip o «»f H> tilN t‘«»**kl»s# I. V P|‘M 4*» ft .%»**! Itf «* M Ooftl III l**N|g i , I iil‘< HH, U*'l III •a* Ml* jam l4»**4!»••»» Nut til ^flltir tNrjf l*4*| UfH frl*i«*U Nr Moll m\mU i.4I ImNu t\ • IN* in iki4t if Nr I at F aN» 10 fit tNvO t f* »4#**0MiNN* 4*4 ft W'*’ tu Nl* I*f tUv Nli'iMi I *iU lutf Nlm NNiNrf itun It «(****. «u4 if \m \oM Mri lltUMlk Im4* «t til No fuN i|; \ umN MM NihiV \| -i fpilito i |tI** ftp* Mm fy |fy> i-lNrf Uf wiic* |o| t K| *N» Iclit i* *N »f tNl* - mUA11 % tNiiHliNt *1*4.1 lN>'f *| lNft4 1 if.not Hv jt*4l«** I'ilkM*«*« Jt INiutN t *io f *s4, v* t*# %*"• u itu - 4 |v»o I lulloim, who represents ttt'itlior the old ! heroic South Ilf lae uml Hordoli Ulld lluekner and llaui|>toii, nor the new South of enterprise and energy and nctiv ly and Inci-cuniug muiiilfacturc, ntood till ill the ('lilengo eoiiveiitiiyli ii lid pro e fa lined a new sectional intuit', the South and the Went iigaiimt I lie North mid the Lust. A new sectional issue lietween the North and the South! Why, Hod forbid! Illinoin nent o'it tlie (loner of her man- i hood to the roltion'n liallleiielil tinder Hrantand Logan and Oglenlir and I’a Ini er to ptlt all end to MeetlOlui Until In' tween the North and the South forever. Illinoin gave Lincoln to the rent oral loti of the Inion, that in liln hallowed mem ory the heartn of all the |teople might grow together in clone and lasting frieml nhip. Mv father went out under Win connilt'n /lag, and gave hin life that there nliould be ami nliotild remain a united people, i have eronxcd the old Manoli and Itixon'n line. Two weekn ago I : went from Wanliiugtoii to Richmond in four iiourn -it took notin' of you four j yearn to make the name journey. I have chinped in right good fellownhip the | liandn of the men who fouglit upon the other nide. The lieroen of that great j war South ami North -will never uguiu ; enlist in another neetiomil ntrife. it doe* not matter whether the Amerl- j ran cradle in rocked to the mimic of Yankee Doodle or the lullaby of Dixie, if tlie (lag of the nation in dinpluyed above it; and the American baby can be nafely (runted to pull about the floor the runty neabhurd and the battered eauieell, whether the inheritance lie from blue or gray. If. from the breast of a true moth er and the lips of a brave father, iln little moiiI in tilled with the glory of the Ameri can eoiintelliitioii. A new innue be* ween the Went and the Kant! why, Hod for bid! I am a part of that mighty Went. I know itn brave, enterprising, pioneer people. I have neen them rent-tie the wilderness and convert it into it garden. They have been greully aided by the an ninlunee of tlie Kant, lit tlie line of money which reprenentn the accumulated nav iugn of two centurion and a tin If of Lant ern thrift. The great Went cannot live and thrive without the cordial co-opera tion and support of the ntrong Kant, and (lie Last cannot live mid grow and thrive an it ought and should without th • cor dial co-operation, friendship and support of the mighty Went. United, we are a nation powerful for the welfare of all sections; divided, we are at the begin ning of the downfall of the republic. Ncbrnnkn put one star in the azure of tlie tlag, und Illinoin put another, but when they took their place* in the ting *... . t.. . e ins.,..,.. auti Nebraska. hut the slurs of the great est nation of the earth, shining for the