J5 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE- FRIDAY, JULY 21', 1809. Published Daily, i:pl Sunday, by The Trlbuno I'ubllslilns Company, at Fifty Cents a Month. zsttrr New Yorlt Ofllce: 150 Nninau St.. B. 8 Vltr.ntiAND. Solo Accnt for rorelgn Advertising. Entered nt tho I'oMofuco lit Serantou, Pa ns .Seccnd-Clnes Mali Matter. When space) -w til petmlt, Tho Tribune I ntunyn r;lad to print pliort lottera from U Xiicids homing on current topics v,.rt It rule It Hint thru' must be sinned, for ptiblKvleni, by tho writer's real name. FCRANTON, JULY 21, 1S99. Senator riatt's statement, In another place, Is worth reading for both mat ter nnd manner. The Bentlemnn from New York certainly wields an effect ive pen. m The D., L. & W. l'"or lessons which have frequently bcn piesviitod In these columns "ml wMeh are- obvious to all acquaint! With the enily history of the Delawaie, Lacl.r.vvanni and Western railroad, the lieople oi' S.'ianton feel a peculiar nl thoURh inoiicslve sense of prapt letor slilji l)i this tjreat stcel-Rlrt highway; Hnd tlu iecpnt revolution In Its man ns ment eeimlnfr so swiftly and woik Inp to completely a disruption ot old condition1? and traditions, not un natuially threw the community Into a daze. As this sensation of surpiise wore off, the force of tradition In some quarters nsseitod Itself In tho form of doubtful prophecies and doleful comparisons. It Is nlvny thus after an Innovation. It became thi fear of these conservatives that the now deal mtelit mean a kind of malicious eclipse of Scianton. tint our community, which had so Iohr felt that it owned tho ro.id, might awaken some fine morning to find Itself con veited Into an Inconspicuous way sta tion, at which the haughty minion" of the Vandtrbllt and Pierpont Morgan lnteiests would make contemptuous faces as they passed bv. We- il'i not suppose that these feais were held Sfilously, In their hearts the people that voiced them must havo known hotter. Yet the undeniable c!r cumstunce that there has existed In conhoquuiee of this change more or less general uneeitainty It not uneasi ness prompts us now to call attention to the fatt Mint the presence among U3 Df Mi Tiuesdale and his vniloiu newly Installed lieutenants has bt-en followed as jet bv none of the vaguelj antici pated disasters; on tho contraiv, we hue found them couiteous, business like and well-Informed gentlemen, whose Ideas of their duties and mis sion, so fir as we can glean, appear to be founded on a good quality of in telligence and common sense. To be sure, they are not In business for theli health, vet so far as our Infoimatlon goes they have shown no disposition to bo mean oi little; their policy appar ently looks tow aid a liberal i elation ship between the company and Its woikmen and between olllceis of the road and Its pations along the line. It is true they hae some notions of tall- roadlng which depart fiom the tiadl tlons of the Delawnre, Lackawanna and Western, but befoio condemning' these It seems to us that It would be Just to let them have a lair tilal. If a deduction may be hazarded from what has alieady taken place under the Tiuesdale regime, we venture to pre dict that those w ho are expecting It to bring up in failure will be disappointed. It is no more than just that the Thir teenth regiment should be perpetuated In name in this eltj, whcie it has al leadj perpetuated Itself In fame. m The Atiminlstiation's View of the Manila "Round Hobin." (Editorial In Philadelphia Press ) The lapse of t.o days since the com plaint of the correspondents at Manila has done much to modify the momen ta r Impression It created. It Isn't nec essaiy to question their slnceilty or good faith. Hut two things have led to a revision of the first judgment. In the first place, other and weightier-evidence has discredited their repusenta tlons on the vital points. In the second plaee, u moie caieful examination of their statement has shuwn its weak ness in lesser but characteilstlc mat ters. Tho weight of authoilty is ugalnst tlm Oenetul ntls may be passed by, Us he Is under question. Cut Piesldent Schuinmn of the Philippine commission sustains and corroborates his view. Colonel Denby of the Mine commission has telegraphed liice the conespond ems' statement that Geneial Otis' 10 port of June JO gives a corrcet account "f tho situation. Colonel Denby has