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Show pHcltly declare, a Ike sense ef the Amect- for Microbes. cau people, that after four years ef failure declare la restore the Union by the experiment ef Starteriologlit Us pretense of a A fii cider, eellzer and slin-A- t war, during whlrk, under military un'esaUy or war power higher kill will tlisn the Constitution Itthe L'oiiatitutlon germs, typhoid j baa been disregarded Is every pert, and Hr ooi at 1.5 per cent destroy self liberty and private tight alike trodvhJ and at 2 per cent prevent public den down, end I lie material tb ronut! 1qi elopmeut. humanity, demand that Immediate efforts be made fee AT STAKE a eeuaatloB of hostilities, with a view te an animate convention of nil tlia Mura, or other peaceable mentis, to tbe end that, at j the earllitr practicable moment, peace may be reel ore d on the haala of the b'edernl of the Mates. 18 NOT THE PERSONALITY OP Union Pcmanda t tale's Rights. raut Qaeetlon la Whilhir a Bepnbll-ca- a or Democratic Admlaiatratlen hall Cooduct tha Affaire of Govern meet Opposition la Neither Aafa Saaa tbi Republic party wel-aa- a a comparison of the character and personality of (t candidate with Ana of tli candidate of til St. Louis oavsutiou, it prefers to urge th election of Roosevelt and Fairbanks a representative and Instruments of Ih party' policies and intention. If k were true, which it i not, that A pm i anything in tb career of Judge Akoo II. Parker to jnidiry th conten-tio- a Aat h would make a "saner and mfer" President than Theodor Room. velt, A fact would reuiaiu, that, tied ap with th Democratic party, a Moue wit' the modern equipment of a Glad-tocould not insure r af and aaua a goveriimeut a tha Uepulilicaa party baa administered under President RooseAkhongu fit-tfn- g velt. It Tha Proaperlty ot tha Agrtcaltgrnl Clans Means that Men Kngngod in All Other Lines of Indnetry Aye Alee Prosperous. J THE CANDIDATES. Nor THEIR RESULTS CONTRASTED WITH THOSE OF DEMOCRACY. ISiUE 7 .f REPUBLICAN POLICIES h not pretended that Judge Tarker any auperiority of statecraft, character or ex peri sure to Grover Cleveland. In fact, ha haa been accepted by the conservative dementi of Democracy as a diaappointing alternative for the pondarana oracle of Buxzard's Bay, and he haa only been accepted by tba radical or Bryaa element of the party, because ha had demonstrated the lack of Cleve-land- a aafety and sanity liy voting for (No Oliver In 1800 and liNNX In these two votes the proof la com jet that Acre Is nothing la Judge Parker's convictions, character or conscience to promise anything better, should h he elected, than a weak, vacillating and reactionary Democratic adiuiuiatra- poaaaia In another resolution the principle and purpose of the iSaliunnt and Seymour of 1804 were set forth in these traditional terms: Uraolved, That the aim and object of th Tbonurrslli- - party la te pmo-rvthe Federal I.'niou and the lights of the Mules nulla-pal- er it, aud they declare that they eonalilrr the administrative usurpation of ilanceroiis and Kiwrs not extraordinary granted by the t'oiialltiitiuu, tbe subversion of the eivll by military law In Males not In insurrection, tbe arbitrary arrest, imprisonment, trial and aeuteiu-- of AmeriIn Ktatca where eivll law exists can eltixi-iIn full fun-e- . the anppreaxlnn of freedom of apeeeh and of the treaa. tb denial of tb right of asylum, tbe open aud avowed disregard of Mute rights, the employment of nuiifciial teal oaths, aud the Interference with aud debial of the right of tbe people te liear arms, as calculated te prerent ro eturuliou of tbe Union aud tbe perpetuation of a government deriving It Just powers from the consent of Hut governed. With the omission of a few phraaea having reference to the theu prevailing condition of war, there is nothing to distinguish tliera utterances of the Democratic party forty years ago from Aon Tito of the same Bourbon party similarity of phraseology nted to denounce, to declare and to demand; Ae invocation of the Constitution to preserve rights and liberties from imaginary perils of administrative usurpation, military subversion and