Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 04, 1896, Part I, Page 2, Image 2

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    T1ITC OMAHA
BRYAN IN CENTRAL STATES
Popocratio Candidate Pawoa Through
Indiana and Illinois.
EVENING DEMONSTRATIONS AT ST , LOUIS
In Spi . Mr * HexUi Mini
LuilKrpHu IIIUl 'i'l 'il lli'lM
null ACCIIKI-N > li-KllilP >
ill s ( ( . | l <
ST KOUIS , Oct. 3. An audience appalling
In im dliucnmnM greeted Mr. llryan at the
An iltorliim this evening Uefore the after-
nnn KCMlon of the ilelnocMtic clubs had
computed Its work , people began to us-
t"tniio ! and crowd In at the doors nnJ It re-
( | < nrnj the utmost efforts of the aergeant-at-
arms and Ills nMlalnnts , together with a
firuad , of police , to beep Iho great crowil
within bounds lly 7 o'clocl , every scat In
the galleries was token and the auditorium
VBS packed to suffocation It was 820 p
in when Senator Moiif } , llio chairman ,
tailed the convention to order. When Mr
Itrvan appeared ho was greeted with storms
of duets Ho looked as fresh nnd healthful
us though he had spent the past months In
ipilet homo life , Instead of In almost a con
tinuous succession of tspeaklni ; and travel
ing While romovlm ; his overcoat the crowd
liept up a continuous uproar. 'I he ladles on
the platform became affected w Ith the en
thusiasm , standing upon their i hairs , cadi
seeking to oiitshout and outvvavo the other
It was fifteen minutes before Mr. Ilrnn he-
Kin to speak
After nlatlng that It "tan his purpose to ad
dress n few words to the members of the
assembled democratic clubs , Mr Ilrjan said
"The club can be of more service In this
i ampalgn than any previous campaign , bo-
catiso In this campaign , the work Is belli- ?
ilono by the people themselves "
Mr llrnn then noted that the clubs had
adopted n button , which bore the likeness
of Thomas Jcfle'rson. of whom lie sail "No
statesmen ever lived who so fully under
stood human nature as he did no ono more
full } understood the capacity of the
people for self-government , no one
moro fully tindi rstood the dangers
to be guaided against He Etr'rl the prin
ciples which unilerllo democracy end then
ho applied those principles to ever } qiies
tlon which arose during his time We today
can Invent no no v principles Wo
are seeking to discover no now truths
Ai > nro Hlmply applying new conditions to
those principles which must forever control
< ho people If the people still cherish the-lr
love for the free govcrmiHnt under which
we live "
Mr Ilonn then leid the code of articles
of faith given by JelTenon , beginning with
"Ilqual and ex.ut Justice1 to all men of
vvhitevci sect or persuasion and Justice to
nil ' nppbing each of the o principles to
prpscnt-ila } conditions
Loogootec was reached at 12 IB anil a largo
crowd hud assembled In the public square
near the depot Mi IIrati was escorted to
the platform and spoke to an enthusiastic
niidlcnco The farmers had evident ! } been
congiegatlng at Washington all diy. for
when the train pulled In there , there wns a
horde of them and thi } were as enthusi
astic as the' } could well be Mr Ilrynn ,
when ho could obtain order for the ehnos
of cheering said In part"When our
campaign opened rur opponents thought
the } could ridlculn it out of existence , and
when they found ridicule would not work
the } began to abuse these who favored fne
coinage. The } called them all sorts of
names , and when they were not making
much progress I understand that our op
ponents have resorted to misrepresentation
I am Informed that the republicans have
circulate in this state an editorial taken
from the Omaha World-Herald criticising
pension appioprlatlons Tnat editorial ap
peared In the Wcrld-Herald somu two } ears
before I had any connection with the paper
ami these who aio circulating It know- that
they nro circulating something v.hlch 1
never wrote , which I was not responsible
for and In no manner connected with am ] ,
I > a } , m } friends , so desperate Ins become
the republican campaign that these who
claim to want an honest dollar arc not will
ing to deal honestly with a political op
ponent. ( Great applause ) Upon the pen
sion question , aa upon all other questions ,
my record can be found b } any one who
will read the reports of the congressional
proceedings or the platforms upon which
I have run. " ( Great applause )
A largo crowd was encountered nt Vln-
conncg The arrangements were admirable
and Mi llryan was convened through the
eiowd without suffering any of the usual
Inconveniences Incident to a speech in a
town of the sl/o of Vlnccnnus.
At Lawrcncovllle , III , thcio was the usual
crowd to greet the candidate Ho made a
short speech from the platform of the train
At Olnoy HI , the homo of the piesent re
publican nominee for governor of the state ,
there wns an Immense crowd nt the station
A gall } decorated stand had been erected
and from this the nominee spoke The
most enthusiastic meeting of the day yet
seen wns at Horn , whore many of Mi
Hryan'H boyhood friends helped to make
lip the crowd tint received him It was a
continual ovation from the time the train
enteicd the city until It left Hu was taken
to the band stand , nnd when ho ascended the
platform there was tin en minutes' of con
tinual cheering Mr. llran acknowledged
the gieeting , and then Introduced Congress
man MeMillln who addressed the iib-
EomhUgu for n few minutes
It was a great reunion at Salem , the town
where Mr llrjan was bum Old nun who
know him since his bohood nnd > oung
women \\cie theio to shake hands with
' Hill } " Old iicqunlntanies elowdtd about
thi' ear , all eager to guisii , the hand of the
presidential nominee who was bom In thcli
iiiidbt. Many of Mi Ilrjana relatives wore
nt the depot , and these he met at the for-
vaid end of the cat after he had addressed
the crowd fiom the back platform Ho was
deeply ulTictoil by the expressions of affec
tion by the people.
After n general handshaking , Mr. llrjan
Bald "Kilends , wo have btopped heio for
a few moments , but I wns anxlou * tei stop ,
not only to MO > ou again but to tell } ou , If
} ou have had on } rumoia of in > falling
health , they arc false 1 feel as well us I
elld when the campaign opened , and If 1
am any judge I have strength to keep up
this light , Just as I havtt been keeping It
up , until the day before election Anil un
less all signs fall , unless 1 am a poor judge
of Indication : ) . } ou will have such a lutl-
llcatlon meeting In this town a month from
tonight us ) ou never hael before Con-
Kieusman MeMillln also spoKo.
The names of llran and Allgtld were
onthuslistically chrereel nt the meeting In
Kant St houla. vvheio the nominee spoke tea
a great crowd from a platfoun erected In
a vaiant lot The tialn beaiing the Hi j an
party anlved In I'aat St Louis at 020
0 clock this evening ami Mr IIIan was
taken In a carriage ) to the grounds 111 *
audlenco contained moiu ju-oplo than ho
could make heat his voice
Mr Ilran's speech was largcl } a icltoia-
tlon of aignments which ho has advanced
many tlmea before In the ( oiirso of his
speech ho said ' Our opponents arc at
tempting to niray the laborers , In the rlftcH
nsalnst the laboivrs on the. faimn The }
are trjltig to ellvlde > thuse T > ho toll Into
two i las.1-en und l'lu > one * ( lass against the
other eli\sd Hie ) tell us that wo uio laU-
lilK class Udiirs. and ) ot the it-piil llenn
pail } In IliU campaign has done mam to
aria } dims against elms tlitn an } part }
ever elld In an } rampalRti In tint hl.Mor.v of
tl.o Lountr } And worst of all , m > frlcnda ,
the republican put ) In this campilcn Is
attempting to compel the laboilni ; men of
this country whn woik for waie tei vote
against their own lurro'tH under tie ! threat
of losing their jobs 'Die } tedl you Hi it the
Interest of ono man U tin1 Interest ef all
1 tell } ou that theiu urn ipicitloni which
Bilso where men's Inlore'sU differ"
In ronrliuloii Mr llrjan silJ "You will
liave an opportunity to heat the Umicti' of
this campaign ell cu > , u > d , I'ccaiuo Illinois
is rich In thosu who aru picpnnd to pie -
6ent and to dtfetidthe pelkles for t/hlch
ire stand , and Among llniuncn of thU utate
vho are prepared lo elo jtnuic.t'f terrkc In
behalf of the common pceiplo there U turni1
moro jble and more ! willing mid more eoir
ruoon.s than jour caudiiUlc feir pove-mor
John P.
