- f , - - v- ' e V $t i"l 5 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1900. fulitUhcrl Dnllv, t:cft Sunilny liy The Trlb nno rulillalittlR Company, nt Kilty CciiU fljlontn. MW H. tllCIIAItt), Killlor. 0. V. UYAIlIJi:, HihIiicm Manager. New York Ortlcc! ISO Nowau St. ft. a. VUKl.tiAND. Bole Agent for r'gxclgnVilycrthlng, tntcrcd t the lotonicc at Scranton, Vn., Eccond-Clnm Malt Matter. When Kpare will permit, The Tribune l alwnjn (ld to print short lrtlen from Hi fflfm ' mg on current topics lmt IM rule la that thew must tip nlgncrt, lor publication, by the writers real nanioj and the condition precedent to ac ceptance Is that, nil contributions shall be sub. ect to editorial revision. SaitANTON, OCTOHEII 21, 1000. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. National. .'rcsldcnt-WILMAM McKIKM'V. Vlcc-t'rcsidcnt-Tlli:ODOnE UOOSI'.VIXT. Btate. ConBrcs.nirn-at-I..irRe (UMJSHA A. CHOW, nonKiiT ii. Focnnr.itKii. , Auditor Oencral-K. H. IIAUM'.MII'.RCIII. County. Conirrcw-WII.MAM COSNTXI.. Judgr-nCORflK M. WATSOV. bhcrlff-JOII.V II. ITM.OWS. Treasurer J. A. SCItANTON. District Atorntr-WIM.IAM R. I.BWIS. rntllonot.lr.v-.IOII rOPHLAND. Clerk of Courts-TIIOMAS r. DAS1KI.S. Iteccrder of Iwdi KMHj BONN. RfKliIrr of Willi W. K. HIXIC. ,. Jury Commissioner HOWARD D. STUiUJFA Legislature. First DMrlrt THOMAS .1. HKVNOI,TS. Second DWrlet .tOHN SCIIKUr.R, JR. Third District i:ilWAItn JAMCS, .lit. Fourth District-P. A. PIIIUllN. "If there Is any one who believes the gold standard is n 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 n Speech at Knoxville, Tenn., Deliv ered Sept. 16, 1806. "The party stands where it did in 1806 on the money question." Will iam Jennings Bryan, Zanesville, O., September 4, 1900. Captain and Crew. TIJK REPUBLICAN who ex pects lo vote for McKinley and Itoosevel: because In favor of the principles they stand for, but who for one reason or another of local nature Is Inclined to take a fall out of the Republican nomi nee for congress, is Invited to consider these facts: (1.) There is not n principle of rov ermuent represented by the head of the Republican national ticket which is not also represented by the Repub lican nominee for congress. The pres ident executes but ho does not make the laws. 'He suggests but he does not frame legislation, lie plans but it is congress which votes the money nnd authority necessary to put those plans Into effect. (?.) There is not a principle of gov ernment repiesonted by McKinley which is not opposed by the Demo cratic nominee for congress in this district and a vote for C'onry Is thcte fore a vote directly against McKin ley. Nolo the inconsistency between a vote for McKinley electors and a vote for Conry for congress. McKinley is for Protection. C'onry is for free trade. McKinley Is for s.nuud money. Corry is for free silver. McKinley is for law nnd order both at home and In the new dependencies. Conry is for Agtdnaldo and bandit rule In the Philippines and he is not very definite us to what lie is for In domestic af fairs except that he is for Conry for conejitvs. Tf McKinley Is re-elected ho should have a Republican majority In con gress lo back him up: otherwise his re-elect Ion would lm without meaning and without benellt. The voter who chooses him lo captain the ship of stale s-houlil also choose a crew that will not mutiny the moment the order is given to lilt anchor lor progress. The Times dared us lo name one sureos.sfiil independent tin plate mill. We named lliree. Now the times Is angry. Prosperity always has that ef fect on a professional calamity howler. Bryan's Deceptive Remedies. IN W15ST VIRGINIA, on Monday, Mr. liryan offered speclflo lem edies for trusts. We use the lan guage accredited to him In the published report of his v speech at Charleston: We t.iy, lii.-t, put on the flic lUt llic t rn-t-limle niiliUs, anil thin the coiior.ition . i II nut he Infilled to u.iiibliif l,i thU iimi.tiy In tuit. prkes lieu- ulillf they nil nhrond in um iclillun with Hie win Id. That will stop olor. tic ii. nnd no in.iii i.ui defend u iiinli'Ulvc IJillf lor tin; hoiKfll ni a Hint that combines In lull I lm AlimliJll iuilc. lint we du nut t Hum', Wu my, ni'U, pioildr by law th.il lieloie any (iirpoi.ithm (iigniilril In liny nl.ilc docs liii-liPnj outnlilc of Hie stun- it fch.ill tile out n lin-rw Iruiii tin fidir.il KoM'iunit'iit uud liefoiu It mil the ljcea-'i' it glial) ohmy that thcic is no water in tfio Jtoik of the ioror.illon. iy should joiwillow i cnri'iuiilliiii to watir its ttueltV farmcranjntlato the .jluc of hU farm; no