The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, September 25, 1903, Page 13, Image 13

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The Commoner.
JPTBMBER 26, 19,03.
13
nillam Shepard Bryan, of Baltimore
lity. TUG piauorm iujlvju iniuuijmi-
r to local issues, mo yiuun uu tuu
ire nucstion being interesting. That
;. .. V11-kTQ "AX7r linllovo fl-inf
lUUK la W3 iwiiwi.o. .,w ww..v.,v. .j
the political uesumea ua marymuu.
ihould be shaped and controlled oy
the white people 01 tue suite, ana
,'hile we disclaim any purpose to uo
iny injustice whatever to our colored
imilation, wo declare without reserve
jur resolute purpose to preserve in ev-
iy COuservuuve uuu tuuauuuuuui
my the ascendancy 01 our race.
It was announced from Minneap-
)lis, Minn., on September 16 that the
Minneapolis Women's Christian Tem
perance union will co-operate with the
national Women's Christian Temper
ance union in its effort to have Sena
tor Reed Smoot expelled from the
United States senate if, on investiga
tion, he shall be found to be a polyg-
nmist Blank forms of petitions are
being circulated throughout the coun
try and have been received by the lo
cal secretary and distributed through
out the city.
A cablegram from Manila under date
of September 16 says that one hun
dred cases of bubonic plague are re
ported in Tondo, the most northern
and populous suburban district of the
city. Of these cases, eighty have
proved fatal. The disease is also re
ported from other sections of tne isl
ands and cholera is also prevalent.
now county government act The vari
ous piatforms express approval of the
administration of Governor Dole and
recommendations are made that a
strong fight be made on the floor of the
national congress for the admission of
the Hawaiian islands to statehood.
Several of the platforms urge that a
determined effort bo made to secure
more liberal federal appropriations for
the Hawaiian islands, much work of
a necessary character being neglected
in the islands for lack of means to
properly carry it on.
The monument erected on the bat
tlefield of Antietam by the state New
Jersey was dedicated on September 17.
President Roosevelt attended the dedi
cation exercises and made an address.
Nearly 1,000 New Jersey survivors of
the civil war were present.
The international electrical workers
in session at Salt Lake passed a reso
lution indorsing the presidenial can
didacy of W. R. Hearst of New York.
In the district adjacent to La Crosse,
Wis., hundreds of families have been
driven from their homes by the en
croachments of the Mississippi river
which is flooded and out of its banks.
The damage loss will amount to hun
dreds of thousands of dollars.
-
The republican state convention of
Maryland met at Baltimore and nomi
nated for governor Stevenson A. Will
iams; atcorney general, George White
lock, and state comptroller, L. E. P.
Dennis. '
Fierce riots between the Jews and
Christians in which four Christians
and two Jews were killed and many
people seriously injured, are reported
from Gomeal, in the" government of
Moghileff, Russia. The trouble seems
to have begun with a quarrel between
a peasant and dealer and it required
the presence of troops to restore order.
An Associated press dispatch from
Norfolk, Va., under date of Septem
ber 17, says: The British steamship
Roxby, Captain Shields, which ar
rived here today from Port English,
has on board Domingo Ballo Reyar
baray, the only survivor of the crew of
twenty-two men on the British steam
ship Mexican, which foundered with
all on board off the Florida coast
Tuesday night. Reyarbaray caught a
piece of wreckage and managed to
keep up until he was seen yesterday
by the Roxby and rescued.
The storm that raged in and about
Manhattan island recently occasioned
a property loss of about $2,000,000 in
that neighborhood and it is feared
that thirty-six lives are lost Most of
the damage was done to sailing craft,
many of which were completely
wrecked.
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whmhnUpitoKHari niwaiWuMiMl III
7 wiMiiimmni whj 1
K. JC OHALMKUft W Ofclig,
DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO CHEWER,
HOMKTHIWO KNT1KKLY NKW IN CIIKWINO TOHACCO.