STII VHlllT POPS 1)0 50MI5 IIOSTIMJ. .
Hill I ) * < 'li anil Pint ! \nmlrrteieirt Talk
III I.llKMllll.
MNCOLNOct. . 3 ( Special fcl ram )
A Kunke opera house audience , vvhldi mndo
up In enthuiilaKm what It lacked In num
bers. tonight listened to the straight populist -
list doctrine as purvoyoel by Paul Vatider-
> oort and William II Uerh Dech opened
fire upon Senator Allen , llolcomb and the
entire state house "ring" He accused Mien
of stepping Into public and political notice
through exchanging his democratic cuticle
for the skin of a populist nnd declared that
Allen had thus secured hold enough on
Gorman to pull his nrthcr extremity for
feileral appointments for a few friends.
Hoth opeakcrs declared that Allen had tried
to fell out the middle-of-the-road populists
to the democrats at St Louis Paul Vander-
voort rotund as of } ore then got the
floor behind the footlights and proceeded to
make llenlon Marks' ears burn It was evi
dent that the governor's private sccretir }
Is not In Vandcrvoorfs good looks at the
present time He explained his presence In
Lincoln by the comprehensive statement thnt
this point was a nest of vipers presumably
one which needed crushing under the Van-
dervoortlan heel He further assured his au
dlenco that ho nlwa8 stood by his friends
ami faced his enemies , nnd had left a Rood
civil nervlco position and the republican
party be cause the said party had neglected
lts opportunities to secure an honest ballot
In the smith He alluded to the dellote
compliment paid by Tom Watson to Pewall ,
namely , that the latter was n "Hump on n
log. " by salng It ma } not have been a dig
nified remark , but was nevertheless om >
which ho took much pleasure In repeating
In dozing Ml Vandervcmrt snld he was tired
of being v Ilimed In this state anil should
always defend himself publlcl } when at
tacked throng the press or upon the stump
inel wound up b } sa } Ing tint vvhat some
I'rvnn populists needed was the gold cure
rather than the sliver panacea
\ i.OM : 'FTriTiiT IN 'iim < I\TII.
'lilMllelielpV Sump * Will Vlxei \iii'lli-
ein HIP UiillntM.
The republicans of the Sixth ward met
In caucus lost night at the room of the
Sixth Ward Republican club. Twenty-fourth
anil Sprttco streets , for the puiposo of put
ting up a ticket of delegates to the clt }
convention , to bo voted for nt the
I rlnnrlcs next Trldav
lleforo proceeding to the nomination of
a ticket a resolution v as read Betting forth
the claims of the Sixth ward to repre-
ticket b tea-
r dilation on the republican }
son of the large number of republicans
In that watel This resolution was laid on
the table
Resolutions were passed requiring the
icvrral candidates for nomination as mem-
tcrs of the clt } co'incll or school board to
submit their names to the voters at the
prlmuilps as hid been the custom In the
Sixth ward for several } cais , the man re
ceiving the highest number of votes to be
the candidate of the ward and pledging the
ddegatlrn to support such candidates
An agreement , signed by till of the can
didates for the clt } council In the Sixth
ward was read. In which they agreed to
abide ) by thi- decision of the voters at the
primaries the man receiving the highest
vote' to be the nominee
The work of naming nine delegates was
then taken up , nnd the following men worn
kc'lectcd A P Gram , Thomas I ) . Stonev.
I I ! Huse' . II T Leavltt , D S Anderson.
II II Taloi , H. O. Stair , Trod llugbeo and
T I , Hull
The 'itectlnK was turned Into the Sixth
Ward Republican club nnd J IJ , MeP'lo ad
dressed the mooting on the Issues of the day.
KIM : TIIKIH ii.ir"iou\ij TicKir.
National lpnieiprilK of liM\a Dejieislt
u l.iMifilli } IVHIInii.
DCS MOINI3S. Oct 3 ( Special Tele
gram ) The national democratic electoral
ticket was filed In the olllco of t\ie secretaiy
of state at noon today. It was backed by a
petition containing 2,430 names The signers
live in the principal towns of the state ,
DCS Molnes furnishing the most This
morning the _ legal committee of the silver
democratic state committee held n meeting
and prepared for action. These present
were Judge C. G. Cole , Judge William
Connors and AUOUIPV& W , L Heed and J
J. Shea of Council HluiTs As soon as the
petition was filed thev called at the secre
tary of state's olllco and asked If the ticket
woti'd bo nccepted Ucput } Secretary Hyr-
kitt was In charge and said thnt ho was not
prepaid ! to give an off-hand decision A for
mal protest against allowing the ticket to go
on the Australian ballot under the name
"national democratic" was then filed. It
is signed by the chairman and socrctarj of
the- silver democratic ; state committee and
their attornoS Kiev en reasons are as
signed The gist of the ui/iiracnt ; Is that
as this Is a national election the tcnn "na
tional" coupled with the name democratic
would be misleading as it would not desig
nate nn } piity other than the icgular elomo-
rratlc part } , that to cntltlii an organization
to Ills nomlnttlon pipers It must bo cither
a ellstinct pirty with principles heretofore
announced and recognised or the designa
tion must be of some pilndplc , that theie
fore the only legal way the ticket can get
on the ballot is undei a design itlrn show
ing that It ierrescnts the piluclplo of the
single go'd standard
sw nniMi-\MiitioANs r.vnirsiSTIC
\iiille > iii > < - Ci-pptN li. iiipnelpr ul
Kierliiepli Hull.
Dr Enoiid-T of Chlcigo addicssed the
Swc'dlbU-Amerlcans in their ovn language-
Karbach hall last evening The largo hall
was comfortably Illled , ,1 coiibldtrable num
ber of v/omen being In the audience The
speaker waa given an enthusiastic reception
and the npplnuso was liberal thioughotit
his address when he made a tolllnc point ,
and that was pietty often
The addicEi was confined Hrgelv to a dls-
ciii-slcn of the money question , which he
handled in a masterly manner. The hls-
toiy of moiutnty sstems in this and other
countries was ieviewed and the evils , \nlch
had alwas followed In thetialn of a de
based currenc } , cither cnln or paper point
ed out "In all history. " the spcakei nalcl ,
"It had never failed , when a nation adopted
a emrency not up to the et indarel of the
great commeiclal natlcnx , that .iuffeilnj
had followed and the poor and laboring
classes had dlvvujg been the
greatest s > uf-
feieirf Wliat uason Is Iliuio to believe tint
the Unlteil States would be an exception
to a rule which had been unhornal' "
The fallacies of the frco silver agltatora
wrro taken un one nt a tlmo and their
specious aigumcnts picked to pieces
The meeting throughout was n most cn-
tluulastlc cue und di'tnciiBlrated that the
Svcdlsh-\n erlians are fully nvvako to the
Importance cf the lHoiien Involved In the
pending campaign and aie b } a luge major-
It } ranged on thf side1 of sound moiuy
( . ! : MII\I.S : srii.i , TofiT iKVNSV.S. .
