v I ( --7 J. r ' ri. V t THE- BROAD-AXE, J t , Owes ta tk QaJek Cvery Lick. J THE-BROAD-AXE, . Hews to tka Liu SI veer TUm, 1 "HEW tO THE LINE LET THE CHIS FALL WHERE THEY MAT." EUGENE. LANE COUNTY, rW(KN. THUItSDAY, JULY 16, 181)6. VOL. 3. NO. Iff. V i. V- - . . V v' - - t t . . - . . . o o. r jst irv JL-? PKPKKSSIONAL CARDS. )R. E. D. McK'NNEY Physician and Surgeon Will give mrlal attention to .11 chronic die- ana moreerpcciaiiy lohieropuiiatlilenaa Olllcs over t;ity drugstore i KUYKENDALL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Special attention u Surgery and aorgieal 41a ui KUWVU. tflj la CBrUauB block. L. BltTKF. J. I. YotS gILYEU & YOUNG, Attorneys-at-Law OIBc OTr Firm National Bank laff.a.i Or.a LT R. SKlPWORTH Attorney-at-Law Will do a feneral la practice In all thsObUrta of the ttate. Cur., Oregon, O W KlKSIV N. E. MlBKLCT JINSEY & MARKLEY Attorneys at Law Commercial atid probate biuineua.nclalty. Olfiffe in Chris man block. t D. NORTON LAWYER Room. 1 and 2 over Flrat National Bank. 1 F. AMIS r Attorney at Law... Notary Offle In XoClung building, op stair. Ksgena, Oregon.' CHICAGO BAKERY y. RESTAURANT '"fllliiett 7ti itti?oUT Eugene,.!), All Kinds of Bread, Cakea. Pies. Etc., ' Always on Hand. Meals' from 15 to 25 cents. 6-cent lunch counter in connection. Orders receive prompt attention. The patronage of the public respect fully solicited. W. O. ZEIGLER, PROPRIETOR. llamette Market. c. I. TOUIG, PROP. A fall turpi T of erythtnf that It kept In flm class tab) lh ment kept here, as Beef. Mutton. Pork and Viral, which ha will sella low as can be afforded lu the valley. FARMERS AND STOCKMEN Having (at Cattle. Ron and Hhtrn (nr aal will do wall by for.MiUlug u. le(ore twlHna. Shop on wuiamaiM Htrt, Young. Block, , Bnrna, urvvun. (sV Meau dallvared to any part of the eli ire. SEE THE NEW STOCK..... -AT- DAY & HENDERSON'S. Tom Attention Is Culled to - or - READY MADE CLOTHING. Wa are also nroparad to hak vonr meaaar for a Pnit nttia to orJe. A perfect fitgoArant-L 8LK Ol R LARGE U.NB Of 6AMPLKS. HOWE & RICE -' - ...EUGENE. ... . Loan and Sayings Bank w. i. in Preetdent Vice Preeldent Ceahlu ICUIII . RKOWN B D fAl.Mt r. W. OHHUMfl OBKOON. DIRKOTOKIt P. A. Paine. J. B. Harris. J. K. Isvis, . B. D. Pain. W. E. Brown,' J. F. Robinson, F. W. Oeburn. PAHKTJP CAPITAL, $50,000.00 ' ' A Genera) Banking Business Trans acted. Interest klloaecl on time de posits. Highest Cash Rate Paid for City and County Warrant. MONEY TO LOAN! ON IMPROVED FARMS . FOB A TERM OF YEARS . SHERWOOD BURR. Eugene. Or. t : WANTED-IN IDEA some airople thing to IaUBlf tTot'i your Heat; tbtr may brna you wealth. Writ JOHN WKDllEKHURN CO.. Patent Attorneya, Walking ton, I). C, lor their tlMKI prlie offer. ' Ik, f. lata. Ra u Pullman Sleeping Cars. Elegant Dining Cars, Tourist r8leeping Cars . ST. PAUL i I M I N N E A P O JT 8 irAGcT" Vocal Ha-. rruaRToN Wifm I PEC I HELENA am "1 BUTTE. THROUGH TICKETS TO CHICACO ' WASHIWCTON ' PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST wnd SOUTH. For Information, time cards, maps and tickets call on or write P.. McMCRPHKY, General Agent. Eugene. Office Rooms 2 and 4, bltelton block. A. t. CHARLTON. Ass't Gen. Passenger Agent. 226 Morrison, cor. Third, Portland, Or. Eacnr.loa Rata. Perartn.'rontemp'atlng Raatern trip. honll not Iom .ignt o the fact that tha Northern I . tflc Railroad will offer tlekat.at one (are for the round trip nn tbe MlowingorrM.lon.: People'. Party (on.eulion, and American Silver CosTentki Kt Uiula. Jaly Sid. Biic.mpment of the Urand Army of ike Ke pul.llo.Ht. Panl.rteptember l'lh. This la the flrat time men r.1.