, '.- .. .... . . . a . . . t rat to traccxalt free intitutioc - to lterity, father who a-k a fair daow for their J." anllhe oer akinr an !! dbisce isr.xM ftrs? of li jl! look to thi rxKiVTfa&.mJ'.'They bpe that her mitt be procltM&ed principle that aili not cm! mtc repuUjran institu tion. bvtTnr.iTZZte nsxtt itsriosibiity for a man to earn Li bread by the awaal of Li bro. They bop that here will be rrDci!ic4 principle that will guide fctitiatitjr to tb golden La fret of a litre, They bope that here today will ce shaped the esbodmee.t of a rightful cane. They Soofc to this convection le rttt there t no higher hop from any other tocrce. At-tit?.1 The repute- Ikaa party, which wa born of the hu-I our great leader ha stood like a rock in ujkz.il j wfcca cassejNDio the world with . the ocean beaticg back the htorta. (Wild a catkjo which was s mighty taoral force apoiau and cheering.! Why is it tht in the tmo f Liseote, ha beoriOie a i for the hrt time an the history of this ore crw&kse! in4rtiaect in the hand j republic the democracy of America from cf Mark Haxxa. (Applause.) ocean to ocean has risen up in favor of They kx&c to Thi convection beaue one man, and there are not twenty -fi.e we have cio proof that we were eta&d-j delegates in this convention who could tS fvr higher thisg. Four year aio haTe come here unless their people be we raaue uim Xhe highland. We quit iieved they were coming here to support truu&icg. We Quit umicjc Ueguage that ! the man who is the choice of the democ ha a dogbee ceasir. We quit follow-! racy of America. Kathusiastic cheering -t-g the wake of tt repuuuean party. We j!tevd gsijt tsakicg this Conn er a mere tribute-pa yieg coi&oy of Ecg We declared that America wat ab to attesd to her own Lalceft. - We ru-rd a 'Cw deelaxatkai of todepecd rtjee. We praam-gated a Dear gtspel of LwsLs..ty. tArpUae.. We wect forth arsed with that strength that come rcsQ casdo a&d frost aizicerity, azd we lutucht the great! caffipaiga ever waged ua the Amerfcao coctioect. We tri tixphed is the areca c4 patrkitisiu. We sos in the forum of icteiiige&ce. and of reaos. bet we were botxe down by cor nsptioa, by bribery, by coerckm, by For the eecocd tlse is the history of i rur ecattry we aaw a man ester the! White liooe with a certiricate of elec- tan that waa writtea with the dirty ccrer of fraud, f Applause. tLzct that eiectieo the experience of iLe HcancUi world ha demosjstrated Jat our theory was right; that the law of &safice ttat we argued for ic immota !. as.d that co cation can Ttolat it withoet payisg the pe&aky. Since then accidecu ha ve ha ppeced. calamities ha ve befallen great cattooe which have given oar cosiEtry a tesporary activity and a apurioaa prosperity, liut, my friend, yoii caetot build the hope of & great catioo on aceiieste, oor can you fe4 great cation oa the calamities of other people. Already there are eigca of di trea. Already yonj aee the atrvggle in the akle. Sow we go forth to plant this great catioo epos a foundation that i is harciocy witn the law of fr.ar.ee. and that will not only nvake our cation, but wtU zcake the other peop le of the world I-roperoc acd happy. My friend. icAcyyeara agtflt was set tled that thin caltoo could not be part Iave and jmrX free. T4f are here to declare that thif republic cannot be rt Cilixen aed part attbject. Arplaoee.) Again, my-Jrienda, we are here to declare that, when cr father. 133 odd year au, protested agaict taxation without lepreectatkiR, when they protected egaist the greed of power and. resolved tJCat we were eterrju.y right, the Ameri can people are cot. in the jear IV XX icg to mt that oar Kevolutiocary father were wrnjog. acd that- we have been wroeg for twenty five year. (App!aue.) .W, iny frircd. for four yar the .cjy. the cjuntioo pre, ha mani. fte4 an extraordinary tctret in our welfare. Kvery morning for four year tie oppmatioa prewt ha been a unit in declaring that if we di4 not change our platforaa, if we did not modify our pu4 tkn. we cold not powubly win. They Lave taanifetd an extraordinary holici tsMie foe u. 1 th-re a delrsate in thi coevenUoQ i tLi .e a n,.aa or a woman is thia cocvetstiun that i o inooeent aa to oeiere that the oppoiUon prea wants m to win?. Ijt Anybody think j for a Cio&ect that they Live been giving u thi advice all tne time in order that we taigrht win? Why, my friend, they koow that moral force, political forces, are led to triuacph by the eincerity, the earnetce, the enthusiasm of their de They know that a party which baii4 upon the dynamic force of idea,' and which trust to the conquering poaer of justice, will be invincibie, irre fitiu!e. and will surely triumph. They kow that if we ataod trmJy by our ckr, if we keep up our enlhuiani, there i not" in america a force that can prevent the triumph of the democracy in thi coming election. 