linn of the papers In order to tic nmnne the first to nnxwer nilvettlMiiii tils nflvrltiK work Mir Itca i IIiiiiiIch Hint tliiii lire liotil 1VVHH1 lille people In New ot k Cllv wlio would k t vvnik If tin liuil mi l pOttllllltT Ilic clpiirnmkcni of St IhiiI khvc ii for tlic iiniiiiplojcil lU iiriiiiihci Ten tlioiisntiil t Ipirttinkt 18 lite out of In New 01 k A cut of uiiik Iiiik ticiii niitiotiticctl In I In Ciiiiii tl mill nt Hiunr Im IN Ia I lie Moiiotixiilirln Aliiiilttiilniitiil nitnclt tloli In f tit iilxlilti k foul Hint fooil to tin poor Tueoiiin m lilior ilny iflcliiiitlon Mirplu y do then to tiiiciMiilii til of that tlty I be It j ciiiplojci of IiiiIIiiiiiIioIIh will fKi J per cent of tliilr vwikck to tin till flllplojcil 1 In- ihiIIii of Clilcuco suy tliat every fiilclit tiuln lulus Into tluit lit fioni olio to twiiit tnuisi niiii in UtlOlllll of II pOxtfll tlOtlt0 of II lilt of 1AI u iciit In uuiM tin 1 Iumi wotkiiN of Kokotllll lllll IlllVf Ktltllk I llltl lltl IJIUK lull ll0lll rilKlltlll III Ctiluiyo Im I i tlve lliolliiiliil of t In ft MIC III tlic Imllilliii tniilin iilniii llie litillilltiK tunic UMikirH nt CliMliilnl liiio ilciliicil to rut iluvvn tin- lull till of tlicli ilu to slic tin- lilli ii sfniiv In lltmtoil IriiliihtilH II lc Unit uoiklnn about U luililv per ilii foi ll to 11 per wick The llticoln Street linlluiiy ciitiipiiny Iiiim tniiili a iiit on uniiiM of 111 pel lent 1lftccli cIkiii limkciH luiM lit t ii throw n tint of i inpho uuiil nt liriuul Islam on uc fount if tin closlin iluvvii of uni of lie rlKir fiiitorltK Tlic pioprlctor riiuirtB that un uirount of llirlit trnik lie now luiv Iliough iiiiinufiiiliiiril yooilH on liti nil to nuiily liU tiHilo lot sit luontlm or mule llrmli tiiit cMliiiiitcs time uro 801000 mil ot employment oilvci UolicitH wire mill In Ilillnilel lililn ciiihiil iiowi lduii null thrown out UllUr Coke nml Ilimncc company uf I nloiitovMi Ill Iiuh rcUlucil wukvm 17 lir iiiit liuiin h icvlcw of lMW hjn In commercial tllHIIHllIH llllll Itlllllhllllll ilciitcHhlun It uuu tlic word for fill jciiih liouipvin of tut Kiilcrntloti of liihor tiiKii tin Imcuo uf IioiiiIh Py tin- go eminent lui thi iillcf of tht illxtirhHtd Tin- iitM of 2V enploycii of the Little Kullx N knitting millk weic reduced 10 ier ivut on Jan 1 The miners uro wrcntly dlsKUtlstlcd nt Uuy ton Ifiiii Tiniililc In fiiiittil at nny time unless more sutlsfactoiy arruuitcmitil tit lnnilf The miners at Slope coal uiIiiih In Saline llle O went on u ctrlku HKlnnt a li niT cvnt rttliutliiu anil day laboicrH ukjiIiikI 10 irr ciiit IlttBwiirK tiim out iMX niiii ciniloyid In thf tun iuirku yit that niniilict iIoch not uroui to iiinkt tiny Kicnt dlrtiiciKc In the ruukH of the army of imcmilnycil iniilrt wooliii mill nt Ilttyvllli N S linn IloMd ilu mii Imltlliiltfly Two thouHinil mi Idle unit itnn nil work Iiik on Khoit tinif at Unrrlhtnirt Im Clinton rollltiK mill at 1itthlitirK lint KlUli notice of a led net Ion In wagi n of 111 lcr cent A au prr cent reduction Ih what now IactB the fiuploycH of the fnlioin hlli workn nt Coliihiiuiiua 1a A ritluctlun of Hi per cent Iuh been made t the Hunter Miifhlne cotupatiy 8 WoikH of North AdaniH Much An nrUcle In the Jouiiinl of the KiiIkIiIm of luhor nntiounccK that iiemly nil of the TnctorltH ttinl hae renamed IiukIiickh hne tloiii m nftur reducliiK the foriutr wiikch of inpioyvH are ailKX Idle conl tnlnim In Ohio At Sediilla Mo niartile cutters Htrnek itlnnt ii cut of 10 per cent Cincinnati unlonn Iinve etalillttied a place tii which the unemployed may sleep The SouthltiKton Conn cutlery shop hnH Biinounceil n cut In wiikch uf from X to Si per cent A general reduction In wnpes rniiKliiK from 10 to M per cent went Into effect at the Nouuntowii Womted compiuyH inills at Newton Mans where 700 liatidH nre cm Iilnyed Btnte Lnlmr Connnlnlnner llrentluper pays there are 118000 pertonn out of euiploymeiit In the larger towtm In Colorado and ajuri 000 unemployed In the United Stnten The KIkIii wntch fnctory which tlve month nio reduced Uh force from 3XKl to 1500 and put them on five day n week ban further red need the days uf labor to three duyn n wek 1111 1 h to Improve the ltlverslde park ami lilvernlde drive In New York may he Intro ductil In the New York lculidnture to glvo Work to the unemployed Troy one of the liveliest nml moxt pros pcrotiH cltltK of the i in pi re ntnte Iiiik Hctit to coiigrtHN n motiNter