individual invasion; tha fictitious concern over financial and industrial hardens all go to show that tbe Democratic party of 11104 Manila in the name old alines of 1804, snarling at the heels of the Republican party which now, aa than, it doing thing for the advancement, peace and prosperity of the people of tha United Staten. It will bo observed that in Aaguet, oier-chan- t, to-da-y. ISli-i-, the Democratic party assumed to express the aenae of the American people" in its arraignment of Lincoln and the Republican party, an assumption which tbe American people in November promptly repudiated by Ae followALTON B. I'AUKER AND HENRY Wors Aan this, whatever may b ing vote: G. DAVIS. dhoaght of Judge Parker's iersonal char-actoral llert Popular Racked by and ability, he stands before the vote. vise, David B. Hill, William Jennings Bryaa, 313 world oa Ae presidential creation of Uneola aad Johnson.. ..3,31K.offT 31. aud Benj. Tillman, C'banip Clark, WilDavid B. Hill, and hi chief associate UrCIcllan Mates not voting II liam F. Sheehan, i'atrick U. ad advisor sine hia nomination have and New Jersey Delaware, Charles F. Murphy aud Tom been Hill. Ilill' Sheehan, "Pat" Me were the onlyKentucky States in the slim DemoTaggart other "Charlie" and Oarrea, Murphy cratic column Aat year. 8 ana tor Gorman and Aa Democratic of the Manhattan brand of Tammany Kamo Old Cry. minority in the Senate. atotesatea for revenue only. DemoEvery four years since 1894, the Congressman Williams and tha DemocraHath-- War. " cratic party haa gone Arough Ae same tic minority in Ae Honra of Bep; Nothing In his campaign utterances formal of arraigning tha Republican neenta tires. has aoggrated that Judge Parker pos- party as the party of unconstitutional Bonrke Cockran and tha boM of fossilissesses any of tha stern attributes of usurpation, fanaticism, sectionalism, exed hired advocate who have been leadership that bind parties to tba will travagance, financial bankruptcy, censhouting "Unconstitutional at a very of a strong, conservative, conacieutlons tralisation, corruption and abuse of powmeasure taken to preserve the On Ae contrary ho has earned er and with two exceptioni tha AmeriUnion, advance ita prosperity and As sobriquet, bestowed upon blm by can people have returned tho tame verestablish Its power daring tha put Speaker Ceuaon, of dict they did in 18(14. In 1884 aud 1892 forty years, and certain exceptional conditions, for which Tbe Democratic record of secession, reTherefore, a vote (or Ae "safe and the Republican party was in nowira repudiation and oltstruction. sans" Parker and hia octogenarian mats sponsible, caused the American people Tho issue before tha Americas people to only to ba justified by trust in the to lend a trusting ear to the reiterated next November ia not between tha per aafety and sanity of As party whess impeachment of tho .Republican adminisonalities of Theodora Roosevelt and aoadsee tbejr, are. tration. Cleveland's two terms were Ae Alton B. Parker, hot between twa g the' two Tor forty result, both giving conclusive proof of representing respectively Oloralaad intervais-th- e Democracy ha Ao incompetence of the Democratic and stagnation In national life. been excluded from power, her a um .the party to admiuister tho government ex- progress The verdict promises to lio as conAmerican people have mistrusted its cept by adupting every Republican policy clusive aa ft was oa tba rama isaas in aafety, its sincerity and ita sanity. Dur- and practice they had denounced. 1804. withhaa til embraced Aat it period ing Ia Cleveland's second administration in Ms rank nenrly all Ae elements of tho Democratic party attempted to reUNDULYPUFFED UP. discontent, discord and reaction that are place the Republican tarih with a monDemocrat Bouse the signs and proofs of hopeleaa politi- grel mixture of free trade, class pro- Tha Are Hravslsg Too Kooiu cal stagnancy and decay. tection aud apecial bounties, aud theu Certain Democrat, with the exuberAs a party it threw every impediment cam to paw the very conditions of revwithin ita reach in the way of the ener- enue deficits, social disorder and wide- ance of