J : i i i i t Little Uu. 3e r- i!ny-n. iCal.tneta $2.01 Per dozen. PREwmvi 14 Street I800--I900. Some Hfstorf cal Parallels Be tween Jefferson and Dry an. First bov Mr. Henry Adams nmmlec of Us Urates alnt JeTerae by U-e Federalists of New EcgU4 ui Kew 'York la 1S00: Ery 4MmAUt Intriguer. looe-llTer, farxcr. ti.ire-co'.r:er and prlon-bIrd; vry Ita4r braised. loud-ta'Mng dem ar -.; every tpecaUtor. BcoJer and atheist, wm follower of Jefersoxi; aad Jerss was himself Ui lacaraa tiast tf their tlteories." WHAT BOETrLT nAlS OF TC ToU-tTHKM or JKrrEBWW "iititdy lio Kansas City platform aad yea caaa-at help realizing that iteir poUmj is las policy of infamy, tfcat their uisaspk woulJ mean misery so widespread that it U almost un taiakaUs sad a ditsra so lasting that mat than a generation would Lass to pace Wore it coulJ be wiped sit. "They etand fr UWihh aad dis order. e4kty dt.hooor. for ti c svod SmW ! sad rew ard:? tWtofcmt frMB abroad." wait itiTma? aar r jcrrrit- MVI ADMIXIoTKlTIOX. A ad what followed all this bysteria a saalie, Is vocation f dread spec trtm aad yrsdlctioa of the mob? Yhat was the ir;s4!? An administration. as &coelrr jastly describes it. "peace ful, p rsr4r a&d popular beyond all precejeat. especially ftrong and sseeesafsi jest where U direst dlsas irr ha bees foreboded, in the mm retseat cf tie finance of the coun try. "Tar pellcy of this remarkable adalaktratia.M writes this admirer ml JtSmos. was at once and steadily ssceessfel ia wlnnlcg the people; and the pretties cf enthusiasm became Ir reslstihls whta conjoined with the wrest:?. ef success. An executive, neither 12 instrument of others nor a brtrsyer f trusts, we may regard Jererewa as the genuine personator of list to which France's First Consul presented contemporaneously the cots eterf tit a leader of the common papl la the direction cf their test desires." TI verdict is aot simply that of Jeffersea't admirers. The historians art aaroaica. Mr. Morse, ia his r Cm sate jZeroa. in the American imri aeries. and neither the aeries as a whale, cor Mr. Morse's vol jc la partisular, will evtr be ac cased f E&ahjjes admiration of JeJer ea its ferte uses terms almost iden tical. Mr. Beaouler. la the passage (noted, is wrttlsc of a time midway 1a Jeffersda's second administration, 3t Wfore Use troubles lta England. Mr. Morse is writing of the close of all lrt admlaistration. when the caaBpala fcr his re-election ap ? reached. Everything, he says. re doeaded to mis food fame and popular ity." The aatlon felt "comfortable aad coed aatared amid the broad Tisi- i hie facta cf the paisinr time, ... vfer at expenses curtaile4 and taxes reduoed. aad debts being rapidly di minished? . . . Had the country bea for ssasy years pat so free from Irritation aad sa xiety growing out of fore4ga aSahs? ... Had political liadlisess erer be'ore permeated the nation aa It did today? Four years of prosperity ad tranquility left little room for diacmttnt with the govejis ssent. Aseid such InJSuences poliUcal ppoltlfea 4.ed and almost died. Tfc wrtft mt ktaury tit arfiulal. rtlB mt t ltVr 4 j Jffng, WUUim J. Uf SfTM, mUm K W pml&tjpm, wut ftMl tmllmm mmt thm I LINCOLN VS. HIS PARTY. tUay , IM. frch at mooning ton. III., at the formation of party in UftWw Arojotd. sw VS.) XC an, ia Vol'iting oor new pertv, plant oar-lvee en the reck of the Ileratkin of lojoVprailmco and the cat of hell shall not be able to prevail I ae now trlare the Dvctarmtien of Independence obsolete and deny It tal prlsM-lp!o that (tcruaraU derie tblr jat pon trt from the tt of the rmi. Of mil th humbug and falme pretense of the McKinley administration there is nothing tnere tfltou? tluan th cry of jrojcrit t.f' The uppresetl rotten beef scandal, which is sought to be covered fry pXewa patriotism; tlie Vuban frauds, whose authors are pretended to be prosecuted j the boodle fumUhlnf truftAy which are held up as enemies while licensed to tax the people? are'all&palpable eridem of the miserable hypocrisy of JUarfc llannurs regime, but for cool audacity nothing lias equaled the clamor about "prosperity.' - Dt O. JT. JTerkins, of Chicago, has made a study of a certified report signed by, A. IT. Glens on. Chief 3rU of the ISureau of Jjabor and Industrial Statistics of Xebraska. Under his analy sis thim report tells a cidely different story from that daily proclaimed by Mepublican speaker and press. "Using the round numbers," he says, ' the mortgages satisfied', during the three and m half years ending June 13, 1VOO, amount to $99,000,000, cm against $77,000,000 filed,' or a difference of, $22,000,000 in favor of prosperity.' This applies to real estate mortgages only end would bear out the claim of the Ilepublicans provUletl there was nothing fur titer. Wlien, however. fwe pas to the nejrt column we $77,000,000 atifieda difference of $1G1,000,000 against prosperity,'" v Th difference between $IGJ,OOO,00O