rv- ,K II' i;v I.' nil THTC SCR ANTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1900. aA. v t fy y Efn f.- : . Published Dally, lcpt Sunday, by Thl Trlji line PiibllMilna; Company, l t'Hty CcnU Month. MVY R. IIICIIAttl), l-Mltor. O. V, HYXIII.i:, llmlncs Minagcr. New Vorfc Onice! 150 Nassau Bt. . . , r. h. viti:t:tiASi), Bole Agent for Foreign Aclvcrthdnit Entered it tlio t'oslorflei" it .Scranton, r., as fcond-Clas Milt Matter. . When space will permit, The Tribune l idwaja (dad to print short letters from Its friends hear. ng on cunctit topics, but Its rule Is that these must to signed, tor publication, by the writer t real name! and the condition precedent to ac ceptance l that all contribution! aball be sub ject to editorial revision. SCHANTON', OCTOBER, 17, 1900. BEPUBLIOAN NOMINATIONS. National, FTcshlcnt-UUMAM McKINI.KY. VIcc-iTcsldcnt-TllEOIlOIli: HOOSEVELT. State. Conerewinen-at-f.ari.'e rtAl.UStlA A. DHOW, RonmtT it. FonnnKnm. Auditor Oeiicral-E. D. IIAUuEXUEttQII. ' County. Conrrraj-Wlt.MAM CONNTI.b. Judirc fli:onoi: M. watsos. Mieiltf-Jlill.V II. FELLOWS. Treasurer J. A. RCIJ NTOS. District Atorm-v WILLIAM It. LEWIS. I'rnllwiiolun JOHN' COl'ELAND. Clerk ol Courts-TIIOJIAS 1". DANIELS. Jtcccrdrr ol Deeds-EMU, DOSS. ltea-lstcr of Willa-W. K. niTK. Jury Commlsslniier-EDU'AllD B. STUUOLS. . legislature. First DIlnct-T110MAS .1. REYNOLDS. Second District .TOILS SCIIEITKR, JR. Third District EDWARD JAMKS, JR. Fourth District r. A. FMILBIN. "If there la any one who believes the gold standard is a good thing, or that it must be maintained, I warn him not to cast his vote for me, because I promise him it will not" be maintained in this country longer than I am able to get rid of it." William Jennings Bryan in a Speech at Knoxvillo, Tenn., Deliv ered Sept. 16, 1896. "The party stands where it did in 1896 on tho money question." Will lam Jennings Bryan, Zanesville, O., September 4, 1900. Buncombe. IT SEEMS, according to the Blng hamton Leader, that at one time in the city of Blnghamton there was a small match fac tory called the Independent Match company, which ran in opposition to tho Diamond Match company, tho bis concern which owns most of the match factories in the United States. The Blnghamton concern sold out to tho Diamond company and the latter moved its machinery away. This, ac cording to the Scranton Times, con stitutes a strong reason why the laboring men of Lackawanna county should vote for Bryan. It shows the awful work of a "trust." I .at us seo about this. Is there any law against one concern selling out to another? Could Bryan pass any law making; it a crime for the owner of machinery in Bingliamlon to move it, for example, to Scranton, or vice vi'Ha? Was the crime in buying, sell ing or moving? Or was there any crime at all? How would the Times construct its argument if Instead of the Blnghamton concern selling to the match "trust" It had Instead bought out the "trust" plants and moved them to Blnghamton? Would that have made any difference in the equity of the transaction? Perhaps tho Bryanlte reply would be: "The buying out of that Inde pendent match factory threw men out of work." True; but it also threw other men into work. The case. Is as broad as It is long. If the Blngham ton concern could have made more money by continuing In business than by selling, it would not have sold. If it couldn't have made a profit by run ning, there Is no possible law which could have forced it to continue in business at a loss. If the Times could buy the Truth, or vice versa, and it appeared to be a transaction in volving business benefits, could Bryan or a Democratic congiess interpose a veto? Could either stop the morning of these plants and tho substitution of ono wot king force for two if the re spective owners so decided (and agreed? There is n vast deal of buncombe in this Populistic howl against trusts. Thinking people are growing tired of it. Thoro has never been a campaign In this county without a lot of lying rumors launched to create confusion and discord. The present campaign will probably not be an exception. It Is well, therefore, to say in advance, with all tho emphasis at command, that the Republican candidates this year nro working together In complete accord and that whatever you may hear to the contrary is false. They nre work ing to win and they are coin- to win. i Here Is the Democratic Record on 1 the Trust Question, EVEKY LINE of legislation . now on tho statute books of the United States directed against trusts and unlawful trndi combinations was placed there by the Republicans. That there Is not more stringent law against them Is tho fault of the Democratic party. Tim