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All good deroocrats should attend their ...

All good deroocrats should attend their ... image
Parent Issue
Day
25
Month
March
Year
1898
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

All good deroocrats should attend their ward caucuses Mondaynight and see that good nominations are made for supervisors, aldermen and constables. The best work can be done at the caucuses. Th at Sheriff Judson is still sawing wood is shown by the report from Lansing that through his missionary work Senator Campbell has been converted into a Pingreeite. We wonder if the dispatches can be credited. The time for action has then come. No greater reason for it can be tomorrow than exists today. Every houf's delay only adds another chapter to the awful story of misery and death. Only one power can intervene - the United States of America.- Thurston. ' ': Cuba should be free, and free not a year from now or some time in the distant future, but now. Who has read the speeches of the senators who have been in Cuba but have feit that the United States owes a duty to interfere on behalf of humanity. The appalling loss of life on the Maine through Spanisbtreaehery, sinks into insigniflcance beside the 300,000 Cubans starved to death by Spanish inhumanity and a death rate of 1,000 a day from starvation. It is said that the present ructiou in the republican party will be carried into the spring elections which will in all probability be slimly attended; that the anti-Judsonites in this city will nominate Col. Dean in the firstward, Dr. üarling in the sixth and G. Frank Allmendinger in the seventh so that the sheriff's bilis may be properly scrutinized. It is thought that Judson's fine hand will be seen in the republican nominations in many of the townships and probab[y in the wards. We await reports of the nominations with interest. Mayor Hiseock has made a public expression of his regret at the difference of the opinión that exists regarding the merits of brick and asphalt as paving material. Already three petitions have been or are in circulation about the paving of Main st. and it looks [as though the whole matter would be petitioned out of existence and the street still left in its present eondition. Unanimity is what isneicessary, not dissension. Had it not been for dissensions Main st. would have been pa ved 25 or 30 years ago as the principal streets in other cities of its size have been.

Article

Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News