Ae uewly rich, are boasting of getic prosecution of the war for the spread despair and misery of which the the 8tatee Aey are going to carry by American people had only dreamed nnder meang of their big campaign fund. Thera preservation of the Union. la no telling what may hapiien, even That the reader may understand Aat the spell of Democratic demagogy. Ac Democratic leopard haa not changed The restoration of Safety and Sanity wiA money in the treasury. Only a day Its spots in forty year it may be re- la the administration of American af- or two ago, one politician from West d coiled that on July 2, 18(14, At Demofairs cam with the election of William Virginia was bewailing certain facts in connection with campaign cratic member of Congress put forth Mcixiuley in 1809. Sines Aea the nation an address to the people of th United haa experienced a period of prosperity money. They art thinking a good deal State in which, according to George unexampled in Ao history of tba world. of campaign money in West Virginia William Curtis in Harper Monthly, It has waged a successful war resulting Jnrt now. This particular individual of Prerident Lincoln wa charged "with the In establishing liberty and a popular tbe Democratic camp raid, in effect, that West Virginia ia likely to ge Republican engross meat of power; with military government in Cuba, In extending AmeriIn elections; with the crea- can freedom, justice and protection in this falL "The nigger will all vote Ae thou tion of bogus States; with illegally rais- Torts Rica and Ae Philippines and in Republican ticket," he declared, ing troop; with unnecessary and hateful advancing the United State to a power- who are allowed te vote. They'll take Reconscription; with the payment of ex- ful. almost a commanding plaee, in tha our money and then go aud vote the publican ticket straight." orbitant bounties; with employing colored polity of nations. This is a complication of great import troops oa an equality with white soldier; like tho national development to onr erring beet lire n of tbe opposing with setting up a false am! ruinous finan- of Nothing these year has been known in camp, it was nut always thus, but now, cial system; with placing u in peril of the past right of the republic, and with it with the Australian ballot, in some form, foreign interference; with endeavoring to have come world-wid- e responaibiKties in use in many States it ia a rad fact with race Iqr amalgamation Corrupt the well aa problems of in- that the riffraff and dutiM, who rail Aeir votes take negroes." terna! government. the money and then vote a they please. In Angnst of that aamo year August Conthe within The Republican party The Oil trust can put its money into Belmont, whose aon is now pulling wire stitution, without straining any of Ao the Parker campaign fund, bnt it cannot behind Ae "Sphinx of Esnpus," as tempowers reposed in the Executive or Conone of iui own vast army of porary chairman of the Democratic Na- gress, haa met th demand of the hoar buy ereu tional Convention, said that "four years with murage, wisdom and access, to employes, nor any of its victims ia Ae of misrule by n sectional, fanatical and which the chnrn of Democratic declama- world of business. The Democrats are puffed ap over corrupt party had brought our country tion. denunciation and demands paya Aa their fat pocketbook, but it wont help to the verge of ruin. The past and pres- highest tribute. them ia the coining election. The people ent arc sufficient warnings of the disin ita history, its policies prefer to have money in their own pockSo astrous con sequences which would befall and ita candidates, Ae Republican party ets, honest money which they hare been should be aa if Mr. IJneolns to the American people as the able to earn themselves, in a time of made posable by our want of patriotism appeals achievement, of resources and prosperity and industrial activity anck of party and unity." of the courage to grapple with every aa a Republican administration give fievsisars Renttmeat. new phase of national life. It ia the them. his as in Horatio Seymour, speech finance sound safe and of