MANY PEOPLE PERISH ■9 ir > A GREAT LOSS OF LIFE BY THE HURRICANE. 9hree Hundred and Fifty Periali In Flor —Hundred# at Fishermen Over whelmed—Cedar Keys Almost Laid Waste—Town After Town Virtually Wiped Out—A great Property Loss* The West India Hurricane. Jacksonville, Fla., Oct 3. —At 4east 350 lives—possibly 500— were lost ia and about Cedar Keys as a re* *ult of the terrific hurricane and tidal ■ware Tuesday night. Of 100 fishing and sponge boats with from four to ten men each, anchored below the town Monday night only about twenty escaped destruction, and the loss of life there is estimated at from 830 to 150. In the town itself, before tne storm, a thriving place of 1,500 people, twenty dead bodies have been .recovered from the mud and ruins. .l'’ew houses are left standing and scores are suffering from injuries. The to-.vu was situated at th« mouth •of the Suwanee river on a number of .small keys connected by bridges. Scores of lives were also lost in the sponge fishing section. The hurri cane struck the place about 3:30 ■o'clock Tuesday morning and contin ucd for several hours. Though warn ing had been given, nothing indicated ■a blow of unusual severity, and up to 11 o’clock the night was calm and ■quiet. At that time a moderate breeze sprang up from the eastward, increasing grad ually until a thirty mile wind was blowing. About 4 ■o'clock a perfect tofnado.was blowihg. Then the wind suddenly changed to the southeast, bringing a perfect del uge of water, the title rising two feet "higher.than jn the gale of 1894. DEATH IN A TIDAL WAVE. At 7 o’clock an immense tidal wave ■came in from the south, carrying de ' ;struction with it. Boats, wharves •and small houses were hurled upon the shore and broken into fragments. This tidal wave caused the principal loss of life, many houses being swept away from their foundations and the inmates drowned.50’ “l In Cedar Keys, when the tidal wave ■came and overwhelmed the houses, many of the inmates floated in the water, clinging to pieces of timber; others clung to tree tops for hours, until the water receded. They were buffetted by wind and waves and many men fainted, but clnng even while uneonseious to the tree limbs. Many .are still unaccounted for, and families and friends are filled with •anxiety, hoping for the best, but fear ing the worst. In view of the utter ■destruction wrought by the storm, it seems miraculous that there is a sin gle person alive in Cedar Keys to-day. While the gale was at its height fire broke out in the Bettina house. In a few seconds the entire building was wrapped in flames, which quickly -communicated to the •Schlemmer hotel, adjoining, and in a very short time nothing was left of eitner house ex r-' -eept the bare walla The inmates ■saved nothing. They made their es cape by wading through four feet of 1 water. The bridges connecting the keys were swept away, and the only com munication is by means of boats, of *■< W hich few are left. Then, too, most ■oi the victims were buried deep in mud by the tidal wave, and many of the bodies will probably never be re covered. Beyond the bar there are a score of masts visible just above the water, aud each top indicates the burial place of a sponging schooner and its •crew. It is possible that many of the vessels were blowu out into the gulf and rode out the hurricane, but the Mary Eliza’s captain thinks that by far the greater number are beneath the water with their crews. He says that there was not one chance in'a thousand for such frail craft to live in such a hurricane. It is expected that for days to come corpses of the ■spongers will be found along the ■coast. THIRTY DEAD IN LEVY COUNTY. In the Western part of Levy and Alachua counties not less than 200 families arc left destitute. Scores were injured and over thirty were killed in Levy county. The town of Fannin was completely destroyed with the exception of one small house. The town, of Needmore was demol ished. The postottice building at that gilace was completely demolished und lhe postmaster can find no part of the mail or poslofiice fixtures ’ Everv house lit Yular, Judson and •Chiefland was destroyed, with one or two exceptions, killing people of both the former places. The people of Bronson have issued an appeal for aid for the destitute. Reports from Baker, Suwanee, Nas sau aud Columbia couuties confirm the previous reports of death and de ■struetion. The death list has been iucreased by nearly a dozen. Colum bia county fared very badly. All the •country south of Lake City is devas tated. In the Caleb Markham neigh borhood scarcely a house is left stand ing. In the vicinity of Payne and Mount Taber postoffices the destruc tion was great, but the accounts are yet meager. Fred Hodge, a farmer of that locality, was fatally crushed ■and his wife killed by the falling of a tree on their house. Fort White fared badly, all the churches, school houses, many stores and residences being blown down and many other* b •• I MUsourl Educator Dead. Marshall, Mo., Oct. 3.