Mado I an Ant tru t Fa to 7 f 11 l best Wti t he Tobaccos
In V niul Pnrn fn Qvpnm intrrr.ti ault 1 .,. . tl a I-- r I
Arabia Iimkl tllO It Stlloltolo ft fllinw Mr. ftiwl't tUr, nuth li .. -i-...-
2. . 5r.,,'Iu!?1.t BW0 t0 8 lho br nth r TV l,1 t0 tl tt,,(1 AIM OIGKSTION. Acnt(
......., .,, .i tiuiniiAbiw in oiicwnr. nonii linn imp. rn miner v m iinin at
RUMBAOCO
1 bwo t c with Wild Ho
Lonia r New Y rk Kxehane .and receive, ClmrKcii prepaid, n TwoPou d llox of CiUMIIAdcO.
ilclorcncc: Tbo American Excbanir Hank, or Any O ber Uanklnx I stltutlon In Ht. Louis.
WETMORE MANUFACTURING CO., Carliton Building, St. Louis, Mo,
I Acetylene Gas
3:;;ft&$d;$ .
"RUNS LIKE A CLOCK." Ifc
BEST ILLUNIINANT J
...IN THE WORLD, f
For Farm, Home, Business and Town Lighting.
'Xi5.yAl'VinBl50 QBNKRAlORS ARB TIIB COST BHCAUSH they bavo IN
GflH ban flliolv Cruchcd. In Hlicnpjmllil nn In AT. Hlafn ami Pjinn.lk
.t .!-:. izt'z-" ' -.
m. uuuu ems tor juiroancmry ucncraior.
DEPENDENT POWER for lecdlngand u o LUMP Carbide, which ylo
iiiit uns han finely crushed. In micccssiul usoln 85 States and Canada.
jnt:
In MOUKor.d HUT
Special In
The republicans of the five counties
comprising the commonwealth of Ha
waii met in convention recently and
nominated candidates for the various
county offices which are to he filled
Jy ballot on November 3, the election
wing the first to be held under the
Not Hungry
when you should be means disordered
nerves, which, will lead to nervous
Prostration. Dr. Miles' Nervine is
guaranteed to benefit you or money
ttiunded. Hu l.- . i--
wk. Max Ukdioai, Co., Elkhart, lad. J service. New York Sun.
Plate Breaking,
A Pole on the east side makes his
living by breaking plates. He breaks
a considerable number each week for
applicants and receives a fee for bo
doing. The plate to be broken Is us
ually furnished by himself, but occa
sionally the customer provides it
Almost anybody might bo expected
to bo able to smash a plate with an
iron hammer, which Is the tool the old
man uses, but the curious thing about
his method is that the blow falls so
as to break the p.ate Into three pieces,
two of a certain size and one larger
and differently shaped from the oth
ers. There are few chipB and splin
terings from his piate-smashin?, and
never more nor less than the three
pieces.
The plates are.jhortuary plates and
are an important part of the burial
ceremony among certain orthodox
Jews. The two smaller pieces of the
potter's ware are applied to cover the
dead Derson's eyes, ana tne larger
and longer piece is meant to extend
from eyebrow to mouth. The believ
ers hold that such pieces of pottery
rcaro placed within the coffin assure
protection to the soul when it makes
its exit from the body a stipulated
time after burial.
"Thy pillow shall be the earth," is
construed as partial warrant for the
custom.
The secret of this particular method
of plate-breaking has come down from
rabbi to rabbi . rough many genera
tions. Originally the plate was split
with a sword. Later the breakage was
effected with a trowel. Now a hammer
nna-nra-ra n"Yvrrnnr v rnft mates ior mu
tuary use were supposed to issue one
and all from a certain potters Kiin
near Jerusalem, and some of the
plates were believed to be heirlooms
since King Solomon's day. am wun
the removal of the tribes from place
to place and the stress of poverty and
strange conditions it has come to be
that almost any plate will do if it be
potter's ware and not tin or metal
and if It is broken oy a person aumui-
ized to bless the ceremony
So this weazened old rabbi of a pe
culiar fast-disappearing sect among
the other orthodox Jews is called upon
by many to perform the ceremony.
