THE SCHANTON TRIBUXE WEDNESDAY MOTlNING,, JULY 29, 189G. 9 MANUFACTURES AN INDEX OF PROGRESS Commercial and Intellectual Develop ment Travel Side by Side. BUSY WORKSHOPS AND SCHOOLS Test of a Kcccnt Speech by Governor Lippitt of Rhode Island That Hut a Practical Hearing on tho Present Campaign. . The consideration of protection lends at once to the question of manufac tures. Are they necessary or advan tageous in a country like ours? For mora than thirty years, after 1SC1. Pro tection prevailed w ith an unbroken rec ord In this country. Kor the past few years there has been a departure from this policy. We are about to decide whether to return to the policy of Pro tection, or to continue In the direction Indicated by the Democratic party. In such circumstance an examina tion of the experience of other nations In relation to manufactures may help us to determine our best interests. In South America there is not a single manufacturing nation, as the term is now understood Africa Is In a similar condition. The same Is true of Asia, ex cept. In some respects, those portions of that vast continent that have come tinder the control of the more enterpris ing nations of r.urope. Jauan, perhaps, furnishes an exception. Side by side with the 'victories that she has gained over her ancient enemy, China, come accounts of her successes In manufac turing. The United States may find a competitor from the West In addition to those that have heretofore been met ' from the East. In Europe the situation Is different. It Is the manufacturing continent of the world. Jleasure the nations It contains by manufactures, and the order Is Eng land, Germany, France, Itussia, Italy, Spain. A comparative table of the po sition of these nations In manufactur ing was complied for the year 1S8S. United Kingdom $3,v.K,0i0.nio Germany 2,!",uik,':i)) France 2,3iili,UiHM Russia l,7iW."WW Italy rs,iuiO) Spain 413,000,000 The manufacturing product of the Vnlted Kingdom, or England, exceeds that of any other European nation. It Is more thnn equal to the product of Germany, Italy and Spain combined, and very nearly equal to the total manufacturing products of Fiance and Russia. AN INFALLIBLE SIGN. That the importance of nations is In dicated, hy manufacturing is well Illus trated by the comparison of tho wealth of the nations of Europe. A table of na tional wealth In 1SSX was compiled by the same authority as that for manu facturers. Wealth, lSS. United Kingdom $ l.-,74il.00O.Wh) France 4I.si:i.iiii.(Wi) Germany 31,iEii.io.iii Itussia 2I.TiM,iW.iMt Italy H.t19.ii0,iKW Spain 12,2I4,O'K).0iW The relation between these nations Is In the exact order of the value of their manufacturing l roducts, except in the' case of France and Germany. The po sition of these two nations is transpos ed, England stands first as the richest nation of Europe. Her wealth exceeds that of Germany and Italy combined. As manufacturing supremacy indi cates wealth, it Is also a measure of In telligence. In the United Kingdom, France and Germany, the number of people In a hundred able to write varies from 85 to 96. In Itussia, Italy and Spain the number falls to from 15 to 47. Among the older nations of the world, therefore, wealth. Intelligence, and, as we have reason to believe, from other sources, nntlonal power, Is generally iwoixrtlon to manufacturing pro ducts. England is our chief competitor. France and Germany are competitors to a less extent. The United States does not fear competition with the man ufacturing products of Russia, Italy, or Spain. Asia, with the possible excep tion of Japan, Africa and South Amer ica do not contain a nation capable of a serious manufacturing coniliet with America. An examination of our pos sible competitors for supremacy In manufacturing reduces the number to three or four nations. ENGLAND AND AMERICA. Compare England, the leading manu facturing nntlon of the world, outside of this country, with the United States. In 1G0 the manufacturing product of Great Britain was $2,710,000,000. In that year the United States was second, with a manufacturing product of $l.M7. tOO.OOO. 'During the twenty-elcht years between 1S60 and 1SSS, the basis of these comparisons being English figures, England maintained what may fairly be called a free-trade policy. The poli cy or the United States was protection. It Is natural to suppose that, nt the end of this period, England had at least maintained her lead over the Uni ted States, a comparatively new nation. In 1&S8, however, the manufacturing product of England was J3.9PO.OoO.ooo. In that year the United States had overtaken and passed her great rival, having tncreased her manufacturing product to $7,022,000,0(10. Protection had worked wonders for America. It had made her the first manufacturing na tion of the world. It had enabled her manufacturing Industry to exceed that of the United Kingdom combined with the product of any other manufacturing nation of the world. As would be ex the wealth of England nnd the United States In 1SSS stands In a similar rela pected from the result In other nations, tion. That of the United Kingdom was $15,746,000,000. The wealth of the United States was $62,410,000,000. In Intelligence thp comparison shows that 92 persons In 100 can write In the United States, against 90 In 100 in the United Kingdom. From 1S60 to 1S90, during the thirty years that Protection was the national policy, the progress of the United States exceeds that of any other nation, for any similar period In the history of the world. The comparison of the con dition of the country at the two periods Is most interesting. i860. lsno. Population S1.M3.32U r.2.622,250 Wealth J16.159.G16.0UO $65,037,091,000 Manufacturing product '. 