la. lioriir;"i'iTaii cm inlialc the value of lili labor no merchant rm inflate the value of the rowIi un Jiu shelf; but a loiporatton can Issue watered stock ami iIkii, by ineam of monopoly, ran col lect, dividend on money ncur Unrated; Itut u dotlre not only to muce.o the water out of the, stock livfoie the license is kIhti, but nIo to iiofldo th it Lcloro the coiporuflon chrobcs in Interstate commerce it shall thow that it hat not tried to mci;u.Q)ize any branch of lmsinea or the production of any nrliile of nienlan. ills. Why ilioulil n rorporatlon bo permitted to encasi in inteiblate commerce for any puipnse cxtptabcueflcial one, and what haiiii or In. Jiute ii doiii) hy I'onipellltuj the corpoiatlon tn fhow that It Ii solni; Into Interstate com nierco for the benellt of the publlo? If you will da that and then proWde that the license will bo forfeited the moment a corpoiatlon attempts' to monopolize onv branch of business un run thut the corporation up In ono state and take fortyJuur states away from It until It shows tint 11 Is a legitimate enterprise, If tlio trusts can outsell their foreign conipotttors on foreign soil, what good would It do to put their products on tha free, list? Would It not discourage competition at home? Besides many articles made by the so-called trusts already are on tha free list and the absence of a tariff may have uffectcd the national revenue, but It has not prevented the combination' or "trust." Kn'pland, with no protective tariff, lu . W.btd fit trusts. A commission to Bryan to revise the tariff would bo likely to result In free trade altogether. To remedy a few evils lie wpttld upset the whole rubric of homo Industry, Thai was what he did In 1S91. Hryun's second remedy requiring federal license for corporations neces sitates a constitutional amendment giving congress power over corpora tions, Yet the Democrats In congress only last Juno refused to vote for that. Urynn could not count on his own par ly following him In his second remedy for trusts, unless It Is willing to re verso Itself. As to the third proposition In the Nebraska candidate's anti-trust plat form It Is sufficient to note that Its application would undo every patent In thn country, cancel every copyright and take away every property value now arising from control of special production. In n specific sense It would prevent Mr. liryan from writing a book on his "Second Lost IJattle" and pocketing $r0,000 In royalties. In only one Item Is his trust cure sound. To prevent stock watering Is highly Important; but It would hardly pay to do that by scaring enterprise altogether, which Is what Uryanlstn Implies. Mr. Bryan has appealed to the ne groes of tho South to vote to relieve their brown brethren from oppression In tho Philippines. In tho vicinity In which this last exhibition of dema gogism was made the majority of tho black men will not be allowed to vote at all. Verily, tho Nebraska orator Is becoming positively school-boyish as tho cumpalgn drags along. . American "Imperialism.'' AFOUKCAST of the yccr's work of General Leonaid Wood in Cuba as It will bo explained In dcttfil In his annual report has appeared in print. It is very In teresting as a sample of American "im perialism," which some of our fellow citizens profess to dread as applied by Judge Toft, General McArthur and their colleagues in the rhlllpplnes. Here, for example, arc some of tho things which American occupation has accomplished In Cuba: It has provided every town of con sequence with a well-equipped hospital, something unknown before. It has established numerous tempor ary asylums for orphan children and has plans laid for four permanent ones on a generous scale, two for boys and two for girls. IL has overhauled and modernized the prison system, released many hun dreds of prisoners who had been held beyond reason in confinement while awaiting trial and put a prod to tardy justice. It lias overhauled the major courts and established numerous petty or cor rectional courts where the trial Is oral and summary, with privilege of appea-1 as In our justices' courts. It will on December 1 proclaim the writ of habeas corpus. It has established 3,000 additional public schools, employing 3,600 teachers and attended by ITiO.OOO children, which number, ere the year is out, is expected to equal 230,000. Public buildings throughout the Isl and have undergone extensive repairs. Sanitary work of great importance has been carried on from one end of Cuba to the other. The two eastern prov inces In tho Island of Cuba for the first time have