had twelve years' experience ns minis ter to China. Is thoroughly familiar with Oilental character and condi tions and Is well qualified to judge uf the facts General Anderson, who was referred to by tome of tho correspond ents as having clashed with OH, states the exact facts, speaks strongly In favor of the commander and shows lhat some of the allegations against him are absolutely unfounded. Gen eral Harrison Gray Otis, who fought under him but Is now out of the ser vice and entirely free to speak, sup ports the same judgment. Wheie It Is a question of fact, are not all theso men likely to bo as well Informed as the correspondents? Where It is a Juestlon of opinion and really the (travamen of the charge Is only a question of opinion are they not like ly to be us good judges? Then the statement Itself, when It comes to be analyzed, is Inheiently weak. What aio tho speclilcatlons? Suppression of "the number of heat prostrations In tho field" that Is, of Iho correspondents' hearsay stories, when the nfllclal reports were going lorwaid. "Systematic minimization ot naval operations" that Is, the corre spondents complain for tho navy when the navy makes no complaint for itt-elf This Is little less than ludicrous. Tho navy makes Its own reports, and navy officers aio nbundantly able to take taio of themselves. "That volunteers Ire unwilling to engage In further ser rlce," Why send a challenge ot reports n this point as late aa July 11 vvhon the whole country knew what volun teer vvcm coming home and what had enlisted for fusUier service? It was no longer a matter of dispute, but ot record. These nro some of the weak points. Thiee months ago tho Associated Piess, through ItH representatives, complained of the censor nt Manila, und asked thnt a particular ofllcer might be detailed to that duty. Thft order was Immediately given, and tho olllccr assigned to the work. The As sociated Press named Its own censor. Hlnce then thcrchas been no complaint, so far us we know, until this "lound robin" came. The tonoiship has probably been moie rigid than free handed coi respondents liked, but sen Bible people, will doubt very much whether it has dellbeintely discolored the truth. Especially when It la coup led with the statement that tho ofllclal reports have designedly deceived the people, will thinking, sober-minded men hesitate to accept It. There has undoubtedly been no little Impatience with tho prolongation ot the Tngal conlllct. That is the tem peramental lestlveness of many peo ple. It cried "On to Richmond" In 1SG1 and led to Hull Hun. It cried "On to Havana" last year and didn't see that there was u better wav. It comes out a. i right In the end, when the lesult Is reached which Its patriotic but Im pulsive and Impatient splilt desires. General Otis und the Philippine cam paign will be judged by lesults. It the at my shall be properly strength ened, If with the renewal of the fighting shoit, sluup and decisive work shall be made of it, the criticisms of the hour will pass Into oblivion. The country has a light to expect the president to make sure of such a con clusion, and It will not be disappointed. The change in svstem announced with reference to Moses Taylor hospi tal, wheieby the admission of pilvate patients for pay will bo discontinued and the lice privileges of the hospital extended to the families of all now eligible to admission, commends itself as being in the line of the intentions of the institution's noble founder. "An Enemy of His Country." The lines between Bryanlsm and antl-Bryanlsm in the Democratic party ate lapldly bhapliifr themselves and soon that party will bo in the throes ot a determined civil conflict. Tho split between Altgeld and Carter Ilairlson In Chicago is one Indication, another is supplleel In the thoughtful edltoiial In which the Philadelphia Heeord, ad mittedly one of the ablest tribunes of Demociacy In the United States, yes terday pronounced Mr. Bryan "an ene my of his countiy." This editorial began by calling at tention to the recent extraordinary change which had como over the econ omic situation in tho United States among other countries, whereby the problem of tho uges how to produce enough to Keep mankind from staiva tlon has ceased to perplex and In Its place has aiiben the problem of what to do with the glow lug surplusage In pro duction It went on to