11,883.801.07'; $9,372,437.2X1 Pig Iron, tons ... 821,223 8,i2,7'ri Coal tons 14,333.912 157.7Sfi.iri6 Wheat, bushels .. 173,101.924 S99.2i2.n00 Corn, bushels .... 838,792,742 1,489,970,000 Exports of do mestic manu factures $10,315,892 $151,102,376 Foreign trade .. S6.S7.192.0uQ $1.6 17.139, W) Customs revenue $53,187,511 $229,6taW4 Railroads, miles. 80,626 ICS.iWI Patents issued .. 26,612 418,665 uch marvelous results indicate that Re Kepullcan policy of Protection has en of wonderful benefit to the nation. Manufactures are necessary to the highest order of intelligence. To devel op the human brain, an infinite diver sity of occupation and of enjoyment are necessary. To attain the highest civili sation, every form of occupation that the climatic conditions render possible must ba maintained. The experience and information gained in becoming fa miliar. with manufacturing processes raises the intelligence of the mass of the iwople. They become Informed and skillful In particular lines of life. Im provements are suggested. Individual gains through the returns from pat ents stimulate the entire population to secure similar protlts. The improved procests of manufacture benefit not only the Individuals controlling them for a time, but also the well-being of the entire country. Here Is an article only a few Inches long. It may be a sixteenth of an Inch in diameter. It is about the size of a lady's darning needle. Upon its sur face are over 7.400 points. It Is a jew elers Hie. One pound of steel, costing 40 cents, will make S3 dozen such tiles. The 9!6 flies In their finished state arc worth t'j'i.Zj. A pound of steel, there fore, after bein.g manipulated by the various machines through which this little file has passed, has been Increas ed in value 11,710 per cent. The inven tor of the machinery which led to tho production of these articles was a Rhode Islander. At an early age he began work In the Whttiiisville ma chine shop, where his father was em ployed at the head of a gang of men. His entire working life, previous to in venting the file machine, was passed In different machine shops, gaining tho Information and experience which tln ully produced the result. If manufac turing establishments had not been maintained In the community where he lived, thereby enabling him to earn hH livelihood as a machinist, he could not have Invented the machinery by which a pound of metal of little value is made equal to nearly three ounces of gold. The enhanced value of the pound of steel Is entirely in labor. The Ml dozen files In a finished state have had nothing in the way of metal or other material added to them. That they are worth, approximately, $60, Is due entire ly to tho labor employed In bringing them to their finished condition. These delicate processes of manufacture, the direct outcome of the Invention of Nich olson, have enabled thousands of work men to maintain themselves nnd their lamilies by honest labor. Manufactur ers, ihereiore, work for the elevation of the Individual workman and for the benefit of the community. PRACTICAL UNIVERSITIES. Every manufacturing establishment is a college. They are ns necessary to the development of mankind as any i.a stitutlon of learning that may bo named. The ordinary signification of the word "education" may well bo broadened. It is commonly restrict ?d to graduates of schools and colleges familiar with books. The learned pres idents of Harvard and of Columbia are educated men. Had they been called upon to solve the problem of the fIK machine, and to so arrange Its delicate parts ns to make It a practical success, it would hnve been as difficult for them to accomplish the result as for Nien olson. In his early years, to conjugate a Greek verb. Can there be any doubt that in relation to tho fila machine Nlcholfcn was educated, and that the others would have been .wanting in formation? The technical knowledge gained in manufacturing establish ments by the people of this country. Is an education 'Which cannot be secured In any other way. The Increase In pat ents Issued between 1S60 and 1S90 in dicates the educational influence of manufacturing. The story of great In ventions is as Interesting as a rom ance. Some eight yenrs ngo three brothers of a New England manufacturing firm, meeting together to consider their busi ness prospects, conceived the idea that the ordinary cotton cloth