passed through a summer without a case of yellow fever, and in Eeneral there hns been a great Im provement In health throushout the Island. Plans in detail are now ready for advertisement for paving and sew ering In a thoroughly first-class and modern manner the city of Havana and Its suburbs, and there Is every reason to believe that In a few yeais yellow fever in Cuba can be got under the same control as now exists in Jamaica. All of the larger cities have under gone extensive street improvements. Travelers can go from one end ot Cuba to tho other -without being so licited by beggars and hunger Is ab solutely a thing of the past. A thoroughly efTiclent mail service lias been established. Public works Involving millions of dollars have been taken up nnd completed. Between COO anil 700 miles of first-class roads have been built and many hundreds ot miles have been put in repair and made passable. Bridges have been re built from one end of the island to the other, nnd roads have been re paired and reconstructed. Old lighthouses have been repaired, new ones built and new ones contract, ed for, and a complete lighthouse es tablishment has been organized. A (.'oniplete overland telegraph has been established throughout the Is luud. A most etlliient emttoms service has been established. T1k- old Spnnlsh service has been reorganized and each port supplied with boats nnd launches A revenue cutter service of six ships, five, of them being of steel construc tion, has been established. Knch principal port has a captain of tho port and harbor police, and the quar antine service Is thoroughly equipped and rigidly enforced, A largo number of the ollicers are Cubans. Many Industries have been taken up nnd are growing dally, Many modifications have been made In taxation, all with the purposo of beneuttlng tho taxpayer npd hastening tho reconstruction of the country, Immigration, especially from Spain, Is heavy. It Is probable that C0.000 will havo entered Cuba during tho present year, The flnanclul condition of tho coun try Is excellent, Tho government is entirely self-supporting nnd tho trens ury has an unencumbered balance of $1,600,000. Municipalities are gradually assuming their financial obligations and responsibilities, and relieving tho State of the earo and expense for police, sanitation, etc., which will re. suit In moro money being nvnllablo fop public works of general utility. The tobacco crop of last year was an Immense one. This year tho sugar crop will bo between C50.000 and 600,000 tons, and If tho present prices con tinue, tho money obtained by the planters will equal tho amount re ceived by the planters for their great crop of a million tons. The value of this year's crop of sugar and tfu coming tobacco crop will bo conscrvn lively $100,000,000. This docs not In clude tho very large production of cocoa, of coffee nnd various vegetables and fruits, nor docs It Include any of tho proceeds from mining and tho many other Industries. It wo can do this much for tho Cu bans In an Island we nie to yield up, what barrier Is thorp, when order Is restored, to equal or greater achieve ment In the Philippines, which are American for nit time? According to aenernl Wood, the Cubnns, ns a rule, are extremely grate ful rmd friendly to the United States. It seems that In Cuba, as In the United States, tho handful of malcontents who find fault with tho government have been malting tho most noise. Do You Want It? . DO YOU wnnt to continue the present good business condi tions, which give employ ment to nil and bettor wages than ever before paid? If so, vote for McKinley, for under his administra tion, the protective tariff and sound money principles for which the Repub lican party legislated, tho depression, tile Idleness and want of 1S93-9G have vanished. Tho country Is now more prosperous, labor Is better, employed, wages are higher than ever before. It Is reason able to expect that with a continua tion of McKlnley's policy, prosperity and employment would also continue. Just aa everybody was beginning to think that he had concluded to keep quiet, Hobson has again broken out In a defense of Admiral Sampson, which has aroused the old controversy In a way to make the admiral appear ridiculous. A mistake has evidently been made In allowing Hobson to re turn to the talking belt. Senator Tillman die of the pitchfork and shotgun for Southern negioes who attempt to vote the Republican ticket say.s that the Democratic senators were bribed to vote for the ratification of tho Paris treaty. As Bryan was busy lobbying for the