... .-v :, -,r xirv 'ffOT;,'i':''" "' X,' ir M . ft:-- THIS SCRANTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER Ut 1900. PuMlahcd Dully, nppt hiimliy, by Tli i Trlli ttne Ttibllshlnjr Compiny, al fifty Centi a Montlt. l.ivv p. ntciiAni), rdiior. 0. 1'. UYXni:i;, BmlneM Manager. New York Ofllcel IJO N'avnil St. ....... n. s. vnr.i:tiM. Sole gent (or IVrelan Advci Using. Lnlcrcd it (he I'mIoIDcp t Sainton, !'., it Bccond-CbM Mall Matter. tt hen ipice will permit, Tlic Trlbwn l ly elail to print short letter fiom Hi friend licr inir on current topics, hut Mi rule li that tlice nunt bo nlftnecl, for puliHc-allon, hy the writer real namet and tho condition precedent le ae leplance li that all contributions nhall be luh Jfct to editorial revllon. SCilANTON, XOVRMnnR 11, 1W- Conscpvntlvo IIkiiWiik. which Is hr llcvcd to fiu very noarly exact, now es tlnintps McKtnlcy's iiHtrnllly on tho impulni' vote nt 72.".000: a rain of 12), m)(i over four yours nso. The olTlclul flitmi'H will not he uVnlliitilo lor ov fi nt dny. Take Notice. IT tl A VINO t'OMi: lo uiti liutlon I Imt olio J. V,. Wllllfinis, al oik.' tliiic liuhlislinf of the Scrnnton IMreetoi'y, Is at woils upon the pii-puiiitlon of ii dlrcctoty ostensibly to tsiUp tin- place of Taylor's Scrunton Dliootoi), llu- followinu fads are- Milli mlttcii for the public'? lnfoimntlon: On tin' 2lsl day of Juiuiuty. 3895. an a?ii.'ini'iit m ontcied Into hu twetm J. K. WllllnniH and Ciillmilne Williams his wife. pnrllrB of tho IlMt jiuit, anil ,T. ,Jame Taylor, paity of tho second put I, wlioieby nil right, title and InloioHt of the founcr hi all tin publlslicil dh-cctoWen of tiny city, boi ourii, township or district In any part of I,achawanna county, and copyrights and maps of all dliectoiicss in .uch county heretofoio published, togutln.". with all other ptopcity In tho directory business in this county, wore sold to All-. Taylor, !il lieiis, or assigns. A clause In that agiecment provides that neither J. K Willlnins nor Catharine Williams, his wife, will in any manner engage or become interested in the publication of any directory of any city, boiotiRh, township or district in any part of Lackawanna county for .the period of twenty-five years ftom the dato of said agreement, and that neither will aid or a&M.st In any man ner in the production or publication of any directory at, afoiesaid during said period. It was also stipulated that against any violation or this oon nact the .said patties of the flint part may be enjoined. On the Bth day of Felmuuy, lfcW, for lestnl consideration, Mr. Taylor as signed and tiansfenvd to The Tribune 7'nblMiing company all his interest) In the fotegoing contract, and wince ilit cfylte the dinctry litioivn as Tajlor's Sermitoii Directoty has been the property of The Tribune Publish ing company, with Mr. Taylor, dur ing his lifetime, seiving as manftger. l'or tho benefit of all concerned, an nuuncment ii now made that "The Tilbuno I'ubli&hing company intends to continue tho publication of the di rectories Included in the loregoinir lontraet, and therefore any contracts made by the ."aid J. i:. Williams for a lival publication in this tenllory must necessarilv be null and void. On Samuel M. Hay, assemblyman eleer liom Philadelphia's Fifth ward, having by "threats, intimidation, piomlsos and inducements" been, a.' lie alleged, persuaded to sign a pledge agreeing to vote for Quay for senator, now, under tho more pious influences of the other side, 1 evokes his pledge and asseits that he Avlll under no cir cumstances enter tho caucus of his paity. Hamuel evidently needs .1 gnai d Ian. An Important Adjudication. THE SUPREME court of the United States has an nounced that on December 17 it will hear all cases now pending before It which revolve upon the question. Does the constitu tion, automatically and Immediately, follow the flag? Tho question is of such f.ir-ieachinir and soiinus consequence iliat lime for tho most thorough preparation or an opinion must be expected to elapse be tween the conclusion of the healing and the foimal announeeiuout of the court's judgment in the premises, An opinion is hardly 10 be looked for dur ing the remaining' thieo-inoiuhs' lltu oC the pie&ent eongiess. This will thiow over to the Fifty-soventh congiess the ,bioad question of providing by legisla tion for the permanent civil govern ment of the Philippines. Fortunately such a postponement will cause no pioper interest to suffer, lloth in Porto itlco and In the Philip pines tho foundations of better adniln lstiatlon along American lines are be ing; constructed by ub'lemeu wlio, being oi);the giound, know far better than a eoflgress ;jt, Washington could wliutls icgtilred. If In the meantime conuies.s wJj2itsto sond committees to the new dej)endoicIoet to prosecute Investlga tlijtos Jndepoijdent of those which havo bctji and ate being made, so much tho betjer. There cannot be a surplus of information on tho subject. hi Ita essence the caso bofuro tlin Supremo court is this: Is tho United Stajos a fully developed nation, witli airitlui express aid Implied powers of soyetelgnty belonging to other nations, Including the powijr to hold ttoplcal territory as property, and to fit Hio laws Rol-einlug that terriVoiy to tho tenl tory'H needs, uiirestilV'ted by the con stitutional limitations Wi mining to tho union of tho foity.lvustatesV An uf flimatlve answer will niean thai con gress can proceed with itn task in tho new dependencies with I disci etlomuy power 10 iimko Hie galiiuout fit tho ma,?)! 11 neguthe answbr will mean I'ltforr that t,ho inun, tlmH Is to say, Hio t topical' man of Malay extraction and vicious .Spanish upbtingring, must bo fitted Immediately to tli a well-developed Anglo-Saxon gan nem, which means a niisflt; or that tha constltn ilop Itself must bo inner ded to allow (he freedom of action cal ed for under these now conditions. It Is u liuestion wlileli (layruen can- I not decide, lint we hnvn full con II elttite In the ability of our highest coin t tit decide If wisely and well. II Is Important to till the Mtutes tint the voiu tegistered In any one should agree with the vote aolttnliy cast. ir the Ttppuhlleans have been counted out In Kentucky, tho fact Hint limy don't heed Kentucky's electoral vote should not prevent a sentclilng and thorough ItiMUlry. If ho people or KenttieltV ate tumble to seeute u fair ballot, they should have help, High-hand "I outrage, such as Is believed to have been committed In that common wealth Inst week must ,1101 escape .lint rcbultf. othmvlM , fiee government Is dead. Army Reorganization, UNDmt