principle. party After an exhaustive review of th permanent chairman of the same con- sane execution of the law. The proof a vention, inveighed bitterly against of it capacity to govern ia written hi the situation In the Hoosier State. Walter administration and the Republican healthy progress ef the United States Wellman, the staff correspondent of the party, raying: They were animated by dnriag the past forty years. The guar- Record-Heralrays: "With the to tolerance and fanaticism, and blinded ranks virtually solid, with of ita fitness to continue in the anty by ea ignorance of the spirit of our bjund te lose a few execution of that great trust ia in the the Democracy the character of oar people charai-te- r and experience of its leaders. thousands of the Itryauitea, with nothing and the condition of onr land." "Step by present in the public mind te lead to an Which Will Ton TruitT step," he continued, "they have marrhed look across upheaval, and with Indiana a RepubliAmerican voter the Let an to result from which at tha outset and ask can State te start with, one decs not tke stage of public life y they would have shrunk with horror; himself he which would trust to need to be a seventh son to foresee the raAer and even now when war has desolated result" And he estimates the Republior administer any public private trust ear laud, haa laid ita heavy burdens npon the plurality at "somewhere between leader-Ai- p can under the Kepablicaa party and ruin . labor, and when baukruitcy 15,000 aud 30.000." ef overhang us, they will not hare the union ROOSEVELT AND unknown THEODORE , Matored except npon condition "Rains unable te agree among themCHARLES W. FAIRBANKS, to the Constitution." He concluded by selves ne to whether the guld standard Racked by Is a enrve or n blss'lng, an l ae te Ismail ding the restoration of the Union Arough Ae unconditional surrender of Secretaries Hay, Shaw, Taft, Moody, whether we aaght or onght net to have Aa principle of national free and anlimltrd roiiago orallver, Wilson, Hitchcock, Morton, and and "As full recognition of the Beaator Allison and the Republican they (onr opponents) have apparently thonght It expedient to avoid any tights of the Stales" demanded by Ae majority in A Senate. and the Republican committal on throe subject-- , Bnd indb people of Ae South. Speaker Cannon each to follow hia particular Tbeec speeches 4 Belmont and Sey-amajority ia Ae liens of Represen- vldaallyBooaovelt'i bttrr af beat. the prototype of the Belmonts tatives. ad Hills, Bryans and Ben Tillmans, Elihn Root and the hort of learned Chicagoan of the Democratic persss-aio- n Bonrke Cochrane and Carl Schuraee of lawyer who believe Aat the Ameriare trying hard to ret Judge ia a anr. day were but the prelude to the not can Constitution petrified ker to come out Wiwt and attend a lip. banLinnaof .the convention in which stumbling block in the path of quet Rut Judge I'nrkcr ia not hungry. denounced coln' adminirir.itinn wn tional evolution, aud Like the execution, just from every tr.iditiunal point of view with- The glorious record of Republican fidelhe "doesn't want any lunch:" in the vocabulary of partisan vitniiera-tion- . ity to the Union aud human proaad the war waadeuiut'iceil a failit i freely predicted by thro who gress. ure in the following perciini.il De.iiwmtie OR onght to know that Ulster i unty, Few : The Democratic party under Ae leader- York, Judge Darker' lnm- - . phraseology: give itcoeovolt a ship of eaelved, That the convention dove majority LABOR. MONEY er "Mr.