TRADE BALANCE FOR 1898. Among the many items of unusual in terest contained in the annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury for the year ending .Tune 30 , 1898 , none will interest thoughtful persons more than the extraordinary showing of our trade with foreign nations. Our experts - ports during the past yjar. reached the phenomenal sum of $1,230,587,5109 , or more than one hundred million dollars per month. During the same period our imports fell off greatly , amounting to only § ( > 4j,977.4. > 5 , the lowest figures for eighteen years , except the years 3881 , 3885 and 3S80 , says the Silver Knight-Watchman. The figures given include silver bullion , which must be classed as merchandise , since the mints are closed against the coinage of that metal. After offsetting imports with exports , there is a balance due the United States of $039,010,134. This represents the amount of gold the Uni ted States should have received from other countries during the year , and our gold money ought to have been in creased by that amount. The Secretary's report , however , shows that the excess of imports over exports of gold during the year amounted to only $10-1,985,285 , or $534- 024,849 less than the amount called for by the trade balance in our favor. How does it happen that of the $039- 610,334 due us from other countries to balance the accounts of last year we actually received in gold less than one- fifth of the amount , or $104,985,285 ? ments through a policy of violent cur rency contraction , which culminated in their succeeding in forcing resump tion in gold alone. The history of every step taken in the manipulation of our public debt and currency from the close of the war down to and includ ing the demonetization of silver in 1873 , is a history of crime against American producers and laborers in the interest of foreign and domestic bondholders and money dealers. When resumption took place it was on boiTowed gold , and our foreign obli gations outstanding at the time repre sented many times over the amount of gold in the country. The folly of clos ing the mints to the coinage of silver , which was at par with gold the world over at the ratio of IS1to 1 , is not fully known to our people. The growth of foreign and domestic indebtedness dur ing the past quarter of a century , the development of millionaires and pau pers and the multiplication of the homeless are among its fruits , and its deadly work , which is yet but fairly begun , if persevered in , will in the end reduce our people to a dependent ten antry. "What Congress Did , What the Fifty-fifth Congress was elected to do and what it really did are two quite different things. Taking the Republican platform as a guide as to what Congress should have done and its own actions as to what it actually did , the account is easily sum med up. The platform advocated a protection. HIS WHITE ELEPHANT. i President McKinley Whatever shall I do with him ? Nothing seems to move him. Chicago Democrat. The answer is , the United States is a debtor nation , having an enormous interest account to meet in Europe each year. As near as it can be ascer tained , the indebtedness of the people of the United States to the people of Europe amounts to six billion dollars , consisting of national , State , city and county bonds , the bonds of railroad and other corporations , and mortgages on city property and farms. The interest on this indebtedness , together with rents on American property owned by foreigners , must be paid by Americans to foreign ship-owners for freight and the money expended by American trav elers abroad , fully accounts for the dif ference between the amount we receiv ed and the amount that was due to bal ance the accounts of last year , as here in set forth. Thus it will be seen how completely the industrial forces of the United States are within the grasp and at the mercy of the bondocrats or gold trust of Europe. The largest trade balance that has ever accrued to the credit of the United States prior to 1S9S was in 1S97. when it amounted to $28(5.203.144. or $353,340.090 less than that of last year. Therefore it will be seen that if we were able to draw from Europe last year -only $104.985,285 , we must have largely added to our foreign debt in 1897 , notwithstanding the large trade balance in our favor , and that our for eign indebtedness must have been greatly augmented yearly for many years prior thereto. We have abundant evidence that this is the case , because for many years it has been common knowledge that foreign capital was be- Jng used in the construction of rail- Toads , and that foreign capitalists were making large investments in our flour ing mills , breweries , mines and other enterprises. The treasury tables during these years failed to show that gold , to represent these investments , had been In our favor every year except three for the past twenty-three years. The in vestments made by foreigners in this country have simply been reinvest ments of the interest and dividends accruing to them on their American holdings. The /foundation of. our vast foreign debt was laid in the years immediately following the civil war , through the manipulation of American securities by British financiers. This country .was at that time under a