SOUTHERN OREGON PIL . THE' MAIL. IS THE OFFICIAL PAPER OF THB FARMERS'. ALLIANCE AND PEOPLE'S PARTY OF SOUTHERN OREGON. ADVERTISERS Do yon (tad; yoor besf Inter ests and patronize tbi paper. It will be appreciated by all the beat fanners, Irwm whom you get trade. A Paper Of, By and For tlie People! VOL. IV. MEDFORD: OREGON, FRIDAY, OCT. 21, ' 1892. NO 42i SOCIETIES OF MEDFORD. K. of P. Talisman lodge No. 31, meets Man' day evening at 8 p. m. Visitlns brothers al ways welcome. - M. W. Skbkl, C C . J. A. Wbithas, K. of R. & S. . - A. O. U. W, Lodge No. 98, meets every sec ond and fourth Tuesday in the month at 8 p. m. In their hall in the opera block. Visiting Brothers invited to attend. j. A. Wbitestdc, W. M. G. F. Mkrrimak, Recorder. I. O. O. F. Lodge No. 83, meets in I. O. O. F. hall every Saturday at at 8 p. m. Visiting Brothers always Welcome. D. S. Y0UJJG8, N. a. A. j illllULMjn, ncc oc I. O. O. F. Rogue River Encampment, Lodge No. 30, meets in I. O. O. F. hall the second and earth Wednesdays of each month at 8 p. m. W. I. VAWTla, C. P. ' B. S. Webb, Scribe. " Olive Rebefcah Lodge No. SS, meeU in I- O. O. F. hall first and third Tuesdays of each avttnth, Visiting sisters invited to attend. MBS. D. S. YOUKQS, N.Q. ' A. F. & A. M. Meets first Friday on or be fore fall moan at 8 p. m.. in A O. D. W. Ban. K. L. Nabrxgah, W. M. J. S. Howard, See. a a T. niMtar A. Arthur 'Post (i 47. meets in G. A. R. hall every second and fourth Thursdays in each month at 7:30 p. M. S. C Nob UK, Com. J. H. FARIS, Adjt. F. A. A L TJ. L. L. Polk lodge No. 165, meets vary Tuesday at 8 p. m. G. 8. BaiGGS, Pres. Ep worth League meets each Sunday even ing at 6:30. D. T. Lawton, president, Julia Fulde, aecretarv. "-" Teung People's Literary meets Friday even ing tf each week, under the auspices of the -Bnwort League. - . - W. C. T. U. Meets at christian church every Monday evening at T p. m. Mrs. A. a. Killogg, Pres. MM. E. P. Hammond, Sec y . Y. M. C. A. Meets every Sunday at S p.m. St M. E. church. W. S. HAU.T, Pres. M. E. Rigbt See. Secretaries of above ledges will please attend m corrections. - Any society wishing to have a place In this directory will please hand in aec- raata. CHURCHES OF BEDFORD. Methodist Episcopal Church E. E. Phipps, pastor. Services every Sabbath; morning, II a. m.. evening, 7 JO p. m. Prayer meeting at 7-39 p. m. Thursday. Sunday school each Sun day at 10 a. m. E. A. Johnson, superintend ent. Kpworth Literary Society, 7 JO p. m., Tuesdays. Class meetings every Senday at loe of morning service. Christian church No pastor at present. Preaching first and third Sundays in month, saorning and evening. Worship every Snnday morning. Snnday school at 10 a.m. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening. Presbyterian Cbumt-F. J. Edmunds, pas tor. Preaching at II a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sun day school at 10 a. m. Y. P. S. C. K-. S:15 p.m. " Baptutt" Church T. H. " Stephens, pastor. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Prayer . meeting every Wednesday Toning- Sunday school at 10 a. m ' Tha pastors of the different churches are re- PR0FESS1QHHL CARDS. J. Y AVAMlf - JJ Physician and Surgeon ' Office : Rooms 23. LO.O.F. Bldg J B. WAIT, - Physician and Surgeon. Medford, Oregon. Office: In Childers' Block. P. GEARY, s , Physician and Surgeon. Medford, Oregon. Office: Cor. C and 7th sts, S. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. Medford, Oregon. Office: Hamlin block, up stairs. D R. O. F. DEMOREST, Resident Dentist. Makes a specialty of first-class work at reasonable rates. Office in opera house, Medford.Or .TIOBT. A. MILXER. n Att'y and Coukselloe-at-law. Jacksonville, Oregon. Will practice in all courts of the ; , , state. J H. WHITMAN, Abstractor and Attorney- . At-Iaw. - - Medford, Oregon. ' Office in bank building. . Have the most complete and- reliable ab stracts of title in Jackson county fIXARD CRAWFORD, Attorney and Counsellor--At-Law. Medford, Oregon. Office: In Opera block. I USTIN S. HAMMOND, A Attorney-At-Law. Medford, Oregon. Office: J.O.O-.F. Building.. Davis & Pottenger, -o Dealers Sn o- GROCERIES, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, Claware, Wooflen I lloware. GOOD GOODS AND LOW PRICES. GIVE ITS .A. TEIAL Free Delivery to Any Part of the City. FIRST DOOR WEST BROPHY & 1 DEALERS IN I FRESH AND CURED MEATS. BEEP, PORK, MUTTON AND VEAL Constantly on hand. SauBages a Specialty. MEDFOEDi : : : IMS' IHHTEB1,8CP0L BOOKS, Call and examine our new DRUGGISTS OF MEDFORD. .