.-? --' v- A fc &il r F3 JKs .1 SOME MORE DEMOCRATS, POPULISTS AKD SILVER ,4 M !"& fix ... SL t r ex-secretary carlisle will support Mckinley BRYAN HAS LOST NEWSPAPER SUPPORT COL. JAMES R. CAMPBELL BELIEVES IN EXPANSION SL t Tkt 'A ' ' i'4 ' - :, wwfmmwaj of a Sound to the covered by two saade They still held He said: "The greetest crlese, short of IVMt,tlMt cmM be iKtei against the ta this cmmmtry wmM he te cosrtlscatc Ms Isher for the heaef itof the employer by destroy lag the value of the ssoaey la which Ms wares are paid. Bat, geatle m, this Irreparable wroag caa ever he perpetrated aader our systeai f fpvcraaseat, unless the lahtriar hbuself assists ia fergine; his owa chaias." If on. Joha O. Carlisle, Democrat. Ex Secretary of the Treasury, Chicago, April 15, 1896. a Carlisle, WILLIAM HINTZ AND HIS EXPERIENCE WITH SHEEP. William Hints, oae of the best known German farmers in Hancock County, Ohio, gives this reason for his conversion from Bryanism: "I used to be a Democrat, and I was one until I found that by voting the Democratic ticket I was voting against my sheep. I had a big flock of sheep on my farm. The Democratic party in 1892 initiated free trade and took the duty off wool. The price fell to 11 cents. It made me think. I studied the ques tion hard and conscientiously, and from all sides. I looked at it in an unbiased manner. What was good for me certainly must be good for my neighbor, and he must also suf fer with me. If the price of my wool depreciated, the cost of clothes might be less, but I would have no money to buy them. I studied the matter carefully, and came to the MORE NEBRA5KAN5 LEAVE BRYAN'S STANDARD Dr. J. T. Emigh, Red Cloud. William Kent, Sr., retired farmer, Red Cloud. J. S. Dyer, stock buyer. Red Cloud. Ed. Dyer, stock buyer, Red Cloud. Geo. Blair, merchant, Red Cloud. Joe Blair, clerk. Red Cloud. Bert Blair, clerk. .Red Cloud. Paul Storey, clerk, Red Cloud. Hub. Henry, farmer, Red Cloud. M. R. Bentley. capitalist, Red Cloud. Thos. Penman, merchant, Red Cloud. Geo. Lindsey, farmer (cattle), Red Cloud. Sam Kizer, carpenter, Red Cloud. Will Kizer, carpenter, Red Cloud. Clarence Kizer, carpenter, Red Cloud. Jim Brown, carpenter, Red Cloud. Henry Brown, carpenter, Red Cloud. J. S. Geeham, attorney, Red Cloud. Henry Geeham, farmer, Red Cloud. E. McFarland, merchant, Red Cloud. Frank Cowden, merchant, Red Cloud. C. M. Storey, liveryman, Cowles. , H. Burgess, merchant, Blue Hill, was Populist candidate for county treasurer three years ago. Andrew Guy, farmer, Guide Rock, German. Henry Guy, farmer, Guide Rock, German. ' Geo. Guy, farmer. Guide Rock, German. Dr. Bradshaw, Guide Rock. A. S. Proudfit, lumber merchant, Guide Rock. Ohmsteads (three of them), Guide Rock, Germans. Charles Amack, farmer, Red Cloud. Evans Amack, farmer. Red Cloud. J. 8. Emigh, farmer, Cowles. i J.- W. Hunter, Abingdon, 111., Collector of Internal Revenue in the Peoria dis trict under President Cleveland. Was. party nominee for Congress eight years1896, will not vote for Bryan this year ago. Frank Sweeney, New Albany, Ind., formerly city engineer. Organized a McKinley and Roosevelt club. Joha N. Penrod, Wabash, Ind., one of the most prominent lumber men in the state. Voted for Palmer and Buck aer four years ago. Believes Bryan's attitude en the money question is a menace to the material Interests of every cilisea. L Oliver A. Allard, Metropolis, 111., a life-long Democrat and ..owner of ttaej taialag LWQ acres opposite Paducah. He has never before cast a Republican vote. Prosperity. Ex-Governor Charles T. O'Ferraii of Richmond, Vs., states that there will be, twice as many business men in Richmond this year who will support McKiaiey as there were in 1896. He will not support Bryan, but will vote for McKiaiey and has always hereto fore been a Democrat Frank T.'GIascow, superintendent of the Tredegar Iron Company, Richmond.--Va.. the largest iron manufac turing plant in the state, will this year Tate Cor McKinley. Major .Clay Drewry of the firm of Drewiy, Hughes ft Co., Richmond, Va., oae of. the largest dry goods firms in the state, whqvoted for Bryan in 1896, will this year vote for McKinley. Mr. J. F. George of Richmond, Va one. of the largest dealers in leaf to bacco, who voted for Bryan in 1896. will -vote for McKinley this year. William R. Trigg, president of the W. R, Trigg company, a very large shipbuilding plant that has opened up ia Richmond, Va.. will this year vote for McKiaiey. His works give employ meat to nearly 1,000 operatives. He aaa'hecetof one' always been a Demo- mM lu Haau mM Dmimim. pMB w wt.