—Professor J. W. Cat ter, aged'i 3, died suddenly at his home in Waverly last night. He has been a prbininent educator in Central Missouri for many years. BANK~ ROBBERS SHOT Townspeople Kill One and Wound An other, but a Third Gets S2,00O. La Oiiandk, Ore., Oct. 3.—Cy Fitz hugh, a man named Brown and an un known ‘ robbed tiie First National bank of Joseph, Wallowa county, of 82,0ttJ>. by coercing the officials by a display of arms, but before they could escape'they were attacked by a num ber of residents of the place. Alex. Donneilv, aged 25, killed Brown and wounded the unknown, who was eaught, but Fitzhugh got away on a horse with the sack of coin. WATSON AFTER BUTLBR. , The Populist Vice Presidential Candidate Warm Under the Collar. AThAhTA, Gi„ Oct. A—In thin week’s issue of his People’s party paper Thomas £ Watsou, Populist nominee for vice president, makes the following editorial attack on Chair man Marion Butler of the Populist national committee: "Attempts have been made to show that Mr. Watson favored fusion in the state of Indiana. This is not correct. Mr. Watson took the position at the beginning of the campaign that no Populist could con sistently vote for a single Bewail elector any more than he oould vote for a Hobart elector. He filed with Chairman Butler a written protest against Mr. Butler’s fusion policy. Mr. Butler has ignored Mr. Watson's protest and gone steadily forward on his own line. “Mr. Watson's position Is now what it was when the Georgia state eonven lim met. He is for a straight ’mid dle-of-the-road’ ticket. In no other way can the Democratic managers be forced to abide by the St Louis con tract. ' Mr. Watson’s position has been humiliating and embarrassing, and he has been compelled to submit to poli cies he did not approve." A DRUNKARD’S CRIME. fatally Injures a 17-Year-Old Girl aw Kills Himself With a.Basor. Holoate, Ohio, Oct 8.—A terrible double tragedy occurred last night two miles south of this place in the home of Mrs. J. P. Ricker, a widow. The family consisted of the widow and two ohildren, her daughter, Annie, 17 years old, and a son. Another inmate of the home for some time past has been a boarder, Nathan E. Spellman. The latter came home in a beastly state of intoxication and was repri manded by Mrs. Ricker. Spellman, while the son was at school and Mrs. Kicker was out attending to the stock, went into the house, and found the daughter ironing. What followed can only be surmised. Anna Ricker was attacked and her skull crushed. Spell man then undertook to destroy his own life by hanging. This attempt being a failure, he resorted to a method more successful. Lying on his back across a bed, his head hanging so it almost touched the floor, he drew a razor across his throat, severing the jugular vein. Anna Ricker, at last accounts, was alive, but unconscious, and there is no possible hope of her recovery. Spell man is dead. CANNON IN THE AIR. New Feat Brings Death to a Venture* some Aeronaut. Paoi.a, Kan., Oct 3 —At the Miami county fair here yesterday. Geo ge Anderson, the aeronaut, who was shot from a cannon suspended from a bal loon, missed the parachute and was hilled in the 1,500 foot fall. Ander derson was employed by Professor Bo zart, and St Louis, Mo., was his home. Ten thousand people wit nessed the awful accident Anderson refused to put on the safety belt with rope attachment and relied only on a cotton clothes-line cord tied to his wrist for safety. COINAGE IN SEPTEMBER. Nearly as Much Silver as Gold Honey Turned Out by the Mints. Washington, Oct 3.—The monthly statement of the director of the mint shows the total coinage at the United States mints during the month of Sep tember, 1896, to have been *5,915, 363.50, which is divided as follows: Gold, *3,140,932.50; silver, *2,754,165; minor coins, *30,226. Of the silver coined *2,700,100 was in standard dol lars. MR. BRYAN IN DANGER. An Unknown West Virginian Said to Have Attempted an Assault Cincinnati, Ohio, Oct. 3.—A special lo the Times-Star from Wheeling, W. Va., says: ‘‘During the Bryan parade last evening an unknown man tried to assault the candidate. The fellow made a rush for the carriage and, with an oath, cried: 'Let me at him.’ A blow from a cane in the bands of a guard sent him bleeding and stagger ing into tile crowd.” WILL WAIT FOR ELECTION If McKinley Wins the Leadvllle Miner*? Will Return to Work at 82-00. Lbadvili-e, Colo., Oct. 3.—As a re sult from the miner’s meetiug last night, the majority have decided to remain quiescent until after the elec tion. If McKinley is elected the present intention is to abandon the strike. If Bryan is elected the hope is that the price of silvei will advance and the management will at once concede all demands of the union. Mlddlo-of-the-Road SUoton, Topeka, Kas., Oct 3.