ratification of that in strument, the charge suggests a host of speculations. . Control ot tho next congress by tho Republicans Is very Important. See to It that your ballot Is cast in the right way to help elect a Republican con gressman and a Republican senator. Mr. Bryan declines to credit honesty to those voters who decline to support him. He prefers to believe that the country will go to the polls and Indulge In an avalanche of ulterior motives. There will be no anxiety In this country on any of the Anglo nlllances upon tho Chinese question, so long as the open door programme prepared at AVashington is carried out. Tho fact that It is his farewell tfp poarance doubtless has something to do with nerving Mr. Brynn to the effort of twenty speeches a day. The announcement that the Ice trust had declared a quarterly dividend may partially explain where Croker got so much money to bet with. In view of recent reports from China them seems to be little excuse for al lowing tho empress dowager to die of old age. Democratic orators are willing that everything should enter the anti-trust arguments save ice and cotton. ) It Is to the credit of Spain that General Weyler is still the mostV un popular man in the kingdom. You voted for prosperity and got it. Will you now vote against It? Do you want to swap horses while crossing Prosperity's stream? Keep the mills open. MAKE YOUR CHOICE. I'lie ltipuliliuiii caudi. ;Tli! Deiuocialle laudi- dale stand tor: date stands for: 1. l'ro-peilty. 1. Calamity. 2. I'alilolNin. 'J. Plait fiuling. !l. Duly. , .t. Experiments. I. i:pauMon. , a.. Contraction. 5. Sumiil money, . fl, l'ieo sllicr. II. Pioplit'Mee fulfilled. I (1. l'alse prophediH. 7. I'ruinl-es Kept. I 7. PiomUea made, S. Jlore niarU'K I . Fewer inarl.ft, i. Payment of debts, j I). Cieatlou of debts. 111. J.mur Inl.'ii'.it. iin. Higher Interest. 1), Mole woilc. 11. Less woik, 12 Protection. I.'. I'ue trade, AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST'S REMARKS. Tlir.RK'.s a ireinhle and a shbrr, and a dark, portentous miller, that has side-stepped IIiioiikIi I lie . Itala ot these gieat United Slabs. 1'nr wc'ie up against a crUls, if (heir's truth In our adilces, and we see, athwart the future, (onus of haughty uoteu. tales. VMS, sir! Dancer, irilm and nuirliy, like an axe abnio a tiukey, bilks Just on the dim hoibon, ami Its tluilmv will not down. And unless we (top our fooling, alter while we'll Know the ruling ot the cruel, nally monarch who Is topped oft with a ciown, TWOl'1,1) bo cay to arranso It. and we'd never hao to ihango it, once the grasplnB hand of mIu mors held our country In its dulch, for the minute we suggested that ue felt thai wc hud tested Miirs and queens and wished to btop it, they would smile and 6a); "Not much!" WON'T you fee? If they'd abolish congiess, with. Us stately polish, and should overturn the statutes that control our feible laud, and I sliber when I pen It they should bounce the solemn senate, then the touutry'd feel the power ot the reckless rojol hand. Tlir.X, by some wild resolution they lould down the Constitution, and could oust each IiIkIi ollUlal In the states we rail our own. Then they'd hate m, and thej'd boss us, with a Klip on our piobosels, and beneath imperialism we would sicli and slave and groan, THUS, we know not the occasion when we'll sec the dire invasion of our rights ss frrc'boin people, be we white or black on brown, l'eiiups I, or joii, my neighbor, may be tailed to toil and labor with the scepter and the signet and the heavy golden crown. I'M opposed to sudi an outcome, but, should any vexing doubt come as to who should bear the burdens as the ruler ot the states well, should royal lightning hit me, any rojal lohc would fit me, and a crown to Kt right easy should be six-and-scttii-eighths I Josh Wink, in Baltimore American. Expert Contrast of the Nominees By President John II, Harrows, of Oliciltn Cob lege. TUP. TIHUMl'IIAXT re-eleitlon of I'rc'lileiit McKinley Is demanded on grounds of pa triotism, good sense, national honor, 1 ngree heartily with Dr. Albert Shn that Mr. MiKlnlty Is (he best equipped man In America for the presidency of the ltepuhlle. lie has galnul in public estimation, nnd grown in wisdom much after the manner ot Abraham Lincoln. tils temper is very much like that ot Lincoln, and the criticisms which lie has homo are precisely those which were made against our martyred president. Wu have already expanded! the nation Is nut of Us ahell. Wc must adapt oursehes to new responsibilities. 