THE SCR ANTON TRTBUNE-WEDNESDAY 3IORNINO, NOVEMBER 4. 1896. t it cranfon $ritum Mil ud Weekly. No 3un1y BllUaa. Published at Scrantaa. Pa., by Th Trlbuae Publishing Company. l'w York OIBck Tribune Building. Ftmnk 8. iry, Miutftf. IKTIBID AT THK POSTOmrH AT STBASTOH. .. AS SICCND-CWRS MAIL MATT KM- SCRANTOX, NOVEMBER 4. !!. Our victory means restored confidence ind good times. Letter from William Canned. Editor of The Tribune: Sir: I wish to tnke this parly occa sion of returning my Bincerest thanks to the citizens of I.nckawunna county for the splendid majority which they have given me ns their choice for representa tive in congress. It exceeds my expec tations as much as I fear It goes beyond my deserving. I do not Interpret this vote ns expression: merely n personal compliment, for the occasion was one where principle clearly rose paramount to personality. And yet 1 should gain little satisfaction from this election and go to my new work at Washington with umall relish did I not foel that In some measure at least the majority east yes terday was a vote of confidence in the candidate no less than a vote of in dorsement for the principles of which he stood as the temporary representa tive. Very truly, William Connell. The original silver man of Lacka wanna will now hibernate. The Local Result. The tirlnclpal lesson of the local re turns Is that personal abuse and dema gogical howls against Industry and suc cess have had their day ns cumpalgn weapons and nre now about played out. There wns very little reason from the first to fear that this staunch indus trial district would falter in Its alleg iance to Protection. There was not much grenter reason to apprehend that It would exhibit favor for the half value dollar. The only point for ap prehension was ns to the effectiveness of the class cry in the opposition's un blushing play to social discontent; and the returns show that) even this appre hension can now be set at rest. The election to congress of William Ponnell Is n ealn to the district rather than to him. Its main significance, apart from Its Identification with na tional Issues, is thut there Is still re spect and confidence among the mass es of the people for a stewardship of lionestly-ucquired wealth which has been ndniinisterod with Just concep tions of Its obligations to the commun ity; that there Is continued esteem for upright character despite the detrac tion of the envious, the malicious and the ungrateful; that. In short, the fair ness of the people Is to be relied upon to render in due time Just verdicts no matter how systematic or unscrupulous Is the effort at times to poison their Judgment. Coupled with all this Is a handsome compliment to the present board of commissioners, whose re-election was nothing less than justice; and a vivid demonstration thnt Lackawanna coun ty has passed permanently Into the Republican column. It Is upon the whole not more than we expected; but It Is still a result which Justifies pro found thnnkfulness to the various fac tors which Contributed to tt. The original McKlnlev man will now please forward his address. Now for flood Times. There Is a lesson In connection with this happy result which may be taken home to each Individual citizen, and it is the need of a prompt and vigorous putting forth of iersonal energy for the early Improvement of husinesss. The atmosphere is now cleared, and effec tually cleared for the future; commer cial activities, long dormant, will henceforth see hope and assurance In front of them, and it will be the peo ple's own fault If they do not speedily And themselves on a fair road to pros perity. For years this financial question has acted as a clog to needed work In con gress. For months It has put a damper on every form and phase of business enterprise In the whole country, and has weighted down all honest industry with its load of apprehension and dread. Now the danger is lifted; the obstacle has been removed; doubt can end, and Its dissipation ought to pro duce In all quarters beneficial results. Let the howlers cease their turmoil; let the recuperative forces of society have room and chance for full play in the work of rebuilding. It may be a slow process. One can get sick a great deal faster than he can get well. But It will be a sure one If good citizens every where will help It along. Mr. Boland's "glad hand," we fear, will never smile again. The Downfall of Altgeld. Next to the election of McKlnley and Connelt, the most gratifying feature of yesterday's overwhelming result was the defeat of John P. Altgeld for the governorship of Illinois, the loss to the Democrats of the Illinois legislature, thus shutting off the possibility of his . election to the United States Senate, . and consequently his enforced retire ment to private life. Altgeld has been the brains of this Whole Bryan movement. It was he who engineered the nomination of the young Nebraskan at Chicago. It was hi who laid the lines on which this audacious battle was fought. If by any mishap on the part of. the American people Bryan had beejt elected, tt would have been the sinister hand of the Illinois apologist for lawlessness who would have shaped Bryan's course and been the real intellectual power be hind the throne. There