ON THE STAGE NOW. THE SILVER CAUSE CAN NOT BE QUIETED DOWN. flow the Author Iteoame Interested In the Money Quention III Drama Founded on "Coin'a Financial School" W. Jf Bryan Prototype. The free silver cause has found ex pression through the medium of the drama. The man who has had the cour age to put his arguments upon the stage la Mr. Fitzgerald Murphy, who has hitherto written along conventional lines. His play is called "The Silver Lining." The play was first produced at the Chicago opera house some weeks ago, and created something of a sensation, the theater being packed to the doors the last three nights of the engage ment, when it had become known that a most daring play had been brought out. Mr. Murphy acknowledges "Coin's Fi nancial School" as the basis of his play, and on the opening night Mr. Harvey, the author of that remarkable work, was called upon, as he sat in the box, to say something about the relation of the play to his theories, and he de clared that the drama represented the spirit of "Coin" "most magnificently," ijnd believed that its influence upon the silver cause would be great. Mr. Murphy is a young Irishman who made play writing an avocation, when his vocation was the newspaper profes sion. He was for a time on the staff of the New York World. He is a nervous, energetic young man, an enthusiastic Eilverite, and believes that, although his play treats of current politics, it will nevertheless be a great success. When asked how he became interested in the silver question as a basis for a play, Mr. Murphy replied: "Through instinct, I suppose. I no ticed that those who uphold the single gold standard are mostly bankers, beneficiaries of the big trusts, stock holders of the big insurance companies, bondholders and mortgage sharks all money lenders, non-producers, who live on the money created by the wealth producer, the laborer. I had nothing in common with them. The men who fa vor free silver are mostly of my own stripe men who work for a living. I never earned a dollar for which I did not give an equivalent. The laborers' struggles and aspirations are my own. As a dramatist I consider the heart aches of humanity my best material. The producers favor free silver, and I am instinctively with them. "But my aggressive interest is a re sult not only of my instinctive prefer ence, but of a scientific investigation of the subject. A year ago I owned a weekly newspaper out in Los Angeles. When the seigniorage bill had passed both branches of congress, thanks to that grand son of Missouri, 'Dick Bland, and was vetoed by that arch gold monometallist Grover Cleveland, I studied the money question so as to be able to intelligently discuss the ques tion editorially. I read John Stuart Mill, David Ricardo, General Francis A. Walker's 'Money' and the magnifi cent speeches of Senators John P. Jones and W. M. Stewart and Representative W. J. Bryan, the last named being a prototype of my hero.". "Did you read Secretary Carlisle's silver speech?" "Yes," said Mr. Murphy, "and he is ONE OF THE MEN WHO OWN THE GOLD. the same Carlisle who is now cuckooing for gold the same Carlisle who first characterized the demonetization of sil ver as 'the crime of '73 In his speech in the house of representatives in 1878 he said that 'the demonetization of sil ver was the most gigantic crime of this "or any other age; it would cause more suffering than if one-half of all the movable property. Including railroads and shipping, was destroyed at a blow. "This quotation, in the light of his recent speeches at Memphis and Cov ington, is a sad commentary upon the undermining of a statesman by the in sidious influences of money and office In the cabinet of the puppet of the plu tocracy. "On my way from Denver to New York last spring I picked up a copy of 'Coin's Financial School' on the train. That chance reading of Mr. Harvey's book is responsible for my play, 'The Silver Lining On page 112 of that re markable book are two little pen-and-ink sketches, respectively called, 'One of the Men Who Own the Gold and One of the Men Who Own the Com modities The first picture represents a prosperous looking, sleek capitalist, and the other a poor, poverty-stricken farmer, sadly looking at a notio of sheriff's sale on his fence. Those two little pictures suggested the foundation for an American social play, showing the conflict between the money lender and the money producer. I believe the stage should be as powerful a factor In the education of the public as the pul pit, the newspaper or general litera ture. I my play I treat the silver question simply as a moral proposition a question of justice in our commer cial relations. The money question can be easily reduced to a few simple truths. If you limit the supply of money it becomes dear, Increases its purchasing power over wealth-producing labor ind commodities. Measured by the accepted standard gold prices fall, and when they fall money in creases in value, can buy more, and the owners of money enrich themselves cor respondingly.. When the producer is exchanging his property for that money he must give up more, for just as money appreciates in value, prices decrease