loom was sus ceptible of great Improvements. They set aside $10,000 for experiment and In vestigation. A contract was made with Rhodes, the best machinist In their em ploy, to assist In producing the result. This man had been trained in machine shops maintained In New England. At the end of n few months an Improved loom was produced. Northrop, an Eng lishman, who had been employed In the; same machine shop, suggested a furth er Improvement. A separate location In the workshlp was given him, and his results. In a friendly way, were com pared with those of Rhodes. In a short time twelve looms were built ahd s't up In a Fall River cotton mill. A short experlenco inillcntcd that they wre ex ceedingly Imperfect. Had cotton man ufacturing not been conducted In the neighborhood of the machine shop, the needed experience could not hnve been secured. After further d velopment. a contract was made for fifty looms wit'i the Pacific mills. It proved a disas trous enterprise. The new loom failed to accomplish the desired result, and Involved the principals In a loss of $15, 000. By this time there had been ex pended In the development of the In vention some $r,o,0f!0 or JfiO.OOrt. To further study the lo m, a suitable build ing was provided nnd eighty looms set up and run under the owners' super vision. A third machinist. Roper, also employed In the machine shop, suggest ed an important Improvement, the wnrr stop motion. Its application complete! the machine. It became known ns the Northrop loom, nnd is now (n practical operation. Some twenty-five men, all technically-educated In machine shops, or In the cotton manufacture, have In vented different parts of this machine. Their Improvements have been covered by approximately 100 patents. There has been expended In experiments, in Investigation and for patents, some JCOO.OCO. The result is a reduction of one. half In the cost of weaving cotton cloto The cost of weaving constitutes one half the cost of labor required to pro duce cotton cloth. Consequently the saving secured by the loom is approxi mately one-quarter of the labor of pro ducing the cloth. Experts have esti mated that In 1S95 JS0.000.00O was paid for labor In the cotton manufacture In ythe United States. Assume that tho improved loom had been thoroughly in troduced, the saving secured thereby would have been approximately $20, 000.000. Tile Interest on the National debt of the United States In 1892, the last year of Republican control, was $22,893,000. The possible saving of the new loom, therefore, would be about seven-eighths of this Interest. PUBLIC BENEFACTORS. It accomplishes something more. The bid method of weaving cotton cloth requires the weaver to suck through the hole In the shuttle, the end of the thread coming from the new bobbin. This process draws directly Into the lungs minute cotton fibres. It has been esti mated that It has to be repeated as often as 800 times In a working day, or 240.000 times In a year. The offsets of such in halations are deleterious. From Its financial benefits, and from a humanitarian standpoint, this ma chine, the Invention' of which In this not the manufacture of machinery and the production of cotton cloth been MAJOR POWELL CLAYTON. CYRUS I.ELAND. UENKY C. rAYNC. maintained for generations In this country, practically Illustrates a fea ture of manufacturing not ordinarily dwelt upon In tariff discussions. The educational Inlluence of manufactures Is of vast Importance to the nation. The workman, technically educated, either in textiles. In machinery, or In the ma nipulation of precious metals, is quite as capable of producing results, to his own honor, for the renown of his coun try, and for the benefit of mankind, as Is the learned professor of any educa tional institution. Of Nicholson, Rhodes, Northrop, Roper, and tho Drapers, may well be Bald as of the successful husbandman, "to make two blades of grass or two ears of corn to grow upon a spot of ground where only one grew before Is to deserve well of mankind, and to be of essential service to the state." FREE SILVER EVILS. Startling Evidences in Colombia of the White .Metal's I'ndesirability. Cost oT Living Doubled--Wnjie In rr nn'tl About Fifty Per Cent., While Provisions Have luerenncd Two Hundred Per Cent. The following letter which eloquently shows the evils of free silver has been received by the World from Luther F. McKlnney, United States minister to liogota: "As the money question Focnis to be the Important question In the present political contest In the Unit ed States, I thought it might be of in terest to know what effect silver legis lation has had upon the people of Co lombia. "Twenty years ago. In 1S76, gold and sliver were coined in the mints of Co lombia, both being a legal tender for all debts, and at that time, owing to the scarcity of the white metal, sliver was at a premium over gold of about 3 per cent. "About 1XS0 gold was at a premium, because the Imports exceeded the ex ports, and as the balance had to be paid in gold. It required n small pre mium to get the