can be no reasonable uncertainty on this point. Ills has been the mind behind every important move lit the recent Demo cratic campaign, and his one purpose has been Altgeld's vindication. He has played with that solely In view. To him silver or gold was nothing but pawns in a game, for further personal power, if that could be secured, but at any event for a vindication, and he has not got one. The man who votes In Ignorance for vicious doctrines, and who is deceived by false appeals to his misplaced senti ment and sympathy can be forgiven; but In a government founded on popu lar suffrage there can be no tolerance for deliberate and wilful demogogism. and this is what Altgeld stands for. His exit from the stage of public promin ence and official responsibility will be enthusiastically welcomed by every law-abiding and discriminating citizen. ret haps you will notice that behind the returns lurks the merry vlsase of "that same old coon." The Result Nationally. The overwhelming victory of William McKlnley was a logical deduction from the celebrated premise of his great predecessor: "You cannot fool all of the people all the time." The people were fooled In 1890 by the cry of "wipe out the surplus:" They were fooled In 1S92 by the cry of "cheaper duties and cheaper clothes!" But in 1SH6, after six years of intimate experience with the menace and the fulfilment of Demo cratic supremacy, ufter six Instructive years of deception, penitence and ex piation they have made reply to the latest false cry for a cheaper dollar In the election by unexampled majorities of a president, vice-president and con gress pledged to the hialntenonce of sound money and committed to tha, earliest possible restoration of Protec tion to American Industries. Now that the tension of natural anx iety has been relieved by the more than generous fulfilment of expecta tion, It Is possible to speak with some candor of certain features of this can vass which had In them many ele ments of quiet humor. Not the least of these has been the glim necessity which constrained so many of the bitterest antagonists of McKlnley and "Me Kinleylsm" In former years to lay aside in this canvass their Inveterate hostility to Protection and to rally to the support of the man whom they had only a few weeks previously been deriding as a "turncoat" and a "strad dler." 1'nable to find enough of their own class of economic extremists to form an effective separate fighting force, they saw before them the choice either of being ground under the Jug gernaut of the very Popullstlc proi a ganda which they had so sedulously cultivated four years ago, or else of having to sacrifice traditional prejuJI.e on the pltnr of self-lnterst. They chose the latter. They performed the sacri fice. They swallowed for a stuo.i their pet theories on free trade and declared for the Ohio Protectionist. They announced that thev did this out of patriotism. We do not doubt that many sound money Democrats were in this course high-minded and sincere; In fact, the country owes to them a debt of gratitude for their patriotic subordination of partisanlsm to public duty which It will not soon forget; but we nevertheless find not a little amusement In the recent plight of their less scrupulous free trade lead ers, who after the desperate politics of a few years ago, were burned Into line by the very fire which they then so merrily enkindled. While we honor the great rank und file of the sound money Democracy because we bcllcvo thnt It was sincere, we cannot say so much for the Whitneys, the Clevclands, and the Oodkins, who took up with McKlnley rather from necessity than from mnnly choice. The victory of yesterday was at its root a victory for Protection. The money senre was only derivative. Had Protection not been assailed In 1892 the question of free coinage would not have taken on serious proportions In 1896. It was only a surface symptom ground ed In a diseased Internal condition of the public revenues. Good people mis took the symptom for the disease and during the past few months have been enjoying a pretty series of shivers; but back of It, below it, fundamental to It all was the question of Protection or no Protection to American Indus tries, and on this broad Issue William McKlnley, a liberal financier, a friend of silver, a bimetalllst to the core, has been 'elected president by a majority unequalled since the second campaign of General Grant. When our free trade friends of the ultra "gold bug" persua sion come to consider this whole mat ter In calmness, they will search In vain for the big quantity of gratifica tion which they seem to have Im agined would be their's to command in the event of Bryan's defeat. One can understand now why Quay went South. Among the Fallen. Now that the battle is over, a word or two about the losers will not be out of order. It Is, we think, not putting it too strongly to say that the most remarkably personality developed by this most remarkable of campaigns was the young leader of the vanquished, William Jennings Bryan. We ask our readers to think of him, for a moment, not as tho representative of vicious or fallacious doctrines, but simply as a human being called practically without notice or preparation to the