> lanv Sjipi'i'lie'w feir 'loinid MIIIIPV \i-i >
liielpnt tJ\pi > Hleiiiplnu Plne-p.
MOl'NI ) VALI.nv , Kan. Oct 1-After
an all-night sleep onroulo the part } of fud-
cral generals this moinlng ngnln took up
then campal iiliif , early. Despite the fact
that thetrain reached Independence ,
the first stopping place at 3 o'clock full }
J.fiOO people were at the depot. At Chcii-
vnlo 800 people nut and chce-red the part )
Mound Vallcv piovcd a laniie'i rcifptlon
elty Kully 2,500 people met thn iraln.
Tiavellns tluouKh Rhiiokcn nnd C'rawford
countlcM Iho gcneials wrieIn the1 populist
ccuntiy inn ] In llulr spredies il.rj ai1clrej td
thenuilvis upcdallv to the tilver iiucstion
At Coluniliua about : t 000 pi uple- win ) K.ith-
e-ied nt Ihe depot , at Cherokee * about hX ( ) and
at Ghard between 2,000 and l.iuO
At eveiy utatlun where the na.n
Btopjied tlutro wi-ie r-ithiisiastle ciuivdi
pi i sent , and the Mprch-nukliu wan contln
lied up to v > itli ! a a few miles of Kans. .
City
MDIIUIP ! 'lli'Kpi hi theDeIll. .
CKNTKHVILI K. S D.Ovl J ( Special ) -
The > democrats , jiopulliu and tllverltca ol
this county met I'l convuntloa } esleida } am
placed a legislative ) ruxl eount ) lliket In the
flelil us follow Senator. II U rfleffer ; repro-
He'titnliviM. William Ln.vrlo , P. MulUon an >
John Lar.ibcrta , county nnditui. Justli
liieon , count } tieasurc'1 , J. I ) , llce-ren
count } sheiiff. A. J Anderson , states attor
noy. T ] ' Wright ; count ) Judte , Alnt
DOR up , count ) coroner. A 1. Potcrman , me ,
of cleedi , K , K , Stoddard.
RATIFY THE PARTY TICKET
National Democratic Clubs Hold Their
Convention at St. Louis ,
ENTHUSIASM FOR BRYAN AND SILVER
Vlpp I're-slelpnl MPVPIIHIIII llppliirpi HlH
I'lriii I'eniv Irllein Hint HIP t'lel-
e-aRo I'liiiriirni I'oliiM the-
llunil let
ST LOUIS Oct , " ! This rather conserva
tive town fairly boiled over with demo
cratic enthusiasm toda ) . It was visible at
every corner nnd scores of banners which
had bwn hung across the streets pro
claimed It to the world And If one were
to Judge by the badges ami buttons worn
hy citizens It might easily have been con
strained to believe that democracy had over
whelmed St Louis from the river to Its
western limits This was the opening day
of the quadtlcnnlal convention of the Na
tional Association of Democratic Clubs The
delegates began to arrive vestcrday and thev
have- been pouring In on cve-rj road that
comes Into the city since that time. All
morning they gathered In the lobbies of the
hotels , where the curbstone orators shouted
and roared with enthusiastic energy , ex
plaining the money question and the "tiuo
significance of Ifi to 1. " Then there were
bands of mu'lc of overv sort and descrip
tion from the backvoods and from the
metropolitan Miles , plalliR pilrloMr nlrj
It was about 10 ' ,0 o'clock In the foic-
noon when the delegates and visitors be
gan to anse-mblo at the Auditorium , where
the convention was held , nnd It wns al
most an hour later when President C P
Illack called the meeting to order Ilardlv
"iOO ilelcgattis v.orc present and the vast
hall was well filled with visitors When
the blessing of the Polly had been Invoked
Iho Jefferson Glee club of Feveral hundred
voices sang the national anthem , "America , '
In which the audience Joined.
When the applause following this singing
of the iirtrcm had died nvvay President
Illack delivered his qundrlennial address
vicn piinsiDtt.vr SPEAKS
Mr Illack declared tint Iho cause which
Ihe democracy was supporting was that
of no class , no section , but of the people
as n whole It was the cause of all cltusea
from nil parts of the countr ) Ho thei
elite-rod Into the discussion of the mone }
question nnd concluded by de-uoiinelug
Mark Hanna nnd HIP mone ) power. Mr
Ulnck was frequently Interrupted by applause
plauso When he had finished ho Intro
duced Vice President Stovouxon who said
The gravlt ) of the Issues Involved in the
pending political struggle cannot be over
estimated Their supreme importance to the
masses of our people cannot be measured bv
words This is not a mere contest as to
men The real Issue cannot be obscured
In an hour so fraught v ith deep concern to
all of the people appeal shrtId bo had to
the Judgment , not to passion
" 1 make no question as to the honest con
victions of those who glvo their support to
the ticket nominated at the Indianapolis
convention. The fact ic-nalns however , tint
the ccntcst for the presidency rests aolel )
between Uran and McKlnley U cannot be
claimed that any other candidate has a
semblance of chance for success , or even
that he will receive a single electoral vote
"I am firmly pcrsuidcd that In this rfreat
contest v\o arcIf ) the right , that the cause
vhlch wo represent Is that of the people
We have no serious foreign complications no
dissensions at home With a soil scarcel )
equaled In fertllit ) with n climate un-
sui passed with nature's choicest gifts so
generously bestowed , with men everywhere
willing to work , anil ample facilities to
transport labors products to the markets of
the world , v.hy this paralsls' Why this
distress' Why should man 'beg his
brother of the earth to give him leave to
toil' ' '
"We believe that such of the ovll that has
befallen us rs a people. Is the result of the
unwise unjust financial legislation of the
last third of a ccntuiy , and for vvhlrh the
republican party is solely responsible
Wherein Is there promise for the futuie'
WliPiehi is there hope9 Will relief como bv
the election of McKlnley and the restoration
to power of the pait } at whose door lie *
the responslblllt ) of the Ills that we .endure
that us' Ey ! ' <
for the burdens are upon
platform , by the utterances of these high Ir
Its councils. It stands pledged to a con
timmnce. not a cure of the ills that aic up i
us It promises nothing , holds out no hope
hy words even of a return to the moaetar )
policy of the foundeis of the govcrnmont-
the polio ) that for so many } cars brcught
prosperity and contentment to all of thr
people
INVOKES ITS GREAT PAST
"Wo turn to the great historic part )
vhoso life Is measured by that of the ic
nubile : the part ) which came in with Jeffer
son and which for sixty ) ears controllet
he destiny of the nation ; the part ) whlcl
In nil eit-rloils of our history has hcen tlu
bulwark of the constitution , and the faith
ful guardian of the rlghta of all th" people
the rarty which knov > s no privileged classes
but t ! at dennnd < equal and exact JiMtn
foi a'l ' the party wh'ch ' In the caily morn
IIIK and In the noon of this centuiy { Jorici1
In the leadership of Jackson and of Doug
las , the champions of the honest money of
th constitution and the undiunteel foes of
special privileges ami of all unji-st taxa
tlon"I am firmly persuaded that In the pr > _ s
cut contest the interests of all the people
are bound up In the success of the demo
critic oartv whose creed upon the pending
vital Issue wns the living faith of the
founders of our government Now as In
the struggles of the past , Us appeal Is lethe
