cl i 1 m mi j se. wlj no j go thd tht DECORATION DAY. Its Patriotic Observance in Vari ous of tho Large Cities. A Notable Fnrside In C'hloafro The Cele bration In Washington Uranf Tomb Bounteously Oeoorated t'eremo ulcs Held in St. Louis. IN CHICAGO. Chicago, June 1. Decoration day was marked by the finest military dis rlav that has been seen in Chicago since the close of the war. The column, re- viewed by Gen. Miles and staff, con- j tained not less than 10,000 men, and was composed of police, firemen, regu lar troops from Fort Sheridan, Illinois militia, Grand Army posts. Sons of Veterans, Sons of the Revolution and civic societies. The day was observed in an appro priate manner in most of the towns in Illinois. Iowa, Michigan, Wisconsin and Indiana. Ia Washington. Washington, June 1. All govern ment departments were closed on Wednesday, and private business gen erally suspended. Flags hung1 at half mast on the public buildings. There was a long parade in the morning. The Ceremonies. The most important ceremonies were held on the heights of Arlington, across the Potomac and overlooking the city, where 16,000 union soldiers are buried. Every grave was marked with a flag and a bouquet of roses. Thousands of people crowded the grounds, among them many members of congress and some representatives of the foreign le gations. At noon a national salute was fired, and the tornb of the un known, where the bones of hundreds of soldiers taken from battlefields are interred, was decorated with services by the Grand army Posts, the Woman's Relief Corps and the Sons of Veterans. In the amphitheater where religious services are held on the Lee plantation on Sunday the bugle sounded as sembly. Music was given by the Ma rine band and the Grand Army of the Republic musical assembly. President Cleveland arrived shortly after 12, ac companied by Secretaries Gresham and Morton. A. L. Martin, of Indiana, chairman of the committee on pensions, deliv ered an eloquent oration and Col. John A. Joyce read a poem. Repre sentative Rryan, of Nebraska, aroused much enthusiasm hy his speech. Pres ident Cleveland sat through the en tire programme, which lasted three hours, but did not speak. After the ceremonies he drove back to the city with the members of his cabinet. At Grant's Tomb. Ni:.v Yokk.. June 1. The great feature of Memorial day in this city was the parade of the Grand Army of the Republic, the United States army and the national guard, and the review at Madison square by the mayor. After marching the veterans and troops disbanded and went in de tachments to the various cemeteries or to the tomb of their great commander, Gen. Grant. Here were the principal exercises of the day. The tomb was decorated at 2:30 p. in. bv U. S. Grant I post o27, G. A. R. The floral pieces j exceeded in beauty and number those of any previous year. The address was by A. W. Tenney, of Brooklyn. In St. Louis. Sr. Loris, June 1. Memorial day was observed here in the usual man ner, the graves in the national cemetery at Jefferson barracks and those in the city cemeteries be ing lavishlv decorated. The special I feature of the day was the Minveil ing of a monument in Rellefontaine, erected to the memory of Gen. John McNeil, Frank II. Ulair post, G. A. R., conducting the ceremonies. Special memorial services were held by the Woman's Relief Corps at the Grant statue and by Ransom post at Gen. W. T. Sherman's grave at Calvary. A DOZEN DEAD. Awful Itesults of Two Explosions in tho ISay of Biscay. j Madrid, May 29. Details have been ' received of an explosion that occurred ; Saturday on the Norwegian steamer ; Norden at Gijon on the Ray of Uiscay. j The steamer was taking coal on board ' when one of the boilers exploded with j terrific force. Her decks were shat- i tered and the boats and deck fit- ', tings were blown to splinters. , Some of the debris was carried ; across the quay at which the vessel ! was lying and a piece of timber struck 1 a dock laborer, killing him instantly. Two steamers laden with sulphuric acid anil gunpowder were lying close: to the Norden. Part of the masts of , the latter were carried away by the j force of the explosion, and in falling ; struck the other two steamers, caus- j ing great damage to them. i Five of the crew of the Norden were I killed and several others were either sea hied or injured by the flying debris. Rrusski.s, Ma3' 29. An explosion oc curred Sunday at a mine at Anderlues, killing six miners and injuring several others. Killed by an American. London. May 31. Gen. John Hews ton, an American who has been stay ing at the First Avenue hotel in this city, has been arrested charged with causing the death of a man of the name of George Hurton. Gen. Hewston was walking in Gray's road and was rudely jostled by a party of itinerant musi cians. He remonstrated and the party turned upon him and struck him. Gen. j Hewston carried an umbrella and used I it to