and $22,000,000 la $139,000,000. This is the actual increase in the mortgage indebtedness of the state of Xebratha according to the sworn statement of the. eounty clerk. The large figures are not easily comprehended. Viewed from another standpoint t TO SUITLANT WHITES American Workmen T7ill Be Put in Competition with CMntxaen by Conquest of the P hilippinea. "BIAS ALEZADY OPEEATUTG. lerer In the history of thla gov ernment baa the labor of this coun try been bo menaced by the threatened Influx of the Mongolian and Malay cheap labor of the far east as seems probable under the McKInley policy of imperialism, should that dangerous policy be ratified by the American peo ple. Without the labor rote that policy cannot be approved. It behooves the laboring people, therefore, to look out for breakers shead. What does the eonqurt-t of the Philippine islands mean? It means that they shall be come American territory. What rights does that proposition carry with it to the people of the Philippines? ' The McKInley policy to make the Philip pine Islands American territory by con quest, and subject to American Juri3 dicUon. carries with it the right oZ the people of those islands to free lo comotion to travel whither they will from one part of American territory to another without let or hindrance. What has happened in the Hawaiian Islands under the McKInley adminis tration since those Islands have been annexed to the United States will take place in this country. Fourteen to twenty thousand Japanese coolie la borers have been imported Into the Hawaiian islands by the rich, sugar planters, under contract, since the annexation of those islands; and this too, in violation of the contract labor law. Why did not McKInley as the chief executive of this nation whose duty It was to enforce the law, pre vent this Influx of Japanese coolie la bor? Simply because he is bound band and foot in the clutches of the syndicates and trust combines of the country. What have we in store for the Philippine islands should the Mc KInley war of conquest be endorsed? The Influx of Chinese coolia labor into those islands under the sanction of the McKInley . administration! General Wesley Merrltt and General Charles A. Whittlcr, U. S. V., and other land and naval oSieer3 went to Paris from Manila to testify before the Paris peice commissioners as to the Philippine people, their wants, needs, capabii.ues and government. General Whittier said: Then the question of the admission of Chinese, with the strong argument oa both sides. ' The merchants of Ma nila are unanimous in their represen tations of the necessity for more cooley labor. They, and many others, re quire it In Manila, and think that it will be necessary in railroad building, and in Che development of the coun try, esying, "There i3 no question of competing with American labor here, there being no such in the country, nor can there be. the climate prohib iting that Cheap labor and plenty of It is the life blood of the Philippines. There is rooia for three millions of Chinese comfortably, while 90,000 is the present estimate. The Omaha Bee (Republican) said editorially Oct. 14. 19S, if we absorb the Philippines, with their millions of cheap laborers, and proceed to the development of those islands Indus trially and commercially by the utili sation of this cheap labor. NOTHING CAN BE MORE CERTAIN THAN THAT IN TIME OUR HOME LABOR WILL SUFFER FROM THE COM PETITION. WE SHALL NOT BE ABLE TO PERPETUALLY SAFE GUARD IT BY THE SYSTEM OF PROTECTION NOW IN OPERATION. . . . . "Territorial expansion as sow proposed Is a very serious mat ter for American labor and the op position of that labor to expansion should have more vigorous expression than has been given. This was when the Omaha Bee was opposing the conquest of the Philip pines and endeavoring to shape the course of the administration. FALSE .PRETENSEi-QF"- PROSPERITY. find that $23S,000.000 in chattel mortgages have been fiZed as against Birdseye View of William His Devious Poftica! and Official Trail Is an Anomaly in American Politics Always Wrong - Th Republican rty Iis aecepSd the Enropeoa Idea and planted Itself wpo prouad taha by George III and by every ruler who dl trasts the capacity af the people far lf-soTeramnt or deaies them a voice la their wn affaics. WUUam J. Bryaa Letter af Acceptance. TbtH U what President William McKinley ba done, sars Jenathaa K. Taylert He has exere'srd the autocratic and uneonstltatlanol power or denying the riffht of representation and traffrage; of trial by jury; ef writ of habeas corpus; of the right to bear arms of all ri&hts guaraateed by the eoastltattaa to the lnuabltanO of newly recognised Islands. lie has recognised slavery and polygamy In Suln. He has made war upon the non-slave holding neo-pnly?inoiM Inhabitants of Iaen lie has eonsc nted to the taxation without representation of the inhabitant of