1 Applause.) Tea, that is not alL They know more. They know that if we triumph while we land f'-r mignty principle, then we will ru this republic ana will shape the de. titie of thi country for fifty years to come. (Great arp!aue.) They know also that any one political victory signi fe nothing at alL We have bad two in recent year, and it I now almost the ucirers-il concenu of opinion that both of theei were a misfortune to the democ rat and to the couttry. iCJreat ap plaue. Why U it that the republican party ha shaped our country and ruled it for forty j ear? Why. my friend, for tweoty-rlve or thirty year they have been wroeg oo every .proposition, and CLEARING SALE IS PROVING THE BANNER EVENT IN OUR HISTORY I you'ean timl it jo-.4!Ie to attend lliH great sale.iu person, liV all mean- do b. Even railroad fare will he saved over md over aain on anv purchase from 83.00 to 850.00. If vou W oy can't come to Lincoln, feed for a yellow, circular containing PRICE LIST OF GOODS ON SALE and SEND IN yet they carried the election. They ruled. Why, because they stood for riomething definite, ,They were ; progressive, they were aggreire, while we were seeking to patch up contending factions and do cba p politic. " i G reat a pplause. ) .. . ' ' Now, my friend, 1 concur with those men who say we want to win this year. And I will tell you that, if we stand by oar colors we will win this year. (Great applause and cheering.? And let me alo fcay that, if we weaken, if we begin to trim", if we begin to make nice adjust ment; then, my friends, wo will lose the confidence of the progressive people of America, and will be defeated and de pied (ireat applause.) " Fortunately, and great applause.) Thw great democrat who to day is in the heart of the American people has gotten that hold upon them because they have confidence in his sincerity. (Great applau&e.) Let him waver, let him hesitate one moment, and be will cease to be the idol of the people. He will fall and be despised. (Applause.) Do you not think that he also wants to win? Do you believe that he Is push ing the presidency aside for a mere quibble? Ah, my friend, you, some of you, have not sufficiently weighed this ere at question. He sees the peril and he is guarding against it. Let me ask you thi: Four years ago some excellent men taw fit to leave us. It was their privilege. They now have come back. They are acting honorably. I believe. They say they will accept the voice of the American democracy, and they will give this man who is to be its candidate ! anything he wants. Well, my friends,! let cue remind you. nobody has asked you to apologize; nobody has asked you to do a thing that will be embarrassing. We have opened the door. We say, come in, hare the fortunes of this fam ily; come along, help us fight this great battle, help us put an end to the hypoc risy and to the infamy that now rules this republic. (Applause and cries, "Hit 'ea again.") Weil, now, if -we have not anked you to make any confession, to make any apology if we have done nothing that is embarrassing to you, do you think it will be quite fair to us to a-k us to be put in a position where the opposition papers win insist in at we have trimmed, ve have laid down, we have failed to stand by our colors? (Loud applause.) liear in mind, my friends, that the great army is standing firm. The great army. is cot asking; any change. It is a&king only to be led into the tight- Now, I ask you to come with as. Do not ask us to put thi mighty -army in a position that will make it T5oif ridiculous before the American people. (Applause.) Why, my friends, if we take a position here which. the ingenuity4 jof the enemy can distort and can misrepresent, we will then look ridiculous. fe" will seem to stand for nothing. The republicans have declared emphatically for the English gold standard. Now, if we take a posi tion that eems to admit of doubt, where will we be Why, we will be in the po sition of the donkey which, having been placed between two bundles of hay, and not having sufficient intelligence, not having sufficient force of character to decide which to go to, stood still and starved to death. (Laughter.) Wnat will we gain? Let me ask you this: You say you want to win. So do we." What will we gain by allowing any thing to happen that can be construed by the enemy into a trimming position? Why, ray friends, the radical element of the desnocratic party will leave us. They have no conndence in us if we do not stand firm. We are destroyed on that hand, and will be destroyed on the other hand, for within twenty-four hours after we take that position the opposition press wul ridicule us clear off the pohti cal Held. (Applause.) You cannot deceive anybody. Suppose you leave out lb to 1. W ill you get any thing? (Applause.) Will you gather any rotes? Will you fool anybody that way? Why, no, my friends, no. (Cries of no, no.) Hiding the head in the sand while the body is exposed in the air simply fchowa the species and the habits of a bird. It has never yet been accepted by mankind as an emblem of wisdom. Who are the people in whose behalf it is sug gested that we shall take a departure that means our death? They are not the men who have bled on the battle fields of liberty. They a re not the men who