—The middle of-the-road Populists filed the neceS' sary documents for the nomination oi a Bryan and Watson electoral ticket in Kansas in the office of the secretary of state at noon to day. The electors named are: Joseph P. Perkins, of Columbus; Quincy A Baldwin, of Tonganoxie; 1. V. B. Kennedy, of Port Scott; J. W. Woolley, of ldell; J. M, Bannan, of Clietopa; J. W. Doolittle, of Cottonwood Pails; S. W, Coombs, of Junction City; E. J. Hill of Phillips burg; C. A. Frantz, of Canton; M. Pemberton, of Ness City. The peti tions contain between 910 and l,uiio signatures, the law requiring only Poison Choked Oat of HU Month. Carthage, Mo., Oct 3.—William J. Warrington, an organ salesman, wai arrested in this city to-day on eighi counts of embezzlement from the Newman Bros Organ Company ol Chicago. He tried to take arsenic but the officer choked him and made him spit it out. A Missouri Hay Train for Georgia. Custom, Mo., Oct. 3.—A Lowerj grain company shipped forty-six cart o f hay in two special trains out ol here to-day for Atlanta, Ga. They are decorated with banners and will be run through by day as hay special) from southwest Missouri to Atlanta.1 M’KINLEY’S VISITORS. «*• Tralnloads from Ohio Point* Cnlled on the Nominee at Canton Canton, Ohio, o<-t. 3.—Five trains brought the delegation from Portage county, Ohio, with greetings to Major McKinley. The first was a party from the southern part of the county, coming over the Pennsylvania lines in regular truins; Three were specials of nine coaches each, over the C., C. & M. No demonstrut'on was made until the last arrived, when a parade was organized. After a short march, a meeting was held in the tabernacle. The introductory address was deliv ered by 8. B. Wolcott, cx-state Sen ator from the Kent, Ohio, district. Kanm Veterans on Parade. Topeka, Kan., Oct 8.—The features ofthe reunion and fall festival yester day, aside from the visit of the ex Federal generals, was the grand street parade of the old soldiers, civic societies and military organizations. The procession started to move from t amp Miles at 11 o'clock, and for over two hours it wound its way through the principal streets of the city. It was about two miles long and there was a band or drum corps for almost every company. The school children of Topeka were also in line. jfnrMln Gold Dtmoorau Omaha, Neb., Oct. 8.—The national Democratic party of Nebraska met here last night in state convention and named a full state and congres sional ticket and electors. The state ticket is R. 8. Bibbs, Governor; O. F. Uigliu, Lieutenant-Governor; Aud itor, Emil Haller; Treasurer, Frank McGibbons; Secretary of State, James Mattes; Attorney General, R. S. Patrick; Superintendent of Public In struction, S G. Glovei; Commissioner, G. M. Baer; Regent, Dr. J. L Leas; Supreme Court, Frank Irvine, W. H. Platte. Washington's Loises Quite Severe. Washington, Oct 3.—The lieuten ants of the eight police precincts each reported yesterday the estimated total damage in his precinct from Tuesday night’s storm. Their totals aggregate $433,600. The unroofing of so many houses caused a brisk demand for roofing tin and sent the price up. The only loss of life in the city was occa sioned by the falling of the Albert building on Pennsylvania avenue, from the ruins of which the body of James Fitzgerald, employed at the navy yards, was taken. Census Work Completed. Washington, Oct 4.—Carroll D. Wright, commissioner of labor, who has had charge of the work of closing the eleventh census, says in his an nual report to the Secretary of the Interior that the clerical work of the census office is now substantially com pleted and that the tables are in the hands of the printers. Gathering at St. tools St. Loms, Mo., Oct. 3.—Throngs of visitors, representing local and out of town organizations, crowded the headquarters of the national associ ation of Democratic clubs at the Southern hotel to-day, enrolling their respective clubs. It is expected that at least 1,600 delegates will be present at the convention to-morrow. Veterans In the Alma Houses Milwaukee, Wis., Oct 3.—For the first time in many years, the Mil waukee Soldiers’ home is crowded to its utmost capacity. The same con dition exists in the Wisconsin state home at Waupeca, with the result that many of the veterans are driven to the necessity of going to the poor* house. _ Ho Meetiug for Thurston. Kansas Crrr, Mo., Oct. 3.—The na tional Republican committee assigned Senator John M. Thurston to speak in this city tonight, but when he arrived this mornig he found that the local committee had forgotten all about it and had not even announced his com ing or secured a hall. He cancelled the engagement. Bryan May Not Go to Kansas. Topeka, Kan., Oct. 3.—William J. Bryan is likely not to visit Kansas this campaign. Chairman Love of the Democratic state committee, re ceived a message from Democratic national headquarters yesterday which read: “Go slow on Bryan. He may not come to Kansas.” Livery Barn Burned at Carthage. Carthage, Mo., Oct 2.