gold for the purpose. I'p to 1SS5 the government continued to coin gold and silver, and at that time gold was at a premium over silver of about 20 per cent. "In 1SS5 congress passed a law that made paper money a legal tender for all debts, the paper to be payable In gold or silver at the option of the gov ernment;' this being nnattempt to make silver at a par with gold. GOLD 190 PER CENT. PREMIUM. "This wag an Impossibility, for at once the gold all went out of the coun try and the government was on a silver liasls In spite of its efforts by legisla tion. to keep gold and silver at a parity. From that time to tills there has been no gold In circulation In Colombia. "The effect of this wus to raise the premium on gold from 20 per centt In 1SS5 to 190 per cent. In Pi5. "At tho present time, June 17, ex change on New York Is 110, the price of exchange depending wholly upon the number of drafts upon the market and the demand for them. As tho coffee crop Is being shipped nt this time and the merchants for certain reasons are pot Importing largely, the price of ex change Is low. "In the department of Panama paper money Is not used, rllver being the only medium of circulation, the result being that silver In tho other departments has entirely gone out of circulation, and pa per Is the only money used. "If one goes to market In ISogota and offers silver for his dinner It Is re fused. As exchnnge Is Iqwer In Pan ama than In other parts of the coun try speculators buy nil the sliver they can find at a premium of from C to 20 per cent., and send It to Panama and make a profit. Now, to show the ef fect of this upon the people of Colom bia, I will give certain facts that ar rarell authenticated. ' "In 1835, when gold was at a premium of 20 per cent., wages of worklngmen M'KINLEY'S CAMPAIGN MANAGERS. MATTHEW S. QUAY. MARK on the plains of Bogota were 40 cents a day, nnd In the hot country CO cents a day. At the present time, wages ara 60 and 90 cents respectively, an ad vance of SO per cent. All provisions have Increased in cost about 200 per cent. Meats at that time were selling for from 12 to 15 cents per pound; at the present time they Bell for 40 and 60 cents. "House rents have Increased from 100 to 200 per cent. Small tenements, such as poor people occupy, could be had In 1SS5 for $3 a month; new the snme tenements bring $S. In 1SS4 and 1SS5 the Protestant minister of Pfogota oc cupied a house, for which he paid $0 a month; at the present time the same house brings $200 a month. MEAN QUALITY OF GOODS. "In 1885 table board could be had at the best hotels for $1 a day, now It is $2 a dny, nnd the proprietors all spy there Is much less money In the busi ness than when they received $1. Wear ing apparel has not Increased in price In proportion to provisions, but this is because the people are too poor lo buy the goods they were in the habit of wearing before, nnd the merchnnts have placed upon the market the poor est quality of goods made In Europe, for the market. The reason that tlv merchnnts give for not buying more goods In the United States is that the goods are too good and the people cannot afford to buy them. "It seems to me that If the working men of the United States will study this object lesson they will readily see that what they want is an honest dol lar that will buy as much In the mar kets abroad as the dollar of any other nation. TWO DOLLARS FOR ONE. "If the silver was coined In the United States at the rate of 16 to 1. while the gold In a gold dollar Is worth 100 cents in any country in the world., and the sliver In a silver dollar Is only worth 50 cents. Is It not plain that the experience of Columbia, and In fact all South American countries where It has been tried, will be the experience of the United States?" "The gold will all leave the country, and It will require two dollars of silver to buy one dollars worth of goods In the markets f the world, where gold is the standard. "The next question ls.wlll the wages of labor be Increased In proportion to the Increase of the coot of l'vlng? The price of labor will always be governed by the law of supply and demand, while the cost of living will be governed by the value of the dollar that the laborer re ceives for his toil. FREE SILVER MEANS POVERTY. "Silver legislation in every country where an effort has been made to make a silver dollar equal to a gold dollar has resulted In poverty to the man who labors, and the attenit-t In the United States can but give the same rtsults. "Three years In this country has giv en me some practical knowledge of the effect of a silver and paper currency, and I send you the above fact3, as they are well known to the people here." Mil. BAILEY 8ILEXCED. When In New York recently Ponrrress man Bailey, of Texas, attempted to give street car conductors a lesson In pronun ciation, with a result not calculated to en courage a repetition of tho undertaking. According to the Journal, the congress man went down Broad vay on a cable ear the conductor shouted out "Houston!" with the pronunciation