THE SCnAKTOJ THIBtnn3-5;rONDAT ttOJXSnCSG, CCTOSER 1ST, tally ud Weekly. Ne Sunday Edition. Published at Scraatoa. Pa., by Tat Tribal Publishing Company. tw York O01(: Tribune nulldiuj. Fran & uray. Manager. SXTtRID AT THI POSTOFrUIi AT SCRANTOS. PA.. SCRANTON. OCTODEU 19. 189(5. THE REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL. rresl.lent-WILI.IAM" M'KINLET. Vice-Presldent-GARtKT A. HOBART. STATK. Congressmen - a. - I-arue GAL17SHA A. GROW. SAMUEL A. DAVENPORT. roi'NTV. Conirress WlLLTAjTcONNELTj. -Commissioners S. V. ROBERTS. GILE3 ROBERTS. i Audltors-A. E. KIEFEK. FUED L. WARD. legislative. Senate. JIM DIstrletCOL. W. J. SPOTT. Representative. 1st District JOHN K. FA R fi : 2d Dlstrlet-A. T. CONN ELL. Jd District-DR. N. C. MACKBY: th Dlstrlct-JOHN F. REYNOLDS. The Democratic prophets who are predicting Popocratlc success on the strength of liryan's crowds continue to forget the fate of Slngerly. Let Va Have It Settled. In a campaign like this large majori ties are doubly essential. As the Is sues are now drawn there Is no middle ground. One cannot conceive of a tenable compromise ns to whether law In this country shall or shall not be upremu; ns to whether mobs shall or shall not have the right to Interrupt public business, wantonly sacrlllce the public tranquility and hazard the se curity of property; or ns to whether our money shall be honest or dishonest. There may be neutral places In such a conflict, but If there are we have failed tc see them. If there are, those who occupy them must have queer Ideas concerning the duty of citizenship with reference to the ballot. A majority of one would elect Mr. Connell to congress quite as certainly as a majority of four or five thousand. It would determine the matter so fat as he is concerned, maybe not so satis factorily In all respects as a larger one would, but certainly conclusively. If he alone were to be considered a small majority would do all the work of a big one, however less gratifying It might appear as a public compliment. 15ut ns we have previously remarked, the personal significance of the coming rlectinii in (ills congress district is small compared with Its public and Im personal moment. There is an educa tional force In big majorities which Is never lost on Intelligent public men. It carries weight in congress. It influ ences legislation. Although a creation of public opinion It In turn makes pub lic opinion and shapes the whole course of statesmanship. A big majority for I'roti-ctioii and sound money In every Intelligent congressional district in this country, will even more than the elec tion of McKlnloy re-Invite confidence and arrest the downward plunge of business. This free trad, free silver agitation has reached a point where it must be settled one way or another, and settled to stay. If It Is to be settled In the manner that ltryan wants, let us have It settled that way by a majority which will leave no doubt of the peo ple's wishes. The keenest punishment Is lcsa hurtful than long-continued dread. Hut on the other hand if the people are still amenable to their In tellects and their conscience, no occa sion since 1X01 has been more opportune for a decided and emphatic manifes tation of that fact than that which the pulling two weeks from tomorrow will afford. We shall look to that date for a wholesome clearing of the atmos phere. . Kev. Dr. Canflcld. pastor of St. raul's I'nlveiHulist church, of Chicago, is gro ins; to use bulletin boards to advertise church services. He had better take a lesson from the stage and spend his money among the newspaper, A Plot to Rob Labor. No one but Tho Tribune and thos of the must flighty imagination can conceive how free coinage will give tho worklngman Co-cent dollars and at tho some time en rich the silver miner by bringing the com mercial value of the silver In one dollar up to 100 cents. There are less than W cents' worth of silver at the present time In a sliver dollar, jot The Trlbuno is not making much of a kick against taking the W-oent dollar In payment for a sub scription or advertisement. The govern ment, by placing Its stamp, or Hat, upon 3T1U grains of pure sliver, declares that such coin Is 100 cents or one dollar. Scran, ton Times. The present American silver dollar Is worth what Its face says It is worth simply and solely because by resolution of congress and by Instructions from the people