Porto Rice. He has withheld Independence from the inhabitants of Cnha. Thl is imperialism, i la his message President McKinley said: "Forcible annexation Is criminal ag gression." He then proceeded to "forcibly an nex" the Philippine . archipelago with its 8.000,000 unwilling people. In 1899 President McKinley said: "It i3 our plain duty to give free trade to the people of Porto Rico." He immediately proceeded to im portune and coerce a Republican con gress Late passing a tariff bill against Porto Rico in accordance with the de mand of the sugar trust. He gave pledges to Spain and Cuba that Cuba should be free and inde pendent. ' He has created a military govern ment in Cuba, which has thwarts every step toward island autonomy and which reeks with theft and corrup tion of every kind. Record in the Philippines. ' President McKinley paid Spain $20, 000,000 for something which Spain did not possess and had not power to deliver. The president has since that time spent of the American people's money $200,000,000 trying to obtain that for which he had paid $20,000. 000. In this attempt he has only succeeded in filling graves, hospitals, insane asylums and fat Insular jobs. The end is not yet. He has appointed more commissions to carry out his unconstitutional pol icy than all other presidents have legally created. He is paying these commissions in violation pf the con stitution. (See article 1, section 9, clause 7). These commissioEs have never done anything beyond administering coats of whitewash to the autocracy at Washington. McKInley Appointees. President McKinley is responsible for General Alger of canned beef no toriety; for General Eagan, who was suspended for blackguardism, on full pay; for Rath bone and Neely, the Cu ban postal thieves; for Gage, the banker, who turned the treasury over to Morgan and his Wall street con spirators, and for Griggs, whose sole duty is to shield the robber trusts from prosecution. He is responsible for Hay, the Brit ish toady. He sent Hay's son to Pre toria to be the administration agent at the death of the South African re LET THE PEOPLE ELECT THE SENATORS President Johnson, in 1888, recommended a constitutional amendment providing for the election of United States senator by direct vote of the people, but his recommendation met with no response. About twelve years later General Weaver, then a member ot congress, tried to secure the passage of a resolution submitting an amendment but his efforts were futile. In 1892, the resolution recommenced by President Johnson and urged by Congressman Weaver finally passed the house of represent atives, but it hs not yet reacned a vote, in ' the senate. And now after eight years moro of public discussion , the proposition for the first time receives the endorsement of the national convention of one of the great parties. ' If the fusion forces win a victory this fall, we shall see this reform accomplished before the next presidential election, and with its accom plishment the people will find It easier to secure any remedial legis lation which they may desire. Great problems are solved slowly, but struggling humanity marches on, step by step, content if at each nightfall it can pitch its tent on a little higher ground. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN. Ncradey: in the Eod publics. Under the same Hay MeKln ley surrendered American territory in Alaska to Great Britain and denied the right of American miners to pro test Enemy of tabor. At the request of the Standard Oil trust President McKinley sent its regular army into Idaho to shoot down and imprison miners who had rebelled against Standard oil tyranny in Coeur d' Alene. These men were thrown Into a stockade and kept there with out right of trial until many of them became raving maniacs. These facts are a part of current history. He placed a horse doctor in charge of vthe medical department of Cuba. He pliced Gen. Miles incommunicado and sent to Cuba in charge of the army Shafter, who rode to battle in a lit ter and who wanted to surrender when the first shot was fired. Crooked All Threagh. Mr. McKinley was a free silver man in 1893, a bi-metallist in 1896 and a single gold standard advocate im 189S. He was a champion of civil service In 1896, and two years later he discharged 8,000 civil service appointees to make place for political pets of Ifanna and Piatt Through his pro-British secretary of state he entered into a treaty with Great Britain whereby the American people were to dig a Nicaraguan canal and leave it defenseless to be used at pleasure by John Bull. He permitted the opening of special mail matter to our consul at Pre toria by British agents and called our consul home because that official com plained. He makes constant declaration that the Institutions of this country are in the hands of providence and then demands a large standing army, as if providence were