welfare tirnl |>rotection of every unction and all the people. I.nlror Need* nn Unvarying unit Re liable Currency. FRANK H. UbACK. CANDIftATR FOR (iOVKRNOIt OF XKW YORK. “No muii'ii labor of yesterday or last year eun lie preserved, except by some representative or token of it. and money is tin- almost universally adopted agent lor that purpose. Nothing in the world -hnltld lie so anxious as labor that the token wliieh represents it sliould he un varying ami reliable. • • • Wlio can preset ve until tomorrow the i a la, r of to day? It ealiuot ho doue. and the only means of s«-curiug its Is-uellls is to re eeive and preserve some token which -hall stand in its stead and which may Is- used as future need" may require. And further on the speuker said: “If a man l* rouMwt II b a crime and im mni have redress. If a hank fails and pays him only VI cents oti the dollar, it is a misfortune, and he Is not yet without Iio|h‘ of recovery. Hut If he totes uwiiy 17 edits of ttvefjr dollar. It is his own fault, and he has iiolliiug to toudeluu Imt ids own folly, which will remain with turn much longer than bis money." CAVo i of liiltaiion. Mti.NATolt MtlHJtt Wdl, It is easy to mark up price* A man can go over bhv stocb of i *st* in j the i.o.rums and mutk them up tl'h a btne |m*io d. tail you .snoot go uvet the talari. < ami tbe wag. » of Inis country with a (due pencil In the morning and math them up (luting ..ur war. when we bad an In gated currency an.l prices rw, tW at.r •rs price of rt#miu»i.in-« rose tgt |,r ecu I . labor rose about bt pef rest. There was a wet tiar t.. labor of about -, i , I a. , i■ U u Mg. . lbs I vlltsl- I .a hot *lo ns. m * asv of a depreciated i Mitrtsi. tags behind >»th «i pih-ew. It b kstibwi oil btstory s,..| all rip-iSm* shows tl They tried It >1. | rate- lu tbe hit century lb.. If...I tb toHattoO o( lb* . .Ml.OcV u t,.. last evtd.l \ ,a irsil lb bistort at I hoi petted, yam hs4 in lb*-- debate* of It, f IrH. b .wnvsnti >M gl the 1,1*4. of tb*' ||,,. Iitlius wbh b re**n*Si.d g g.... | deal, Iw mam I. *|w. t*. tbe . on * cat ton at fbnugw ytat bud H .OH.IShtly •> .| "XXv am so great. Frame Is so i->n*r, < y so .i*llised. So free., that she .gw fame tbe p*>»* of morsel* owe ego maintain any *t*t.-ts *he asst*.' And th. s Is*., 4 la*, assigns!# bas*d «n tbe public far. I tb*re waa land behind them all: the# w*re M merely itr.d* wyabbr t#,**-*, | they went on. I think, to the amount of $H.t*KI,l*HI.IHKI, mill lllillll) the whole ntrueture collapncd. The government would not tnke them, the |ni|ier heemne uhnollltcly worlhlenN, mid when thill pa per been|ne wort llie** It wu* found, not in the blind* of the *peciilutnr*l no, it wu* found in the linnd* of the manu facturer*, of the lillnilic** inetl, of llie workingmen of France, It wu* on Hi cm (lint the |o*» fell. Iieinunc they Imd ex changed their Iniior nnd their earning* for till* wortlllc** J111jo r. 