—Yesterday afternoon the livery barn of W. E. Hall was burned. All the horses were rescued. Over twenty surreys, wag onettes and buggies were burned. The loss on building and storage was $4,U0d to $3,000, with only $1,600 in surance. Two Texas Desperadoes Killed. San Antonio, Texas, Oct 3.—Cap tain John R. Hughes of Company D, Texas Rangers, and two of his men have returned to Fort Davis, bringing with them the dead bodies of two desperadoes, whom they killed in the “Bloody Peninsula,” near the Rio Grande border. Harrleon to Slake Two Speeches. New York, Oct. 8.—Benjamin Har rison has agreed to make two speeches under the auspices of the national comnrttee on his way home to Indian apolis One will be delivered on next Monday evening in Richmond, Va.. and the second Tuesday afternoon in Charleston. W. Va. Increase or National Bank Notea Washington, Oct. 3.—The monthly statement of the comptroller of the currency shows the amount of na tional bank notes in circulation Sep tember 30 was $^33,532,030, an in crease for the month of $4,025,581 and for the twelve months S';o.7£9,793. Babe Bnrned to Death. Nevada, Mo., Oct. 3.—The 2-vear old baby boy of Pierce Fonburg, re siding fifteen miles southwest ot this city, was burned to death yesterday. The little fellow’s clothes caught fire from the kitchen stove, while he was alone in the room. Ten Thousand Fever Victims. Merv, Turgestan, Oct 3 —A ma lignant fever, similar to that which appeared in 1893, has ravaged Turges tan for the past two months. Ten thousand persons have died from the fever, most of the victims being chil dren. **mM**m*jkmm**m**mmmmk*Mi 1 BRYAN’S B06IIS RETURN TO BIMETALLISM. J in Mr. Bryan’s speech at Milwaukee he said: “Whenever money goes up property goes down. You cannot have a dollar that buys more unless you have property that sells for less. Now that is a fair proposition, no sim ple that anybody who has money and wants it to go up can understand the advantage of the gold standard, and anybody that has property and does not want it to go down can understand the advantage of bimetallism.’’ Mr. Bryan in all his speeches claims to be a bimetallist, and talks about the "return of bimetallism." In his opin ion the opening of the mints of the United States to the unlimited coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 would be a “return to bimetallism,” because the mints are now open to the coinage of gold. Why, then, he says, should they not be open to the coinage of sil ver? Simply because, at the ratio of 16 to 1, the amount of silver which it is proposed to have the government call a dollar is not worth a dollar. It it were this controversy would be impos sible. ,J .. ! . ' The government has put its stamp upon the dollars which It has coined upon its own account, and for whose redemption it is morally and legally re sponsible, Just bb it is responsible for the redemption of $tie paper dollar. True, It does not redeem silver and paper money in the same way. For the paper dollar It gives a gold dollar In exchange. It' redeems silver indi rectly by accepting it in payment for debts due itself. This has the same ef fect as >if it paid gold in exchange for silver, since all the silver in circulation could be returned to the government in any one year. But if the government should coin silver, not on its own ac-. count but on the account of the owner of the bullion, it would be under no such obligation. The nature of its ob ligation would then be changed, and it would be under obligation to see that the man who passed a silver dollar Is worth one hundred cents shall re deem it at one hundred cents, upon demand of the holder, just as It com pels a national bank to redeem its notes at a hundred cents on the dol lar in gold. The “return” of which Mr. Bryan speaks exists only in his imagination, therefore. If the government should coin silver worth one hundred cents into silver dollars, then the mints would be open to gold and silver upon equal terms. Mr. Bryan’s proposition is to open the mints to gold and silver on unequal termB, giving silver twice the privileges that are granted gold. The government, under Mr. Bryan’s scheme, would coin one hundred cents’ worth of gold into a dollar, but It would coin fifty cents worth of silver into a dollar. This is so plain that it would seem as if even a child can un derstand it. So long as the government maintains a parity between gold and silver, coin ing gold in an unlimited amount, and silver in a limited amount, we have bimetallism. It is not full, theoretical bimetallism, but it is practical bimetal lsm, since both metals circulate and perform every function of money at par with each other. Mr. Bryan’s scheme would drive gold out of circula tion, which would result in practical silver monometallism, since