He Wat lb* Wide Push in the Three B-tfed Political Circus. BOTH PIATEORM AND CANDIDATES Ha* Can Hr Carry thr State—Nebraska's Hl( Com Crri|> and the Inrrraslng H«od Tin.rr arr All Against Him — Outlook In tbr Hig tilth—Sta r I'ollll ral Ma11«r* in t.rncral. ■Wan Hryan's Krynotn. BU Louie (Ho be-Democrat: The chief significance which attaches to the aMui of the Nebraska convention lies iu tin tad that Bryan dictated It. Local iiid« coerced the populists and the diver eg-rcpublii ans Into line for Bryan's candidate for head of the tick et thte vwai—eg-tiovernor Holcomb, who rtm* in ifor supreme Judge. The platform was dictated by Bryan hlmsell and if Interesting an showing what hi wants to be made the issues for IMS' Tbr platform repeats the sil ver folly of 1MH It makes a frothy and demagogic atta< k on trusts, which his party when In control of the gov ernment never marie any attempt to curb. It irinker an assault on national eg|>ahPlth and endeavors to give aid and lomfoit to Agulnaldo and tits fel low conspiratcrf by assailing the ad ministration for endeavoring to carry out the pi ov if ion* of the peace treaty with Bpsm in the maintenance of the national sovereignty in the Philippines. AH thie js e*. eedingly gratifying to the republicans. They now have a fair aesuianif that Bryan will be bait ed inti demanding a reindorsement of the 4f>-; democrat ic, 800; sliver republicans, less than a hundred. How could democrats dic tate to populists under such condi tions? The Chicago Ttmes-Herald, looking at the two platforms and the circumstances under which they were constructed, says- "Mr. Bryan Ib thus accommodating himself to the exigenc ies as they exist In the several states." Thirty *H«*rontl lowi He union MASON CITY. Ia , Sept. 2.—The tenth bieunlul reunion of tlie Thirty second Iowa is in session at Clear Lake. The regiment was raised in this j vicinity in 1802, It now lias 500 sur vivors, about 100 being present. It gained its chief distinction at the bat tle of Pleasant Hill, in the Red River campaign. A monument to the dead of tlie regiment stands in the public park at Mason City. Colonel William Shaw of Anamosa, who commanded the regiment, and the brigade of which it was a part, is present. Ex-Senator William V. Alien of Nebraska, who was a private, delivered a rousing speech at a campfire. The president of the association, Colonel John Scott of Des Moines, presides. Good Him w in tlm llig Sixth. Lincoln dispatch: The chances for a big republican victory in the Sixth congressional district are now admit ted by many prominent fusiotiists to be lietter than they have been for a num ber of years. Republicans from that district concede the nomination of Moses P. Kinkaid of Holt county with very little opposition and no alarm is felt concerning the success of the tick et at election. There is but little pros pect that the popocratic forces will be united, even if the democratic commit tee asks for and secures Harrington's withdrawal. The dissatisfaction all over the district is so general that the populist campaign managers will find it difficult to heal the wounds made at the conventions. Keruril* of Harlan Soldier*. HARLAN. Ia.. Sept. 2.—Only one of the twelve or fifteen men sent from Harlan with the Fifty-first will re enllst. That man is Janies Beebe, who left Harlan as a private and who has Iteen given a commission in one of the new volunteer regiments as second lieutenant. Another man who left Harlan as a private is now a lieutenant serving on the staff of General latwton, George S. Gibbs, jr of the signal corps. Louis Wyland is a corporal, and James Taltman. bugler. Beebe and Gibbs are graduate* of the Harlan high school and ex-students, respectively, of the : State t'nlverslty of Iowa and Simpson , college* Ha* I.imI HU «»rl|». Fremont Tribune Mr. Holrnmh, It I* fair to mate. due# not aland aa high In public aateeni today aa he once did. Icuti* public cerlvce baa developed hla weaknea» Ha la nut a lawyer ul die j ttnitoUhed ability He la mediocrity. I lo re are denoa fttlc lawyer* who afould have tieen alad tu aland for alectiiiu who (vraaeae * renter talent The democrat* of IVodne county nr# not likely to tea* over kindly to the H thumb candidacy The popullata have tdalmed everythin*, nnd lure where they nr* of no eonelderabl* a im tier, ihe democrat* do aot •*» the utility , of •urreaderiuu everythin* to them. H«b«uh caj ik« Nun Meat. The popolt** editor* are b#*tnule* i tu ahrteh in chore* that * llohoml never »tole tat hmtae real ' The record thou* that he drew from the treaaurv eoveral hundred dollar* noire ho houae rent than the owner* of the hotaeu tH which he lived received a* ' real I'all it what you plena# Th* •tale paid the aotaer to llobotub and hla Uadi.od didn't mritr it ntwU tka t •«> York H*ptW aa I pop papat j car* th# buy* ta the army uf th* l*hil I tpplnae had to noth for III a