point out that this new pioblcm, s-o far fiom calling for a progi amine of confiscation andl spoliation, called rather lor more equitable dlstilbutlon, and It pioceed ed: "Legislation on the subject of trusts is sadly needed Is Imperative If wo aie to suivive as a fiee people, and yet It ih plain that it alone will not do, and that we could better do without it than have any moie of the foolish and wicked Kind alieady enacted by many of the Western states. In some ot these states It has been provided that th people may legally become mora! thieves, and need not piy foi what they have honestly received if It Ii.im merely been seemed from a very big concern or combination. Such legisla tion will accomplish nothing but the rotting out of the moral sense of the people. "It lb also far from plain whether the formation of gieat concerns Industries, combinations, what you will should be prohibited, or whether the best course of tho community would not be their pioper icgulatlon Co-opeiation be tween men is not mciely civilization It Is Christianity; and he is a bold man who feels that he can safely check It even though it become wholes-lie. Tho present maivelous prosperity of tho United States certainly largely comes irom their Increasing exports of mer chandise, und these aro largely made possible by the fact that in co opeiation e have feo far sui passed the world that in many lines wo can pay better wages and yet undoisell all competitors. It must be, therefore, apparent that a political party which should carelessly undertake a solutlem of this Intricate and novel situation might bring about a degree of suffeiln;; which would hurl It fiom power for years." The Itecord In somo detail shows how the wot st danger fiom tho modern tendency toward Indu.stilal combination comes through tho enormous power which it ocntrullzes In tho hands of a few men at the head of these combina tions, a power which, when used uu sciupulously, to debauch leglslatuies or seize upon valuable public lights with out adequato public compensation, gives rise to evils of a most far-reaching nature: and it concludes: "It must bo admitted that to find solutions for the Industrial problems Is the greatest need of the hour If our He public Is to bo safeguaided and our people to prosper; that theso prob lems are not merely tho paramount and all absoiblng Issues, but that they are so vital as to make all others triv ial. And yet tho acknowledged leader of the party which (by reason of being out of power) Is best situated to take them up feailetsly, discuss them hon estly and solve them thoroughly con tinues to distress and dlv lde that party by Insisting upon pushing to the front a single Issue of no great Importance, founded upon fallacies, and which to many who agiee with him on much else seem3 tank dishonesty. It is an Issue which the people spurned even in their distress, and one which they will as certainly spurn aguln if It shall bo fotceil upon them In the prosperity which has followed their wise decision. I'or such an ifbuo the whole future of the people of this country Is to be en dangered, and tho real party of tho people (anxious, more than anxious, to unite and win) again divided and again defeated. Mr. Bryan may be a loador, but he certainly has proven himself a fanatic, and, vvc believe (however un intentionally), his country's worst en emy and his party's destroyer, Tho people must sooner or later realize this, nnd ho will be more nltterly opposed than ever before, us certainly as the pun rlfes." We take Isitie with our contempor nrv's assertion that the party now out of power Is best situated to take up fearlessly the problems It outlines; on the contrniy, the very fact that that pjrty willingly follows a leader like Uryiin and Is committed to the Populls tic excesses which the Hecord notes as characteristic of miie-hi of tho anti trust legislation put on the statutes books of tho Western states by Demo cratic Initiative establishes, In our opinion, its radical unfitness for addi tional power. Hut be that ns It niuy, we commend tho Record's general ar gument to the nttentlon of our Demo ciatlo f i lends who look upon Mr. Bryan as their party's greatest apostle. It U a plctme every feature of which bears tho Impress of unmistakable truth. m While there Is no disposition to pur sue young Mollneaux unfairly, the sec