-. hara heen of feml Ir m rVeln ate.. Hufflpleut limit will be Klvea oi theae llcketa to enable ita..enger. to make quite a vlaii. For ileutl Information, date, ol aale, etc, call on or write B. McMfBrnrr, General Agent, Kutrene, Uragon. Chairs and Rugs , Undertakers and Upholstery Goods.... Oar Urge and ' Complete Lint PROPRIETORS Bp: OF NEBRASKA i : fnr P.M. Nominated k the Democrats. DELEGATES STAMPEDED TO HIM t ' T ' He " BUeetaa tka rink Ballot Artkar w.U. ml Mala, lee-rraeldtat. Chicago. W. J. Bryan, "th boy' orator of the Platte," and ei-oongreas- man from Nebraska, wai nominated by the Democratic national oonreotlon at Chicago, upon the fifth ballot. Ever siaoe Bryan'i brilliant ortcri- , . 1 ....... . 4 eai enort on tne tnua oay oi tne oou- Tention, be has been steadily gaining ; ngth ln the convention, and after ; first ballot furmer fupporters at- . - - T rr . - . ier osndldstes rapidly tranarerred tUair allegiahoe. singly, in pairs and In ! drofw to the young statesman who 1 Rouas, a millionaire of Kew York, bad so ably defended their free-silver ' will pay f 100,000. Tb j oflVr is open oause in and oat of oonTention, and at ny one who may wi.h to try, man, ! all times, - - woman or child. ( ? ; After Mr. Bryan waa nominated the , The city authorities of Tacoma ln oonTentlon unanimously ratified the dolged in another wi-e outJESR P"ty, choice of the majority. The decks were cleared for balloting, i which was to begin as soon as th Democratic national con Tention reas-t ! sembled, at 10 o'clock on the fourth WJB, ryarv dsy. The real struggle opened with the delegates wrought to an intense pitch over tbe sensational develop ments of the previous dsy, when tb( Bryan wave swept through the con vention, and threatened for time al least to stampede it then and there. ! bad Usturted all iOlnnlip4 and t'lioa'a the ranks ut Hue other tanci- dstes into confusion. " The Brayn forces were making thf most of the phenomenal rise of th young-orator of -Nebraska. The ad journment at midnight bad given tbs leaders of other candidates an opportu nity to rally their forces, and it served also to give some hours in which not cool oounsel might prevail against thi wave of sentiment which wks at high tide the night before. Delegste Miller, of Oregon, adderj to the list of nominations the name ol Sylvester Pennoyer, of Oregon. Th names of Bland, Bryan, Boies, Blaok burn, Matthews, -MoLean, Paulson an Pennoyer were before the convention. - There were no other nominations and Chairman White announoed that tbe roll-call of states for the nomina tion of president, would proceed. Ureal excitement swept over the bait Tlx first ballot resulted as fellows: Blackburn, 88; Bland, 333; Boies, 86 Bryan, 106; Campbell, 2; Hill, 1 Matthews, 87; MoLean, 64; Paulson 96; Pennoyer, 10; Russell, I; Steven son, i; Teller, 18; Tillman, 17; no voting 188. . On thaiteoond ballot Maasaohnstetti deserted Bland for Bryan, whiol created sensation and started th other states, and in the two follow inj ballot Bryan kept gradually gslninf one state after another, until the reaul of the fourth ballot showed Bryan ii the lead with 876, Bland having fallet o 141. . This precipitated anotbei demonstration which lasted for fort minute. Twenty thousand peoplt veiled themaalva. boars cheering tot tb Nebraakan. Several of tb state delegate tnea retired for consultation and when they filed back into th bal tb fifth ballot waa taken, resulting It Bryan receiving tb necessary two thirds. On gaotien it was mad nnani Tka View-Pre eld eaey. ' A oaoews ot delegate was held antl 8:80 in tb morning, but no agreement could be reached on th v ice-presidency , When th convention opened in th morning th following name were pre anted: Bland, of Missouri; MoLean of Ohio; Williams, of Massachusetts Bibley, of Pennsylvania; Fithlan, Illinois; Daniel, of Virginia; Pennoyas. of Oregon, and Bewell, of Main. Five ballots war taken. Up to tbs fourth ballot Bland and McLean led. Their name were then withdrawn, and on tb fifth ballot Arthur 8ewlL ot Maine, waa sleeted. After th third ballot wa taker Bland sent telegram to th conven tion, asking that hi nam be with drawn