given to that name In tho metropolis. Bailey looked it a lnmp post. V'Vou mean 'Hooslon,' " said Bailey, "ddn't you?" The conductor, without Inking at him, said: "I know my business." "If part of your business is to call out the streets properly," said Hal Icy, quietly, 'then you don't know It. The street we have Just passed Is not called 'Howston.' r.a you gave, but 'Hooston,' for Oenornl Bam Houston, the liberator of Texas. If you ever went to Texas and talked about 6am 'Howston,' you'll fee CHARLES U. DAWES, IIANNA. From the Chicago Times - lucky to escape lynching." "If I went to Texas." said the conductor, who was born on Sixth avenue and who never was farther nway from the city than Coney Island, "I'd deserve anything they gnvo me." Hal ley said nothlmt. for hu did not know the answer to this discourteous sug gestion. WHAT "STASUAHU" MEANS. It Is Simply n Measure of Value, in This Country Gold. From tho Times-Herald. Thero are two meanings for tho word standard. The Hag of a country is a symbolic standard. For a mere piece of bunting men deem it happiness to die, if necessary, not for the texture of the bunting, but because of that which It symbolizes, which It represents or suggests. The flag of the United States symbolizes freedom of conscience, free dom of person, freedom of contract and the right to Individual property honest ly acquired. That is the American poli tical standard. In addition to a symbolic standard there Is an actual or concrete standurd, as In money. Gold is a concrete and ac tual standard, because of the Intrinsic worth of Its metal. A concrete standard Is a measure by which other things have a proportional reUUion to the measure. As a political standard of the United States is the highest known to the history of political (society, so gold is the highest standard known to com mercial society. What the flag of the United States Is to its political citizen ship gold is to its honor in the com mercial world. The jgold standard, the existing monetary standard of tho United States, has been its money standard Bince 134. Other things besides gold pass cur rent with us in exchange for what wo buy. These other things are silver and paper. Uecause gold is the monetary standard of the country our silver and our paper possess their present value. That Is to say, what purports to be a dollar In either silver or paper is a dol lar because we measure it with gold. Hy maintenance of a sufficient! quan tity of jrId In the treasury of the United States government and the sol emn pledge of the country to pay 100 cents of every dollar that wo owe, we keep our silver and our paper at par with gold, that Is to say. equal to gold. We measure a certain amount of sil ver hy the measure of 100 cents In gold. That makes a silver dollar exactly the measure In purchasing rower of the gold dollar. We make a piece of paper expand to the measure of n gold dol lar by our promise to give It 100 cents gold on demand. Thus measured by the gold standard or gold measure the mere piece of paper Is worth 100 cents. Etit suppose we drop the gold meas ure, or the gold standard, for the two words mean exactly the same thing. We must then take the next lower measure or standard. That Is silver. To flmnge the phrase Ellghtly, wo would drop a yard stick thirty-six Inches long and adopt In Its place a stick of half a yard or eighteen Inches long. Instantaneously the equivalent cf thlty-slx Inches kept In the sliver and the paper of our currency by the gold standard or measure would shrink to eighteen Inches, the dimension of the silver measure or standard. Thus we would lose at once one-half the entire volume and worth of our money. The question comes down, therefore, to th!s: Shall we continue to call our standard or measure a yard of gold, or Fhall we deprive ourselves cf one-half of everything we hijK-e and be content hereafter with a half a yard of silver? rl!F.K TRADE IX ENGLAND. That the free trade policy has been a failure In Oreat Britain will be a surprise to most American readers. The Hon. George li. Curtlss, In his re cently published volume, "1'rotectlon and JOSEPH H. MAXLET. W. T. DURUIN. N. B. SCOTT. Herald. By tho conrtesy of B. H. Kohltut Prosperity," says: "The opinion expressed by the Royal Commission In Its report to parliament In 1SSC, that the depression In trade and Industries was due to no exeep. tlonnl or temporary causes has been con firmed by the experience of recent years which have followed. That system of free trade, or free Imports, which In 1885 was sapping the vitals of British Indus tries, was the essential cause of the loss of profits, reduced wages, lack of employ ment and universal stagnation in business, Since 1885 the Increase of Imports of com peting commodities which has taken place has intensified the suffering which to such an extent prevails among the masses of the people. It has prolonged and made more severe that llfe-and-deatn struggle which has been raging in every branch of productive Industry, since the effect of free trade began to be