TIIH law all volunteer rogimonlH now In the mili tary service, numbering about .10,000 men, and more than half of the 05,000 regulars inttMt be mustered out befoie .lune !!0 next. This would 1 educe the nrtny to about 21.000 and thrice that number of men are needed, and will for an Indefinite time, lie needed to police the Philippines alone, lo say nothing of Porto P.leo. Cuba, Hawaii, Ottatn, Alaska, our home fiontieis, seacoast defenses and peimuiieut home po-tts and forts. One plan proposed to meet this sit uation l.s Hltnply lo ftrlke out the limi tation clause In the existing statute, tvbtcli would allow I he present atiny In continue for Hie unexpired balance of ihi full tlnoe year term of enlist ment. That would derer the Inevitable day of at my teorgiinlzattnn, but pio vide only a makeshift arrangement for the inteival, and It would leave Hi" country absolutely helpless in the event of a sudden emeigericy occurring when congress was not In session The plan of the admlnitintion pro vides lor a pcininnenl organization of "i'i.OI'i men, divided into companies .of .sit men each, with discretionary authority intrusted to the piesldent to increase tlie strength as needed up to 11 maximum of 120 men in ti com pany, or 100,000 In all. The skeleton of the frmy would be permanent and the staff coips oiganizod upon the maximum basis, hi case of war the president could increase its numbetrf aeioiditig 10 circumstances without calling for special legislation by ion giess. Ho would have a tiaiucd aims' of .",0.000 men to start with, and by adding 11 few men to taoh company could in a few weeks have a fore1 of 10,000 or 75,000. or as many as In required, up to the maximum of 100, ono. It lemains to bo seen which plan congress will choote. But if the present eongieb.-". with its nanow margin of nepublican control, shall dodge, the net congress will act. Knowledge of tills f,1(i may hasten the Inevitable. AVlitt CioPer Iom in election bets lie moie than got back in the recent rise in stocks. Tiust Cioker to look out lor ills pncketboulc all the Urn". How to Down Tammany. ON THE HASrSs of the Ury.111 ote tin- duposltijii of T.ini ninnv fiom couliol of Ciieater Now 'oi k will le quiio the conversion of at k.ist i.'i.oOO Tiryanites. Rut this is bv no means a safe basis of calculation. In light ing for Bryan on a free silver platform Cioker was pulling up stream, against 11 strong cm lent, hi fighting to con tinue the w Ide op,'ii principle of in dulged vice a aq.ilnsr. the pioposltion of a refoimed city lie will be going with the cm 1 cut of majoilty impulse and desiie and It will take Napoleonic generalship with th" most thoiough union of his adveis.u its to ell'ect his defeat. It is vlonr tiom the ilguics of both last week and tlnee ycais ago that a Republican, run as such, cannot be elected mayor of New York against an undivided Tammany vote. Nor is tho election of a gold Eeniocrat of the silk stocking type who is without tdron friends and icsouices within the Tam many told within 1 lingo of possibility. Bird Color will not do, (or he coull not command the complete Republi can strength and the effect of his nom ination upon the Tammany following: would be like the waving of u icd flag In front of a bull. In this view of the matter a - low held by most of the bettor liifoimed piactlcal politicians who are figuring on tho possibilities oV Tammany's ovrtluow no better suggestion has been made than that all parties and gioups of citizens opposed to Tam- nianv unite on a man like John T). Ctlmniins, a gold Democrat who le fiibcd to .swallow ltryanlsm and lmd tho courage to openly advocate the election of McKinley hut who know.? Tammany like it book, lias as many peisonal friends among Its member ship as Cioker himself, is In hBh es teem among Hie niajoilty of voteis In the tenement districts, commands the undivided lospoet of the business and financial elements and in peisonal character is above ropioacli. Such a nomination would undercut Tammany in Its own strongholds and almost certainly lend to victory. The chaigo is .specifically and dlieet Iv made in tho Philadelphia Press that the defeat In tho last congiess of tho bill to collect abuses In second class mail matter, 11 measure calculated to save for I ho government ?JO,000,000 a year now unjustly tinned Into private pockets, was the work of lobbyists. Coining fiom a journal in which the postinuHler geneial hinibolf is Inter ested, this usseillon has moie than or dinary weight. The announcement Is made Hut tho postal war against bo gus trade Journals rind tinshy peiiodl cnls, which lias been in progress since JMIO, will be kept up; and it is to be hoped that Ibis Hiuo it will icglsder u Ictoiy. Rectification of Indefensible abuses in second class mall would per mit penny letter postage, or a t ry material lucicaso in rural freo delivery. Public intei est calls loudly for postal refoim. - Repiesuntallvc ditchings, of Alls sU'slppl, contt Unites the following as tho proper busls of Democratic ie oiganlzation: "Dtop fiee silver, chop (ublonlsm, diop tho cry of govern ment by Injunction, drop the cry of Imperialism rind militarism, drop nt! ilLscti'isloiis nbtnit Hie Philippines tin III peace has been lestored, drop np penis to tin- pnoslons and prejudices of lite Idle and discontented, ttovlvu the fundamental question of tnsatton, teach the Democratic iloetrlnn that people iiinnot be made tleli by taxing litem, assail the favoritism .and wroiiRS of a high piolcctlvo tariff, Miiml for tlie control of trusts and combines by methods not oppressive, demand en lirgemeiit of the power of the Inter flato commerce commission and tha liberal Improvement of harbors, and Insist nit toenl self-government, and lei the next presidential candidate re main at homo dining the campaign." In other words, on ltal Issues revert from fieo silver lo freo trade. The mill will never run with Hie wnt'r that has passed, Hy the time the enemies of Hie Powois mid the victims of the wrath of the Empress Dowager have all been punished It may be necessary to ad vertise for 1 eci ults for the civil and military service in China. Don Cnilo.s states that the recent Carllst uprising In Spain was not aii Hioilzod by him. Don Carlos Is very much In the position of many Ameri can politicians who have difficulty In (ontrolllng thole friends. The fact that the sheriff assisted In cloing many of the features of the Purls Exposition, shows that even the business of a fakir Is not carried on without some risks, Sena lor Wellington, of Maiylaud, doubtless expel iences sensations akin to thi'nc of 11 man