- f the Treasury under President Cleveland, has Money Ctah hi New York ana win of President JlcKinley. Mr. Cnrnaie's reasons In a speech at Chicago four years "No saaa who has a particle of sysspathy for working sseu and wouku, and their dependent fami lies, can contemplate the possibil ity of such a calamity (free coinage of silver) without feeling that it Is his duty, whether he occupies a public or private station, to em ploy every honorable means at his command to avert it." Hon. John O. Carlisle, Democrat, Ex Secretary Treasury, Chicago, April 15, 1896. conclusion that I might just as well kill my sheep as. vote the Democrat ic ticket Then came the cry of free silver. In my life I have found that it is wise to follow successful men. Therefore if a man is a money maker, why not watch him and try the same methods yourself? I found that the men of the country who had money were against free silver. I asked myself why, and concluded free silver would be bad for my sheep. I voted for McKinley and the Republican platform and have done so ever since. I shall support the Republican ticket this year. I am no longer a Democrat but a Re publican. The Democratic platform shifts its planks too often to 'suit me. I am satisfied with the present state of affairs, and so are my sheep." M. Sterne, merchant, Red Cloud. H. Deidrick, merchant, Red Cloud. Walt Elliott, shoemaker, Red Cloud. John HcCord, farmer, Guide Rock. Harry McCord, farmer, Guide Rock. Harvey Perry, plasterer, Red Cloud. Nibs Perry, plasterer, Red Cloud. Vance McCall, farmer; Ixnarah." James Vance, farmer. Imarah. Lawrence McCall, farmer, Red Cloud. Floyd McCall, farmer, Red Cloud. Thos. Emigh, farmer, Red Cloud. W. S. Bense, merchant, Red Cloud. W. Bense, merchant, Red Cloud. A. Cook, retired merchant, Red Cloud. O. C. Case, attorney, Red Cloud. Charles Davis, farmer, Red Cloud. F. Sadelick, farmer, Red Cloud. Joe Sadelick, farmer, Red Cloud. Charles J. Piatt, merchant, Red Cloud. C.rja. Seder, Deloit township, Holt Co., Neb.: "I am for the straight Republican ticket this year. Mc Kinley times are good enough for me and I want to have more good times. I was Populist committee man of Deloit township long enough to find out that the Populist party is not a party of reform, and I can't see how any thinking man can sup port Bryan again after seeing the prosperous condition of the country and seeing how Bryan's predictions have turned out A large 'number of my neighbors who supported Bryan four years ago are, like my self, disgusted with the talk about imperialism, trusts, etc., and will this time cast their votes with the party that always gives us good government and good prices for our products. I am for the straight Re publican ticket" Virginius Newton, nresident of the First National bank, Richmond, Va., who voted for Palmer and Buckner in and says that he considers him the most dangerous man in America to day. Colonel John B. Purcell of the whole sale drug firm of Purcell, Ladd ft Co., Richmond, Va., voted for Palmer and Buckner in 1896, but will not vote for Bryan this year. R. E. Richardson. Talleysville, Va., one of the largest timber operators in Virginia as well as a merchant operat ing five stores, who would not vote at all in 1896, will vote for McKinley this year and states as his reason that he is satisfied for business to remain as it Is. Roger Gregory, Jr., Democratic chair man of King William county, Va., in 1896 and a large planter, has announced his intention of voting for McKinley this year. One of the oldest Democrats in West Virginia, Mr. John B. Darnell of Al derson, Monroe county, has come out for McKinley in a letter in which he says that he is 82 years old and has voted with the Democrats for more than 50 years, but now feels compelled to become identified with the party that has brought such prosperity to his Lstate by the operation of its principles ul suuuu uiuuey auu protective unn. James Brittingham of Mount Vernon. N. Y. General Charles F. Smyth of Chi cago, formerly on Governor S. J. Til deh's staff in New York. Arthur A. Taylor, Santa Cruz, Cal. Jacob Keene, prominent attorney, Athens, Mich. Franklin Bartlett New York. Fav ors sound money. Francis L. Stetson, New York. In favor of sound money. 