1 agree heartily with thoo who regard imperialism as a false lue, n bneaboo, a ghost, a meanlnglesn phantom. America Ins destroyed Imperialism In the East and West Indies. The talk about militarism Is, of course, the- sheerest nonsense, nnd known lo lie such by those wdio arc guilty of such reckless speech. Every sensible man knows that Mr. McKinley is a peare lover and peace maker, and not a dictator. He has none ot the qualities or ambitions of a Caesar. The New York Times has well said: "The man on horse back cannot keep his ear to the ground." I am In hearty sympathy with the rry, "Kour more years of the' full dinncr-pall," It was sold, "Man does not live by bread alone." Itut he must have bread or he cannot live, desus Christ made bread lot the multitudes. When the contest Is between a full dinner-pail for the working man and an empty or half-filled dinner pall, such as the Democratic administration helped to provide a fow years ago, every bene volent nnd sensible man should prefer the full dinncr-pall. I am persuaded that an empty dlnner-pall Is utterly unnecessary In America, nnd that the most emphatic condemnation should be pronunced upon those policies which heretofore have storked disaster to the worklfig men. A full dlnner-pall means much phj-slcal well-being. It means tho possibility ol comfort and happi ness at home, It means education. It means the preparation for higher and better things. I have had a warm ndmlrallon for the cour a no nnd many intellectual powers of Mr. Brian. He is a man that has kindled generous enthu sunns and no one has regretted moro deeply than that his great powers aro given to I lie Fir vice ot fabe and misleading theories. I have also regretted that dining the present campaign he has alowed himself lo Indulge In much clip-trap, which mav and does capture tho crowd, but which makes the ji.dicleiH grieve. few men In the country seem to me so poorly qualified for tho preslilcnry of the great Republic as Mr. nrjan. lis has wrong ideas, he lacks balance, and good judgment, he couches his lance ngainst almost every windmill. 1 do not believe the nation is to suffer the mispoal.able calamity and dishonor of his election America has never been so proud a name to my mind and heart as during the 1at few years. The path of national greatness and honor Is marked out plainly before us. We must con tinue tho policies which have given us prosperity nl home and have made our name a symbol of enlightenment nnd liberty to the nation of the earth. The paramount Issue is not the bogus im of imperialism. To me and to most others vilio have followed closely the facts In regard to American occupation nf the Philippines, the anti-imperialistic pamphlets belong to the tie pnrlment of comic liteiature. The veal and paramount Issue Is "Shill the ncpuhlic be deceived by false leaders, or con tinue In the presnt path of national greatness and honor?" IN REPLY TO THE TIMES. Kdilor of The Tiibunc Sir: The editor of the Scianfon Times lias something to say about a gentleman who pur porls to speak for the commeicial tiavelers, whom The Tribune dubs as "an able biisinrss man." 1 v.lll waiie The TiUninc's adjective. Mr. IMItor, I grant .von tint word able Is a mistake, nnd I will make this plain statement of fact. I am a business man, also :i eommcrital traveler. I am not a politician nor am I paid by any pcliticians or office seekers to express an opinion. I stated the situation just as 1 have found ic to be. 1 did not have u woid to say about trusts eicept indirectly, hut ns the editor of the Times has inteipreted my statements into an endorsement ot them I will say a vvotd on this Interesting subject. 1 wish to state must em phatically thatI nm not a defender of trusts', nor do 1 meet many men who are rithei among the merchants or conimeicl.il traveleis. In fail the cummciiial travelers strongly denounce them but somehow, Mr. l.'ditor, the gieat inn joiity of men I nitet do not belieic that Ml. Hi, van's election and Ibu success of the Demo cratic p.uty would lui.ig about their overthrow. You see, Mr. IMitnr, they are not as cicduinus ns the Times editor appears to be. 'I hey look upon Mr. llijan a- a man who has a very glib ti'i guo and a fan.Uul Imagination; one who talks mole than be thinks and piouifses more than he would lie able lo perforin. 