whoe air ship has been a failure. The question as to whether Mr. Bonn will run again or not Is 10 gaided with glowing indifference. Tho Pails Exposition appears to have experienced a. drizzling finish. Aineiic.i seems to be Spain's best f 1 lend Just now. MR, GhOATE ON UNGOLN l inn I111I11I liom I'.iki' 1.1 -Ijwij, .uti ictril the uttention r,t lha whole (uti.trj. Mmoln's powerful jruiiant-, curled c '.'miction cur.uWicrt. His muul iuu.I'i.' .n Ihuiouitlily jioiimiI hii c nreciriH e was bliired lo the quid.. Pules slavery v.ii wrong-, notli in,; was wiuntr. Was tach mm, of whateui iuIol, intltlecl in the frails u( his own lihoi, or iiiulil im 111 111 lle in iiilu luxury t the we.it n( nnothei's liiow. whosi- skin wus (Urkcrt lie w.is an Ininlicit hihem in that nrlucinlc of the Didaulioli of InJein'Milence thai ull mill .lie ( sail with iiiIjIii Inilleiuble ilnlits the equal liglits In lifi, lilit'ily ami the pmtuil 01 luppl m. On Ihii ilmtriiie he -,t iKeU his 1 ise anil i.uifil it Uncle Tom's Cabin. Ilitiiuir the entiio ilei.Kle, fiom 18S0 lo Its), the ablution of the -Ineiy question was at the hoiliui; imuit, mill ients which have btioiuo lihtouoal lontlnuillv inilnaleil the near approadi nt tlie mriuhiliili:' stnun. Xo ioonr hail tiir iuiiiiioliil-o ails of lbotl re-ailteil in a tcmpoi.il) peuie, wlii.li vi,houV Mill iiiibl he lltul .111J pupetual, thin ne outlue.iKs 1.1111c. 'I lie foici iile carrjinir ,iw iv of luHhe slics by feiler.il tioop', liom HiMou aKitatiU that aneiiut httoni;' hohl of fuciKiin In its louiiiLitiun-. The pillill iMlioii el "l nil,. Tmn's I'ahin," uliicli truly expiMil the Iriehtful puviihilitiis of the slave )Mfiii; tlie iuKIim attimpts hv folic ami Iriiuil to ctahlinh it in Kui.i-i .iKiiua the will of the vaii inajoritv of Ihe settlers; the beating of stuimci in the .sinate ihauibci for wjmIs spoken In ilibite; Ihe DiiiI Stott ilciisiou in the Su picme iiuirt. which uiaile tlie nation iralie that Ihe sluo iiowir hiil ot last readied the foun tain of feilii.il iii-tic; ami finally the execu tion ot .lolin lliown. for his wild 1 lid into Vh Kiuii, lo imltc- tlie slavii to rally to the stand aid of fii'iiluiii whldi he untuiled; all these et tils tiutl to llhi'.trute nnd lonthm Lincoln's c cute ntinii (hat tlie nitiim lould not piTin.1 miitl) lontlntie halt sliw and lnlt free, hut must hi'cotiu' all one thins or ull the other. Winn John ISiown hy under scntiiuc of death, he ditl.llid thit linn' he u.id miii that sl.uciy niU"t he wipul out In blood; hut licit her he nor Ids execution ft dreamt that within four years .1 million sohlliis would Iji? iiiaiddnir ucnws the K'liiitn tin' its final evtiipatinn, lo the inu-iu of the w ii' (niiir ot tlie srcot lontlirl ".lohn Uiowu'n body lies a uniiilihiiiiK in the ai.iM'. llul Ids soul is til u hill on." nd now, at the aj;e ot lifl-oiie -Ibis iliild of the ililiiii(s. I hi.-, farm lahniei, lall-splitter, llit'hoitinin tills rune) 01, lawioi, ornlnr, ulisiiuii 1 ml iMtiii.l found hiinsilf elcitid by the KiiMt pari) whlih wa-, pledeed to prpMo'i it all lia?ati!s the further pMcibioii of Mcerv. a tlie ihlif in isrlstrntr ljf d,n 11 Public, bound In iiii out that pin pose, tn be the leader and mli 1 of the tiitiou In its most tninK hour. 'Iltrue who biliie lint theie Is a lhlnir Pio Idiiui' that rxeiiubs and londiuts the aliahs of iiiilims, find in the elevation ot this plain man in this etinoidliiai' tti linn- and In 1I1U unit duty whlili he so (111) di-cltaisid. n slinil in ileal Inn of their flitli. lie wa-. limn KiiMl, is diatlnauished fiom lho-e v.h.i ,i(hi(i' niialiiiss 01 have it tlnui upon iIkiii, and his Inhiiiut cipiulty, inentil, iiinul mid pli)ni(ul, hivliiit been ircoiiltul liv the edn. ( itcd intellUemi of 11 fuo people, thcV happily ilio-c liim fur tlitii iiilei in a diy of deadly peill, Lasting Impression. H Is now foity )i.us siine I titUt -aw and IiimiiI l-t.iliun f J 111 ol 11. but Ihe iinpicslou uliicli lie lui on my inind is inillaccable. Alter his i,ipat suuissia in the west I to mine tu New Voik lo niahe a poltlial .idihess. c apH'aied In every sin-e is the wind lllu one of tin- plain ei'ile anion,' whom he lovid to be lonntcd, At thst slvtlic hue wis nothing iuipiiMiip or iinpoiiiiir about him iMcpt that his incut ttat. uie siiitdul him out fiom Ihe iiowdj iU irothe, hung avvhvvaiilly on Ids kUiu (runic, his faci v.is of u d.ith pullui. without the .slightest tliiKe ot mini; his senupil and iiiiriil featmis lime the fuiruwrt of lurdsliip and atlUKule; Ids dcip. mt c)es hxlu'd Mid and .inxious; hN coiuitc iiaiiui in icposu gave little evidence of that biuin p,mir wlilih had raised him liom the loivtst to ihe highest ktatlou nmnuu; ids rouuti.vnien; as liu lulked 10 mi' hi'fuie the nue'tlng, he Miliiid III al 1 in-, villi thai son of uppiehen. Ion whlih 11 viiuiur man iiiIkIiI ted bitoie pre .-tiillui; liliihi'lt to a new and stiaiikit uuuiinie, vilio'c uitlial ill.po-illon lie iluaded. It was 11 kicat .luillt 111 e, including all Ihe noted menall the h.uncil and lultuiiil ot his paity in New Ymh; riltoi!., iliiKvmcu, statesiiun, lavv)em, nicrihanls, iilthu, 'liny aii nil unions to i(.(r him. His fame as u iovfirful ppeiKci had pie (eihd him, and i.);u'i'iatid iiituor of Ids wit the vviiut foiei miner of tin oiutor had leaiheil llu can, Whin Ml. Ilijunt presented him, on the Illicit pl.itfoiiu of the Cooper Institute, a vast h.i i,t mien tiptuinul laces uieetcd him, full of luii'iie iminsltv In mo whit (his nnle child of the peojile was like, lie w.i i'iiial to the ocen Ion, Win 11 he K.he ho was traiutorrned; his )e ldiidleil, his voice r.uiir, Ids luce kliune and M'liiiul In llicht up the whole assembly, l'or an hour and a hill he In hi Ids audience in the ho), low of Ids hand, Ills slvlc n spvuh untl maie iii-i of ddlvery wise seveidy i.inpl", What luivvill tailed "Ihe uianil fclmpliej of the lllhh" Willi which he wa tn l.uiilllai, weie ie. th olid in Ida ilUioiiisc, wm, no ulicmpt at 01, iiiililiut HI llulnili, without paiade 01 pielinie, ho hiiiI.i stiaiuhl to the point if an) lame cn. KlIllilC the tilliild (loquriue 01 the rihahhy of (he fioutii.1, llu) uiiut have Ijciii statlKd ul the cuiiifl mid slniiTii piult) ol Ids uitciauies. It wj.i uuivdlous lo see how this uututoird nun, bt nine self'dlsdpllne, nvl the cli.wti'iiliiB of lis own stililt, hul niiturimii ull iiisielilcioiw mis, uiid iound his wuv lo the xMiichtir und limslli nf absolute tluiplldl), Mnsteiiy Logic. lie spoke upon (he theme whlih ho had nu, tcied ho tlioiuiiclily, lie ilcuionvtiatdl b) lopjous liUloilcal piuula and ma.ttrly Inic, that