issued when they elected Mr. Cleveland president on the Demo cratic national platform of 1892, this government Is pledged to keep every one of its dollars at a parity with every other dollar. You can take ten of our present gllver dollars to any bank, trade them for a $10 treasury note or green back, send that bit of government paper to the United Plates treasury at Wash ington, or to any sub-treasury, and get In return a 110 gold piece. That Is what makes the present silver dollar pass current at Ha face value every where; that Is what makes It buy two Mexican free coinage dollars, each con taining more grains of pure silver than It itself contains. The people four years ago. Including these same men who now shout for free coinage, by their votes Instructed Mr. Cleveland to keep nil our dollars equal; and now that he has done so, ontf wing of his party, which helped to pass these Instruction, censure him for olteylng them. Under free coinage the redemption of silver In gold dollar would cease; no longer backed by the government In any form ave by a dishonest legal tender clause, our silver coinage would Inevitably fall to the level of It commercial value. It buying ' value . would change each day. .. No one engaged In business would or could feel secure. Bo much for tbl point, We propose now to bring out another point la thl currency discussion which will convict the whole free coinage movement of a deliberate Intention to defraud labor. We" are asked. How could the silver mine-owner profit through free coinage Unless silver should rise to tf.L'9 an ounce? We propose to show that the silver mine-owner would make money through free coinage even if silver were to fall to 40 cents an ounce. At the present time the average wage paid to labor in the western silver mines Is $3 a day; With silver worth 60 cents an ounce, this wage Is today equal to 5 ounces of silver bullion a day for each workman In each mine. That Is, In or der to get $3 with which to pay that workingman, the owner of the mine to day has to sell S ounces of the working man's product. Under free coinage, at It' to 1. he could take 2.33 ounces, ship It to Washington, get It coined free Into 3 legal tender dollars and with these dollar he could pay for one day's labor in his mine, saving 2.67 ounces of sliver bullion on the deal. With silver even as low as 40 cents an ounce, free coinage would mean that the mine owner would gouge 2.67 ounces of silver at 40 cents an ounce, or $1.07 per day out of the actual value of his employe's wages, although still paying him the nominal price of $3. In other tards, the cost of the production of silver would be cut In two by free coin age, through the cheapening of the wages paid to labor, and the mine owner could then sell at 40 cents an ounce with a nice margin of profit, where now he finds himself unable at gold standard wages to Bell silver at a profit even at 60 cents. Suppose the owners, of our anthracite coal mines were to ask the government to pass a law by which In an Indirect but .never theless effectual way they could cut In two the labor cost of producing coal. It would be a good thing for them, no doubt; but wouldn't It be mighty rough on their employes? and wouldn't It also be a gross species of govern mental favoritism, beating our present syndicates and trusts all hollow? We repeat that whether Bllver should rise or fall, the silver mine-owner would In either case stand to win under free coinage. If It fell to 40 cents, he would win 2.67 ounces of bul lion or $1.07 on each employe's labor; If It rose to $1.29. he would win 2.67 ounces (i $1.29 an ounce, or $:i.45 on that labor, plus the Increased value of his output In general. He would be able to do as well as now even If silver fell to 30 cents an ounce. No wonder then, that the owners of our big silver mines are sup porting Hryan nnd putting up money to elect a free coinage congress. There Is evidently a good deal of method In their madness. If surface Indications are to be relied upon .McKinley will be our next president, but when conditions are analyzed It Is Im possible to see how Hryan can avoid an election. Detroit Tribune. It depends upon how you analyze them. If you count votes and polls, McKinley has 'em; but If you figure simply on hopes, then there's no use trying to beat Hryan. The Comedy ol Politics. It Is pointed out that on March 16, 1S9'.', Mr. Hryan, while