'Ihey re number some of his asseitions four jears ugo when lie thought he possrsacd the gift of pmplieiy nnd piophe-ied all manner of diic eiU that would befall the country if certain policies tli.1t he outlined were not carried out, lie piovcd to be a fabc piophet then and among n great, many thinking men there is an aversion to trust him now, There are a gieat many men, Mr. IMitnr, who do not put the lesponslhilfly of the tiusls upon Piesiilent .McKinley, or eien on Mr. Haiuia, Thev may tell you lliat most of the successful tiusts were organized picWous to .McKlnley's election. Some of thee men will even quote facts nnd figures to piovo this. They -vlll tell .vim that the Stauiuiil Oil company was organ bed in 1SS2; the chessed beef combination in J8S5; the Aineilcan Tobacco company In 1800, the American Sugar Refining company and the National Tube compiny in lilt, the National Wall 1'apir company and the Consolidated Steel and Wiiu company in lb02. These men "w ill nl-o tell you that when the Republicans at tempted to legislate against trust the Democrats fui'trnted their efforts, nnd occasional- I meet a man who has something to say about the ice trusts. These are feme of tho reasons, Sir. Udllor, why men who do not believe In trusts Inien't a puficle of faith In Mr, Hiyau's assertions that he, if elected, vvoyld eiadicate these evils. And Isn't it possible that even so able a ginlleman ss the editor ot the Times may be mistaken? Arthur L. Collins. Scianton, Oct. S.1. AN ANSWER FOR MR. BRYAN. From the New Yoik Sun, "Do any of jou laboring men sale anything ot your earnings!" asked Mr. Ilrvan the other day. The comptroller of the cuncr.ey can give the Ingenuous questioner sonic information mi lids point. He has been looking at the Ogiues of the savings banks, mutual and stock, the great majority, how mi, being of the former claw. A little nosegay of statistics for the Paramount; J!KJ. JWX), Total savings de posits $l,0O7,15i),277 about ,100,000,000 Number of deposi tors 6,00.), 401 ,0,7,518 Average deposit. JJ70.M ijaif.MJ The bulk of the deposits is In the purely mutual savings banks, width hold in 000 &2,13U7t,i:iU and which held In lSflU, $.!,,. 11)0,00.1. lleie is a little "appaicnt" picpcrity of neatly $150,000,000, a gain ot almost S3 pel cult, under the iniquitous gold standaid. As illustrating Mr, lliyan's theory (hat the poor are growing pooler, it may be said that in IPS! the number of savings bank edpcultois was '.',670,133. It has almost doubled blnce then. Two billion, four bundled million! There Is aggregated wealth for ou, Mr, ilrjaii. There is plutocracy and there aro the plutocrats, "go ing on" six millions of them; ami millions luoie are on the road. And now, perhips, joii know whether the laboring man saves an thing or not. FACTS ABOUT A MUCH ABUSES OCTOPUS. From u Paper by Profcsor George Cunton. When tho Standard Oil company was organ, ind in 1871, tho prico ol very poor oil was 217-10 cents per gallon. Under the Standard Oil liubt, whkh was disbanded a little over a ,ear ago, the price was reduced from 217-10 vents a gallon to 7 cents, and the quality was infinitely improved as all consumers know. This of courco was tho result of Immense Improve ments, resulting from unlimited scientific ex. pcrimenU in the process of handling and trans- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO AN OBJECT LESSON. Tho books of the great Baldwin Locomotive Works tell i Btory of prosperity which needs no comment. The following is an official stntement of operations for nine years, tho periods of national depres sion and national prosperity Year. 'Total, No. Percent. Wages Account. No. of Men 1892 731 127 17.37 82,737,871.49 4040 1803 732 182 20.08 2,722,007.80 4301 1804 313 132 42.17 1,075,913.40 21B0 1805 401 161 37.00 1,500,137.32 2551 1800 547 280 52.83 2,077,623.88 3550 t 1807 501 205 40.91 1,887,180.47 3191 , 1808 750 348 46.00 3,033,800.89 4888 ' 1800 901 375 41.02 3,061,305.10 0330 ttann ionn nop an t n ORn nnn.nn noun 0 Partly estimated. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO porting oil, all of which would have been im possible without Imenso aggregation ol capital. The pipe line njntcni Itself could not have been developed by Individual ffort, nothing short of colossal corporation made that possible. The great competitor ot the Standard Oil company Is Russia. Since 1870, the. oil Indus try has undergone Immense development In Russia, all American methods having been copied. Tho product of the Russian Holds Is nnwr nearly seventy million barrels a year. Nothing but Hie superior economy nnd large capital and high developed management nf the Standard Oil company has prevented lttrala from supplying the American mar ket, and thus taking the benefits of that In dustry from American labor and capital. Re sides supplying the American market the