last occasion on which the parties, ns represented In congress, went on rec ord on the trust question wns on June 1, 1000.' On that day u final vote was taken on a constitutional amendment tf) want congress' power to "define, refetitVte, jnohllilt and dissolve trusts, monopolies and combinations, whether existing In' tho form of corporations or otherwise, It requires, a two-thlids vote of congress to submit a Constitu tional amendment to tho state loch ia urcs for ratification. The question to so submit It was lost by a vote of 16 yeaflio 138 nays, )F TlIK YEAS 110 WEltE UEPUB LKJANS AND ONLY 5 WERE DEMO. CRATS. The Ave were Campbell, of Montana; Nnphen and Taylor, of Mas sachusetts; Scudder, of New York, and Sibley, if Pennsylvania. OP THE 132 NAYS, PNLY TWO WERE REPUU LICANS; Loud and McC'all. Rlehatd soji, Lents,, Sulzer, Ruppert, Salmon , v v. L -SJ MtJiJ,BBVata and all iho other professional "trust klllera" voted NAY. They declined to give congress the power to grapple with the trusts. Tho Democrats In dttlBcd In spesms of virtue for two days, denouncing tho trusts, and then voted to continue them. In ono of Mr. Bryan's recent speeches ho gave the Republican rempdy ns the final onu ho would adopt, In case bo was elected and all other means failed. In other words, Mr. Bryan admits the value of tho Republican Idea, but wants to try other measures ilrst. Ho has not said what those measures nro to lie. fc'oine trusts operate all over tho country; others, like tho New Yoik Ico Trust, operate In a clngl" city. Tho requisite power to reach each and all and bring them within the Federal law, WAS DENIED BY A MARGIN OP 36 VOTES, ALL DEMOCRATIC. Denouncing Is ono thing. Doing Is another. Mr. Bryan's trust denuncia tions, In view of his patty's record, promise no better than the prophecies ho made four years ago; and as a prophet Mr. Bryan has not succeeded. After all Is said, the paramount is sue Is Bryan vs'. Business. As to Imperialism. -T-HE HALLUCINATION that I the Ameilean people, born " to a heritage of free gov ernment and bred in the at mosphere of well-regulated liberty, could bo coerced or cajoled into part ing with their freedom Is not shared by any citizen In a normal state of health. We are unable to credit Mr. Bryan and his local echoes with really taking any stock In It beyond Its diminishing utility as a campaign scarecrow. When a man is not in good health; when his bodily functions are de ranged; when tho food he eats does not supply requisite nutrition, when his blood Is watery, his nerves at ten sion and his whole Inward apparatus consciously or unconsciously out of keltcr, then it not infrequently hap pens that he Is psychologically ripe to catch just such epidemic vagaries as this lecent spawn of Bryanlsm that the men and women of this great repub lic purpose, if McKlnley is re-elected, to turn oppiessois, forego their civic rights and set up a king. Intemper ate brooding on dire conjectures touch ing the remote and immeasurable futuie tends to produce the condition of mind in which manias are bred; but manias are not the true basis of ma jority rule. The cry of imperialism has been made every time a big undet taking was In hand. It was a bugaboo in the convention which framed our consti tution. It made a continual din In the ears of Washington. It reverberated in the days of Jefferson. It was the feature of the opposition's attacks upon Andrew Jackson. And in later years, when was It more intemper ately and abusively resoited to than In the Democracy's onslaughts upon those pillars of human freedom, Abra ham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant? The American people ate getting used to this fake yell. It doesn't fool them a little bit. "Imperialism" In the Philippines means doing as much as -we can as fast as wo can for a mixed collection of Malays thrown under our flag by the fortunes of war and with a few conspicuous exceptions as little fitted to govern themselves as the Piute Indians on our western plains. When these untutored victims of Spanish neglect are rebellious and homicidal and Inclined to repay kindness with knife stabs and pistol shots It means taking them by tho nape of tho neck and administering paternal discipline; but to all who behave it moans In struction, protection, encouragement" and development, toward the goal of unfettered self-rule. Ilifalutin talk about tho "consent of the governed" and the "Inalienable tights of man," coming from men who forget all about the political fate of the disfranchised southern negro, makes no difference in the fact that we have wot the Philip, plno bear by tho tail and must hold on until the animal Is tamed, The