TJIE Cm AHA DAILY HAT TUB AY , SEPTEMBER II ) , 1800. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE , K. JlOHRWATKIl , Editor. ruiiLiiiib"tVKiV ! ! TKKMH OP ! ( Without Hun.lay ) Or.e Vrar..J X V > Dallr lice nd Sutnlny. One tear 10 W > Blx Monlli B W Thre Month * 23 * Huniliy llc. One Year 2W Hntnnlny lire , One Year 1 W Weekly IJ . One Vcnr 1 OPTJCKS : Omaha. Tli lice HnlMlng. South Omnhn , Blnji-r lllk. . Cor. K nnd JUh St . Council Illurr.1 , 1C North Mnln Street. riilcnBn Ollloe , 317 Chamber of Commerce. New York. Itoumn 13. H nn.l IS , Tribune IHJs- Waihlnnton , 1(07 ( I' Htrirt. N. W. All communication * renting to nsn-s nml eJI- torlnl mntier should tie mMn-s-fl : To the I-Mltur. lir.SINICSS I.KTTIIUH. All btialnvAB Inter * nhtl ri-mlttnnt-ON Miould be mlilrcmtnl to The Iee ( rulillnlilm ; Company. Omnha. X > rnftt. ) rhfcktt nnd pofttolllce nrilcm to be tnnte pitynMc lo the order of the company. TIIIJ tint : I'uuiitsuiNu COMI-ANV. KTATHMKNT OP CIltCUt.ATION. Elate tit Nehrnxkn , I Dourfiui County. I ClforRB I ) . Txnvhiiek , m-cretury of Til" Itc * l-tili- lL Mnc cimipany , being dul > nwnrn , Miyc that the ncliiiil iimnlHiof full nnil omiplele cr > t > b > of the Dully , Morning. Evenlnc nnd F.ninlny lioo iirlnlnl durliiRthp month of Auguiit. H.Hiva > OB follows : 1 20.2l.-i n zo.Ht 2 20 , TM 13 20.1S7 3 2D,2 13 20.SJ7 I Z0.2M 10 SI.HI D 2l , rf,1 21 ZI.79S ) ,307 SI 21,71 < i 7 21,193 : i si.coo * 29.ZD1 J | 2I.W.7 1 ZD.SOO 23 21,201 10 2IUI.1 2i ! 21) ) . KO II 20,221 J7 20,140 11 20.17H S 2(1,389 ( 13 M.IXI M 20,120 14 10.201 . ,0 21.10 ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' it' ! . . . . . ! . . . . . ! 2o'M Ti.tnl C39.723 I/ess driliictlonit for unsold nml rclurnetl coplra 12 SIC Not palon C2IS.9U7 Net < l lly nveraue 20.22J OKOlirJK H. TXRCUUl'K. Sworn tn before me nii'l RUlmcrlbeil In my prrscncn thin iBt day of Scptcmlx-r. ISM. ( Seal. ) N. T. 1'Rlffc Notnry 1-uhllo. LHADIXG Sl'KOIATj KK.VTTJKKS. THE OMAHA SUNDA.Y BEE. HAGOAIIIVK NR\V SI3IUAI , STORY. FARMING HY BLiKCTlUCtTY. IP KYR3 WRHK MlCKOSCOrRS. SPELIj-IIIN'UKRS 01' ' THE PAST. IN WOMAN'S DOMAIN. OUR YOUTHS' DEPARTMENT. THE WEEK IN SOCIETY. WITH THE WHIRLING WHEEL. . IN THE WORLD OF Si'ORT. THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE , TIIK HEST NKWSPAI'KIl. Tim cotmlliiK niiU'lilntIn Arkansas merely HUpped a ft-\v I-OKS. The now campaign button , "Ilnvo you hoard from Mainu , " Is in grout tleniiiml. If cntt'litng trains \vi-ro any indication of ability to catch votes there inl lil pos- Bihly be some hope for the iiopocratlc cmitlliliilc' . Aftm' ' a ticket Is noinliiiiti'd It bnR lo be elected. Dulegsites to the republican coniity convention slionld bour this In mind. Silver men are constantly vouching for one another's honesty. The niitn who has to have witnesses to his honesty will usually bear watching. People haviiiK urgent business with the heail of the two-lulled ticket can reach him by mlilressliiR , "Care of Train 10 , Hertlt ' 1. Sleeping Cur 'Defeat' " Where does Watson come in In the Now York fusion deal ? Is Watson BO much worse than Uryan that the silk- tiled Tammanyltes intend to draw the line on him ? 1C Mr. Drynn has thirty-six states all solid for him , what is he diing down In this CarollnasV If the tiling is ail set tled , why doesn't he come homo and begin to prepare ills Inaugural Message ? Watson's visit ) to Nebraska came dur ing the very pleasantest season of the year , lint the Ice he received from his supposed populist friends must have made him believe that It was already mid-winter here. Mr. Bryan's paper , the World-Herald , refers to the proposed Emancipation tiny celebration at Des lollies as a " 'CnlliitV barbecue. " Does the Bryan organ ex pect to attract the colored vote by such Insulting comment ? It Is well the popoerats Jubilated early over the ArkaiiMas election. If they luttl waited for the complete returns they would not have Jubilated at all. Even repudiation Arkansas turns out to be a disappointment for the repudlationists. The council combine has graciously undertaken to relieve the voters of the trouble of choosing their own repre sentatives in legislative , county and city government. The < inestion is , Do the voters want to abdicate In favor of such a precious gang ? Fourth district populists have Insisted on having a populist candidate for con gress. Seeing no other wny of secur ing one , they have put one In nomina tion by petition. Hero Is a chance for the democrats to fuse by withdrawing tlidr nominee and accepting the populist candidate. In the language of the stage mum mers , Watson doesn't care whether Uryan Is starred or not , lint lie insists that his contract stipulates that he is tel l > u featured more than Sewall. If the theater manager does not live up to the contract Watson threatens to break up the whole show. Don't forget the assessors. Our ah- Jes-sment laws are admittedly barbarous , but administered by etllcleni ami con scientious assessors they co'iM be en dured for a time. The assess.