FOUR GREAT- FACTS. Justify Republican Party it Asking Voters to Keep It in Control. Redeemed Platform Pledges; Main-' tained Prosperity; Developed Commerce; Protected Labor. "Four great facts seem to just ify the Republican pnrty In asking the voters of the United States to continue it In control of the affairs of the government.. First, the promptness with which it has fulfilled the pledges of its plntroiui upon which It successfully appealed to the people in 180(1; second, the pros perity which hits come to all classes of our citizens with, and as it result of, the fulfillment of those pledges; third, the evidence which thai pros perity furnishes of the fallacy of the principles offered by the opposing par ties In 1890, and still sup)ortcd hy them; and, fourth, the advantages to our country, our commerce, and our pcoplo in the extension of area, com merce, and International Influence which have unexpectedly come ns an Incident of the fulfillment of one of the important pledges of the platform of 18!M1, and with it the opportunity for benefiting the people of the territory affected." Front the Republican Cam paign Text-Hook of 1900. The above quotation from the own ing pages of the Republican Campaign Text-Hook of 1000 applies with equal force to conditions In the present cam paign. The four great fnets which justified the pnrty In asking tho sup port of the public In J00O were: First, that its pledges of 1S90 had been re deemed; second, that prosperity had come as a result; third, that develop ments since 1890 had shown the fallacy of the principles upon which the Dem ocracy then appealed for public sup port; and, fourth, the conditions which . hud come to other parts of the world and their people as a result of promises fulfilled hy the Republican party In tho United States. . These assertions made In the Text-Rook of 1300 have been fully justified by the added ex Xterlences of another eight years. The pledges of 1S'.M! and those made In 1000 and 1004 have been redeemed. The protective tariff has been restored ; the gold standard made permanent; Cuba freed, given Independence, pro tected from Internal troubles and alwut to be again made a republic; the Pnn uiiia Canal assured under the sole ownership and control of the United States ; a Department of Commerce and Labor established; rural free delivery given to millions of the agricultural community; tho laws for tlje proper regulation of trusts und great corpora tions strengthened nnd enforced; pros perity established : commerce devel oped : labor protected and given ample employment and reward ; intelligence, prosperity und good government estab lished in distant Islands ; and the Hag of the United States made the emblem of honor In every part of tho world. Opposed hf Ueinocracy. All of these. great accomplishments have been the work of the Republican party. In each of them It has met the discouragement, the opposition, and the hostilities of the Democracy. The protective tariff was fought at every step, and denounced by the platform of the Democrats ns a "robbery." The act establishing the gold standard was op posed and the Democratic vote cast al most solidly against it, and that party in Its conventions and platforms of 1004 and 1908 deliberately refused to retract In the slightest degree Its ad vocacy of the free and unlimited coin age of silver. In tho war for the free dom of Cuba, the work of the Republi cans was met with harsh criticism. In the efforts to establish peace fend good government In the newly acquired ter ritory, each step met with opposition and false charges and with the demand that the territory nnd Its millions of people be abandoned to Internal strlfo or control by a nionarehlal government. The acquirement of the right to con struct the I'auauiu Canal was met with opposition and obstruction. The en forcement of law against trusts and other great corporations was denounced as ineffective and designed to deceive the public. The establishment of rural free delivery was discouraged. The splendid prosperity which followed tho restoration of the protective tariff was decried nnd denounced as fictitious and temporary, and an attempt made to sow the seeds of dissatisfaction and discord among the ieople by complaints of the higher cost of food which etiui.