suspension of specie payments , and English finan ciers not only manipulated our markets through the gold board , but through their agents and partners manipulated our politics , and secured legislation to orce the resumption of specie pay- Congress gave that with a vengeance , but failed to secure revenue. Reciprocity was promised iu the plat form , but neglected by Congress. , Duties for the restoration of the American marine were recommended , but no such duties were levied. Pensions were promised , and it can be truthfully said that there was no economy practiced in that matter. As for foreign affairs , the platform said : "The Nicaraguan canal should be built , owned and operated by the United States , and by the purchase of the Dauish islands we would secure a proper and much-needed naval station in the West Indies. " Nothing was done in regard to either of these important matters. Sympathy for Cuba was expressed in the platform , and the Democrats in Congress forced the redemption of this promise. Civil service was approved and its extension advised. Nothing was done to extend civil service and everything to contract its influence. But Congress has broken the record of extravagance. It has passed a bad army bill , it has made the census bu reau into a scramble for spoils , and has allowed politicians to bring death and suffering into the army. Representing the Republican party , the Fifty-fifth Congress has made a record which will destroy the adminis tration it represents. \Vo7lciMtrmcn to Ponder. If this administration takes over the Philippines permanently the savages whom we are now shooting and bayo neting will next appear as competitors with American labor in the industrial field. The cotton goods which we are now sending to the far east may some day be manufactured iu Manila , and the raw product carried across the Pa cific in ships to which tiie people of this country will be compelled to pay a sub sidy. The products of the Philippines tobacco and sugar may be brought in to competition with the products of the United States , and when that time comes American labor will find itself confronted with the problem of re duced wages. Baltimore Sun. Insolence of Imperialism. Imperialism is showing up in its true colors when an arrant pair of dema gogues like Grosveuor of Ohio ( McKin- ley's political chief of staff ) and Can non of Illinois bawl out "treason' ' on the floor of the House as their best an swer to Democrats , Republicans and Populists who denounce the politicians' war of conquest and subjugation in the Philippines. Pittsburg Post KINDNESS TO HOBSON'S MEN , Kcro of the Merrimac Acknowledges the Courtesy of s. ia Captors. Lieutenant Uobson opens the thir < of his "Merrimac" papers in the Cen tury , with an account of the kind re ception he and his men received on th < Reina Mercedes. When we were all on board and hat laid aside our arms and accoutrements the launch headed around and stooc for the Reina Mercedes , and I directec the men , who-were shiveeing , to ge ; down near the furnace , to which no ob jectiou was raised. Not a word was spoken till we reached the Mercedes However great may have been theii curiosity and interest , the officers , af tcr thdir first kind words of greeting forbore1 to ask questions or make re marks. When we came alongside th ( senior officer asked if I would be gooc enough to go on board with my men So courteous was his manner we mighl have been guests coming to breakfast The officer of the deck and the execu tive officer met us at the head of the gangway. I bowed salute , and inspect cd the men for their condition. Those who were still shivering were sent for ward at once for stimulants and fric tion. Kelly's lip showed a wide gasl that had become clogged with coai dust. Murphy had a wound in his right hip , twelve or fourteen inches in length and perhaps a quarter or a half of an inch in depth , which he had received in the biast when he fired torpedo No , 1 ; and though the wound certainly must have been very painful he had not uttered a groan or made any ref erence to it during all the time that had elapsed. It was only after our ar rival on the Mercedes that we learned of it. The men were all more or less scratched and bruised from colliding with objects in the vortex whirl , but there was no injury of consequence , the life-preservers having formed ex cellent buffers. The executive officer followed the inspection , and gave di rections for the care of the men. Kelly and Murphy went to the surgeon , and all were given facilities for washing and were supplied with dry clothing. Richard Harding Davis is making a dramatization of "The King's Jackal. " .Taincs Barrio's "Margaret Ogilvy" lias just appeared in a Swedish transla tion. tion.A A new literary iwiew is to appear in Paris scon under the editorship of Maurice Bernliardt. The contributors are to be the dramatists in whose plays Sarah Bernliardt has appeared , ; md among those who have already promised their collaboration are Sar- : lou , Rostand and Catulle Mendes. Olive Schreiner absolutely refuses to je interviewed. She said recently to a roung reporter who called to see her at ler African farm : "I heartily condemn ho modern interview. A person is en- snarcd into a light and superficial coi- oquy upon a