'Herbert B. Turner, New York. Sound money. Um DaaMCfaMc IfatfcMMl TkicaC: Starts Zeitang, New York. Baltimore Sun. Boston Herald. Brooklyn Eagle. Baltimore News. Pittsburg Leader. Richmond (Va.) Times. New York Times Chattanooga Times. S Philadelphia Ledger. V Philadelphia Times. New York Sun. Galveston News. St. Paul Globe. Greenville (S. C.)' News. Hartford Times. Worcester Post. e Burlington (la.) Gazette. Raleigh (N. C) Observer. Charlotte (N. C.) Observer. New Haven Union. Fall River Herald. Manchester (N. H.) Union. New Haven Register. Charleston (5. C.) Post. Montana Journal, Butte City. LaPorte City, (la.) Progress Review. Bloomington (III.) Journal. wwuy. MI550URIAN5 ARE APPRECIATING PROSPERITY Ralph Simmons, banker, Seymour, Mo. General prosperity of the country. Capt R. A. Collins, Piedmont, Mo., captain artillery in Confederate army, also lawyer fine ability. Sound money and prosperity and expansion. Col. G. W. Ceath, Piedmont, Mo., business man. Prosperity and good business. Col. O. L. Nieder, Mansfield, Mo.. Democratic candidate prosecuting at torney in 1898. Expansion and pros perity. H. E. Stiff, Mountain Grove, lumber merchant Good business. M. Gorman, Hartville, merchant, for mer Democratic collector of Wright county. Business conditions. Henry Snyder, Mountain Grove, farmer. Good prices for farm products. Prof. J. S. Magee, Cape Girardeau, professor in college. Willing to stump for sound money and expansion. R. McCombs, Jackson, miller. Ex pansion and sound money. Rob't Barnard, McEIhaney Station, farmer. Prosperity. Jesse Frank, Grangeville. son of the former Populist candidate for Con gress. Now on the stump for McKin ley and prosperity. J. H. Stoineeipher. Buffalo. Mo Pod- unst candidate for Congress in 1896. Ready to stump state for McKinley and Flory. W. D. Olderworth, St Louis, farmer. Approves entire policy of the President. Expansion. Walter Olderworth, St Louis, farm er. Approves entire policy of the Pres ident Expansion. Bruno Olderworth. St. Louis, farmer. Approves entire policy of the Presi dent Expansion. Henry Heineman. St Louis, farmer. satisfied with McKinley in adminis tration. Business conditions satisfy him also. James Gardner, St Louis, farmer. Bryan's claim that McKInley's election would mean low prices proven false. Entirely satisfied with McKinley. Be lieves him safe and good President. Eugene Guerre, florisant business man. Now 'believes Bryan wrong on all issues. Wm. Offer, St. Louis, telegraph op erator. Enlisted as Bryan did to fight Spain, and is in hearty sympathy with President's course and Is working for his re-election. Dr. Davis, Charleston, Mississippi Co., physician. Sound money and fixed policy of Republican party. John A. Jackson, Chilllcothe. Popu list candidate for Congress in 1896. Says he don't want to shoot in the air any longer. Wants to vote with the party that has fixed principles and poli cies. G. S. Clemens, Carthage, business man. General prosperity of the coun try. Thos. H. Harkless, Lamar, merchant. now Republican candidate for Legisla ture. Prosperity. Gen. D. H. Mclntyre. Mexico, Mo., former Attorney General of Missouri. an old ex-Confederate general, writes that he will vote the Republican ticket from top to bottom, and take the stump In October if his strength will permit. Julius S. Walsh, president of the Terminal Railroad Association of St Louis Js a native of this city, and voted A GEORGIAN'S REASONS FOR VOTING FOR McKINLEY I shall vote for McKinley and Roosevelt because: First We are Americans, and are against all of America's enemies. Second We are patriotic, and are desirous of suppressing those who give aid and comfort to our ene mies. Third We are honest and are against all efforts at dishonoring the nation by currency legislation or otherwise. FourthWe are law abiding, and are against all encouragement of force in the settlement of disputes. Fifth We are progressive, and Denver Times. n (Sttvar RtpMMM aatf isv.) Denver Republican. (Silvar RvpakHca aai arysata isee.) Denver Post. Port Chester (N. Y.) Daily Item, j !s Sedalla (Mo,) Daily Bazoo. Louisville Post. Nashville Banner. Wellston (O.) Sentinel. Beloit (Wis.) Daily News. Louisville Dispatch. Detroit Free Press. Galveston Globe. Pittsburg