protent aaliint the inHMitie of the WIIhoii lilll It In ti lietl tlou nlftned by Tp00 perKomt coiitalna 0875 iuBCK and weltitiH over MM poll ml h The uiluerH of Meuilotn Mo hnve lieen not I tied of nil Immediate reduction from S8 to M cents The men tiro not oryaiiUed The Thayer Woolen compuny North Ox lord Mhkh will make n cut down In wages Viiree hundred men will be affected Which of all outside men hare boon re duced from fJM and li2Z nt the KIhk coal Billies at Conio Colo to i a day Tbe funds obtained for relief purposes t Ban KrunclFco ure to be expended for Improvements ut lolden Gate park The committee decided that ft day hlinuld be the rule of wokcs fur nil employed out of the relief fund Clevelnnil Iron workers hnve been cut 10 per cent Merldrn Conn Cutlery company cut nraics If ptr cent titrert railway men nt Ornml Itaplds lllrb hnve been cut 10 per cent Tbe Jlttstiurn Shenanito K Inke Erie railroad has cut wages 10 per cent The employes of the Miller plimn factory t Wakefield Mnss refused to accept n rut of 20 per rent and tbe works have closed down Tbe merhnnles at Mnre Island navy yard feave bail their wuros reduced from to fiO cents per dny The lrtorly cotton mills at BchuvlerTllle ti Y bare nmile a second reduction of 10 per cent In wanes Tbe Greenwood Cotton company of Win load Conn cmidnrlug 1700 bunds has hut down Indeflultely On account of the employes refusluc to crept a 3A per cent reduction In wnpe the lllrrraldr Iron and Steel company of Hen wood W Vn has closed down Indefinitely Factories at Pnssnlc N J hnve reduced their worklnfc force i per cent Mayor Drown of 1nterson N J snys that loOOO nre Idle In Hint city It Is estlmoted thnt four fifths of the clothing operatives In Ilostou are unem ployed A Inrne portion of the spinning mnchlnery In tbe Irlnnell mill New Itedfonl Is Idle Tbe Tomeroy mills Ilttsrleld Mnss will depend for two montlin unless business lin pniveii The spinners employed by the Merlden Conn woolen mill have had a reduction of ST per cent in their waces The Ilppltt It I Woolen company Is rtinnlnp five dnvs a week eight hours a day with about half of a force Flw hundred miners have pone out on n trlke at Mercer Pa rnthcr than accept a cnt tn waves of 15 per cent Two hundred glass workers hnve lout po rtions on account of tbe reduction of force t a factory In Ilridiirtnn A bicycle factory nt Toledo O has re duced Its working force from 700 to 300 Ten thousand nre Idle in the city There are said to be 2000 skilled mechan ics out of work In Hochester N Y At Coboes N i 4000 people nre out of work owing tn tbe Idleness or a large num ber of knlttlug mills fit Kouls unions have assessed working members 10 rents prr week to asxist In pro viding for the unemployed Of the 3000 men usually employed by the Maryland Bteel company nt Bpnrrnws Point Baltimore but 000 are now nt work Tbe Midland shops at Colorado Cltv Colo run only half time from now on working Mondays Wednesdays and Thurs days The railroad firemens unions at Terre Haute soy their wages have been reduced until they now only make 39 per mouth Several mills at Muosup Conn have closed dowD throwing about 1JX hands eut of work No rent will be charged operatives In the companies bouses as long a tbe mills are Idle Mayor Rankin of Klitabetb N J an anunred last week that one quarter of the luborem In that town were unable to get work NOTB Ieued from the 1ubllclty Office Omaba Ilranrb Republican National Cow ilttw M lice Building MJIY SBPPU Agriculturnl Classes Almost Exclusively Depended Upon for Them Fnnn Products Absolutoly snry for tho Snstoimnoo of Mon and HorsoSi Rash nnd False Stntcmcnts of Bry an Regarding These 1 Matters Official Figures Disprove Arguments ot tbe Democratic Leader In Ills Speeches Mr Hrynn In his nirrcli ncccptltig the populist iioiiiiiintion for president luuk un Angiiht II tit ropekii Kun lit par ttd f i oiii the plan followed In his lnilinniiiolis hpeech ncuiptlng t lit ikinoerntio noiniiititlon nml tllKUFMt ull tlio Uhiict pcculiiir to the poptiliMh In tiilkitip on tli est tithtion lit- iniide niiitij nikh n nil fulsc stiiteincnts in re gard to certnin condition which he declared to exist In his Hpecch to the furnitTB he laid ctpecial htress tiiou tbe fact that they were not benetiUd by the republican prosperity and in speaking of iiiilitiiiisin and itnperial ibin and their uiTvct upon the furmert be bu ill booklnB at finest lutiB from the stntul