Nuatt and cpend tbat fur Teel that Ihey w*r* I *u •* rut a ho la. fc Millar car* th* 1 hard wae pol lb* Weal of the haat ! and ter ted freah a(#h« daya out of ten ' Yon van ho Have lack MiHer w rvt I * aa Wi*y« *h • paper I ALL ARE AT WORK. A TYPICAL CENTER OF PRO TECTED INDUSTRY. Extraordinary Showing by a Free-Trada Journal on tha Condition of Thluga That Haa Follow r«1 the Keaioratlou of tha American Policy. The New York World has discovered .he existence of a Greater Klondike. It is located in Pittsburg, that hive of protected industries, and the World’s correspondent is telling some tall sto ries of the wonderful products of the region. The stories are well told, and they have the additional merit of be ing true—which is more than can be said of ail the World's stories. Re duced to a brief form of statement, the situation In western Pensylvanta’s In dustrial Eldorado Is thus described; ‘‘Area of Pittsburg's Industrial Klon dike, 180 square miles. "Number of Industries being operat ed on full time, 118. "Number of men employed In these, embracing all classes, 270,000. "Aversge wage* per day, $2.15, "Range of wages, $1.75 to $7 per day. "Number of Idle men, none, except from sickness. "Number of mills and factories un able to run full time by reason of scar city of labor, 80. "Railroads unable to move freight promptly because the traffic Is 30 per cent larger than ail the freight cars in service. "Gross industrial value of trade in Industrial Klondike, $8,000,000." Further along we find the World, a free-trade Journal, testifying to the wonderful results of the revival of In dustry thaj has occurred since the re advent of protection and prosperity. It prints the following table, showing "the extent to which labor has shared One came from Alabama, the othei from Ohio. The Alabama man wantei 200. Ho was told that the manufac turers in the Pittsburg district wantec men as badly as he did. He went fur ther east tonight, seeking them. "Common laborers are almost as scarce as skilled hands. Mr. Williams secretary of the Amalgamated associa tion,told the World scuff correspondent today that unskilled laborers could And employment throughout the district, Contractors employing laborers on public improvements are constantly seeking men, "John C. Sheehan, the former boss ol Tammany Hall, who has a contract for constructing Pittsburg's new $5,000,000 boulevard, is inconvenienced by the limited supply ot laborers. "E. B. Taylor, general superintend ent of the Pennsylvania lines west ol Pittsburg, said today that bis road could not secure as many men as lie desired. “The same story is heard in every line of trade, but principally, as is nat ural, from mill owners—not men enough, cars enough, facilities enough to meet the new conditions that are making the 180 square miles of mines, forges,mills and factories around Pitts burg a veritable Oolconda of wealth. “Next to the shortage of la.bor conies the transportation famine as a factor in retarding the fullest operation of the industries In the Pittaburg district. Mine, mill and factory owners all com plain of their inability to secure enough cars to carry their product to the markets. “Railway officials have pressed into service all the cars they cau secure from any quarter, yet there are not enough. “It may be that the shippers them selves are to blame, as the railway of ficials declare. Their complaint is that the mill -owners aud mine operators are compelled to utilise the cars for storage purposes because of the lack of room In their establishments. UNRESTRICTED DOMESTIC COMPETITION. H. O. Havemeyer (testimony before the United .States industrial com mission. .June 14, 1S99).The customs tariff iH the mothpr of trusts. Madam Protection—If you insist upon being recognized as a member of this family, you must be prepared to submit to Its discipline and restraints. ‘ Unrestricted Domestic Competition" Is the rule of this establishment. in the increased prosperity that has come to the iron and steel center of America during the past year": Increased wages, Trade— per cent. Tin plate workers . 15 Sheet iron mill men: Tonnage hands . 1H4 Day hands. 25 Finishers. 25 Steel workers, both in and out of the Amalgamated Associ ation .10 to 15 In this table no account Is taken of Increased employment. A detailed ex hibit of this important branch of the subject would doubtless show that the number of men who are now receiving the increased rate of wages Is nearly double the number which received the lower rate of wages paid four ypars ago In the Pittsburg district. Four years ago. an equivalent length of time after the enactment of the Wilson free- ] trade tariff, scarcely more than one- J half the workers of the Pittsburg dls- j trict could command steady employ ment at the then lower rate of wages. Today, two years after the enactment 1 of the Dlngley tariff, not only are wagts much higher, hut the supply of labor la not equal to the demand. Again 1 .at the free-trade World tell the atory "When Mr. Hryan. thr aspirant rur »h< mans mtl<* prmldantlal numlna tion. rr.rntly vlaltrd llomrairnl, hr • t hr whan I work full t mr was ths an»wrr ‘ Mr. Hryan did not ask aay morr aural Ions ‘ Kvan thr Iroa puddlar*. whoa* worh among thr furaa.