treaty of Paris made these Islands property of the United States and put upon the president the duty of enforcing order in them until ho gets further ordets from the people. It Is a big Job and not yet ended, but Its completion will not bo expedited by back-lb lug at home. It belongs to congress to bay how these now dependencies, when put In order, shall bo governed, If congress shall show any tendency toward un American methods then will bo the time for our anti-Imperialist follow cltlzens to arise and object. Just now the proposition Is the Hat one of stand ing by the ling and tho man who won't do that, however well-meaning, Is to every practical puiposo a trnltor to hts I'ountry because nn alder and abettor of Its armed foes. Bryan denies tho report that ho had promised a cabinet position to Crofter, Tho fuot seems to bo that Bryan has promised nothing at all.excopt to ltlck the splnnl column out of tho gold standard and to make tho American Hag In tho Philippines look like a back-number porous plaster. If American statesmanship had no bettor representatives than such men us Bryan, Altgeld, Pettlgrew and Till man, the country would have to con fess that "the whlo mail's1 burden" wns too heavy, But the mantles of Jeffer - ' - Ji&tjtt 1,-,'WtgJ-Jaagfc jji-it,!, iUct, son, Jackson and Lincoln have been Inherited by others ns patriotic as they, who will not pawn their Judg ment for homlnatlonn or trade their Inllttence for votes. Kansas and Mississippi each ban seven congress districts. In Kansas It takes 21,033 votes on the average to elect a congressman, while In Missis Hipp! It takes only 3,105. In other words, under tho Democratic plan of governing the colored citizen without bin consent, a voto In tho solid South has seven times the effective force of a voto In other sections. This Is a hard, fact which Bryan finds It convenient to overlook, but which will not down. A Loose Thinker. I N HIS SPEECH before tho Chi cago conference on trusts, made Sept. 16, 1S99, William Jennings Bryan said: "There Is no good monopoly in private hands, and I do ont believe It Is safe for any man or group of men to monopolize any nrtlcle of merchandise, or any blanch of In dustry." On Oct. 10, of the current year, spenklng at Nashville, Mich., Mr. Bryan asked: "Do you know of any good monopoly In private hnnds? Do you know of any man good enough to stand at tho head of any monopoly, and determine the price of that which others are to use?" In reply It Illustrates a point to call attention to tho fact that there Is a certain book known as "The First Battle," which Is an article of mer chandise, and an nbsolute monopoly In W. J. Bryan's hands. Ho holds a copyright upon It and this copyright prevents any publisher from reprint ing It without his consent. This Is the most absolute kind of monopoly known to the law and in operation it has made Mr. Bryan a rich man. No body begrudges what he has received In royalty upon his book. No one dis putes his explanation that those who bought his book could. If they had so desired, let it alone. That Is true of most articles offered for sale. No In dispensable article Is long a subject of monopoly; the ttust which tries to control It goes down with a crash. But tho incident shows how loose are Mr. Bryan's mental processes; how little there is to much of his pre tentious oratory when you come to put It under tho X ray of cold facts. Every copyright, every patent, is a monopoly In a private hand. To abol ish these would overturn a recognized equity which has the sanction of civil ized society everywhere. The public debt shows a decrease of $6,122,133 during the last month an other evidence that this Is not a Democratic administration. A Type of Many AN UMBER of our reader acquainted with Ge Charles P. Smyth, of readers a General Clin ton, N. Y. He Is an old time Democrat who was a member of Samuel J. Tilden's staff when Mr. TU den was governor of New York, but he cannot stomach Bryanlsm. When in Chicago recently General Smyth was interviewed by the Inter-Ocean. He said: I lmc been a Democrat all my life, but when Mr. Iiijan was nominated by the Chieago conven tion on the most danscrous political platform I ever remember, I refused to support him. I am not a Populist or a believer in free coinage of tiluT at 10 to 1. I could not support -Mr. llryan on tho I'opullstic platform of 189(5 and I can not support him on tho Kansas City platform, Jtr. Ill j an and his platform arc just as danscrous now as in lSOO, and more so, because vc have more at ttaKo now than wc had then. Jlr. Bryan's elec tion would paral70 business. Money would be withheld and withdrawn from enterprise to find n site retreat