i mwt fi IJnil'fcyn .-. 10 s.v TIIE COURIER .OlIAWftLG-KIJ. v2i B 389f5'i3S3StBZ'BB" .... .; . . t i,,!.r,,ff i, ,ifil Jt; .it. tiiij .f nt limtno entered AT4nE'tiiiaiLT'iiyicK1ky'iBb6kiw:i.Aas'MArrEB. " "' ,. . .... ..i '.ii - Q It.' .. i. '. 'An,. I.lii... i?.t.f,. ..n.?iMiiiinr) ' ' ' ' VimtMlKD EvWV ATttrbYBV '" ' l '-' ,)'"' . TrtE, cbp;Ri.E(?; MBfe'isMaicaMi., OFFICE 142 N. IITH 8TREET. TEPHONi36vi i" iUnH' Ii'iri-i.j i) ,. lu -H'tuvViH tnl'l- W. MORTON 8MITH, Editor. '( .,)..n.. ,).r,rti il.ir-idVt , iHli,,. LoWl.,l itf !. II.. r. iVlhtllM i-. il.Jj. '-I'7 troubles. In almost overy mstancu turbulence Las bean crpajqif ( vy those who do not know what the American Hag meansthat are strangers to the liberty of law on which our freo government is founded. They have no appreciation of liberty except liberty of liceiisejandthoyasSUnie'tnat iri. fred'g6vernriicnt,trro'aTtf',fr to destroy property and lifo when their wishr isregardtl' by their employers. With them aro a few Americans, but as a rule the tur tbqnketemt,iofouiindiistnaiicircls are brutal forcighoreJ.who aro not citizens, and who have no sympathy with the free'dorii'that is made sacred by the majesty ofjaw. Nw(af1w1hayetJjfiifaghoiqd)pgr our, schoolsy why. npt.go a step farther and' provide that the stars and stripes shall float from every .mine and every factory, and every Jiivo of industry lntho-coun try! If only Americans by birth or by adoptipn.wero employed jn these trreat industries there would be littlo need' to teach the lesson t 'i i ii -il feu baerlpt toil liA.vnccO.ii fin i ii-ul PctBnnum1..j..-,H-,-MiHtMr(-ii-J-i TroiptKb- .mmtvitfft. Six months.,.. ., 100 I Onemontlr ,... ,.,....r,..,.0c. ' fi 'ni in SUi8lpcopic6Ji.iJ..'t0.iiJ.u2i.l'iTocenls.'J. initio ain J ! 1 f J i M41"? f f' ' ' -4hw iln.. hU .- For salo at all new stands in thin city and O-aali- and ounll .train! iili.i w A Hmitod number of advertisements will bo -inserted, Rates inado known o !'- -. i' I Ji.in . ..... Til. is .iii.it j,l t ti iwy Miiilft lifli U it i i"."t: 1 .I'ltfi ,JUi III -ii iH'ill LlNCOLS, NEB., SaTURDA'JONe'S,1----. ' i liuu i liii- i I i ' if )i -.i great 'of obedience to law that is taught by the flag of the republ ic Un ifortanatly't6,gree!of e'mpCT!hs'lad thh. bnn'-ficapau. per labor to our Bhorcs to supplant the A nierican" 'wbrkmerl, and these ignorant, brutal creatures have logically accepted all the vices ofioUrfreeYBtem with nodoibf- its J virtuosi h-ydomin-b 'in a large proportions qfitheTstriliing- minors throughout the land; 'and thd',havt b'rought'such reproach uponbrgahtzed labor as must; for feit the publiciBympatbyUhat poor!" paid-labor would inspire. 'I' The first thing to do is to stop the coming of ignorant labor, and ,hp next .thing should s bo to driYQfrpni. our fields of industry 'every one of them who has participated, in lawlessness by violent assaults upon erson or property. But whether few or many of this turbu rJ Ji 7T T i 1"i; i T i i ' ' ' .I lent class shall remain in tho.eniploy; of our operators,, the stars and Those persons, whftgive more ihaq a passing .notice ,to .JKftqte . QOuld flt 'over 'them1 toteach to,citizeaand stranger alike tRd cpnd.tK,ns of .everyday life, cannot haye failed.to.not.cq that thfreQ gm:ernment fB tho gOVCnm'ent of peace. of law and of pro- tection to the humblest of its