in an adverse ratio. The material of which money is made is no more a standard of value than is the material of which a clock is made a standard of time. The money lenders of the world have cornered the gold, and have succeeded in having a law enacted to prevent our using silver as fundament al money of redemption whereby we can break that corner. The single gold standard is slowly and insidiously un dermining our American independence. The gold standard newspapers of Chi cago have ridiculed my play and abused me; but ridicule and abuse are not ar guments. I expect no quarter from gold standard newspapers, and I give no quarter. In 'The Silver Lining' I show how certain of the gold papers 8fk ONE OF THE MEN WHO OWN THE COMMODITIES, are subsidized by the gold powers Naturally, I am not a favorite with the gold press." Old Parties Tnlte In Kaunas. The republican and democratic com mittees in Seward county, Kan., have united in a call for a joint convention. They declare this step to be necessary in order to defeat the populists. It is reported that the same combination of the two wings of the plutocratic party will take place in other parts of Kan sas. This is the natural course of events. Whenever and wherever the populist party gets strong enough to carry a state then and there the old parties will unite to defeat them, for this reason: There i3 absolutely no difference of principle or policy be tween the two old parties. They are both run and controlled in the inter ests of the bankers and monopolists. As long as the plutocrats can keep the people divided, half and half in the old parties, they will not care much which one of the two wings of their political party is elected. But the moment a party like the populist, which differs radically in principle and policy from the other two, and is in the interest of the people, as against the monopo lists, arises, then if the money power cannot beat them with the two wings of Its party separately it will combine them just as it did against the Knights of Labor ticket with Henry George at Its head in New York in 1886, and just as it has done in scores of other cities against the Knights of Labor when they develop strength enough to carry an election. This is a good object lesson for the voters in those states where the two old parties are still separated. The democratic workingman who is now fighting the. democrats must see from this that it is only a question of time when his masters will force him into the same camp of the party he is now fighting. Workingmen, shake off your slavery to the old party bosses and march out into political liberty. A Half-Civilized Country. Col. I. W. Avery, who has lately made a tour, of South American countries, talks very interestingly of his observa tions of the monetary system of the powers visited by him. In Uruguay, according to Col. Avery, where silver under ten dollars is the issue, a coun try that does not coin a dollar in gold, he was surprised and humiliated by having his United States gold discount ed four cents on the dollar. The same holds good with English gold. There is food for thought in this. Uru guay, a small South American power, just says that her money shall pass current, and it goes. Yet Uruguay has no gold. Her paper issue is considered bo much better than gold that she dis counts the metal without regard whether it bears the stamp of the United States, England or France, four cents on the dollar. ThiB is a nut for the "sound money" theorists who want a dollar that will be a dollar all over the world, to crack. Gold was not worth a dollar In Uru guayan paper money in Uruguay. Why this outrage? Why can't the United States, the richest power on earth, make its own standard of value? We can, if we will. The only way to do a thing is to do it. In the meantime what about Uru guay ? Atlanta Commercial. It was a clever Englishwoman who, when M. Blanc was mistaken at a garden-party for a page, replied: "Well, M. Blanc is a page of history. Learned men do not always appre ciate the achievements of their fel lows. It Is said that a friend brought Milton's "Paradise Lost" to a great Scotch mathematician, who remarked when he had finished it: "It's verra pretty; but, mon, what does It prove?" A Scotsman once neatly turned the tables on an Englishman who had been alluding to the number of Scots in London. "Well." replied the Scot, "I know a place in Scotland where there are thirty thousand Englishmen who never go back to their own coun try." "Why, wherever tan such a crowd be?" said the Englishman, to whom the Scot dryly remarked, "at Bannockburn." Speaking of the ignorance of somt newspaper Interviewers, Henry Wat terson relates an incident that happen ed in New York, when a young man was sent to the Fifth Avenue Hotel to Interview Rutherford I. Hayes on some matter of prison reform. When the interviewer had gaihered all the facts, he shot a last question at Mr. Hayes. "By the way, Mr. Hayes," he said, "what were you president of?" A young lady in charge of the cap tain of a P. and O., boat had two suit ors, on board and a pug dog. The lat ter fell overloard, and one of her swains instantly jumped