silver coin alone would perform the functions now performed by both silver and ,?old. The Republican party has planted it self in its platform upon the doctrine of bimetallism properly understood, that is, of bimetal lism in which both metals qlrculate freely at par with each other. Mr. Bryan seems to think that we "would not have the gold standard, if we had bimetallism. He claims that the gold standard and bimetallism are contra dictory expressions, and that they stand for irreconcilable ideas. On the contrary, with theoretical bimetallism in force, the gold and silver standard would constitute but one standard, and it would make no difference whether it was called the gold standard or not ; it would be the gold standard all the same. The Republican party beltevi«' it easier to pass from the single gold standard to the double standard, so called, in which the gold and silver standards are identical, than it would be to pass to bimetallism from ufe sil ver standard. It believes that the method of arriving at a truly bimetallic monetary system is not by way of the silver standard, but to pass directly from the gold standard to the double standard; at the same time it believes that it Is impossible to have the double standard, without the concurrent ac tion of the leading commercial nations of the world. It therefore says: We are in favor of bimetallism, and as a means of arriving at bimetallism we propose to retain the gold standard until we can secure the co-operation and consent of a sufficient number of leading commercial nations to enabjp us to put full, theoretical bimetallism into practical operation in this coun try. The idea that this is subserviency to Great Britain is pure nonsense. We might as well say that we are slaves because we are under the law of gravi tation, as to say that we are a province of Great Britain because we are under the operation of the great financial laws which are, in the world of busi ness, what the law of gravitation is in physical life. The experience of our own country in the use of silver during the last one hundred years surely ought to be worth something. From that experience three great leseons may be learned: First, That with the free coinage of gold and silver it is impossible to keep both metals in circulation at the same time. From 1792 to 1834, under free coinage, gold was under-valued; it was not worth as much in money as in bullion. Consequently It was every where hoarded or kept out of circula tion. So also from 1834 to 1873, when free coinage also reigned, silver was under-valued, and went out of circula tion for the same reason as gold had before. Here, then was a period qf 81 years during which Gresham's law of the departure from circulation of the legally debased or under-valued coin was fully demonstrated. Second, Another equally important lesson Is that no legislation, especially under modern conditions, Is able bo to change the market value of silver as to keep It on a par with gold. The Bland bill, and particularly the Sherman act, was passed for the very purpose of strengthening our national credit with regard to silver. Under the lat ter 168,000,000 ounqes of silver, which was supposed to be equal to the entire output of our American mines, were purchased by the government, and much of it coined into money. Still the metal declined continually in mar ket value, fromfl.17 in 1890 to 78 oents In 1893, when the Sherman act was repealed. This proves "Conclusively that Mr. Bryan’s “firm conviction” about the rising of silver to fl.29 under a 16 to l free coinage law, is simply absurd. Third, But perhaps the most im portant of all thp lesson to be derived from our one hundred years' experience in the use of silver is the fact that the : only practical bimetallism ever used by our United States government, or the only method by which gold and sti ver have both been kept in circulation, is the policy which we have had since 1873, or in a more perfected form, since —. oirres to the- laborer constant sad re munerative employment. C. It Is a fact that the workingmen of our country, who were as a class so cruelly deceived hy tao big free trade promises made four years ago by the democratic party, are fully alive to the injuries and losses they have sustained, aid they are not going to £e fooled a train by any democratic or ffpocratlc promises. On the contrary they are everywhere In crowds declaring their Intentions to vote for McKinley and Hobart.