-Kscln- Is hia famous Chicago eosvostios speech in 1899 V. J. Bryan raid Aat the Americas business man included A "man whe 1 employed for wage, th. merchant at the crura-roa- d atore, the farmer who goe forth in Ae morning aud toils all day, aud begin In tho 11 spring and toil summer, the mines who goes s thousand feet into Ae earth th attorney in the eouutry tows," eta. He also expraraed Ae "Democratic idea that if yon make tke maset-- prosperous Aeir prosperity will find ita way up nod Arough every elam." The Republican pertjr during Ae Inal eight yean, in faet aa well in theory, has been carrying ont thia "Democrat! ides" of making the nation prosperous by making the uiaaees prosperous." it kae reached ont after the laboringmea to the cities, the farmer, the country the miner, Ae country lawyer, etc., all included in Bryans definition of tho "American business man," and It has mads them all pro parous. It may ba raid ef Aa prosperity that As Republican party brought not for certain claasee, but for Ae masses, and from them up and through every ills that THERE WAS PROSPERITY ENOUGH FOR ALU Through the opening of As nlili at Aa United States, rendered again possible by tho return of Aa country to 1897 to Ae Republican policy of protect ion, the unemployed clastic wet THEY WERE THEN gives work. NOT MERELY BUSINESS MEN, as Bryan raid Ary were, but BUSY MEN. A Contrast of Reenlta. In Democratic times then was com st ant ami frequent allusion to tbs ARMY OF THE UNEMPLOYED. Th Cony Army that went to Washington, to 18D to demand that As government give k work was but s small guerrilla detachment of the vast army that stayed si hums, suffered, starved and found tho living of life to be almost nneadurabi When Aia army of As unemployed got work, and uot only that, but got steadily increasing wage, it made s quick and s good market for tka products of the farmer "who goes forth to Ao morning and toils all day, and begins to th spring and toils all summer. There are nearly nine million men to the United State whe make a living for themselves sad families by tilling the soil, and whe must depend for thstf prosperity on the demand for Aeir prod g- Ait. ysare--barrln- well-prove- to-da- y IJn-aoia- to-da- - Too-Rn- jn, Nearly Half a Billina Dollars More for Wages. Tbe ceneua of 1000 showed Aat Ae wage ot all classes of labor in all As manufacturing iuduatrira of Ae United State was 82,322.333,0. a aa against $1,-S- i' 1,238,321 A 18U- O- gain of 843UU5,-55- 0. The census reports of wages for labor and salaries tor clerk and officers employed in manufacturing i adust ties for Ik last three decades are aa follows: inno IMS) '1889... 1408,711.233 8Ul,M8,2u3 ....... .......... 12.823, 888.W7 LHU1.228.821 M7.KS.nfi takes. Had these censna reports Included Ac period from 1804 to 1004 the comparison would be far more striking, toe thousands of workingmen lout Aeir job shortly after the last Democratic adminwent into power, istration (1803-180gad Aero wen very few workingmen of those able to keep their jobs who did net bare to submit to ad least some redaction K eenaaa in wngen. Those were Ae days when Democracy piled trouble on to trouble, and seemed to leave noAing undone that could be don to bring impoverishment to the date tor Ae presidency. A life ef judicial monotony and exclusion from political affairs does not appeal to the allegiance of partisans. Theodora Roosevelt ia a stroug, a vigorous, aa invincible candidate for the presidency, lie ia a man of action nominated for an electorate of abonnding energy, force aud Ha is, especially, At idol of progress. the young man ot Aa country. "It ia, therefore, not at ail surprising that as tha voters contrast these two candidates they should ba irresistibly drawn to one to Roosevelt and should ba repelled from or become indifferent to his antagonist, Parker. Such ia Ae present trend of (he campaign and it ia decidedly favorable to President Roosevelt. No reaeonabio doubt of hia election oxiata or ia entertained by anyone familiar with politics. Democrat or D0N7 FORGET CONGRESS. It le Very Xaipertant that Xt'BhonM Be Kepnbllcan. In the great political contest which occurs In this country every four yean, and which ia now on, tho election of President is apt to overshadow all other interests. This ought not to be ao. Tha President is the head of Aa cxeentive branch of Ae government, bnt Ae legislative branch ia equally a important Republican should remember that it is aa important to hold Congress aa it ia to elect the P resident The election ef Judge Parker would mean muck mom than the induction of his personality into Aat high office. His election would mean Ae election of a Democratic Iionra of Representatives, and this would be moat unfortunate, because: First, the