leadership of a great host of voters, and then soon left by the old hands In the Democratic campaign business to fight his own bat tle, without money, without assist ant speakers of any consequence, and without the support of more than a very small fraction of the influential newspapers of the country. It has been said that Bryan should have kept still. That Is a matter of opinion; but had he done so it would have been equivalent to giving ud the fight. He had no resource save his voice and his personal presence before the people. That subtracted from his campaign, there would not have been a considerable factor left to his ao- count; the election would have been so one-sided as to have been devoid of interest. As it was, he hurled himself into the front of the battle lines with a courage and with a fine scorn of the consequences which, to our mind, look ing at it purely as a political spectacle, .has not lieen surpassed In the history of this or any other country. He not only broke all records in the way of physical endurance, continued travel and the numtxr of persons addressed, but he delivered speeches which, even in the abbreviated and Inadequate form In which they were reported by the press associations, were models of tact, free from coarseness or personal! ties, and strongly surcharged with the peculiar force than which, by the bye, there is no mishtler called personal magnetism. The lay reader has prub ably seen only disjointed portions of Bryan's speeches. We, on the contrary have read many of them In full and through our exchanges, have noted their effect upon the various communi ties visited. That effect was nothing less than wonderful. He gave the conservative business element of this country, the men who seldom bother with politics. who usually regard things of that sort as mere tomfoolery, a scare the like of which has not been duplicated In modern history. It was not his argu ments that did this. They were shal low. It was not his logic. It w notoriously faulty. It was not what he said; It was the personality back of that; the human factor, the man. We consider this wonderful. In some re spects It excites our highest admiration All the time thnt we have been con demning, and Justly condemning, Its purpose we have been conscious of u sneaking curiosity to know how differ ent would have been Mr. Bryan's recep tion had he only fought in that mas terful way on our side. The American people are not un friendly to silver. They want to use It liberally in their currency. But they don't want to coin It Into a dollar which will not everywhere circulate at 100 cents. "Buch" Hcnrlchsen, the Popocratlc chairman of Illinois, claimed that State at 7 o'clock by "0,000 for Bryan. This teaches the futility of premature pre dictions. The best plan for sincere Bound money Democrats to follow Is to be come Republicans for good, and thus make sure of satisfactory company What settled this election was the people's sober second thought. That Is generally fatal to Democratic pros peets. The question which now agitates the public Is whether or no the result will cork up the Times "Forum of the Peo pie." The man who sent In returns yester day before the polls closed In many In stances lost his reputation as a guesser, Illinois after all didn't prove to be the pivotal state; but she acted Just asHf she thought she were. The few fellows who "knifed" the ticket yesterday feel "cut up" today themselves. After all, Bryan got what he worked for a reputation. He Is young and can wait. The American people, In other words are fundamentally and eternally hon est. The "enemy's country',' doesn't op pear to hanker after a change In faith Brother Boland can now locate his free silver rainbow four years forward. STORIES OF THE HOUR. The question, "How would Colonel Mor rison run on a free silver ticket V" elicited from a prominent lemoerat, the other day, the following story, according Id the Washington Post; "In the early racing days there lived In the Mile Grass regions a farmer named Pnt Kelley, who owned a race horse which he called St. Patrick. Kelley hail heard a good deal about Lex ington and the rest, but he had a notion thut St. Patrick was the horse that could beat the field. He concluded to go to Lexington when the big horses were ad vertised there, and St. Patrick came with him. "Pat made an effort to enter his horse in one of the big races, and as he was ready to back his animal handsomely, they allowed him to come in. Well, su.;h a race you never saw. St. Patrick wus the first to leave the wire, and he led the procession to the llrst pole a couple of yards. Then there was a stringing out of the field, and a few of the leaders began to press St. Patrick rather close for com fort. By and by they dropped him, and when they reached the half-mile post St, Patrick was ambling along by himself :n the rear, trying to keep from being dis tanced. "Kelley's big talk on the track before the race had attracted a good deal of at tention to him, and the crowd began to guy him unmercifully as St, Patrick was coming along In lonesome order at the tail of the procession. But Put never lost his wit. Turning to some of the men who were making fun of him, he exclaimed, loud enough to be heard