Dispatch. De Kalb (HI.) Advertiser. Rockford (III.) Germania. St. Louis Anzeiger des Westens. Philadelphia Demokrat. The People, Chicago. Utica (N. Y.) Observer. Rome (N. Y.) Sentinel. TroyJN.Y.)' Press. Westchester (Pa.) Repub lican. Butte (Mont.) Inter Mountain Monona Leader, Monona, la. for the Democratic ticket for more than thirty years. In 1896 he took an active part in the local sound money move ment and marched in the big proces sion of October 31 that year. He was one of the vice presidents of the Music Hail meeting of the sound money Dem ocratlc party ;on the evening of the same day, the principal speaker of which was the presidential candidate of that party. Gen. John M. Palmer, whose death is now being mourned by the whole nation. Mr. Walsh will vote for McKinley and Roosevelt next No vember. The official reports of the Terminal Association show that its re ceipts have steadily increased since President McKInley's election, and Mr. Walsh is authority for the statement that the company's business is larger now than it ever was before. When asked if he thought the business would continue to increase in the event of Bryan's election, he laughed and an swered: "I'd" not like to take the. chances." G. H. Walker, stock broker, St. Louis, Mo. tSound money. H. H. Pike, live stock dealer, Ash land, Pike Co., Mo.: "A good many 'Pikers' will be with me in voting for McKinley this year. I can borrow money at a lower rate of interest than I could before McKinley's election, and get a better' price for my stock. A good many of my neighbors also have been more prosperous under McKinley than they were before, and we all be lieve that it is to our interest to keep him in." James Campbell, stock broker, St. Louis. Sound money, and says that "McKinley is more apt to carry Mis souri than Bryan is to carry New York." A. W. Day, president Day Rubber Co., St. Louis. Prosperity and sound money. William B. Cowan, cashier National Bank of Commerce, St Louis, Mo. Sound money and prosperity. P. C. Maffett president Missouri Railway Co., St Louis, Mo. Sound money and prosperity. R, P. Tansey, president St. Louis Transfer Co. Wants sound money. Alonzo C. Church, vice president Wiggins Ferry Co., St Louis, Mo.: "Bryan is not a Democrat, but a Popu list He Is a different man from the line of eminent Democrats beginning with Jefferson and ending with Cleve land. John Scullin, president Wiggins Fer ry Co., St Louis: "I always voted the Democratic ticket until Mr. Bryan's nomination on a free silver platform at Chicago four years ago. For the government to put a stamp on a piece of silver bullion and call It a dollar, without being able to redeem it in money which circulates at its face val ue the world over, seems to me ridicu lous. I expect to vote for McKinley and to continue voting the Republican ticket as long as the Democratic party continues to advocate the free and un limitedcoinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1." Judge John G. Wear, Poplar Bluff, Mo., for twelve years on the Missouri Circuit Court bench. Is disgusted with the makeshifts of the Democracy for a "paramount" issue. favor legitimate expansion of our commerce and our power. Sixth We are hopeful that Mr. McKinley has seen his former errors and will treat our Southern people fairly and broadly, and carefully re frain from humiliating them. Will he do so? If he does not, then all hope of ever breaking the solid South must be postponed until he is succeeded by a wiser man; and we, who are leaving the beaten path, will sorrowfully and penitently re turn whence we came. Alexander R. Lawton. Savannah, Ga. R. feeH ill., tor yean a la the Demacrnlk party of tne expansion nnaitlon. He ia a colonel la the Uafeed States service an has jast rctaraed from the Philippines. "I have always been n besso crat," said Colonel Campbell, "bat the party's stand on the PhlUppiae nnestion compels me to change my political belief. I desire te fee known as an expansion Republican. Any Democrat, Bryan included, who wIH go to the Philippines and ascertain the exact situation, as I -know it, will come home convinced the party Is wrong on the question. We should hold the islands and give the people a stable govern ment. I believe the war In the Philippines will cease as soon as McKiaiey is re-elected." Colonel Campbell's wldeacfuslnt- BRYAN MISSES