*1**1 ..f tt*.|. In tha fi'iaharg Kluadiha tha pa-tgiai , ha- taaa aommaaad sgaln aa a mattar •4 u awiit Ifta par a >*ar ago *o |t par twa Now It ta I * With a halp •r. ahum ha paya. ha «aa maha If im ' at It a day oaly a **m small pat rsptagr at tha mills «a *«m» aft «* ta-Uy atng pilddi» ■ “ ‘Some of the mill men.' said Mr. Taylor, 'have long lines of ore, coal and freight cars in their yards, all loaded with material. They have no storage facilities of their own, and use the cars. There are 9.000 tons of coal locked in cars and awaiting delivery. 'The rush comes every summer, but business is very much greater this year than for many years past.' “River transportation la choked with the immense amount of business quite as badly as are the railways. Thousands of tons of iron and steel are stored on the docks awaiting ship ment to western river points. “Ready for transportation to south ern points are 30,000,000 bushels of coal that cannot be moved until the flood of the river in a few weeks. “Great difficulty is experienced in se curing hands enough to transfer much of this tonnage from cars to docks and boats. In one yard as high as $1.75 a day Is being paid to shovelers, and they are scarce at that price. "1 He good tunc* tgiai have come to the operator* and operative* In the Pittsburg Klondike are not confined to the Iron, steel, coal, coke, tin and glaas Helds. "Krom reports to the commercial agencies snd Mg dealers the sun of prosperity shines upon all kinds of tollers, the labor aud professional claaaew alike It naa said Uelay by a lawyer and by a leading newspaper proprietor tbai the awpply of compe tvnt labor In those hraachea waa gaits ss restricted «* in the mines and nulls'* It Is nw vsry dtAcult to gums Ike wotlvs uf the New York World In blssoaing forth these splendid fact# of restorsd prosperity IVtabOees the de •ign la la wars Mr Mayan aad his l»ea»o Pop fallow lag of lbs futility uf preaching If to I" as eu i«ea# ta sell year's campaign; lu present nn uh|ert tvgnun which shall show that m times like these a heap money . rasa Is will fall fat dock indeed la the tax Its Me ktgic of l he World's shoe lag Mot M lagkuity dsmoasiretee mash mors ehtch alt lbs Worlds frseirats sophistry saaot she va or keep duos namely Ikai ike industrial Ktoodib* lbat te the rale eve*vakeve tbroogkuni ibu country is In gr#n< meaeave tbs profart of the policy of protecting |« sounding lbs kastl >*< free stiver the Wortg le *»- »•* n*ost» gr ranging for Iks «b • antes fves trsl* ll IS build lag better ihah It hkoe« TARIFF REFORM. Will the Democratic I’artj Make This aa I.eue lu the Campaign of IWOOf The Philadelphia Record is another newspaper which takes the ground that the Democratic party's best chance of success In the presidential election of 1900 lies in its making the tariff the issue. It says: “With tariff reform as the issue, the Democratic party would not only be united, but to its banner would be at tracted tens of thousands of voters who can no longer be duped with the false pretense that protective duties, while enhancing the cost of the necessaries of living, give labor and high wages to workingmen.” The fatuity of those ntlio believe that any party or any candidate could win in 1900 on a platform pledged to the re peal of the DIngley law' and the de struction of the protective tariff sys tem is beyond comprehension. If the proofs were not at hand it would be impossible to believe that there were any one left In this country who still believed in free trade. As a matter of fact, we believe that the fellows who are now crying tariff in the Democratic party are low down cowards who want to dodge the financial issue. That a belief In free trade cau still exist in any one after our experiment with that destructive and pauper-producing poli cy during the Cleveland administration almost makes one doubt the truth of the old adage that experience Is the best teacher. But that any one can dream that free trade would be a win ning card, can think that the people of this country can be led into making another disastrous experiment with It, is almost beyond the power of imagina tion. It will be a rather difficult task to make any tens of thousands of voters, or any tens without the thousands, be lieve that they are being duped by pro tection. They have the cold, hard cash, . brought home regularly as a result of steady employment and high wages, since the resoration of the protective tariff, with which to refute any charges of being duped by protection, The prosperity