all over the track: " "Oh, begorra, he's all right; Just watch him drlvln" the others.' "I fancy Morrison would be somewhat In the same fix." li ' !! A surgeon, who has gained more than a local reputation, was recently called upon to perform an operation which was attended with more or less dunger, says the Chicago Record. He went to the house where the opera, tion was to he performed, taking with him an elaborate supply of Instruments. He and the two assistants succeeded be yond their expectations. The operation was completed without any accident, ind the patient, a man whom the surgeon had known for several years, seemed en tirely out of danger. Shortly after tho surgeon had departed the wife of the patient found what she supposed to be one of the surgical instru ments lying on the sofa in the room where the men had made ready for the opera tion. "Why, how careless of the doctor," said she. She cleaned the instrument very care fully, rinsing it first In a solution of car bolic acid and water, nnd then rubbing It dry with a flannel. After that she care fully wrapped It up and sent It to the surgeon with the following note: "Dear Doctor When you were at the house yesterday you mislaid one of your Instruments. I found it and I return It to you by this messenger. I am very truly," etc. The messenger came back with tha instrument and the following noto from the doctor: "My Dear Madam 1 wish to thank you for your thoughtfulness, but there is evi dently a mistake somewhere. The in strument' does not belong to me. I think you had better ask you son about it. Very truly," etc. She carried the Instrument to her 11-year-old son. "Do you know what this Is? she asked. "Why, yes." 'Whose la itr "Mine." "Well, what Is It?" "Why, that's the pump for filling my pneumatic tires." Then she threw the nickel-plated thing at him and went away thoroughly mad. A gentleman of this city, says the Lynchburg News, while on his way to his office the other morning, overheard the following conversation between two col ored boys, who were oderlng the News for sale to a passerby: "Here de News! Here de News!" said Darkey No. 1: "Wld all about Gen'l Lee goin' ter fight in Cuba." "You better stop hollerln' dat," said Darkey No. 2. "Folks ain't gwlne ter ouy de papers- wld all about tightln' In den. sides, Gen'l Lee ain't gwlne ter fight thar." "He boun' ter fight," said the first s:eaker, "fer de war's goin' on, an' he too fat ter run, an' he gutter tight." The other day, relates the Washington Post, Congressman Stone, of Pennsyl vania, who Is one of the practical Jok-rs of the house, upproached Mr. Mahany, of New York, who is an authority on Celtic orthography and orthoepy. ".Mahany," said Stone, "how would you pronounce this word," and he spelled It out very can fully "M-a-c-H-l-n-e-r-y ?" "That's easy," said Mahany: "that's the name of an old Irish dock MacHln ery, a bit of Danish mixed with Mile, slan." "You're mistaken." said Stone, "that's pure Knglish machinery." Mahany collapsed. "Don't tell any. body," he implored. "If that got out among the Irish of my district it would lulu me." A pretty southern girl,' who Is attending a fashionable school in the city has l-en entertaining en older sister for a week or two, says the New York Sun. "How long will your sister remain?'' asked a friend the other day. "Well, Mirs , 1 really don't know." "Hasn't she decided yet?" "No o! she husn't made up her mill whether to stay two weeks longer with me or buy a hat!" A few days after this conversation the friend met the southern girl again. "Is your sister still here?" she asked. "No; the bought the hut!" H II I' "Phwat Ol want," said the new police, man of Washington, "Is instructions." "On what point?" Inquired his superior officer. "If Ol foend er mon that worrucks In the Capitol buyln" a new inkstand an' puttln' av it in 'Is pocket, is It concealed wlppinh, or phwat is it?" "It Is insanity," replied the higher of ficer. "No man about the Capitol, tit possession of his senses, ever buys Ink stands, or anything else that the govern ment can be made to pay for." .. 'I li H "Yes, said the principal of the young ladles' seminary to the proud parent, "you ought to be very happy, my dear sir, to he the father or so large a family, all the members of which seem to be so de voted to one another." "Large family! Devoted! What on earth do you mean, ma'am?" "Why, yes, indeed," said th principal, beaming through her glasses. "No less thun leven of Otissle's brothers have been here this winter to take her out sleighrldlng nnd she tells me she expects the tall one with blue eyes again tomor row." II II II Coach (to college athlete) Your muscles seem to be flabby, and your whole sys tem needs toning up. Are you drinking anything?" Athlete Not a drop. Conch Then you must bo smoking too much. Athlete No; don't smoke at all. Coach Studying? Athlete er yes a little. Coach .