the judgment , the patilotlsm , sense of jus
tlce of the ' .mcrlcan people Its camllditr
foi the piesidency Is the able and eloquent
statesman whoso words have cheered the
despondent , given hope and inspliatlon U
his countivMen , and whose Inauguration
will bo the cniiust of better daS to thr
republlc. "
When Vlco President Stevenson had fii
Ished Governor Ptono of Missouri was In
tioduecd. Ilr excuse 1 himself from mak
ing an e\te piled srec-ch ns ho had con
tide.ted a s irro cold nnd could not talk
It w is his duty lo welcome ) the deiiociatu
clubs to Missouri lie did not think such
a speech w.-u nee i aiv All ele-mocrits
Know the ) wrio welcome to Iho old state of
Mhsoiirl He Ihc-i piocoejiJcil to formal ! )
welcome the delegates to the u'ate of which
he is COVPIIIC.I
U the coixliiolon of Govenior jtone's ad-
dies ? of v > clcninc Eevcal iiniinpoi taut reso-
lutloTD regar.liiiB the rules soveinlng lh °
convention woio adoptee ! nftrr which Con-
gipssimin Nrwlands of Novula was Intro
duced Ho addressed tl c convention on the
silver questlmi
When Mi Nowlands had finished an ad
journment was taken till t o'clock
PEItMNENT ORONIHATION
At the aflcinonii session. Ser.atoi H D
Money of Mlssitslppl was selccti'l for pci-
manint chairiian , O Raker White of Wesi
Yltglnln , spcroiary , and Jefferson Pollard of
Mlsjourl , icaolng elcrk
In taklnif the chili Senator Money said
this w..s really a meeting to ratlf ) the ticket
ncrrlnatcd at Chicago. lie paid a high
tribute lo W J Iloan and said ho WOH
woiih > to b * ranked with Lincoln and Grant
He ? ufeired to the coining election nnJ said
Mississippi would go solid for nran and
free sllvu In conclusion he dwelt upon
the llvrr question and said this countr }
could adopt a bimetallic standaid Indc
pendent of any oilier mil. n The- chair
man was frequently inle ruipltd b ) applause
At the conclusion of hli addrc-ss the > com-
mltteo on permanent olllcers rc-porlcel the
follov.lng C P Illrck of Pcnniolvanla
president , Lawrence GarUlnci of the District
of Columbia secretary , W A Clark of Mon
tana trcjsuici The rcpon war adopted
nnd thn ofllc-en elected b > a viva vccc vote
A lottc-j from Orni.d MasUr Workman
Sovirelrn of the KniKlil * of Lixbor , expiisi >
Im ; i egret that bo c-e uld not be present , was
read In Oio course cf liin letter Mr. Kov
crclpn uaid bo dull ) cimo across evUcn-ej
of nctemptPd corruption by the emtssarlr
of Mark Hanna and eotrclc'i and cgjoletrv
by coi | > oritlons toward their rmplors
Mr * 0 LVoith of St l.ouU , representIng
Ing the Ilian and Sewnll demociatlc club *
of Ameilca , read a pajcr on the influence of
women In rolltlcn
J , W , Ksll ) of Jt.JlJuu , icpluseutlue the
tlryan and Sew all college clubs next made
nn addr js. .
In Its repot\ tin commllteo on resolutions
endorsed the Chicago plalform ind ticket
throughout -Monopolies and truits and
thp single RoT3 standard were denounced
The action of many of the great corporations
und rallnas In eoerclng their emploes to
support any particular cnndldato was con
demned and the Attention of the government
officers was called to the roporteel abuse
The report was ndnpted
Recess until 7 30 o clock was taken
M'KIWS ' BUSY DAY
vTV3
y -
( CentlinJoa rrom Klrsl Page ) _
political pirty they irmy belong And this
} car , unlike any year of the past the cam
paign Is commanding not the support of
mr-re partisans , but the support of all par
lies all over the land Men nro thinking
Inllnltel ) more of their country , their coun
try s honor and their rountr.v's prosperll )
than they are thinking of any political or-
gonlrntlon. I am glad to receive from the
emploes of the Stnndaul Manufacturing
company this splendid specimen of their
handiwork 1 Am glad , my fellow cltlrena ,
alwas to recelro any 'token of regard from
the men who labor ( Continuous applause )
Labor lies at the foundation of wealth. It
lies at the foundations of progress and pros
perity nnd when the labor of anv counlry Is
une-mplocd that countr } suffers In every tie-
partmtnt of human Industry What we
want In this country Is to protect the Amer
ican factory against the foreign factory
( Loud and continuous cheering ) I do not
believe In a policv thai gives a single day's
work to another IIP tlon ot the world so
long as wc have on Idle man In the United
States who wants to work ( Continuous ap
plause ) If we do not protect our homes
and firesides , our eniplo ) incuts and occupa
tions nobody will do It for us " ( Cries of
"Vou'rc right " )
A delegation froKi Ilarberton was next In
tro luced by 0 C Harbor ot the Diamond
Match compiny
RAILROAD EMPLOYES COME /
As soon as the lawn could bo vacated cm-
ploes of the Pcnnslvanla shops at Alle-
ghen ) were on hand and were Introduced by
W It Klrkcr
In his leply to the Sound Money club ,
composed of rmploes of the Pennslvanla
Railroad company nt Allcghcnv , the noml-
ne" said in part "I appreciate this fiirndl )
call from the mechanics and worklimme-n
of the Allegheny shops of the Pennsylvania
Railroad compan ) I have been pleased to
note from the public press und the many
railroad ile > legr.tlons that have visited me
In the last six weeks , that the emploes of
these great railroads arc deeply Interested
In the rightful settlement of questions
which aio presenteel In this campaign Wo
have all come ti > realize , no matter what
may bo our employments that we are most
prosperous when the countr } Is most pros
perous Wo have come to iealln > that the
railroads which do the most business pa ) the
best wages , nnd have the must work when
the farmers have good crops , good prices
and good maikct-g and the manufacturers
have plenty of ciders and their worklngmen
steady employment ( Loud cheering ) You
build more engines , } ou repair more e nglncs ,
) ou do moro by way of repilrlng equipment
when your railroads do the most business ,
when Ihoy do the business } ou have the
steadiest employment and best wages , and
when the ) do the least business } ou have
less employment and less wages Therefore
} ou , like all the other men engaged In the
workshops of the countr ) , are deeply Inter
ested In having a policy that will energize
over ) Industry of the country , bring to us
the widest development of our resources
and give us , whether wo live In the west or
the north , or thf- south , or the east , the
largest and mcoU general prosperity. ( Tre
mendous applause. ) This } ear the people
of Ihe country have an opportunlt ) to pass
judgment upon the exoerlenco they have
had since 1S92 ( Applause and cries of "And
wo will do it. " ) You have an opportunlt }
this year to approve or disapprove the policy
which has given you that experience. What
will your answor.be on the 3d day of No
vember ? ( Cries of "We will elect McKln-
loy " ) Democr.jts and lepubllcans alike , I
ask \ou. do yO'tVa&t a continuance of the
policy that has $ .ken work from the Ameri
can workshop alia given It to Ihe foreign
workshop , or dtt you disapprove of that
policy' ( Cries of "You bet we do" and
"Hurrah for McKinley and protection " )
I1EST COUNTRY IN TI.C WORLD.