and that th noantnation N givan to som man east ot th Missis sippi rives. W. J. mryaas Cars William Jean lags Bryan, who is popularly known a "the boy orator of to Plat," I tb yomngas anan rt osnlnatsd to tb ptaatdeaicy by a po litical party in tb Calked States, ax need lag, as a doaa. tb ag limitation tx4 by tb aonatitatioa by esUv U fcaea snontb Bs Is tb nditor of tk ObbbbA Dally and Weakly Worlds Her sld, oat of tbe landing stive organ ot jrz Runny year. advocated tre aotaaaa ei atlvwr. CONDENSED DISPATCHES. ViUagea npon tb island of Crete are being pillaged by Turks. James BUnsbnry, the Aoatralian, Harding the English cnanfion, on tbs Thames. . The neir earohlight . Barnegkt, N. J., near New Yotk haiobr, throws light whloh can be sees nearly itfo milea at sea. fV Patrick Carney, 80 yea;i f age, was kicked to death in Chiugo.by James Wilson. The killing war n moat brutal affair, the result of a family row. - - EnglUhbimetaltftA oonrened in Lon- jdon. ThflT declared fnr The remooeti- ration of aiWer. and tbluk it should be liaooompliahed by interactional agree j ment, '. . j m -v. . 1 n m J - ne nurworn i-aoino MjeiTexi were Bim ladsmant in the wi nnnrft ill Seattle by default agaiiVthe Seattle, Lake Shore ft EasteVn rniod for $!, . 1 . J 1IA A UI . ror ine reaioraiiou n aigu. (u ui. rapidly failing eyes, Charles Broadway dming the progress of vruicn'tne wires of. the Commercial K" Jtrio Light St Power Company were ln removed, the company having re4aoed the wirea during the day. The boathouse in counectlon with (4eorge & Baker's winery, near As toria, was Obrned, t'getber with a two-masted plnngor and a barge. Prompt work saved tbr.cannnry proper from destruction. Tb fire was of in oendiary origin. Lost sot stated. In the federal ooirt in Beattle, Judge Hanford, made 'an order dis missing Oakea, House and Payne, the old receivers of th Northern Paoifio, ezcosing them and th Pit sureties from further liability, and wiping ont the charges of oontempt nf court, whloh hve been pending against them be cause of their failur; to show up in oourt when they were under the fire box, as the oourt directed. WERE MURDERED AT NIGHT Chrta Taj In and P. u. Nalaoa Near Aa.r1m. Killed i Astoria, Or., July 14. Chris Vejin and . O. Nelson were murdered on fthe Washington side of the Columbia : river, near Point Kill-. abotJt 8 o'clock ! this morning, and si et no infuma' tion has been obtaiUM? that points "to the identity of th ssHMn. Vfjin i . -V- j ..A: .1.'. I. - 1.,.. i. - i.,. anchored near the soeua of the murder I sinoe the fishing season opened, and j waa also engsged in fishing. Nelson ; attended J. O. Megler'a fish station a ; short diatanoe above Point Ellis, and I started out from the whisky scow in j company with Veln' shortly after 1 o'clock. This wss th lsst seen of them alive. Several shot were beard '. near by about 1 o'olook, and at day break the body of vejin was found in his boat and that of hi companion among the rocks on the shore, a short distsnoe away. . Vejin' breast blttf"t"d 1 unfriendlinesss by a storm ot been nieroed by a revolver bullet, and a,m opened the debate with a wildly a similar messenger of death had pane- Ponate speech, In which he affirmed crated th sid ot Nelson's bead. Both I battle for the restoration ot thou bad been fired at close range, th : ,ilT"r w" wsr tor the emancipation face of the murdered men beina now- der-burned. - At noon today Bherll Hare and Cor oner Pohl proceeded to th soen and brought the bodies to thi city. The Point Klllee Disaster. -Victoria, July 14. An aotion has been oommenoed by Martha Kan James against th city of Victoria for i damagea caused by tbe death of Fran-1 ois Thomas James, which wss brought by the negligence of the defendant in and about Point Ellios bridge. The plaintiff brings the aotion for tb ben efit of herself and Maria Louis Lang' don, Maud, Willi and Charles