a member of congress, and in fact during the busy period of his work as one of the train ers of the ruinous Wilson bill, In speak ing of tho world-wide fall In prices, said: "You must attribute It to the Inventive genius that has multiplied a thousand times, In many Instances, the strength of a single arm, and en ables us to do today with one man what fifty men could not do fifty years ago. That Is what has brought down prices In this country and everywhere." Then, of course, Mr. Hryan spoke as the economist and not as the office seeker. He did not lay low prices to the door of the gold standard. He did not say they were the fruits of tho demonetization of silver, of the "crime of '73." That sort of talk hadn't then come into vogue to any general ex tent. In those days Mr. Bryan was among the bravest and boldest of the free traders. Cleveland had just been elected by an electoral vote of 277 to 145; the country had twice in succession gone against Protection and Mr. Hry an conceived it to be the proper thing for a young man with political am bitions to awlm conspicuously with the tide. He threw the blame for low prices on Inventions, because otherwise it would have been difficultto account for low wages without at the same time discrediting free trade. Hut look at " Hryan now. What a change has come over the spirit of his dreams! One would never suspect to hear him talk that such a thing a a labor-saving invention had ever been a factor In the industrial situation. The fall of prices is today all the ne farious work of the Iniquitous gold standard, of the conspiring "gold bugs" of Wall street, of the "200-cent gold dollar." Such poor old free silverltes as Senator Teller and 'Dicky Bland, who have been roasting the "money sharks" and damning the yellow dollar all their lives, have been literally thrown into eclipse by the pcrfervid zeal and torrid eloquence of this young ster from Nebraska, who not only rushed past them and captured the free silver nomination, but is so fond of ap plause that he will scarcely permit one of these silver-locked veterans to step upon the same stage with himself. And yet some people think that the comedy of politic is uninteresting. Both the Republican candidates for county auditor are experienced ac countants and shrewd business men. They can be depended upon to give a careful and honest audit to all county bills and accounts. Interdependent. A timely truth la forcefully expressed by the Youth's Companion when It says that capital and labor are not antag onistic, but supplementary. "It Is," say the Companion, "a fact that ought to commend itself at jjnee to the rea son, that together they enjoy the fruits of prosperity, or suffer tho conse quences of commercial disaster when capital is profitably invested, when the employer, that 1 to say, Is pros perous, the condition of the employed Is benefited thereby. When, on the other hand, the employer Is embarrassed by financial misfortune or business re verses, the labor to which he give oc cupation I of necessity a sufferer with him. "Thl simple end common-sccac view of the relation between capital and la bor li capable of mathematical a well as logical demonstration; for the tables compiled by the I'nlteM States Bureau of Statistics, to show the annual con sumption of the necessaries of life, bear directly upon this question. The fluctuations In the amount of bread stuffs, coffee, sugar and clothing used by the people are caused principally by differences in the condition of the workingmen of the country. It Is they who are obliged to economise In the use of such article whn times are hard, and the greater part of their Income, even In times of prosperity, must be spent for the purchase of these house hold necessaries. "The figures given below show the annual average consumption, by each person in the United States, of wheat und corn (expressed in bushels), and of coffee, sugar, raw cotton and raw wool (expressed In pounds), for the four years, 1874. 1880, 1892 and 1894. The first and last years were, a we all know, those which followed great commercial panics, when capital returned little if any interest, and employers found it difficult to conduct their business ex cept at a steady loss. The other years, one following the successful resump tion of specie payments, and the other marking the highest pitch of com mercial prosperity reached since the war, were years of confidence and ac tivity In business circles. 