-' Night Bell on Door . Prescriptions Compounded. STATIONERYrPERFUMESDRUGS. si !0NS & CATHCART, SUCCESSORS t6 - . - ADKINS & "WEBBp . .: " ; Dealers in SHELF AND HEAVY HARWARE. Stoves, Tin Willow Ware. CYCONE and HOOSIER PUMPS, Etc Every article TawMsaaarsssssEsn ITHEI ClarendoIM HOTEL. XIX. G. COOPER, Pvop., Medford, - Oregon. Firstdass Board liy the Bay, Week or Moil Centrally Located, West HEDFORD THE G. W. PRIDDY, PROP. 140,000 Brick on Hand. First Class Duality- Larce and Small Orders Promptly Filled. Bfiek Wok of All Iinds Executed With Satisfaction. Give Me a Call. OF POSTOFFICE. MATHES, : OREGON stock W Artists' Material. bears a guarautee. Side of the S. P. R. R. Depot. BRICK YARDS, A. C.TAYLER, SHOEMAKER, ALSO THE LATEST STYLES Of Eastern Shoes. REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONe. OPPOSITE POSTOFFICK. W. GREEN. Suits to Order, $24 and Up. Pants to Order, $6 and Up. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Corner of 7th and C Sta, MEDFORD, - - - OREGON. S. ROSENTHAL THE GBEAT CLOTHIER, OF MEDFORD, ORE., Has just received a large stock of fine CLOTHING and GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS also a 6nestock of BOOTS and SHOES Which he will sell as low as can be sold. Small profits and quick sales will be his motto. Call and see for yourself. UNIVERSAL Combination Fence. S. CHILDERS Havinjr bought out Frank Galloway is now prepared to fill all tordurs promptly. The Cheapest and Best Picket Fence made. Correspondence Solicited. Ad dress all orders to S. CHILDERS, Medford, Oregon. 1-2 Mile East of Medferd. Fruit Trees, Grape Vines and Small Fruit. Choics Stock. Reasonable Rates CHUTE & CAMPBELL, PRACTICAL WATCHM AKKKS, Medford, - - Oregon. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Specta cles Repaired. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. EJf Glre ub a call. To All Shippers of Produce : M. E. Ballard & Co . Hit Cottage Qrova Avenue, Chicago, Ills. General produce, eommtsslon merchant and snippers. WAISTS Buttor. cheese. Ems. Potatoes, Apples. Onions, Cubbane, Dried Fruits, Uenns, Poultry, (tame, Veal, Heef, Mutton, Pork, Furs Hides, Poltu, Tallow, Honey, Beeswax, Broom Corn, Feathers, Ulnseug Root, Cider vinegar, lour, uucKwnem, etc. V Send for our daily bulletin. ROOFING GUM ELASTIC ROOFING FELT oosts only .00 por 1(10 square feel. Mnkos o good roof for year, and anyone can pat It on. Bend stamp for sainplo and full particulars. Gnu elastic Roofing Co., 90 & 41 West iiroadway, New York. ' LOCAL AGENTS WANTED. THE NEW TAILOR NURSERY THE LEADING ISSUES CLEARLY PRESENTED BY A POPULIST CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE. . Questions of Finanoe, Land and Transpor tation as Viewed by J. II. Turner Bow tlie I'rodncers Are ltobbed by tb Bat ons Tha Tariff Humbug. Mr. J. EL Turner, national secretary of the Farmers' Alliance and Industrial nniou and aluo secretary of the national committee of the People's party, has been nominated for congress from the Fourth congressional district of Geor gia. He was bora and reared in the dis trict. Mr. Turner's letter of acceptance is a masterly document, showing that the writer fully understands the ca rises of and remedies fur the present deplora blo and threatening conditions which obtain in our beloved country. Follow ing is a liberal extract from the letter: If the tariff be the great robber, as pictured by the Democratic party. Instead of cutting it down T per cent, every vestige of It should be blotted ont forvrer. But 1 Lav found the great trouble with this party on this subject to lie in the fact that the controlling clement of the party, being interested in thoso protected industries, is Just as much in faror of pro tection as the Republican party itself. There is no perceptible difference, so far as the rec ord goes on this subject, between an eastern Democrat and aa camera UepubUcaa. This sham battle over the tariff or been going on for more than a half century. The people hare been arrayed on either aide loyally and 1 might say Mindly following their leader with a devotion unparalleled in political his tory, while both sides have been systematical ly robbed by a system purposely kept in the background and alinuat entirely Ignored as a political issue. I refer to tiie fUiancis! system which