have pointed the way to nobler civilization. They are not the n:en who have lightened the burden of the toilers. As a rule they are the men who helped to shorten the loaf that the laborer eats. As a rule they are the men for whom posterity will build no monuments, and who careers the pencil of time will disdain to notice. We are at the most critical junction of Lincoln... Uebraska HAIL ORDER this republic. We have reached a time when men must lay aside their selfish ambition and rally to the rescue of re publican institutions. (Applause.) Look back; take your men of the great Missis sippi valley; four years ago you raised the standard of your party and you brought it to the west. Shall it be said of you that you had not the intelligence, that you had not the character to hold your ground or to stand by and defend the standards that are committed to your care? You sons of New England, what mean the monuments that greet the morn? They tell of an. age when there were great men in that land; they tell the story of men who fought for con viction and who died for principle. Shall it be written that in one short century the sons of those mighty sires frittered away their divine inheritance in the vuU gar brothel of expediency? You men of the south, thirty-five years ago your fields lay waste; your homes were in ashes. All was gone save honor and glory. Your land is covered with the graves of your brothers who died for they believed to be right. They never truckled to the dollar. (Cries of "no, no," and cheers,) and there is not a battlefield on this continent where they trimmed. (Cries of "not much," and ap plause.) They wrote imperishable his tory with -their blood. For thirty-five years your daughters have covered their graves with laurels. (Cheers.) Is there a aeiegate trom tne great sou in mat is willing to bring the blush of shame to the cheeks of that proud people by doing an act in this convention, or anywhere else, that would put him under suspicion of lacking character and courage? (Cries of "no, no, and cheers.) Ah, my friends, not only in America, but the liberty-loving people of the earth, the enlightened men of all Chris tendom, have their eyes on this conven tion, watching it to see whether it will maintain high principles, or whether it will simply do politics. (Applause.) We are at the beginning of a new century. We are standing on the threshold of a new time. The world is moving forward, and tne Almighty is looking to the dem ocratic party on this occasion to lead the world onward to a higher plane; to lead this country onward to where the sons and daughters of America will not be begging for bread. (Loud applause.) OPTICAL, GOODS. The Western Optical and Electrical Co., located at 131 North 11th street is composed of old citizens and thoroughly acquainted with the business, having btted eyes for twenty-hve years. Cer tainly they ought to be competent to do good work. . They are permanently lo cated with us and that means much to the purchaser of eye glasses and spec tacles. . WOMEN BEHAVE WELL. Shove Courage When Cooped C ua Cltlea That Are Bealea-ed In Time of War. ine lessons or even tne most re cent history show that, once they have got over the first thock of aur- prise- the yvomen in besieged, citiea take, even less account of the mis siles of the invaders than do seasoned soldiers, - who, of course, have a su perior knowledge of the possibilities of injury. ' ' ; j us i as tne laaies nave been seen walking along and chattel iug togeth er In the principal street of Lady- smitn. so nave tney done in tne same circumstances from time immemorial; and, beyoDd this, one of the strang est lessons of history is that nearly all the most hopeless and desperate defenses of cities on record have been those in which women shared. It would be idle to ignore the moral in fluence in such cases; but, beyond this, certain defenses would have been utterly impossiole had not the women virtually acted as soldiers, charging and cleaning the guns, hand ing up ammunition, Acting as "look out" sentinels, tending the wounded, and encouraging officers and men alike. There have been scores of cases where tne women were not con tent with loading the guns, but fired them, and did the business well.' be sides. At Badajoz, Spain, several par ties of women made the most desper ate stand in squares, and when they were beaten back into the houses had to be dislodged at considerable loss, for they fired from cupboards, and even through the boarding of the floors. If ever woman has shown to what emergencies she can rise with a nerve of steel, it has been in famous sieges. TOWN SOLD OVER AND OVER. People Par No Taxes aad Are li Quandary Over the Pnssllaar Situation. Somerville, Me., is in a queer plight, says the Boston Herald. Farms have been sold for delinquent taxes and the property has been sold 'in this way again and again. .No one will serve the town as collector', and even the sheriff of the county cannot make the people pay their taxes. This bank rupt town has a valuation of $60,000, and