1S74. 1K80. 1892. 1894. Wheat 4.4'i o.S.'i 5.SI 3 It Corn 20.93 2S.8S 30.33 22.7H Coffee 6.f9 8.78 9.'i3 8.01 Susnr 41.5 42.S R3.5 GS.4 Cotton 13.t 18.94 24.03 13.91 Wool 4.81 ti.U 6.72 5.08 The consumption of sugar In 1894 was apparently Increased by the fall In price following the free Introduction of Cuba and South American sugars. In 1S95, under the Influence of prolonged business depression, It fell to 62.5 pounds by each person. "Do these figures not show how closely allied are the Interests of employer and employed? Do they not prove that to the worklngman business activity and stability mean Increased comforts and a large share of the necessaries of life? Do they not, finally, demonstrate that it both suffer the grevious results of a commercial panic, both also benefit by the prosperity which marks those years when 'business Is good?'" The application of these just observa tions to the present campaign is self evident. Are there really any attempts on the pnrt of employers to Intimidate or coerce Ameilcan workingmen Into voting for Mc Kinley? Chicago Record. Probably not, outside of Mr. Bryan's Imagination and the Popocratlc cam paign organs. We have not heard of any. No Lack of Money. One common accusation of thl cam paign Is that there Isn't money enough. In a personal sense this may be true. In national sense, it la not true, and If It were, free coinage would not help matters but would make them worse. Do our free silver friends who de clare there Is no money In the country forget about that last bond Issue, when Instead of dealing with a syndicate in private, President Cleveland and Secre tary Carlisle offered the bonds to popu lar subscription, and within a fortnight over $600,000,000 In gold had been sub scribed directly by the American peo ple? The bonds were 4 per cents, and the people bid so lively for them that they hud to pay more than 110 on the average, thus bringing the interst down almost to 3 per cent. In other words, the government, by offering good se curity, got the offer of the loan of six times as much money as it needed, at the low interest rate of about 3 per cent., and that offer came mainly from its own citizens. This does not indicate a scarcity of money where there is plenty of confi dence. The only time money is scarce is when confidence is scarce. And the free silver agitation tends to make con fidence scarce, for the reason that it threatens business with a sharp con traction in the volume of the currency, holds out the prospect of a violent oscillation In values, and by wanting to repay obligations In half-value dol lars prejudices the American people in the eyes of the civilized world. It is time to put a quietus on such hurtful trifling with the fundamentals of our proseprlty. It is refreshing To note that at the last annual meeting of the National prison congress there was general dis sent to ex-President White's proposi tion that crime In this country is rapid ly on the increase. The sense of the congress, as brought out in a very in teresting discussion of this point, was that the recent Increase In arrests, as compared with the penological statis tic of former years, argues really sharper work on tho part of the officials in enforcing tho law rather than a real growth of the criminal impulse. It seems to us that this is a rational conclusion. An order for 900 sets of axles was re ceived last week by the Scranton Axle Worksfrom a prominent carriage build er In Detroit, coupled with the condi tion that If McKinley Is elected, the order Is to be duplicated six time with in a period of three months beginning Dec. 1. But If Bryan is elected only the one consignment is to be sent. If any body doubts this statement the man agement of the Axle works will gladly produce the order, While there Is not In the First and Third legislative districts the same ap parent necessity fur Republican nativ ity that exists In the Second and Fourth districts. It is clearly advisable for Re publicans In the former districts to ne glect no opportunities. This Is a cam paign In which every vote counts, and the more votes wisely cast, the merri er. Fortunately, Messrs. Farr ' and Mackry are candidates In whose behalf no Republican needs to be lukewarm. What earthly reason has any sane man to believe that the state of Ohio, which has