"You will nave an opportunity to vote
directly ' -non that proposition We have
ho best countiy In the world nnd If It cloej
lot continue to be the best , It will be our
ault Wo have the best railroads In the
.oriel and wo have moro railroads than any
ilher nation In the world and wo have more'
nternal commerce than any othei nation
if the world nnd It Is because wo have ruch
nst Internal commerce that the railroads
have been able to extend their lines , giving
mploment to American labor. You have
n opportunity to oto this ) ear on an-
ithci question , as to whether } ou want
, oed , full round 100-ccnt dollars for vour
lork or whether \ou Aant to be- paid In
0-ccnt dollars. Nobody Is cheated by a
IcpreciatcJ < urgency policy so much as
lie man who labois. That Is the e perience
f mcnklnd the world over. It Is our own
xporlencc At every pcilod In our hls-
orv. when wo have entered upon an era
T depreciated cnrrcnc ) and when we were
Ivlng under that wildcat banking system
vhlc i Issued state money The vvorklngmon
f this country ere the laigest ciedltors of
his countrv There Is duo to the work-
Tgmcn in prosperous time so vast a sum
) f mono a < to make them the' largest credlt-
rs of the countiv nnd the/ are therefore
more intorostfd or quite as much Inte-r
j ed 0.3 r.nv ether part of our population
in having a sound and , stable currency , un-
vailng In value and good wherever trade
? oes I am glad to know that the work-
'iin'inen ' of the United States this yeir. 18 %
ire with us no matter what theii po-
Mtlcal illations have been In the pail ,
Mid that the ) mean to stand for their conn
'rj , their country s prosperity , their coun
tr } 's honor anlior that policy which will
iccuro to the largest number the greatest
; ood. " 4
Speaking laler to the Franklin and Me-
Klnlov Sound Money and Protection clubs ,
Majo , McKInley said
I can with propriety present to my fel-
lo-v eltln-n of yeimtiRo county , tlin oil
producers and the elrllle 11 | | u > faimoiH
in el Iho innnufactuiurx. aiul the employes
tin bime doe trlnca nnd niKiinitiili that 1
i in vMtli equal propriety pii-sinl to the
stuilrntH of tljo.Unlveislty of Wooster
U o are nil standing upon ll.- mime p'ut- '
fcrm. the plitform of publiciiilih , of li.v
and order , of honest compliance ) with fvny
public or prlv.ile uontr.ict , an honist ilol-
lai itncl the nation's honor. Wo nro nil
i u r ) Ing the n rno Jlug this ) eni i nil It Is
M > od 01 ougli for HUD of us , ] in ) ( ; , oiljiu
old tint , that vet followed In tlmo of win
incl Hint wus'Inovcr tilumphod over by
my encin ) ijj ( tu vqrld It re pu-sents oui .
i-oiulolfoiu , our" * nlins nnd oeu purposes ,
for wo Inivo 'AW purposes now , us your
spokesman sc/-WMI ' H.ild , but tw | publlu
rood , tlio eowmiMi good of all \\V nut
lighting to kotp tiio currency of this j-ov-
iinmont n.s hnmie ) nn tie government It
self und untjriiThlu-d us the HUIIV b inner
of thefuo ( GHsU die. ring. ) Wu pio-
pose that tlilM rtiitlon shnll not bi'Kln now ,
after UO ye.lVVyirloiious / lil-iteiiy. to io-
IHldlati ) Its eWllt.l/'e-lthe-i iiilille oi private
I am Rim ] to > ni * t j ou all Onei.lorlons
thing about nciplilnl an priiulpleH hi that
the ) aililiLnfniJlHinsdvi K to tlueiliioueil
men of the cejimlfy , iia well ni tinunrdu -
e-.itrd , and we- submit them with confidence )
lo the learned ofTjvui ) profession. Wo ap
peal not to iMftilpn , not to picjiicllee , not
to IsnoranciV put to Intelllgeiico nnd
piitrlotlnm. * ' "
'Iho fifth adclVc'aa ' was madu just at ! -
o'clock and IaUl Iho c-mpln rs of the Sta
Tin Pinto cqiU ! > an > en I McKiutouh Ileup
h'll ' & Co otiM'.i > bi.rn The party vvai in
troiluced b } Voiijrtueman J H. Johnson
Spcceh No GjV.-as elnllvi-r 1 to rallrouil
nun In the c-qiplqj of Iho Plttfiburs if Western
orn , IntrocluTd ) iy Robert K Kr hc'iblhl
Ne.xt tatae tl\er \ farmers , miners laborers
tin nakcrs anJ v ppl Krowtrs of Washingtot
counl ) Pennslvanl3 , a pait ) of largo pro
partloiu lu grcellnsji were picacntcd b
John II Mur ccJi.on tvhalf of tl.o cltlzei
In gcncial , and b ) Join ) d Clark , on belu
-f ihcwoilgrov era' as-.oclat on
Dclrgal'cns from P nii } lvJnh , Pe/i
Wayne. In ! , anil Ohio lls'cncd to and at
ilauJeJ speech Ko ? In the crowd wci
\ircrlcati wire vvo-l.trs cf Cleveland lutre
lucoj b ; J W. Silihevlvid. Kllby Manjfr
irli 'f comriny LlI P Nslt con.p ny tr ,
Mi-velsnJ Harihvffe eon jiany , Intioluccd I
Itrlei I Dally : Slur Tire n.lik . compan
tiipliyrs of Pllt . 'ur Intrc lucel bVP
lari Callwll ; . tu'.iirn Oil Well Suppl
o.npmy emclo * { < i l-if l-.rpl b ) Giai
Hubler ) ad Prit \ r , e. Ind , rjllroa
rrcn , InT'-iJjCcl v , " . . li Cof
i
I
APPEAL TO THE LABORERS
E. Eosowator and 0. J. Qrceno Address South
Oranha Workingmen ,
WERE FOOLED BY THE DEMOCRATS ONCE
lfiitppliiii | mid n Mieitnl Ciirr < 'iie > 5 > s-
I MU Ulll Hpxtnrp HIP ProniMTllj
\ \ lilpliienNhi.l ullh ( InVil -
vi-iit e > f Itpi loprnllc Itulp.
A largo and Interested crowd of South
Omaha voters congregated nt the republican
vvlgwem at Twcntj-fouitli ami M streets last
night to hear the Issues of the campaign
ellscussc'd by i : . Roscwatcr nnd C. J. Greene
U wns particular ! ) n meeting of laboring
men. The audience wns large- composed of
men wlto belonged to the waco-earnlug class
and man ) of them were accompanied b >
their wives , who seemed equally Interested
In the political problem as It concerned
those who labor.