owes about $30,000, which Is half the town is worth on a liberal valua tion. Most of the town debt is In the shape of bonds, on which the interest ha not been paid for some time. When, some years ago, the people in the town got discouraged and gave up paying taxes, the usual course of advertising and selling the property at auction was pursued. But. and this lends a humorous feature to the case, the inhabitants of the town bid tn the property. And then, as the years, have gone by, the property has regularly been, sold and as regularly bid in by the inhamtants. So all the property haajbeen sold over, and over again to pa3'.the raxes,1 and now all the farms and the real estate in the pl;ce atand thus: It has been bought in at nominal sums by tlie inhabitants of the town, and therefore the people are where they started from, i -3 reality. They have raised no money dy these opera tiona. ' ) It will puzzle a Philadelphia lawyer to untangle and set in shape the affairs of the town, mixed up as they have been by this remarkable rotation of auctions and sales. ii mi m Dreadful Words For Gov ernment Employees. "STAND 3 AND ? DEUVEB P High Handed Mcthodsof Repub lican Campaign Managers. DElfAHD 60 PEB.OEKTOF SaLAEIES Officeholders Mast GIto 1T orXoao Their Joi-Cmfc . Soamd! Kot Co named to ho Postoaaee How the Boer Kavoya Wero ; Received hy Mr. Brraa Saarsestloa For a Jot at Debate Coaeermlna: the Oaea Door la Cklaa The Democratic Leaders (Special Waahlna-ton Letter.) "Stand and deli ver!" .was the ominous command which Paul. Clifford and his robber crew used to thunder into the ears of travelers on Hounslow heath and In the pleasant lanes of England. Stand and deliver!" are the dreadful words whispered in the ears of govern ment employees "at Washington and, as for that matter, all over the country for there is no Republican officeholder big enough or small enough to escape the modern highwaymen the Repub lican campaign managers. Rathbone, Neely & Co. steal on a huge scale In Cuba; the Republican campaign man agers hold up and sandbag the defense less employees here at home. Civil service rules don't count when a cam paign la on no, not on your life, they don't! . Blackmailers appear to grow with what they feed on. In 1SS0 one Jay Uubbell made his name loathed until It became a hiss and byword by black mailing employees out of 10 and 20 per cent of their wages in order to raise the slush with which to buy Garfield's election. Thehatred of the American people drove Hubbell Into private life, but Hubbell was timid at the business compared with latter day Republican managers, who demand and get 50 per cent! "Tls true, and pity 'tis 'tis truer that Is, if the Washington Post Is to be believed, and remember that it is a stanch friend to McKinleyv --. ? Rebberr sai Blackmail. Here is a short extract from a two column expose which The Post makes of a transaction which Involved both robbery of the' pnblic and blackmail of the employees;.. Congrew took S0, 000 out of the treasury fust before adjournment M presented tt to the em ployee of the -senate and house. This waa in pursuance of aa old ectabliabed custom custom more generous tha crediUhle of votiag.an ex tra month's salary to each man on the cspitol pay rolL Kobody has ever .seriously contended that then is any real justification for this giving; away of the people's money, but both political parties do it, and it has been dona so often and so long that the big annual gift it is a clear gift has ceased to provoke more than a feeble and passing protest from even the watchdogs of the treasury. - . But this year's presentation to the force of cap itol employees has had a sequel more scandalous than the presentation itself. Congress hsring lib erally voted SS0.0O0 in the shape of extra salaries. the Republican congressional committee has step ped in and asked the beneficiaries on the house roll to give ap one-half of the sum thev received lor use in the campaign. In other words, an ef fort has been made to utilize SO per cent of a large appropriation of public money as a nucleua of a fund needed by the congressional committee to aid in the election of Republics n to the Fifty seventh congress. A failure ta respond freely by the employees has prevented the complete con summation of this remarkable .project, but it la no fault of the congressional committee that it failed to get hold of a considerable share of the $80,000 so generously donated. There waa a belief that $10,000 at least would be voluntarily sur rendered, but it is understood that less thsa half of this amount will be realised. Give Up or Get'Oat. How do the taxpayers of the land like to have $80,000 of their money pre sented in one gob to a job lot of Repub lican officeholders and then have the officeholders plundered of one-half of it to ho' the freebooting administra tion In power for four years more? It's a pity that a resolute prosecuting at torney does" not get hold of the black mailers and send them to the peniten tiary! We had to pass a new extradi tion law in order