Conservative. . old-fashioned Methodist revivalist. His denunciation of British greed and op pression was keen and cutting. His eulogy of Boer patriotism was tearfully touching. In pleading the cause of Oora Paul , he excelled all in frenzied fervor. His entrancing oratory completely cap tured his patient and attentive listeners. It was the kind that not only reached the heart but , what is more to the pur pose of Sulzer , "touched" the pocket- book. His emotional hearers shelled out generously. $1,800 was raised and placed in the hands of the solicitous Sulzer'to be forwarded to the needy widows and starving orphans. Several weeks passed. It was whispered about that the money had not been used in a way to effec- Tammany , . . , , . , Extravagance. tlVOly alleviate South African dis tress. It was inhumanly hinted that it was expended more to quench Tammany thirst than to feed South African babes. To silence this talk and exonerate the "disinterested" Tammany brave , an in quiry was instituted by an ardent pro- Boer and prominent Bryanarohist leader , Dr. Groffutt. It developed that the stories of dissipation , at the expense of charitably inclined Boer sympathizers , were not unfounded. Of the $1,800 col lected , $1,782 were used to pay expenses and $18 remained for Kruger's people. The chief item of the expense account was for wines. Those who know the almost insatiable thirst of Tammany chieftains will not think the bacchau alian expense unreasonable. Probably the greater portion of the wine was con sumed prior to the meeting to work up the proper degree of enthusiasm. The conduct of Sulzer illustrates the depth of Bryauarchio interest in and sympathy for the band of patriots who have been so bravely and courageously , against fearful odds , fighting to maintain the independence of the South African re publics. The Chicago A PAID AGENT. „ . . . . , f Chronicle , the leading democratic paper of Chicago , on July llth , 1890 , said : "The proprietors of the big bonanzas have found it profitable to keep a large number of orators , lecturers and other spokesmen on the road. Among the men who have been thus employed and carried on the pay-roll of the big bonan zas for a number of years is Wm. J. Bryan of Nebraska. A paid agent of and spokesman for the silver combine , he has not since his retirement from congress had any other visible means of support. The richest men in the world , the proprietors of the big bonanzas , hire orators like Bryan exactly as other wealthy men hire fiddlers , and value them about as highly. Silver orators , like fiddlers , come in at the back doors of the big bonanzas and eat at the ser vants' table. Since he holds no relation ship to the big bonanzas , Win. J. Bryan's nomination by their order , and as a re- \ suit of the free use of their money , be comes an insult to the American people of no small proportions. " Can it be that the Chronicle has been seen by the proprietors of the big bonanzas , that it is now support ing the man whoso nomination in 1896 "was brought about as a result of the free use of their money" and was "an insult to the American people of no small proportions ? " * > 1898 , Juat tWO WATTERSON AND HRYAN. Watterson , of the Louisville Courier Journal , thus ex pressed himself about the populist pres idential nominee : "Mr. William J. Bryan has come to Kentucky and Kentuckiaus have taken his measure. He is a boy orator. He is a dishonest dodger. He is a daring adventurer. He is a political faker. He is not of the material of which people of the United States have ever made a president , nor has he even the material of which any party has ever before made a candidate. " If two years ago Mr. Bryan was a dishonest " " adven dodger" , a "daring turer" , a "political faker" , the oharao terization must be true today. Could words better describe Mr. Bryan's apparent abandonment of the sweet delusion of 16 to 1 and his seeming devotion to anti-imperialism. Mr. Bryan's exploitation of his new para mount confirms the correctness of Mr. Watterson's characterization of two years ago. According to the MINERAL . . TONNAGE.reP ° rt nP ° n ral1' way statistics for last year , the mining interests of the country contributed the largest per centage of tonnage , aggregating 51 per cent , of the total. Manufacturing was next with 18 per cent. ; agriculture 11 per cent. ; and forests ten per cent. The percentage of freight from the mines was about the same for all sections of the country , showing that our mineral resources are fairly well distributed. Should the proposed strike in the coal mines materialize and assume anything like the proportions predicted it will seriously affect the transportation in terests of the country. In a speech at SOLICITUDE FOR _ . _ . , YOUNG MEN. StLom8' On Sat' urday , September 16 , Mr. Bryan became hysterical and paroxysmal as to the safety of the young men of the United States in the pres ence of trusts. He was especially anx ious as to the young man in his relations to and danger from his suppression by the "money trust , " and referring to this said : "Is he safe when national banks con trol the volume of money with which ho does business ? " Why did not Colonel Bryan inquire : Is he safe when shoemakers control foot wear ; tailors , clothing ; and bakers , bread ? In the same exhortation Bryan says : "Is the young man safe when foreigner or domestic financiers are allowed to determine the money system under which he lives ? " Whom would Colonel Bryan have to control monetary systems , except domestic and foreign financiers ? Would he have "Coin" Harvey and Altgeld and himself determine safe systems of finance for the young men ? Of all the fiapdoodleisin and flabbergast - gast which Mr. Bryan has recently evolved , this seems to bs altogethar the most diaphanous. BENEFIT OF TREES. From an exchange : Wo print Dr. Ohapin's words with but little conden sation , in the hope that they may help on a movement which promises to lessen what Morris calls the sad contrast be tween the fields where the boasts live and the cities where men live. : "As trees maintain an average tem perature of 54 degrees F. in all seasons , it is easy to see what a constant cooling influence they possess in an atmosphere of 90 degrees. Add to this the constant exhalation from the leaves of watery vapor that has been absorbed from the moisture in the soil and from the sur rounding air , and the cooling effect is much enhanced. This takes place most actively during the heated portion of the day , when it is most needed. A general purification of the air is not the least benefit to be derived from vegetation , as carbolic acid is absorbed and oxygen given out , just the reverse of what takes place in the animal economy. The purifying and cooling atmosphere of trees placed uniformly through the city would have a marked influence on the public health in summer. " CORN AND CANDY. During the fiscal year ended July 81 , 1899 , the consumption of corn for glu cose and its by-products amounted to over 27,000,000 bushels , which is equiv alent to the whole yield from one million acres , based on an average of 27 bushels of corn to the acre. From one-third to one-fourth of the glucose product of this same year went directly into the manu facture of candy , according to a state ment which is made by one of the leading authorities in the glucose trade. The prosperity in the candy trade which is directly responsible for such a big part of last year's great consumption of glucose , and the absorption at good prices of a large portion of the 1899 crop of the corn growers of the West , was directly duo to the general prosperity. When the mills are closed , and the workman cannot fill his dinner pail with the necessaries of life , candy is a luxury for which there is little demand. That candy can now be eaten in the families of workmen is one of the best evidences of prosperity that there is.