after it into the sea. The other confined himself to leaning over the side, and crying, "Poor doggie!" When the rescurer came on board, dripping the j-oung lady turned to the captain and asked him which of her two lovers, after such an incident, he would recommend her to take. He was a practical man, and replied, "Take the dry one," which she accordingly did. Among the "bulls" compiled by the National Tribune as having been made by members of congress in the heat of debate, are the following: A mem ber in referring to one of his collea gues, said: "The gentleman, like a mousing owl, is always putting in bis oar where It is not wanted." In an other speech occurred this expression: "The iron heel of stern necessity dark-, ens every hearthstone." And another member, in a very forcible and dra matic manner, asked the house this startling question: "Would you stamp out the last flickering embers of a life that is fast ebbing away?"' "My doctor," said a somewhat volu ble lady, "was writing me a prescrip tion yesterday. I generally ask him all sorts of questions while he Is writ ing them. Yesterday he examined me and sat down to write something. I kept talking. Suddenly he looked up and said: 'How has your system been? Hold out your tongue I put out that member and he began to write. He wrote and I held out my tongue, and when he got through, he said: 'That will do 'But,' said I, vou haven't looked at it 'No,' said he, 'I didn't care to. I only wanted to keep it still while I wrote the prescription.' " The late Edward Beecher on one occasion, was dining with friends and inadvertently swallowed a mouthful of exceedingly hot coffee. Imme diately he deposited it upon his plate, and, turning around, remarked: "A fool would have swallowed it." One day at the table of George the Fourth, when Frince Regent, the roy al host said: "Why, Colman, you are older than I am." "Oh, no, sir," re plied Colman, "I could not take the liberty of coming into the world be fore your royal highness." Once upon a time Lord Melbourne visited the kitchen of the Reform Club (Soyer seems to have held a regular levee there in the afternoon), and re marked to the great chef that his hand-maidens were remarkably good looking. Soyer bowed with deep re spect, and answered with gravity: "Yes, my lord; you see, we do not want plain cooks here." A Boston man traveling through the South was obliged to stop over In a small tow n where there was but one hotel, at which the accommodations were hardly to be called elaborate. When the colored waiter brought his dinner, the Boston man found that he was to have roast beef, stewed to matoes, corn, peas, potatoes, and cof fee, the vegetables served in the usual stone china canoes. Presently he said to the waiter, "Dick, pass the simiohr." The waiter rolled his eyes in genuine amazement. Spoons, sah! What you want with the spoons? There's yo spoon In yo corn." A Xew Scheme. Jonas Deadbeat Please, mum, kin yer give us sump'n to eat? Lady What? You two strapping fel lows begging? Caspar Corker No, lady. Yer see we's is ont of dese roun de worl' trips widout money, an we ain't got time to stop an' work. Chicago Record. Reasonable. "Whisky," said the temperance ora tor, in tones of much earnestness, as be pointed his finger at the audience, "whiskey has killed more men than bullets." "All the same," said the watery eyed citizen near the middle aisle, "I'd a heap ruther a man filled me with whis key than with bullets." Indianapolis Tournal. Good Reason for It. Rounder So that Is a picture of Old Soak, eh? The eyes are particularly steady and bright. Etounder Yes. The photographer placed a whiskey bottle where ht wanted the old fellow to look while the picture was being taken. Truth. The "w Oirl." A bright specimen of the "New Girl" made her appearance before a magis trate on Saturday. The top of her head, says the London Daily Tele graph, was just on a level with'the rail of the witness box, and Mr. Dickinson was considerably surprised to hear a small, shrill, piping voice issue from some one he could not see, and say: "Please, sir, I want a summons for abuse." "What's that?" asked the learned gentleman. "Stand up," cried the usher of the court. The applicant stood on her tip-toes, which enabled the magistrate to see her eyes and half her nose, and repeated: "Please, sir, I want a summons for abuse." "Cer tainly not," replied Mr. Dickinson, promptly. "If grown up people are foolish enough to take out summonses for mere vulgar abuse, I am not going to encourage children to do the same. Go away home." The litigious girl frowned and went away. liegeman's Camphor Icotvlth Glycerine. Cu r-f k CnanJ H auds and Face, Tender or 8or Feet, CUiiblaiiiN t'ile. &c. C G. Clark Co.. New Haven, CU The Winter Honnet. Flowers, as well as feathers, appear on the winter bonnet, but in making a choice one must consider what wear will be given to the bonnet and wheth er bright-hued blossorne will harmonize with the hour and the toilet. The style of coiffure has much to do with the arrangement of the bonnet on the head. If the hair is parted the bonnet is placed a little further back than it is if either a pompadour or