polnt of tbe producer of wealth rather than from the standpoint or the speculator the populist recognizes In mllltnrlt m a constant and lncrcuslriK burden Thenrmy worm which occuMouully destroys u tleld of wheat Is not nearly so dangerous an enemy to the farmer as u larfe standing nrmy which InvaiKs every Held of Indus try und which exacts toll from every crop If 100000 men arc withdrawn fnTm the ranks of tho produce und placid ns a Humeri on trie uiickh oi wiose who remain It mentis longer hours hurdcr work and Krenler sacrlllceB tor tbohe who toll The former while he pays more than his shurc of the expenses of the nrmy has no part In army contracts or In developing com panies and his sons are less likely to till life positions In the army than the sons of those who by reason of wealth or po litical promlutnce exert Intlucnce at Wash ington This statement especially ns to the fanner and his relation to the army is so far from the truth and is so easily disproved that it excite suspicion In the firU place Mr Hryan must know that the law provides that all army contracts must be advertised for and bids opened before they are aw arded and that no special ckuss is faored in giving tlieiu out Figures showing the expenditures toy the quartermasters department from April 1SUS to nnd including June 1100 make it plain that nearly 10000 000 has been expended by the Inited States for the purchase of supplies nnd luateriaK for the army which have been produced by the farmers So that when Mr Hryan says that the farmer while he pays more than his share of the expenses of the army has no part in army contracts or in developing companies he states what is untrue Oilicial figures of expenditures in the subsistence department of the war de partment show that in the purchase of American products during the years 189S 18n and to June 30 1000 the ar ticles purchased for rations were main ly direct products of the farm such as beef bacon Hour comment beans rice potatoes canned tomatoes nio lnsses soap pork hard bread peas hominy onions sugar vinegar pep per and candles nnd during thnt period the subsistence department expended 3314761703 for these rations So much for the subsistence department The quartermasters department shows on account of purchase of for age fuel stationery cavalry and ar tillery horses wagons and means of transportation other tlinn railroads boats etc harness clothing und equipage materials and manufactures nnd lumber from April 18U8 to June 30 1000 that 4880303680 has been ex pended Of this forage oats hay straw etc come direct from the farmer Horses nnd mules as well as the lumber pur chased were American products while the many millions of dollnrs expended for clothing equipage and material represent wool and cotton grown by farmers in the Inited Suites Instead of the farmer having as dangerous an enemy in a large standing army as he has in the army worm figures from the wnr department thus show that he hfls been greatly aided nnd helped by the army and luis had a market for his products To show exactly the amount o money expended by the quartermas ters and subsistence departments of the war department the following of ficial figures are given in answer to Mr Hryan6 charges that the nrmy has not helped the farmer but has been a menace The subsistence department during the two and a half years has expended for American farm products for ra tions for the army 33H7617fi3 The quartermasters department has expended during the same period on account of purchase of forage fuel horses clothing etc Forage oats hay straw etc 160SS015 10 Fuel wood and coal station ery stoves 2771405 90 Cavalry und artillery horses 1740H53 24 Draught horses and mules 232WJ M Wagons and meurit of land transportation other than rail roads boats etc 211690 S4 Harness 4374 ly Purchase of clothing und equi page und materials SDWlOGC 14 Manufacture of clothing nnd equipage 2133703 02 Purchase of lumber 1132830 64 Total 14803036 K Total farm products 3314C17 G3 Grand total THE NOKFOLK NEWS THURSDAY OCT01U3K 11 JOOO lr0654 52 JOHN S SUHIVUIt 4 EXPORTS TO ASIA 1895 mm WkKZSmmwBmmmmmmmmmmwrf 1732505 1000 64913984 EXPORTS TO OCEANIA 1893 13109231 1900 43390927 i3mWSEwlKGUmM mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmLrAmmmmmmmmmmrm BUSINESS OPINION Solid Southern Men Hope for Mo Kinleys Reelection UcrnmlnE Avtnkcnri to the Neces sity of Atlvocntlnir the Ileiiub lleuii InllclcM