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HOYML reception
Tie fir at Bryao
ky pfetraskiis.
W N!S INTWUGKDBY
The Covem®r And SP®ke Flu
ently and Peacefully,
Lincoln, Neb., Bee. 24. Col.
*■ j Bivau returned to Lin
coln yesterday afternoon and
vaß last nitht tendered a ncep
,jon at t) e Oliver theater by tb .
w,i n’' Bl metallic League.
'Hit-i.o se was crowded and
tol.Ki'a leceived an ovation.
He was introduced by Gov.
Hold mb, who formally wel
comed him home and compli
niert°d him for his patriotism
'in tnlisting in the army.
After thanking his neighbor*
:for their cordial welcome and
‘complimenting the menders of
Lis ng rm nt and Cel. Visquai",
in whose < hai ehe left then ,he
-justified his resignation as fol
lows :
“I had five months of peace
in the army and resigned in
order to take a part in a tight. 1
am as much interested in the
people of the United States as I
im i» the people of Cuba, and
unless I am mistaken in judg
ing, we are called upon to meet
nisre important problems in th®
United States just now than will
confront our army in Cuba.
“Some of these pt oblems were
under discussion before hostili
ties began ; others have been
Jhrust upon us as a result of the
war. Let me improve this, my
first opportnaity to assure you
that my zeal for the reforms ad
vocated a few months ago has
not in the least abated. Vital
questions cannot be killed or
buried, and we were dealing
with vital questic ns when the
call to arms resounded through
the lai.d.
‘The American people have
not accepted ths gold standard
as final. It has wrought more
injustice in our country during
tbo last twenty-five years than
Spain h«3 wrought ia all her
colonies, and apposition to it
*ill glow until the gold and sil
Ver coinage of the constitution
is iullv restored. The trusts
wnich now flourish n delance
ot law -tie 110 t, uluie maiciless
than Weyler was, and the new
trust—the paper money trust,
SCROFULA
It is Foul Biood's Advertise
ment
It is Soon Cured by Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.
Ye<, Scrofula, if anything, inn j bo eallet*
of foul blood. It is ti.
•courge of the world—offensive, painful
stubborn and well r I
•“•■durable.
Outward applications do not cur®, t’>;
**7 drive the difficulty to new rp-ur v
■mollients may palliate, they can;:
•wish the evil. There ’> but on© str
* a> out, and that is to eliminate it
**nt from the blood.
Thsr- i a ene remedy that can effect this
* n( i it is the only one that, so far as V"
°w, has almost invariably succeeded
* Ten where the system has been poisoned
w long years of taint and the ravages to
repaired are tremendous. That remedy
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Read this:
’ My daughter was afflicted with im
a “ re b'ood. There were running aoret
o'er her body and they caused her
w U,:h Bu ffering, We tried medicines that
ere recommended an blood purifiers,
U , '° u, d not esc that they did any good.
r) rien d told me about Hood’s Sarsapa
iein and 1 beßan Eivimj the girl this med
f»etn lho resu,t was that she was pw
-8h« h CUred ofter takin 8f n fGW bottles.
9 as ha I no symptoms of scrofula
rea since that time.” Marietta M.
South Middldboro, Mass.
htJi par ilia
pillc oct harmoniously
Howl's
which is seeking to obtain c®u
trol ofall paper moaey of
nation—i b ft greater menace te
the country’s welfare than any
foreign foe.
“There are, hewever.two new
questions which demand imme
diate attention, because congress
is asked to act upon them at
once. The president recommends
that the regular army be perman
ently increased to 100,000 men.
Ibis question must be met now
or not at all.”
laking up the subject ®f im
perialism, Mr. Bryan said that
the president has misinterpreted
the sentiment of the people.
They are opposed to giving the
Philippines back to Spain, bat
they have not as yet declared in
favor of embarking upoa a co
lonial policy. So great a change,
he said, could not bo undertaken
without more investigation aad
deliberation than the people had
yet given to the subject. The
prineipal part of Mr. Bryan’s
speech was devoted to the Phil
ippine question.
In this connection he referred j
to President, McKinley’s inquiry,
‘‘Who will haul down the flag? ’
and replied :
“Th® lag is a national em
blem, and is obedient to the na
tional will. It was made for the
people, net the people for the
lag. When the American people
wart the flag raised they raise it;
when they want it hauled down
they haul it down. The flag was
raised upon Canadian soil dur
ing the war of 1112 and it was
hauled down when peace was
restored.
‘‘The lag was planned upon
Chapultepec during the war
with Mexico and it was hauled
down when the war was over.
I he moraing papers announced
that Gen. Lie ordered the flag
hauled down in Cuba yesterday
because it was raised too soon.
