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'i’Uc ilVavdtcuuac I? Hot THURSDAY. JULY I s . 1001. EIGHT PAGES. Established 1838. ISSUED EVERN THURSDAY. S\ DNEN T. PRATT, Editor. FORMER EDITORS, Jere Crowley, Ten Evck (>■ Olmsted, JOHN NiAtiLE. ARTHIR.fi. ZANDER, HuHness Manager. The Pilot i- iml.:;-.!>•• Oil Slfl York Sir Termsi sub < v i-ii->n *!..*(• a year. jiay -trictly in advance. Ad vertising rate* can Ik* procured bv 'application at tie office. All job work don- promptly and care taken that work will be artistically turned out. Sul s ril-ers a;. 1;. rti- rs are request ed to remit all checks. postoffice or e.\pr-'S money order or i-uristere le'tcr :u.d to addre - THE PILO'j CO,, MAN IT'>w<>u. wis OHIO'S DEMOCRATIC stand. Inumdiately following the campaig: and eleci' o • • ; !'. -umcrats through • out the length and breadth of the lan ga vc practical evidence and voiced in ip uncertain language their faith in Mt Bryan leadership and Mr. I’r'.i > - the ories It wa dear then to ;h> min I- > t the least astute that the Democratic cm. ventiou of 11MKi would again make the Nebraskan th* standard bearer, It did though wane voter-* within party align ment felt, ami they went m> far as t presag*- defeat for the Democratic ticl et. Tile n -nit- of the llm cam pair' are fi> well known to need recital an one re -alls that hist ry only a*a remim er that leti-i.i-m disastrous whetln in politics or r ligion How different are the conditions i the Democratic party this year fr. i that of the year f dlowim; the first ire. silver campaign As in I*!*? so in H 1 the Ohio Democrats met in conventioi but unlike the intoxicated fervor of |s; the Ohio Democrats were silent as i leadership and platform. Efforts v. ■ mode to have the Kansas City platfon reaffirmed and Mr. Hrvan endorsed a ‘matchli -- I<adi i . but b ill ended i fizzle, only -i.x opt of the more Ilian it delegates voting ay for ihe amendin' r to the resolutions This action of il Ohio Democratic convention may I taken as an accurati gauge of the sen! incut prevailin'.; ii party rank- throne out the country regarding Mr. Bryn Hid the theories hi espouses. It won! he rank iu 'ii-;u . to the Democracy , the future as well as to Mr. Bryan t push him forward or the free silv. -question v. jth which his name will inseparably associated II is plain i nuondav that the party cannot win yvit either M Bryan -r free ,• il\t. flier* fore it was wise for the Ohio delegab to ignore him and the IMm; a..d It" plait -tins It -eenis only tea-.,liable presume that iuc te stale conv.uitio; S'lil (](l likewise Tie platform of the Ohio Deumcra built r:. i in local than national issm although me attention was given tl ■ latter it i freshing ,-.nd teas arii o wittier • tne party again standing o the Deni- Tate- r-- k of tariff reforn lit the lit tw- national campaigns tari reform w .s ali.-iost forgotten fren/y 1' new Isiru theories lilurred the lioriz.oi. but defeat following feat, lies clarilb the |Kilitieal atmosphere and Democrat now -ee success looming in the distune and if the party treads loyally and wit unfaltering bet the historic pathway a marked out by Jefferson and sub-i qtieutly by tin long line of able stall - men down to Cleveland and Bayard it may soon sit in the seat of power am. direct the national trend away from tli imperial Moloch at which shrine tin Republicans Would have the nation wot ship. The gist of the Ohio Democratic plat form. Waring upm national and inter national subjects is thus succinctly sun. Diarized Tariff reform is demande ■ ■rn llie ground that tin* production o the country far exceeds its power of ■ (jusuitiplion I In*enactment and rigoi ouh enforcement of measures to jrev-n monopolies and combi nations in n straint of trade and commerce is de Utandis). as ir> also the suppression of a) trusts and a return to industrial fret dom As a means to that end the plat i f irm declare- that all trust product should lx* placed on the fiee fis and ti. government should exerei-** a more rigi supervision of transportation. Uestoi ation of the merchant marine is favored without subsidies, however Butting itself on record as sjs*ciall\ repudiating