defend himself. The point of the i umbrella entered the eye of Hurton, J who was one of his assailants, and he ! fell. He was taken to the hospital and there died. Opposed to Postal Telegraph. Washington. June 1. Postmister General Hissell is opposed to the pro posed government ownership of the telegraph system. He does not think a postal telegraph service would prove profitable in this country, or that such service could be fully accomplished without material additions to the pres- nt post office organization and in- THE COAL STRIKE. An Amicable Settlement Prevented by tho Consolidated Coal Company. Springfield, 111., May SO. Illinois holds the key to the mining situation, and the Consolidated Coal company holds the key to Illinois. This is tho sum and substance of the conference between the national officers of the United Mine Workers and the central and southern Illinois operators held here Monday. The executive com mittee expresses itself as willing and ready to settle and call off the strike whenever the Illinois operators can ag.ree a amicaDie mong themselves upon an arrangement of difference existing, and the operators say they are willing to settle upon any reason able basis whenever the Consolidated Coal company will agree to join with them, but otherwise they cannot make any overtures nor accept any proposi tion which will place them in compe tition with this powerful corporation. New York, May SO. The coal famine has begun to make itself felt in all lines of business in New York and the east, and unless relief comes speedily there will be a serious interruption of manufacturing and transportation industries. The cor porations which have reserved fuel for ordinary uses are ob serving strict economy in its use and are refusing to sell their holdings under any circumstances. The usual source of supply being cut off by rea son of the strike among the miners in Pennsylvania and in the west. New Yorkers have been compelled to send to Wales for fuel. Thirty big ships are now on their way to this port with coal from the Welsh mines, but under the most favorable circumstances the re lief to be afforded by their arrival will be but temporary. Coal contractors say that by the time the vessels arrive New York will be entirely out of fuel and that the supply they will bring will be exhausted in a week or ten days. NIPPED AGAIN. Jack Frost Pays Late Visit to North western States. Chicago, May SO. Frost Sunday night and Monday morning did consid erable damage to fruit and grain crops in Illinois, Wisconsin, Michi gan and other northwestern states. In the northern part of Illi nois corn was in many places so badly nipped as to require a replant ing. Vegetables and small fruits were also damaged and in some instances ruined. In Wisconsin it was so cold that ice formed. Huckleberries and other small fruits were damaged, and what promised to be a large crop may be a failure. Michigan reports damages to strawberries, mel ons, tomatoes, potatoes and other small fruits and vegetables. Peaches and the grains were not especially in jured. In northern Indiana the wheat was hurt bv the frost. BAD BLOOD IN KENTUCKY. One Man Is Killed and One Fatally Wounded Near l'llot Hock. IIorKiNsviLLE, Ky.. May 29. A fatal shooting' affray took place Saturday night at a country store near Pilot Rock. 9 miles east of here. Neal Edwards shot and instantly killed Samuel Martin, with whom he had some trouble. Joe Martin, a brother of the man killed, and James G. Edwards, father of Neal, drew their weapons and began firing at each other. They continued until their re volvers were emptied. James G. Ed wards was fatally wounded and Neal Edwards' horse was killed under him. The affair has stirred up bad blood in the neighborhood and more trouble ia feared. A CHILD'S TERRIBLE DEATH. It Is Caused by Lockjaw Which Follows Vaccination, New York, June 1. Lockjaw now comes forward as a possible accom paniment of vaccination, as shown in the case of little Frank Evans, whose death was reported by Coroner's Physician Frank J. OTIare as hav ing been due to tetanus, consequent upon an application of vaccine virus by one of the young doctors of the health department nearly three weeks ago. The child, who was years old. died in fearful convulsions in the early hours of last Monday morning. His jaws were locked and the muscles of the arms and legs were spasmodically contracted. j Two Men Killed. j Chicago, June 1. A Chicago & East- ern Illinois freight train ran over and killed two men at Sixteenth street j Wednesday morning. They were: W. i N. Young and R. II. Stewart, both of j Berwyn, a suburban town. The men were walking east on the St. Charles , Air Line tracks near their junc tion with those of the Chi-! cago & Eastern Illinois A freight ! train on the latter road was backing up from the south. They evidently did not see the approaching cars and both were struck at the same time and