of Protection imil Kxpniilou The hotith is becoming thoroughly awakened to the fact that the polit cic of the republican purty protec tion expansion and sound money are those that will bebt promote the industries of that bection of the coun try The Manufacturers Ilecord ol llaltiinore has collected another broadside of southern opinion on the issues of the day this time from bankers The sunt hern bankers as a rule coincide with the opinions of the manufacturers nnd here is what some of them say E L Foster vice president of the bank of Anderson county Coal Creek Term While 1 was a democrat nnd voted three times for Cleveland I do not see what could be done from n mere human standpoint that would be more disastrous to the business interests of the country anil there fore to every interest than the elec tion of Bryan The gold standard of money must be maintained im perialism or no imperialism A S Heed cashier Bertram Tex While a very large majority of peo ple in this section will vote for Bryan for president because he is their party nominee still the honest con vict iou of the best business men is that they would really prefer to see Mr McKinley reelected believing that such reelection would the better tend to insure a continuance of the pres ent prosperity II V Kchweer enshier First na tional bank Denton Tex J firmly believe thnt Bryans election would bring financial disaster over our be loved country degradation to our flag whereu r it floats McKinleys election continued prosperity and all tint ions honor our flag wherever it is thrown to the breeze H W Shownlter assistant cnshler Ritchie County bank Hnrrisonville WVa Democrats and republicans both sny that times nre better now than ever before in the countrys his tory McKinley protection nnd sound money is the cry from all lips Joseph S Davis cashier First na tional bank Albnny a The con servative business men of the south nhnost without exception regard the doctrine of free independent and un limited coinage of silver as a mennce to the countrys prosperity But what the result would be should Mr Bryan be elected would require a prescience beyond human to declare with certnlnty W K Pntterfield cashier Peoples national bank New Iberia Ln The country has never been so prosperous as since the election of Mr McKin ley We want to see his good work continued No Bryan fi V Saxon president Capital City bank Tallahassee Fla The politi cal party that maintains an honest stable currency with open doors for foreign trnde will in my opinion best subserve the business interests of the country J K Hngsdale Blair K C The av erage business man believes that the election of Mr Bryan to the presi dency of the Inited States would cause a money panic F A llper Co bankers Ivnlde Tex We nre doing well be satis tied and let it alone W S Wilson cashier Deposit bank Eminence Ky It is my opinion thnt the election of Mr McKinley will be for the business interests of the country Imperialism is only a scare that we care nothing for I am a democrat but I am convinced it is to our interest to make no change in the president 1 A Ball enshier American nation nl bank Fort Smith Ark This sec tion of the country neier before en joyed so great a degree of prosperity as at the present time We nre well satisfied with McKinleys administra tion und for my part apprehend thnt a change would prove most disastrous to every business enterprise A E Watson president First na tional hank Marlin Teat The busi ness outlook is good In our opinion the election of Mr Bryan to the It Sort o Looks tu if Id Ilarc to Expand dency would be very disastrous to every business interest in the coun try William Powell cibhier Bank of Cul loden Culloden Oa I am a north erner While he Mr Bryan might not be able to foist his free silver is sue upon the country it would be dan gerous to give him the chance to do so nnd only for the race question I believe thnt this would be the verdict at the polls of many thousands of the oters of Oeorgin O F Luttrcll cashier Bank of Brew ton Brewton Ala It seems to be the consemus of opinion among the lending business men that the business nnd commercial interests of the coun try will be best subserved by the elec tion of Mr McKinley No one denies thnt the election of Bryan would be adverse to all business J B Carter president Wholesale Grain company Sher man Tex As for presidential can didates I do not think it advisable to make a