'I lull i* tile lli*loiy of IIII iilteiu|il* to juggle Witll llie eiirreney. The lo»* Imid* nlwiiy* in the mmiiic place. mid we eun form no ex ception to llie great natural law*. •fugglcr* wit It t lie National t'rwllt. f'llAIM liV llKI'KW. "Hrynn nnd He wall mid Wnf»on pro* elafm ii revolution. Theae juggler* with llie iintioiinl fuilli mid lint hum I credit, with luinlne** nnd proNpcrity, with In hot mill employment, are reekle**ly endeav oring to precipitate one of I hone eri*o* ill which capital mid hihor and home* and w«gc* ure inextricably involved. The right of revolution I * divine, hot it uiiiMt have nupretnc Ju*tlficnthoi. Under our eoii*tltutloii* mid iu*tItulinn* nnd low* ii* they cxlnt there i* In fore n* ill the prollli*e* of the l’opiili*tie lender* nothing hut uii invilntioii to eiiihark upon ltint *ea of repudiation and dWhon or which hn* wrecked every nnlioii nnd every lieople that ever embarked upon it. Tnl* revolution promiHc* to dcnlroy the Supreme court, to prevent the i*,ue of hoiid* and the u*e of the credit of the country for any |mrpo*e, to dehnae the ciirrcin y, to i**uc. if need he, irre deeninlde paper and lint money, nnd to dcKtroy tlie validity uiid I In- im iolnhillty of contract* between iiidividuui*. It propone* to veizc the railwny* mid the telegraph*, to enter upon u vague mid vuhI *y*tem of palernul government mid to dcNtroy tho*c element* of Ainerleatt liberty by which tie government govern* IciiHt and tlie individual bn* unlimited opportunity for lndu*triul biiMinc**, pro fi HMionnl mid i*diticul honor* mid emolu ment*. “No one bn* ever doubted the win don! of tlie futber* of our republic. A century of experiment bn* nlmndnutly nnd overwhelmingly juatiHed their fore right, *t:ite*mnh*liip and put riot i*m. They *nw the horror* of the French revolution, mid they made up their mind* to gnnrd their country nguiiiHt the ex ee*»e* of temporary mad lie**. They created tlie executive mid the leginlntive lirnnebe* of the government nnd made them nulijcct to frequent *ubmi**ion to tlie will nnd iudginciil of tlie uco.ile. but they enacted a written roust nut ion un der which the executive and the Icjdtfla live branches must tied, and then they created that new feature of government, that palladium of the right* of the peo ple and the permanence of our institu tion*. an independent judiciary, a court which could say to a wild I'ontrress: ‘You have overleaped the boundaries of the constitution and you must hrluir yourselves within its limits.’ They knew from tlie precedents of liberty behind them that the judiciary can always be trusted. There are two phiccs under our constitution where neither wealth nor power give* any ad vantage to the individual, where the richest and the poorest, the most exalted and the bum Idest stand on the smile plane; one is the ballot box and tin* other the court. And vet this Democratic mid Populistic al liance proposes to destroy this majestic tribunal and make it simply the echo of the party cam-us which control* Congress tills year and may be driven into oh •curity next," Integrity ofilie Courts. r.xm:\ATnit joint i\ a moos Kit. “There i* another pr«>tMM»ihott in tluvt platform which ought to strike limn to the heart of every good citimu, what ever Ids |obti* i»i uthiuif Urn* to retofi.rc may have I* cm, and that is the j>io|hm4 lion which ev il shocked Da > id It* mo lt Hill tlsnghtcri. whom I am fulutlj hop lug will idlin' out after a lutU- for sound timur), and that is the augjp*i)*»tt that wdicin- *cf the yiupreuic ioiii* of ill* 1 Klwtes in the « i • hr in St Sea who hate b»« that In IM S iw M»S| luati f Mog ot*f |Of *p|U d* w*w Sled tftjpMM I hr Wo*tSak So of th*' smiM, latf st»Ma kvatif Miskeiloi the and 1« at the tiMMo *• of the , *%» .»