tc get Rathbone and Neely back here from Cuba, but these blackmailers are carrying on their ne farious operations in the full light of day at the Raleigh hotel, on Pennsyl vania avenue, in the nation's capital. We are told that F. F. Schrader, who Is doing this precious business for the Republican congressional committee, assures a startled public that no coer cion Is used. Oh, no! Perish the thought! But there is not an employee who responds to Schrader's Invitation to walk into his parlor at the Raleigh who does not know that if he refuses to come down with the dust to the, tune of .50 per cent of his salary he will lose his official" bead. So rather than give up his job he whacks up. , Schrader has been caught in the act and In history1 will Join Jay Hubbell, of odoriferous memory, but no doubt there are "others at work In every de-' partment of the government, busy aa bees bleeding the employees In order to re-elect this administration of puri ty, sweetness and light. Assassination In Kentucky, blackmail In Washing ton, plain but colossal stealing In Cuba, are the starters in a campaign destin ed to be the eorruptest In the history of the republic. All decent folk will be compelled to hold their noses long be fore the frost of November nips the Republicans on election day. . Lllto Baaetae's Ghost.' . The Cuban scandals, like the ghost of the late lamented Banquo, will not down. The stench Is so strong that even some of the UcKinley organs are com pelled to give a lusty and far resound ing snort occasionally to keep from bursting. WW exam nle. that perfervid McKlnley vshouter, the Indlanapolla News, has a Havana correspondent who, among many other warm things, say. It osems a little unfair that the department of posts la Cuba should be made the scapegoat for all the corruption oa the island's administration wbea it is weU known la Havana that the portal Irregularities and defalcations, are ttut. a bagatelle In comparison with the etupenk)u9 frauds that have been perpetrated and judiciously c&vered up iff this city alone, to ssr nothing of suburban anllitsry railroads, etc. Havana bss alwsva had the reputation of, being a .warm place, but if the political pot continues to boil over much more it will soon be pronounced too hot for comfort. , The . military muddle Is getting thicker tbaa ever. General Adna R. Chaffee, late chief of staff, got away just ia time. Before leaving hi remarked to a friend : "We , all knew it would have to comr. and I thought the sooner the bet ter, but those tender toes up there in Washington wanted the cyclone staved off till after election. 'Keep quiet down there or the Democrats will catch on, and then the devil will be to pay. So we kept quiet until some Jay squealed to congress, and then well, now the fat ia ia the ore, and no body knovra who stole the flih." For many months la fact, since January the military authorities in Cubs knew of the gross extravagance, the eriminal carelessness and the glaring inaccuracies, not to use stronger terms, that existed Is the department of posts, but they also knew of the am axing rottenness of the city government, which was under military Jurisdic tion snd for which army officials ia Cuba were re sponsible, sad they hesitated to stir up such a cesspool of corruption, realising that all the vir tues of the $125,000 electrosone plant and other disinfecting fakes would not be sufficient to de odorise Davit' dolags, let alone purify the city expense aceovnt. Besides, the constant admonitions from the White House "Keep Cubs out of politics" could not be ignored, so the military authorities ia con trol followed aa long as possible the advice of the late Colonel IsgersoU. "Never look tor what you doat want to find,'' and were happy. Oa toe Stool of Repeatanee. Now, mark you. The News has been & stanch supporter of the McHanna administration. ' But rats desert a sink ing ship. The same correspondent gets off this startling paragraph for the. amazement of a gaping world: The real facta are that the present administra tion lacks the foresight to discover, the courage to denounce and the ability to bring to Justice the real thieves and political parasites, both civil sad military,' that have disgraced our occupation of the island. Whereupon the agile editor of The News, determined not to be caught as the ship goes down, makes a brave leap for the shore, remarking on the way through the air: But the people will not have it so. They will Insist oa knowing the worst in order that the proper remeiy may be applied. " The president cannot afford, no matter how completely some of his Mends saay be involved, to ignore this mat ter, snd we cannot believe that he win. When the whiaky ring scandals touched the most inti mate friends of General Grant, the members of his own official household, he said. "Let no guilty man escape. Here is a precedent tor President UcKinley. - Evidently The News is on the stool of repentance, and it may seem ungra cious to jog its memory with unpleas ant things, but the fact is that, not