die fjtlnis tthu ueated thu lotutltullon, in older to toim a nun e iKihu union, to cslublish Jus Iki, and to secure tho tdnsniKS "' libert) to thiiusdicji aid link posleiit), iulended 10 eui H)et the leiK'ul govminient to iicludu tlavrry from the Iciiltorles. In the Kindliest spirit, he' protested uiwlnst the nvovvid threat of thu Mnth em statu to dcutrov Ihe Union If, In order to wiiue freedom In those vast rciiloiu, out of whlih future state wile to Iki cauul, .1 ltcimb. lliun piesldent wire dieted, lie iln.nl with an ainieal to hU uudleiiie. sDokui vvllli all llm tho ol his Jion-i'd and kindling conscience, with a full nulpoiirlliir el Ills love cf Jtuttcc nnd 111). J-rtji lo Inaliitan their poiltlcal purpoe nn tlmt lolly ami ttniilUMcc Iwiic ot rlglil ami wronie Wlilrlt ulonc muld Jimtllv It, and not to lie In tliiildjled from their IiIkIi icwlve ami muni duly liy any tlitMM ot UHliiitloii lo tlia ro criuncni or tit tulti lo tlnmelves. lie ion tlnded Willi this telllnir dontence. which drove Ihe whole aiRtmirnt honle to all our licarln: "ia-t us luve faith lint light in ii.es nilght, uiid in tlutl fnitli let us lo Ihe end due lo do urn duty n we understand 11." Unit 'night the Bicul hill, and the lierl ilnV the whole elly, rung with iIcHkIiIciI appliame and roiigintulatlons. and lie who had come n a "Hunger departed with the hinrds of a great triumph. Al.lt In five j cats from that pxitltng night, t aw him ngiiln, fur tlic lt time, In (lift rune Ity, home In M roffln Itiroiiglt Its draped ilrecl. With team and lamentations a heart iirokcu people aunmpunlcil him from Washing ton, the Kenc of Ids inailvnlnm, lo his lat rest. Ing plice In the joung clly of the vvef, where he worked Ida way lo fame. , A Desperate Flight. Never was a ikvv" inter In a mote desperate plight than Lincoln when he entered office nil (he 4th of March, ISM, four months after Ills clcillon, and look his onth lo mippoit the. Ion ulltutloti of H12 Union. The Intervening time had been hwdly inplovcil by the oiilher ttates In c.ur)iiig oul their threat ol disunion In Ihe event of Ida election. As won as that fact was ascertained, seven of them hail neiedcd and had aelml upon tlir fori", aimiials, navy yard! and ulhcr public property of the United Hlatia vvllli. In (Itch boundaries', anil were making rwry prepiratlon for wai. In Hie meantime tho ie tiring piT'ldent, who hud been elected by the slave power, and who thought Ihe acceding Mates could not lawfully he coerced, nail done absolutely nothing. Lincoln found himself, by constitution, comniander-ln'Chlef of the atiny and navy of the United Stntcs, but with only 11 rent liatit of either nt hand. Kadi was to be cieated 011 ,1 great scale out of the unknown reaotmn of 11 liutlon mil lied in war. In his mild and conciliatory Inaiigiual address, while appealing to the seceding state lo return lo their allegitme, lie avowed his purpose to keep Ihe solemn oath he had taken that day, to liv tint, the laws of the ITnlon were faithfully exfeiiti'd, and to ire the tioops to mover the foils. navT yatds and other pioiiH-ty belonging to the ifiiv eminent. II I" probible. however, that neither (.Ide nctuilly rcallreil that war vvaa it'iv halite, mid tlial the other was determined to fight, until the ujsaiiU on Kmt Sumter pie tented the south as the flr't aggressor and roused the ninth lo ue eiery possible resource fo maintain tlic government and the imperilled I'nion, and to vlndleili' the supremacy of the Hag over even' huh of the leirltory of flic United States. The fact thai Lincoln' llrat proclamation (nihil for only "lOW troops, to serve for three month", show's how inailcqnatc was even his idea of what the future had in atoie. Ilut, from that inomint Lincoln and his loval supporter never filtircd in theh piiipntc. llicy Knew- they eould win. that It was their duty (0 win. and tii.it for America Ihe whole hope of the fntuie depended upon their winning, for now by the. ails of the sciediner slates the issue of the elec tion to s-puire or prevent Ihe extension of sluv. rrv stood tiaiisfomieil into a atrugglc to pre asvu or 10 destroy the I'nion, Four Year Contest. We 1 iniiol lollovv this iVutcsl. Vim Know its Rlganliu piipoitlons; that it lasted four .vears Instead ot liner moniis) that in Its piogrcss In slead ot 7j,00 1111 Ii, more than 2,flOD,uiW Were enrolled on the aide of the government alone; that the aggregate cost and loss to the nation iippicTiinated lo l,0ti(l,00fl,(ioi) sterling, and that no less than ::0o,nnn brave unci pinions lives vveie saci Diced on cadi side, lllstoty has refold ed how Lincoln bole himself during these four iiightful vears; that he was the real president, the lesiMinsihle and jetnal head of the govern ment through ,t alt; that tic listened to all ad vice, heard all parties, and then, alvva.vs real izing his responsibility to God and to tho na tion, decided every 310.1t executive question for himself. 1 1 in absolute honesty had heroine pro virhiul long before le was piesldent. "Honest Abe Lincoln" was the name by wlilih he had been Kuov n for.uars. Ilia eviry act attested it. In all the grandeur nt the vast power that he wielded, lie never ceased tn be one of the plain people as he aluav called them, never lost or impulied ins perfect sympathy with thvin, wus al wavs in perfect tomh vvth them and open ro their appeals; and here lay the very Heciet ot Ida pusonillty and of hi. power, for the people in linn gave him their absolute ronlhlenee. Ili.s t outage, his fortitude, his patience. Ids hopeful-lie-", vveie solely tried hut never exhausted. lie was true as sled lo his generals, hul had fiequenl occasion tn change them, as lie found them inideipiate. 