Thorn as, children of tb deceased. In thi ) the psrty in career so wild that th aotion tb tramway enmpany is not world stood aghast. With wav of mad tb defendant, for th probable j his arm, that was full of impressive reason that tb deceased was not on th j portent, h sounded his warning, car, but waa crossing tt bridge on his Ex-Governor RosseU, tb keen Mas bioyol at tb time that tb ill-fated aaohusett statesman, who has thrio car want through the bridg May 86 ' carried th standard of Democracy to Kist. Bo far there is only on other j victory in tb Old "Bay Mat, pleaded ease pending for damage arising out j (or word ot eonoeasion, of concilia ot th accident It la brought by A. 8. tion, and eonlcuded with a solemn Potts against both th city and th j warning that th country, if not th company. He allege; that tb city ouvntion. would listen, was. negligent in allowing -th bridg ' Demonstrations followed at frequent so become out of repair and tb com-! Intervals throughout th speeches, but pany also negligent la allowing the tt was Senstor Hill who aroused the oar to be overloaded. Th damages i gold forces to their wUdeataathuataaat, ar named at 930.O0O. I and Bryan, th "boy orator ot tb - Piatt," who set thssilevrman aftaaa. Havana, Joly .It is reported from i Tb demon strati on for Hill, who Santiago d Cuba that Jos Msoeo, tb j with oloa logio and tranohant blad wait -known inwargem wader, and ke tner oi Anvonio asaoeo, naa neen aiuao. I Insistent rumor bar been circulated that Jos Macao died in th last en gagetnenl in which he took part in Bantiago d Cuba. A Twa Hear- right. Havana, Jnly 14. A fight bevwsan , Colonel Plnera'a foroea and anan nndr ' Oeneral Capet In tb Sas Loranao hills, ' aewr Mosoeaaa, U th Holguin distriet, I lasted two hour and resulted in tb j defeat of th insurgent. Tbey left ssraa killed and carried off seventy . killed and wounded. Tb troop bad four killed and fifteen wonnded. eaanija Oaahalla Ckareh ItaaUwf ed. ' . New York. July It. The Roman ! Catholi Cburoh of tn" irito'Uon, in ! . Brooklyn, with ita eonlenta, wan de I troyd by fir tonight. The loaa is as- timatad at 91M.0OO; liWBnuaoa, 0,- ' 000. Th eaaae of th firs is aaknown. i wavS Ova a Daaa, . i Lawreoe. Kan., July 14. A rew- aWM Sneew at a'akiwdi anxtaka aS . .. " . . " a.r. uvaa .waa MADITII EXCITEMENT Wild Scenes Enacted in the Chicago Coliseum. BRYAN'S f ASSIU3ATE ORATORY 1 Dele galea aaa S a eta tan Alike Carried Away ky Kla Speaekv Staav. a.de fa tk Mekraakaau ' Chioago. On the third day's session 'of th national Demncratio convention, ten acres of people on th sloping side of th Coliseum ssw th silver-helmet-ed gladiators in the arenatverpower th gold phalanx and plant the banner of silver opoa tk ran parks ot Daimoerraay. Tbey aaw what may prove th disrup tion or th saoee of great political party, amid aoenes of entboalaarn snob as, perhaps, never before occurred in rred ina rithim. national convention. They saw 80,000 people, w agination inflamed by. th burning words of passionate oratory, swayed like wind-swept fields; tbey beard the awfnl roar of 80,000 voice burst Ilk volcano agaiust th reverberating dome overhead; they aaw man (Bryan of Nebraska) carried npon the shoulders of other intoxicated with enthusiasm. Amidst tb tumult and turbulence, they listened to appeals, to threats, to cries for mercy (from Hill of New York), and finally, tbey watched the jutjllant majority seat' its detogatna and 4h vanquished stalk sullenly forth into the day. gbt The battle for supremacy OI lmoorstio prinotpies was xougut in 7 rmtPi ion wqfii tr'm M! r:i"Cl D morntiia ntirti Toort; lions -d 0 oloc " klternoon. Each side sent its champions to the forum. Senator Tillman, of South Carolina; Senator Jones, of Arkansas; ex-Congressman Bryan, ot (Nebraska, orossed swords with Senator Hill, of New York; Senator Vilas, of Wiscon sin, and ex-Uovernor Russell, of