The wigwam was \vell fllleel long before the
speakers arrived Tnen the sides of the tent
wns taken up nnd another 1 irgo crewel stood
outside. It wns one of the innst ordorlv
political gatherings that lias been seen In
South Onialn this > e.ir and the speakers
vveio lie-arc ! with a degree of attention that
Indicated that laboring men of South Omilia
realized the Importance of the1 Issues before
them. Just before1 the speaking he-Kan the
raised seats that had been constiuctod.it the
rear of the vlgwamp went down with n
crash , but no one was serlousl ) Injured an1
no dsorder followed '
The Inside of the tent was profuse Iv
docoiulccl with Hags and large portraits ol
McKlnlo ) and Hobart occupied the right and
left of the singe President John Melntre
of the Irish-American Republican club pre
sided and othcis on the platform weic Jame
Hole , Tom Adams , Thomas Callowa )
Chailes Uradle ) and Z P. Hedges Mi
Ilosowatcr was Introduced as the lira
speaker and received a heart ) greeting Hi-
remarks were addressed primarily to the
laboring men , who composed the bulk of tin
audience , ami as 1m showed tint It was nut
a question of mclu dollars but of moro em
ployment the applause was liberal and frc
quent
WAOK KAUNKRS nHRPIiY INTranSTHl )
In the beginning Mr Uosc-water snld that
the audience befrre him furnUhcd a itrlldnp
Indication that the people of South Omaha
and especially the v age-earners , had i
deep Interest In the outcome of this cam
r-nign Ho did not propose to appeal to pas
slon or picjudlce , but to discuss the epic- ,
tlon Impnitlally No cue was moro elceph
concerned than those who toiled AVhat
am.i7cd him was that any laboring mai
should arra ) himself en the side of those
who had made lalor idle He would take
for his text Hran's declaration. "Thou shall
not prc"s the crown cf thorns upon the brow
of labor , " and from that to discuss the
Issue and the merits of the man who
said It
The question was whether frco coinage
would bring relief to labor and Increase its
opportunities for emploment Mr Rosewater
briefly rev lewed the blstor ) of monctur ) leg
Islation In this countr ) to show the fallac )
of Uran'a exordiums about the "money of
the constitution ' and similar phrases
When the coinage sstem was established
by Alcxinder Hamilton there was no pro
vision for any specific dollar. That was
left optional with congress The maker. !
of the constitution had aimed at n double
standard and had made a ratio of 15 to 1
The double standaid was the proper ex.
pre-'sloii of the i'se of the two metals Hl-
metalll'm wns a humbug and a fraud on
its face If the option was left to the elebtoi
to pa ) in any metal he chose , as was pro
posed by Hoan , ho would very naturall )
pay In the cheaper metal It would bo e\
actly as though a man had borrowed wheat
when wheat and coin were both worth CO
cents a bushel v.lth the understanding ; tint
ho could pay In cither pioduct. When he
came lo pay wheat v.as still GO cents , but
ccrn had chopped to 15 cents , and he would
he very llkel ) to piy In the cheaper grain
The speaker went on to show that the
continual charges made by nran that tlu
lepubll an paity was an "enom ) to silver"
wore historically false The republican
party hud coil PI ! r > 00 times as much allvei
while It was In power as the democrat ! '
pait ) hail In eighty } cars. During tlu
tvdve vears from 1S7S to IS30 It had colnc >
$1,100 every seven minutes Up to 1ST'
the democratic rait ) Ind only cclncel $100,00
In slher altogether
TRUE PRinND OP LA neil
Returning to the iiucstion PS applied dl
rectly to the laboring men , Mr Rosev.ntei
declared that every thcoi ) must bo tested
In the light of leasoa and experience The
laboring men had uiany champions when
their votes were wanted , but few v/heii the )
wanted help themselves Who had pressei.
the crown of thorns on the brow of labor if
not the men who had taken away the op
portunlty to labor. The republican part )
had alwas he-en the file-nil of labor At
the time of the great Q strike the i.-llroad
company had Imported hundreds of aimed
Plnkcrtons He had himself denounced that
action , and finally any Impoitatlon of Plnk-
01 tons had been prohibited by a law passed
by a republican legislature- and signed bj
a republican govcinor 'Had Bran eve-i
been heard to ilcnounco the Plntcertons"
He was in congress at the tlmo of the Chicago
cage strike Was his voice then lifted in
protest against the conduct of the couitii
which he now denounces for their nllcgcu
govcrnme'it by Injunction' ' Ho v/as con
tinual ! ) talking about fighting the hatfless
of the laboring men Had ho over fought
thcli battles when ho had nn opportunity
to elo It or before ho vv.ntcd their votes' "
Then Mr. Rosewatei asked his audience
to compaio the woik of Ilryan In congress
v.ith that of Ua\o Mercer "All that Hryan
hid o.vci accomplished wns to got n bill
through v\lileh provided for n freight ele
vator in the poatolllce- building at Lincoln
And until ver ) recently tliero had been a
sheet of brass tacked on ( lie side of tile
elovatoi that Informed visitors that It had
been placed ti.inthrough the efforts of
W J. Hian "
The speaker tl.en proceeded to show that
Hryan's entire record was that of u man
who hid iostiocd ! ) labor rather than built
it up Ho quoted the largely Incieased
Importations of wool to show Inr.v much of
the homo industry hud been killed off by tlu
bill which Hian had assbted ' 3 enact
His action In working to secure the repeal
of the licet sugar bounty was cited as a
direct blow lo one of the nuwt promising
In litBtrlcs of Nebtan'ca Since the icpcal the
ImpoitatloiiH of sugar had reached $10J-
00X000 , enough If it was manufactured at
home to inal-itnln H20 inc lories , employing
from -100 to 000 hauls apiece. If the bill
had mt been repealed , there v nulel nov ,
be twent } of thfso plants In operation In
Nebraska uinl nt le-ui ono lunr South
O-i aim Mi Hijan hail ncvei built a hoii-
or given three ) dus , ' labor to rii ) workIng -
Ing ii.an , but ho had struck off the dut/
of $10 per lira 1 on ( nttlo mil the irault
lied Lien n lloo I of Itnpoited cattle from
Mixko tint had foiced down the pi ices
which Ihe Aim-rUnn ; roduccr iccclvccl for
Mi pioduct Pour jiiTi ago Ilran had
asked the people ) to vote for free tr.ido Lo-
cause It would make the prices of com
modities come elown Now lo was oxhoit-
Ing them to vote for frco sllvei In order
to make prices go up
ALWAYS LUiOR'S CHAMPION.
The closing nigumcnts of Mr Rosewnter
Incited niiViXcd tiithUHiaem , which fontlnu
by way of greeting to the next bpcnVci
.Mr Giecno spoku someUiat hrlell ) , but
nailc an effective appeal to Ihe woiklngiiiin I
o veto for their own Interests by voting foi
Iho paity thnt had alwaya been tiuo t >
them. Ha declined tl ct for half a cciitur )
II erci wm a struggle In this rountr ) be
iwecii cheap slave labor on the ono Iiaml
ivl fren labor on the other The democratic
'artj had been the champ'on ' of slave labor
Hid Iho republican party had been thei chain-
Ion of fico I a lor. The man who llftc-d his
'and to stril.o down the republican pait )
as an enemy to labor Haily In
vo 'ROa the republican party had
flared that If no were to bo able to
protect our own labor wo must erect a bar-
-Itr at our borde-ru which ehould keep the
laupcr labor of Kuiopo fiom depreciating
ho value of the services of ou own people.
\ctlng on that principle It had built up a
jicut } Btom of protection \Vi > hael grown
marvelously In 1M2 there were no In
dustries In this countr ) thnt wen not run
nlnK on full time. Commerce was nt Its full
tide Kvery one \v s bp | to have the neces
sities , nnd most people * ome of the luturlt *
of life This was the supreme net of the IP-
puMlcnn part ) after thlrt-slx } enrs of
Klorlous hutor )
Then continued the speaker , the demo
cratic party lincl urgeel the laboring men to
vote for free trmle. telling thrm thnt they
could bii ) their living cheaper The ) had
believed it They voted It and In a sln lo
) ear Toooonn men were Idle and the ) Intel
been Idle ever since It was time to stop
and think whether it would not be a good
thing to try the re-pul.licnii part ) again
Speaking of the mime ) question , Mr.