THE SPIRIT OF AMERICAN ASPIRATIONS Dr. J. A. Milburn, pastor of the Second Presbyterian church of In dianapolis, who has been a sturdy champion of Democratic principles in the past intends to vote the Re publican ticket this year. He says: "I see no reason why a minister should not express his political pref erences, as well 'as any one else. I have been for long years a Demo crat, but at the last Presidential election voted for McKinley. I will vote for him again. Mr. Bryan, I think, is a good man, but he is the incarnation of economic heresies, and what is more he falls to under stand the temperament and the genius of a growing world. He has not yet learned, evidently, that life means growth, and that to cease to KANSAS WANTS EXPANSION AND GENERAL PROSPERITY W. H. Nation, a leading Populist of Erie, Neosho Co., Kansas: "Mc KInley's election was not attended by the evil consequences predicted, in fact the time since the election of 1896 has been a period of almost un exampled prosperity. Instead of men hunting work, you now find work hunting men, and the doleful predictions made four years ago now read like a comic almanac, and this fact has made it necessary to create a new issue, consequently, the question of imperialism has been brought forward and the Democrat ic party has become sentimental and is shedding tears over the wrongs of the colored man (10,000 miles away). I can see no reason why the Populist parly should any longer follow Mr. Bryan, the fact that nearly all the gold Democrats that bolted Bryan in '96 are supporting him now leads me to believe that secretly he has abandoned the silver issue, and on that issue only was he in sympathy with the Populist party. From the first I have been in favor of retain ing the Philippines and sustaining the administration." R. E. Melvin, Lawrence, Kan. A leading attorney and graduate of the Kansas State University. John A. Forrest, one of the lead ing business men of Hope, Kansas. Prosperity. Judge Funk, Medicine Lodge, Kan. Prosperity. Ben Jenkins, miner, Weir City. Lou McGruder, farmer, Weir City. George L. Rives. New York. Sound money. William E. Curtis, New York. Sound money. Abram H. Dailey, the well-known Brooklyn lawyer and former Surrogate of Kings county, has abandoned the Democratic organization with which he had been closely allied for years and will vote the whole Republican ticket this year. Mr. Dailey thus briefly but forcibly accounts for his political change of heart: "When I want to de stroy a bad cause I come out actively against it I don't believe in any half way measures in regard to Bryanism." F. P. Garrettson. Newport. R. I., was once a free trader, but is convinced that protection is the proper policy for the United States to pursue. J. R. Williams. Bucks, Summers Co., West Va. In declining a Democratic nomination he wrote: "As an honest man I cannot consent to allow my name to remain on a ticket I cannot support. I voted for William McKinley in 1896 and am x proud of it. as I feel the Republican party has fully redeem ed all its pledges made to the people then, and especially to the farmers. I desire no change in the administration. I feel that I can support my family better and easier; have better prices and readier markets for the products of my farm under a Republican ad ministration. I cannot jeopardize my interests for any untried theory of free silver or bugaboo of imperialism. I am for McKinley and the Repuolican ticket" B. F. Meador, Dunns. West Va.: "I have been a life-long Democrat, voting that ticket for 21 years, but I find that the Republican party is the party of the people; the party for the farmer and laboring man. I can live easier and have more comforts of life under a Republican administration than under a Democratic administration. In view of these facts, I can no longer support the Democratic ticket, and hereby de clare myself for McKinley and the iie publican party." A. J. -Mills, Oriskany. N. Y. I have voted the Democratic ticket for years, but this time I shall give my vote to McKinley and Roosevelt. I liked Mc Kinlev's attitude on the Cuban ques tion "and I admire Roosevelt very much. Rowotoi ticket, on the groaad that Us furionch Is only fori stansp. u ISM Mr. Campbell was elected as a Democrat to the house from the forty-sixth senatorial dis trict, and was re-okcced in 188. Two years