- . * ins in * much , if not more , to. do witli Using the tax rate than lias the cily council and the county board. Now Chairman Jones has it all tk'im-d out that Nebraska is to go f.ir Urynu by SO.OOO majority. Where the votes nrp to come from he carefully refrains from saying. Hut there are no sane sli- vorltes in tlie.se parts who want to wager that Bryan will carry Nebraska by ao.OOO or by half of 80,000. Everything wo get in this world htm to bo imd | for by somebody , Yet the number of people who permit them- BL'lves to be fooled Into tlm belief that they can get something for nothing without expense to anybody appeara to bo us- great now as it ever was since the world's history haa bet-ii written. The rnmpalgn of education In behalf of William Jennings Brynn has degen erated into n campaign of brag mid bluster. The press bureau nt unUoual 'li'inruY.ilIc ] iendiiinrtcrs | has issued a bracgadodo manifesto which claims for Bryan the electoral votes of thirty-six out of the forty-live states by popular inajoritic.s ranging up into the hundreds of thousands. As n specimen brick of monumental lying this statement beats ntiything ever produced by Baron Mini- cliauseu. The. state of Iowa , for example , Is claimed for Bryan by . ' 10.000 , when Iowa Is Just as sunto give McKinley 1M.OOO as .Maine Is to give .10,000. The state of Wisconsin is claimed for Bryan by the blatherskite bureau by I'.O.OOO , when everybody who knows anything about Wisconsin knows that It Is safe for .McKinley by nut less than l n,0 < x . .Michigan Is placed by these fakirs in the Bryan column by ; ! 0OiH > and .Minne seta by ; i."iX)0. ( ) .Michigan has ceased to be debatable ground. If it ever was de batable , and Minnesota has recovered sulllcleiitly from the sliver cra/.e to be confidently looked to to give from . " ,000 to 10.0CHJ majority for McKinley ami llobart. Tlu most colosMil fake in the Bryan list Is the claim of JJO.OOO majority for Uryan In Nebraska. The wildest Bry- anile In the state who has had any ex perience in Nebraska politics has not dared to claim the state by.more than from r ,00l ( to 10KM ( ) , and those who are conservative are satlslied with persuad ing themselves that Bryan has a fair chance to pull his Nebraska electoral ticket through by a scratch. As a mat ter of fact the outlook for a MeKlnl y victory in Nebraska is more hopeful than a Brynn victory In Kentucky , Maryland. West Virginia , or Delaware. All Ihese border states are of course claimed by the Bryan brag and bluster bureau by large majorities , when every well-Informed politician in the country knows that they are till more likely to be counted In the electoral college for McKiuley than for Bryan. But the claim-all bureau Is long not only on electoral votes but on popular majorities. H modestly gives Bryan a majority of 175,000 in Texas , when as a matter of fact he would bo glad to feel sure of Texas by 10.000. Texas lias a middle-of-the-road populist vote of 180,000 that declines to swal low Sewall and is liable to spew out Bryan if he gives them much more provocation. The claim bureau takes in for Bryan not alone every southern state , but also every state west of the Mississippi clear to 1'tigot sound. The only wonder Is , It has not claimed Bryan majorities in Massachusetts , Ohio and Maine. Kor that matter it might as well have claimed every state in the union and have done with it. BFFKCT OS TIIK ll.MLHO.inS. The fact that the railway Interests of the country are opposeil to the policy of currency debasement Is being used by the free silver advocates to charge that the companies are exerting an un due intluence upon their employes. The presidents of several railroads have felt called upon to deny uninallledly ] ( this charge , In which there is undoubtedly no more truth than in most of the other statements coming from the leaders of the popoeratlc element , which is sparing no effort to incite workingmen against employers. The simple truth Is that the railroads of the United Stales have the most practical of reasons for opposing the free silver policy. Hallway men declare Unit the plunge to a silver basis would offer the railways hardly any alterna tive but bankruptcy. Earnings could not be. materially increased , owing to the maximum rates tixed by state and federal legislation , the force of public opinion and the competition which would become more desperate as the roads found it Increasingly dilllctilt to make both ends meet. Expenditures would lie greatly Increased , as the re sult of higher prices for fuel and every element of equipment , even If wages remained stationary. Another change of great importance In case earnings were wholly received in silver would he the Interest on gold obligations. Tha ne cessity of buying gold at a premium to pay this Interest would eat Into protlts enormously. A leading llnanelal journal remarks that between the upper and nether millstones of Indexible freight and pas senger charges , high prices for fuel and material and the payment of gold interest on bonds , n frightful