change at this particular time C W Arnett Fnirmount W Va Bryans election would mean disaster to business destruction of public con fidence the return of pnnics the re duction of work and wages nnd the repetition of the scenes of hardships which filled the land during the last democratic administration O G Bournan Citizens national bank Hillsboro Tex I believe that the business interests of the country would be injured less by the election of President McKinley than Mr Bryan E A Shipley clerk and mnster chancery court lonesboro Term I hae no doubt that the business inter ests of the country would be best subserved by the election of Mr Mc Kinley nnd a Inrge majority of the voters share with me in this view as will be attested by tlie ballots cast here in November RESULTS OF BRYANS LETTER First Kr1lM of the Uemocrnllc Can dltlulex Letter of Ac ceptance The response by Aguinaldo is prompt and to tbe point Bryans letter carne out only a few days ago and Gen Mac Arthur reports the results Considerable activity throughout Lii7on Fighting reported in districts heretofore quiet In llocan province numerous small af fairs Country north of lasig very much disturbed South of Pasin same conditions It was a mere matter of course and had been anticipated and reported upon as long ago as August 25 as likely to oc cur about this time Twenty one Americans killed and 19 wounded It is well to keep Lnwtons prophetic words in mind If I am fchot by a Fili pino bullet it might ns well come from one of my own men because I know from observation confirmed by cap tured prisoners that the continuance of the fighting is chiefly due to reports that are sent out from America I2xianln In Trade The rnpid growth of our business with Japan in rails and machinery during the past four yenrs is an in dication of what may be accomplished in that quurter in the future under proper encouragement Four yenrs ago American rails were unknown in Japan but at the present they more than double in quantity the mils which come from Englnnd which up to 1S0G constituted the chief source of supply It is believed that Amer icans have it in their power to prac tically control the supply of rails and railroad material generally with Japan during the next decade As an indication it is cited that the Carnegie cenpnny signed a contract nt Kobe for 8000 tons of rails nt a price of 32fi per ton under the English bid The men who man ufacture these rails contribute to the well being of the farmers whose sup plies feed and clothe them Hard ware Who Own Ihr Fuelorlmf Massachusetts is one of the lending manufacturing states in the union in 1800 there were 4740 factories of which 3451 were owned by individ uals 1168 by independent corpora tions and 91 by industrial combina tions The individual manufacturer b the largest element by long odds u the fet utek industrial euterprine PJ10VES PROSPERITY The Nations Condition Shown in Labor Day Demonstration Strlkltm Ctintrnnf Cnmiinreil villli Iho CoimIIIIoiim Wli leli Surrounded the Slime CIiim tif Men Iutir earn A no The demonstrations In every city and hiiinlit in this country on Labor dn when the industrial populations poured through the sticets in march ing order well- certainly gratifying whether rcganled merely as a pictur esque display nf the forces of so ciety or as a token of the united fcplrit which guides the destiny of the nineteenth century workman Bank after rank the marchers In labors great nnmiiil parade presented the most conviuiing evidence of the indus trial prosperity that prevails through out the United States In its personal appearance as well ns in numbers the testimony admitted of no question For hours nn army of well fed well dressed cheerful workingmen filed through the streets of nil large cities nnd in smnil hamlets the parades were none the less marked This years Labor dny parade was essentially a demonstration of the employed fairly nglow withthe signsof satisfnetionover plenty of labor at more remunerative wages thnn lnbor hns known in six yenrs This years demonstration was the largest the best dressed the best fed and the best pnid procession of workingmen this country has ever seen There was expansion in its step its smile and its waist measure Scarcely four years ago under the Inst Democratic administration there was a great agitation for free soup houses where the workingmen who were out of work under President Clevelands administration could get