has so ruthlessly snatched away the comfort and happiness of so many of our busi ness men and brought desolatibn and ruin to the once happy homes of so many farmers and mechanics. In proof of the above statement as regards the bojtiaess men of the country 1 submit lbs following from Uradlreet s Commercial Bul letin: ia UCS there were failures, with liabilities of Sn.es.an. la UCS, after silver bad been demonetised and the currency of the country had been contracted from t&.ul per capita in UUS to W.04 in IS7S. tber were .: failures. wUh liabilities of J31UBU.aMi and in IftB number of failures UT, with liabilities of S312.ie.;U." Let us now examine into the condition of the farmers and working people of the country. We find from tho census bulletins of M0 that there were e.(UMU mortgages recorded between MO and UUOontha homes of the peo ple. From statistics already given out esti mates fairly made show that from $9.01)0. (XA CUu to $ lSjULta.UU) yet remain unpaid. This sum at S per ocut. Interest would amount to $720,000,000 that must be paid from the prod ucts of labor annually Into the coffers of the usurer. Allowing S.UAAD bales of cotton for aa average crop. It would take three entire crops of cottun to pay thb) interest alone. How long will tbe farmers and business men of the eouutry cuntinue lo vote to continue In power -political parties that propose to oootinoe pres ent conditions? Of the lands of the United Etatra. aliens own oot.iide of railroad grants. 6lAL(ls) acres: railroad corporations own lel.scfJM acre which, added to the amount owned by aliens, makes aa,tf,tft acres, a snfflcieal amount, if reclaimed by the government, to provide a comfortable borne fur every man, woman and child In the failed States who is today with out a home. It is the borne owner that devel ops the resources of a country, defends Ita laws, builds its arhonh and makes society con tented and happy. Tha history of all coun tries and times teaches as that when Use lands of a country drift into the hands of tbe few and the many are made tenants and sorts, bloodshed and revolution bare beea the In variable results. Are the people of this country to stand Idly by and permit their home to be absorbed by aliens and corporations, simply becaoae the political boss says that It would be commun ism to offer a protest? If liie people would not see their children the tenants of alien land lords, let them put their protests in the ballot box. which Is the only remedy left except the musket. Both the old political parties are so completely, dominated by Uieae corporations that they dare not open their mouths on tbe land question. Examine their platforms and Tuo transportation question is one of tho most vital that Is now engaging the attention of the American people. Itailroad corporations have become so exacting that almost every slate in lbs Union has been compelled to create a railroad commUsion and the nr"1 gov ernment an interstate commission. In order to protect the people, and they are still unpro tected, as everyone knows who has endeavored to Investigate the matter. According to tha price the people are receiving for their pro duct, the railroads are charging more today for passenger and freight traffic than they ever did since there was a railroad in the country. It will take twice as many pounds of cotton or bushels of wheat to carry a passenger Us) miles or a carload of freight 100 mika than it did twenty year ago. For example, it would then cent five cents per mile, or five dollars to ride 109 mile. The Ore dollar would cost twenty-Ova pounds of cotton at twenty cent per pound. Now It will cost only three cents per mile or three dollar for ltO mile. The throe dollar will coat fifty pound of cotton at six cent per pound. Railroad control as now practiced Is a ham and a fraud, and the experience of aom of the wisest railroad men In this country and thsold country teaches us that the only way to con trol railroads U for the government to abso lutely own and operate them In tbe Interest of the people. "Poor's Manual" for lad is Just out. and I recognized authority on railroad statistics all over the world. It give th num ber of miles of railroad in th United State to be nu,C0l; actual cost, a4.8,ir0.01; watered stock. $1.060, VIS.yOO; total valuation. $10,76V 830,041. By fictitious or watered stork they are compelling the people to pay more than twice as much tor service as they should pay in order that they may reap dividends upon fraudulent investment. 