until it was known what policy tho new administration would adopt. There would be the instant fear of free coinage and the shrinkage of alucs. There would be paraljsis in business which would be felt throughout the country. Thousands of Democrats are of tho same opinion. The idea that sound money Democrats will In numbers support Bryan this year Is being rap idly exploded. The opening games of foot ball were a trifle discouraging to the surgeons. A foot ball game that creates demand for nothln.T but court plaster may be an Indication that the sport Is on the decline. So long as the patent medicine por trait business continues to flourish, some consolation Is left for people of promlnenco whose pictures will not adorn the hall of fame. Tho chief Democratic objection to the full dinner pail is the fact that it makes the average man rather In different to the pathos of a calamity howl. Th'' apptonch of election day does not appear to Increase tho regard of the average Democtatio orator for tho truth. It begins to look as though Jack FioEt is also nveparinsr 'to -resume wot k. - -- REPUBLICAN OBJECT LESSONS. How Jersey. Depoiltois. f f f f f Hanks. National Estate and I'rUatu Loan and Trust., Sninsa 1511. 1S1D, 70,721 (1,015 10.1W fi,W3 fr.'.tlTl S.1S1 J0.1S.S 1JS.217 f Total 10,S3J ;5(1,2S7 Ir.tnaso in Ko, of depositors.. no.W Amount of Peposlts. llmU HOI. lblrt. National $ a.),32'J,17S ? ,7rJ,S0O Statu und 1'rb.ito 3,iiAl,iilt 1,50(1,01 Loan nnd Tiuat.. W,n47,17t 21,101,0 Savings .,...... 2I,53S,'.'70 uu,ei7,078 Total $ tl'),7lS,433 $103,(101,015 Increase in ill posits .,,,,,,,, $ SS,W't,512 Vivgiuia. Depositois. Hanks, leu, i b0. National 10,WH 27,201 Statu and Private 7,(1(11 12,"1 I.o in and Tiust., bCU 2.7M Saving :V-H 4,103 Total ,, ,., 31,1)05 47,10.1 Increase in No. of itetosltors,, 10,111 Amount of Pepo3lts. flanks. Jb'). iwo. National .,. $ 7,&T, S 10.37S.10O (Mate and 1'rivato 3,.10?,&U t,VU,137 Loan and Tm.t., 4.'J,70l 1,22-1,70(1 Saving ,, 1,112.1,692 2,'!'1I,5I7 Total ll,l,3a3 f i8,7.So,53(J ' Increase in deposits ....? 7,11)3,103 - M - ,. ..-rfftri '.,. s.. !aa.m HOW HISTORY REPEATS, B ELOW WILL 1111 found n number of e.'tlrnetn from Democtatlc edi torials, speeches and platforms In 1861 nnd 1872. Compare thorn with tho literature of Bryanlsm today and Judge for yourself how history repeats. LINCOLN. Destroyed the Union. WliU has Lincoln and his administration done? 1. tie I1.11 railed out two and a halt millions able-bodied men to the war. 2. He Ins artit a full million nt lil'e peoplo to their prives 3. lie h,i9 can led moiirnlnu Into slmoit tvety white household. , 4. lie has saddled the country with ft national debt of At least tour Ihutismid millions ol dollars which will he an opprrbo burden nd Incubus Upon the Ifllinr -iml rii,tinl nt the eountrv. a. lie nils destroyed the Union Mil suDvertecl our republican form of government. n. lie has carried ant, pocrty and destitution Into the homes of the poor by advancing the price of living to a point almost bejond their rcitli, 7. He hts fstally derangid and destroyed the curiency of the country. S. Ho Ins degraded the nation In the eyes of foreign natloin. Cincinnati Knmilrcr, Sept. 24, 1SS4. Violated Solemn Pledges. I Impeach Abraham Lincoln ami the Ttepubllean party, because they did not and would not, when they could, Rive tho country from the revolution which has overwhelmed it. I Impeach Abraham Lincoln, and his administration, because when entrusted by a patriotic people with the control of sreat armies, they wielded them In violation of solemn pledges given to the nation. In viola tion of the most acrcd constitutional obligations, nnd for the destruction Instead of the preserva tion of the t'nlon. .Judge Comstock, of Ryrtcii'e, N. V in a speech at Ilrooklyni published in Indianapolis Sentinel of Sept. 20, 18S4. Freedom Struck Sown. Half a million of our young men have been sacrificed to the dread Moloch of war and the appetite for blood Is not appeased. The r-plrit of implacable hatred has been sown and fostered In the land. An enormous debt has been created which must rest for ages like an Incubus upon the indusliy of the country. Tho freedom of tho pres and of pccch and the right of liberty have been struck down. The Republican party Is re sponsible for all thee wrongs heaped upon a patient people. They have been false to their pledges, faithless to the people and must h de posed. Hon. Paniel Piatt, as chairman of Demo cratic State convention, Albany, N. Y., Sept. 10, 1S0I. All the Elments of a Tyrant. If Lincoln should be elected, his tyranny, unre strained by moral principle and unchecked by or ganized resistance, will grow stronger