dellcit would stare the most prosperous rail road in the face at the end of n yeav under free silver. Manifestly the rail roads would be compelled by self-pres ervation to reduce wages. The number of railway employes In service on .luno : > 0 , IS ! ) , " , according to the commissioner of labor , was 78. i,00t ) and the wage payments amounted to about $200,000- ( MM ) annually , not Including the salaries of th higher olllelals. This Is a mat ter , therefore , which most directly in terests every railway employe and which lie ought to understand. It is H kindness lo the men who are In the service of the railroads to enlighten them as to the effect that free silver would have UIMIII the great Interest with which they are connected and which Is ( subject lo peculiar conditions which would prevent It from protecting Itself , except in reducing wages , against tile consequences of a debased currency. Obviously no class of workingmen are moro concerned in the maintenance of the exlstjng monetary system than those employed on the railroads and it would seem that no man In that service who undurstands what Is In volved In free silver , so far as his em ployment is concerned , can for n mo ment doubt that self-Interest dictates that he shall vote against that policy. Workingmen generally would suffer from it in having the purchasing power of their earnings reduced , but they probably would receive the same num ber of dollars as now for a day's work when employed , The railway employe , however , would bo threatened with the additional loss of an actual reduction in the amount of his wages. Ho would suffer In earning less as well as In being paid depreciated money. Surely these considerations , which are undeniable , ought to make the railway employes of tlio country n unit ngalnst the free and t'lillmlted coinage of silver. A JMWKH UltDMt W riVllil Mr. Bryan grows more audacious and reckless every time he talks , seeming to think less nnd less of the Intelligence of the people. Down In North Carolina he said that the gold standard "means n lower order of civilization. " This extra ordinary declaration was made In face of the fact that the nations of highest civilization have the gold standard , while the masses of the people In the silver standard countries can hardly be classed as civilized , using that term broadly. How does the civilization ol China compare with that of ( Jermaiiy , or Franco or England ? Compare the civilization of the laboring classes of Mexico with tjie civilization of ( lie workIng - Ing classes of the 1'nlled States. Is Ciliiratlon promoted and the arts culti vated In the most advanced silver stand ard countries to anything like the extent they are In gold standard countries ? Is pvblle education fostered in the former as It is In the latter countries ? Do silver standard countries maintain great uni versities , conservatories of music , art gall"ries anil public Hbraiies , as do tin- gold standard countries ? Hut it Is need less to Illustrate the utter absurdity of Mr. Bryan's remark , because It will be apparent to nil intelligent people- . The fact is that his fanatical devotion to the free silver cat-so is Impairing his com mon sense and causing him lo make ali sorts of wild and extravagant declara tions. Very much of bis talk In the south shows that he cannot have n very high estimate of popular Intelligence there. -1A/J FAltMKlt. Ill one of his speeches Thursday Mr. I'.rynn said , "Our opponents try to divide the toiling masses and set the laboring men in opposition to the farmer , " and he warned laborers not to desert the farmers. The truth Is that the oppo nents of Mr. Brynn assert that the Inter- eats of these classes are mutual that .he prosperity of one means the pros perity of the other. The- republican party says that the interest of Un- American farmer is in building up tin home market and this Involves the fill1- and constant employment of the labor of the country at good wages. Mr. Bryan's panacea is opening the mints : that of Hie republican party is opening the mills. Mr. Bryan says that the pol icy lie advocates will produce panic , from which both the farmer and laborer would certainly suffer. The republic. ! ! ! party proposes to restore confidence , bring into active use In developing productive enterprises the hundreds oj millions of idle capital , put the army of unemployed labor at work and thus increase the consuming power of tin- people , enormously reduced by the tariff policy for which Mr. Bryan is in a meas ure responsible. The popocratie scheme of currency de basement promises no benefit to labor. It would not create any demand for It. It would simply cheapen the dollar paid to labor. The necessary effect of this would be to lessen consumption am' this would injure the farmer. More than ! )0 per cent of the chief products of agriculture and the whole of some of them are consumed In this country. Tlu- wage earners constitute the great body of consumers. It is therefore ospontinl to the welfare of the farmers that laboi be