‘‘The flag will be raised in
Cuba again on the first of Jan
uary, but the President declares
in his message that it will be
hauled down as soon as a sta
ble government is established.
Who will deny to the people the
right te haul the flag down in
the Philippines if they se desire,
when a stable governm.nt is
established there .*
“Our flag stands for an indis
soluble union of indestructable
states. Every state is represent
ed by a star and every territory
sees in the constitution a star of
hope that will some day take
its place in the constellation.
What is there in the flag to
awaken the zeal or refleet the
aspirations of vassal colonies
which are to* good to be cast
away, but not good eaaugh to
be admitted to th® sisterhood of
states? Shall w® keep the Phil
ippines and amend our ting?
Shall we add a new star—the
blood star, Mars—to indicate
that we have entered upon a
career of conquest? Or shall we
borrow the yellow, which in
1896 was the badge of gold and
greed, and paint Saturn and hi.
rings, to suggest a earpet-bag
government with its schemes of
spoliation? Or shall we adorn
our flag with a milky way com
posed os a multitude of «mor
stars representing remote and
insignificant dependencies/
«No- a thoweand time better
toh.ul’dow.
stripe. .»d .US.IIIUW »'
a„ udepod.M republic th«u
10 surrender lhe doctrine.
gir. glory to‘Old Gl.r»-
the «.g our fetor. •» £
year. that “• * aa * • “
Hag es a reunited country today,
le t itbe the Hag efour nattonin
the years that are to come.
" t iall t f the blood
stripes of red toll
that wa« shed to purchase . ber
ii. stripe, of whit. prod«.n.|
the pur. and hear.n bora P«r-
C' !
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Ni
el
pose of a government which de
rived its just powers from the
consent of the governed. The
mission of that flag’s to float,
not over a comglotneration of
commonwealths but over ‘The
land of the free and the home of
( he brave,’ and to that mission
it must remain ‘forever true—
forever true.’ ’
■~Col. Bryan’s ipeech was th
only ime of length al the recep
tion.
EMBRACES judism
Wife *f th* Po«t Kahn A«c«l»t»
Th® Hebrew Faith
Pari., Deo 24-Mme. Kthn
* O s Gustav. Kaba. th. P®«‘.
. MB been admitted to the
yhnrch aad h.s al.® through
» marriag. eer.mouy with b®r
maband in acoordanee with th
j.wi.h rite., wii formerly a
Catholic, aad took this step r.eent
ynent of the feehnf again.t h.r
.u.oa«d' b people
The caudle makes
light the small boy’s P«r»«-
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| GURIY’S CORNER STILL THE PLACE. ’
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1 Io Our Store Has Been Marked Down To Se;l. ■
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I -L>ANO<~ :
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S IF YOU WANT ONE YOU GAN GET IT! =
£ :
£ I
| SEE OTTE?, TVTTTIDOW ,
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SANTA CLAUS’
OF A H AT
for a holiday gift is a sensible
ene . Especially when one of
our handsome Derbys, Fedorae
or Alpines have been crosen.We
have them in the newest shapes
colors aud nobby styles, and
anyone who is fortunate enough
to receive one will call it a
“be».ut.” Come to W. H. Co,
ker to trade and get your Xmas
preaeuts.
W. H. COKER,
No. 11 Broad St.
mi* 7//X\
: / ri
Fashionable Capes, Wrap
Fascinators, Gloves, Umbrellas,
aud etc , will make a member
of your family an Xmas gift
that they will appreciate. We
have some beauties in Capes,
Fascinators, ere. The prices are
the lowest and our quality is the
best.
N. B.—Don’t fail to come to*
jtiy store to trade and get
Xmas gift.
W. H. COKER,
No. 11 Broad St.
. — — —i:«er
Mwuducho Jtkllß® Pxiii Piite*
Kiyuud rabnie*: unt fcives reiiut
FOyfilUFF
Deputy Sheriff J. M. JohnFton
iHiHOiinces himself a candidate for
the office cf Bailiff of the Rame
District, and asks you 'o vote for
him on election day.
I announce inysolf as a candi
date for bailiff of the 919th dis
trict, Floyd county, and request
the v >te of friends and others
in the election on the first Sat
urday in January.
Geo. W. Beauford.
To my friends and the voters
of the Rome district, 1 desire to
state that I am a candidate for
re-election to the office of Bailiff
for this district and most res
pectfully solicit your support. If
re-elected I pledge to do my full
duty on each and every occasion
in discharging the obligations
of the office. Very Respectfully,
R. H. Copelan».
thereby announce myself for
Bailiff 919th District G. M.
Floyd county, Ga. Elwctiou fint
Saturday iu January, 1899,
D, B. Bryan,