Mas sachusetts. Tb sinister-looking senator from th state of Calhoun (Tillman), with his eye biasing defiance which msni- m " wul1" 'TO". " we war oi ioou bad been for tb emancipation of tbe black slaves. Disruption of tb Democracy bad brought one, and be in vited another disruption if it would re sult in this other emancipation. He went to tb extreme of glorying in the suggestion presented, that the issue wss a sectional one, declaration whloh aroused the resentment of Sena- tor Jones, and he repudiated It In a brief speech whloh aroused th first demonstration of the day. Even ' th gold delegate joined heartily in thi demonstration against sectionalism. Senator Vilas bitterly denounced what he termed an attempt to launch sought tb very heart of tb oonven tion aa ha bitterly assailed aa tmdetno- entia tb now creed which th ma. ; jorlty was to proclaim, lasted about 18 minute. Although I traoted than that - whloh Bryan, it waa of a different natnr. j Tb latter wa tb spooUDSous out i burst of an anthnaiaara kindled by th toaoh of naagneti eloquanoa. Tb star of tb brilliant young orator front I tb plain of Nebraska has burned ; brightly on tb borisoo of tb ooavea i tiosi for two dsy. There wer Mvwral J densonstrattons in hi behalf tb day before, but this wa tb first oppor tunity h had to enow himself. Tb aadiaoo had been wamwd SB, and wa fall of pent-up anthaaUsm. Tb ow auagasin needed but tb spark. d Bryan applied it with tb skill of geaUa. Hi vary appMrano eaptorwd tbe- adino. Dreaaad lik plain WaSemr, U blsok suit of alpaca, n atood wttk a mU blayi&g over hi stand sens a. mobile, aleai . taoa, wkil with kpltftad hand he lnvitod ' Wa sight have beaa arkiaaiad frosa a la . . . . . : . to 5 nil -' '- tk I Inn, hi ye bright, his no Roman, bis raven hair is brushed back from hi forehead and falls to his collar. With well-modulated voice, which gradually rose in pitch until it pane bra tad tb farthermost limit of tb ball, b wov th spell npon bis audi ence. His speech waa a masterpiece of fervent oratory. With, eonsummat sloqusno hs stated th caa of silver and parried th arguments of the gold men. Mas Antony never applied tb match mors effectively, j His closing remarks weret 5 "Having behind n th commercial Interests, tb laboring interests, and all th toiling masses, we shall answer their demand for the gold standard by Bay ing, to themt 'Yon shall not pre down npon th brow of labor this crown of thorns. Yon shall not crucify man kind npon tb cross of gold.' " ' Th convention took fir with enthu siasm. It crackled as with tb war ot Barnes. Hill" was" forgotten; all" ela was forgotten for tb moment. Cheer swelled to yell, yell beoam screams. Every chair in th valley of tbe Coli seum and every chair in tb vast wil derness on th hillside became a dock on whloh trantio men and women were wildly waving handkerchiefs, -oanea, bats and umbrellas anything movable. Borne, like men demented,, divested themselves "of their coat and flung them high in th air. ' A Texas delegate uprooted the purpl standard of his state and bore it fran tically to th place wher rose th Standard of Nebraska. n twinkling others followed the' example. Two thirds of th stat staffs were torn from their sockets and carried as trophies to Nebraska, wher tbey danced in mid air. A doaen delegate rushed npon the stag and shouldered th half -dated orator and bor him In triumph down th aisle. Louder and louder shrieked th thousands, until tb' volume of ound broke Ilk a glgantio wave, and fell only to rise and break again. For almost tenjninotet this madden ed tumult continued, while the dele gate with th state standards paraded the lnclosura. Old political generals were stopifled. If th ballot for the nomination bad been taken, it would have been a stampede. When it was all over the vr-te were taken first on the m'-iorltv substitute for tbe platform Urd y Senator Hill, which