inqs-rialism and the evil growing out cf it the convention says Powers granted the federal g< vern meut were not meant i ;*, , n quer or hold in subject. <n tie- js-ople ot other countries The Ik-inucratic parti op|smml any extension of tie- national Isinndaries not meant to t arry speedily* to all iuhaliitaots fell equal rights with ourselves If these ate ut fitted by 1 cation, race or charac ter to Is- forme 1 into self-governing territories and th n incorporated into the union of state-. ♦ hey should Ist permitted to work oc.t their own destiny. ( inly terrilonkl expansion deinn* 1 ed 1-y the national welfate and the na tional safety is at any time to be favor ed. the objection's yvhtch should have prevented certain of r recent accea -ions being that they imperil the nation al welfare, tend to embroil us yvith European powers, weaken our claim to supremacy on the American continent and furnish a dangerous opportunity and temptation for the disregard of the -elf evident truth of universal application that governments derive their just pow ers from the consent of the governed. The ticket nominated by the party is a thoroughly good one and it has mon than an even chance to win. Colonel Kilbourne is nominated for governor. The colonel was born in Columbus in I s 11. was graduated at Kenyon befon j the civil war and from Harvard law | school after the war. He enlisted as a private an 1 rose to the colonelcy. He is president of the Ohio Centennial com mittee. the Columbus Board of Trade. Children's Home and Associated Chari | ties, director of banks and railways, vice-president of the Army of Tennessee and member of other military organiza tions. He has never held public office and was never a candidate until two year- ago, when he was defeated for the giils'rnatonal nomination by Join. 11. McLean. Colonel Kilbourne is an j honorary member of the Coluntbn- Trades and Labor ivssetn id v. For year j he was the next door neighbor of the | !ut< Senator Allen (i Thurman, and was Ids close counselor. At lust there ts hii end "f free silverisin. Tin ( Hi!" I lemoerm y. most ardent ! r a debn *• f-nr r.-ne\ "f any r.ortbern state a* tin* v*te for M ixinl-v shows lias come toil -i,-es. igner. til" exploded i- In- wlei.ni.il lack the "M 'leelaimeil against tin-r- M.e; tariff and generally ;>!cist itself again wgiarely "ti ten able ifi 'iittid It i-mild wnrcely Inc •• done lst t.T were tin- ••noblest Ketiian. 1 barman, till ally I" lend the party In the nnfli it should fol low, A valuable start "Il the U).w..rd road lit. th it- I made, an 1 no one ran doubt tliat It* ■ publican overthrow Is proximate if tie- party in power shall per-ist in the ie.-tni.te of levy im; tariff* for He- ts-neflt of Pillion dollar trust- M <oi v Drtioi hat. sSf jzi. We XV bV -A’ K ti y q John Nagle’s Philosophy. , n— y JJ finds have their fiiiuvi in their J-. ft own hands Fathers are too busy J. with affairs of business and in j planning tor the future of tin ir -Otis, to refit ct that girls have a V- future which includes anything p be-idi marriage or the prim acer- J/ bity of old tmtidenhoisl Mothers t, '• have to-. much concern f-- • the re (|tdrements of the present to do r 'v mind anything practical in the '• education of their children. To ?! ditss w*ill l ta ' app' ir vv 11 at ; ?• pari- attractive and properly f, •ji religions are the io/0//iok Uunmn j in tie * rlv life of a girl accord- i" j ing >n tie mother's idea But J. % lie-re are not a few girl- whose /y eves rest mi ‘.he future and who Jf liav- a purp - beyond social ph'i J, ft ure.-and the di lights of youthful i. A love making They are not striv j ing to cu-I oft all feelings of J 4 responsibility^■, but aeijiiiriiig /■ j strength - a-i tube able to dis ft charge lii'i- dnti -a- become wo- U i ft re the tnn j, J tin leaih of fash > x sinks ib <-p inti he current -■( lile h ■ anil de veh ipes the Wouienhood v\ which ha* not tjivohtv as its chiet V- characteristic. file education y \ •t vvhi- h dignitie- life with a purpose . 