well employed and well paid. Neitliei Mr. Bryan nor any other advocate of free silver lias ever undertaken to shov that this would be attained under free silver. The farmer ami the workingman should stand together for a sound nnii stable currency as good as the best in the world. Every plausible- argument advanced ir advocacy of Ki to 1 unlimited frecolnag Is equally if not more applicable to the ui'liii'Ilcd ' issue of Irredeemable paper. If it is cheap money that Is wanted why not the cheapest money ? If silver Is cheap , paper Is cheaper. If sllve ; will enable people to repudiate half their debts , unlimited Irredeemable paper will enable them to repudiate nearly all of their debts. But what free silver candidate diuo come out openly and ad mit that ho favors paper Hat pure and simple ? The Baltimore American Is authority for the statement thatIt l.s perfectly safe to count Maryland for McKinley by L'0,000. Maryland republicans aiv tills year favored by two factors that make for their success ( lie strength of this sound money dmocracy In that state and thi' revolt of respectable democrat- : against Oorman and Cormanlsiu. Mary land will not knowingly huerifieo the opportunity to make a record for hoiuMty nnd honest politics by casting Its electoral vote for McKinley. For candidates for county commis sioner ( lie republicans of this county must put up men of ability and of popularity. This Is particularly true of the Third couimlssloner district , which at best Is close between the two oppos ing parlies. That district was origi nally cut out with 1ho purpose of making it a democratic district. If the republicans want to keep control of the county board they must iniiko no mis- dikes In the men they choose as their candidates. Nowhere in the history of the United States can a counterpart lie found of tins dully pilgrimages of bodies of workIngmen - Ingmen , old roldicrs , business men and trades societies to Canton to pay their respects to the republican candidate for this presidency. When we relied upon wfiat this means , that the visitors him put themselves to an expense of time and money to listen to Major McKiuley anil to shako his hand , the phenomenon become.s slgnlllcant In the rxtroim- , The controversy over the exposition site will soon bo on and will bo deter mined by the directors as representa tives of the stockholders of the expo sition association. And it may bo perti nent to remark that the stock subscrip tion books are still accessible nnd the advocates of any slto may increase their votes by Increasing the sine of their stock subscription. The ? I500,000 limit Is the minimum , not the maximum. An important denominational event Is now on In this city. It is the annual conference of the Swedish Baptist church of the United .States. Delegates * \ THE DOCUMENTS IN THE CASE. . a HNANGIAt NEWS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 13. 1S96. 31 uumrial 49 chut.- ( fldrc Jf imtncial Y lu- legally Iiegislcre d for transmission through tht Post in I fie destroyed every one of iho ' ftAiitd Kingdom and Foreign Paris. pamphlets , lint 1 became mnro ' " ! convinced limn over that the . „ , Price One Penny. nitirlc was genuine. OfB'cta : /.nctiuncn-tA.ST : , LOSPOK , E.G. Since that tlmu I have ob < served that the World-Herald Branch Offices , forlpjjng. 13 , cbaasseo d'Anlin. has printed a far-slnttlo of thu . Subscriptions and } NKW YOBJ. | j willUm-strcct. nrtlcle. nnd I helli-vc Iho proof Advertisements. . . . ) ' la conclusive to any person. Hut Subscription rates ( Post-paid ) : you have even denied the cor 76. United Kingdom. Foreign. rectness of tills fur-slmllo. 1 observe that World-Herald Per Year.- 119 0 . . . 312 0 the - has made you an eminently fair Sit Months 0 19 6 . . . 160 which proposition , proposition Three Months . . . 0 9 9 . . . 0 13 0 you have so fur iRiiorud. Inas All Cheques nnd Post-Office Orders should bo tn.iao much as you appointed yourself " * crosded the censor of my conduct , I feel payable to C. F. Tombs , Secretary , and that I shall not be Impertinent "Parr's Bank , Limited. " If I shall assume to call your at Newsdealers and the trade snppliod in time for the tention to a very serious lapse- on your part. In an editorial early traina.ottho Publishing Officetho Argus Printing you said , concerntiiB myself : Company , Limited , corner of Tcmplo - nvcnuo and We fire Informed that our es teemed but over-credulous follow Tudor-street E.G. , low townsman , Mr. .1. H. TUB FucANcut NEWS can bo oblain&d in : Kite-hen , Into Inrorpor.itril Into Ilia valuable ilefrMsiof tn to 1 f At the DrufJCH Office ; 12 , Chnuitsdo free cnlnnKo tbnt fcirsi-il edi PAHI3 J d'Antm ; the Kiosrjucs ; nnd nt the torial from tin- London Flivin- I Railway Stations. i-lnl IsVvis. Now thill the article been proved to Init cle hits Bnnssnta ' kibrairio Kicssling nnd Co. , 72 , rank fabrication , we naturally " ' \ Montague do la Cour. Bttppos" Mr. Kltehon'H liont-Hty KICB f Golignaai's Library , 48 , Qaai St. will Impel his pamphlet him cither from to