not equal to the task. r Behold the Man of Destiny. Secretary Root in a recent speech in New York said: "Oh for one hour of Grantl WTiy Grant if McKinley is such a Napoleon? Why Grant when the man of des tiny and of providence, is at' the helm? Look -at. the man! He has been on every side of every- question-" always landing on the side opposed t the people, on the side of oppression, on the side of national shame. may be easier. Allowing that census of 1S90, we find that tlie in the state. If the people of the state of Kebraska with abutufnnt crops are in this short time plunged $139,000, OOO more in debt titan at the beginning of tliis period, how many years will it require under the same regime to place the property Those not acquainted withpte present method's of loaning money in the icest and south will be astonished at Vie large increase in chattel mortgages shown by the report. This is explained by the fact that the lender prefers a short time loan at an increasetl rate of interest secured by a m&rlgage on growing live stock to one on real estate. An analysis of similar reports made by other state officers in tJte west and southwest will show practically the same results. Instead of there beingany decrease of mortgage debt in Indiana, the mortgage debt? real estate and chattel, has increased during every year of the McKinley administration, and the total increase for Vie three years completed is in excess of $50,000,000. In two years of McKinley prosperity the ehatiel inortgages cf Indiana liave increased 255,151 in number, and $782,234 in amount, and the total mortgage debt of the state in three'years cf McKinley prosperity has increased $55,94G,7G over wluit has been paid, not including the chattel mortgages and foreclosures of 1897. v WANTS A MONARCHY HcTTinley Organ in Ioto. Voices the Beal Sentiments of the Republican Party. COSTITU I'IOU IS 03S0LETZL The following article is frora the Des Moines (la.) Globe," a Republican farmers' paper. It voices in plain lan guage the spirit of McKinley Repub licanism. What thex Globe frankly speaks the imperialist secretly thinks. It is brutally plain, and for this rea son Republican organs .have affected to discredit' its sentiments; but it speaks out of the fullness of a heart saturated with Hamiltonianism, which is the Inspiration , of President McKin ley; and tnere Is1 in it that touch of sincerity that gives It weight as an ut terance, a little rash perhaps and pos sibly a little premature, but significant of ue trend of modern Republicanism. The article deserves the very widest publicity as showing the direction of the McKinley drift: "For a long time thinking people who have large commercial interests have felt unsafe with our present form of government from the fact that we are controlled by the little cheap John politicians iinu ward-heelers. NO. 13 A GOOD TIME TO DO AW A vITH OUR OBSOLETE CONSTITU TION and adopt a form of government uxat will be logical , with expansion ideas and will give AMPLE PROTEC TION TO CAPITAL. . "A CONSTITUTIONAL. MONARCHY is probably the ' most desiraole plan that we could now adopt Everything is ripe for the change. We1 take it (that the great farming interests of our land will readily aclapt themselves to the change. The warmer is a great lover of law and t order, and ANTI MONARCHY IS LARGELY THE IM PRESSION OF FRENCH REVOLU TIONARY ideas Suggested by HOT-HEADED THEORISTS. "We. believe that history and exper ience have proven beyond cavil t A REPUBLICAN FORM OF GOVERN MENT CANNOT bUBSIST beyond a certain stage. That as soon as a great PEOPLE BECOME RICH,. STRONG AND GREAT, THE REPUBLu DROOP3 AND DIES. We believe this is so, of necessity and not by chance. Wo believe that there is not a single case ofTecord where the masses ot a great nation possessed the intelligence to initiate laws, and were intelligent enough to compel tne enforcement of such good laws as they might pass. "It would seem a" if science teaches that men are created to follow their masters -the inspired minds of the world. HISTORY SHOWS THAT A KING MUST BE AND IS FOUND IN EVERY NATION to guide Its people in every great crisis.' Neither is tae change to be dreaded or looked for ward to with foreboding. While we are in fact largely under the conditions of a monarchy, we have the evils with out the benefits of the same. Bryan and tha Incline Tax At present the government ran draft the citizen, bat wiatt drft the poeketbook. Slowly but sorely the tnllar i beinc enltcwt and the man do based. Justice ia taxation " mast be restered. The sentiment prevailing among thne who advocat n income tax jaat'Be the prediction that the Demo erntn, Ponoitsts ad S lver Repabllmt wtU in their next mplgn advocate aa amoadmeat to the rnnlkalinn speeifiealty awthnrlatn an lnnvme tax. and no one who hna fnUb in the final trlnmph ef every rij;le- ws canse will donht the a HI mate ftoecess of the effort to make an Income tax a permanent part of the revenue system of t e fed eral govern meunk. W. J. BR VAX- NO FREEDOM NOW F03 FLIFiKGS. 