Democratic party, composed aa it is of all Aa distracted elements of the country, is not capable of successfully administering Ae affairs of thia government It has not the eapacity to deal with Aa great problem that now confront na. Second, a Democratic Honra of Representatives would mean that Ae entire legislative machinery of that body would be placed in the control of the South; the Speaker, Ae committee on rule, and all the important committees, ae well aa tha chairmanships of Ae si me, would be composed largely of Southern men and the great interests of the North would be subordinated to Southern policies, in answer to thia k may le raid th.it a Democratic House could do no barm, na the Senata would still be Republican and could prevent any unwise or radical legislation. But a 1 irinocrstic House could prevent Republican legislation, and great harm might result from Ant. The election of a Republics a tiongrera ia scarcely second hi importance to Aa election of a Republican President. Americas workingman. The entire country was made a sort of laboratory tor original Democratic experimentation In various explosive products aad including especially free trade, free silver, free riot and free soup. It mattered not that desolation waa brought into Aourands of American homes, that the workingman and his wife and little ones wart pinched tor the necessities of Hfe, so long a Democracy was given the chance to experiment wiA the idea of taking the home market away from American indua-trand giving it to tho foreigner, and autageniring business interests by agitation against tha gold standard. After William McKinley was elected Tresident and Ae policies of protection and of sound money once again established, the phenomenal growth of the United States in wealth and prosperity attracted the wonder of all civilised nations; and Ail growth haa continued with accelerating velocity up to the present time. The emeus of 1900 recorded this great upward movement when it was only boot half way to where it is now. Of course, an increase of nearly half a billion dollars ia workingmen's wages does not concern An workingman alone by any means. It oncrn every kindness man in the United every farmer, and every woman and child dependent on Ae labor of others for their support. For instanee, if the wages of labor in manufacturing Industries had not increased in the milKona Ae per capita eouaumption of wheat could uot have InThe Viking Fringe. creased from 8.44 bushels in 1894 to C.33 The Borthem fringe of the United bushels in 1904, aud Ae price of wheat States ia briug rapidly and densely popualmost doubled. Prosperity is always lated with people from Norway, Sweden made ap of an almost endless chain ef and Denmark. Thia is right, for we are circumstances, and it ia only by having f them, ffe are of the trend of humanevery link sound aud string that pros- ity which populated England and made perity tor all can be preserved. and subsequently made tbe Anglo-Saxthe United States, and whom descendant generally vote the Republican ticket. CANDIDATES COMPARED. If any one doubts Aat tka Northern Why Kooeevett Is More Papular than States in which are settled so many of onr own Scandinavians will thia year go Parker. well, he should The New York Sunday Democrat, a anything but Republican newspaper Aat recently bolted Parker ba taken care of by hia friends. and came ont tor Roosevelt, in giving Poor Old Roosters Aa rnaotia why the Parker campaign ia languishing and the Roosevelt cam- The Democratic rooater Sighs, with a mournful glance: paign ia booming, say a: "Judge Parker haa few of tbe attri- "I would crow like I nseter, Bnt I dont get the chance." bute of popularity; Theodore Roosevelt haa them all. "The record ot the last seven pears "Parker ia timid; Roosevelt ia brave. "raAer is controlled by friends aad proves that tha party new la power caa ha trasted to take the additional patrons: Roosevelt ia independent. "Parker represents no policy and haa action aecesnary ta improve and no political record; Roosevelt is ene of strengthen onr monetary system, and the acknowledged progressive atataamen that onr lci opponents cannot be so Icttoraf acceptance. of Ao century and hia record is the rec- trnited."