thrown under the wheels, l oung was instantly killed and Stewart was so badly crushed that he died on the way to St. Luke's hospital. To Abolish the Word ".Male." Albany, N. Y., June 1. The assem bly chamber was filled Thursday night with hundreds of women from all parts of the state who are here in advocacy of the movement to abolish the word "male" from the constitution. The constitutional convention committee on suffrage had charge of the hearing Jockeys Killed In a Hurdle Race. Philadelphia, May 31. Two jock eys were killed Wednesdays in a hurdle race at Phoenixville, near here. As Arthur Davis' mount attempted to go over the hurdle the animal stumbled and upset Guy Gilbert s horse. The boys fell under the animals and were crushed. Cut a Fellow Convict's Throat. Columbus, O., May SO. Edward Mas sey, in the Ohio penitentiary, knocked down Alijah Lynch, unother prisoner, and cut his throat. Death will prob- ably ensue. Massey ia believed to ba SWEPT AWAY. Towns in the Far West Totally destroyed by Floods. No Loss of Life Is Reported, Bat the Damage to Property Will Reach Into the Millions Distress in Denver and Other Cities. IN THE PATH OF A RAGING TORRENT. BouldeH, Col., June 2. The flood in Boulder creek has caused great de struction to property in this city and surrounding locality. In this city five houses were swept down stream. Tho occupants were rescued by a relief corps. All the city and railroad bridges have been washed away. The towns of Crisman and Sa lina, small mining camps in Boul der canyon, about 7 miles from here, have been totally destroyed and over 300 people rendered homeless. A number of the placer mines are ruined. The Sunset branch of the Gulf rail road has been completely washed out. All the crops in the St. Vrain valley have been destroyed by the flood. The total loss in this city and in the adjacent terri tory is estimated at SoOO.000. On ac count of the storm and floods, tele phone and telegraph wires were ren dered useless and outside communica tion has been cut off. Fifty bridges between here and the mountains have been carried away. The towns of Copper Rock and Sugar Loaf are gone, the Prus sian and Corning mills flooded and six of their outbuildings swept down the canyon. Springdale and Jamestown suffered greatly, but no particulars can be had except that the Springdale hotel is in ruins. Several other small towns along the canyon have been partially destroyed, but nothing definite regarding losses can be learued until communication with these districts has been estab lished. Denver, Col., June 2. Platte river continued to rise until 3 a. m., and a raging torrent continues pouring through this cit3'. Colfax and Jerome Park were flooded at 11 o'clock Thurs day night and the people living on the low ground had to flee for their lives. The railway embankment was washed away in places and bridges were badly damaged. The loss will not be very great, but the inconvenience will be extreme. In Jeroiae Park and vicinity 175 families were driven out of their houses and are camped on higher ground. As many more families living oa the river bottoms in this city also fled to higher ground. Edward Whitman, a boy, fell into the torrent and was drowned. No other fatalities have been reported. The damage to the mountain roads by the floods is the heaviest experi enced in this state. An experienced railroad manager estimates the loss to the railroads at S-5,000. He figures that the loss on business reaches S15, 000 a day. and 10,000 will cover other expenses to the roads. The South Park branch of the Union Pacific is under water from Wheatland to Pine Grove, a distance of SO miles. Manitou, Col., June 2. Business is practically suspended and hundreds of men are working to save their proper ty. The stream fro?n Williams canyon is rushing over Mineral Water park, leaving gravel in place of grass. Tons of earth have been torn from the pa vilion grounds. Dynamite has been used frequently to demolish gorges. The damage to streets, parks and pri vate property cannot now be estimat ed. The water is still rising. Idaho Springs, Col., June 2. The damage by the flood in this county is estimated at 8100,000. The storm was the longest and most disastrous in the memory of the oldest inhabitant. On the mountain tops, instead of rain, 18 inches of snow fell. Almost all the bridges over Fair creek and its branch es are gone. Some houses werewashed away and mines flooded. Portland, Ore., June 2. The flood in the Columbia continues to increase and the indications are that the worst is yet to come. The river is more than a foot higher than ever before known and the damage will be immense. The fertile bot tom lands along the river from the Rocky mountains to the sea, a distance f 000 miles, are all inundated. Crops are all ruined, houses washed away and stock drowned. The flood has come gradually, which has given resi dents an opportunity to move