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Show THE NEW PARTY. WILL tho new party born in Chicago Chi-cago on June 22 die of malnutrition, mal-nutrition, asks the Literary I'igest, an entirely independent reflector re-flector of opinion, or other infantile disease, as the .scoffers predict, or will It, as the most sanguine of its friends declare, grow so rapidly to man's estate es-tate as to bo able to defeat In November No-vember the Golla.ths of Republicanism Republican-ism and.Domooracy, together with all leseer antagonists? In any case It is evident that, for an infant not yet even ohrlstenod, the. now party J& causing a remarkable; cpnmatlQn among tho politicians, and occupying a great deal of space in the newspa- pers. Already such influential Re-publican Re-publican and Independent papers as the Chicago Tribune and Post, the Philadelphia North American, the Kansas City Star and Times, the Boston Bos-ton Journal, the Washington Times, the Baltimore News, the Pittsburg Leader, the Emporia Gazette, the iSpokane Spokesman-Review, the San Francisco Bulletin, the Los Angeles Tribune and Express, the Fresno Republican, Re-publican, the Madison Wisconsin State Journal, the Indianapolis Star, tho Muncie Star, the Torre Haute Star, and the Louisville Herald have rallied to the support of this newcomer new-comer in the political field, and tho same CQurse has been followed, says tho San - Francisco Bulletin, by two-thirds two-thirds of tho country press of the Pacific Pa-cific coast. While tho new party has not yet held its first convention, and is still officially nameless, correspond ents report that the work of local organization or-ganization is proceeding rapidly in Chicago, Boston, New Orleans, and many other cities, while tho problems prob-lems of national organization are in the hands of a temporary committee composed of governors, senators, newspaper proprietors, a judge, an ox-congressman, ox-congressman, an ox-cabinet officer, and others. ""tenting in all some fifteen states. |