Stand ard Oil company exports about one hundred mil lion gallons of oil a year, which at the present price brings over sixty millions of gold Into the country. Thus by the power of Its large capital, this concern gives employment to nearly fnrly mil lions of laborers, pays over one hundred thou sand dollars a day in wages and brings sixty millions of gold to the country a year, all ol which would be lost to this country but for the superior management and largo capital of this company. Small oil producers, such ss ex. isted before the Standard Oil company was or ganized, could not hold the American market a month against Russian competition. MERELY A STRAW. W. K. Curtis, in Chicago Record. There is no barometer ot commercial activity so accurate and reliable as the receipts at the postofflre, "for people do not buy postage stamp? and meney orders unless they i.eed them. Dull ness Is always more or less disturbed by elec tions. During the presidential campaign of K it was almost paralyzed by the uncertainty that lump; over tho financial Policy of the UnitcC Stales. In 181)2 nnd 18P8 It was the tariff which unsettled values and caused a suspension of con. tracts. Rut this jear there is so little uncer tainty ns to the results of the election In the minds of business men that the leceipls of the postofflce department not only keep up to the nvcrage, but in most cases exceed it. Duiiug the months of September nnd October in the years vihen presidents are elected there Is always a large falling off, but during last September only fourteen of the fifty principal clti"s of the country show- a decrease In receipts. The total receipts for the fifty cities showed a net in crease of $101,01:, or 5.4 per cent. CHAMP CLARK'S CHANGE OF TUNE. Champ Clark, ot Missouri, who is now going aiound Hie country berating McKinley and Mark llanna and the cunsequenccs of the Spanish war, loudly denounced them two years ago for trying to avoid a war with Spain. Speaking In the house of repicscntatives, on Jan. 20, 1898, lie tailed forth loud applause on the Democratic side with the following: "In these days of McHannaism our foreign policy is so feeble, so cringing, so cowardly, that even old and decrepit Spain insults our flag, maltreats our citizens and searches our ships with perfect impunity; and President McKinley, instead of sending men-of-war to protect our lienor, rsert our supremacy nnd teach the inso lent and impotent "Dons" a lesson (applause) they would never forget, passes the hat around nnd invites the American people to contribute alms for the starving nnd djing Cubans." (Ap plause.) Clark is a type of many. LITERARY NOTES. "The World's Work," the new- magazine edited by Walter 11. Page, of 1'orum renown, and pub lished by Doublcday. Page k Co., 84 Union Square, l.'ast. New York, lias made its initial ap pearance. It springs into the arena full fledged and well equipped to create a prominent place fro itself in public favor. In plan, size and gen cial quality it is not unlike the Ameiicaniltevicw of ltevicws, except that it i? larger, better print ed, better illustiuled and edited upon somewhat ill If ei put lines, with les scrapplness of informa tion and moro cheerful phllosuphy, When In the hands of a master even slang is cnteitaining. This is doubly true when the master has a natural sense of humor. t.'eorge Ade is a mushr of slang nnd a imtuial humorist and the consequence is that what he writes peo ple read. Some months ago ho virote tor the Chicago Itccord a series of modem fables that caught the town nnd the country, ton. They wcie afterward put into book form and sold most readily. Ihc same pioeess is now repeated in "More Fabcls in Slang," an attiacllie little volume from the press of Heibcrt S, Stone & Co., who announco the sale of 24,000 copies ere the sheets were bound and who cvptt double or treble this demand as soon ns the public awakens to the fact that as a clever manipulator of (he very latest slang Ade Is the premier genius of the hour. The tine story of a whole company of modern Monte Chilstos is to be found In Douglas White's "Yankee Millionaires in South America," a prom, inenl article in Ainsloe's for November. Take Geoige B. Cliace, "Chile's Silver King," for e ample. After having failed In his hunt foi a paving prospect In California, lie prospected In Chllo for ten years in vain. One div on old Spanish priest, a fiiend nf his, gave him a map by which he traced a silver mfne that had been lost for a bundled yoars. The mine pioved to be a bonanza, and today Chace can iliaw on the Hank of Kngland for five hundred thousand pounds. Hesldes Cluie there am about ten more Yankees who have piled lip millions In South America, but their photographs, which illus trate the tiyct, sho-v them to lie bald-headed men ot business. REPUBLICAN OBJECT LESSONS. f Montana. Peposllors, f Hanks. JS9I. 1S09, -f National D.705 ti.niS f bints and Private 1,033 1,101 Total 7,:.03 1S.WI s-. Inneaso In No. of deiosHois,, 3,818 sV Amount of Deposits, f Hanks. 