felt." Mr. Curtlss has compiled tables from tho highest British authorities which show a favorable balance of trado for England from 1CH7 down to 18C0, only a slnglo year Intervening when the balance was against her. Again, from 1801, after England's protective tariffs had been fully repealed the balance of trade turned against Eng. land, ranting from three hundred and twelve million 111 1M14 to six hundred and thirty-sevn million In 1M:. Thus England is today buying abroad more than six hundred million dollars worth of goods moro than she sells abroad an amount equal to one-third of the present money volume of the United Slates. There are no other three nations on earth that could Jointly stand such a strain. England's ability to meet this enormous balance Is iue to the Interest and dividends on ner foreign loans and investments and to tho Immense amount she receives as the com mon carrier of tho commercial world. The wealth which England accumulated during three centuries of protection Is toJay invested In the Industries of Amer ica. Africa, Australia and :nlni, wntle English labor Is taking refuge In alms houses. The fact that Great Britain has thirty times as many paupers as the United States In comparison with the ac tual population of the two nations Is a significant testimony against the bene ficent influence of free trade. M'KIXLEY SLOGAN. "Protection and Prosperity" became the battle cry of Governor McKin ley's campaign managers last February. This graceful alliteration did not gain Us hold on the American people through 'ts rhetorical effect alone. It appealed to the rhetorical, the belief and the hope of every Republican voter. When this watch-word was first heralded forth It was caught up and re-echoed across the continent nnd touched a rosponsiive chord In the hearts of a large majority of Republican voters. Since then it has been emhlai oned on banners nnd badges until It has brought to Alajjr McKinley a magnificent victory. It mny be of Interest to our readers to know the origin of this new famous brttls cry. The manuscript and proof of a large qiuirto volume entitled "Protection and Prosperity" was sent to Major McKinley last January for criticism and review. The title appealed to him so forcibly that he gave It to the manager of his campaign. Governor McKinley berame so Interested in this book that he carefully read and re vised Its every page and wrote a nine page introduction, which Is now published In the fore part of the book. In his Intro, duction r Eays: "I recall no work that even attempts to cover the field marked out by Mr. Curtlss. It (Protection anl Prosperity), should be In the hands of ev ery Intelligent voler who is called upon to decide between free trade nnd protection or who desire to base his decision on the balance sheet of nations." "Ho also says: "Under similar condi tions our experience has been precisely the same as the experience of other nations. In some ways It has even been England's own experience. A low tariff or no tariff has always Increased the Importation of foreign goods until our money ran out; produced a balance of trade against tho country: supplanted the domestic pro ducer and manufacturer; Impaired the far mer's home market without Improving his market abroad; undermined domestic prosperity: deoroarod the industries anil Investments; nnd robbed labor of Its Just rewards. The lower the tariff the more widespread and aggravated have been these condltons which paralyze our prog ress and ludustrles." "My Friend from Indiana," a new com edy on the style of "Too Much Johnson," Is one of the new productions promised for cexteason. TEACHES RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY This Is the Purpose of the Military Drl I in the Schools. IT DEVELOPS OBEDIENCE TO LAW Col. Ilenrr H.Adams, of New York, Explains tho System Practiced im the Empire State-Not a Soarco of Danger, lut of Strength to the Rcpablie. In view of the efforts of Exra S. Grif fin Post to secure the Introduction of military tactics Into the public schools of Scranton, the following statement by Colonel Henry H. Adams, of New York, to the Tribune of that city, con cerning the practical effects of such Instruction will possess timely Interest. "I notice," says he, "that there Is some misapprehension In regard to the ap plication of the military drill as con nected with the public schools. In point of fact, there ts no military drill 1n the public Bchools. Indeed, I have never seen any drilling of the school boys lit the school rooms. The system which obtains in the schools of New York provides that assembling In the morn ing the scholars march Into the assem bly room, according to the usual cus tom of nearly all publlo schools. In columns of twos, filling both sides of the auditorium or assembly room, and at a signal the wings 'Inward fare,' after which a color-guard with the United States flag marches down the center aisle and halts, and at a signal the whole school comes to a salute of the flag, after which the school ts seated and the colors are