And he has steady employment, even
though his constituents be among the
poorest of the ghetto's people and able
tn h nnlv a tithe of the fee which
used to be considered proper for such
rTciilinenlal. LOCMVH.LE, Ky., Aug. 28, UKKJ. The 15 Da Is Machln f. wo have sold
1!1!&.&.l,.ti?d 5r.c w.orkl"g pcricctly and havo mado us many rrlonds. DAYUfillT
ACETYLENE GA8 CO
KNEKQET1G, REPUTABLE- BUHINE88 MEN should wrlto for Uxj al proposition
, iui liitiumvu ciiiw Atsrniury. ounu ior oil w mil iraiaa UIIUIIOkU . J:
DAVIS ACETYLENE CO.. 6 Prospect St., Elkhart, Ind. iff
V7I Jj W 5 mk 7mim J ;f u rlJ l I Lm a
8nl
for
runs
ot-
Iochs .
4eMJa
taia
U. B. Standard
U U AJCAJ4TKKD
IUB
' ' ' I ' Jsi
ffn.nuirt ar
te DAYH' FKHE TKIAL
Eraryf&rmorandttockrKtMriihnnM hnmhown
BCAle. IiftTjwinonnrnd U h wortttornrtUfnaloa.
Yr tSt9.7& wis oITcp joh thn
RELIANT 5-Ton coJ?KndSGaLE
Ko looso welehtn. and amar&BLmi it to ht th ntiH.I .
of any ccaln m&da HO tna.ttAr whu thn nrlrvt. namn
orrntratatlon. So aura ar wa that it please that ?o nnnd It
on JJaya' Fr Trial and anaraataatt for Kite Year.
goalmplolBltthatroacanaatlt jroarulf. Ildoa't harota
eaxactlrplarab.aaaarwcr leral to watch aearatiy. Ho
. axport required. The UnllvaL t S.7 I XJalJ Urlnif.
InterohBnKoable Frta. fall Compound lira liitnm, No
ioom weieni. aaa tne mow carerui aaa oientltla caie oon-.
traction. Oar prlee is low becaaee wo bare no areata to par.
. U CHABK HEKCAJITIUE CO.. lfl W. 91k Wrtet, a 1 SHAM UTT, UO.
mmmmmmammmimmmmmmmm
Tiare la tan jrraUat
ncaia iiaream
eTare!are4
ONLY
$2915
Ball 8riag
The Commoner Condensed.
VOLUME LL
A Political Reference Book
44
c
HE COMMONER CONDENSED " was so well received last year that
it lias been decided to publish volume two in the same form. It will
be, as its title indicates, a condensed copy of the Second volume of
xne commoner, i ne euuonajs win en ujscubs questions 01 a permanent nature
will be reproduced in a book of about four hundred and eighty pages.
The work will contain a complete reference index which will make it a
valuable campaign hand-book. Facts and figures, arguments and reasoning on
leading issues, and information of value to those who Uke part in discussions
of live political questions, will be found in its pages.
"The Commoner Condensed " will be published, not for profit, but to en
able subscribers who have not kept a complete file of the paper to obtain the
important articles that have appeared during the year, in convenient form for
preservation. The publisher's price for the book will be $1.50 in cloth binding, 50
cents in paper cover. It is offered to subscribers on the following terms:
Ooc year's subscription to The Commoner and "The Commoner
Condensed," cloth bound $1.50
One year's subscription to The Commoner and " The Commoner
Condensed' paper cover $1.25
This offer is open to both new and renewing subscribers. To those who
have already paid in advance for the year 1903 the price is 50 cents in cloth, 25
cents in paper. ,,.. j, , j, , 1.
The book will be sent postage prepaid and will be ready for delivery about
OcL 1st. Orders will be entered as received, and filled in their turn, when the
books are ready. ,,., j j
A limited number of copies of Volume I of "The Commoner Condensed "
may still be had at the same price as Volume IL In ordering be careful to
6tate plainly which volume is wanted.
M2t THE COMMONER,
LINCOLN,
NEBRASKA.
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