-j as tho natural results of the Increased demand accompanying general pros perity and high wages. It is upon tho evidence of the past twelve years, evidence that the Rep'i"li can party Is a party of progress, und the Democracy a patty of Inaction, re tardment, and fault-finding, that the Republican party again confidently ap peals for public support In the Presi dential ard Congressional elections of 1D0S. . . it! Sentluteat That Wilt Mt. Judge Taft's "I do not care for the Presidency If It has to come by com promise with Senator Fornker or any body else in a matter of principle," Is one of those quotable sentences that will stick In memory and In politics and be recalled In campaigns many yean hence as one of the virile utterance of American hlstorv. Topeka Capital, From the Baltimore American. AS B00SEVELT SEES BBYAN. "Yon say that you have advo cated more radical ' measures against private monopolies than either I or my party associates have been willing to undertake. You have, indeed, advocated measures that sound more radi cal, but they have the prime de fect that In practice they would not work. I should not lit this letter to you discuss your !itti fude on this question if you did1 not yourself bring it up, but as you have brought It up, I answer you that In my judgment the - measures you advocato would be wholly ineffective In curing a single evil, and so far as they had any effect at nil, would mere ly throw tho entire business of the country Into hopeless and uN ter confusion. I put Mr. Taft's deeds against your words. I ask that you be judged both by the words you wish remembered, nnd by the words that seemingly you and your party now desire to have forgotten. ... I diold II entirely natural for any great law-defying corporation to wish to see you placed In tho Presi dency rather than Mr. Taft. Yo-ir plans to put a stop to the abuses of thesa corporations are wholly chimerical. Theodore Roose velt." BRYAN UNLIKE LINCOLN. Attempt to Compare Continuous Candidate to Great Statesman a Miserable Failure. ' "The present canvass shows again the, folly of the ass that put on a lion's skin. The managers of Mr. Bryan's press bureau are attempting to conjure votes for him by the use of the sacred name of Lincoln. Aesop declared that when the ass lifted up his voice nnd brayed, every one knew him und his owner came up and gave him a sound cudgeling. The warning falls on deaf ears. The partisan who tries tho same tricks Invites like shame and punishment. The audacity of the device may capture some of the un wary. Insofar ns he has a party be hind him, Mr, Itryan is tho candidate of those who maligned nnd ridiculed the first nnd greatest President the Republican party has given to the na tion. Mr. Itryan tjelles for support on the forces which nt every step opposed Lincoln, which obstructed the meas ures of war and pence of that savior of the union, and pronounced the proc lamation of emancipation a monstrous crime." Vice Pesldentlal Candidate Sherman at Rock Islaud, 111. The I'ubllo Wellar. (From Governor Hughes' Speech at South Bend, Ind.) "If Bryan had been elected In lSIMi tho disasters that would have followed wcjttld have prevented him from ever being a candidate again. "We are devoted to a line of progress, st.nightfonvard, honorable administra tion above every selfish advantage, against- every attempt to exploit the ptople for private interest. We are de voted to the public welfare in establish ing the stability of honest enterprise. We serve the Republican party becuuse we believe that through it these .things can be accomplished. In the heat and turmoil of political campaign It Is Im portant that we should preserve a true and a proper sense of proportion." STAINDIINd OIN THEIR RECORDS, BRYAN THE FREE-TRADER Stands To-day as He Did When in Congress for Free Trade. He Pronounced the Wilson-Gorman Free Trade Bill Just and Honorable. In the record of Mr. Bryan's public career he lsi officially Identified with Just one important measure of federal legislation, and thn the Wilson-Gorman tariff act of 1804. As a member of the House Committee on Ways and Means during President Cleveland's second ad ministration Mr. Bryan assisted in pre paring that mrfisure, nnd ' In its com pleted form It bore his unqualified ap proval. Ills advocacy of tho bill drew sharp and clear the dividing line be tween the Democracy of Bryanlsm and the Democracy of G rover Cleveland. Mr. Bryan pronounced the measure just ami honorable. President Cleveland de nounced It as "the creature of jterfldy and dishonor," refused to sign it, nnd it became a law without his approval. The distinction thus drawn between the Bryan Democracy and the Cleveland Iemocracy continues to this day. Frea Trad Disastrous. Innsmtieh as Mr. Bryan ts posing this year as the special friend and champion of the farmers, It is worth while to point out how their interests were affected "by the only important law he over helped to create. The Wilson- Gorman act repealed the duty on wool. On Janunry 1, 1803, two months after President Cleveland' second election, the sheep In the United States, accord ing to official statistics, numbered 47.