subject which demands leep thought and mature reflection. If i man or a woman has a message to ssue , it cannot be uttered forcefully n one of these interviews. Interviews ire abominations which accentuate the personality at the expense of the prin ciple. " An article on the suppressed books ) f writers of fiction now living would ) e , the Bookman thinks , of consider- ible interest. Mr. Kipling has stopped he sale of "The City of Dreadful Slight , " "Letters of Marque" and 'Echoes , " and all now fetch a high n-ice. Probably the most valuable of tfr. Kipling's suppressed books is , lowever , one entitled , "A First Admiu- stration" a collection of stories print- id in India , but never offered for sale n the ordinary way. It is said that here are only some three copies of this ) ock in existence , the remainder of a arge edition having been destroyed. The composition of the magnificent ) oem , "The Recessional , " was , accord- ng to the report of an interviewer , an xceeclingly difficult task. Rudyard vipling. who is apparently less difli- : ult to entrap than formerly , and also nore communicative , said he had prom- sod to write a poeni on the jubilee for he Times , and when it was due all his efforts dissatisfied him. The Times : cpt writing for it , and at last sent tel- 'grams. "So I shut myself in a room , vith a determination to stay there un- il I had written a jubilee poem. Sit ing down with all my previous at- empts before me. I searched through hose dozens of sketches till at last I 'ound just one line I liked. That was Lest we forget. ' Round these words The Recessional" was written. " The cvelation of this fact destroys the the- > ry that , as a general rule , a work of jenius is the inspiration of a moment. ) n the contrary , some of the greatest Masterpieces have been produced only iflor labored thought and with despair ookiiig through the window. AincrTc.in The sleepy Spaniards at Manila are istounded at the energy of the Ameri- ans. They can hot understand why he Americans keep their stores open .t noon , when it has been the accepted ustoin of years to close them at that lour. But it is the great game of base- lall that is the mystery which passes .11 mysteries. The Filipinos gather ronderiugly at the edges of the crowd nd peer into the field. They can not athorn the enthusiasm. There is one attractive feature about war drama on the stage : no investl- ating commission appears in counec- ion. THE FILIPINO CHIEF. HE'S THE BEST MALAY SPECIMEN - MEN ! N HISTORY. Of Doubtful Parentage , the Filipino Leader Is Well Educated , a Lover of Freedom , a Great Organizer and a Cuiminc Diplomat. Aguinaldo Is a highly interesting character. He has had a remarkable career for so young a man , and events seem to point to him from the first as a man of destiny. His complexion is about half way between the reddish- brown of the Malay and the olive of the Spaniard. There is a yellowish tinge about it which , taken in connec tion with his forehead , would lead one to infer that a modicum of Chinese blood flowed in his veins , and that in his pedigree was some individual of Igorrote-Chinese or of Tagalo-Chinese characteristics. Upon this point it will be difficult , if not impossible , ever to learn the exact truth. So deep has been the moral mire of the Philippines under Spanish rule , so universal the immorality of the dominant race , that neither the civil nor religious authori- ILOILO , TIIE FALLEN FILIPINO STRONGHOLD. ties have ever cared to keep any record of the alliances and misalliances , the bH'ths legitimate and illegitimate , the wives , concubines and mistresses , slaves and abducted women who have filled the long-years of Spanish rule. In his features , face and skull Aguin- nldo looks more like a European than a Malay. He is handsome , according to Spanish standard of masculine beau ty. Friends and enemies agree that he is intelligent , ambitious , far-sighted , brave , self-controlled , honest , moral , vindictive , and at times cruel. To those who like him he is courteous , polished , thoughtful and dignified. To those who l U .v ' KMILJO ACU1NAI.UO. dislike him he is insincere , pretentious , vain and arrogant. Both admit him to be genial , generous , self-sacrificing , popular and capable of the administra tion of affairs. His friends say that he was the son of a Spanish general ; "his enemies in Manila that he was the offspring of a dissolute but learned Jesuit. At the age of 4 he was a house boy in the home of a Jesuit priest in Cavite. A house boy in the Philippines , as in China , plays the part of a hous dog rather than that of a domestic servant. If the head of the house is cruel he is kicked jiul cuffed by everybody and lives on short commons ; if his master is kind and affectionate he enjoys about the same attention as one of the chil dren of the family. The only work which he does is to run from one part of the house to the other or from the house to any part of the grounds with in the compound or space inclosed by the walls around the entire establish ment. He helps the table boy to clean the silver , to scour the knives , and to set and unset the table. Aguinaldo's master \vas a very kind man and took a deep interest in the welfare of his little protege. He dressed him well , so much so : is to excite the notice and oven the wrath of some neighbors. More important still , he gave the boy an education , which , though unequal to what every child receives in the United States , was a hundredfold better than what is bestowed upon the little Tagais of Luzon. Aguiualdo was an apt scholar. He was precocious like the Malay , ambi tious like the Caucasian , and had a memory like the Chinaman the great est memory possessed by man. At the age of seven he was the equal of most half-breed boys of 12. At 10 he was mentally the superior of most of the half-breeds of his district. When he was 14 or 13 he was enrolled in the medical department of the Pontifical University of ! Manila , under Profs. Xalda and Buitrago. He was a bright student , but nothing is known of his college career. Shortly after this time he committed what is an unpardonable sin , both secular and religious , in the Philippines by joining the Masonic or der. Masonry was a prohibited thing in the Philippines under Spanish rule , and any man joining the organization might under an ancient law be tortured and executed. About this time ( in 1888) he got into sonic trouble with the Span ish authorities and went to Hong Kong to escape their tortures. While here he took advantage of all the educational privileges that came in his way. He attended the drills and parades of the British garrisons , frequented the gun- shops on Queen's road , purchased fire arms for his own use , and in every pos sible way increased his fund of prac tical knowledge. He entered the Chi nese army and learned all he was per mitted to learn there. Then he joined the navy and gained all the knowledge he could of naval warfare and equip ment. He studied the lives and cam paigns of Bonaparte , Wellington , Von Moltke and Grant. He also picked up at least a smattering of English , French , Latin and Chinese. At the outbreak of the great insurrec tion in 1S9G he held some political posi tion in a provincial town. He was very popular with all sections of the people except the order of Dominican friars , whose tyranny he openly denounced. He gradually came to the front as a leader of a section which was willing to exhaust diplomacy in dealing with Spain before resorting to arms. He ex hausted diplomacy completely and then prepared to fight. As an organizer of the natives he was a wonder. Like Bonaparte , he seemed to exert a strange fascination upon his people. Wherever he went he was followed by troops of admirers , and while other generals suffered at times he and his camp were always supplied with the choicest supplies and comforts. Nor was the feeling of more than admira tion confined to the Tagais , stulid Igor- rotes , and half-naked Negritos. Cun ning and skeptical half-breeds , and even Spaniards themselves , seemed to share in this odd hero-worship. MACHINE KEEPS BOOKS. Ingenious Device in a New York Bank Is Operated by Electricity. An adding machine in use in the Union Dime Savings bank , New York City , is operated by electricity. It marks in a depositor's book the amount of his deposit , and makes a duplicate of the entry on a tape locked in a box attached to the machine. At the same time the amount of the deposit is au tomatically added to the total of the bank's transactions , so that a glance at the latter would tell just how much money the bank had received since its organization. The machine is placed on a table at the teller's right hand. In front of it is a keyboard , with rows of figures ar ranged like the letters on a typewriter. When a deposit is made the teller places the depositor's book under a cylinder filled with movable figures on the side of the machine. Then he pulls the figures on the keyboard that rep resent theamount of the deposit. These figures are connected by wires with the figures on the cylinder. The teller next moves a lever and that sets the ma chine in motion. The amount of the. deposit is printed on the book and at the same time on a tape locked in a box placed just above the cylinder , so j that a double entry is made. Should the teller make any mistake there is an ingenious contrivance attached to the machine that would prevent it from working and thus notify him of the error. After tiie entries have been made in the'depositor's book and on the bank's tape another cylinder is set in motion. This is in the middle of the machine and contains movable figures running THIS MACHINE KHIIPS BOOKS. up into the millions. These figures tell the total of the bank's receipts since it was organized and the amount that has just been deposited is added to it. At the end of a day's business the officials of the bank add together the totals registered on the two receiving machines , deduct from them the total registered on the paying out machine and strike a trial balance in a moment. The machines are inclosed in glass cases , so that every part can be readily seen. City of Bridges. Ghent , Belgium , is built on twenty- six islands , which are connected with one another by eighty bridges. Three hundred streets and thirty public squares are contained in these islands Debtor and Creditor Notion- * P.imetallists have again and pointed out the difference between the. monetary conditions existing here anc those which obtain in England. This being the greatest