—Valparaiso (Ind.) Vidette. This Is Indeed an age of prodigies. The boy’s the thing the populace to please. Boy preachers In the pulpit stand, Boy trumpeters are found in every band. ■ Boy writers write, . « .. Boy fighters light, Boy singers sing, And Spain rejoices in a boyish King. The Osar’s a boy, JQ And Germany is Wilhelm's toy. And now amongst these boys gal orb We have an “oratof;” A great big ptnkrjcheeked gassy hoy, JuBt bubbling o'er with words and joy He's set his steady baby stare Upon the Presidential chair, ,f- ; Because, like boys of good content, * He wants to be a "President.” He makes boy speeches ,4 In which he teaches Boy lessons, In a boyish way. He knows It. all, nor hesitates to say That black Is white, or white Is black. If he can win a point by sailing on that tack. He means well,* as do other boys, And merely grins to find that he an noys; ' \ And, like most kids, He rather likes the things the law for ; bide. '"TKt-f- Kii- .» His sympathies go out, quite un abashed, ...,, ■i.’, To those whom most deservedly the Not as Large as It Looks—How Bryan Tries to Pool Them. > 1878—namely, a policy which makes gold the standard of value, and then with a limited coinage of silver, as well as with a limited issue of paper money causes both of these kinds of money to bo kept up to par value with gold by virtue of the government's pledge that all of its money shall be main* talned on an equality of value “in the markets and in the payment of debts.” This system has proved not only in America, but also in England, Francs and Germany, and other countries, to be the most stable, elastic, practical and serviceable, and therefore the best system of finance ever used in all human history. Why, then, should we change it for some wildcat, red-dog, balloon system, such as that proposed ■by the popocrats In the Chicago plat form?—Valparaiso (Ind.) Vidette. | FACTS FOB WORKINGMEN, f 1. It is a fact that in all silver stand ard countries workingmen receive muck less for their labor than in gold stand ard countries. Wages in Mexico for common laboringmen is 93 per week; in China and Japan it is about |1. 2. It is a fact that of all men the laborer has most Interest In the elec tion of McKinley and Hobart; for the success of the silver ticket means the deprecitlon, or the cutting down to about half value, of the workingman’s wages. Besides, the Industrial estab lishments now closed will not start up under the general panic and financial insecurity sure to result from an at tempt to put our money system on a silver standard basis. 3. It Is a fact that even now the la boringman’s wages are higher in pro portion than are either manufactured goods or farm product. Moreover, it is not true that during a period of twenty-five years past the wages of laboring men have declined. In 1870 the average yearly pay received by men working in factories was 9310; in 1890 it war 9489. 4. It is a fact that under the Harri Eon administration laboringmen, as well as others engaged In business, en joyed greater prosperity than they do now. Not only did they then receive larger wages, but work was much more in demand and easier to find. 5. It is a fact that a protective tariff, while beneficial to the manufacturer and to owners of capital invested in in dustry, helps particularly the working man; because it, more perhaps than [ any other governmental regulation, in law hath lashed. He has a liking, as have other youth. For romance rather than the truth; And ’stead of training with the good and true, Prefers association with a pirate crew. Sweet, perfect boy, ' His party’s joy! Don’t criticise him harshly, for, you see, He only alms at puerility, And in that line His powers seem almost divine! —John Kendrick Bangs in Harper’s Weekly, Bryan wanted to debate with Mc Kinley and now Tillman has chal lenged Harrison to a discussion. The youthful prodiges are getting sassy. , There is no danger that anyone Will call the two democratic tickets twins. By the way he is talking, Bryan la cutting his throat as well as making It hoarse. 1 <» Men are judged by their works, not by their words, and what deed -of Bryan's contains any promise, of good for the American people? The country must have a revenue equal to its expenditures and none but boy orators deny it. No one is buying silver in the mar I ket. No one is betting on Bryan. Enterprise Is galling only to those who have it not. What do fanners and wage-earners think about it? Are they getting to* much of anything for their dollars? Right. Colonel B. F. Clayton, of Indianola, la., the president of the Farmers’ Na tional Congress of the United States, which has perhaps exercised a more potent influence in securing legislation favorable to the agricultural Interests & the country than any other farm ers’ organization, says: “We have had a four years’ dose of Democratic dis aster and desolation, and the experi ence should be enough to preclude any repetition of the experiment during the next century. What the people want for the next four years is the Mc Kinleyism of 1888-1892, with a good market for everything, everybody em ployed at high wages, with spindles running by day and the heavens light ed up by night from the chimneys and furnaces of factories, when the poor man will be able to feed and clothe his family, and when capital will And employment.’’