never given a Democratic majority In a presidential election since the days of Abraham Lincoln, will this year waver In Its loyalty to one of its most popular sons? W'ns there ever a more nbrurd bit of false assumption than thnt Ohio Is doubtful? Every sign seems favorable to the capture by Republicans of the Eighth congress district and the demolition of tho malodorous Mutchler Oynazty. This' is clearly Judge Klrkpatflck's year i Object Lesson in SoUnd Finance $000,100,000 Gold Money In United States. $625,GOO,000 Silver Money (Depreciated value tiuder free coinage, $3i2,Soo.ooo). Paper Money (Depreciated value under free coinage, $191,650,000.) Present value, $383,300,000. The above diagram represents a pocket argument which Is being used very effect ively by speakers In explanation of the financial Issues of the cumpalgn. The up per section, It will bs observed, repre sents the gold money of tho country JOW. 10O.0U0. The second seutlon represents the silver money of the country, whose pres ent value Is )(jJ5,(iOO,000, but which, should it become depreciated by the withdrawal of the government's support under free coinage, would shrink to one-half of Its present value thus amounting to 1312.800, UOU. The third section represents the "un covered" paper money. Its present value Is Ki83,300,OU0, but as It would naturally share the depreciation which would come to the country through free coinage. Its value would be cut down to tW.liOO.IKlO. If the country should adopte the free coin age of Bllver the entire Bold money would disappear, as It has done In other coun. tries having free coinage of silver and as It always has done when an attempt has been made to maintain the free colnge of two metals at other than the commercial ratio. The object lesson which this card pre sents Is to show at a glance what would happen to the present currency of the country should free coinage be adopted. This Is accomplished as fololws: First, fold backward out of sight the section containing the gold money, which would disappear under free coinage. Second, fold backward at the dotted lines the up per half of tho section representing the Bll ver money, since It Is apparent that free coinage would reduce the sliver money to the commercial value of the metal, which Is practically one-half the value at which the government now maintains it. Third, fold backward the lower half of the sec tion representing paper money, which would be also deprvlated In an equal pro portion, since the metallic currency of the country would be only silver coins pass ing at the commercial value of the metal In them. By this process you are ablo to show the enormous reduction In the value of the money of the country which would follow the free coinage of silver, since the government would not, of course, attempt to mulntain the dollars which it would coin for individuals at any more than the commercial value of the sliver put Into It. Hy this simple explanation it becomes apparent at a glanco that the money of the country, now amounting to fl.tiUB.OOO, 000, would shrink to .10M50,000 In value, or less than one. third the present amount. This Illustration is being used by many speakers In the campaign, who have pro vided themselves with strips of cardboard hinged together at the lines which sepa rate the sliver, gold and paper, and also in the middle of the strips representing the silver and paper. These strips of card board are usually covered with paper of an appropriate color yellow for gold, white for the silver, and green for the pa per money. The above diagram, however, answers the purpose equally as well, and those who desire to make use of the Il lustration In personal conversation or ar gument can do so by using the printed slip, or, what would be better, by pasting It upon strips of cardboard or heavy paper cut to the proper length and hinged to gether with strips of cloth, which will make It durable and convention! for pock et use. Member nml Other Predictions for the Coining Week. Tuesday, Oct. 20. Venus an evening star. Weather mild. A child born on this day will bo lazy and untruthful, unless carefully trained In early life. A female will get a high-minded man for a husband, but will not live happily with him. An unlucky day, Wednesday. Oct. 21. Bun turn to Mars. Weather mild. A child born on this day will be free, generous, hut rather unfor tunate; If a female