people. Let the flag not onlyiloat over' our schools, but let it tiodt over'&uV 6ur mines, our shops, and our mills as well. Let it be teaching its lesson from day to day alike fo children and to workingmen, arid thus train all t& respect1 thesan .. city of our law' and pay homage to the grandetlrof our fTee'institu tions. ' - ' i " ',' 'w Hd there has developed in this state within the last few months, a feel- v.iug of patriotism., a repugnance, lor those, ideas,. eleni9nts,and men that have been arrayed under; different banners, in. opposition tohe welfare and progress of tho state, such, as has not been manifest for several years., u Apparently there are many persons who are realiz ing for tho first-time, the full extent, of the .almost irreparable, injury done by the various bands of destructionists that have united in thearmy of populism,, that has swept oyer the state in a more or less .triumphant manner, a movement that three and a half years ago pro duced in, thiqcity,an open revpjt against the law and caused the cor ridors of the state hquso to gleam, with, the bayonqts of soldiery: that sent abroad at that time a message of disorder and anarchy and fraud, that created, a .lasting prejudice against Nebraska; that at thi Br 4P4r aV Tin 4f lvttl h & ! si n1 9 vd 4nh v n n at vt& I r Awtn ,. Uu i w -p "" - ' -- .jw.u.-sMi.Hju- with it8 purees. Hetill acts upon tho principle that the.Kingdom bnum by attempting to tear,.down and overthrow tho residue of ofGod fcometh not witti : 6bservati6n't WKenHo Was on e'ar'thTmen , siaie creuit; inai nas raiseu up sucn aesperaie anu, dangerous "men ae Van Wyck(aod JamnTthe,onstituJtiqn-Schrader who .recogpjze no right and are guided, Iply jby, demagogic avarice; .thai; has sent to the congress of the United States as the representatives of the intelligence of the, pe9ple of Nebraska, these , .towqring . frauds and brain, diseased harlequins, McKeighan, Kem .an Allen, . that has raised to an .equal. heigh t,;W. Jj,Pryan,;w;hQ'i8 nojess pernic ious in his ideas apd tendency; that has, in a general wray, rtjyqrsedthe " ,. "l , 'ry i - T. I ',: " .jmightliavo'foiuuLovidences of.this.work.hadhabeenlWillin'g to look resulting from this four years, dose of populism iiavo at last roused . .. i -, . , -, .. , , ,,. .. Because Mr. Stead came to Chicago and ran up against, thalevil and wrote a book about ii there has been a great sensation. The other side of "If Christ Came to Chicago" has been presented by a writer in tho Outlook, of New York, who says: Christ has come to Chicago and Mrl'Stead has' failed' t'6'f discover him there. Thatlis, perhaps, not strange, for Christ alwayd 'works' in quiet, unscnsational ways, dealing not with the surfaco of life, but did not know' that ho ha'd come; theydidnot-pcrceive his presence, uui uiiutiDiauu uia iuuiuuus, iiur xcaiiu mu power Ol nis WOrK. John the Baptist, a prisoner by the Dead Sea, wondered whether the Christ liad coitfedr the' wdrldVas to whit for lan6thef.1 'The very disciples whoj followed I Christ did noti comprehend" him',' and wondered. wjhy.ho didnot,begip his,,wprk,lwhilo all.theltimb he . was carrying i on. So it is not , strange that, Mr,Steatf has vjsited Chi cago and not discovered that Christ has' been there before 'him, and was busily at work there. v. iTha" JHler-Otean commenting on