(Indignantly) You've go to slop that. Do you want to lose the game? IX II Kit OWN COIN. From the Times-Herald. Tho last time the Kendals were here the Sunday editor of a morning paper sent a reporter to interview .Mrs. Kendal. He was received with great cordiality. The actres chatted about "dear Lunnuu" so freely that the newspaper man finally was emboldend nnugh to Inqnlr whether she ever heard of Peter Blank, mention ing the name of the proprietor of the largest general store in the Kngltsh met ropolis. The reporter Is a nephew of the KiigUshman about whom he made the In quiry. .Mrs. Kendal admitted that she had heard the name before, and. added with an expressive shrug: "Hut of course we don't know his people, you know mercy, no! They nre in trade, I believe." She was kind enough, however, to say that she fairly doted on Chicago. She had been so kindly received here, and the people whom she hnd met were so charm ing. She would always remember Mrs. Lake Shore as the most delightful wo man she had ever known. And Mr. nnd Mrs. Prairie Avenue! and Mrs. Calumet! And General and Mrs. Gran Boulevard delightful people, all of them. Did the re. porter know them? "Well," he said, slowly, "I've heard their names before, I think; but of course, you know, I have never met them mercy, no! They are all In trade I believe." HIGH PJIAISK mTlLUESTOWED From the Fourth Kstate. The Chicago Times-Herald has the grat ification of knowing that independence pays. Fred A. McKenzle, the well known English editorial writer, hus written a letter to the Times-Herald which ought to make H. H. Kohlsaat glad at heart. In this letter he says that he has been procuring copies of the Times-Herald In London. He says, further, that the paper has come to him as a revelation of Amer ican Journalism, nnd pays the following unusually high compliment to the Times Herald: "Its sobriety, moderation and fairness to opponents stand out in strong relief against the style of many of its contemporaries; Its fullness of news and verbatim reports of great speeches ara invaluable to those of us in England who wish to understand your politics, nnJ, unlike many of the chief eastern dailies, it has a sense of proportion and does not allow minor local issues to occupy all its space to the exclusion of great national doings." F.DISO.VS PRESENT TASK. From the Times-Herald. Edison has accomplished so much In the line of revolution that It Is popularly believed he has made no failures in that direction; but the truth Is that he has Been at work ror years upon several hard problems which seem to be no nearer a solution today thnn they were when he began. For the last seven years he has been trying to derive electricity directly from coal without going through the usual process of heat, steam power and dynamo. "There's enough latent elec trical energy In a pound of conl to carry It across the Atlantic," he said the oth ;r day. "yet we have never been able to utilize more than a very small fraction of It. I know how to get electricity from coal direct, but 1 don't know yet how to get enough of it." TOLD BY THE STARS. Daily Horoscope Drawn by Ajncclius I he Tribune Astrologer, Astrolabe cast: 1h. 3m. before, for Wed. nesday, November 4, 1S9G. A child born on this day will observe that Th "silvery" moon, fair queen of night. Behind the hills has gone to rest. And left the world to "golden" light Most prosperous anil best. There Is a frog In the throat of the calamity howler today. Even the fellows who voted tho other way must rejoice at the results. Twas a cold day for th "sp. frumentl" ward worker of ilucnce. Editor Lynett'i campaign rooster has the "pip." Ajncclius' Advice. Pay your election bets and look pleas. ant. Be charitable In the hour of victory. Prepare for batter times. GOLDSMITH'S New Trade Winners in Our Dress Goods Department L-Ot I--50 pieces of 32-inch Rob Roy Plaids, At 10 cents Lot 219 pieces 38-inch, all wool French Serges, in all shades, 22 cents Lot 3-24 pieces 50-inch all wool Broadcloths, in all seasonable shades, including black. 35 cents Lot A 75 styles of the prettiest two and three toned novelties shown this season at 39 cents Lot 5 A choice selection of 40 and 45-inch Fancy Tailor-made Suiting at 50 cents Lot io pieces of Genuine Scotch Frieze Suitings, 50 inches wide, the latest for genteel tailor made suits, 75 cents Special attention is called to cur Dress and Fur Trimmings. DON'T BAKE A MISTAKE Aud buy your garments elsewhere. Come to our mammoth tailoring es tablishment, see the very latest in Suitings, Overcoatings and Trouserings. Get them made to your order, at ready-made prices. All garments are made on our premises, under our own supervision. We guarantee our work and fit and don't allow a garment to leave our store except it is perfectly satisfactory to you and ourselves it is our greatest aim to please our customers. All garments made by us are kept in repair free of charge. PDCflT CnCTCDU CHIT Mil. DflUTC MnDHUV D. lowenstein UIlbHI LHulLnn OUll MU IHHIO I U III f Hill, Proprietor. Branch 11. r !. b now In demand. Lie UelT andltshmild be, for Inst degree. Wearo supplying this demand along with every other in our line. Set (loads In Show Window. The demons, Ferber, O'malley Co., l'A UCKAWANM AVE. Our Specialty For This Month, Overcoats oS SI 3 Blue, Black, Brown, or Oxford Beavers, Kerseys or Meltons, Also your choice of Covert Cloths and the rougher goods any kind of lining silk, serge or woolen. Made in our own tailor shops und tit perfect. Competitive times in crease our business. 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