ft & P. tit ft f Ifltlm I wwy( g w w w w A WEEKLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO 1 II 11 I I III I 1 I It Vol.19. No. 952. BRYAN'S ROYAL WELCOME Fifty Thousand in Front of State House and Thundered a Hearty Welcome Home 5 William Jennings Bryan came home -to his home folks Wednesday after noon. Since landing on American soil he has been meeting "home folks," but the meeting last evening excelled all, and the Lincoln reception was the one that most touched his heart.- He said so. That statement was made from the north balcony of the state capitol before a sea of upturned faces, covering between three and four acres. From the train he had been , followed by his enthusiastic admirers to the home of his brother. There he was compelled to say a few words expressing his" pleasure at meeting home friends. He dismissed his ad ; mirers there that he might refresh himself, promising to meet them later on at the state capitol. When he ap peared on the balcony at 7:30, before a field covered with human beings crowded together as thickly as they could stand, he was greeted with a mighty cheer one that began at that point in the crowd where he could first be seen and rolled over the mass like a mighty wave as he came into full view. Thousands who were there could not hear a word he said, but they saw him and they made known their presence." The voice of Mr. Bryan, strong and clear as it is, wa.s not equal to the task set, and only those in a limited area could under stand clearly what he said. Thou aands stood with upturned faces dur ing his entire address, unable to hear a word, but pleased and entertained at the scene before them. The state house grounds were dark toward the close- of the address, but Mr. Bryan's figure stood out plainly in the light given by two clusters of strong ln candescents. Mr. Bryan's speech was the feature of the program of speak ing, the addresses of Mayor Brown and Governor Mickey being listened to with impatience. Mayor Brown's speech was very brief, and he fared -well, but the rather lengthy address : of Governor Mickey was more than the crowd "cared to hear and he was asked many times to give way to Lin coln's distinguished globe trotter! The governor was hooted and interrupted frequently, but insisted on delivering his entire address. . Mr. and Mrs. Bryan returned home from their travels around the world in good health, although fatigued by inconveniences of travel and the stren uous life they have been leading dur ing the past week. After a year's absence from his home city many of his neighbors de , sired to greet him. He rode with . bared head through the streets, recog nizing his friends and neighbors on every hand. Passing down South Seventeenth street where the family formerly lived, his attention was fre POLITICS, AGRICULTURE AND HOME Lincoln, Nebraska, quently directed to personal friends waving to him from the curb. At the reception they met him and shook his hand, congratulated him on his safe return, and emphasized the home wel coming. . His partisan friends were more than usually exuberant, and they predicted for hint political success sufficient to cure the political failures he has endured in the past. WELCOME IN NEW YORK Receives Tremendous Ovation Ad dresses 20,000 People on Issues Such a welcome as seldom in this country's history has been accorded a private citizen was given W. J. Bryan at Madison Square Garden in New York City on the evening of the 30th ult., in the celebration of his re turn from a year of foreign travel. As the guest of the Commercial Travelers' Anti-Trust league, Mr. Bry an was greeted by more than 20,000 persons, who filled the great structure from the floor to the upper gallery. The streets and avenues outside the garden were choked for blocks by other thousands who stood patiently for hours for the privilege of even a fleeting glance at the distinguished visitor. . ... The interior of the garden was a. waving sea of color. Every per son in the audience had been provid ed with an "American flag and every cheer from 20,000 throats was accentu ated by the waving of 20,000 staffs bearing the stars and stripes. When Mr. Bryan entered the hall the proceedings which had already be gun were brought to a temporary pause while for. eight minutes volley after volley of thunderous cheers rolled through the great building. When Chairman Tom L. Johnson in his introduction of Mr. Bryan referred to the guest of the evening as "the first citizen, if not the first official of the land not yet thefir st official," and Mr. Bryan rose, the great gather ing" broke out in unrestrained cheer ing, while the band played "Hail to the Chief." ; So touched was Mr. Bryan hv th welcome that as he stood waiting for me uuceis iu suusiae nis eyes filled with tears and he strode nervously from side to side of the narrow plat form. "How can I thank you for this wel come home?" he said. "My heart would be ungrateful if it did not con secrate itself to your service. It was kind to prepare this reception. It was kind of Governor Folk to come here all the way from Missouri. It was kind of Tom Johnson, that ex ample of the moral courage we so much need in this country, to tender his presence here. It was kind in you to recompense me fully in being ab sent so long from my native. land. I thank you. I return to the land of my 'birth, more proud of my citizen ship than ever before." The