withstanding General Grant's fine epi gram, several guilty men did escape, i among them his military secretary, ' General Babcock. and at the ensuing election the Democrats swept the coun- try, electing Samuel J. Tllden presi-) dent by" a' popular majority of a quar- ter of a million and, by. a substantial ' majority of the electoral college. , Two Fletaresw - It will be remembered that when the envoys of 1 the two ' brave little South ; African republics presented themselves at Washington to seek the sympathy of the greatest republic under the sun in their heroic but unequal death struggle with the vastest monarchy upon the-face of the earth, the admin istration, headed by President McKln ley, gave them the cold shoulder and the marble hand. Mr. McKlnley and his premier. Colonel John Hay, receiv ed them as private citizens only and turned tbem away empty handed. Gaze first on that picture of heartless ness and then on this of American cordiality. When an ovation was given these same envoys at Omaha. William J. Bryan was the chief orator. During his speech, which"" was American throughout, he uttered . these noble words, which thrill the heart like strains of martial music: , I trust the day will never come when s nation fighting for liberty will look in vain to the American people tor sympathy and aid- These envoys have honored us by c. ming to seek our sympathy, giving ua as Americana the opportunity to assist them to gain that liberty which is so dear to us. It ia to our honor that the Boers hsve come to tra to receive our sympathy. It ia hard to uader stsnd the feelings of the man who haa sympathy for the Boer cause, but who ia concealing it for political reasons. When a young man, I heard s very sble sermon which haa always clung by me oa the text, "As he thinketh. so he is." Why should any American citisen who feels tor the Boer fall to express himself as such? I do not see how one can do other than to choose the cause of the two republics in preference to that of a monarchy. Essence of American I am. Those words were fitly spoken and are like apples of gold in pictures of silver. I humbly and fervently thank Almighty (rod that America Is still able to nurture a man such as Bryan. His career demonstrates that the breed of men who formed this republic has not run out. "I do not see how one can do other than to choose the cause of the two republics In preference to that of a monarchy." That Is a simple statement. It contains the very es sence of Americanism. Two years ago to those words and to that sentiment there would not have been a. dissent ing voice in all this, broad land; now official America Mark Hanna Ameri cadissents toto caelo. I doubt If any other nation since the morning stars first sang together for joy has traveled the road from republic to "empire ss fast as has America in the , last IS months. Which represents most truly the great body of the people In this Boer matter Bryan or McKlnley? There can be but one answer. , : Bryan aasl McKialer. ' My more or less esteemed and always amusing contemporary, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, suggests that a joint debate between William J. Bryan and Theodore Roosevelt would be a fetch ing performance. 4 Teddy's friends ought to have The G.-D. arrested under the statute against cruelty to anfmals. The G.-D. ought to suggest somebody of Bryan's size, or, falling that, which Is I in possible, somebody who measures up somewhere to his Intellectual stat ure. Ife Is easily the greatest living orator, perhaps the greatest that everj lived. . Roosevelt would have about as much chance with him In an oratorical slugging match ast Terence McGovern would have had; with . John1 Lawrence Sullivan when "Sully" was In his prime. . ' , ' " I have not seen Bryan since April, and am no more authorized to speak for him than Is, any other Democrat In good standing,, but If The G.-D. Is really hankering for ja joint debate In which Bryan shall figure I can suggest one which will add to the-gayety of na tions. LetWrllHam McKlnley and Wil liam J. Bryan have one joint discussion in each of the 45 states of the Union! I am absolutely certain that Bryan will accept., Can The G.-D. bring W4Uiam of Canton to the scratch? I trow not, and why not? Because The G.-D. knows, full well that McKlnley can't hold a candle to Bryan In a full and . com prehensive - discussion of the issues now before the American ' people. I feel so certain that Bryan and Democrats generally . would, favor a discussion between xthe presi dential candidates that, while I am not authorized to , speak for the Democratic national committee, and while that committee is not burdened with funds, I feel perfectly safe m say ing that rather than not have these 45 debates between Bryan and McKlnley the Democrats will defray the entire expense of the performance. If we can't get the necessary money any other way, we will raise it by popular Democratic subscription. The poorest Democrat in the land would be willing to contribute his mite In order to see the peerless Nebraskan thump the present occupant of the White House. This Bryan-McKinley oratorical scrapping match woold attract more attention than any debate that ever took place on earth, and The G.