which has come as a result of the enactment of the Dingley law is too concrete a thing and too uni versal a thing for the wild and base less assertions of the free-trade papers and free-trade orators to have any effect. The change from prosperity to hard times at the repeal of the McKinley law and the change from hard times to prosperity immediately upon the resto ration of proteetion by the passage of the Dingley law is too great and em phatic an object lesson to be soon for gotten by the voters of the country. By ail means let the Democratic party make free trade, or Its alias, “tariff reform,” its battle cry for 1900. It will serve to show once for all that the people of the United States by an overwhelming majority believe in the American system of a protective tariff. American Spring: Water*. An excellent move in the right direc tion is that of bringing prominently into view the virtue of American spring waters by means of a public ex hibit and sale under exceptionally at tractive conditions. It is with Amer ican spring waters as with American wines. Familiarity breeds respect; they need only to be known In order to be appreciated. To promote a wider knowledge on this subjeet the plan has been adopted of establishing stands in many of the large commercial build ings of New York, where native spring waters in many varieties are.dispensed by the glass at a moderate price. The water Is displayed in a handsome glass receptacle, so constructed as to con tain the ice in a central cylinder, while the crystal water, kept from contact with the Ice, and cooled to a natural spring temperature, la shown through, the outer circumference of the glass Jacket. A considerable number of con cerns handling spring waters have adopted this method of securing the favorable Introduction of their waters, and with excellent result*. Any plan is to be commended that tends to Im press upon Americana the fact that In their own country are found spring waters equal to any la the world alike for hygienic and for potable purposes Make the hm Plain. It is unfortunate that the trust mat ter has been brought Into politic*. If It Is to lead to a revamping of the tar iff illscuaalon, however. let the Issue be made plain. In such matter* even the Democracy of the country cannot afford to be otherwise than honest. The Interests at stake are too great to be trilled with. The present tariff haa brought order out of chaos, prosperity out of disaster, and strength out uf weakneea. It la to be hoped that there will be no more bootless discussion of this question which has already been settled, hut If It must come let Ihe la sne be drawn squarely and let (he De moerary of Ihe country endure the on sequences Peoria (III I Journal, The Patent ef I »al4»«n. The DeaKK-rntte papers are glesfully taking up Mr. Havemeyers suggestion that th# tariff la ths long lost parent of the trust Reversing the application of Out Bryan's recent bon mol If trust Is conffdsnte. that might he const rue a ss meaning lhai the tang g ike legui male parent of otsMesre To thie soft Impeachment *be tariff wilt rheer fully plead guilty iMoug ('By tluwg Journal tea tiqfetM »temples. Hrvaa and Msteateyer would he aa idea) il ket on an anti trust pisiform ■ ihe one in denounce corporate gree»i and the other to eerte at Ihe frigntfui • eternp • >*f Ms »ff»< u ,.n ihe India u| who iietd* to malign tn- t|tn neapeita Tribune THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON XI, SEPT. IO—HAGCAI, 2: t-e. He Strong All ft People of the Und, Naltb the l.onl, and Work, for I Ah Willi Von—ling. *: I—A New Prophet Appear*. t. "In the seventh month." Tisrl, Oc tober. “In the one and twentieth day.” The seventh day of the feast of taberna cles (Lev.-23: 33-3«». This was a thanks giving festival, "and the call to prats* and thanksgiving In an unfinished and Im poverished temple might naturally sug gest gloomy and desponding thoughts,” especially after a miserable harvest arid a depressing season. 3. "Who Is left among you.” It was sixty-six years since Bolomon's temple was destroyed, and there might well be not a few who had seen It. "Baw this house." Tlie temple was ever regarded as one and ihe same temple, however many limes It wus rebuilt or restored. "In her Hist glory.” As Solomon built It. with marble and gold and gems from all over the World. "The Holy of Holies wus empty. The urk, the cherubs, the ta bles of stone, the vase of manna, the rod of Aaron, were gone. The golden shields had vanished,” "und the high priest'* breastplate, with the oracular stones.”