ond Indictment of him for mutder will tend to rested o the public confidence In tho Integrity of the courts which was unsettled by the auspicious manner In which tho first indictment was evaded. If this young swell Is guilty neither hl3 fathers wealth, his lamlly's aocial position nor tho nullifications In high life of the scandals connected with his case should be permitted to shield him. Colonel Hawkins, of the Tenth Penn .sjlvanla, will soon bo In position to shedjllght on Philippine subjects, and If it Is tiuo that he was on Otis' black list on account of his short-cut meth ods of caring for his command ho ought to be willing to shed It, without fear or favor. Tho people will support their government until perdition freezes but In the meantime they have a right to know the facts. Tho Rochester Democrat and Chron icle sees In the developments of the past few weeks signs that "a wide and deep consphacy is on foot to dis credit and overtlnow the Republican administration at any cost of national honor or national welfare." If thero Is such a conspirtey it will fail. Com mon sense will kill It. Piesident Cannon of the. Salt Lake Mormons has pleaded guilty to a charge of polvgamy and expects to escape with a small tine. Utah, we fear, got state hood on false pretences. If dogs have to be muzzled, It might far better be on the tall than on tho head. We trust that the legality of the tall muzzle will soon be established. In spito of the honor and money In it, there does not seem to be a stam pede of applicants for Algol's job. If not Roosevelt, why not Leonard Wood ! THE WAR CORRESPONDENT. S. U. Kiscr In Times-Herald. Tho great war correspondent was pro voked that was plain at a glance. "Ah, general," he said somewhat Irrita bly when tho commander of the American forces appeared before him, "you havo kept mo waillnj:'" "I beg a thousand pardons," tho cf llccr answeied. "As I was abouc to hurry hero In rosiionto to your summons the enemy appealed In forco end made us run all ovei three counties before ho fin Mi escaped after suffering a heavy lo.-s. This tendered it Impossible for mo to pr sent mj self as early us I would otherwise, have done " "Very well, very well," tho great war ocrrespondent answered; "I huppose ou are blameless but don't let It happen again I sent for jou this morning to leain why jou censored my dispatch last night I wrote that jou reminded mo of an incompetent, fussy old woman, that jou might bo all light as an cleator boy or as a llagman at somo railroad cross ing, but that you wero wholly unlit to command an armj You cut that out, thus robbing my paper of a sensation of which It is very much In need at this time. "Also, T wrote that the enemy had jou practlcnlly surrounded, that jour troops were demoralized, that jou were not re porting a quarter of tho deaths, thit j'our armv was doomed to utter nnnihlla. Hon .and tint you had been svstematlc ally suppressing tho truth That woull have given my papei the chance of a lifetime. It eould havo printed that part of my dispatch In largo tvpe and cteatcd a sensation throughout tho whole civilized world That s the kind of bluff I was sent over heio to get. Yet when I went to the cablo ofllce this morning and asked for mj copj- I found that j'ou hid inn tho blue pencil through nil my sensational btatcments. This is intoler able YWiat havo jou to say for jour self' "Nothing," the general humbly replied "I am forced to confess that vou havo found mo out. I must throw mv&elf on j'our merev." Tho gieat war eoi respondent waved him away with an lmpitlent gesture, saving" "What do jou think this war Is being foujrht for. nnvhovv? If jou aro going to keep on subduing nntlvcs without lie v. Irs jour armies killed in ambush or wlpul out by disease what will there bo In It for my jellow shed? 1 ought to lun jou oft this Island without any fuither oomlderatlon, but I shall content mjMf for the present with ordering the govern ment nt Washington to appoint j-our hiiecess-o; nt once.' Signifying by a sign that tho audience was nt an end, the great war correspond, cut then permitted tho general to pro ceed with his campaign. ROUGH RIDING. For Tho Tribune. If, perchance, on an evil day You mount your wheel to speed away O'er a Scianton street, and all ulone, Hid farewell to the folks at home, If tho devil don't get jou, a policeman will, As