household goods to places of safety, and in most instances stock has been driven to higher ground. The salmon canning business has been almost annihilated. Fish and canning establishments along the river for a distance of 200 miles are under water. It is estimated by can nery men that the loss will reach S100.000. Telegraphic communication to the north and east is cut oil except by a roundabout way. For miles along the river water has risen over the tops of the telegraph poles. Along the Union Pacific from this city to Umatilla 20 miles of track aw under water. They have established steamboat service, which enables them to carry the mails and passengers. In this city the water has risen into basements as far back as Ninth street, and more than half the elevators in the city are stopped for want of power. Sauvies island, a few miles below Portland, is almost entirely under water. Many buildings have been lifted from their foundations and are afloat. ltrtital Thieves. Greenville, Pa., June 2. Mrs. Eliz abeth Williams, 80 years old, who lives in a cottage along the Erie & Pittsburgh railroad, was robbed of SI, 100 and beaten by ruffians who es caped. One of the robber:s.choked her, a second flourishing a knife and the third bearing a light. They threw her on the floor, chloroformed her and piling bedding upon her jumped on her body. The money was taken from her trunk. Part of it had been sent her from Car diff. Wales, by relatives. She has lived in .New lork, iienton anu innauei phia. She is left without a penny or any means of support. STRIKE HURTS TRADE. Business Shows the Effects of Mining Troubles. New York, June 2. R. G. Dan & Co.'s weekly review of trade says: "It Is a sign of cheerinpr import that In fin ished business, represented by clearings nnd railway tonnage, there has been less decrease since the strike began than might have been expected. Hut in inchoate business, tho orders which start the wheels, to result in tonnage and payment weeks or months later, there seems to be an actual de crease. Meanwhile the consequent inter ruption of traffic and Industry increases. Tho stoppage of Iron furnaces between tho Alle gheny mountains and the Mississippi river has become complete and a great number of concerns manufacturing iron, and others re quiring soft coal or coke for fuel, have been forced to stop. Husiness cannot increase in volume under such circumstances, and yet payments through all clearing houses for tho week show a decrease of only -0.8 per cent, compared with lust year. Though a large number of works aro idle the demand for prod ucts is not whr.t inijtht be expected either in volume or in urgency. 'Aguin tho lowest price ever recorded has boon made for cash wheat, 56 cents at New York. ugii;nst 73 cents a year ago. while the average in May. 1HV2. was 'JO cents, and in April, isyl. SI. tsv;. Corn is stronger, with, exports about half as large us a year :igo. and the unfavorable outlook for oats results In a higher price. I'ork products aro weak with continuing large receipts. Cotton has varied little, though receipts from plantations have fallen off, for stocks in sight are very large, a new crop, for which prospects are do. cidedly good, is drawing near, and the demand for goods is uncertain. 'Liabilities reported in failures for the fourth week of May were rJ.ffay.0H7, and for four weeks ending May 24. $11.3!1.04'.!. of which 84.1..'p05 were of manufacturing and Jo.wW'yi of trading concerns. Keports yet to come in may increase the aggregate to i-14.OJ0.(KH for the month. Fail ures this week have been 13 in the United States, against 238 last year, and "7 in Canada, against 21 last year. Only two failures, both banking, are for $luo.0(0 or more." Rradstreet's says: "The decidedly unfavorable condition of gen eral trade reported last week continues with out material improvement. Continued delay of tariff legislation prolongs the stifling effect of wholesale business. The greut coal strike continues without sIkii of early improvement, no concession having been made by cither side. More mills, factories and furnaces have closed their doors for want of fuel. There are no new labor strikes of importance to record, but almost all of those previously reported aro In existence." OPEN REBELLION. Civil War Hrraks Out in llulgaria Sev- j era I Killed in ltuttle. London. June 'J. The removal from ofiiee by Prince Ferdinand of the Rul- j garian Iremier Stambuloff lias re-; suited seriously. A dispatch to the : Telegram from Relgrade. Servia, says the following telegram has been re ceived from Sofia: j "Ex-Premier Stambuloff and the ministers ' who formed his cabinet are under arrer t. Civil war has broken out. Two battalions of troops have rebelled and demanded the reinstatement of Stambuloff. They have been joined by the i gendarmes in an attack on the troops who have ; declared for Prince Ferdinand." Hkklix, June a. Dispatches received by