- 273.53 nnd were valued at $125,000,254. At tho close of Mr. Cleveland's term, thanks to tho baleful Influence of the free trade act which Mr. Bryan had helped to force upon the statute book, tho number of sheep In the country had fallen to 30,818,013, having a value of $00,020,012. In other words, the sheep herds had suffered a loss of more than 10,000,000, or nearly 25 per cent, and the Avool clip or the United States had declined in value about $58,(MH),i00, or nearly 50 per cent, all through the op eration of a law which found one of Its most ardent supporters In the perT son of "tho farmers' friend," William J. Bryan. In 1S!I3, under the fostering care of tariff protection, the wool of the coun try amounted to 303.000,000 pounds; in 180.1, under th,e blighting effect of free trade, It fell to 200,000,000 pounds. In 1801. with the tariff restored. It rose to 302.000.000 pounds and to 310,- 000,000 pounds in 1!MJ2. During the four years of President Cleveland's sec ond term the measure which lie de nounced ns "the creature of perfidy and dishonor," but which Mr. Bryan never theless enthusiastically endorsed, sad dled tho American wool growers with losses conservatively estimated at $KK),- 000.000. But the wool growers were not the only victims of (ho Wllson-Gorinan-Rryan perfidy. Kvery branch of Ameri can Industry suffered. It lowered the duties on Imports of manufactures ami thereby forced the closing of Important native Industries and drove their em ployes Into Idleness. Wages In every branch of industrial activity. declined, the demand for every variety of farm products fell off, and the worklngmen of the country were subjected to uni versal hardship and distress. The op eration of Mr. Bryan's pet measure robbed the fanners, brought hunger and misery to the wnge-earucr nnd bank rupted the treasury. It was Indeed, as Mr. Cleveland said, "a creature of per fidy and dishonor." Bryan for Free Trade. William Jennings Bryan stands to day ns he stood In 1804, for free trade nnd all that it means to American la bor and American enterprise. lie can not get away from the record, and there are no indications that he wants to get away from It. He Is committed to free trade as distinctly as he.ia to free silver, nnd his own words allow that he will fasten those twin deviltries upon the country if he gets the chance. "SHALL THE PEOPLE B.TJLEP" une "John Brown." We have heard the wondrous query of Nebraska's "Peerless One," As It sounded out from Falrvlew and struck the nation dumb ; So we guess we'll keep on ruling, as for ninny year we've done I The people still shall rule! Chorus: Glory, glory, hallelujah! Glory, glory, hallelujah! ' Glory, glory hallelujah! The People still shall rule! In eighteen ninety-six yon know, the People thought they'd rule, And give the "Peerless Orator" some more years at school ; But still in nlnteen hundred he could not the People fool; Tho Teople still, would rule! "Shall the People rule?" asks Bryan. Does he think the nation daft? Is there any cause for wonder that the People see his craft? Of course, they'll keep on ruling, and their Leader will be Taft ! Tho Teople still will rule! Tnft is running on his record, while Bryan runs away From the "Paramount Issues" which he held tho other day; And what he'll hold tomorrow no mor tal man can say, The People still shall rule! We believe in honest banking, but not i - In guarantees To secure bank deposits, that may tend to foster thieves. However much sueli methods some cun ning knaves might plense, The People still will rule! We Intend to vote for William but not for William B. " Our ballots in November shall be cast for William T. The defeat of William Bryan will be counted No. 3. The People still shall rule. ' B. F. C. In Baltimore American. For Taft and tha Big Stick. To the Kdltor of The World: Because of the present condition of our government we must have a man with the ability of Mr. Taft to keep the wheels of progress turning, so that more respect shall be shown on tho part of Europe. Our government has been progress ing ever since its birth. The Monroe Doctrine will be In great dauger. In stead of Japan being our friendly neighbor it will become our foe. Thero fore all parties should unite In electlnf Mr. Taft by a big majority, and with the "Big Stick" he should carry out Presideut Roosevelt's policies. ' LOUIS SHAPIRO. ANSWERED "TRESSm." When Democrats Had Chase In Congress to Vote for Bryan Bank Deposit Plan They Dodged. in n recent Interview Judge Walter I. Smith, Member of Congress, said: ' . "At the last Houston of Congress n currency bill was Introduced by Mr. Jno. S. Williams of Mississippi, leader of the Democratic side of the Houne