jou jog along on level or hill; Tor tho dog and tho bike nro condemned, jou Know, Slnco tho powcra that bo havo made It so. Talk of tho chaige up Sun Juan's HI11--"lis nothing compared to a Serantou spill, In u Scianton hole on an asphalt pave To test a. wheel and show who's brave. Hut there'j nothing llko It In tho land I'or a (Sirlstlan man with n steady hand To ride thioush towp on a high gcattd wheel Wrcckless, and caielcss how jou feel. Flock cut shoit or long coat tall 'TIs all the s.imo at tho end of the swnll Spattered with mud or covered with 'uat Illdo jou may but tumble you must. Into the holes or into tho ditch, Over tho cobbles jou will plungo and Pitch, Hut keep to your wheel and don't let go Tor the city of Serantou made them eo, -C, II. Sopcr. Scranton, July SO. WAR RECORD IMPREGNABLE Concluded from Pago 1. of them was to light and defeat the Spaniard? at Manila, nntl nt the time when the president dictated the lan guage of the pcaco protocol tho Amer ican urmy tood confronting the Span ish Intrenchments. It became Immediately necessary for our government to define its Philippine policy, but tho pre-aldcnt was not to bo forced Into Inconsiderate action. As to e'uba and Potto Rlrti, ho had made up his mind, and the Trench nmbnssador was informed that a treaty of peace could be negotiated on the baslt t the sin render of Cuba to us and to tho Cuban people, nnd upon tho cession of Porto Ulco nnd Guam, and, as for the Philippines, tho president said that wo would take and hold the bay, harbor and city of Manila "ponding- the con clusion of the treaty," nnd that the tienty should "determine the contiol, disposition and government of tho Philippines." 4 A New Aspect. Tn agreeing to this arrangement as the basis of n peace conference, Spain made It her duty to withdraw her forces from tho city of Manila and give room for ours. But the cablo fiom Hong Kong was not then In working order, and before tho terms of tho pro tocol could be communicated by Spain to nor lorces and by us to ours, a bat tle had occurred, and at great expense of blood nnd treasure wo obtained by foice what the pioloeul had peacefully conceded This did not niter tho terms upon which the peare eommlssloners were Instructed to piepnre a tteatj. but It put a now face on the situation both hete and at Manila It hid an Immedlnto and very obvious "ffect upon the attitude of the American people toward the future of the islands It materially affected, moreover, the po sition of the Insurgent Tugals. It em phasized and Increased our moral re sponslbillty for the preset vallon of or der If the terms of tho peace pro tocol the Spaniards had quietly march ed out of Minlla and we had quietly' mnirheel In, the two forces each in Its full strength peacefully avvnltlng tho conclusion of the negotiations at Paris, we might perhaps have withdrawn fmm the Philippine Islands with dig nity and without the Impairment ot International obligations But, having beaten the Spaniards, having scattered theli aimv. having destroyed their au thority ovei the 1'hlllpplnc people, and having forclblj- plaeM ourselves In their stead as a government, th" status quo became Impossible of restmatlon, and from that moment the withdrawal of the Ameiloan armj' and navy would hav e meant tho abandonment of tlm Irlands to utter anaichj", mlseiy and misrule. Policy Shaped. This view compelled the course that was taken by our commissioner nt Paris, and it loudlj Justified the presi dent In having assembled so consider able a force at Manila His power to add to the force was now gone The question of the future of the Philip pineswhether thej- should belong to Spain or to the United States had passed into the hands of the peace commission. And, of course, neither country was at liberty to change the conditions until tho peace commission had acted and its action had been ap proved. Further expeditions of men to the Philippines would have been a plain violation of the terms of the pro tocol But If that wholly suillclent leason had been wanting, there was another, and this other Involved the most trying and troublesome condition with which the government has hail to contend. The men then under arms nnd avnllable for use whether In the Philippines or in the West Indies, had all been enlisted for the peilod of the war. By tho terms of their enlistment they were