the Tageblatt from Sofia. Rulgaria, say that two battalions of infantry and the entire police force have issued a manifesto in favor of ex-Premier Stam buloff. The dispatches add that a bloody fight has taken place between the revolted soldiers and police and the loyal troops, during which many were killed on both sides. Several dis turbances directed against the prefects are reported from the provinces, and one of these otlicials is said to have been killed. On the other hand it is reported that Irince Ferdinand has received many telegrams thanking him for having dismissed Stambuloff from ofiiee. j INDICTED. After a Delay of Two Years Action Ia Taken Against Iron Hall 01H ers. Pmi.AlJF.i.i'HiA. June 2. After a de lay of nearly two years since their ar rest indictments were presented Fri day against Freeman D. Somerby, Charles II. Raker, Joseph Glading anil James 11. Eckersly. of the defunct order of the Iron Hall. These men were respectively supreme justice, supreme cashier, chairman of the committee on laws and supervi sion and member of the committee on finance and accounts of the order. The indictment charges them with conspiring to defraud the supreme sitting of the Iron Hall out of some S-OO.C0O; with diverting it to the uses of the Mutual Hanking, Surety, Trust and Safe Deposit company. This large sum was the money which the defeudantsclaim was diverted from the Iron Hall treasury to save the toppling Mutual bank and preserve intact some S4."0,000 addition al Iron Hall funds which were on de posit there. John W. Hayes, cashier of the Mutual Hanking, Surety, Trust and Safe Deposit company, who was arrested at the same time, turned state's evidence. SHOT BY BURGLARS. Uanker John M. Itusscll and Wife of Pal myra, Mo., Seriously Wounded. Palmyra. Mo., June'-. This town is in a condition of great excitement and the surrounding country is being scoured for two men, who, at 13 o'clock Thursday night, shot Hanker John M. Russell and his wife. The men, bent on burglary. entered through the south bay window. Mrs. Russell was awakened, gave an out er', and the burglar, taking delib erate aim, shot her in the fore head between the eyes. Mrs. Russell fell back unconscious. The cry had aroused her husband, who grappled with the other burglar. The latter was quick to shoot, and Mr. Russell, who is 50. years old, was also wounded. Roth he and his wife are in a serious condition. Police are trail ing the rob'jers with bloodhounds. RAM'S HORN WRINKLES. Tub more yon love yourself the less you will be loved by others. The day becomes longer every time a lazy man looks at tho clock. The one who has suffered has a key that can unlock many hearts. Nothing makes us richer that does not make ns more thankful. " It is much easier to love some people than it is to agree with them. Time sets his chisel a little deeper whenever there is a frown upon the face. jWHAT OF THE CONSUMER? Ills Rights Ignored by Protectionist I'an derers to the Producer. We were prepared for almost any re sult of the customary hysterics of the New York Press, but we hardly looked for it to stumble upon such an honest condemnation of protection as this: "A tariff measure which discriminates against one section in favor of another, and which confers immense beneiits upon a single interest at tho expense of a whole people is not protection, but spoliation." There never was a tariff measure con ceived that failed to do this very thing. There never will be one, as long as one section differs from an other in its natural adaptation to cer tain industries. The industry with the strongest pull gets the biggest protec tion and holds it until some other in terest comes along and complains that it has been injured by the protection of the other. Then another attempt is made at an equal distribution of the stolen cheese, to be followed by more complaints, with the result that the average of protection is pushed higher and higher in the effort to satisfy all. If there is such a thing as "genuine protection," under which, as the Press avers, "all American producers possess equal rights and enjoy equal privi- leges." what of the consumer? His very existence is forgotten. lie is not so much as mentioned while those who despoil him are trying to divide the booty. And when an attempt is made to ease the crushing weight of taxa tion which rests upon his bending shoulders and to place a little of it upon the possessors of large incomes, a cry goes up that such a measure is com munism and sectionalism. There is no better answer to this folly and no better defense of the rights of the consumer than certain words of Hon. John Sherman, which were quoted without challenge no longer than last November by Hon. U. S. Hall, of Missouri, in a speech before the ways and means committee of the house as follows: "The public mind is not yet prepared to apply the key of a genuine revenue reform. A few years of further