8 'Cbc Conservative. A SOUTHERNER'S Ol'INION OF IIKYAN. . "I suppose there is 110 danger of Bry- au's electiou , " said an eminent Southern banker to a friend in this city a few days ago. "What's that ? " replied the interlocutor , "I thought you Southern people were all in favor of his election. " "So we are on the social question but we expect you in the North to prevent him from coming in , " was the rejoinder. This conversation actually took place a day or two ago in a New York hotel , and we print it because it is typical of the state of feeling in the business community - munity of the Southern states. The great mass of the bankers , manufactur ers , and traders of the Southern cities and larger towns the class who have saved something and who have got ahead in the world are just as much opposed to Bryanism , to the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1 , and to business dis turbance of every kind as the same classes in the North. They are entang led , however , in the meshes of what they call the social question , or the ne gro question , in such a way that they cannot separate themselves from the democratic party. Whatever bears that party's brand they must accept and rat ify. This is to them the paramount is sue. They perceive the incongruousness - ness of their action in denying political rights to the negroes and demanding them for the Filipinos and the Porto Ricans. What they are most afraid of is negro equality , but next to that they dread the election of Bryan , because they believe that it would introduce an element of uncertainty in business. There is one Southern state , however , where business interests are not domi nated by the social question. That state is Maryland. Her railroad men , bankers , merchants and manufacturers feel at liberty to act and vote without particular reference to negro equality. The gold democrats of Maryland have accordingly organized a campaign of their own which they confidently believe will re sult in. giving the electoral vote of the state to McKinley. And yet they are not more enamored of McKinley's pol icy in the Philippines than the gold democrats of New York are. New York Evening Post. THE FRIGE OF STARCH. EDITOU CONSERVATIVE : I am frequently asked the facts in re gard to the price of starch , and under stand that it is being stated in political speeches that the price of Argo starch has been doubled under the present ownership of the factory. I believe it to be a fact that the one pound package , which has commonly sold for five cents , is in some cases re tailed for ten cents at present. But it is the retailer that makes this price , and the manufacturer , whether a big or lit tle corporation , a firm or individual , cannot help it , and neither can the jobber. When the retailer bought the one pound package for four cents , he sold it at five cents and made twenty-five per cent profit. But when asked to pay 4 cents , it seems that for some reason many retailers advanced their selling price to ten cents. It may be that this was because they could see no "handy" stopping point between five and ten cents ; but undoubtedly in some instan ces it has been done deliberately with a political motive , to pervert a just ad vance , required by market conditions , into an unwarranted extortion. Some jobbers appear also to be pur suing this unfair course. A Nebraska Oity jobber recently met , in a western town , a traveling salesman from a whole sale house in another of the river towns , whom he heard speaking quite bitterly of the National Starch Company , which he called a "trust" and charged it with baving advanced starch without justifi cation to 5 cents. Fortunately the Nebraska Oity man was able to correct this assertion , being prepared to take orders to any extent at 4J . This kind of thing is not business , and it is hard to see how it can do any body any lasting good politically. As to the present price of starch being unreasonable or extortionate , no body familiar with costs would make such a statement. The Argo factory is grinding corn to day that cost 35 8-10 cents per bushel at the elevator. In one very recent year , the average cost of corn for the entire year was 19 8-10 cents , and in another it was just 20 cents. The boxes in which Argo starch is packed cost at present 12 cents each ; a short time ago they cost 8 cents. The box-nails now being used cost $3.55 per keg ; the lot before cost $2 per keg. keg.These These are only fair samples of the way prices of raw material have ad vanced , as any one in any manufactur ing business knows very well. Very respectfully , A. T. RICHARDSON. Nebraska Oity , October 6 , 1900. CHINESE RESOURCES IN IRON AND COAL. Ohina has everything , from a material standpoint , that could be wished. It has people by the hundred million , food , peace , plenty , and , above all else , the two great requisites for natural suprem acy today iron and coal. Already England is beginning to look with terrified apprehension at the rapid decrease of her coal and iron , for she knows that in the bitter competition for trade that nation will fare badly which has to import its machinery as pig iron and its power as coal. Ohina has the unlimited possibilities of fertile lands , resourceful and painstaking people , and great supplies of the raw materials , out of which prosperity is-built. The ques tion that confronts the other nations is , ' will Ohina be able to build up such an ' overmastering prosperity that ours will be dwarfed into insignificance ? Cer tainly , if the same difference in natural resources existed between Germany and England as does between China and England the British statesmen would be confronted by as gloomy a future as could be imagined. But the iron and coal and cheap labor of Ohina are not of the same international value as they would be if they were found in Eng land. From the foundation of the world iron and coal have existed , and for hundreds of generations men used sharpened sticks and chipped flints , until the resourcefulness of some genius moved into the larger field for metal weapons. , From the beginning of the world the ocean rolled its wild expanse between the distant shores , and the wind blew where it listed , and the mariners waited in port praying to the God of winds , Eolus , or any other God , for a favoring gale , until some one learned to tack against the wind , and , behold , the vast possibilities of sailing in any direction at will. And so today in Ohina the establish ment of great iron and steel works at Hanyang , the Chicago of Ohina , does not mean any great revolution in the iron industry of the world , for the Ohinese are following in the steps of the more advanced nations , and following a great way off. The works are situated at one of the greatest .natural centres of commerce in the world. Within a few tens of miles lie coal and iron and limestone. On all sides are to be found thousands of patient and capable laborers. Strikes are unknown , the market is enormous and the works are operated at a loss. No nation and no man can at one miu- ute't notice take up the method of life of another nation or man and hope by a single bound to reach where another has painfully climbed. The Ohinese may , and they probably will , develop their coal and iron to a high degree , but it will be generations before there will be any cause for alarm for those nations that have anything like similar natural resources. Richmond mend Times. BRYAN'S PLATFORM. My platform is like Joseph's coat , A crazy-quilt to get a vote. The wildest hobby I will mount , If I can call it paramount. Come ye to me who nurse a sore , And I will cure you evermore. On one thing only I'm intent I want to bo your President. Abraham Qruber , New York.