Greene cited figures to show that It was the
emploment of labor and not the volume of
monev that made prosperity He took the
financial hlitor ) of the countjy from 1SOO
and proved thnt duiliiK the periods when
prosprrlt ) prevailed there was Invariably
much IP S mone ) In circulation per rnpltn
than In the corresponding Intervals when
commerce was at a s-tnndstlll and financial
panic relRtied He concluded with nn ef
fective appeal to his hearers to maintain the
honor of lhe > republic and the ellgnlt ) of tlio
government
MIT ir roit % orritsto sr.Tn.is.
Ninth \Vnrel ll < - | > ilil | lea MM Ulll Vnlf
Dlrppl fen foiiiiplltiiiin.
There was n ver ) filr attendance at last
night's meeting of the' Ninth Wanl Repub
lican club , Vice President C ll Hutchison
presiding Collln 11 D.ivliNon nnd George'
W Mercer wore both present to nurse their
councllmnnlc booms , but haimoti ) prevailed
It was decided to have but one delegation
pioposed to leprcsont the ward In the city
convention This dele-mitlon will vote In
favor of the coilncllmnnlc cindlilnln iccelv-
ItiK a mnjoilty of votes at the prlmnrv elec
tion The follow Ing were chosen members
of this delegation J A lleveilv C. J
Johnson Louis Hurke , W G Templeton , An-
Ircw Wiggins II L lllbbeler. Pied Kiatz ,
1 H Mcrulloi-h nnd Anlrew Peacock
CharKs Unltt moved thnt the ; weld de-lc-
qntton be Instructed to support IMwnrd P
Ilavls for the posltlem of elnlrnun of the-
Ity central committee Iho motion pre
vailed
Secretary Chapman then I itroduced a resolution
elution which brought forth i llvel ) discus-
jlon It favored the selection b ) the club
f three men for places on the clt ) central
-nnimltlee and the recommendation of these
. en to the ward delegation Unltt pitched
into the resolution and Its author bltteil ) ,
. ml insisted that the Instrument , tlut was
, o obnoxious to him It siiould be laid on the
> ble He made a motion to thnt effect , but
3 It received on ! ) two votes In its favor It
was declared lost After some moro discus-
lion ns lo whether the ward delegates or
the voters nt the ward at large should name
the three' nu-mbcis of the1 cential eotn-
nlttco. It wns decided to table the matter
until the next meeting It is to be brought
< ip as the spe-elal order of business at the
iieotlng on Tuc-sda ) evening next
i.uous niiKiiir nIN IN ri i\vs. :
aoiinel "Moin- mill I'l eilpe-l Inn C.i-llln-
a Slronur PonllioliI Tlie-rp.
The report comes now tint Texas Is veiy
likely to bo In the republican column when
the leturns come In after election da ) .
That Is the wa ) that R V Mlskousk ) the
editor of the Pokiok Zapadu the local Do-
hemlan organ , sized up the situation in that
state after several weeks' visit there
Mr Mlskousk ) states that ho visited In
all about nineteen of the counties of the
state , including the democratic stronghold ,
raetto count ) . Ho sas that the demo
cratic central committee * of the latter Is al
most ready to concede- the county to the
republicans The same situation holds In
the othei counties he visited Under the
circumstances ho concludes that if Texas
goes for Hran ut all It will bo b ) a very
small majority , but that there Is a strong
piobablllt ) that It will go for McKlnley
Mone ) Is cutting a big figure In that state ,
as overwhere else , but Mr Mlskous'j ) sas
that protection Is the iallng ! cr ) He
states that the people have finally como to
the conclusion that Industi Ics cannot be
fostered in their fctatc without protection ,
and therefoio Intend to do all In their power
to establish such a policy
llpe-llnu I" lcieicleN Prc'plne-l.
A meeting was held last evening under
the auspices of the Douglas County Repub
lican club In the large hall at Riser's park ,
In Douglas precinct The hall was crowded
with an enthusiastic audience and the
ipcakcis wore ) liberally applaudcMl John C
Miprton delivered an address confined prln-
"ll all ) to a discussion of the tariff ques
tion A. C Wnlkup also spoke , his argu
ment being almost exclusively en the eur-
cnr ) question Iho republicans of Douglas
precinct are full ) alive and arc making an
tight.
MPICPP ( "iiinliii ; Home TlilN AppU
The roj abllcan congressional committee
held its first meeting ycsterda ) at Its head
quarters in the First National Dank bulld-
lim All me nbera of the ccmmlttee except
Messrs McKcnny and Sprich of Washing
ton were present Onl ) routine business
was transacted , but the members of the
committee fiom all sections of the district
report Mcicer enthusiasm imaliit d I'on
D II Mercer will rcttnn this week and devote -
vote the rennlnln weeks of the campaign
'o his own canvass
\ \ llslllimtllll ClUIIllj \\lllllS SppnKiTN.
W J Cook of llhlr was In the city ) es-
Icrclay arranging for speakers for October
8 , rcpubllcin di ) at the Washington count )
fall It H expected that Hen D II Mercer
ant1 lion I H Micfoll will both bo In rt
tendance lion John R Webstei of this
city will deliver the principal address Mi
Cook EajB Washington Is In line foi Mc-
Klnlc'y , Ma.foil and Meicei
I'olllli'al Niitt-N.
John Roslcky leit jesteielay afternoon to
make a numbci of speeches on sound money
Ho will nddrcss audiences In IJiuno and Lln-
wocd Ho will ic-tuin to the clly again to-
moi row-
\ Dohenilan lepubllcan and Hound money
club \lll bo oiga.il/cd In Mouth Omaha on
next Wolnesdi ) nlUit ut Kousky's hall
John Rcslcky will bo the speaker of the
e venliih
Mr Dohcity of ' "oluinbns 0 , Is In the
city and will mfike- several icpubllcan
speeches in the state lie has he-en foi many
juai.i piomlnent In lupuhllcan polities In the-
lintlicvc state
I. J Palda , i ft CD sllvei spe-akeii from
Klgln la , who Is at prcdunt In the city. Isle
lo ! ( pltlod against I"rank Dole/e'l of Prc > -
iiiont in a discussion of the money question
The debate will occui on some evening next
icole on which Pnldi has un open duto.
DOPED BY WHY BISMARCK
Use of the Prince's Letter Shown to B ?
Farcical in the Extreme ,
BRYAN AND HIS FRIENDS NEATLY TAKEN IN
MM rli ( 'ontiiiiMtlpil I.HIrr from the
Ulil Iron 4'lmiirt'llitr AM ? Oli-
i riH-el li > \mlr '
I ) . U hllc.
N13\V YOUK Oct 2 lion Andrew T .