1 find In the same manual tbat the gross earnings of the road are U38.Q:,5. Cotton at six cent per pound. It would take 42,1IMM bales, or about fire entire crops, to pay this eaorruoitssnm. n heat at sixty cent per bushel, it would tako l.WB.VUT.tai bushels to pay it. The net earnings are $.19009,880. At the pres ent price of cotton it would take 1SJMS,IH8 bales. or about IH crops to pay these net earning. The annual earnings of the four principal classes of corporations in this country are as follows; Railroad - JSMJSOe.WKl Insurance . lli.tit.iS8 fanks T5.M3.Sl4 Xeiegrapns x,ihi, Total.. o78,aT4,84S Tills vast sunt paid In cotton at tbe present price would require xljaUDH bale or cotton. or about H crop. Tbe wheat crop for 1801 was in round nam. brrs 400,WO.OOU at sixty cent perbusbel; the price tbat tbe fanner 1 now reowvtng would amount to J3W.000.000. v Tbe earning of these corporation paid la wheat would require ft&6,33,18 bushels, or two and one-fourth crops. If an entire ootton and wheat crop should be applied to th payment of tbe carnlnc of these corporations It woald lack SU.8?tjfci of paying 1. I give these tact to show how the products of tbe country sx being consumed. It account for tha tbon lands of failures among bnslnes men and tha universal . bankruptcy among' the Tanner. Both of the old political parties claim that' It would be unconstitutional for the government to lay ItshsniU upon these corporations, and have entirely Ignored these issues In their platforms; therefore I accept your nomination pledged, if el.-cted, to do all in my power to remedy these jvlla and rescue the government from the hn.,ds of these corporations ana restore It to V e people. If the constitution has lo oe cuaugeu waoiu . COURAGE AND FIDELITY. Bow -General, wreswar. Ofeefraoted Cam- I rress and Cot, a IU Passed, v h In the igresiMna ctteer of "James B. taataveis. ' llaw .na. lomrmv (car -cbrea months' to aermra - reroiHiirtorl 'from I Bpealter KanTlall for the purpose Of in- I troductnsr an antizold bux resolution' J and - won. has been frequently toldl Here are : the particulars of the other great fight made by this'-dldomitable champion of the people. ' K tk place during his last term in ccsgress, and the tcconnt is token from the columns of a Kew York daily paper: ' ' ' . - What is now the territory of Okla homa was then an Indian reservation. Rich cattlemen, however, had persuaded the Indians to let them occupy the conn try for grazing purpose without giving the Indians any reasonable compensa tion. General Weaver believed the land ought to be thrown open to citizens for settlement He introduced a bill to ae complish that end. Immediately the rich cattlemen took steps to prevent its being considered by the house. It is well known that if the bill could be brought up for consideration it would be passed. The only thing necessary to defeat it would be to keep it from being discussed. Time and time again Gen eral Weaver tried to force its considera tion, but each day be failed. Then he made up his mind that be would block the business of the house and prevent congress from doing anything at all, no matter bow important or unimportant. His purpose was to weary the mem bers out and so fatigue them that they would be glad to surrender to him. . He began by demanding a roll call upon a trivial motion. He continued by mak ing dilatory motions hour after hour, until whole weeks were consumed and no public business had been transacted. He drew to himself the wrath of both great parties. Newspapers criticised and denounced him, but he held to his line of battle and proved that as an ob structionist the house of representatives would never have his equal. Finally the members yielded. They saw that under no circumstances would he ever give way. and fearful that their own measures would be jeopardized, and knowing that the plan to open Oklaho ma to public settlement was wixe aad anly opposed practically by the rich sattlemen, they surrendered. ' . .A day was set for the couaideratiaa of the Oklahoma bill and it was adopted. U was a great and magnificent victory for Weaver, and some of the very men. lonw of th very mwwnepers that had criticised him, now turned around and complimented him for his audacity, his pluck and his persistency. . Harrloaa Falsehood. It strikes me as