withdraw sale AWE tOU GOING . " 1 Jean Baptist * . clrcttlatloti or have the unsold * nml l UHl t 11. . W IJrlUr euMoi4 f At the BRANCH Office : 1 , William- sold copii-M oxpttrRed and ro- r lr tumm New YORK. . . \ 6-troot ; Arcade Nowo SUnd , 71 , vlsed. would unnt No to honest tie responsible silver ! lo to TM lh II " ln > I Broadway. for lite circulation of u forgery. f ot-U ftbouU titwf- I adept In part your own voids titwfWh < n TOO < " * " ' " " ° that the , , . nd > t ti Imeth et No v tti. STOCK EXCHANGE SETTLING DAYS. uhen 1 say : > article has proved to be not a WUll IIAT. THIS IS Settling Days ou the Stock liichanRO are nu follovr : PASTB I naturally siipjoso fabrication , WtowltiB I" n Jllotl > ( r ra CONSOLS , Tuesday , Gep'ternbcr 1. that Mr. Hoacwater's honesty the The London I'lnlnclil N " < < > iJ' STOCKS AND SIlXKES. will Impel him either to acn-pt ' Continuation Davji Ticket Days. Pay D.iye. the World-Ilerahl's challenge to UJU ? ! . . * . " ' ' " " * , . wouM the proof to a committee II H U ltM Sl.tM Thurs. Aup. 13. sustain nmrk lh t , J'l'l trom charKe of htrwlf ' the cut & . ' . 27. Fri. . 28. or to retract vtnture to ' jrg&-'WChurs. , Aug. . , Aug. that ho has caused to rurotc J"J l l" oulrl M lo llafr.'v&inffW Tucs. , Sep. 15. Wed. , Sep. 16. be forscry Bpr-'n-l broadcast. No honest rtic woutl h e " Amcilca nl ipr 3.1 Tues. , Sop. 29. Wed. , Sep. 30 : Bold champion - would want to A.li t h l fk 1"1 lh * c"rnnd ( ' countrlfi. that the " ' " ' ot toll ) original "I'aBto-thls-ln-your-hat" 'lu MiffttiK 'Shares , the neitcarr. . over days nro be responsible for the circulation mirkctB . . . b. mor. . ' > \.ligusi ! 25 , September 12 , nnd Sejteraber 26. tion of a falsehood. Will you TK bartlft ot P > M woul.l ' * CU" ° m ' article was first alleged to have been olippe "rtl" " 'l > " I' " ' explain why you do not act on lot J tl' " W * by an employe In the World-Herald ofllo * il cr wo 11 t,0U.e. Tl > l "J ol > > the lines of common honesty , . th.n any bond ot t from the original paper received direct from , Wn have received numerous letters from which lines you were so ready uron.tr trad * . Thftc c n b H3 J M ° bout London , and that It Is now admitted thul American correspondents containing whab purport - to lay down for the Rtililance of It lh.1 If ll-e - United SlatM . * to this story had no foundation In fact , hut port to bo editorials from TUB FiXAXdAb other people ? tl * r btili ruln lotnorro < d bctor * * _ | that the clipping was furnished by an English "w" * A reply will obllfie not only lrltl li tr Je " KEWS , and which have been reprinted in myself , but others who have the yrnr n out. Enry Amorlcto lish Cuttings bureau to a Mr. JX-vInu In various Western papers as "campaign litom- watched this controversy with 'would be prolwlrf. no' " tnarl " " 1S94. You know that the bogus extract In " " considerable Interest. Yours lotn . but In tvtry oilier serted by yourself into your pamphlet was One.Omaha article ture. . paper prints an . lot n J sl ' woul1 J. 11. KITCHEN. Ot coura. left without date with truly , throuth the express purpose stating that it is " from the London FINANCIAL , utter to a M.tala "tent abroad of making people believe that It had been br oUlsltlons " , to pay ! % ! of March 10. No such article ) was In toll , but the lw ot tschance printed since the opening of the present J. 11. Kilclica Dear ever printed by us , and its whole tenor is To Mr. under tW h'a would be a mere campaign. Sir : Jly response to your k-t- tn the bucket. ct.rorared to to the view have taken 4rop directly opposed wo l be re.ped ( rom the mar- The only thing you have to sustain your tcr of the 14th has been delayed the proM of the eiTccb of frco silver in the United keli ot South America and A.la. lo pretense that the clipping : of April 30. 1SS4 , States. So far from advocating free silver layed in order to ctiiible. me to Biy nothing of r.urope. The marvel of which the World-Herald has printed fao-slmile of the St t" ! > not a - copy . Unll'd coinage , \ro have persistently pointed out that procure of the London Financial "Nerv : long ll th.t aso the el cd the oprortunlty. It fac-simlle , was taken from The Financial it spells repudiation and , the withdrawal of all lia been a piece ot tuck that It has News , Is the word of an English concera editorial which denies , positively American to Uie . uver occurred lo that maltcs a business of selling newspaper European capital. nies ever haviiiR published thr > ui oot cr the norld-a mark u KOOI bail. . nd It clippings. There In nothing on the face of article which you liad seen (1. ( nllht by eolng aerve on uj a rltbl tl er If. Irritated by thu fac slmllo to show from what paper It to Incorporate in your pairphlet the contemptible apMhy ot our was clipped or on what date It was pub * as an In favor of toward th. .liver problem OMAHA , Sqpt. 14. lion. E. Hosewater , Edi argument eovernmett relallated by lislied , or whether it was an editorial or a tor Omaha Ilqe : Hear Sir Some time aRO the opening of the United