•» Mt treating M, |a hashing it (sftrtial *al tn §*♦*»% »d*o* for th« Mr I * mfc-tot SM*! feather setr M by |*#4«aa of I •hr iff* imam of ms “| do not Hhe to h* *r «*** n •«*! m*(i| t as spa |catges. * **»* 1; *t idaa*** Mi is the inhflifb lb en.No m (SHv III ■I* (*»r of oar Maihdoti \\ ** th*1 l*«>.pp St# aw si | ml kjr p-»isah«a, W hrM I Vg gf c to* imi go him,, aWs the tkailv, which may bo intended to In? a oonnera^fl live body, may he a revolutionary hodyJH we take comfort in the fact that we cao^fl rely ripen the putriotlnni, upon the wifr^fl ilom and ujmiu the fearleRMiieim of tbe^f Judiciary. t Apidaime.) The man wbo^f make* it bin hiininenn in puhlic or pri-^fl vate life to ii. Kirov the confidence of the^J people ill the judiciary In a puhlic n»-B my. (Applniine.) It in n cowardly thing^| to do. It i* the next niennent thing toH w!ii*pering noun thing about the clnirac-^f ter of a woman: and nothing on earth^f can he nicnner ltinn that, iApplntiM'.J^H It in tin- wnI thing to it, to puna un-^| Irl mlh comment and impeachment n|ittnH Judge*, and Hie Integrity of tliclr |HlpH pone*: been one a judge cannot COOW^| down from the bench and reaent an In-H Null like lliat. I nay the people In thhl^| elect inn ought to nee to it Hint no l’rcal-H -lint In elected upon n platform whichH enIndy proponen, by niiiuintnkable nug- V genthdi, to make the Supreme court of fl the I'nited Staten, mid other coiirtn in fl . n> nielli, the mere football of politicg,H the mere tool id iniriniiiiig, < Applause.) B “I think Mr. Itrynii HntV far in Id* H talk* and lie nnyn, I iiudcrntund. that H lie never Keen u crowd without wnnting fl In talk to d and I kj-uipulbixn with him H a little in tied renpect: I lined tn feel that fl way mynclf 11,i lighter I. hut It wan when fl I w an e good d. ill younger tlmii I nm fl now. and didn't know n great deal: H when I wan about ;Wi yenrn old (laugh* fl ti ll, alllioligli I never expect to kllOW fl an III inti UK I I bought | knew then fl iliilighteri Mr. Itrymi in bin niccche* fl Iiiin not iiiii>(i In Kiiy nlaiilt thin packing fl of the Siiprenie court, but It in In their B platform. That fact itnelf in another fl lennon which juntilie* the llcmocrntg fl of charm ter and renpeetnhlllly in n re- ■ toll agnliiKt the nomination made mill M ]iIn I fi.i ni promulgated m Chicago.'' m I Ml IIOOSTr.lt III. WoltK OK Ills HAT, I Come, pa line for a wldle In your pluy, M My Iniy, a And jolt down your hall and your hat. 3 A I tend to me well fl M illie u ntory I Hdl fl of a man who wan lempled to nlray. 9 My hoy, 9 And Hie runnier lie wore on bin lial. Jj Tliln man «... a laborer nkllled, 1 My boy, d • ontenfed mol happy lliereal; id I- Ilf IiIm lull A ,ia Mail* ii H Ami III* wage* were mini. Hut III* In art ivllli n lunging mi* (Hied. My buy, lor n roimter In wear on lit* liat. dm* ilny nnme demtigoguea came, M y boy, I lor ili'iinigogim mn] In-mm-rat), Ami npotited mill lirgreil In lii'lmir of free trade, Till lliey m l nil III* fnney nllmne. My boy. Tor a loonier lo pin on bin hat. He wlloopeil like mi linheelle loon. I My boy. Tor ii eamll'lnte fanny ami fat, Wlione Intinfi'll renown H,ihi eollap'iiil unit eame down; Ami ll felt like a pimelmod hulloon, My boy. On the runnier thul nut on Ihe hot. Now hln parllnunn final In the iionp. Sly hoy, Along with Ihe hill they begat. The eilekoon nil nigh Tor their vunlnhlng ole; Anil Ihe loonier In nlek wllli Ihe roup, Sly boy. Tour runnier llial rmle