'lids sciious and painful duty listed wholly on him. and waa perhaps his most important function as commander-in-chief: hut when, at lat, he rciognicd in Central Giant the master of the situation, the man who could and would bring the war to t tiiumphant end, 1 e gave it all over tn him, and upheld him with all his might. Amid ull tho picssuie and distress that the liuidens of oflice brought upon him, his unfailing sense of humor saved hini probably it made it possible for him to live under the huideii. He had atwavs been the aie.it stor.v teller nt the we-,1, and he used and cultivated this faculty to idleve the weight of the loicl he hole It enabled him to keep the wondciful leeoid of never having lost his temper, no nutlet what agony he had to liear. A whole night lulirlit be spent in ici minting the stoma of his wit, humor, and harmless sarcasm. Hut I will tee.ill only two of his sivings, boih about Oe11cr.1l Crant. who alw.i)s found plenty of enemies and allies to uige the picsidpi.t lo oust him from Ids mill' iiiitnel. One, I am snip, will interest all Scotch men. They repented with niilidnus intent the gossii) that Grant drink. "What does he drink V .isked Lliiioln. "Whiskej" was, of couisc, Ihe ansvvei : doubtless )nu "can Rtiis-. th, bund. "Well," said the president, "lust find nufvvhit pstllcului kind he uses and I'll send .1 baud to pitch of iiiv other epiipi iR" The other must be as pleasing to the Tliitisli ,m to the AuiPiicau ear. When piesnprl again on oilier mounds to gel lid of Giant, he dediied, "f cin't spjic tint man, he fights." Tender-Hearted to a Fault. He was tendei hearted to a fault, and uever iiiuld lesist the appeals of wives and inothcm of soldiciH who had got into trouble and weie mi In sentence of death fot t licit olleiwes. His sec ictaiy of wui and othir oflltials complained that they never lould got. deserters shot. As surely as the vvoiuen of the culprit's family could get at him. lie iilu.i)s gave war. Certainly )ou will all appitditc Ins exquisite s)mpathv with the suffering lelativis of those who had (alien in battle. His heart bled with thcltst. Never was theie ti mni' gentle and lender utterance than Ids letter, to a mother who had given all her sons to lnr eountiy. wiitteu at a time- whin thu tuigel of death had visited almost pvcrv house hold in tlie land, and was alicudv hoveling over lil tit. "1 have been shown," he savs, "In the ill of the war department 11 statement that )Oii .in itio mother of five sons who had died gloilously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be jny words of mine which should attempt to beguile )ou from )our grief for a lass so oveiw-helmlng but I cannot refrain fiom tin. deling vou the consolation which may lie found In tho thanks of the icpuhlic they died to save. I piay that our Hiaveiily Father may assuage the anguish of your beivaveuunt and leave .vmi only the cherished memory of tho loved ami the lost, ami the solemn pride that mast he joins to li.no laid so cosily a sacrifice upon the altar of ficedoui," llm illy could )oui tlhistilouH iiov eieign, from the depths of her queenly and wo manly heait, have spoken woids more touching and tcmlci to soothe the stricken mothers of her own huhllcis, 'the cmuiicipillou pioclsmution, witli whlih .Mr. Lincoln delighted the inuntiy and the world on the first of .latin ir), ISM, will doubtless se nile foi him a foremost pluic in lii.toiy .uuong Hie phllinthiopUis und benefuctors ot the ruie, as il icscucd, from h ipdess und degrvllng slut eiy. so inuny millions of Ids (ellovv beings de. si tlhed in the law and existing in fact .is "chat. aiU'peisoual, in the hand of (heir owners and posspssois, 10 all Intents, roiislrui lions uid put posps whatsoever," iturdy does the happy foi. tune conn: 10 0110 man to undir such a sen ho ro Ills kind tn prodiim liheity hrout;hout the land unto all tho inhibit ant theicof, Ideas ivtle tho vvoild and uevii was theie a moie signal instance of this tiiuniph of an idea than heie. William l.lo)d Gaitlson, who thirty .vcais before had bcitnn his inuadu for tha uholltlou ot slaver), and hud livrd to see lids glorious and unexpected consilium itlon of He liopelesu cause to wlilih he had devoted Ills life well ilescilhed the proclamation us a "great his toric event, sublime in its magnitude, moment, oas nnd beneficent In Its furrrucldlis rouse, uuiiiifd, and eminent I) Just und tight alike tn Ihe oppicsoi and Hie oppressed." First Opinion of Slavery. Lincoln had been alwas heart and oul op posed to blavciy, Tradition sa)u that 011 tho ttlp of the flat boat to .Sew Oilcans, I in fouued Ids (list opinion of uluveiy at the dlght ot in-gioes chained und seomged, and Hut thtn and them the Jiuu ccnlcri'd Into M) soul, .No hoy could glow tu manhood in lliotu ila.vs a a pour wlillo in Iventuckv and Indiana, in close contact with Lively ot in its udghboihood, vvitliout a glow, ing cuiisdousiitss of it. I'lightliig ellects 011 iree labor, u well ul its frightful injustice am) ciuelty. In the Icabluluic ul Illinois, w litre the publlu sentiment was all fur upholding the in (dilution end violently ufuinst every inovimcnt fur its abolition or lestriitiou, upon the passage of icsoluloni to that elh'ct, lie hid the com. ago with one companion lo put on record hit pro. le.t ''believing that the limltutloii of slavery It founded both in injustice and bad policy." So gnat demonstration of courage, )ou will suy, but Ilut was at a time when Oaulson, for his iboli. tiou utterances, had been dragged by an angry mob through the streets of BiMton witli a rope aiound hi body, and In the veiy )cur thai Loveioy in the luuit slate of Illinois was .lain by ilotn wlllc ddrudliig hU press, fiom which he hud printed antislevary appeals In congirsj, lie brought In u bill for gradual abolition in the District of Columbia, with com pensation to tho owners, 'for until they raited reasonable hands against the life of the nitron, lie aluajs muliiluiued thut the properly of tho sluvp-holders into which they had lome by two centuries ordesccnt, without fault on their part, ought not lo he taken away Irotn them without Just rotniMMwatlon. He Used lo say Hut, imp way or another, he had Voted fotlV'tuo times for tho Wllmot proviso, which Mr, Wllmot, ut Prntisjlvanta, Inovcd it an addition In ever) bill Which affected L'nlted Slates terrllnrv"tliit fieUlier slavery lior Invnlunlaiy servltudp ahull ever prist in any palt of thy said Icrrltoi)'' and it Is evident that his tomlemniitloii of Ihe svs Jem, on moral grounds its a nlmo agilnsl the human rate, and on political mounds an u can ter what was sapping the vitals nf the tuition, iitid must master Its whole being or lie llsetl Mllrpaled, grew steadily upon him until it mini' hulled in Ids great fpeeches In Ihe Illinois de bate. Effect of Lincoln's Election. Hy Hip hum election of Lincoln to die ptest deiiey, the further extension id slivcrv Into the territories was lendered toictcr Impossible vox Oonull Vox del. Itevntutloh. it..tss ,. I,.,, tiuntil. and when founded on a great moral sentiment Stirling Hip heait nt an Indignant people, their edicts arc irresistible and final. Had Ihe stave power acquiesced In that election, had the south ern states remained under the constitution and within Hip favorite Institution, linmoinl os it was, blighting and fatal as II was, might have endured for another centui). The great parlv thai hid elected him, imtltcrablv determined against Its extension, was nevertheless pledged not to Intcifcre