-D. will miss the greatest opportunity of Its career If it falls to join me In the ef fort to pull It off. The Oaea Doer la Catnap A recent declaration .by a high Re publican official at Washington recalls the famous lines which Bret Harte puts into the mouth of Truthful James: Do I sleep Do I dream? Do I wonder and doubt T . Are things what they seem. 1 . Ot are visions about t " Is our civilization a failure. Or is the Caucasian played out? The aforesaid declaration of the high Republican official Is, in words and figures, as follows to wit: "The so called guarantees relative to the 'open door In China are not worth the paper they are written on." , Jupiter Olympus! What are we com ing to? a For many moons ' we have been told, with frequent' and monot onous Iteration; that the achievement of the "open door" was of itself alone amply, sufficient to secure an Immor tality of glory for this Republican ad ministration. At the annual banquet of the merchants and manufacturers of Baltimore last spring I heard my brilliant and expansive friend. Hon. Charles Emory Smith, postmaster gen eral of. the. United States, laud It to the skies: as the sum mum bonuin of all diplomacy and In a rhapsody of iridescent rhetoric place William Mc Klnley. and: Mr, Secretary of State John Hay on the pinnacle of fame for having negotiated It. General Smith is a handsome man. a prepossessing gen tleman, an artist in the use of words, and he enthused his audience and car ried it off its feet, cr, rather, out of its seats on to Its feet, as he pictured In gorgeous colors how we were, one and j alb to be made rich beyond the dreams ', of avarice by reason of the "open door" policy. I confess that 1 was so wrought upon by his flights of imagination and eloquence that 1 began in my mind to figure out the date when I could quit practicing - law and lecturing and go to living in clover on my part of the divvy of the Illimitable wealth to come to us through this much vaunted "open door." I lived In ecstasy for weeks afterward. Now comes this cold blood- I ed, heartless, unimaginative, matter of fact "high . Republican official" at Washington .and pulls the underpin- j ning out irom unaer uenerai smitn s air castles In China as ruthlessly, as blind Samson pulled down the temple by pulling down the pillars that held It up. I feel, a sad sense of personal bereavement as 1 see my Individual portion of j wealth through the "open door" receding In the, dim distance. And so "the guarantees of the 'open door are not worth the paper on which they are written 7" Too bad! One by one the roses fall. "The high Republican official" who ruined Gen eral Smith's speech and blasted my hopes ought to be prosecuted for leze majesty. - , : ,-i : The Tleltet. , . It is useless to say that Bryan's nom ination Is a strong and popular one. Also the platform Is strong and popu lar. It Is generally conceded that the nomination of Adlal E. Stevenson for vice president strengthens the ticket greatly in that section of the country where It most needs strengthening. A conservative estimate of what would happen , were the election held today Is that the Democrats would carry Kentucky, Indiana. New York and Delaware, thereby electing Bryan, and by -a handsome majority, and. as the tendency is constantly In our favor, he may sweep other states which voted against him In 1SG. r .' Saa Jose Scale Treotnaeat. '. Spraying-at intervals of not over ten days from June 15 to Sept. 15 with Hhale oil soap or' kerosene and water Is recommended by one of the stations for Eon-Jose scale. .It may be remark ed, however, that results in the use of keroseue have sometimes been disas trous to trees, and there is much differ ence of opinion about Its advisability. TH6 TARTINS. . When Paul and Henriette returned from the matinee given for the benefit of the new hospital, in which their friends, CoraHe Verdier and Maxime Renaud, had played the leading parts before an en thusiastic audience, they looked tired and cross.. . There was not a more, happily mar ried couple in all Paris than Paul and Henriette Dnfrenoy.' Their f rlends had pronounced it a marriage of f'reason and inclination," and they had adored each other for three years. They had been Inseparable, devoted, without a single misunderstanding marring the v perfec tion of their happiness. They had lost a child, and this great sorrow. Of their lives had bound them still closer: in an affection deep and strong. f " Only the day before, resolving to profit by the beautiful weather, Hhey had tsken the, train to Meudon, and, after having lunch in a pretty little vine covered inn, they had spent the afternoon in the great beautiful woods, as happy and care tree as two birds. ' . , Very different from this beautiful day with nature was the matinee from-which they returned so morose, without telling each other what had