from day to day. Taxes will increase, tariffs will multiply and military necessity become the law of the land, Mr. Linaoln has all the elements that make men tyrants. He ha3 low cunning, greedy ambition and reckless associates. He Iia3 no re straint of high-toned sentiments, He has Ion? since silenced his conscience. To nnintaln his power ho will rule with an Iron rod and the peo ple will sink lower and lower Into an abject de pendence. Itlchmond, Ind., Inquirer Oct. 7, 1801. Monarchy Predicted. Reflect but for a moment on tho aggravated calamities of four j'cars more of war under the administration of Abiaham Lincoln. Choose you now what shall be the distlny of yourselves and of your children after you. If these things con tinue for four yens more the chances are nine to ten that jour free government will be changed, that instead of clectivn presidents converting themselves into despots you will have hereditary monarchs to rule over jou and your cbildien to the third and fourth generation. How is jour mode of ec-ape? In the success of the Demo cratic party. Clement L. Vallandigham, in speech at Sjdnej, O., Sept. 21, 18(14. Greatest Tyrant in History. If jou, by persisting in jour policy, should cause this rule to be continued two jeais longer, it will involve the nation in debt twice as much as the value of all the taxable piopcrly; it will bring over a million freemen to a bloody end; it will cause crlpplis, widows and orphans to become so numerous anil crime and violence and blood and miserj will incre.no to such an extent, and jour tjranny will become so great that jour couils will rise up to defy you, and im partial history will write you down .is the great est tjTart that ever lived. Colonel Frank Wool foid, of Kentuck.v, in a letter to President Lin coln, July 30, 1804, Question of Life or Death. Follow Citizen.: It is not much that jour countiy now asks of jou, but all that you hold dear, all that you have and can hope to have of liberty, of peace, of piosperity depends upon jour giving to jour country what your country now asks wisdom to see jour dutj-, courage to do it. With jou, under a benignant Providence, it icsts to determine by your votes on the Sth of November, the death or life of the noblest repub lic over established among men. August Belmont, Chairman Democratic National Committee, Oct. 2, IStll, Bevolutionary. Itcsolvcd, Tint the administration of Am iham Lincoln, by its usurpitions, its disregard of the Constitution, its violation of personal libcity and state rights, its resort to military power to sub vert civil authority, its temporizing and covvaid ly degradation of the nation in its foreign pollej', its perversion of tho war from its original ob ject and its avowed determination to prolong it has lieiome rcvolutlonaiy in its character. Reso lutions adopted by Democratic State Convention, Albany, X. Y bept. 15, ISA). Imperialism. The miserable principle of centralisation, of Iniperhll'in, lias been deeply implanted in the hearts of the men who arc governing now. One by one they are deploying all the guaranties of personal rights. The people must protect themselves and thdr country or they will bo swept in the maelotroiu of ce-nti illzatlon and nibitrary power with every vestige of liberty in this countiy. Colonel Tilco, at New York, Oct. 10, 1S04. Perpetual War. Onu million of the very best joung men In tho land have alicady left their bones on the battle field or died in the hospital, or gone home to drag out u miserable existence. A million jptiug men upon whom we depend for tho encrgj-, vigor and activity of the country are swept from among us, and every few months a c ill is mada for 500,000 more, Wlun will this (ei-o? Never, while tlila administration is in power. lion. Amasa J. Parker, at New York, Sept. S, lOI. These are only n few spsclmcnn of tho tone of Democratic comment aimed at Abraham Lincoln and U. S. Grant. Tho contemporary Domoeratio uhuso of William McKlnley Is not so lloico on the petsonal side but tho outoiy against Imperialism, militarism, the, blood cost of subjugating a froo people, etc., etc., Is very much the same. Tho Democratic special pleaders of the present day could savo a lot of time by simply if pcatlng tho productions of their forbears, LITERARY NOTES. "The Life of Puil Jones," which Cyrus Town, send Urady Is publishing lluoiiih the MfSsis, Vpplcton, has been awaited with peculiar In terest on account of the obvious Illness of this brilliant writer to deal vlth to picturesque 11 iubject, As a vvritei upon naval Hfo from tho point of view of the historical lomanccr, Mr, Ilrady stands at the head of tho American writers of this generation. He