a very singular fact that New York journals of all parties have totally ignored the gross misstate ment in the president's letter and other Republican documents in regard to. farm values and farm produce ' prices. Pot- ably I exaggerate Us importancs be cause 1 am a western man, and as tee boys say, "My money fat in it," but con sider these facts: The depression in agriculture today is greater than at any time since 1S43, and with possibly -three exceptions everv- thing produced by tillers of the soil from Manitoba to Mexico is from 3 to So per cent, cheaper than on Oct. 1, 1890, when the McKinley bill became a law. What do you suppose wheat is selling for at the railroad stations in Indiana ind Illinois? About 65 to 63 cents; oats, possibly S3 cents; wooL S3 cents a pound. ind so on all around the board. In Springfield. Bis., in 1SC3, the finest all wool suit a tailor could make to order ;ould be bought with 100 pouuds of wool or 40 bushels of wheat. Today the same suit oosts 173 pounds of wool Mr 60 bushels of wheat. In tbe face of these facts Harrison de liberately writes that farm products are !0 odd per cent, higher by reason of the McKinley bill, and "cereals 33 per cent higher." " " And th? Itew York editors do aot leem to know that ho is wild. Kay, the national Republican committee is send ing documents by the million into In diana and Illinois, etc., in which the highest prices of 1S91 are quoted as still prevailing. You affect to wonder at the growth of the Populists in the west. I begjyou to believe that western men are not all natural born, infernal fools. When the Indiana farmer goes to his market town and sells his No. 2 red wheat for sixty five cents, whereas he sold it in October, 1990, for eighty-seven cents, he certainly (loos know the difference. The way faring man, though a protectionist, can not eir therein. "Wabash Valley" in New York Poet. Cyclone" in fioorala. "Cyclone" J. H. Davis, of Texas, is rtumping Georgia in the interest of the People's party. He followed General Weaver, and at first there was a dispo sition to treat him as the general had been treated, but it soon, disappeared. '. Mr. Davfci said in an interview: "At one place a lawyer blustered up to the platform, interrupted my remarks and began a tirade against our party. After auiet had been restored in a measure I b formed the gontlemwi that I was from Texas, and that when a gentleman in sulted another gentleman in that state a funeral invariably followed. He then subsided, and I was not again inter rupted." . Coming to Basin. , ' The New York Sun, discussing the hot campaign in Georgia, says: One of the results I that the Daraoinatla party of Georgia ha had to throw away It okadot and coma to business. The academic Mr classic style Is not soiled for confuting rank or cowhides, and It 1 natural enough mat there should be "a set of young hrbht campaigners who are making fun and Qghs." Yes, instead of "cockades" the "bright jampaigners" are using rotten eggs in '.heir "busluess" this year rotten eggs sbich they hurl into the faces of good women. This is how logic, and patriot ism are met by the Democratic machine a Georgia. LINCOLN AND WEAVER. callar Slrollarltr of tbe Cuasurn J -y ft r ;-tj-.d-airo.: ' , . ; , lecd, the outlook for the election of Abra- r.linrr.JTvm.T,Tvliv - a cijot, r w-' Ti fotwAlt, & nnWi -nartv In Wt thir ranilirfata frtr nnwdi". 'den t nr.1 'TlirsK'-" who proposed to vote for Lincoln wert "assured that the- contest was' between Breckenridge and Douglas, and that Jx vote for Lincoln was to insure the eleC- tion of Breckenridge. ' The October elections gavevideuce that the people were in earnest in their desir for p change in administering the affairs of the government, and a desperate situa tion presented itself to the leaders of thf organised political forces. Instead of its being an issue between the northern and Rontliera-Kingi t tbe Democratic party the lineswere.drawn between the Republican party and all others. In order to defeat the will of the people fusion became the "order of the day, and every possible combination was entered into for the purpose of de feating the "rail splitter" and "ignorant boor" of the parties. . The "Know Noth ing" party, headed by Bell, was making ita last effort under the banner "Ameri cans to Rule America," and the Douglas party derived its greatest strength from the foreign vote, which was concentrated under the Douglas lead for the purpose ' of opposing and defeating the Bell party, yet the situation, becameo des perate that the Douglas and Bell parry united forces as a last resort to defeat Lincoln in some doubtful states. This served to show the success of. .the peo ple's movement, and with renewed hope tliA Ljnmln mHnrta mAiv1uA nn to vie-' tory. ' .