THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : TUUH DAY , NOVEMBER 17 , 1898. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE K. Editor. I'UBLISHUD UVEUY MORNING. fcI'UBLISHUD TEIUI8 OP SUBSCRIPTION : Dally Bee ( without Sunday ) . One Year..J8.00 Dally Bee and Sunday , One Year . .t. . . 8.00 Blx Months , > . , . . 4.00 Three. Months , .i 2.00 Bundav Lee , One Year . < 2.00 Saturday Bee , One Ifeur I.M Weekly OM , One Year 03 OFFICES. Omaha ! The Bee Bulldlnc. South Omaha : Singer Block , Corner N and 'twenty-fourth Streets. Council Bluffs : 10 Pearl Street. Chicago Quite : Block Exchange Bldg. Now York : Ttmolo Court. Washington : 501 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. All communications relating to newd and editorial matter should bo addrcsscl : To the Editor. Editor.BUSINESS LETTERS. All business letters and remittances should be addressed to The Bco Publishing Company , Omaha. Drafts , checks , express and poHtotllce money orders to be made payable to the order of the company. THE BEB PUBUbllliNO COMPANY. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska. Douglas County , ss. : Georso B , TzschucU , secretary of The Bee Publishing company , being duly sworn , saya that the actual number of full nnd complete copies of The Dally , Morning , Evening nnd Sunday Bee , printed during the month of October , 1503 , was as feN lows : 1 50,020 17 2 25ROf ( 18 3. . . 25,410 19 . 2U..1HO 4.1 23.H10 20 . S5a7t : C 2.VI81 21 . i5. ; 45 6 23,474 22 . aaw.i : 23 . a3,815 8 27..T.I9 9 2.1,207 10 2B.OU8 26 . tt5BW 11 t/,007 27 . a ,4 U 12 04,012 2S . ars : s 13 rtl.OIS 29 . as,7 H 27.IHH 30 15 20,740 31 16 20 , 00 Total 8JB.01W Less unsold nnd returned papers. . 17sat : Not total average 7 7. 7R Net dally average S5,71N GEORGE B. THSCHUCK. Sworn to before mo and subscribed In my presence this 31st day of October , 1893. N. P. KEIL , Nfotary Public. The wltlc-nwaUc merchant advertises In The Bee. And it pays people to patronize The Bee's advertisers. The streets of Omaba bolons to the people of Onmhn. No railroad will be able to got around this proposition. The tax commissioner's appraisement of real estate Is In the main satisfac tory , but there Is vast room for Im provement In the assessment of per sonal property. ' All railroads that desire to cuter Omaha should be granted facilities on equal terms and the Interest of'property ' owners adjacent to rights of way should be protected as far as possible. Colonel 'Bryan ' will probably have no hesitation In testifying to the elllcacy of the salubrious climate of Nebraska as a euro cure for military lockjaw , no mat ter how serious the case may threaten. Douglas county has ten members of the republican majority of the coming legislature. That readily explains why Omaha has suddenly become the Mecca for the pilgrimages of so many aspiring republican statesmen. Ono woman at Duwnon stands a fair chance to go down In history as n rival of Mrs. O'Lcary's cow. She has started three fires by playfully throwing lighted lamps at people , the last one of which nearly consumed the town. Spain Is trying auction room tactics In the Philippine case , but the United States shows no disposition to raise dummy bids. On the contrary , It ap pears to be Insisting on Us right of eminent domain and do the appraising Itself. Now that the election Is over the fu- elon statn ofllcers can safely bring their railroad passes from retirement and their Trlends can secure free transporta tion for deferred visits which campaign modesty prevented them from taking ut an earlier date. Excessive bridge tolls have been an Impediment to Omaha's commercial growth for many years. If the Com mercial club can devise any plan for relieving our Jobbers and manufactur ers from the bridge embargo It will render Omaha Invaluable service. Defeated candidates have the consola tion that their troubles are over , while the successful ones nro struggling with the demands for place. The fusion 1st county attorney must yet solve the prob- lern of providing for forty or flfty fol lowers with only four places nt his dis posal. While the council Is at the business of protecting public streets from occupa tion for private use It should not over look certain store buildings that have oc cupied public thoroughfares nil summer without paying a cent of ground rent for the street space on which they are located. Colonel Bryan has sunlclently recov- crcdfrotu his attackof tetanustoexplaln that the recent election does not mean anything and that both himself and the sacred ratio arc just as much Issues as ever before. Nothing but n case of com plete political paralysis can shatter the colonel's sclf-coufldence. According to the local yellow journal "Tomorrow may bring a renewal of the Illspano-Amerlcan war. " We think so , too. Tomorrow may bring n renewal of the war of the revolution or the war of the rebellion. Tomorrow may bring on a new civil war. All arc In the range of possibility. But the probabilities arc all the other way. The coming legislature can materially reduce the appropriations by simply tak ing the popocrntlc state olllclals at their word. During the campaign they prom ised to reduce the expenses of conduct ing state otllccs and state Institutions if given n now lease of power. Politicians , like doctors , often hesitate about taking their own prescriptions , but there Is noth ing like experience to show just what effect It has on the patient RKVIILVT 0X3 AEVRtl 00 HACKtt'AHn. William Jennings Bryan bus sounded another silver bugle bla t' to the porio- cratlc hosts whom ho hopes to rally around his stamliird In the fateful year 3000. Urynn doffs his colonej's uulfbfm for the time being and , reviewing ( ho political battle which has proven BO dis astrous