States mints to lem reeling the out Americans told. It could b. .a.lly contributed article. On the other hand , I The Omaha lfc ! took me to task for pub the frco and unlimited coinage of silver f COM. have In my possession the original copy lishing iu. a pamphlet issued by me an arti at the ratio of 16 to 1. I regret exceedingly of the editorial denial of The Financial Ncwa cle credited tq the London Financial News , , and taken ' by mefrom the that you have put mo to the trouble of and that disposes of thu entire matter so Omaha World-Herald. In which It forcing you , through the medium of The far as The 13eo Is concerned. had been1'printed under the headline , Hee , to Inspect the document the original printed " copy of the article that appeared In The Financial You say that I have appointed myself " This In Your Hat. When I "Paste reproduced this article 1 had peed reason to of which was placed at your disposal , but nancial News. If you had compared this pretended the censor of your conduct. I say your con bclievo that it was genuine , but when The which you declined to look at because you tended extract with the cutting of which it duct Is your own censor. Had you been Bee assailed l as a forRery and criticised evidently cither did not want to be un purports to bo a copy you wtuld have seen honestly desirous of learning the truth , you mo for Riving ) circulation to a forgery , my deceived or wanted to keep up the'work of that it was garbled and misquoted and bears would have examined , as Mr. D. Clem reputation as an honest man was at stake deception In which you have been engaged. upon Its face the evidence of designing im Denver has done , the documents In my possession and I made another InvcstlRatlon. Had that Investigation-shown that The Hec.was right You say you are satisfied the "I'.tSLO-this- posture. session , whose genuineness can not ho dls- * " fi I should 3havtf , taken your adVfce and have in-your-hat" article Is genuine nnd a Into You know also , or you ought to know. ptlted. E. HOSEWATEU. art ) lioro front many states in tlio union and legislation is being enacted for thousands of communicants. 'JV > tin- Swedish people this conference Is of uront interest and the fact that the hotly was induced to hold its session in Onmlia is significant of the growing number of Swedes in the Avcst , and particularly in Xt-bnisUa. No foreign iMitionallty has done more to build up the resources of this state. "An Amooy.lii' CIIHN. " Kansas City Joumnl. "I Hnd as much enthusiasm for mo hero as In Nebraska , " said Mr. Hryan to a Ken tucky audience. This must have inado the colonels grin Immensely. They know Ne braska is a sound money state as well as Kentucky. _ - All of < > " < Ml ml. Globe-IH'inocr.it. A poll of 300 Methodist ministers in Ohio did not reveal one who favored the Chicago platform or the election of Uryan. Some of the number are lifelong democrats , and will act with the party again when the coin de- basers are shaken out nt It. An I'liiirrircilc-iitcil Situation. Ne > v York Sun. Oryan was nominated on the 10th of July , two months ago. During that long tlmo there has not been a single democrat of real ( consequence and distinction In the whole state of New York who has declared himself | in favor of 'the candidate and the platform on which ho was nominated. Nearly all the democrats of the slate most honored by the party and Influential In it have openly nnd formally repudiated both platform and ticket as utterly undemocratic nnd unworthy of the countenance of any patriot. nf Fnlliiri- . Philadelphia He-curd. The silv'critts of Louisville , Ky. , hurled a boomerang at the sound money notifica tion meeting In that city Saturday night last when they started twenty-two counter- meetings throughout the city to draw away the crowd. Hut the counter-demonstrations worn flat failures , while the notification | meeting WRS a complete success ; and now the sllverltcs admit , as they rub the con tusions left by the boomerang's recoil , that they have abandoned hope of Kentucky. Leaf by leaf the roses fall ; and one by one the statcB that were sure to be swept by Dryanlam pr $ dropping out of the repudia tion porldd n'llll into the sound money column , rrz tinSc'limil TcnclMTM , Js'cnr York Run. "If yotr wlIU show me a school teacher who , because of a salary Involved and for the hope ofVjJettltiG larger dollars Instead of moro dollu&yVlll favor the gold standard while tb $ people of this county and state are suffering I will show you a school teacher whaflovs not deserve a place teach ing the children of this country.Dryan. . That Is. Ifcyan denounces as unworthy of their places all ' .those who prefer to get their wages or salar'U'S In 100-ccnt dollars , Instead of 5 : > cent dollVst He wants to put them on half pay , on the ground that their loss will bo the gain of those from whom they buy necessary articles. Hut how can there bo any ga'7 ' Vr tlll ) e'l'r ' ' when he. In his turn , inust/aNo / pay two dollars for what he buys , yherV ho pays one now ? Dryan