— Cambridge Bible. "Is It not In ... . comparison of It as nothing?” (See Kara 3: 12, 13.) The fact of Its humble appeal Is admitted. Tills fact In Itself was de pressing. \v hat was the use of so many years of such hard work, for a temple of such Httle value? Why not first get then build a wor thy temple? YY'hat would all their labar und self-denial mean? ’• 1,1 —--— l Here are other thing* besides these that you see with your own eyes. "I am with you. salth the Lord." Jehovah, as alwuys - In capital*. "Of hosts," Organized ar mies and companies, not only of -. the forces of heaven, but of all the pow ers und forces of nature, which are or ganized to do his will. It was sufficient encouragement to know that Ood was with them. That fact was glory and pow er "If Ood be for us, who can bs against us?” "One with Ood is a mujur »t r." 5. Omit "according to.” "I am with you" (v. 4) is "the word that I covenant ed with you when ye came out of Egypt. (Ex. 1#: 5. «; 39: 45, 4«; 34: 10, It.) God's covenant with Israel, when tho people came out of Egypt, was this, that they should be 111* people, and he would be their God. He here declares this cove nant to be still binding; that his Spirit It dwelling In their midst, and that they should therefore have no fear.—Cook. "So tny Spirit remuineth among you.” He had wrought wonders for their futhers In deliverance from Egypt, from the Bed S*a, from numberless dangers, lie hud Just wrought a wonderful return for these his later people. 6. "Vet once. It Is n little while.” Yet one. again, In a little while. In their past history God had shaken tho nations many time*—Egypt by tho plagues und overthrow; the nations dwelling In Ca naan; the Assyrians In I Iczcklah's time; the great nations In Nebuchadnezzar's day. before the Jews were made captives for their sins, and then hts empire was shaken, und Cyrus came to the head in order that the people might return; and again the kingdom of Ids successors was shaken, so that Iiurtus might be king and lend his aid to the rebuilding of the tem ple "I will shake the heavens." Tho Invisible spiritual powers, the ideas, thoughts, titans, which control the earth. Ideas arc the capitals of the nations; not the visible Rome, or Athens, or Jerusa lem, but the forces, the thoughts, the tendencies, the principles represented by them. 7. "And the desire of all nations shall feme,'' B. V., the desirable things of all nation*, thw objects which the nations most desire, their choicest treasures, "i uro about to convulse the nations-to rev olutionize the Htate of the world, und thus as the ultimate oatcome, the dedr uble things of all nations—their wealth, beauty, and glory shall come to Zion; and ‘1 will till this temple with glory, salth the Lord of hosts.’ r'—Cowles. S. "The silver is mine, and the gold Is mine." He created It, and he controls It, and compels It to work for the further ance <*J' hts kingdom. Thus the Egyptians aid th.- Israelites at tli* exodus, Nebuchadnezzar preserved the temple treasures, and Cyrus returned them, and Darius gave U a revenue, and Herod brought untold riches to Id* reno vation of the temple, the Homans, com prising all nations, contributing Immense wealth for the purpose. And still more, they contributed to the elevation of th® Israelites by their exile, discipline, and by widening their views. 9. "The glory of this latter house shall be greater than of the former." Better as R V.. the latter glory of this house shall be greater than the former, th* "house” being regarded am the sarn* house from 8»lnmu«v'» tlrtie till. Herod's, and the spiritual temple which grew out from It. "And In. thb* place will I give peace." To the contemporaries of Hag gal his words undoubtedly conveyed th* assurance that, amidst the threatened shaking of the nations, the people of God should bo secure, mutest royed. by sur rounding convulsions And. In point of fairt. the house of God whs preserved ln vtoiMte during tile terrible conflict be tween the Persian and the Greek empire* — Mar. ipj Duds. ■‘rattjr liowt riahiitf. A sportsman known to Forest nod ft ream was on ce on the bench at tha outlet of a creek In New York state, looking for abure birds, when he saw n colored bor. who was Ashing for perch, lay down hla pole nt tha cull of hla mother to do some errand Thu aportsman put hla gun aside, and took tha cane pule and Ashed, adding n duaen perch tu the buy'a string, and then sneaked off Presently a second sportsman, happening that way. naked the boy the usual question and received this answer: "Yeae'r, dey'a good Bakin' heeb. Wen I atop to rua to da a to' fa’ to get aone raw a meal fu' mam', da pereh dey mm# ootea de crick aa* Jes' atrlugs dey ee Wee awa my string I don' on start It. but dey'a Jes aa good fu breakfas a If dey was cotched awa a hook/' eagereg WsitsU. Taka off Ika .kina of about three losen wsiauis. separate them in halves sad dry al Ike oven dour Thaa as ash ih*m with aa Icing made of four ounces of sugar sad on* •<> I*ta>n them on a sheet el tkhl fsf»*. f*' them in s slash -sen and baba uni.I n light brown *ot«»r H»bwm from thn own and when c«Hd they as* ready for use. If llbsd the hern*la can b« dipped in ibkh shossdnla Mors they aie itvi