with ll rontiininiie In thu statu where It already exMrd. Ot coursi'. when new regions were foievei' dosed against II, from Its very nature It must have lieguii lo shrink and lo dwindle, and pioluhly gradual and compcimted emancipation, which appealed very slronglv lo the new president's sensp of Justice and exped iency, would III the progress of lime, bv a ie veislnn to the ideas of Ihe founders! of Ihe to public, tiavp found i, sale outlet for both mas ters and slaves. Ilut whom the gods wish to de. stroy they first nnkc mad, and when seven stales, utloivvards Itttieuscd to eleven, openly seceded from Hip Union, when thev decl.itcd and begun vvir upon the ttttlnn, and challenged lis mighty (lower to the disperito and protracted tiuggle for lis life, aril tor His maintenance of Its authority us a nation over Its lenllmy, they gave to Lincoln und to fiectlom the sublime op. portunlt) ot history. In his first Inaugural addiess, when ,v jet tml a drop of pieilous blood had been shed, vvhils lie held out tn them the olive tiranch in one lund. In the other lie presented the ginrunlcpj of the constitution, and after reciting the em phatic ifsoltitlon of the convention that nomi nated him, tint tlie maintenance Inviolate of the rlphta of the stales, and especially "the right ot each slate to order and control its own domestic institutions according to Its own judgment ex dusivcly. Is essential lo that balance of power on vvhhh the perfection ami endurance of our political f.itnlo depend." he teiteiatcd this sen timent nnd dcclaied with no mental reservation, "that nil the ptoleition whlih, consistently with Ihe roiistittitliin and the laws can he given to ull the states when lawfully detnanded for what evei cause will be as chert full) given tn one sec tion as to unothei." Tables Turned. Vvbeii, however, these magnanimous o pi lines for peace und minion were rejected; when tlic seceding klatcs defied tlie constitution and every claue and principle' of it; when they persisted in stt)ing out of the Union fiom which they had seceded, and pi ot ceded to eaive out of its tcniloiy a new und hostile; empire based nn slavery: when they flew at the throat of tho na tion and plunged it into the bloodiest war of the nineteenth centmv the tables wcic turned, and the belief gradually came to the mind of the president that if the rebellion was not soon sub dued by forcp of arms, if the war must lie fought out to the bittpr end, then to icuih that end the salvation of the nation itself might ie qulie the destruction of slavery wherever It ex isted; that it the war wuk to continue on one side for disunion, lor no other puipose tli.m to picerve slavery, it must continue on the other side for the Union to destrov slaveiy. As he said, "Kvents contiol lite; t cannot con trol events," and as the dreadful war piouressed, and hpcaine more deadly and dangerous the un alterable conviction wus forced u(ion him that, in order that the frightful saciifice of life am! trcastiie on both sides might not bo all in vain, it hud become his duty as c-omtnaniler-ln chief of Hio ainiv, as ,1 neicssaiy wai measure, to strike a blew- at the rebellion which, all others falling, would incvitihly lend to its annihilation, by annihilating the very thing for which it was contending. And so. at list, when in ills judgment, the indispensable necessity had come, lie struck the fatal blow, und signed the proclamation which bus made ids name immortal. By it, the presi dent, as commander-in-chief in time of actual erned rebellion, and as a fit and necessary war measure for suppicssing the rebellion, proclaimed all persons held as slaves in the states und parts of states then In rebellion tn be thenceforward free, and dcclaied tint the executive, with the r.rinv and navy, would lecognb-e and maintain their freedom. Great Responsibilities. In tlie other great steps of the government, which led to the tiiumphant piosecution of the war, he necessarily shaiecl the icsponsibility and the ci edit with the gieat statesmen who stu)cd up his hands in Ids cabinet with Seward, Chase and Stanton and the test, and with his generals and admiials, his soldiers and sailors hut this gieat act waa absolutely lis own. The concep lion and execution were exclusively his. He laid it before ids cabinet as a measure cm which his mind wus made up and could not be changed, asking them only for suggestions as to details. He chose the time and the circumstances under which the cnianeip.it ion should be proclaimed and when it should take cltect, It came not un hour to soon; hut public opin ion in thp north would not have sustained it earlier. In the first eighteen months of the war its ravages had extended from the Atlantic lo beyond the .Mississippi. Jlany victories in the west had teen bal.inicd and paialyzed by inic lion and disistcis in Vilginia, onl) partially ie deemed hv the bloody and indecisive battle of Antletini; a icactlon hud set in from the gen eral tntlivsiuain which hud swept tho northern stule, utter the usiult upon Sumter. It could nor truly be slid tint thev hid lost heart, but fiction vv is tulslng Its head. Heard thiough the hud like the blast of a bugle, the proclamation allied the pitilotisni of Hie eountiy to lush saciifici's and renewed aido. It was a slop tint could not be revoked. It icllevcd the con science of the mtion from un incubus thai bait oppressed it fiom Its birth. The United States vveie rescued fiom the false predicament in which they hid been from the beginning, ,'in.l (he gieat popular heart leaped with new- enthusiasm for "Liberty mid Union, henceforth and forever, one nnd iuscpaiablc." It hinught not only moral but miterial support to Hie cause of the gov ernment, fin within two years rjO.UOO coloied ttnops weie enlisted In the military service and following the nation il thg, suppoitcd by nil Ihe lovuity ot tlie noun, unti lea ny us cnoiccst spirits. One mother said, when her ton wus of feied the rominand of the first colored legiment, "If he accepts It I shall be us proud us if I had heard Unit lie wus bhot," He was shot head ing a gallant charge of his regiment. The Con federates replied to a request of his friends for Ids hodv that they "had bulled him under :i layer ot Ids ulggeis"; but the mother has lived 10 enjoy thirty-six years of his gtoiy, and Uo. ton lias elected Us noblest monument In his memoiy. Effect of Froclamation. '1 lie- clfcct 01 tin.