1h; tl lelliellls of real beauty. {' Jj ('ullure inii-t reach character A girl who has learned t>> sew well V has ri veil evidence of a higher con- \l iy ocptioii !' life - duti- than one J/ ft who has received n "polish which j, a precludes all knowledge of domes- 1 i "i ' :,i v- s.. Hin ih*v fifftl imt flrfinv mu any <Vl* kCMt' f ftt'in WiuiUf'tha •••iiinty in thn nuxt <> . v*nti*n w !nthr nr not ‘taonv .loin** In a *jn UrnutorlMl aspirant If Jotn*a I-h a candiclat** i In* will sct'iiri' I Id* dflck'aflun and if !• Ik not |tl . (l‘*l*n,;it.- will U fif Lu K<|NVatki ■ w|| Al* I >iaiAT( H litmus COMA ISLAND I>r Howie the Chicago healer who proclaims him-elf the reincarnated Kli jalt ha-ample opportunity of proving whether the mantle he wears be true or spurious. The doctor is planing to build Zion city and for tins purpose op lions have U>en secured on a tract of land lying northeast of Waukegan. 11l Tite doctor in selling lots in Zion City puls into the contract excessively string cut rule- s*i severe that any owner of projierty in thi charmed city who vio lutes one \\ ill immediately lose his land, the e-late reverting to Zion City, or to 1* more accurate t > the doctor himself. It is the o' Dowle that no un clean tiling Is* tolerated iu Zion. To- baeco, drugs theaters whisky, physi cians and many other things are pros (Tilted even the /ionites will not Is* per milled to eat hogs they are prohibited, dead ur alive While the doctor was making rules for Zion and getting ids options on land, his business jierspica city slipjied a cog and it is now discover . and that a Lake county farmer owns a pit-ee of ground within the Zion curios ure of which Dowle lias no option The land is about 180 acres and situated within a short distance of proposed location for the temple This farmer is a prosaic sort of a fellow, with his eye open to business and be refuses to let ' the doctor have it: he pay? be will keep it and when Zion is running in lull bla-t he will open a genuine Coney island with all the pantphanalia such a place demands. This revelations hue shocked the .sanctimonious Dowie. but if he re il ly wears Elijah's mantle why doesn f he perform a miracle to get it: "he old Hebrew sage could have done it. Dowie surely remembers the oatmial story. Bnt ti.e farmer says it will take money to get his land. The (Ireen Bay Uazett rails for tli ■ limiim tfon of the term- tnlv.iir: and hnlf-1 reed Irian the iii wr,iaper e.iluums. \ettliis same never In- hates hi apply iiimiproiiriafe epithet.* to the members of the Demoeratte party. FnuD or Lai Kkpobtkr. WAR TO Till k.MFT;. The Milwaukee Free Press is again pounding its Republican neighbor, the Sentinel, alleging the latter misrepre sents rather than represents the party both papers are trying to serve. Be tween the two papers there is war to the throat and it will be interesting to watch who comes out victorious. In last Monday's Free Press an editorial tins riferred to The Sentinel: ‘ Mr. Ellis J 5. Usher is now zealously engaged ;n telling in The Journal what Populism has cost Kansas. It is only within a few weeks that The Sentinel has ceased to call Wisconsin Republicans freaks. Populists and curs. Both have been do ing what they can to misrepresent Wis consin and give the state an undeserved reputation. Both are doing or trying to do up re injury to the business inter ests of the state and to the men whose livelihood depends on the daily wage? tney earn than Wiscoii-dn will ever stif fer from so-called ‘Populism.’ Both an maligning Wisconsin, Wisconsin Re publicans, and a state administratin' which was elected by the largest major ity ever cast for candidates for office in tliis state." We are waiting The Sentinel's reply. A I I.NDAMLVfAI. ISSLI!. The Springfield (Mass) Republican it its last wed. s issue says: 'The fundamental issue of the Ameri can idea of freedom, a conception which embraces the golden rule doctrine this 4 toother.