and Democratic Senator-elect from Mis sissippi, i "This bill not only provided for the cure of all the Ills of our currency sys tem, but enntalnod provision for the much lauded national guarantee of bank de;oslt8. On the 0th day of last March Mr. Williams arose in the House and stated that he had been furnished with ndynnce sheets of an editorial to appear In Mr. Bryan's Commoner, com menting tiMn this bill and asked that these advance sheets might be printed In the Record, and leave being granted they were so printed. "In the editorial slight criticism was made upon trilling details of the hill but upon the whole It was declared to be an ideal measure that ought to re ceive the support of every Democrat It wns also stated that the bill had been prepared after n conference of the lead Ing Democrats of the Senate and House at which Mr. Bryan was present. "When the Republican currency measure wns brought wp in the House it was provided by the rule that It should be In order to move to substitute this bill of Mr. Williams, which. It should not be forgotten, contained a provision for the national guarantee of bank deposits. "As the time drew near for the. close of the debate and for some reason no Democrat offered the bill, Mr. Kahn ot California moved to substitute the Williams bill for the Republican bill Immediately there was great confusion on the Democratic side, of the chamber and a hasty consultation as to what should be done. Finally six Democrats voted to substitute the Williams bill for the Republican mensure, 20 Democrats voted against It and 92 Democrats vot ed 'present' without being paired. "The question was not on the adop tion of the Democratic bill, but was whether the Democratic bill, containing the national guarantee of bank deposits was preferable to the Republican meas ure, and on that question only six Dem ocrats voted 'Yes,' 29 Democrat" voted 'No' and 92 Democrats without being paired voted present In other words, about three-fourths of all the Demo crats had no opinion whatever one way or the other ns to whether their bill with the blessed guarantee of bank de posits in It, was better or worse than ours." COUNTBY NEEDS A REPUBLICAN ( CONGBESS. President Roosevelt Points Out Im portance of Electing Legislators to Support Taft. President Roosevelt, in a letter to William B. McKinlcy, chnlrinnn of the Republican Congressional Committee, appeals to disinterested citizens to join wllh the National Republican Commit tee nnd the Congressional Committee In a rnovemetit to elect Willlniu II. Taft ns President and n Republican Congress to support him, saying, In part: "It Is urgently necessary, from the standpoint of the public Interest, to elect Mr. Taft, and n Republican Con gress which will support him; and they seek election on a platform which spe cifically pledges the party, alike in its executive nnd legislative branches, to continue nnd develop the policies which have been not merely Introduced, but acted upon during these Seven years. Tin-Be policies can be successfully car ried through only by tho henrty co-oper-ntlon of the President and tho Congress In hot It Its branches, and It Is therefore licculinrly Important that there should obtain such harmony between them. To fall to elect Mr. Taft would be a calam ity to the country ( and It would be folly,' while electing him, yet nt the same time to elect a Congress hostile to him, n Congress which under the in fluence of partisan leadership would be certain to thwart and bafllo blut on every possible occnslon. To elect Mr. Taft, nnd nt the same time to elect a Congress pledged to support hi in, is the only way in which to perpetuate the policy of the government as now car ried on.' I feel that all the aid that can he given to this policy by every good citizen should bo given ; for this Is far more than n merely partisan matter." Big Western Bank Deposits. The deposits In the State banks of Kansas on Sept. 1, the-date of the last call, were greater than ever before In the history of the State a total of over eighty-three million dollars, ami this within ten months after the panic. During the eighty days between the last and next to last calls the deposits Increased at tho rate of $100,000 a day. The net Increase for this period was eight million dollars. The na tional banks will probably show an equal gain for the same period. To peka Capital. TAFT'S PLEDGE. Mr. Taft at St. Panl: "If I am elected, as I expect to be, I have the greatest pleas ure In pledging, in the presence of this grand audience, all the energies and 'all the abilities of which I am capable to continue the Roosevelt policies, to mako business honest and to keep every man within the law, be ho fcombla or