free soup to keep them from starv ing Those same workingmen under only a couple of yenrs of William Mc Kinleys administration are now eat ing sirloin stenKs and the grounds where the thousands of soup houses stood four years ago are now covered with factories employing thousands of men at good wages Yet the dem ocratic party leaders from Mr Bry nn down are trying to hnve the work ingmen to vote to go back to the soup house condition again The American workingman will not vote himself out of a good steady job at good wages for all the soup houses that the last Democratic administration produced They are all voters Every man who holds in his hand an implement of la bor also holds a ballot For the first time in the history of the labor move ment in this country nnd under a re publican administration the freneral prosperity of the country includes the prosperity of labor The steadily in creasing prosperity in the business world was distinctly reflected in the neat and satisfied appearance of the different organizations The men and women marched like people who are self confident and self assertive who know that they are a mighty force in the work of widening and strengthen ing the nations fields of industry They marched like men who dignified labor hy stamping it with their own manliness Of nil our nnnual exhibitions none is more Impressive than that of Labor day It is a grand demonstration of wealth producing forces nnd of the opportunities which come to men in this free country under a republicrn form of government and adminislra tion The thousands of workers who make up these annual parades are in truth ns is often said the brawn nnd sinew of the nation but they also rep resent a progressive intelligence such ns it would be impossible to discover in the same citizenship of other lands From their ranks will spring many of the men of affairs and influential pub lic men of the future Questions of politics should not be mixed with the principles which are at the root of all lnbor organizations Labor is organized for purely co nornic purposes But this yenr the issue at stnke is one which vitally af fect the economic welfare of the whole people and it is only natural that the wrrkingmen should regnrd it as worthy of their best study both as individuals nnd as members of trade organizations They will not let democrn c calamity howlers fool them ns thry have not yet forgotten the Inst democratic timeb of only a few years ago We hear of their philanthropy and immense donations to the poor but when they give a dollar they take two dollars off the workers wages A majority of the people of thin country dont want to ruin the indus tries of the country nor do they want nn aristocracy of clnss They want a government by and for the peo ple such as we have had for the past four years and will hnve for the next four lnbor voting selfishly perhaps for its own prosperity When the workingman Is prosper ous the whole nation is prosperous netler Lend Thnn Ilorrovr Mr Bryan views with alarm the fact that Americans nre lending money to Great Britain Germany and Sweden He thinks the lenders are unpatriotic Americans are glad to have money to lend Under a demo cratic administration they had to bor row 202000000 abroad and that in gold Mr Bryans election would mean a return to that undesirable po sition President Lincoln said in his first inaugural address The power con fided to me will be used to hold occu py and posseb the property and places belonging to the government Mr Brynn wants to aay in Lib first Inaugural uddreiu Scuttle LOANING MONEY IiiiIvki of the People Are Ilnceil ti he llnntlx of Money licnilcr When there are millions of dollnrs piled up in New York and other finan cial centers waiting for irnestinent it follow that money i cheap in the fense that it does not cost much to bor row it The capitalM with capital for investment makes the rate of in terest low and consequently invest ors capitalists large banking nnd other financial institutions have great ditliculty in lending their money out safely nt a percentage larger than three or four per cent The credit of the Inited States government is now so good that government bonds can easily be sold which yield nn income of onlj two per cent but the credit of foreign governments or nt least sev eral of them is not so good ns that and not having money of their own in their financial centers which can be bor rowed at a low