has the Impudence to make a threatening demand for an utterly useless Eolf-sacrlllco by all salaried men and wage earners. " \Vll Tf ( III- ClIllllMlHCoilUH III. Kansns City ijournul. "Tho moment the mints of the United States are ppcned to the free coinage of silver , " .nays Mr. Ilryan , " 70,000,000. people can go out and secure silver , toke It to the mints and convert It Into money and use that money to pay taxes and debts with and for the purchase of property. " Oh , no they can't. The silver mines are all owned by millionaires and big corpora tions , and the people can no more HO out ' and "securu" silver than they can go out and secure gold or pearls or diamonds. The silver mine owners would very quickly put an end to their "securing" If they bhould attempt it. U la just as much a crime to " ecare" silver bullion without giving an acceptable return for It. as to "secure" JL Jiurje out of another man's sta ble at midnight. Mr. Bryan's plan of get ting money Into the hands of the people Is about as practicable as the suggestion of the blue-blooded lady who , when told that the poor had nothing to buy fond with , in nocently asked , "Why don't they live at hotels ? " A I'OMTIC.M. HISV of ( In * l"lftloii llrtnriiH from .MnliK- . PprlliRfloM ( Mass. ) Heimbllcan ( liul. ilrm. ) In all the presidential years since 1SCO the Maine republicans up to Monday had never been able in the September state election to lift their plurality above 20,000. Hut Monday's returns point to a plurality moro than twice as large as the highest ever before obtained In a corresponding election , and It may reach above 2V4 times the highest previous plurality. Tills , like the Vermont election , exhibits nothing less than a political revolution. It shows again that the republican ranks In tlie northeast are Impenetrable to the sil ver attack , while thousands of democrats have been driven from their party Into the camp of their old enemy or Into the woods. Hut the result Is still more emphatic In Its verdict for honest money and against the Chicago platform than even the Ver mont result. Maine , unlike Vermont , has long been infected with soft-money Ideas. So far is this true that in the state election of 1SSO , when the country nt largo was strongly republican , Maine was carried by a greenback nnd democratic fusion. Maine , also , unllkf ) Vermont , has In later years been touched by the populist movement. It cast a populist vote of 2SSS in the state elec tion of 1S-J2 and 5,321 In the state election of two years ago , Here , certainly , was the one spot In nil New Knglaiid whcro the free silver move ment should exhibit strength If It 1ms any ; and the Chicago convention recognized the fact when It put Arthur Si-wall upon Its ticket. Hut the event proves that free sli ver has no strength in all this section , and the disappointment of those who bail been building high hopes on the contrary uuppo- sltlon will be bitter In the extreme. The news will carry now hope and en couragement to the Hryan opposition throughout the country , anil discouragement if not despair to the free silver army. TALK A1HMJT THII.ST.S. WIiut'N flic MiiHi-r ivltli ( lie Silver Mini * Symllriilrr .St. I'unl I'lom-cr 1'rcKa. The frco silver orators have a great deal lo any about trusts and comulnos ami iromip- olles , as In some vacua and miixpluiiel : way Illustrating the evils of ilio gold si am- aril. Hut they are careful to say nothing about that gigantic trust In whoso M-rvJcn thuy are enrolled many of them as Its hired tools and agents. Thuy Bay nothing anout that monster combine of sllvi-r nilno owners which Is behind the silver btandard lauvo- incnt. lietwcen thirty airl for'nu'ii tun- trol thn great bulk of tna silver output of America. Hut thulr ag.ruat9 ; r a zcd wealth from their mlncH U computed at rot less than $500,000,000 , while they i > ro Iho possessors of many times more potential wealth In tl.o hidden stores of their silver mines. Talk of trusts , Indeed ! Why. this aim Infernal silver trust even If the pt-ojilo U ' should rise In their might next November and crush It so utterly that It will never ihow Its brazen head again has already accomplished a hundiedfold more mischief than all other trusts , combines and monop olies that over existed. During thu lust three or four years It is safe to say that Ihraugb the apprehensions catm-il In bujl- ncss and financial circles by thu threat of trco coinage of ullver , thu silver combine lus cost the American people more than the i-ntlro money cost of putting down thu re bellion. Trusts , Indeed ! Look to your own trust .ho trust whose rapacious policy has dragged 'ho country more than once during the last 'our years to the brink of bankruptcy and llihonor ; the monster silver trust , whose lark shadow has blighted all the conll leuce and credit which aru thu life of bual- tess prosperity , and before the awful menace > f whoso possible success In this election ill business stands still awaiting the vcr tlct of the American people. Trusts , indeed ! OTIIKIl