on Ihe bat. Ami iwnerly nlla In Ibe neat. My boy, where enni|H>tenee formerly oat, -Si ll ihe luhoring man, Thnoigh I him fiitmnin plan. In now Ii fl w ith nut fling to eul. Sly hoy, Hal the rooater he wore on bln bat. Then take warning ami never forget. My boy. Tree trmlera are hliml an a bat. Tbelr promlne of good In udvornlty'n final. And Ibe laborer long will regret. Sly boy. The roonler he wore on hln hat. - Indiatiapolla Journal A IKIT Ml LI. Hit SAN. Alma Hill Ilryan. may hln trllie deerenoe! Awoke one night from a deep dr.-uni of pem-e; And naw w11lilu the moonlight of hln room. Staking II rh-li and nilver-llke la hlooiu. An angel writing In a hook of gold; T.toeedlng gall inn! made Itlll Hryan hold. And to Ihe prenem-e In tile room he nald: "Wnut wrlfeat IhouV" Tbo vlnlon rained Itn head. Ami, with a look of what he might expert, Annwered. "Tbelr liaiuen who'll get It In Ihe Beck." "Anil uni I one?” linked Alton. "I don't know,” Iteplled He- angel. Alton niioke more low, lint elieerlly »t!ll, ami nuid. “I pray thee, nlr. Write me an one not liable to err." The angel wrote and vanlnhed. Tbo next nlgbt It eame again with a great November light. And allowed tile umnen of thono knocked gab ley-w cut; And In! Hill Hrynu'n name led all Ihe rent! —Lincoln (Neb.) Newa. COMB HOMB. "From Tbouiaa Wiilaon.'* O' Tlryan. dear Itryiiu, eoiue home with ru» now. The |iopn are nil reedy lo run; You hhIiI you were coming right beak to the l''atle. An hooji uh your talking wan done. Come home, come home, llryaii. dear Bryan, come home. Poor Altgi Id U dying mid l'mlen hun gone Hat. Don’t talk any more, hut eotue borne. ti! Itryau, dear llryaii, eotue borne with me now. Why don’t you earn* home while you can? Free *11*er'* all right ifor the heathen), that'n no. But you can't muff It down a free man. Come home, rome home, Bryuu, dear Bryan, come home, McKinley In ready to give you a blow, Tbut will klioek you MUltc Hat, no come borne l.loeutu (Neb ) Call. CAMPAIGN NOTES. fn the nliiry (rite that thnmutrpl* of lulnirliig torn are wearing McKinley hut loti* who intend to vote for llryuh r We n»ther gtienn iu>l. The lalmriiig min le hot that »ort of n hypocrite, If ne coy ri i tly eatUnate him, mid it 1* an iu«ult la hint to •»> otherwiee. Mr. M Kinky *akl: ‘'tkanl oiooeft never made kanl I:me*,'* Mr, IhiAit Mid: *'M g »»d '' \VM the people of l|y!> country have didicufty in detcruMUing wbkb in light ? Ai o>na the beat ope*' he* being Hub III thin campaign are llmae com ., troll* tlig' little two *lory (nni h at Canton, It twjaitft no argument to we »hy Hr. no o.t bin Irdfo**,** do iml waul *ir tala ikiul protmtkuU. It la the Hiiit* and nut the mint* that tudikih* of worker* want otiened. tltflp tic » lit, M >n lb. head and k t Ike wlwaMH 111 tke mi bine »b .(►* go around. The moat 1*1 Ming boovejr <*ue*lHIM )« that of wage* f"f the l*opt* ami a rut* IHvau lb MOW big .ailed tke lm«ln||— klibr tie man a den through Ike M uo< y mg ».tv. < *,«». in* and the nviito and fa. i an* itoaw In he# wake, Utef f< .dug Itryau* ».ml fen.ifd bl t'ongvee* the Imuet whu cam tut htm mint riiiwr Mi* a i.fgitiwg ih*t>miM| ..f in ki* tall* he on tke wrung •kin uf tke c t v .W|*.v meMlta W andail W, A fa. met1* U nit.ahn* of tke Mhnphl ■iloi d.dlii i tkait u would tm hhaaMMit J mg t o tab . i ail labeled I hi* ** > oi,.. " ».,d demanding dunbkr |N»* M it V td »