rich." Ben mm mm t i The Continuous Candidate Drop from Idealism in H.'s Frenzied Fight for Votes. Now Hand In Glove with Notorious Politicians and Corruptlonlsta Whom He Formerly Denounced. While morality has been the keynote of all of Mr. Bryan's lectures and ot most of his political speeches for years, the record shows that he has not been assiduous In practicing what he preaches; while his voice has been championing the moral uplift of th loople In both public and private life,, personally ho has uot hesitated to form alliances with some of the most unde sirable citizens for the advancement of his political hopes. The recent expo sures of the close connection between tfie Standard Oil trust and tho Inuer councils of the Democratic National Committee have served to recall other alliances made hy Mr.- Bryan lit hit choice of political associates and on fldantes, says the Omaha Bee. In the Illinois lights for the Inst eight years, Mr. Bryan has been Identified with the Roger Sullivan Democrats. True, he defied nnd denounced Sullivan nt the St. Louis convention.-In 1904, but Sullivan was at that time working for Judge Parker's nomination. Bryan declared that Sullivan was a corpora tion creature, the tool of tho big in terests and insisted that ho could not nnd would not accept nny endorsement from a convention or committee that had endorsed Sullivan. This year Sul livan Is one of bis close political ad visers and director of the Democratic destinies In Illinois, with Mr. Bryan's expressed approval nnd consent. Money and Torrer All-Imnortaat. In New 'ork Mr. Bryan's political fortunes are indissoluhly linked with. "Flngy" Connors. "Charley" Murphy, "Pat" MeCnrren, the New York rep resentative of the Standard Oil trust; August Belmont, T. Fortune Ryan and the entire clique of trust olUclnls and lice track promoters, who huve been waging such bitter fight on the reforms urged by Governor Hughes and the Re publican State administrations. Thesa Interests, through T. Fftfie Ryan nnd W. F. Sheehau, sent $20,000 to No- dldncy for the United' States 8enate. .Air. Bryan has struck hands with thoso nnd .other devoted servants of tho Standard Oil interests In New York and . Das Joined Lieutenant Governor Chan ter In nn assault mon Stnte reg'j'atioa of railroads, although everywhere elso- be demands more government regula tion than ever. In Pennsylvania, Colonel Guffcy, tho- recognlzed lender of the Democrats and representative, of the Standard OH In terests und donor of tho stained glass window In Mr. Bryan's home, wns rend out of the Democratic party by Bryaa nt the Denver convention, but he Is back again and the fight against hlns has been stopped at Mr. Bryan's direc tion. la Indiana and Mlssoarl. In Indiana, Mr. Bryan places hla trust in Tom Taggart, proprietor of' the gambling Joint at French Lick Springs and best client of Mr. Kern,. the Bryan running mate. Taggart fre quently meets Mr. Bryan at Chicago -and other places outside of Indiana for close political conferences und he also figured In the transfer of that $20,009 boodle bng to the Nebraska Democrats - in 1904. Mr. Taggart has been de nounced by Mr. Bryan for public con sumption only. In Missouri, Mr. Bryan's closest poli tical associates are Harry Ha'wcs, lid- ward Butler nnd Moses C. Wetutoro, and other lenders of perhaps the most corrupt nnd notorious political machino ever organized. Mr. Bryan has dona nis nest to ininiinizo tno luiiuence or Governor Folk In tho Democratic poll tics of Missouri, where Folk has mad some record of practicing what Mr. Bryan preaches. Standard Oil Mob In liiBlknlil. In Texas, Senator hclley, wearing a beautiful coat of whitewash, which covers up the Standard Oil spots, Is Mr, . Bryan's adviser and lit Oklahoma, Gov ernor Haskell, who has not yet re ceived his whitewash, was Mr. Bryan's direct representative on the platform -committee at Denver nnd his personal choice for treasurer of the national committee. In Kentucky, Mr. Bryaa championed Goebellsm nnd made a de termined effort to continue that system by trying to force the Democrats to elect Governor Beckham to the United Stutes Senate. In view of the record, it Is not sur prising that in Nebraska Mr. Bryaa makes Cowboy "Jim" Dahlmau hla closest political chum. The surprise la that ho still has the temerity to con tinue his demands for the moral regen eration of political parties. Mr. Taft should bold to bis original resolution not to answer every state ment made by Bryan. Give Mr. Bryaa time enough and be will deny them aJI. himself. Philadelphia Ledger. . Haskell in himself amounts to nota- lng, but be is valuable as showing wita. what kind of men Mr. Bryaa la witling ; ta aurround himself. New York fllaaau