free of every obligation to the government upon Its proclamation of peace The president knew, better than any one else, that peace was as sured, and that all his soldiers, not only those who stood ready to go to the Philippines, hut the twenty thou sand then there as well, were bv law to be mustered out of the service on tho Instant when he made official an nouncement that the Spanish war was over. "On April 20, 1S9S. the Joint resolu tion was passed recognizing tho Inde pendence of Cuba It directed the president to emploj- the land and naval forces of the United States to accom plish the expulsion of Spain from Cu ban soil. At that time the American army consisted of 27,005 regulars Two days later the volunteer act was passed and four days after that the law was passed enabling the president to In crease the regular army But both these measuios were distinctly de clared to be war measures Both re quired that the enlistments secured undei tlu.ii should terminate with the return of peace In these provisions the acts wero peremptorj" and specific No discretion whatever was peimltted to the government. Under the terms of the regular armj bill, 3S.O0O regulars were added to the 27,000 who composed the armj In times of peace With these and with the volunteers, tho government had a much larger foice than turned out to be necessary for the purposes of the war with Spain: but after the peace protocol had been signed, not a man of them eould be used In the Philippines more than the forco then there. Conflict Not Toreseen. And who could then foresee that this forco was not sufficient? A con flict with the Filipinos was not then anticipated Their aimj-. It Is true, had been assembled on the outskirts of Manila But with respect to the Americans It was generally supposed to be a friendly lather than a hostile aim j-. Its leadeis had been aident with the nssuianees of their friendship and conlldencc. They had pioclalmed a republic, to be suie, and had assert ed a government, but theie was noth ing In the attitude they then assumed which could Justify the belief that their guns were going to bo aimed at the llag which had set them free. Hven had the president been at liberty under the terms of tho peace protocol to lncieaae the Philippine at my, nnd even had the men, available for service there, been leady for tiansportatlon, no wise coun sellor would havo advised sending them. Indeed, the veiy thing that brought on the conflict with Agulnaldo was tho dispatch of a small forco In tended to take tho place of those whose teims of enlistment had expired, and who had already been brought home. Fiom the hour when congress as sembled In December the president en deavored to dtaw Its attention to the situation In which the government would be left upon the pioclamatlou of peace. In one message ho delivered to the senate the treaty In another he warned congiess that as soon as the tieaty was latlfled and tho tatlflca tlons exchanged he would be compelled to muster out the troops at Manila An aimy bill diawn In conformity with the government's views was al ready prepaied and was urgently piesseel upon congress Tho countrj will lemeinber the bitter opposition to It encountered from the Demociutlo part j'. Democratic members who did not dare to assume tho responsibility of defeating tho peu'e treaty, who would not even consent to take the le sponBlblllty of opposing the acquisition of the Philippines, ariayed themselves with tho rest of their partv against tho in my bin. The Demociatlc leaders In both house and senate had a bo. wllderlnu haidlhood to dechuo that tho Inci eased forces asked for woio going to bo employed not in Manila but here In our own country. They were not needed In Manila, these lead- 1 ers said, and they actually argue.! that the administration was using the unlikely meanco of a war In tho Phil ippines as a means ot extorting from congress an enormous rcgulnr urmy for the suppression of liberty at homel It may surprise Intelligent persons to know thnt this sort ot talk could bo Indulged In upon the noors of congress, but thero were weeks and weeks ot It, nnd meanwhile tho Insurgents were gathering an army of 30.000 men, wero glowing mure nnd more belllgoient In their attitude, and every day brought neater the time when peace with Spain would bo proclaimed and tho govern ment be left without a