will marry an austere man. Avoid superiors, but deal with oth ers. Thursday, Oct. 21 Jupiter a morning star. Weather fair. A child born on this day will ho generally fortunate In all un dertakings. Unfavorable for business. Friday. Oct. 23. Venus 1GA degrees from Mars. Weather fair. child born on this day will be careless and unlucky and gen erally In trouble of some nature. Bell; evil for all else. . Saturday, Oct. 24. Mercury 36 degrees from Saturn. WeBther showery. A child born on this day will be Improvident and generally poor; a female will be rather fortunate In marriage. Sell before Ian,: avoid woman and keep very quiet. GOLDSMITH'S HI News In We have set the pace to sell more Carpets during the next four weeks than ever before. We must do this in order to make room for Holiday Goods, which are displayed in our Car pet Room from about Nov. 25th. Everything now in the buyerVfavor. Note the fabulously low prices. At 59 cents 25 rolls Tapestry Brussels Carpets, made, laid and lined. At 69 cents 40 rolls of 9 wire Tapestry Carpets, with Body Brussels back, made, laid and lined. At 75 cents 30 rolls of Body Brussels Carpets, made, laid and lined. At 98 cents 27 rolls of the best Five Frame Body Brus sels; also Wilton Velvets, made, laid and lined. The figures are from 25 to 33 1-3 per cent, under actual value. Take advantage of it while you can. Terms strictly spot cash. POINTS n..- p f . b now In demand, tSlLie UelT nd it should be, for lat d.greo. Waare supplying thladamaad along with every other lu our fine. Sea (foods In Show Window. The demons, Ferber, 0'malley Co., , C7 UCKAWANNA AVE. SO TOU WOULD SEE IT. Pants to measure, $3.00 And Up. Suits and Over- (f coats to order, V 1 vv First firm in the city to make clothes to order at popular prices. Over two yours of success prove we are the best. GREAT ATLANTIC PANTS CO., 3I9 Lackawanna Ave. POULTRY--. Turkeys, Docks, Chickens, Fresh Every Dy. ALSO Pheasants, Quail, Prairie Chickens, Wild Ducks. W. D. FEB, PI MIL ill CAPT. CIIAS. 1(7 At Just laaud. I. THE Iprac It., Opp.Tbe Casaaaouwaalth. 1 I fill Immense Variety, Latest Novelties, Perfect Fitting, Excellent Workmanship, Rock-Bottom Prices. GREAT EASTERN SUIT AND PANTS COHY Branch 14. 427 Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton. Branch 14. FINE TAILORING WITHIN REACH OF ALL. High Grade Shaw, Emerson, Malcolm Lots. Clongti A Warren, Carpenter, Waterloi And Lower Grades a) Very Low Pricai J. LAWRENCE STELLE, 103 SPRUCE STREET. WOLF & HENZEL, 531 Linden., Opp. Court Hous:. PRACTICAL TINNERS and PLUMS Sole Agent, for Richardson Boynton's Furnaces and Kanves. PHILADELPHIA MANUFACTURERS OF CLOAKS AND SUITS SPECIAL SALE FOR THE COMING WEEK : Small lots of the highest grade Cloaks and Capes to be marked down to prices never betore seen in the city. Seal Plush Capes Full sweep, silk lined, beautifully braided and trimmed with fine Thibet fur; good value &A QO at $S.a0. Our price 4 "30 Dressy Coats Fine wool Beaver, blue and black, silk lined, shield fronts, with handsome buttons; well worth WO Cfi $7.50. Our price 9div0 Fine Tallor-mnde Coats. In all-wool bou cle ami astrachon cloth, lined through out with rhii'lame silk; ac- t Q8 tual value price JIZ.OO $0.00 Tan Brown and Oreen Kersey Coats Striped seams, silk lined, box fronts: Kood value at 116.14. Our 0 QO price $OiSO For the comlnff week we offer a most ex quisite line of Handsome Suits at $7.98, $M)S, $9.98. Otir Suits of Chameleon cloth are Bilk lined, 7-eored eklrts, full sweep; any one can see 01 a si.uice iiihi me are cheap at VM.W vurrin prk'e d) I J. Elegant Pllk Waists, In silver array, pan sv, Ksrnet and arecn. two-tone effects: the like never seen in this purt of the country before. Your choice z, II 421 LACKAWANNA AVE PROP NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS. BAZAAR. Belli An Inspiration la almoitt lost when your pen catches and your Ink spreads on your paper. GOOD STATIONERY Is one of the necessaries of civilization that In Indispensable. A favorite locu tion for all classes Is that of RKV NOLDS BROTHEK9, where a fine fls vortment of everything In first-class Stationery and OtHe Supplies can ba purchased. Students, lawyers, com mercial men anil society In general Ket their supplies here, as everyone can ba suited, both In price and quality. Reynolds Bros., n.ii i r.. . ciauunws ana cngravsrs, HOTEL JERMYN BUILDINO. t ' . , a