placed on the plat form, when the usual morning exercises take place. "Ten minutes each day Is usually given to physical development, after the 'setting-up form.' This method is re garded by medical men of distinction as the best process of physical devel opment now known outside of the gym nasium, and Is more effective than the old calisthenics which have been par tially Introduced In some of the schools of the country. This and no more Is all that takes place in the schools connect ed with what Is ordinarily termed aa military drill In the public schools. "In connection with this system civ ics, forma of municipal, state and na tional government In all the details con nected there with are thoroughly taught. The scholar Is taught the re sponsibility of citizenship, the neces sity of a pure ballot, from which' Is evolved a government of the people, for the people, by the people. He is also taught reverence for the flag, respect for authority, prompt obedience, and 'to do right, because it is right.' DOES NOT INTERFERE. ' "This system does not in any way In terfere with or take the place of any school work established under the or dinary curriculum which has hitherto been adopted and carried out by the public school system of the Unlte.l States. It does not supplant or take the place of geography, or any other study which Is a part of the establish ed course of study. "Outside of the school proper, It Is op tional with the members of the gradu-' atlng grammar grades and the young men of the High School to organize companies, officered by their own mem. bers, for the purpose of self-development. Improved school discipline, selr restralnt, self-control, respect for au thority, to acquire under skilled train ing a dignified bearing, an erect figure, fine carriage, cleanliness and apprecia tion of wise leadership, esprit de corps, etc. These companies drill once per Week entirely outside of school hours, and In no way connected with the school except under the counsel and advice of the principal, who usually acts a commandant. "The non-commlsstoned and commis sioned officers of the local National Guards volunteer to Instruct the school cadets In the manual of arms and com pany movements, etc., and the use of armories ts usually aocorded to the cadets for drill purposes all of which is In charge of tho Nation Guard of ficers, which complies with the law. The companies are equipped with 'wig wag' flags, dispatch bags, etc., and a well organized system which usually accompanies the Signal Corps service. The uniforms cost $0.50, Including coat, trousers and cap. Two of these uni forms outwear three of the ordinary citizens' suits, and these uniforms are furnished by the cadets themselves. Up to the present time the system does not Involve any expenditure on the part of the public money. FURNISHED WITH ARMS. "The advanced grammar grades and the High Sshool cadets are the only or ganizations that have been furnished arms. These cadet rifles are now loan ed by the state to the several organiza tions requiring the same, a proper guar antee being given to the state for safe keeping. Hundreds of letters are re ceived from the patrons of the New York schools testifying to the good ef fect of the discipline under this system on the IncoiTlgibles. The testimony Is, In effect, that the boys are more readily submissive to home authority, moro considerate of the sisters and the broth ers In the home, and more self-respect and manliness are developed in the pu pil. These communications are a mat ter of record, and on file In general. In point of scholarship the record of the New York schools show that the pu pils connected with the American Guard stand higher In scholarship than those who are not of the organization. "I have given you In brief the promi nent features of the system now In operation In New York and In other parts of the country. When we con sider that we are a cosmopolitan country, nnd dally receiving Into our midst a large population made up of Individuals who are entirely unfamiliar with our system of government, and who are unable In their Ignorance to comprehend the principles which un derlie a government of the people, for the people, and by the people where a government Is evob ed only from a pure ballot; where the power lies In the hands of the peopleIt will at once ap pear that It Is next to Impossible to edu cate the adults who are thus flocking to our shores, and that we must of necessity look to the enlightenment and development of their children. The public schools of the United States are the bulwark of our safety, and through this channel we must build for the fu ture. The census of 1890 shows that out of the 230,000 public schools of the United States only 10,000 teach civics In any way. 'It goes without saying that the An glo-Saxon Is not a military man. He Is averse to lighting; Is peaceful In his disposition, and Is only drawn Into war under compulsion. There Is noth ing In the influences at work In tho United States that la likely, to product a warlike spirit." -