U a hlstorlun as well a a novelist, and his historical and biographical woik hat attracted marked attention on account ol the jmovvle'dgc, th grasp of theme and the power of sympathetic discernment which he has shown.' A life of Paul Jonca bv Mr, Brady seems to lepresent a peculiarly fellcltmu union uf author und subject. There is no more picturesque and heroic ILjure In naval history than that of the doughty little captain who fctight uud captuie-d the Seiapts when his own ship was sinking under him. UU career pre sented features which have proved puzzling to many writers, and tho work which Mr. Brady seems to have done in clearing up bis life. and in presenting a lc-ld narrative enriched with t'Aiiuiu, iiuiii uuk iuiiei im-tv ,uvi,u,i. ivi- respomlence, has a peculiar and permanent value. .Mr. Brady's vigorous style, vivid imagination and s ' - a Military Dospotlnm, K Abraham Lincoln Is reelected president, the liberties of the people are pone f'irru'r. Military dcpotlsin will rule, There will lie no liberty of jpeech or pre.s. Anarihy, bloody nnttiliy, will follow. Taxation without limit wilt grind the people to the dust. There will bo more widows and orphans and more tjratniy nnd oppreslon than tho world has seen for centuries. Xllcs He publican. MoBt Dangerous Foe. The lutty of which Abriliam Lincoln Is the candidate and representative, though profcsslnu iiaity 10 me union, la us iwu uangiroiw im; The fails of Us history, tho eplilt of lis policies, the tendency or tt mfjsuic tally u completely with dis-IInlon designs ns If they had been die tatrd by cold, subtle and ralculatliiK hostility to cur national greatness. New Yoik, World, Sept, 13, 1SH. Ignorant and Fanatical. It Is at this moment the unspeakable misfor tune of the country to be placed In thu wrong by the lawless and unconstitutional measures adopted under the administration of an Ignor ant nnd fanatical president, the tool of the worst men and tho worst partj- that ever rose to pewer In any nation. Hon. George F. Corn stock, at New York, Sept. 13, 1604. Will Starve Laboring Men. Arc jou a laborer? The re-election ol Mr. Lincoln will, as surely as you live, not only close up the ways by which jou hope to find cm- plonnent. but put the in lee of food and cloth ing and cverj' necessary of life so far beyond jour icacli that jour wages svill scarce HfTlce to keep you from starvation. New York World, Nov. 8, 1604. A Keign of Terror. When we all have been driven off or forced into the armj- who do not submit to be stretched on the Procrustean bed of abolition, there will bo scenes like thosj enicted toward the close of the French revolution, when the indignant and starving masses turned upon their leaders and put their necks upon the guillotine a ter rible finale of blood and crime. Portland Argus, October, lSol. Liberty and Bight Trodden Down. Under tho pretense of a military neccsitjv of a war power higher than tho constitution, the con stitution itself has been disregarded In every part, and public liberty and private right alike trodden down and the material jirosporlty of the country essentially impaired. Democratic Na tional Platform, 1S04. Arbitrary Power. Wo are passing through n crisis in the Lnitcd States. The question whether man shall be al lowed to govern himself or whether he shall be governed by arbitrary powei, comes up befoie jou and it depends upon j-ou whether the people or whether tyrants shall govern. Profe-o-or W. B. Wedgcvvood at New York, September, 104. McClellan the Last Hope. I look upon the election of McClellan as the last hope for the restoration of the Union, an honorable peace, and the security of personal liberty, and this jou may publish to the world as my views on the pending crisis. Ex-l'resldcnt Millard Fillmore, in Indianapolis Sentinel, Oct, 5, 1804. Farewell to Civil Liberty. I cannot give j'ou any better argument why jou should change this administration than to say that if you prefer liberty to slavery, you will change it and change it quickly, foi if Lin coln is elected, farewell to civil liberty In the United States. Ex-Governor WlckliiTc, of Ken tucky, at New Yoik, Sept. P, 1S04. Irretrievable Ruin. Upon the lesult hangs the very destinies of our land. Four years more of such administration as we have had will work irretrievable ruin to this great and glorious country of ours. C!ov. Sej-mour, New York, Sept. 8, 1804. Standing Army of Negro Janissaries. In my deliberate opinion, if Mr. Lincoln is re elected we shall have a military despotism fas tened upon us and our children, with a stand ing armj- of negro janissaries. Leslie Combs, of Kentuckj. No Further Use for Elections. If bis rule only lasts four ycarsj more we shall perhaps be spared the tioublc of elections alto gether. Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, New London, Conn., Oct., 18, 1861. GRANT. The Last Struggle. This may be, nnd we think is, the last btiug gle that will be made to preserve popular in stitutions in the United States. If Crant is re elected the iron heel of despotism will not only bo continued upon the south, but will be en forced upon tho north and west, as well, The power of patronage and money, the stealings through the national treasury, may be ko great as to re-ciett Grant now and as often there after as he might conclude until the ollleo be comes xirtually for life, and Irm that it is ca-j-to have a hereditary successor. Cincinnati En quirer, Oct. 22, 1872. A Subjugated and Conquored People. The Republican party, instead of resisting the Union, has so hi as in its power, dissolved It, Under its repeated assaults the pillars of the government are rocking on their base, and should it succeed in November ne.xt and inaugurate Its president wo will meet as a tubJoUcd and conquered pi'ople amid the ruins of liberty and the scattered fragments of tie eon slltutioii, Democratic National Platform, 1S72. Militarism, Sure. If Giant is re-elected the children of the joiin men who voto for him will have to peiform not enly ono jear's camp Kiviec, but seven ycais, .13 i'l certain pirtlons of Diropc. Cinoli.liatl )ln quircr, Nov. 1, 1572. Dishonest, Corrupt, Lazy, Ignorant. Grant is a dishonest, corrupt, lazy and Ignor ant nnn, who l entiii'ly unlit to peiform the simplest civil chitiw, Cinvlnniti Enquirer, Nov, 1, 1S7J. diainatlo force, .lie most happily exhIMted In this book. It should fully ilesrnn to be called more fascinating thin inoet loiinna ,. 'iho llonslers" la a book bj Meicdlth Nlthnl son whldi sets foith tlio beeli nln:ji of cultuie in Indiana, Irom thu settlement of the tcrrltoij; eloscribcs the lluoslcr tjpo and dlaleij, and the early centers of uk ita t ion and rnltghtimmnt, euch as New II.11 ninny; and, after thui otudjlng the environment ami Its pioneer antecedent, examines tho lltcraiy ptodurt with 1111tv.lt full ness and detail. IMvvatd Eggleston, Junes V, hit comb Illlcj-, General Ia'W Wall ice, .Maurice Thompson and a few joungci vvriteis ircclve most specific attention. As the first format study of literary conditions and auccei'is In thu west, the work, which drivvs from its orl.rlr.il toutces for the Hut time, may be' expected to mrct with a very coulial welienne. It wlH b issued by the MaoMlllan company In tbeli st-iies of "National htudicd of American I.ctUn." With its November Issue, the Centuiy Maga zine begins a jcar of romance, during which many of the most famous, living writers of no tion will contribute to the magailne -short stories, nove's, or novelettes. The reception ac corded "Th' !3linct of Navarie," begun In the August nui , !l iu'licatci (hat the pioposcd do-J -- Af-f . pitlurc will be a popular one, ami with such nimcs to rmtjtiio with ns lludjard Kipling, Mrs. Ilutlielt, Bret llirle, Low Wallace, Weir Mitch ell, Miss Wllklns, Winston Churchill, ltowelh, James, Harris, Cubic, Stockton, I'age, Ansley, and lin Maelaren to nolo but these few the iniiilucton of (he Century aro pretty sure lo inert the lasles of oil lovers of lletlon. til "The Footsteps of a llnone," Mat t'ember ton'a new romance, which l.s to be published Immediately by I). Applcton tt Co., the author Is said to prove that the life ol today may sug gest romance, injAtcrj', Incident and adventure in ns fiselnvtlmr forms as tlio lite of the days of lance and armor. Ills new novel deals with Itusslan social and politic nl Intrigue, a field wheieln he Is fully at home. There is n charm ing love slory, which Is tarried tluough a stir ring series of adventures to a fortunate end. In "The Hosts of the Lord" Mis. Flora Annie Steel is Mill by those who litve een advance rheels of tho book lo have vviltlrn a novel which Is (ven a liner piece.