- arc due the rights we claim for ourselves, is as true and deathless an issue to-day us it ever was in the pa t we have deemed so glorious. An old contest is now sharply raised, abiding and irrepressible and not yet settled. Ji has not been repressed, the true Ameri canism, because events of the immediate past have been permitted to appear to carry the United States into acceptance of tie- old w aid ideas of colonialism and the despotic rule of inferior races. There is to lie no abiding unity upon theories that were the btilwork of slav ery in the days liefore the civil war, in surrender of Lincoln's views to thosi which the public men of the South in sist ii ]■ >n before the arbitrament of tin civil war made the bondsmen free. "It is true now as always that there i no liberty that is not constitutional lil - erty. Nothing in the march of com merce or the growth* of people ha change 1 the essential quality of liberty what it is and what it is not.£j No iui potem-e in the face ot great events tlm should have been directed in hannoin with American principles and preced ent- hut were not, can change thecha acter of human rights, or excuse us froi, the obligation to square the nationa conduct with them. These arc thing that ought not to he challengeable in the United States at any time or midi i any circumstances, for tlieyj are tin commonplaces of the historic Fourth i t July. And yet the statement issued on an other page hv the Aiucrcian anti-in; pciialist league, the necessity which ex ists for its appeal, is proof<|that the di vergence from ideals regarded in the past as sacred calls for sei iouschallenge. Perhaps there has lieen undue intensity of debate upon the one side or the other, and if so, that is a matter to he pardon ed in view of the importance of the principles involved. Bnt the present liberty appeal does not offend. Is it not exactly true amldemperately stated that Imperialism is not a question of crowns and scepters, of names and titles It is a system of government. When a man or body of men. an em peror. a president, a congress or a na lion, claims the-absoluie right to rule a people, to compel the submission of that js'ople by brute force, to decide what rights they shall have,,what taxes they shall pay. what judges shall administer their laws, what men shall p vem them all without responsibility to the people thus governed this is imj erialism, the antithesis of free government.' Was it not precisely upon this ground that our fathers took their stand, that they objet ted to exactly these infringements and then the ((evolution was slow fought, with sacrifice infinite, to its sue cess Was Benjamin Harrison other than a typical American of the sort this day has ever commemorated when he declared himself 'unable to rejoice in the acquisition of lauds and mines and forests and commerce at the cost of the abandonment of the old American idea that a government of absolute powers is an intolerable thing, and under the constitution of the United States an im possible thing. Ah. but we are b gi vent so well notiiing but justice and benevolence and ti betterment of men can go where the rule of the United States extends, and so ruler and ruled will l*j profited' SOKES Mv'D ULCERS. Sores and Ulcers never become chronic unless the blood is in poor condition —is sluggish, weak and unable to throw off the poisons that accumulate in it. The system must be relieved of the unhealthy matter through I he sore, and great danger to life woub follow should it heal before the blood has been made pure and h ealthy and all impurities eliminated from thesys tem. S.S.S. begins the cure by first cleans ing and invigorating the blood, building up the gene and health and removing from the system A CONSTANT DRAIN effete matter UPON THE SYSTEM. When this h s been accomp.ished the dis charge gra mlly ceases, and the sore or ulcer heals. It is the tendency of these old indolent sc - to grow worse and worse, andeventu :iy to destroy the bones. Local applications while soothing and to some extent allev ite p tin. cannot reach the seat ot the troub, ■ S. S. S. does, and no matter how apparently hopeless your condition, ev‘-n though vnnr constitution has broken down, it will bung relief when nothing else can. It supplies the rich, pure blood necessary to heal the sure and nourish the debilitated, diseased body. Mr J. II Talbert. I.ut It Iln* 345. Winona, Miss., ' says: "Six years :-tso my leg from the kme to the foot was 01 -.uli'i sore. Severn! physicians tlcated me and I made two trips t Hot Springs, i hut found no r-lief I was induced to try SS S , an lit made n c mptete cure. I have !