- piodamatioii upon the ac tual pingicss of the wur was not lininediitc, but wherever the Kodeiul armies advanced they tar ried fiiedom with tlifin, and when the summer i.imu iound the ucvf spirit ami foiec which had animated the heait ot the government and peo ple were manifest. In the first week of July, the decisive battle of (jelt)sburg tinned the tide of wai, and the full 01 Vieksbiug made the gieat ilvei flee from its source to the gulf. On t'oicljn nations the liillucnce of the pioila liutlon und of these new victories was of greit iinnoilance. In those days, when there was no 1 able, it wus not easy for foielgu obscrvirj to uppreclule whit wus leally going on; they could lint see deaily the Hue state of anuiiF, as in tlic )ut )euis of the nineteenth tcutuiy we have been uble, by our ncv dectiic vision, to vvateii everv event ut the antipodes and observe, its 1 fleet. 'I lie rebel cmlssailes, sent over to solicit liitciventtou, spared no pains to iinprens upon the minds nt public and pilvate men and upon llm piess their cwn views of the thaiucter of I lie contest, The piospcctu of Hie- t'onfedcruiy were alvsU)S better ahroid than al home. The stock nuikets of tlie world gambled 11(1011 its chances, and its bonds at one time weie In high favor, Spell ideas us thi.e were seriously hi Id; thai the north wus fighting for emplie, unci the south for independence! that the southern -tales, in stead of being tho grossest obligurchies, essen tlally des(Ktisius, founded on the right of one man to appropriate the fruit of other men's toil and to exclude them from equal rights, were leal irpiihllrs, feebler lo be sure tuu their northern rivals, Luc icpicscntlug the same idea of freedom, und that tho mighty strength n the nation wa Udug put forth to cru'h Hum; that .lefirisoii Puvis and thu southern leadeis had mated a nation; tint the lepuliliiaii experiment hud failed, unci tho Union had ceased to exist, Ilut lbs eiuwnlng uigi'iucut to Ionian minds was Hal it wus an utter liiipo.-slbllltj for tho gov ernment to Win in Hie inntestt thai thu success ot the soul hem stiles, so far us sepuiutlon wus toncrimd, wus as certain us any event .vet fu tut.) and contingent could be; Hut the subjugu. Hon of the south by the north, even If II could he ncromplUlied, would piovi- a calamity lo thci United States und the world, uud ispedull) calamitous lo tho negro uie; and thai audi a vlitmy would lieu -sully leave the people ot Ihe south for many geneiatlons clietlslilng deidly lavs, tlllty against ihe govciiiuiint and the north, and plotting nlvvuVs lo lecovci Iheii Imlepeivl dice, When Gladness Came. When Lincoln issued Ids pioeljiu uloii, he knew that all these Idea, vveie toundnd in or. tor; that the national ri'souues were luexhaust Mile; that the government could ami would win, und that it slutci) vveie mice (hull) dispostci of, the only ruuse ot ilitfcmico being out of the way, the 1101th uud south would ionic together again and, by-and-by, be us good friends os ever. In many emitters alneud the ptoclamatiou was welcomed with enthusiasm by (lie iiieuds of America; but I think Hie demonstrations in its fuvoi that biought moie gladness tu Lincoln's heart than any other, wcic Ihe inceilugt held in Hie itiiinitfirtuilhit tdders hy Hip very fcpera lives upon whom tlic war Lore the liardesti ex pressing Hie most enlhtististlc symplthy with Ihe proclamation, while they bore with lierole fiirtlliidc the grievous privations which tin- vva pnlalled upon litem. .Mr. Lincoln's expectation when he announced tu the world that all slaves in all stales then In rebellion were set tree, must have liren that Ihe avowed position of Ids gov. erimtenl, that the rontliiuancc of the war now meant the annihilation nt slavery, wxnild make InlMveiitlim itnpoealhte for any foreign nation whose people were lovers of Illicit) and iio (he lesull proved. The giovvlh mid development of Lincoln a men tal (lower and moral forte, of his Intense and magnetic pcrsontlll), alter the vist responsibili ties of government were thrown upon him at ll.c age of fltty-two, IttrnMi a rare 0 ml sulking Il lustration of liv marvellous capacity and adapt ability of the human Intellect-sit the sound mind In the sound liody. He came to tho dis charge ot the great duties of Hie ptesldcncv vvllli absolutely no experience In Hip administration ( foreign and domestic policy which Inline dlalely arose, and continued to pica upon him (luting Hip real ot his life ; but he mastered eanh as II came, apparently with the facility of (mined and experienced luler. As Clarendon said of C'romvvelt, "Ills parts seemed to lie raised liv tho deminds of great station." Ills life through il all was one of intense labor, anxiety nhcl ills, tiess, without one hour of peaceful repose from first In last, tint he rote tu everv occasion, tic 'led public opinion, hut did not inarch so fur lit advance ot It as to rail of Its cneclivr support 11 every great emergency. He knew the heutt and thought of the people, as no man not In con stant and absoluto sympathy with them could have known it. and so, holding their confidence, lie triumphed through and with them. Wot onlv was there this steady growth of Intellect, hut the Infinite delicacy nf his nature and Us capacity for refinement developed also, as exhibited (11 the purity and perfection of ids languagp und klvle ot speech. The rough backwoodsman, who hud never seen Hip inslclp of a unlvcisilv, became in the end, hy selMiulnlng and the exercise ot his own powers of inlud. heart ami soul, a mister of sl.vlp and some ot his utterances villi ifllik with the best, tho most pitfcctly adapted lo Ihe oc casion which produced them. Gettysburg: Speech. Iluvc von time to listen to his two minutes' speech at Gettysburg;, at the dedication at the Soldiers' cemetery? His whole soul was In it: "Four score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation eoncdved in liberty and dedicated to Ihe piopo sllion that ull men uie cieated equal. Now we urc engaged in a great civil war, testing wlictiicy Halt nation, or i.ny nation so conceived uud si dedicated, can long endtiic. We me met em 1 gieat hottleticld of that war. We Itavo come to dedicate a portion of that field as a flnil irsllnj. plate for those who help gave their lives tint that nation might live. II is nltogethei lilting and pioper that we should do this, llul In a larger sense we cannot dedicate wc cannot con secrate we cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who snuggled hcie have conseciuted it far abouve our poor pnvvei to add to or detract. The world will lltt'e note, nor long remember, what we say lien but It inn never ti rget what they did here. It is for ir, the living, isthei, to be dedicated here lo the nr finished woik which they who fought