waa dV. ated 62 to 860. Then, on the resolution to .Indorse the administration, whloh waCaaten, 867 to 664, and laetly on tbr adoption of the platform, which was carried, 638 to 801. Senator Tillman, after tbe rejection of the resolution to indorse tbe admin istration, withdrew bis rvx'ntion to oensur th sdmhirstraUo;- Tka Klgar . A ner Bigt aouiavt f-Biite1 iwe of fully 86,000 people, tbe nominating speeches were made, and there was a repetition of the exciting soense of the afternoon. Th Bryan enthusiasm oontinued. The galleries went frantio at every mention of bis name, and the wild demonstrations of the afternoon wer duplicated when he waa plaoed in nomination by Hon. H. T. Lewis, ot Georgis, and seconded by W. C K. Lots, of North Carolina; George V. Williams, of Massschnsetts, and Thomaa J. Kern an, of Louisiana. Senator Vert -plaoed Bland in nomin ation, and Governor Overmeyer. of Kansas, seconded the nomination. Tbe name ot Claud Matthews, of In diana, was presented by Turple, of In diana, and seconded by Delegate Trip pett, of California. Fred White, of Iowa, plaoed Boles in nomination, and the Waterloo statesman owed a magnifioent ovation to the enthusiasm of Miss Minnie Murray, a young woman from Nashua, la. , who led the Boies demonstration, aa Miss Carson Lake did tbe Blaine demonstration at Minneapolis four year ago. THE CHICAGO PLATFORM. I Dealerea for Free Cat a age af Bllver at tka Precast Ratio af 1 ta 1. Wa, the democrats of the I'nlted States, In convention assembled, reaffirm our al legiance to those great essentia! principles of luatlce and liberty upon which our In stitutions are founded, snd which the democratla party baa advocated from Jet ferson'a time to our t, own--freedom of speech, freedom of the 'press, freedom or conscience, the preservation of personal lights, tk equality of all clttsena betore tk law. and the faithful ebservancs of oonatitutlonal limitations. During all theae yeare th democratic party has real. led the tendency of aeinh Interests to tb centralisation of govern mental power, and steadfastly maintained th Integrity of the dual aciieme of govern ment, aa eetabliahed by the foundera of tbla republic of republics. I'nder Ita guld anoe and teaching, the grat principle of local self -gov ernnient hae found Ita beet aspreaaloa la the malntenaece of th. rich! of states, sad Its aaaerUon af tne neeeeeity ef confining th general government to th. exerctee of th powers granted by the con stitution sf the. United States. t Recognis ing that the money .weetloa Is paraaaount to all others at this time, we Invite atten tion te th fart that th federal con stitution named stiver snd gold tncether ss the saoney metals of the United Biates. and that th first coinage law paeaed by congress wnder the constitution made the silver dollar th monetary anil and ad mitted gold ta free coinage at a ratio based pon the sUvev-dollar snlt. We declare H at the act of 171. demone tising silver without the knowledge or ap proval af the American people, ha reetilt d la th appreciation ef gold and cor responding fall la Ike price of commo-tlt. produced by the people, s heavy hv-rraee ta th burden af taiailoa. snd ef nil dehta, publta sad private, the enrichment af the Beoney-lendtag eleaaes at home and abroad. preetratlAe of Industry snd Impoverish meal of the people. Wa ar unalterably apposed te mono met Ham, which has locked fast th proa perl l y af sa Industrial peopl In the paralyets ef hard tlmea Oold monom.t al tera I a Prlti.h policy, aad lie adopt toe fcas hrsusht acker nations Inta financial sarvltad t Ladea- It at and only an Aneerlcaa. but antl-American, and raa be fastened aa tka I nlted mates anir by the sinking af that ererlt sad lava af liberty wktrB proclaimed owr political indepew eaca la irN, aad waa It la th war ef tk Sieve! ut law. We Seme ad tk free and aallmlted eata sg ef fcelS geld and SO