later he was promoted to tne senate, where he served eight years. Me lexismtlve was criticised many tisaes, but was ever known as a loyal crat. la 1896 ho was elected to congress on the Democratic ticket ia the twentieth Illinois district. When the Spanish-American War broke out he raised the Ninth I Hi nds Ojegiment and was elected colonel. He waa the first congress man to resign from the house to accept a commission in the army. He has been in the Philippines siace occupation hy American troops. grow means the beginning of death. Whether, as Mr. Bryan says, world dominion is our destiny or not one thing Is clear, and that is that ex pansion is in our blood, and it is in our blood not because of any love of conquest of the world, but of our passion for the world's betterment. One thing that characterizes the American is his God-like ambition, his supreme and splendid passion for achievement. He is not satisfied with the good. He yearns for the better, and when he has attained the better he reaches out for the best. He wants this to be the best possible world, and, thank God, he is man enough to do his share to make it so." 9 Charles I. Dodson, merchant, Weir City. Charles Hughes, Weir City. J. S. Murphy, expressman. Weir City. Henry Davis, carpenter. Weir City. Captain J. W. Farrell, real estate and insurance, Weir City. Matt Goodman, miner, Weir City! Robert Goodman, weigh check man, Weir City. Ed Goodman, miner. Weir City. Tom Brisco, miner. Weir City. James" Dunn, Sr., miner. Weir City. James Dunn, Jr., miner. Weir City. Ira Clemens, coal prospector, Weir City. J. D. James, merchant. Weir City. William Eddy, Weir City. James Bates, miner, Weir City. Matt McClenahan, miner. Weir City. Dan Gray, miner, Weir City. John Cunningham, Weir City. Ben Rood, miner, Weir City. James Moore, merchant, Weir City. Sol Relli. miner, Weir City. John Alfred, miner. Weir City. Mike Fasogen, miner, Weir City. Charles Kemp, miner. Weir City. Thomas Mallems, miner. Weir City. Ed Broadhurst, farmer, Weir City. S. P. Murphy, Ice dealer, Weir City. Charles Dunn, miner, Weir City. H. Huntsterger, mine engineer. Weir City. Judge A. C. Hinkson of Sacramento. Cal., has resigned from the Iroquois blub, the leading Democratic organiza tion of the state. "Long before the re tention of the Philippines had crystal lized into a political issue I expressed the unqualified opinion that, not only as wise political and commercial measure, but as a duty to the inhab itants of the Philippine Islands, they should be retained as our territory and should be governed as our other terri tories are governed. To this view I still adhere, regardless of the wishes of the comparatively few who are in rebellion against our government" William H. Devlin, at one time Democratic candidate for assembly man. Sacramento, Cal., now a leading attorney. "The Philippines are now In rebellion against the authority of the United States, and for my part, I be lieve that this rebellion ahmiTii tw crushed, and that until the authority or our government is recognized no negotiations toward dmm ahmiM k had. By acquiring the Philippines we have undertaken new responsibilities and are liable to the governments of tne world lor tne proper preservation of property rights and maintenance of good government. In my judgment this can be brought about at the pres ent time only by the authority of our government being recognized and re spected! For these reasons and others, I favor the policy of President McKinley. and intend to vote for him." Col. Andrew Corry, who has hitherto been one of the principal stays of the Democratic party In Iron county, Utah, has publicly announced himself a Re publican. As Mr. Corry is widely known thronghout Utah, his conver sion will occasion no little surprise. Will H. Lett, who has been secretary in tne salt uuce city (Utah) Fifth pre cinct, has resigned and will support the Republican ticket "I think it would be suicidal to make a change In the administration at this time. I be lieve President McKinley Is the right man for the place at present and I shall do all I can to keep him there. I am in favor of expansion and believe this cry of 'imperialism' is all a buga boo. I have always been a Democrat until this year, but from now on I In tend to do all I am able to elect the Republican ticket" -V. - Cffgc-:q, - -- ?' ,1 "-t. - .