experience will convince the whole body of our people that a system of national taxes which rests the whole burden of taxation on consumption, and not one cent oa property and Income, is intrinsically unjust. While the expenses of the national rovc-rnraent are largely caused by he protection of prop erty, it is but right to call on property to con tribute to Its payment. It will not co to say that each person consumes in proportion to his means. This is not true. Every one must see that the consumption of the rich does not bear the same relation to the consumption of the poor as the income of the rich does to the wages of the poor. As wealth accumulates, this Injustice in the fundamental basis of ovr system will Le felt and forced upon the atten tion of congress." The injustice has been felt, and the first attempt toward righting it finds arrayed in opposition all the forces of protection and privilege which have thrived upon it. It is denounced as "a fine upon thrift," a "confiscation of the savings of the industrious;"' a some thing that will discourage economy. Does anyone who applies these epi thets to it know of anybody who would not rather have an income of four thousand dollars year, with a 2 per cent, tax on it, than not to have such an income to tax? Louisville Courier Journal. DEMOCRACY AND THE TARIFF. Ucneficlal Reforms Obstructed by Protection-Fed Monopolists. The consequences of nearly thirty years of robbery by protected monopo lists are not easily overcome. The democratic party has a great and seri ous task. It has undertaken to reform the tariff and to turn back the princi ple of tariff legislation to the right method, the method that prevailed in framing the Walker tariff and the ta.-iff of 1S57. Rut it is met on the threshold of its reform work by a gi gantic combination of interests that have been built up by the republicans who have taxed the people to enrich monopolists in consideration of gen erous contributions to campaign funds. Rack of the men who have invested their wealth in industries for the sake of securing tariff bounties, who have bought laws and corrupted congresses and who are entiMed to no sympathy, are thousands of innocent persons who must not be injured by sudden changes of laws. It is a hard task, but the democratic party is making an effort to reform abuses. If the party could have its way, if it could be rid of some of its own bur.iens, it would make a de cidedly stronger effort. As it is, the Wilson bill attempted to give the country cheaper clothes, cheaper fuel, cheaper homes, cheaper tools and a larger maruet for the products of the soil. In standing in the way of this effort the republicans and their allies are inviting much more radical legis lation than has yet been attempted. The people have determined to be rid of the odious system which wrinirs millions of dollars from them through tariff taxes for the benefit of million aires, and the democratic party is j pledged to help them. j If there is too much resistance there int!V be more destruction than was con templated. Carnegie, with his pock ets bulging with the loot that had been stolen for him by tho republican party, was the wisest protectionist of them all when ho advised his accom- , piices to accept the Wilson bill. ! There are men calling themselves 1 democrats who hold and practice re- publican principles, but the heart and inind of the party are right, the real leaders of the party are right and t he struggle against the system of protec tion, which is a struggle for larger hu man liberty and for less governmental paternalism, will be carried on by the democracy of the country. The repub lican party is the servant and slave of monopolists. It is built on ill-gained wealth. The democratic party is the party of the people and it will redeem its pledges to break down McICinley ism. What the democratic majority in the house accomplished in the face of republican power in the senate i a guarantee of the party's good faith. It may be obliged to go slow, but it will go in tiie right direction. N. Y. World. After McKinley the deluge has long been a popular notion in Pennsyl vania. Louisville Courier-J ournal. A SYSTEM OF BRIBERY. The Corrupt Practices of High Tariff Advocates. It is not at all strange that direct bribery has been attempted as one of the means to influence the votes of senators on the tariff bill. Of course the attempts at bribery are directed against democratic senators. The votes of republican senators have been secure from the beginning against any change that would reduce the enormous rates of monopoly tariff tax ation. Corrupt influences would be used, naturally, only to affect the ac tion of democratic congressmen. It was to be expected that, sooner or later, at some stage of the issue, the tariff corruptionists would offer direct ly to purchase votes. The entire McKinley tariff system is brilery. Not a member of congress