\Vlilli willing from Ithlcn. tins addressed
i nn open letter to Ueorgo Culberson of Texas ,
on thi' lecent lllsinflrek campaign document ,
In I ho course of which ho aa > s
'Yon h.ne doubtless nlrenily Icnrneil that
liolh ) ou ntnl Mr IJrjntl hive boon dee-rived
rpRnrdlns the letter of Prince Ulsmarrk to
jou ntul that the most Important part of
tl at first published , la a forqerj. the dis
horn st translation foisted upon ) ourse > lf nnd
Mr nrjnn containing a paragraph favoring
the lunnoillato nnd Independent action of
the Unltpil Stalia In favor of blinetnlllsm ,
which dots tint exist in the original
"Of course1 1 acquit > ou both of Intentional
deceit , bellc-vlnt ; > ou both lee hlgh-mlnelcd
to prollt Knortlngl ) b > this forged Interpola
tion Hut what are the Atneilran people to
think of n cansi > which re-sorts to such
glaring criminal uvpedleiit , ana i-hldi doc *
not hc-sltiUo to exhibit > ou and > onr rnnill-
d.ato In the light of dupes before00000.000
of ) our fellow iltlrens ?
"lint , even concedlnz ' .mt 'm1 ' letter , wither
or without Its farced Interpolation , piovcs
that 1'rtnee lllsmnck favors the unllmltt I
colnanej of silver In the I nlted States , 1
resppe-tfull ) submit thnt jour excellent } s
conlldliiK applications to the prime foi his
opinion on this subject anil the line of hln
H'ply , mailo b ) ) otiistlf and Mr llrjati , 13
posslhl ) the most f.irclcnl ev nt In Ameri
can hlslnr ) My reasons for this opinion
ale as follows As minister of the I'ulled
SUtis to the German rmplro In 1S70 1SSO
and Isil , I caiafull } observed the ilrmono-
tlzntlon of silver in ( lorman ) . which reached
i Its consummation during those > ears Pos-
slblv Mr Ilrjan and vour cxcellenc > will bo
ama/cMl to Icain that the controlling nud
| directing agent In th it demonetization was
none otlie-i than > oui kind correspondent
Prince Ulsmarrk , himself , at that time the
all-powerful chancellor of the Herman em
pire
HOW (1CIIMANY UNI.O\DiD :
"Somowliit over half of the vast mass of
silver thus reduced to bullion was sold by
the ( Id man ROV eminent but the prlio ran
so low tint the sale ? were stopped nnd the
German tieasurj was left with an mormons
qinntltj of this elrnrcelnlccl monej In Us
coffers. .imcuiitlnK. If I ivmembir ilejhtl ) ,
to something over $101000010 A little of
it sc$2000000 Orrmaii ) managed to worlc
1 oft upon poor Kgvpt under the Kheillvc
Tew Ilk and Illsmnrrk reall > n patriotic farsighted -
' sighted state.sman , would naturill ) be glad
to find a slmlltr dupe on this side of the
\tlantlc , and to unload the lemalmler upon
the United States , at , Da ) , twice Us market
value
"As a simple matter of fact , of which
I win direct ! } and official ! ) cognl/ant Pi Into
Ulsmarck uttcrl } declined to take put In
an > K''neral scheme of bimetallism without
the ro-operatlcn of Great Ui Halt ) , though
the I'nlted SlHtes and Trance Jointly nnd
oflhlall } united In urging It upon his govern-
.innt
"Prlnco DismalcK is , Hist of all. as many
of his victims besides } our excellency and
Mr Ilijan have had occasion to know all
greit German patriot , devoted above all
things to Germ in Interests ae > ho under
stands them Hence It was thnt ho
demonetized Hllvci and brought German } on
a geld b.ibla , nnd foi the same patriotic
reasons which are now leading the great
Russian minister of finance , DeXVItto to do
the same thing Hence It was , too that
Prince Bismarck did his best to exclude
from Get many our American agricultural
products , and , luncn doubtliss It Is that
he. shows his Geiman patilotlsm b } oblig
ing ! } suggesting to } ou nnd through } ou to
the American people a pollc } which would
piofit Germany to the amount of about $50.
000000 to sa } nothing of comfoitablc pioflta
to the fierman bullion hioKern
NO PIURN1) OP SlLVHIt
"If you think that the ex-chancellor
writes } ou in an affectionate spirit toward
democracy. 01 toward the United States In
L'cncral permit me to suggest thnt } ou oak
vour respected Texan fellow citizen , Mr.
I.asKer. for his opinion on this subject
Ho will , perhaps give Infoimatlon of which
your c\ccllcnc ) appeals to lie strange ! } IK
norant icspcctln the ticntincnt of the
icsolutlons of the United States congiess
lesraidlns Mr I.asker's cmlntnt mother
resolutions whleh tmanatcd from a Icxan
member of that congress and which were
spumed nnd ictnrned to the United Slatea
contcmptuousl } by the great Geiman states
man
"How a governor of Texas could In a
crisis like till1) ) , null the advice of a foielgn
.statesman , who nail thus grossly Insulted
hla state and conntiy utterly passes inv
coiiipu'hciislon , and how a candidate for
the presldcnc ) of the United States could
ejuotc- with nppioval such a letter from a
man who has thus ticatcd his country ,
Is equally astonishing
"Poi Prlnee lllsinarck , us the statesman
and ( lie patriot I have piofound respect ,
but he his alwajs held democratic anil ro-
tmbliran governments In contempt "
i SHIM ; THI : rumit : CAMP \irv.
( olil Sin mill ril Ili-moi-riilM Mill. ii K n
I'lulil In I In- HUH ! .
CHICAGO , Oct 3 Iho executive c m-
inltteo of the gold standard demociatli party
liiu ( icated a cimjiilgn cotnmittre < onsist
Ing of nine memberr John P. HopKInu ol
Chicago has been elected vice clmliiimn of
this committee , Mr Ityniim hcldlng the
chalim.inbhip ex odlclo During the re
malmlci of the campaign Mi lIopKlnu will
be In vlitual tontrol of ( ho Pnlmei an 1
Hucknu campaign Chairman llntim havliiK
crrangiil to take the stump
Tint ( ampalgn commlllco Is as follows ,
Danie-l It hawlir. St Paul , MinnV iJ
Hildi man I.ouUvllle , ICy j \ , . C Knieitlx-r
of Kansas C'lt > , Colonel \ , M Maiiili ,
Maishalllown. la , W. U Shelby ( jian 1
llaplds , Mich , Hills II Usher , I.a i robbc. ,
\VI , John P Pi duel. Indianapolis , C1 V.
Holnian of Maine.
K < > ! ltllcU. > l'OlllllHlH | r/lllllll MlIII' ) Jill ,
PRANKKORT , Ky. Oct aIho hevni'i
llsiilct populist cpnipiillon passed a icjj-
lution endorxlng Hian uml lucivlillng tint
l silvci din.ou.it loeongresi bo nomlnatiil.
The Pill that WML
"Tlio pill llmt will , " implicH the pills that
won't. Tlioir nnmo ia legion. The numo of "tho
pill that will" IB Ayor'a Cathurtio Pill. It ia a
pill to rely on. Propojly tif-ed it will euro con-
Htipatiou , bihouanesB , siuk headache , and the
other ills that result from torpid liver. Aycr's
pilla mo uot designed to spur the liver into n
momontiry activity , louvinp ; it in yet moro
incupablo rouuition nftor the immediate effect
ii. past. They are compounded v/ith Iho pur-
jOje of tonniB up the entire system , romovinc
the obstructing conihtiono , nnd puttJug the
Jivor into proper lolationa with the rest of the
organs for natural co-operation. The record of
Ayor'ts Pills dining the half century they have
boon in public UHO outnblisho. ? their great and
pormauont vnluu in all liver nifectionn.
Ayer's Cathartic Pails.