1811, lb'i!). -- National f 3,21.,039 $ (1,437,-140 -f State and I'liiate 831,377 2,:U.I,1S1 Total $ 4,00.1,4311 t,,7fi0,S:M -s- Increase in diposlls ,.........? 4,Cl7,-'IS7 f -f Kansas, s- Depositors, -f Hanks. 1S9I, 1S-W. National 28,720 48,410 -f Slate and Prlwto 21,007 4&.SS') Saving 2,fll 8,5"3 Total 3-1,131 10n,u80 -f Increase In No. of depositors.. 4,77'J 4- Amount of Deposits, f Hanks. 1891. Iblifl. -f National 10,041,334 19.21S.474 btate and Private S,S1C,CJ7 1.1,4 ,CU -f Savings ,,.. &J9,1C9 16,070 -f Total $ 17,11T,1W $33,C03.101 Increase la.deposits .,,,, $ 16,437,041 4. , ''''' 0OOO0XX"COOX0000 ooooooooooooooooov NUBS OF KNOWLEDGE. New Zealand's education Is entirely secular and free. The life of an Australian nittvc rarely exceeds 60 years. Of the 3,700 Chinese In New Zealand only ?0 ro females. In 1SS0 there were 200 horses In Australia; in 1000 there are 2,000,000. On a nursery nt Brisbane Water there are nearly 100,000 e.iotie trees. Scandinavians are numerous In New Zealand, and Germans In South Australia. The largest ocean-going vessels can vojagc up the river St. Lawrence ns fir ns Montreal, over 1,000 miles from the Atlantic Ocean. Westralla Is the only Australasian colony that pays neither the members of the legislative council nor those of the legislative assembly. "British Columbia "tooth-picks" each about .1 feet square and 00 feet long Is a name given by Canadlin lumbermen to large timber baulks. The total capaolty of the boiling down, chill ing, frrezlng and meat-preserving works in New South Wales Is estimated at 10,000,000 head of sheep and cattle. The Australians eat more than double the amount of meat per head of population to that consumed by any other people, except those of the Tnlicd States. The proportion of divorces to marriages i Australia is very much higher than those i'l other countries, except Denmark, Swltrerland and the United States. The principal llvcis and streams of Tnmini.i have been stocked with the fry of I'nglish sa' lnon, brown trout, salmon trout and Loch I.cir' trout, bred in tho colony. Scotsmen nhow most favor for New Zeal mil, frlshmen nre moro attracted with (Jiieensland. while Westralia has the, greatest percentage of Ilnglish coin p. n oil with the other divisions of the island continent. ALWAYS BUSY. Ladies know, alt admit they know, bow much they save when they can buy Ecbvin C. Burt's Shoes at -J3 50 per pair, in turns and welts, patent leather and kid tips, button and lace. Styles they all admire. Lewifii&Reilly Established 1S3S. Shoes for all the walks ot life. flercereatm & Cpeeell Now open for business at our new store, 132 Wyo ming avenue. We are proud of our store now, and feel justified in 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, MERCIBEEAU & C0NN1ELL Jewelers and Silversmiths. Broker. I wish I could net hold of something that would help this distress I feel after eatii.g. Merchant. I think I have liere the very thing you want, I keep a supply for my own use and for just such cases as yours. Broker. What is it ? Merchant, A Ripans Tabule. Swallow it with a mouth fill of water, or without if you can. Not tnornlnj the Broker reported himself as under a double obligation. Not only h4 hOt relief hinuclf, but a brother broker, lo whom he exhibited lik nupply bought at th corner drug itore. had suffered from trouble of the same tort aud in bit cmo ilto it M found tbt ONE GIVES KEUEF. NLEY'S Special Sale of Waists We offer an ele gant line of New Silks, mostly in lengths of OK Waist Pattern, all exclusive designs and no du plicates. The de signs are choice, neat in effect,, and prices range from 75c to $1.75 per yard. We are also show ing a very elegant line of New Laces, Laces T!es and- - Lace 5115-512 "Don't Swear' If you haven't the proper office sup., piles. Coma in and give us a trial. We have the largest and most com plete line ot office supplies In North eastern Pennsylvania. If It's a good thlnp, we have It. Wo make a specialty of visiting cards and monogram stationery. ReynoldsBros Stationers and Kngravers, Hotel Jeimyti Building. Fancy Silks for fS"""1;".! 0URr V ' .1