- ot work thin "On the Face nl the Waters." Her lepulillon Is praellcally based on this latter book. . "The Hosts of the laud" is a illlllciitt book to do ferlbe. The Mac-MIIInn eompmy r-pcak. of It In their autumn list ,s a novel of romance and tragedy, history and comedy. Its scene Is India ami the protagonists Knailali and Hindoos. A magailne has been started to promote tin phjslcal Interests of the American baby. It Is addressed, of course, to the mother of the baby, and It gives her a lot of information calculat ed to enable her to so ralfc It that It will Krovv into a splendid nun or woman. "The Nursery" Is the name of the publication. It Is Issued by the Van Publishing company, of 251 West Fifty fourth street. New York, at 10 cents a copy, or $t n year, and Is well Illustrated and well printed. A very sedate looking stork is the ap propriate picture on the cover. The competition among the Illustrated week lies has lately been forced Into an unprecedent ed pace by P. F. Collier k Son, who have un dertaken to make their periodical the first in Its field. Every number nowadays, In addition to costly illustrations covering the pivotal cen ters of contemporary human interest, has spe cial contributions fiom men of international repute upon uppermost news themes that give to It something of the combined ihancter of a first-class newspaper and up-to-date review. Henry Norman's article on the Great Siberian railway, In the November Scrlbner's, is the re sult of a recent journey made throughout its entire length, so far as completed. The coun try traversed, with its industrial and mineral possibilities, Is described from actual observa tion and conversation with the people living along tin- route of the railway. Mr. Norman sijs that the road will cot )0O,OOO,OOO, and Is the greatest undertaking of modern times. ALWAYS BUSY. Ladies know, all admit thej know, how much they save when thej can buy Edwin C. Hurt's Shoes at $.! 50 per pail, in turns and wells, patent Ieatlnr and kid tips, button and lace. Styles they all admire. Lewis&ReHIy Established 1SSS. Shoes for all the walks of life. nerceream & Conioell Now open ifor business at oiar new store, 132 Wyo ming avenue. We are proud of our store now, aud feel justified iu doing a little talking, but we prefer to have our friends do the talking for us, A cordial invitation is ex tended to all to call and see us, MRCiMAU k (MNEIX Jewelers and Silversmiths. iM& As norve tonio Ripans Tabulos Jtalnd and strengthen tho nerves, and mmmmmwmmmmmi condition. A btwicnt of the University of Pennsylvania recently Baid; "Just prior to the closine examinations I won romuolleil in vrnrk- nsnrnd. singly liaid, as th 'coun.o is an exceptional one. T was up until two and tlueo o'clock in tho morniup; studyini; Tin's was Komt-thiug I was not us-rd to, and as a result my system wan upwf. It becamo exceedingly ditUtiiilt for mo to eoncontratn ray mind upon tho work, and o.s for renioin beriiifj, why, my head nt times seemed a vacuum. I consulted a physician, but bin prercription failed to briug relief. Then I wns advised to In' Ripnns Tannics and did so, and to my Kreat. delight wns Ixmofited immt diately. Aftor only a becond dot,o I was restored to my wonted condition of noi"l health and vigor of miud. ami pxssed my examinations successfully. I ven graduated with honors. I gladly add my testimonial to that of thousand of others who ashcrt that for stiengthening tho nerves and toiling tho yrrtom itipans Tabuleo have no peer." . M aty U atl(t oontsjalnst tin nn-asis t aecjibi In n tmnw ntlnn (without clisrt la now for aalsiet km toWiBT, Ko. II tpnic Stivtt, Mtw Tort or slag! etxtva (rea ru cuts) wUI b iat fur a?ei oral fc. FINLEY Gloves Corset; Wo cannot empha.slae too strong, tho importance of these two Items and tho prominent part they both occupy, In our general business. We take no second place In cither of these departments and our lines coin-" prise only well known makes ot recog nized merit including tho lending things as they make their appearance- Kid Gloves Everything new and desirable Is novf on our counters, and wo have no hesU tatlon In recommending anything wo show, from tho Best Dollar Glove Made to our very finest numbers. We make special mention ot ait EXTRA HEAVY PIQUU WALKING GLOVE. with PEAHIi BUTTON" .FASTENING, at $n0j that for durability and usefulness can not be excelled, Also our Centemera WASHABLE PIQUE, two clasp, at Hoja that have proven an unqualified sue cess. CorsetSo The correct thing in Corsets is, ol course, the Sfralgiit FraM, low Bmi1 of which we are showing several ol! the leading makes, from $1,00 to $f.5 each All the standard makes and istyles are represented, as usual. Special attention given to extra! sizes and styles that have to bo tnada to order and which cannot be carried in stock, 510-512 LACKAWANNA AVJENUE 66 Doe't iwear 99 If you haven't the proper office sup piles. Come In and give us a trial. We have the largest and most com plete line of office supplies in North eastern Pennsylvania. If It's a good thing, we have It. Wo make a specialty of visiting cards and monogram stationery. Reynolds Bros Stationers and Engravers, Hotel Jermyn Building. have no equal. They invigorate the more, thev (((-; Hu iHomach in Rood r- r 1 llCCO BLESS TOC.3S&II HOWE I PHfl, . r-,f .U ..ApHMBg- SJ -tf-,- M4A-lM&lbjktrV m VV,J V": r