I.AM1S TIIAV OII1IS. It may bo possible for the diplomats of Europe by sheer force of their power to shield the sultan of Turkey from the Indig nation of outraged humanity , nnd preserve Intact his throne , but by no display of their subtle diplomacy can they any longer do- cclvo the people with regard to the situation of affairs In the sultan's domains. All the world knows of the barbarities of this "as sassin" of Europe , and all humanity , speak ing through that "grand old mnn" of the English speaking people. Mr. Gladstone , cries aloud for vengeance. No further apolo gies can be made for Abdul Homed , and none will be accepted. Mr. Gladstone speaks for all when he demands swift punishment for this extermination of the Armenians. How long must we wait for it ? Will the rulers of Europe , all of whom are numbered among Christian potentates , strip him at once of the power to perpetrate these crimes , or must the world hope on , viewing these tragedies dally , for the band of God to ren der futile any further efforts to grind these few remaining people In the dust ? * * * The czar's European trip Is being made very unpleasant for him. Starting from homo with the memory of having sacrificed 5,000 people on HIP plains ot Moscow , nt his coronation , ho had scarcely left Vienna when IjQbanoff , his foreign minister , dropped dead by his side. And now the smart English detectives startle the world by exposing an alleged plot to blow up the czar and bis wife. Queen Victoria , nnd perhaps ether representatives of royalty , and , finally , to es tablish a reign of ( error In London and the other European capitals. All this Is calcu lated to make It disagreeable for the czar , and to convince him that bo Is on the throne of his ancestors. It Is said that the czar has a very nervous disposition. Then it will not bo helped by his present trip , Such an unprecedented series of sensations would break down the strongest man. If long con Untied In , and the present lord of the house of Itomannff has not the tremendous physl'itio ' and steady nerve of his lamented father. The effect upon him personally Is , there fore , a matter of consequence , * * * Next year will complete the fourth century since Vasco do ( lama set out from I'ortugal on the voyage which carried him around the Cape of Good Hope to India , thus opening a new pathway for the commerce between the Orient and the west , which destroyed old marts and built up new ones from the Medi terranean to the Hultlc , entirely shifting the channels of trade in the European world , and giving a new direction to Its commercial ac tivities. The anniversary Is to bo celebrated by Portugal In an Impressive- manner , as It deserves , beginning on July 8 , 1897 , and cnn- tlnnlnj ; through three days of festival throughout the kingdom , with rcliglniu and patriotic ceremonies on a scale bcllttlng the Importance of the occasion. There will also be an exhibition Illustrating the contribu tions of I'ortugal to the art of navigation , and setting forth her trophies of discovery , which arc almost as glorious as those of her sister nation Spain , and In that period eclipsed those of any olhcr marlllmo power. She Is entitled to celebrate her achieve ments In thu most clowlng and gorgeous manner , and Invites I hi * whole world to her ceremonial. It wl'l 1-1 ' ' perpetuation of an Illustrious mrinot ' , : ; renown wllb 'Uolumbus and Ai . < . . - nnd sharing It with Cabral and 1'cilrn da Sauza , both of whom , llko Vasco da ( Jama himself , carrlrd the standard of I'ortupnl to the remotest lands , Hrazll among them , providing an exile and an empire for Its royal house which Is was to enter on In duo season , and when the time was rlpti abandoned , as It did a few years ago. The United States must not be unrepresented at the cele bration , and Hrazll , In particular , ought to put Its best foot forward on the occasion. * Thn Neuo Prole Prrsso recently pub lished an article supposed to have bct-n Inspired by the Austrian foreign office , which declares that the powers of the trlplu alliance have received calming assurances respecting thu Franco-Russian treaty , and have been put In possession of trustworthy Information on the subject. The inference suggested is that. In spite of the czar's outward reserve during lila visit to Vienna , his late foreign mluUU-r , I'rluco I obanoff , ' * * - i-j ' and cooler times are at hand , for which every ono with a memory of the tor rid summer rejoices , And fall styles in cloth * ing are ready , if you know where to look for them. Clothes , more clothesyou can find at almost any store , but there is only one best place where style is as much a consid eration as the cloth itself. We want to clothe the man who used to think he must have everything1 cjt to his order. We would like to show him his error and put money in his pocket at the'same time. For the man who knows bur kind of clothing , it is only necessary to remind him that our I7all Stocks ary ready for his inspec tion. 9 9 S , W. Cor. 15th unil Uouglus Sts.