>ecn a per fectly well mail ever since ” 1S the only purely veg -s HT s <siy * etable blood purifier known contains no t . jgg jt., poisonous minerals t) ’MS Sr 'SaiS*' v&J' ruin the digestion and ! add to, rather than relieve your suffer ings. If your flesh does not heal readily when scratched, bruise 1 or cut, your blood is in bad condition, and any ordinary sore is apt to become chronic. Send for our free book and write our physicians a! mt your case. We make no charge for tbi- ervice. THS SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, QA. Men ever ha arg i> <1 alike in such it cause. It in so the supporters and King r< T A NARUS„( c;:-c of the distant Atncrb .'onists and the advocates lav -v saw < iy flu sid -• of its pa riarclml ,■••*. fhc rnndcment al principle*- involv' and. the naked right and wrong < : it ti.e application of the golden rub th‘-e u.n-t always lie qualified and v<-ide-l where ‘inferior races' are com crue l. Mow Lincoln's honest hewing to the line of inspired truth confounds the qualifiers of IWM at it did those of I*ol. 'Those who (let:; liberty to others deserve it not them selves, and under a in t God cannot lon it retain it,’ There are, ns -me a u fate the making!) of anew irrepressible con flict, when tbi- country shall, by the de liberat decision ot her people, have citi zens and subjects under the one flag. It will not be the old United -dates of America, but a nation, call it what yon will, that has a vepted the ideals ot Britain and ot Hnrope for its own. “Thi-is ai i--ne very pertinent b Indepemleru day. and so th- appen; issued last week which i- signed by men like ''ar! Schurz. Bishop Hall ot Vermont. Samuel L. Clemen.-, Wheeler H. Beckham. William D. Howells. .1 L. Spudding, hi shop of Peoria. 111., and .Tames Ryan bishop of Alton 111. i thus concluded! We urge all kivcr of freedom t organize it defense of Immiui ri.'lits now threatened Or th greatest Ti *■■■ govern ■ -tit in i ‘-tory. Even i nnr government may exerris. arb., -y pr.wei over million-of men in disregard oi th.* ••op< ti tution wiinli we deny it.an in v ■ riglc for it to e> 'vi—such power. Right is Uu;’m*> ■I an might Let ev citizen study tl fact and nwk- M- ei.nefuslon known, ■ -nbinfiu with hi- neighbor to influence congress t< stand true to the principles o? the deelarntim hy whlcii 1 - j > rims-i t was Coiiud.-d and an dor which ; Ims grown no great The graves danger of our conntry has known til' now ha come from a denial of those price- pies. Tin incoming congress is not yet com* tted to tin policy of Ine .riM.rating the Island . .pie int< our system without rights, i.et it i mine it place in the government in defense ot the in alienable rights of man We appeal from tin's, who for the moment exercise the power of fin nation to the p. oph* who are the nation thiC nation w hich, on .Inly t. Util. Was conceived in lilierty and dedicated to the principle that all men aiv created eipial SCOTLAND COMING. Shiploads of II trr Iteliig F'rcq nenl I y Dumped In New Torts Harbors. It is a fact that Scotland is literally being transferred to America. It is being carried across the Atlantic piecemeal; and, although it will take many years to remove the whole of Scotland, considerable portions are being conveyed at not infrequent in tervals. The Land of Cukes oninos to the United Stales In the character of bal last; and the other day ns mttch as a thousand tons was thus brought to New York on the Allan line steamer Laurent an. Nearly every week a large quantity is shipped. This is because of the absence of freight. Shipowners would much rather leave the land of the Scots at home, bur without ballast their ves sel, rn hi turn turtle. While for com mercial purposes the soil is absolutely worthless, it has to be paid for at (ilnsgow, its removal from the hold at New York involving still further ex pense. \fter the cargo of soil has been discharged the ship has to be thoroughly cleansed before freight can be received on board. Put other ships than those that hail from Scottish ports carry