rate of interest or bor rowed at all they naturally come to the country or the financial centers of the country where there is plenty of money Such n thing as sentiment never actuates n person or n country borrowing or a person or a financial Institution lending It is a matter of business Money lenders get as much ns they can nnd money borrowers pay as little ns hey must New York is to day tho financial center of the world because it is better able to lend money to all corners than any other city of tho world This condition of affairs proves thnfc our own country was never so prosper ous ns now It could not be true with out these millions of hundreds of mil lions of dollars piled up In New York seeking investment at these low rates of interest It also illustrates that the big financial institutions wherever lo cated cannot prosper unless the coun try as a whole has made the money and has put it in their hands for saving or investment The savings banks scat tered throughout the country the life insurance companies the financial in stitutions or large private banking cencerns of whatever kind depend for their very existence in the last an alysis of things first upon the fact that people have money saved up which they can place with these per sons or institutions for investment and second that they have such con fidence in the general business outlook and also such confidence in the of the persons and institutions in question that they place their money on deposit with them It if this money the money of nil the people that is loaned out to such would be borrowers as can put up sufficient collateral The presence of this great mass of money in the financial centers seek ing investment at rates no matter how low so far from being a toad sign as MrBryan and his organ claim though we have never been able to see why is the best possible evidence is indeed a perfect index of the prosperity of the country It is positive proof that the present prosperity of the country is unprecedented When we pay that a man is a creditor when we know 1hnt he has money to lend we mean to say that there is no better way of saying that he is prosperous When a nation is cnlled a creditor nation it is only perfectly fair to assume that the same conditions exist with regard to the whole country in fact it is mere clap trap to assume anything else REV SAM JONES ON TRUSTS Wealth nnd rirnln Combined Do Much for the Good of the People The large trust and combinations t already formed nnd being formed by aggregations of capital are considered hurtful to the masses and the com mon people This is a theory Theo retically a thing may be so nnd prac tically it may be very untrue When we speak of trust and combines we think of the Stnndard Oil trust the sugar trust the tobacoo trust etc When the Standard Oil trust was formed I was paying 40 cents a gallon for kerosene oil I am getting it now for ten cents a gallon I was payinp 12 cents for sugar several years ago but when the combines set in we got it at 5Vi When the whisky trust was organized I was in hopes it would put up whisky where the poor devils couldnt get it but they have teemed to chenpen thnt down to where they enn pay the government 110 n gallon revenue on it and yet Sell it for 127 whirh i1nrt j thnt they nre making it nnd letting the public have it at about n2 cents n gallon including the barrel There is no doubt about the aggre gation of wealth with brains con- trolling it thnt they can manufacture nny article cheaper thnn it is or has been manufactured on n small scale I hnve watched the progress of events ntld llip lirnrtiiLLintic c i I rrwitn 11 II J J U I U J IV II i nave yet to Know of a single in stance where combines and trust hurt the masses or permanently raised the price of nny product Bev Sam P Jones Inmher Mllln Hnay There is a big demand for men in the northwest particularly in Wash ington nnd Oregon Circulars are being distributed in Chicngo calling for 1000 men nt wages ranging from 175 to 425 per day The demund for lumber caused by prosperous times in California nnd in expansion of trade across the Pacific has done it Activity In Manufacfarlnir The capital invested in Massachu setts manufacturing interests in 1808 was 408317300 In 1600 it had in creased to 443908875 a gain of oer 35000000 Nearly every religious publlcatioa in the country without respect to denomination or creed is advocating Mr ilcKiiiltyi reelection M