tho above says: I 'Mri Stead ,up a long suffering people, and thprq is in all, parts pf tho atu to, a rapidly growing eaUment, Qt disgust forjthomenandthpaty that hare blighted Nebraska,ancl there are hundreds, ancj.tboueand.of men at tho present .tiny. whq arc, ;n9 only .willing, jbut. anxious to ,tj stand up for Nebraska, mep who for the last fpw years have, stood t, ,idly by, whilo the dcs,tructipnists were at, work. This fooling i (not confined to the republican party. Dcmocrats.whOjbaye manifested jJaa diepoeitiontofuso and confuse, are eeqing the .error of ,the way and for it, or had even tried to comprehend it when brought to hisattl-n tion. But wherever ho found men and women trying to do Christ-' tj fan, .work .and shpw,1thqtJGhrist, h,ad keen .hero, .inspire , themjrwith a love for his work, Mr. Stjad,felt call.ed upon to. rebuke them,or patronize them. The Outlook's suggestion, that the title of Mr. Stead's book,shpuld havobeen 'ThecvilHas CometojCfiiago,' 'isa very good one. Chicago people have nr denied, that, the devil nas boenliero and accomplished much, just as ho has" in all 11 r dfttTftiTk I n nvv - nv lrv v 4 .rX 1 -m 1?V 1 V , .the. best elementpf this party, is now -strongly opposed to any? sort of ,. , , . ,, , , . . , urntn mi-? r ii i- t i Tu- "li." ' ' n,m from many of h,s old haunts, reclaiming a large territory in tho affiliation with the populists. It is entirely within the,range. of r . - ,.. , , , , ., ) i ,, fa 'b iwucg w iuu prouauuiiy uiai ino awaKcncu intelligence, oi eorasKa people may thin vear brinrr :iimtit cHimnltito recnvnrv from ivinnlist inflnonfi - j p ,... w . .. . rm'placolhis statd'Snffie'foll f it t T J .IU a hi ilyi ni to Lni honor ncermore? !l 4." I i n ii it!- 'i; .11 x . j'fii 1"' 13 Olii VU U ..!. JI j 4 , i .i' t It is welLinjthjejday-q fprgttulqpas of law and .order, in jiuany of our industrial circles to have the stars, and.stripeswavod from our j public schools, hejeispropiefy iajtitaljimD8, but it. is, well , tat,s parncuiar time yvnen lawlessness jprflyayipjinany secnons or plc;on that hc wa8 bot a diiple.0r eviI rafcr thariT ..eWaTtor 4a.Uxe country to teach the children o-4ho,!jig4) tbgtheflag o the good." ' BeeKer rter .-republic is the symbol not only of publici6afcty uj1pfJuvw.'ind,order. There is great need to have the American Hag hoisted over pur mills and great factories where lawlessners has been bred by labor "But'hb is still here. 'and Mr. Stead' seems to'hi.vft'wriltU'Wia'i.Lt, . to demonstrate that' he .ound th"dvirin almost every place 'he , went while in the cityi .No one was surprised that,Mri,Sted found the dqvil here, because he devoted thfi greyer ,. part, , pf, ,hig time to hunting out the haunts where ho was sure to And his satanic ma jesty. !Th-ro'ha-rit1been aadtherVe'putablo'v'lsitor in thiscity who so persistently sought out the haunts of vice as did Mr. Stead seek .cin.ona. hP, e onlymanwhoe.verdeyptedsofliuchitimeand TTrtV'rt - ln Knitnn e -V. .lv..rt 1 fV 1 ? " . .."" "" uuuuio ui ixio ucwi iu yuicago.antLOBcapea tho.sus Dicion that he was not a discmle Vif nn mtii.r tinn"' t,'i- Mr. Stead"s view of Chicago is a good deal like Rev. Herron 's view of tho United States., ThQ.dcvil.doe.lnot holdmndisputed ' swdy in Chicago; neither is tho United States a fallen nation. tX - -iuC -v- -v ., ' rlnimjmhi ,