-R(wToord of tke sunshine yean of militant week before election it looks Four and advancing Americanism. to tbe conservative prophet as if Roose"As there I practically no one to vig- velt would have 317 clectnr.il votes to orously oppose there is no one to activeonly 159 for Parker, with tbe probabilily defend Judge Parker aa a political ties running in favor of an increase in tandnrd-heareTheodore Roosevelt intbe Republican majority. vitee the fire of partisan eiimiiiee and athia ot thousands patto tracts support "Tha American homa la Indeed the riotic ami earnest admirers. cradle of liberty It is the wait of the an "Judge I'arvv is a weak candidate, Venn bite's strength." .Senator Fairbanks naCt" canduimc, an unfortunate candi In lb geuia. Jsnusry 11. laN. y Stt. on r. arts from those employed in mamrfao-tnrin- g Industrie. The census of 1900 showed that the wages of those employed in manufacturing Industries had Increased 431,105Ji50 from 1890 to 1900. Tha fignrea would have been immensely mors striking could Aa census decad covered 1894, in th midst of Dam era tic times, to 1904, tha present An NO WONDER THAT WITH BUCE kid ENORMOUS GAIN IN WAGES T(J THE LABORING CLASS OF BUS- -' NESS MEN. WHO WERE GIVEN 1 CHANCE TO BE BUSY THROUGH TILE REPUBLICAN POLICY OP PROTECTION, THE TER CAPITA CONSUMPTION OF WHEAT FROM 8.44 BUSHELS IN 1894 TO (L33 BUSHELS IN 1904. THE PRICE HAS DOUBLED, AND THAT ABOUT THE SAME THING IS TRUE OF PRACTICALLY EVERYTHING THE AMERICAN FABMEB PRODUCES. This farming class of business men le new given adequate reward for their toil by day and through spring and summer. It now can, in fact already has, paid mortgages and started checking seconnto wiA As country banks. A Change in Condition. The merchant at Ae croes-road-a stove oew finds Ae farmer and his wife and children have money to spend, and want more and better clothes to wear, books to road, and to adorn Ao country home. Tho fanner could now afford (if ho wanted to) to change frost the corncob pipe to a real Havana cigar, and dress every bit as atyllAIy as tho business mas in Aa city, pity as high fees to his doctor sod his lawyer, end just as much rent for the pew in church. Hia wife conld dress to satins, silks and laces, just like tha city business man's wife, and hire a servant girl to do bona, work that in Democratic times she hev self had to do. He could afford to have his daughter wear clothes Aat won Id make her look just aa attractive as tba bnuker's daughter in the city, and study music, art, French, etc., that would mak her jnat aa much at home in tb moat lie could afford accomplished society. to send his son to college where k could get an education Aat might make hia some day a railroad or bank president, r eves President of the United State The American farmers' increased prosperity reciprocally benefits the working Sian is Aa cities, and Ae workingman's prosperity again reciprocally benefits tha fanners in tha country, creating Ana as emllera chain of mntual benefit. As for those who "go a thousand feel In Ae earth," etc., they, too, have fully A a rod in the Republican prosperity which has increased enormously As d mand for iron, copper, sine, lead, coal coke and tke precious metals. Ia mining; as well as in all other branches of how oat industrial effort, th Americas bash ness nits" css now seen re the hire Ant the Bible says his labor is worthy o( but which Democratic policies ! bric-a-br- !y deprived him of. The Limit, That the Democratic party has Bright's disease, cancer ef tha atomack and swift consumption ia generally admitted, but it was sever realised ae thoroughly before how much it had qm. A Bnre Thlnn. At this late date the tidal wave Is Careening over II. G. Davis, Am! every outlook grows the dsrkst For the napes king, silent rarkar. it rayed or stolen Forty-fiv- e niiisritution club in forty-fiv- e Staten. The finders will ba rewarded with copies of "What I Know About th 1,'nronHtitntiiiiiality of the War of . A. Bourbon, bound to by calf wiA tall lurid. Lost, rrlter 1861-ISt'k- i,'' ie |