ear al la pv.e.ut eawl raoe af at te L wrtkawt walttae far t ef say etaar aet aa. We hall b full lral tender quallr wtlki void for all debta. publla and prlvata, anS favor guch lecBlatUin as -will prevent for lha future th demonetiullois ef anjr kind of lecal-teoder money by private can tract. We arc qppoeed to the poilry and practice' of surrndrinc to the holder of th ob lUcatlone of the lTnlted Stattse the option rwetrved by law to the government of re deeming auch obltsatione In allver or In gold eoln. We are oppotved to the latulng of Intereet-bcartna: bonda of the United State.-, In time of peace, and condemn the traf ficking with banking eyndlcatea, which. In exchange for bonds at an enormous profit to thvmaelvea, eupply tbe federal treaaury with guld to maintain the policy of gold tnonometaltam. Conjrreaa alone hae the power to cola and laeue money, and Pre-. -lent Jackaon declared that thla power could not be d-legated to Incorporation or Individual. We therefore demand that the power to laaue note to circulate A money be taken from the nattftnal banks. ind that all paper money shall be lasued directly by the treas ury department, be redeemable In coin. and Receivable for all debts, public and pnvaie. We bold that the tariff dutle should be levied for tbe purpose of revenue, such duties to be so read lusted as to opera is equally throughout the country, and not discriminate between clan or section, and that taxation should be limited by th need of government, honestly and eco nomically administered. We denounce a disturbing to business th republican threat to restore the Mo Klnley lsw. which hasrbeen twice con demned by the people In national elections, and which, enacted under the false plea of protection to home Industries, proved a proline breeder of trusts and monopolies, enriched the few at the expense of the many, restricted trade and dt-prlved the producers of the great American stsples of access to their natural market. Until the money question Is settled, we are op posed to any agitation for futher changes tn our tariff laws, except such as are nec essary to make up the deficit In revenues caused by the adverse detli-lon of the su preme court on the Income tax. Hut for this dclnlon of the supreme court, there would be no deficit In the revenue tinder the iaw passed by the democratic congret. In strict pursusnc of the uniform decision of that court for nearly -I years, that court having under that decision sus tained constitutional objections to Ita enactment which had been overruled by the ablest judges who have ever sat on that bench. - v We declare that uN the duty of con gress to use all the rbnritltuttnnal power which remains after that fiedsion. or which may come from Its reversal by the court ss It may hereafter be constituted, so that the burdens of Laxaljon may be equally and impartially dlvM1, to the end that we. may all bear the ltie proportion of the expenses of government. WeHiold that the mot efficient way of protecting American labor Is to prevent the Importation of foreign pauiier labor to compete with It In the noma market, and that the value of the home market to our American farmers snd srtlsuns I greatly reduced by a vicious monetary system, which depresses the prices of their prod ucts below the cost of production, and thus deprives them of the means of purchas ing the prod nets of our home manufac tories. The absorption of wealth by th few, the consolidation of our It-ading rail way systems, and the format'on of trusts and pools require a stricter control by the federal government of those arteries of commerce. We demand the enlargement of trie pow ers of the Interstate coT.nif-ce commls s on. and ?.' rt H.M'on tM en.ir.