legal claim to the service of any single soldier at Manila, Tho Army Bill. . It was the 2d of Mnreh before con giess passed the Aimy bill, nnd tho war in tin- Philippines had been going on for four weeks. When the country considers this fact, and realizes that the 20,000 Ameilenn troops then at .Mil ilia had been assembled there', not, at all In anticipation of a campaign against the Filipinos, but wholly and solelj for tho purpose of defeating the Spanlaids, and that the president had been told by no less an authority than Admiral Dewey that for that purpos" 5,000 men would be sunk-lent, surely his foieslgnt nnd good Judgment will be ovei J where npproved. Battle after battle was fought, and every battle won And now, when nt last the au thoilty he sought fiom congress was conferred, not In the form he sought It, but In the fashion of a compromise, here was the unexampled task that was set before him. He had at once to re duce un army of C',000 regulars to an nrmy of 27,000, mustering out 38.000 men, he had to enlist an equal num ber of regulars to take tho places of those mustered out; ho had to organize the new leguluts, to provide tianspor tatlon for them to Manila, to transport back the army then there, and at Mi" same time and nil the while to prose cute tho wai This is what he has been doing during the last four months. The now Aimy bill was not what the piesident wanted, but it gave him per mission to i-ilse a legulnr army of C3, 003 men nnd also to raise a volunteer aim of 3,",00O men and to keep them until July 1, 1901. Under the terms ot this act, -15 000 regular have already been enlisted, and have taken tho places of an equal number of men who have been formally musteied out. Ten now regiments of volunteers are now organizing Gen. Otis has been sup plied alieady with 22,000 reguluis hav ing two yeais of service befoio them. And all tho while the nghtlng In Luzon has been maintained with the result already descilbed in this statement. What more eould bo asked or expected? What possible criticism can be passed upon the Intelligence or the foiesight with which these difficult and compli cated affalis have been conducted? What, indeed can bo said except In warm and generous praise both of the admlnlstiatlon at home and of the army abroad? Tioops for Otis. On June 21 tho tiansport Sheridan sailed fiom San Francisco with 1,801 men, the Valencia sailed on Juno 20 with GOO more, the Pennsjlvanla sailed on July 1 with 1,300 more, the Para sailed on July 12 with 1,000 mote, and the Tartar Is due to sail on July 22 with still another thousand. Threq now regiments of volunteer Infantry nre In process of organization at Ma nila, and the ton home regiments will be ready by the middle of August. So that by the end of the lalny season, and as soon as troops can bo- used, General Otis will have a fully equipped and effective force of not less than 40,000 rren, and 10,000 more will be ready for departure In case they are requited. It may be true that If on Feb. 5, when the Insurgents nndo the first at tack, we had then had, pioperly dis persed through Luzon island, such an army of occupation as will be there In tho fall, the rebellion might bo now much nearer Us end than it seems to be. but the facts which I have bilefly recited show, first, that tho piesident had no right, in honor and good faith with Spain, to Fend to the Philippines one single man moie than was there or on his way there when tho peace protocol was signed last August, nor until the ratifications of the tieaty of peace wc-ie exchanged on April 11. On that day the Philippine Islands be came the property of the United States The facts show, second, that lie could have sent to tho Philippines, assum ing that the obstacle of good faith w 1th Spain had been removed, onlj a body of men whose enlistment ex pired with the proclamation of peace, nnd whose dlspetch out of the coun try was consequently of no avail The facts show, third, that he had assem bled, while the light to do so was still existent, an nimy much larger than his mllltaij- advisers thought necessary, and largo enough as tho event has pioved, to maintain our position and greatly to extend our authoiltj-. And tho facts show, fouilli, that inee ihe pioelnmatlon of peace with Spain and the passage ot the new law the presi dent Is now possessed of an aimy with two j-ears of