doors of Madison Square Gar den were opened at 5:30 o'clock and by that time hundreds of ticket hold ers were clamoring for admittance. Police lines had been formed for three blocks from- all entrances. In this way the early comers were well handled. The immense auditorium September 6, 1906 with its tiers of balconies and galler ies rising to the great glass roof be gan to fill up so quickly that the ush ers and policemen had difficulty in adhering to the seating arrangements. It was a gay spirited, big natured aud ience which had a cheer for every one. There were calls and eoimterealls from the various state delegations. Mr. Bryan was presented at 8:40 o'clock. The audience was on its feet as one man. The cheering which began at that instant did not end un til 8:48, and then only after Mr. Bryan had waved his hands frantically in an effort to still the waves of noise which rolled in from the audience and beat upon the speakers' platform. At first the man for whom the demonstration was planned stood bowing and smil echoes along the girderedetaoishrdlu ing. Then his attitude was one of appeal. GREATEST IN HISTORY State Fair Breaks Records in Charac ter of Exhibits and Attendance Monday ......... 5,080 Tuesday ........ ........... ...17,720 Wednesday ........ . .42,233 Wednesday Attendance Burlington coupons ...... , .. , .12,836 C. & N. W, coupons.. ... . . '. .'. 2,080 U. P. coupons. 1,661 Total coupons 16,577 General admissions .'. . . . . .22,457 Paid admissions 39,034 Exhibitors 1,136 Employers' clerks 417 Concessions r, ... . 683 General complimentary ....... 252 Press-... 711 Total at gates 42,233 Ampitheatre .......... .12,936 Total 55,169 All records for a single day's at tendance at the state fair were smashed beyond recognition by the immense crowd which swarmed through the gates Wednesday. The banner day crowd of last year's fair, which was accounted easily the larg est single day's record in the history of the exposition up to that time, was rendered a mere memory. Forty-two thousand two hundred and thirty-three people, nearly 15.000 more than psssed through the gates on Thursday of fast year, were admitted on tickets. This number by no means indicates the total attendance, either, for tickets were not taken for children, thousands of whom were on the grounds. As it was," however, the total-attendance for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this year's fair, is already almost two thousand in excess of the entire five days last year. The excess over the first three davs of the exposition of 1905 is about 13,000. It is believed by the officers of the fair that yes terday's attendance will be almost if not duplicated today, since thousands of people arrivc-d in the city on the late trains Wednesday for the Bryan reception, who were not able to at tend the fair then but will do so on Thursday. , LIFE Subscription $1.00 PAY A LAST TRIBUTE Thousands View the Remains of Ed ward Rosewater at Omaha Prom inent Men Attend Funeral Tlie. funeral of Edward Rosewater, late proprietor and editor of the Oma ha Bee, who was found dead Friday morning, occurred Sunday afternoon with Masonic honors, from the ro tunda of the Bee building. The body was exposed to public view between the hours of twelve and ' three o'clock, during which time many thousfjids of people of all classes filed past the casket. Never during his long and active life was there such a token of respect to the memory of Edward Rosewater as was paid by the thousands who thronged the Bee building where the last obsequies were held. It was an outpouring of people in all walks of life, from the., highest Nebraska offi cials to the humblest employe of the newspaper or building company, and all united in their expressions of rev erence for a man who had for half a century labored unceasingly and un tirely for the rights of the people as he saw them. The spacious court of the Bee build ing, one of the prides of Mr. Rose water's life was a solemn chamber of mourning and it was sombre with the Imposing tokens of. death. The court on every floor was filled and thousands unable to find standing room In the great building, thronged the streets outside or sat on the sloping lawns of the court house opposite. Sim plicity, which characterized every phase of Mr. Rosewater's life, marked the proceedings. It was a common remark that Mr. Rosewater's countenance looked most natural and the thousands who took a last look at the familiar features dur ing the three hours before the services began, showed by their sad faces and moistened eyes the loss which they felt In his death. The ceremony consisted of the Ma sonic ritual service, which was con ducted by Worshipful Master Charles L. Porter, assisted by George W. Lin inger, followed by addresses by Dr. George L. Miller, Robert Colwell and W. J. Connell, of Omaha'; Norris Brown, attorney general of Nebraska, and Melvin "R. Hopewell, republican nominee for lieutenant governor. -At the conclusion of the addresses a quartet sang "Lead Kindly Light.' The services in the rotunda were closed with an impressive Masonic eeremony with prayer by Rabbi Cohn, of Temple Israel. Cj Hundreds catr.e from out in the state and joined with the thousands in Omaha to make the number the larg est ever assembled in Nebraska on a similar occasion the outpouring of common people to the funeral of a private citizen ever assembled in the country.