heie Lave thus fur so nnhlv advanced. It it rather for us to Ip heie eledicsted to the great task it niuluing before- us that fiom these honoied dead up take increased devotion to that cause for which tiny gave the Inst full meisure ot deve tlcn that we here highly resolve, thar these dead shall lint hav- died in vain that Hils in Hon under God shall have a new birth of free domand that government of the people, by the people and for thp people, "hall not peilsh from the earth." Second Inaugural. He lived to see his woik indorsed b.v an over r helming mijcilty nt his countiymen. tu his second Inaugural aildiess. pronounced jusc forty ca.vs Ixfore Ids death, there is a single passugs which well displays his indomitable will and ul Hip s,.mc time his deep ldlgious feeling, his sublime cluiity to the enemies of his country and his broad and catholic humanity: "If wc shall suppose that American slaveiy is one of those offcnsesesvvhlch in Hie riovldence of God must needs come, but which having con tinued through the appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He gives to both north und soulh this teriiblc war, as the woe due lo those by wlitim the olfence came, shall we discern therein any depirture from those divine at tributes which tho belicveis in a living God alwavs ascribe to HimV Fondly do wc hoie, terv pntly do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pise away. Yet, if Gnd wills, that it continue until ull the wealth piled by the bondmen's two bundled and fifty vears of unrequited toil slnll he sunk, and until eveiy drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be pai I with another drawn by the sword, as was said lime thousand .vears ago, so still it must be said, 'Thp judgments of tlic Lord arc true and righteous altogether.' " "With malice towaid none, vvllli chanty for all; with firmness in the right as God gives us to scp the light let us strive on to finish the work wc are In; to hind up the nation's wounds; to caie for him xvho shall lnvc home the halite and for his 'vichiv.- and his orphan to do ull which may nchioro and cherish a just and lasting pence among ouisclvcs, and vvllli all nations," Ills piu)cr was uiisweied. The forty du)s ot life that tcnnlned to him were crowned with gieat historic events He lived to sec his pioc 1. Dilation ot emancipation embodied in an amend nienl of the consiltution, adopted hy congress and submitted In the states foi luliflcnlion. Tlie. mighty scourge of war did speedily pass away, for it was given him lo witness tlic sinrenclei n the last rebel at my and the fall of their capital, and the stany flag that he loved, waving In tit umph ovei every (out of the nillonai soil. When .he died hv the midman's hand in the supieine hour of victory, the vanquished lost their best Mend, and -tlie 1111111111 race one of its noblest pvamples; and all the friends of ficpclom and jus tice. In whose cause l.p lived and died, joined hands as moinneis at his giave. Many notable persfms. weie In tho audience, nnd Mr. Chonfe was fre fltienlly applauded. Lord llosebery, rcplylnsr lo a voles of Hinnks for presiding, said: "Lincoln was one of the fireut dipr iires of the nineteenth century. To 1110 il has also seemed that he was the KPcond founder of tho great republic. His strength rested on two rocks un flinching principle and Illimitable com mon sense. One dlstlnKulshinK: fea ture that disassociated him from Ut! tlie other great men of history, was his- immense fund of humor." PROGRESS ABROAD. I'loiii llu- Philadelphia Pics. One of the most noticeable llihigs about the foreign comment on Ihe election of J'loideiil McKinley is that it shows a much cleaici grasp of American affairs than it usual with Kuiopeuu publicists. Tills is not only line or our IlriUsh filcnds, who aip getting to know us hetlci pxciy .vein, but of comment tint appears In I'lendi, Ailstiiin, Spanish mid German nevvsjiipi'is that a few vears ugo never mentioned Ami'iicuu rit.it prt, or, If they did, only wmte lo expose their Ignorance, ihere- is, of course, evidence heir and theie In tlie various "views" tint u lourse in Dryco's "American C'ommonweillh" Is still needed by -ip foielgu cditoi, but Iheie has been a great advuncp since, Ib'W, It they du not know an.vtlilng else abioad they know there it an Ameilcaii executive named McKinley, whose policies have utliucted world-wide attention, and now thai tho people havo again indorsed I1I111 the L'mopiau publicist js even more ini-pie.s-ed with tho personality nt Hip president under whoso administration the United Mutes has come to its own in the counsels ot the tut ions. ALWAYS BUSY. Man wants but Utile here below, Aud .0011 he'll want no moie, Hut while ho' hero ha wuuU Ihe but; Dial's why he likti our utoie. .shoes for ull tin vvulLu of life. hhoeti for ull Muiona of the mr lor tver) member of tlie family. Ladlu, in our Glove-Bttliiif Jlflba .) shoe wi.h I') live toicvri, they are 10 dcllglitlul. Lewiscs&Reilly KiUbllshld 16M. Short tot M tht willci t lift. FINLEY'S Laces, Lace Jackets, and TrimmfliiTigs Laces today occupy a more important part in Dress Tri minings than ever befor needless to say that ou, stock was never so com plete as now comprisinj the very newest and choices things in Laces by the yarf as well as all-overs. Jackets, Boleros, Collars, Fichus Ties, etc., in real hand made Irish, Russian, Arabian Cluny, Point Venice and Duchess Lace in iact all the latest and most fashionable things that are now aud will be in demand for the season's use. A few Extra Choice Marie Antoinette's in Applique Re naissance; entirely new and exclusive. Beautiful assortment of lace gauntlets aud gauntlet materials. Elegant line of all-overs, in Gold Effects and Gold Cloth. 510-512 LACKAWANNA AYENUE We Have T Joust Received A large assortment of Miniature Calen dars for the coming year, such as are used for fancy work and designs. As the stock in chis partic ular line is always limited, we would ad vise that now is the time to get what you want. ReymoldsBros Stationers and Engravers, Hotel Jermyn Building. JlercereaM & Comnell Now open for bus5 raess 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, Jewelers and Silversmiths. lount Pleasant COAL At Retail Coal of the Ixct iualU) foi doiuculiu un n,4 o( all tltct, fticludiinr Uucliwheal and Ulrawve, dolivcrfd in an) iait nt the city, at th lovvcjf pi Ice. Older ri'c rived a I I lie utile , lomall build. Incn rcom .W; telephone! So. UcU; or at th nine, t)phone Ne. J7i, will h promptly t IrndcU lo. Pcilm supplied at the- mill. Fleasait Coil Co. V f y.. frr j S' " . ftjt . -..'