bang is worn. 1 use Tiso's Cure for Consumiition toth in mv family and practice. Dr. G. W. Fattebsox, Jnkster, Mich., Nov. 5, 1W4. Satanic IlaftebalL. "Out, foul fiend!" cried Luther, pant ing heavily. Satan regarded the black splotch where the ink bottle had shive; id on the wall, and a cynical smile played upon his features. "I acknowledge," he said in the bland manner for which he is celebi-ated, that somebody has made a base hit, but scarcely comprehend under what rule you thereby render your decision. " And while the bleachers applauded to the skies he walked serenely to the bench and sat down with the rest of 'he nine. New York Recorder. The ValQ of Trees. How many farmers and others, too, whose places are destitute of fruit and shade trees. Again, how many rented places are devoid of trees of all kinds. Has the land-owner ever stopped " to consider that a small orchard, a few yard trees around every tenement house will greatly enhance the value, attract and hold a better class of ten ants, make life more enjoj-able and that too at practically no cost? We tell you there is a great deal of selfishness when we look abroad and see how stingy and selfish many are with their tenants, and oftentimes perchance some good farmer rents his farm and moves away and is so selfish as to reserve all, yes, all the fruit produced, denying even this to his tenant. Land-owners owe their tenants and the public generally.a duty by planting at least a moderate quantity of trees. This is a wise pub lic policy. Ornamental Tree Growing. A Terrible Possibility. The question of expediency of dis banding the militia company was being agitated one town-meeting day in a certain hamlet not a thousand miles from Boston. The tavern keeper, a most pompous individual, who had courteously preserved silence during several noisy harangues, threw a final terrible bomb into the camp of the in conoclasts by the solemn interroga tory, delivered in his most impressive manner: "Gentlemen, let me ask you this: What could we do without militia in case of a resurrection?" From the "Editor's Drawer," in Harper's Maga zine. Necessity reforms the Fr and satiety the rich. 8 Such ills as SORECJESS, STIFFNESS, and the like, CCCOOOOOOSOOCCOCOOj Remarkable Offer! MYSf .TVX .fl Free to Jan. i, 1896. Kcw Subscribers who will cut out this coupon and send it AT ONCE with name ud address, and $1.75, will receive FREE Our Handsome ' 4-page Calendar, litho graphed in 14 colors. Retail price 50c. FREE The Youth's Companion every week till January 1, 1896. FREE The Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Double numbers. And The Companion 5a "Weeks, A Stall Year to January, 1897. . 77 " THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, 201 Columbus Scad Check, Pot -Office r Express Order, sr Registered Letter, Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't E.eport A Delictitfnl Theory. "The strangest invention that ever came to my notice," said a patent agent to P. W., "was that recently brought out by an old German. His idea is to build a massive pillar in the center of the Atlantic ocean and place upon it a revolving bridge, one end touching Liv erpool and the other New York, so that people in England desiring to go to New York could get on at the Liverpool end of the dridge, and vice versa. "By a 6emi-circle turn of the bridge the passengers will be brought to their destination." "When I asked him how he could get the pillar in the ocean, and where the power would come from to turn such a structure, he admitted that he had overlooked it, and when I told him fur ther that there was danger of the ice in the Arctic regions being an obstruc tion to the turning of the bridge, he decided to carry the idea no further." Pearson's Weekly. It the Baby Is Cutting' Tcetrx. Be ur and use that old and well-tried remedy, Mm. Wwslow's Soothing Syhcf for Children Teething- Pleasure is a thing of today ; sorrow holds over from last year. "Euiios'i Magle Corn Salve. Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ak TOOT drugrg-ist for it. Price IS eenta. A woman will male ten excuses for ber boy to one for her hustand. Billiard tah!e, pecond-hani, for saie cheap. Applv to or address, H. C. Akix, "oil .S. Uth St., Omaha, Ne: KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. 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Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. cooscoooccooccoooco ST.JAGOBS OIL WIPES OUT Promptly and Effectually. poooooooooooooooooo COMPAN I O H "52 Times a Year." THERE are few famous writers in Great Britain or the United States who have not already contributed to The Youth's Companion, but some illustrious recruits have been found, who, collaborating with the old favorites, will enable its editors to make the paper notably brilliant during the coming year. Statesmen, poets, famous scientists and travellers, eminent lawyers and delightful story-writers will provide entertainment and instruction for our friends and subscribers in a richer measure than ever before. Our Distinguished Contributors. The Princess Louise. The Dean of Salisbury . 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