producing and debtor nation , the great creditor of the world , it necessarily follows that a system highly favorable to the latter might be almost ruinous to us. It is to Engljiul's advantage as a creditor to make money dear , because it increases the value of her outstanding claims. The interests of the United States require chpnper the- money money , because it enhances value of our products , and thus eases up the burden of our ever increasing debt. Perfect equity requires neither "dear" money nor "cheap" money , but money that is simply "hones ! . " Th.it is- to say , money that can be acquired by the expenditure of a just and reason able amount of labor. That the gold standard does not supply such money is conclusively proved by tle almost uni versal distress prevailing among out producing classes. Talk of cheapened production by mechanical improve ments and the like is utterly fallacious and misleading. No matter what provcments may have been made productive methods , it does not follow that the average purchasing power of money should increase. The gold standard idea upon this point is that whatever mechanical or other improve ments may be made whereby produc tion becomes easier , the mcr. who con trol the money supply should have all the benefits. For example , some indi vidual invents a new fertilizer. The owners of farms , the soil of which has become somewhat impoverished , pur- phase the fertilizer in great quantities. Thus they enrich the soil , and produce larger crops. It would seem as a sim ple matter of justice that these fann ers should have , at least , a portion of the benefits of their own enterprise and thrift , but the gold champion says' No. ' ' The farmer has produced a larger crop , find therefore he must sell more cheap ly. As a matter of fact , the largtr crops at' recent years have actually brought less money than the smaller crops of Cornier times. So the producers have ictually been impoverished by inci eas ing their production. The miser and the money lender has not only raked iu all the benefits , but he has acci-m- dished a great dial more. Our Forciirn Ueht. The gold standard mean * absjluto : uin to all but the moneyed classes iu the United States. To maintain it we iiust sell our produce so much nioro ; hcaply than other countries will -e'l it , is to enable us to pay for eveiythlnir wo 3tiy abroad , besides the interest upon nir foreign debt , amounting to perhaps ? -iOOGOOJCO ( a year , and still have a jaiauce in our favor. But it lau-t he . omembered that the cheaper oir pred icts become the more it will tak" o : hem to settle this va-t foreign < 1 < ma ml "or gold. If price-s should fall o.e-half 'roni their present figures , we would lave to soil twice as many protlu- to ealize the same amount of money ; and f we could spare such a quantity , it ivould probably glut the marker. In "me , the more we sold the wo--o we ivould be off. There is nothing iu eco- lomic history to compare with the ab- wdities and contradictious of il-1 ar- ruments made on behalf of th ; * gold itandard. In one breath wo arc told hat the cause of low prices is "over- > reduction , " in the next we are in- ormed that we must produce st'll more nd sell at still lower prices iu oder to indcrsell all other nations in tle Euro- tean market. There is but one n mcdy or the unnatural cond t'o s wl.iIi now xist. That is the complete rcnioneti/a- ion of silver. Such a measure wi.I not nly increase the money volume of the Vesteru world , thus giving a h ° 'ilthy timulus to prices , but it will deprive ilver-using nations of the tremendous dvantage which they now have by re.i- on of the difference in exchange. It rill give the producer sone of the bne- ts accruing from his own labor , and tart the republic upon a nev. * and rightcr career of prosporit- which. 11 classes may share. The p1'u mall ue-ositor who' . * as hir , oUO dollai's in the savings bank ; sheer hypocrisy. The interests of [ lose people are 011 the si tie of btt-Sr.e.-s ctivity and general prosperity , not nn ie sickof dear nionry. 'i \ \ e I-.m 'ivd ollars is a very small item in th ' t t-oii- my of any man's life. If , as a ivsult f falling prices , which uj ans lining loney. one of these depositors finds his mployment gone , he cau very e.ii-ily shaust his 300 in a single ye.ir. Tiie fi es in which the reiaoueiization of ilvcr would work a ! iartl-hi : > ar ex- nedingly rare , if in fe : tuere ! > : ; ny t all. During the war many djl : s ere paid in greenbacks that had 1 ei > n Diitractod on the basis of coin. Ltit ery few people were ruined thereby. a the contrary , the rising pricepro - ueeJ a condition of weil-n'gli un\vral ; rosperity. There are , in truth , but a infinitesimal number of persons who re benefited by the gold standard. hose are the few great bankers who > ntrol nearly the entire stock of the- orld's money , and who are separated Y an almost impassable gulf from the ast army of toilers .and producers. Some years ago in France there died maiden lady who had been for many oars a habitual snufftaker. She left irections in her will that her coffin as to be filled with tobacco , that the tortuary chamber was to be carpeted ith it , and that tobacco was to b& mattered before the hearse that con. eyed her to the cemetery. j , r