-- -. V wiu a U11UMV1-J, te urev ; uiu im- sess to administer th. aitarrs of tbe gov-,.. eminent turn ms-y ojrposeu in in iu ujs honest belief that his election." would be a disgrace to ..the nation and. that the with hi inanspiirai0n- A TjaxaHel is nmeantAH ,m Tine r.twwitinn tn thsMf. tion of General Weaver, and the" su porten.of tha old and found wanting parties are working the same old scheme to prejudice the people, and with about the same result. Every election and and caucus held since the nomination of General Weaver gives evidence of a growing popularity cf tiie Peggie's ticket, and the few who came out of the old tanks because they beiiered tfce intex ests of the nation, demanded a change find themselves almost-crowded out of the ranks by the efforts' of raw recruits in their seal to get to the front. So far as is possible the People's move meet is ignored by the eastern pisss,yet evidence of theirs alarm-; of tha t-esult from the uprising othe! people is not wanting. - In the western states the cry of neither protective tariff nortariS re form catches the ear, and in the mining states the bugaboo of the "appeal of the lead tax fails to mislead ."the people. Listening-to the appeal fcf the poiiti-" cians while taking the toboggan for a lower plane of prosperity is not prac ticed, by the people to the. extent it has beea in the past, and the dulcet tones of the alarmed officeholder arc not being responded to' by the measured tread of the heretofore slaves of the old parries. Colorado Herald. People's Party la the Eaat. The People's party in the east is not asleep and, though as a matter of course the greater interest is centered in th west and south, eastern members of the national committee have not" been in active in the stronghold of the gold bugs. There are People's electoral tick ets in each of the Atlantic and Xew England states, and in most of them full state and congressional tickets. The state committees in Ivew York, New Jersey, Massachusetts Mid Con necticut are hopeful of securing a good vote for Weaver and Field, and claims are made tbat a congressman -or two will be elected in. New York and New Jersey. - A Little Bit of Beeord. . It is thought by some that this plan (the snbtreasury) conflicts with, the con stitution of the United States, becans they affirm that "the government has no . mnnor arrAnt i-V a t it nbtainAiI frtim th people by taxation."' To this we reply: Did the government obtain by taxation. 1312. the f 10,000,000 issued in ISIS, the P5.000.000 issued in 1SU. the$S5;000,000 issued in 1S15, the issues of 1SSS, 1S40, 1S43, 1843. 1S46, 1S7, 1S57, 1S66, ISM. 1S63 and 1SC3? Did not the government issue these amounts simply by fiatat no expense whatever to the paople? Southern Mercury. ' -. Ttia Tota In Arkansas. The Populist vote in Arkansas proves to be 81,177 instead of 15,000, as the dis patches have said. The new party car ried three counties and elected seven members to the legislature. The Populist vote is heaviest in the north western part of the state, where there are compara tively few colored men. This is another indication that the majority of the wkite voters.in this and several other southern states hav broken, away from tbe Dem ocratic party. New Nation. . Ttiere'll Ba Gnashing of Teeth. " "What a gathering tbat will be" when the People's party reinforcements stand up to be counted in the Fifty-third con gress. Coming from the west- and, the south to sit down-in the seats of nations power they will take Abraham, Isaac and Jacob of the effete east, and the goldun calf of Wall street and thrrtvt th?m into outer darbuess w&ere theft will'be-weeping ana wailing and gnash ing of teeth. Nonconformist. - . -: Think of Marat Halstead as an ad viser of the People's presidential nomi nee! In a recent article in the IJew Yjflrk' Herald Halstead suggests, that "Weaver ,an get oven with the JIacon, egg thrower" by withdrawing from "the contest and assisting to defeat Cleve land. This looks like Halstead has read Harrison's doom. - Others - have read Cleveland's,