earth as bal last, Any French or Italian exile in \meriea who is yearning for the sight of hi native land can see it without the trouble and expense of crossing the Atlantic by visiting the New York harbors This is all because the tide of trade is in our favor. We ship more goods than are shipped to us, and the difference made up in eoil of the old wvrli}. It All Hinges on Quality, When Buying a Bicycle. J • There is no bargain In ; icycles where beauty lies only the depthTof'the covering. Don't confound our goods with this cheap, unworthy kind so£exten sively advertised at present. The wheels we offer are goods of character; goods of quality; bargains that no other dealer will duplicate. Largest display of bicycles and bicycle sundries in the city. Chas. F. Schuetze Cos. 1206 Washington St. Manitowoc, Wis. THE GREATEST WORK 1 THE WORLD All the leading writers and scholars of both the old and the new world have contributed to the j ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA | fife EDITION OF | f i Law t- m if m MSBMedicine [| .- -| M® Biography ra Pfy off COMPLETELY REVISED AND j BHOUUiIT DOWN TO DATE... j, |{} More handsomely and durably bound than ever before. All delivered on payment of o n ly j 3IL I wO | down (Balance in small monthly payments.) YOU CAN SEE A COMPLETE SET (31 large quarto volumes, including five volumes of American Supplement, New Guide and Bookcase) by calling on us. (No obligations imposed.) Forjurther particulars, Call or address Theo. Schmidtman Sons’ Cos. Manitowoc, Wis. De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve should be promptly applied to cuts, burns and scalds. It soothes and quickly heals the injured part. There are worthless coun terft its, be sure to get DeWitt’s. F. C. Buerstatte. ■. ■■■■. •—- Don’t get discouraged because your first two-line ad. didn't bring; you a fortune. A CAHI> I We, the undersigned, do hereby agree to refund the money on a 50-cent bottle of (ireene's Warranted Syrup of Tar if it ! fails to cure your cough or cold. We also guarantee a 35-cent bottle to prove sat , sfactory or money refunded. Chas. a. Gropfman, Henry Hinrichs. If Kve had fierer fallen it would bays | l>een a terrible joke on all the rest of us. - I Those famous little pills. DeWitt's Lit tle Early Risers compel your liver and 1 bowels to do their duty, thus giving y<>u pure, rich blood to recuperate your body. Are easy to take. Never gripe F C. Buerstatte ‘ I am indebted to One Minute Cough Cure for my present good health and my life. I was treated in vain by doctors j for lung trouble following in grippe. I took One Minute Cough Cure and recov ered my health." Mr. E. H. Wise, Ma dison. ura. F. C. Buersiatte. Mrs. Fijjit—You think you know what I am thinking about. Mr. Fijjit- Eh? Mrs Fi.i.iit Ves. you're thinking that I'm thinking that you don't know EXCURSION HATES TO Mll.WAl KEE Via the North-Western Line. Excur sion tickets will lx* (dd at reduced tales for round trip, on account of Elk's Grand Lodge to be held at Milwaukee, July 33 to 35. For dates of sale rates, etc., apply to rgents Chicago & North- Western Railway. July 18. A woman will believe in faith cure un til her little child is dead, hut a man can only believe it until he gets the lum bago. Very Low Rate Excursion Tickets to the Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y. Via the North-Western Line are sold, daily with favorably return limits. Direct connection at Chicago, with fast trains of all lines to Bnfialo. An illus trated booklet will be mailed on receipt of two cents postage by W, B. Klnskeru, General Passenger ami Ticket Agent Chicago. Scatter the golden coin of courtesy freelv if you would travel over the road that leads to success. Spavin Liniment. English Spavin Liniment removes All Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps ond Blem ishes from horses, Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints. Sweeney Ring-Bone, Stifles Sprains, all Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. sve $5O by the use of one bottle, 'Varranteed the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by F. C. Buer tatte Druggist Manitowoc. Wis.