- nt! In th t:or,tr.j of he r-f-iVln' aB JTI prov" tect the people from rubbety ar.d oppres sion. We denounce the profligate waste of money wrung from the people by oppre- Ive taxation, and the lavish appropria tions of recent republican congresses, which have kept the taxes htfh while the labor that pays them Is unemployed, and the products of the people's toll ar de pressed In price until they no longer repay the cost of production. We demand a re turn to that simplicity and economy which bfU a demo--ra tic government, and a re duction In the number of usrVss offices, the salaries of which drain the substance of the people. We denounce arbitrary Inteiferenc by federal authorities in local afTnIrs as a violation of the constitution of th United f Slates and a crime gainst free institu tion n, and we especially object to govern ment Interference by injunction, as a new and highly danireroua form of oppression, by which federal judges. In contempt of the laws of the states and rights of cltl sens, become at once legislators. Judge and executors, and we approve the bill passed at the ..not session of the United Putes venat, and now pending In the house of representatives, relative to con tempts In federal courts, and providing for trials by Jury In certain cases of con tempt. No discrimination should he Indulged la ty the government of the United Stales In favor of any of its debtors. We approve of' the refusal of th t3d congreiss to pans the Pad lie railroad fund ing bill, and denounce the effort fit the present congress to enact a similar meaa ure. , w Recognising the Just claim of deserving Union oldt-re, we heartily Indorse the rule of CommUs-ioner Murphy that no name . shall h arbitrarily dropped froei the pen sion rolls, and that fact of enlistment and service should be deemed oonclualv evi dence against disease and disability be for enlistment. i W favor th- admission of the territorle of New Mexico and Axiaona Into th Union as stntes. and we favor th early admission of all the territorle having th necessary population aad resources to en title them to statehood, and while they re maid territories we hold that the official appointed to administer the government of any territory, totrether with the IrUtrM of .Toliimb.a snd Alsska, should be bona fid residents of the territory or district tn which then- duties are to be performed. The oSrmCTtlc party believes la horn rule, and that all public land of the United Htntes should be aonrotirlated to the Astabllehment of free boma (or Amer ican cltlaen. - W ncammeriV that the territory of AUa be grantej a dlrst In ongreaa, and that te genwal land and timber law of the United 0 tates be extended ta aald territory We extend aur sympathy tn the people of Cuba tn their heroic struggle for U berry -and lndendenc. Th federal government should care for and Improve the Mlsaiselpppl river and other great waterways of tbe renubllc. so ss to secuap for the Interior state easy snd cheap transportation to tidewater. When any waterway ef the republic t of siitflclent Importance to demand aid of th government, such aid should he extended upon a definite r lan of continuous work, until permanent Improvement t saenred. We are opnosdM to life tenure In nib He servt-e We favor appointments based upon merit, fixed terms of cnV. and such an admtnletrt.on of the c'vll service law ss will afford equal opportunity to all elU ens of a certain fltnesa. We declare It to be the unwritten law nf thi republic. ttaM!srcd by custom and usas of I no years and sanctioned by th example of the area teat and !sat of tboM who foupded and have maintained aur government, that no man sbsll be eli gible far a th'rd ttrm of tbe irealdanual office. Confident in the fusil of eur cause and necessity af tia ti. -- at the polls, wo tts-eatl the foregxng dUr.tUHi of prin ciple to the (nnal-lerste Judgment of la Amr"cn people, w Invite t upport of oil eltleect who approve tarem. and dee.ro to hare ihni wrtiv threug lagie letla. for tb rlef af too snropis and tao q X c t.' sua auov ef ta eevair jr eprii,