service to run, ainvb" competent, as he and his advisers be lieve, to bring nbout the pacification of the Islands. Theie Is nothing for which any Amer ican need apologize In this record. It Is a lecord of consistent nnd unpar alleled success, a nucces that began with tho message to Dewej'- "Go nnel destroy the Spanish fleet In Manila liny," and that will not end until tho possessions which dutjr nnd foituno have confided to our caie and tlrmlj advanced on the high road to peace and ptospeilty. rfrfisa -4 'wsm-far, I J ft! BsSP Ml M1 A consumptive patient, who made uso o'f Ripans Tabulcs, found his weight increased but was made anxious because expectoration ceased, and feared on that account that harm would result, but on consulting a physiciin he learned that Ripans Tabules do not alt'eci the conditions of the lungs in any material degree, but if they do ho at all they have more tendency to favor expectoration rather than to suppress it. Consequently there is r.o reason why a consumptive should discontinue tho use of Ripans Tab ules because expectoration has ceased. Furthermore, In lung troubles an increase in weight is the best indication of improvement, and as the Tabules regulate the diges tion they increase nutrition and are doing the very service required to produce best results. A now st jld pocket onntalnlntr tsi r.iriN TABtLM In A pit,r aartmi (w.theut z scit u new , &i' n: Mm druif iort rou FitKtKo iliUlow prKfvljart U Inteudixl for ibepo,.rin4UWDr.,.'nl,,Ki emtdnra of tho live-rent otrumdOtt) tabulM) 'n bd bl b) null by nllni tony ftlirht rn uu I, llio Illl'lN CllBiU?AL Corwx, ho. ID Syiuai btrwt, .Suw York -or a ulnzlo cartuu (tl. liSVLW) will bv Kilt fur Uvu iwU. Star Paper Fasteirner Fastens papers in a jiffy, feeds itself aud improved in every respect. Prices lower than ever. We arc still sell ing the Planitary Pencil Sharpeners. The only sharp ening device which never breaks the lead. On trial in your office for 10 days free of charge. We have numerous other novelties in office sup plies, together with a large line of Blank Books and Typewriter's Supplies. Ry molds Bros STATIONERS and KNGRA.VER3, Hotel Jermyn Building. A Twenty-Year Gold-Filled fee Wlfla 15-Jcwclcfl Waliiam Mwemeit, Both Qimaraeteed The Best Watch in the Whole World for the Money. UBKMEAIU & C0HHELL 130 Wyoming Avenue. If! ,c&- THE LONG GREEN lawn around tho house, or tho little patch of gras In the doorjarel, require constant attention to look beautiful Don't bonow jour neighbor's lawn mower whlrh jou And isn't sharp, nnd then say sharp things about It which rnalees jour wife s.id, but como In here and buy a lawn mower that will cut llko a razor and runs as e.isv as a blcjcle The laboi saved will amply repiy you for the small outlnv And such things as Trunlng Shears nnd Glass Clippers that will give satisfaction are hero too GMSTER & FORSYTE, 225-327 PHNN AVENUE. Lmither Keller L1HE, CEMENT, SEWER PIPE, Etc. Void andonico West Lackawanna Ave,, SCRANTON, PA. FOR $10 v ) .irnjii f'i, ii.1 jij, ArfTiiiir.' .M-'ummi ilUt't HILEY Poulard In order to make a com plete clearance the first aud last cut of the season now takes effect on our entire stock of Prioted Foimlard and our Hue being of stand ard quality only, we are giv ing you an opportunity -to procure a first-class gown at very moderate cost. Every pattern is of this .season's production mostly black aud navy grounds- in neat designs, and our closing prices are goe aod 79c a yard, formerly 70 to $1.25 We are still showiug a good assortment of Wash Jap Silks in plain and cord effects "colors absolutely fast," which we are closiug out be low cost. 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE Thk MonritN JtAnnwAitE BTonn a Ceit, Saved if you purchase your now. The ranges are the same kind we've been selling. The price is the only difference. FOOT! k SIEAE CO), 119N. Washington Ave. The Hiflmt & Coeoell Coo Heating, PlumbJng, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Hardware. 04 lackawairoa Avenue HENRY BEL1N, JR., tjtiieial Agent for ths Wyomlaj Dlstuet.j.- PUT illuItU, Ulaitlnsr Knartla", mot,iui una lUo Itonauna CUe.nlca. HIGH HPLOSIVfiS. tiilcly I'usp, Cup 1 und UjcploJaci. I'.uom Jul Coiiitsll lUlhllu;. burautau. AUKNOlUi Tiios. ronn, ... vittston, JOHN . SMITH & SON, Plymouth. W. K, MULLIGAN, - WIlUes-Bawc, Silks 20 GAS IANCE PiWEIL ,