1 have sIitsti thonht that all men should be free, but if anr should be slaves, it shonld be first those who de sire it for themselves and secondly those who desire it for others. ABRAHAM UNCOLJT. ' Prom an address to au Indiana Reg iment March 17, 1865. The Children of Do yon hear the children wte"in;, O my brothers. Kre the aurrow comes with years? They are leaning their joan; heads against their mothers. And that cannot stop their tears. The yoang lambs are blrating in the meadows; The young birds are chirpin? in the nest. The young fawns are playing with the shadows; The young flowers are blowing toward the west But the young, young childrca. O, my brothers, - They are weeping bitterly! S They are weeping in the playtime of the others. In the country of the free. Mrs. Browning. the population of Xebrtiska, has increased indebtedness is over $109 entirely in tlie hands of mortgage ASSSIlLATKONi A Republican Newspaper Ac count of a Philippine ; , Battle. Just past this a few hundred yards we saw a solitary body lying In the road. The body was almost stripped of clothing, and there were no marks of rank left on the blood-soaked coat. But the face of the dead man had a look I had never noticed on the face of other dead men I had found in in surgent uniform on the field of battle, in the wake of an "American firing 1 line. The features were clear cut aud forehead high and shapely. I decided the man must have been an insurgent omcer. A soldier came running down the trail. "That's old Pilar, he said. "We got the old rascal. I guess he's sorry he ever went up against the Thirty third. "There ain't no doubt about it3 be ing Pilar," rattled on the young sol dier. "We got his diary, and his let ters, and all his papers, and Sullivan of our company's got his pants, a;.d Snider's got his snoes, but he can t wear them because they're too small, and a. sergeant in G company got one ' of his silver spurs, and a lieutenant got the other, and somebody swiped the cuff buttons before I got here or I would have swiped them, and all I got was a stud button and his collar with biood on it." So this was the end pf Gregorio del Pilar. Only 22 years old, he managed to make himself a leader- of men when he was hardly more than a boy, and at last had laid down his life for his convictions. Major Juaish had tho diary. In it he. had written under the date of December- 2, uie day he was kined: ' "The general, has given me the pick of all the men that can be spared and ordered me to defend the pass. I re alize what a terrible task is given me. And yet I feel that this is the most glorious moment ot my life. What 1 do is done for my beloved country. No sacrifice can be too great" . A private, sitting by the camp fire, was exhibiting a handkerchief. "It's old Pilar's. It's got 'Dolores Hosea on" the corner. I guess that was his girl. Well, it s all off with Gregorio." v Anyhow," said Private Snllivau. "I got his pants. He won't need 'em any more." The man who had the general's shoes strode proudly past, refusing with scorn a "Mexican dollar and a pair of shoes taken from cne of the private insurgent soldiers. A private sitting on a rock was examining a golden locket containing a curl of a woman's hair. "Got the locket off Ls neck," said the soldier. ... As the main column started on its march for the summit ef the mountain a turn in the trail brought us again in - sight of the insurgent general . fir ! down below us. There had been no time to bury him. Not even a blanket or a poncho had been thrown over him. A crow sat on the dead man's feet Another perched on his head- The fog settled down upon us. We eould see the body no longer. We carved not a line, and we raised not a stone. But we left him alone in his glory. And when Private Sullivan went by in his trousers, and Snider with his shoes, and the other man who bad the cuff buttons, and the eergear.t who had the spur, and the lieutenant who had the other spur, and the man that had the handkerchief, and another man that 'had his shoulder straps, it sud denly occurred to me that his glory was about all we had left him. Rich ard Henry Little in Chicago Tribune. Rights never- conflict; duties never clash. Can It be our du'y to uss np po ll Meal rights which belong to others? Can it be ear duty to kill tliooe who, following the example of our fore fathers, love liberty we'l enough to fijrht for it? W. J. IS RYAN. the Coal Miners increased twenty per cent since the for eaclt man. woman and child IioUlers? GBOWTH OF COALBINISS GRAIN DEALERS IN A TRUST AGAINST FARMERS. Latest Monopoly Is Con-tphracy to Je Then of Their Profit II a lsr-Krct-lng Effect - Contracts Aro A1inV Signed. P. E. Dowie, member of the execu tive committee of the National Demo cratic Traveling Men's association,nnd of the Commercial Travelers Anti Trust League, arrived in Chicago yes terday. He has Just completed an ex tensive tour of Missouri, Nebraska. itMd Iowa.