can vote to impose a high tariff tax for purposes of protection except from some motive of sordid selfishness and greed corrupt political greed or greed for gain. Protection bribes the popular vote. The farmer is bribed by the false promises of a nearer market and bet ter prices for his products. Labor is bribed by false promises of higher wages, iomraerciai classes are unoeu. by false promises of llush times and big profits in trade. The panic and wreck in financial af fairs, in labor affairs and in agricul tural affairs, show how false was the corrupt promise which the protection ists made to the people. The bribe j that they offered was illusive. Hut the corruption was real. The offer was like that of the being who promised "all the kingdoms of the world" for the service and worship of the person to whom the temptation was addressed. The being who made the offer could not fulfill one of its conditions. It was a false offer. Hut it was equally corrupt and criminal as if he could have paid the price which he had promised. Experience shows that the prosper ity promised by the protectionist is a disastrous illusion. The offered bribe was not a reality. Hut the corruption, the crime of the transaction, though the consideration failed, is the same. Failure to pay a bribe does not alle viate the guilt involved in a pledge of payment. The entire process is a system of bribes by which votes are manufac tured against such a tariff as the dem ocratic party pledged its faith that it would give to the people. Nothing is more corrupt in the history of legisla tion than the acts of which the sena torial gamblers in trust certificates were guilty when they framed the sugar schedule after raking off their profits in buying and selling sugar se enrities. The same impeachment holds in re gard to every other feature of the tariff on which schedules have been manipu lated by congressional dabblers in bucket-shop manipulation. Chicago Herald. POINTS AND OPINIONS. Perhaps the "great emergency" Trof. Harrison is waiting for will arise about the time Hon. John C. New lo gins to feel bound to save the country bv getting back into office. 2. Y. World. The evidence of republican sen ators concerning trust influence in legislation is entitled to considerable weight. They have had wide experi ence in driving bargains with the agents of monopoly. N. Y. World. A republican newspaper under takes to convince the great American public that the Wilson bill threatens the destruction of the mackintosh in dustry, as if the people didn't know enough to come in out of the rain. Louisville Courier-Journal. The number of fraudulent pen sioners on the rolls is certainly not less than a hundred thousand out of the total of near a million, and no amount of protest from the Supporters of fraud should be allowed to intimi date Mr. Cleveland in his attempts to restore something like a semblance of honesty. N. Y. World. The republican party has no call to say a word about Uncle Sam's lack of revenue. Revenue depends largely on imports, and the republican party started out to check imports, if it had to smash all the banks and embarrass all the merchants in the country and plunge the country into a pro tracted panic to gain its point. Louis ville Courier-Journal. Senator Quay held the floor hour after hour, and day after day. for the sole purpose of having statistical re ports read to the senate by himself and Mr. Gallinger: "And yet in the face of such work republican organs have the impudence to assert that what has thus far taken place in the senate has not been filibustering, but legitimate debate." Jioston Herald (Ind.). It remained for a democratic ad ministration to assert that the oath of a private is as good as that of a commis sioned oCicer when it comes to the of ficial consideration of pension matters. With all the blasted love of the g. o. p. for the soldier it was only true to its instincts in giving greater weight to the word of a leader than to that of one of the rat.k and tile. Detroit Free Press. In defiance of an overwhelming public opinion and of the latent senti ment in the republican parly in tavor of tariff revision the republican sena tors resist every effort to make the slightest reduction in the scale of duties. While tlic3' imagine that they are promoting the intercstsof party in severing the tariff-fed monopolies they are preparing for a repetition of the jiopular demonstration;; of 1S?0 and lsJO. Whether this reaction from the tariff panic of is;: shall come this f:ll .r two years hence may depend upon the degree of republican resistance to the present effort to enforce the popu lar w ill. Philadelphia Record. Tin: mikado of Japan has recently issued a decree nllowing u Japanese woman to lead, if she chooses, a single life. Hitherto, if found unmarried after a certain age, a husband was se lected for her by law. N creased expenditures. insane. T - ;i ' it 3 1 i,