caused the sudden change. However, everything comes to an end, even the silence of twox angry people. The next morning at breakfast Paul, unable to bear longer the taciturni ty of his wife and the glacial expression of her face, throwing his napkin on the table, cried: "Henriette, what is the matter?" . "With me? Nothing," replied -Henriette coldly: "Nothing. That's quickly said. But what have I done? Ever since that con cert yesterday you have been different. We did not care to go to it, but surely that is not cause enough for this change." "I think if any one is changed since yesterday it is you. Xou are thoughtful, preoccupied." And of whom do I think except you?" "Who knows? Of Coralie Verdier per haps, who was most natural yesterday in her role of coquette dn the "comedy. Waa she not full of spirit, radiant with charm and grace?" - Paul laughed. "Is that." he cried, "the subject of your great anger? You may rest easy. It Is not for Coralie, with her ridiculous af fectations, to turn my head." '.That is what you say now to me. But I heard you telling her what you thought ofter the play behind the scenes.? "The most trifling words, spoken for politeness." "Politeness does not demand such a profusion of. compliments as you : show ered upon her. No; you were aincere. You have been thinking of her ever since and regretting perhaps that your.wlfe is to much less charming." ' "You doubt my -wortjl What would you say if I should accuse you of looking with too much admiration at Maxime Re naud during, the performance? He was very fine, was he not Jn his officer's uni form?"'" " Henriette, pale with anger, arose. "What! You dare" ! Yes. I dare! Why not? ;You dare! Why not I? One accusation Is worth another."'.'- " ' - This is. too .muchr, cried, the young woman, and she left the dining room. Paul followed her into her own room. - "Come. Henriette, this Is foolish, I as sure you" " ': ' '' "Oh! I am foolish as: well as untrue! I shall not remain here to be Insulted another moment!" And, trembling with anger, she put on her hat and seised her gloves. . "Where are you going?" asked Paul, uneasy for the first time;" -' "I am going home, where I am loved and trusted. I shall never see you again." And without' further speech Henriette walked swiftly from the room. Left alone - Paul stood ' staring at the door as though he had only half compre hended his wife's words. Then, in a moment, he said aloud - "Very well, go If you want to. If there Is one abomination under heaven, it is a jealous wife!" ,-. , . Taking his hat and cane, Paul, too, left the house. He had no place to go and walked aimlessly along the street. ; s "So she has gone home," he refected, "and she is perfectly capable .of remain ing there. Well, I am satisfied. I shall enjoy being my own master once more. It ia rather nice to feel at liberty,, though there seems to be nothing to do Joiit now. Strange I never knew .what a temper she had. She looks very pretty when she Is angry. Shall I really never i.e her again? Absurd!" but his. heart sank at the recollection of her last words, and his new ' found liberty . seemed to lose some of its attractiveness. .! ... , It was a beautiful 'day, and after wan dering about all morning he decided to spend the afternoon in the country, for he was still too. angry to return home, though he longed to see if his wife had repented of her hasty resolution. He bought a ticket for Meudon and in the train thought of the day they had spent there together such a short time ago. Ar riving at bis destination, be took lunch at the same pretty little inn and felt his loneliness growing with the tender mem ory of that other day, spent in such sweet companionship. "I am a brute," he suddenly, exclaimed as he was walking after lunch in the forest." "and she is the dearest little wom an in the world. If she was jealous, was it not simply because she loved me? And who could lore a, woman without spirit enough to be jealous?" ; , He resolved to go back at once, and if she had not returned to. go to heir moth er's and ask ht r to forgive, him. ' "But first I'll get, her .a bunch of the purple hyacinth," and he walked quick ly, toward the oak . in . whobe shude the flowers grew. -$ .. .. . - He walked with his head bent, think ing deeply, and did not see the figure that rose from the ground as, he approached the tree. When be looked up, his wife stood before htm. and her hands were tilled with hyacinths. - "Dearest! he cried breathlessly, . - She held out her hands, with the flow ers In them." "Will you take them. Paul? she said softly. "1 picked tht'tn for you." From the French. ". Txewrter Taetlesi. "Miss Speilum wears all her best clothes dowa to the office.?,. "Is she in love with anybody there?" ' , "No, but she sayi it scares her em ployer so he doesn't give her much work to do." Chicago Record. . f . Mlraeslons. Dasherly.Time's a wonderful thing. It gilds all troubles we may have had. Downtrod Yes: I suppose a widower can look' back on his married life with real pleasure. Kansas City Independent.