-, - '-" "I have.N recently discovered." eal Mr. Dowie, "a gigantic ccraspira:y to rob the farmers of the country. This latest product of monopoly Includew In its membership about 00 big Karai dealers and elevator men in the terri tory extending from St Paul on the north to Kansas City on the smith, including the states of Wlsconria.Min nesota. North and South Dakota, towa, Nebraska and Kansas. "AH the 600 and more members ot this newest thing in trusts are pledged to buy grain at one and a half oentt? low, that Is below the cash price, rn to store for. not less than ono and a half cents profit The association en gineering the scheme is to fix the sell ing price. Forty per cent of the profits are to go to the association, the bal ance going to the dealers who aro pi ties to the swindle. Have Signed Contrive. "Grain-dealers in the sections where the trust is at work have been in duced to sign contracts and a rejrvlar system .of inspection guaraatee against cutting prices. Grata stations are established here and there, and ot each station the trust nas an' ngent who" has authority to inspect the books of any member of the association. A. membership fee of $50 is charged. A fine of $100 is imposed if the agreecaeat is broken, and ,$50 is charged for re instating a member who has violated any of the terms of the pact On its part, the assoeiation guaran tees the grain dealers, who enter, Into the agreement.protection from changes In the ownership of elevators where they may have their grain stored. If an elevator attempts to break away or to run independent they guarMitee to have Its supply of cars shut off, so that it cannot ship grain to market iv opposition to the trust Promoted by Repahlicana "Since I discovered the consplraccr, a few, days since, I have been collecting information concerning it I Ciscer tained today that the prornetar ;&nd organizer of the trust is an ardent Re publican and superintendent of oao of the largest elevators in the entry. "The practical workings of this com bination to rob the farmer are not dif ficult to see. By getting all the grain dealers of a community enrolled as members, it is impossible for the form ers of that section to sell to anyone outside the trust or to ship their grain away. They must stand th losa of a cent and a half a bushel on the price of their grain in order to find a mar ket I amjiot ready to give the n.uiaes, but will do so soon." It is said that the new movement to compel the farmers of the states men tioned to accept less than the market price to realize on their crops bad its inception in Chicago, and that several of tbe big elevator men and grain deal ers are interested in it LYING WAS BEGUN. The Republican ' national committee keeps the Republican newspaper throughout the-country supplied with burning thoughts. This Is a boom to the Republican newepapers, for their thoughts use to cost them 25 cenla per column from, tho "boiler-p ate" fac tories, and now they get them for nothing. In a list of converts to Bryan pub lished sometime ago by an eastern newspaper, the article mentioned half a dozen names of residents of Bath. N. Y., as citizens of Bath, Me. The mistake was purely accidental. Ob viously their votes would b raCh more useful lo Mr. Bryan, where they properly belong than they would be In Maine. The Hanna organs, how ever, discovered the mistake, poanced upon it with a great outcry, and even yet have not finished crying "fake. Last year, Mr. Creelman, the cele brated newspsf er correspondent wrote from Net ra ska that statement that Mr. Bryan by his lectures and writings had accumulated property worth about twenty-five thousand dollars. The ever vigilant and diabolically in clined printer, put on an extra cipher, making the amount two hundred and' fifty thousand dollars. The mistake was not discovered until the paper was on the street. Here was another thing for the Republican press to make an out-cry about Remarks about Mr Bryan as a "plutocrat" began to cir culate through the Republican press, but they eventually stopped when the explanation. of the slip made the:a too ridiculous to be persisted ia. The Hanna literary bureau, has, however, recently revived them, and ha uren improved on the original typographical error by raiting the amount of Mr Bryan's fortune to three hundred thou sand dollars. Another instance of the methods em ployed by the Republican literary bu reau may be cited. Some years ajto a gentleman, no longer connected with me xxew York Journal, wrote a signed article giving his estimate of Mr Bryan as a man and as a leader. This estimate has been revived by the Re j publican press bureau and circulated 5 the editorial opinion of the New 4 i