to his 'followers , tries to ro- inspire confidence by declaring thut the di'tiil Issues of two years ago can be regalvanlzed Into life and that the Chi- cngo platform will bo reiterated bIhe next democratic national convention. In this respect Colonel Bryan o la boring under u delusion. Involutions go forward and never backward. Thi- mis take of his life and that of the popo- cratlc leaders from Senator Allen down to Jerry Simpson lay In their foolhardy efforts to force n foreign war upon the republican administration , which every rational reader of political history must have foreseen as fin extra-hazardous risk for the political minority. On that score Colonel Bryan and his friends are referred to the columns of The Bee , which last February outlined the In evitable result of their war cry In the following article headed , "What Fools These Mortals ISe" : The New York Journal , a paper that clalma to apeak for the pcpocratlo forces of the country , has loosed Its doga of war. Incendiary blood and thunder dispatches , dated from Havana , arc flashed over tht. wires every few minutes of the day , sup plemented by startling rumors of war fabri cated at Washington to flro the popular heart Into an explosion that will force a war upon the nation oven against Its better judgment. The chain of popocratlc popgun organt from New York to San Francisco Is re echoing all the horrible yellow back tales of Impending hostilities and using up ah the studhorse typo within reach to emulate th < > parent paper warrior. Tons of pictorial ammunition arc being discharged at long range and short run Re and vast amount of red fire eel off to blaze the way 01 patriots to glory and the grave. In the language of the French general who witnessed the Ill-fated charge of tht Immortal Six Hundred at Ualnklava , " 'Tit magnificent } But It 1s not war. " Suppose that the popocratlo big guna ana little guns should succeed In inciting the , cruntry Into a war with Spain over thi Malno Incident , what would become of iht prospects of their party In 189S ? What chances would It have to , recoup In 190 : from the disaster that overtook Bryan In 1890 ? Political history tells us that no partj In power In the United States has ever been dislodged while fighting the battle- , of the nation. A war with Spain would at once obliterate all other issues and solidify the people. Irrespective of party , In support of the republican administration. The roar of Undo Sam's guns would drown the tinkle of the silver bells and the smoke of battlefields would obscure the oratorical flrewrrka eet off by brazen-throated cam paigners , whether they hall from the fertile valley of the Platte or the andw-cappeo. peaks of the Rockies. The 1C to 1 question , the free trade Issue , the protest against government by Injunc tion and all the great and small terns would be sidetracked , not only for the time being , but for years to come , by the all-absorbing , paramount Issue of the sword , which would have free right of .way. With the un limited control of the nation's resources for prosecuting .tho war , with all the con tracts for war ships and war supplies at Its disposal and with the awarding of all the commissions sought by men aspiring to military and naval tame , the administration ft McKlnloy would bean Irresistible force that would sweep the country like a whirl wind In a political contest and smash the ponoeratlc machine and Us organs to smith ereens. / Yet with these prospects staring them In the face almost an certain as the operation of the law of gravitation , the popguns con tinue to belch forth their Inflammatory com bustibles and howl for war. What foola these mortals be. SEEKING The Boston Chamber of Commerce has submitted to the Anglo-Amorlcan commission in session \Vashlngtou n petition urging the desirableness of re moving , so far us It can be done by just and reasonable concessions , the barriers which now obstruct commercial Inter course between the United States and Canada. A Boston paper , In referring to this , says that a sti < , .jf , ' feeling per vades business circles , especially In Now England , that the fundamental question for the commission to settle Is the ques tion of reciprocity "and should thai body dissolve without some broad anil definite action upon that particular Jn terest , there will icmalu a residuum of disappointment , dissatisfaction and per haps anger , though every other point of difference should be disposed of. " Doubtless - less this accurately represents the quite general feeling In New Ki. 'land busiuesh circles , but it cannot truthfully be saiti that such a feeling widely prevails In other sections. There Is a good deal of selfishness In the zeal of New England In behalf of reciprocity with Canada and the manufacturers of that section arc quite willing to sacrifice the Inter ests of the agricultural producers on our northern border in order to secure the advantages they think would come to them through reciprocity. The barriers that obstruct commercial Intercourse between the United States and Canada , so far as our tariff in con cerned , are chiefly the duties on agricul tural products. What the Canadian government and people desire is an "open door" to the American market for their natural products , such as they had under the one-sided arrangement , mis called reciprocity , from 1854 to 1807. Under that arrangement our agricultural producers on the northern border suf fered severely from the Canadian com petition , as they also did under the low duties of the last democratic tariff. Canada offers no Just and reasonable concessions In return for this. She will ( of course ngreo to admit our natural products free , but she has no markets for them , because she produces In excess of the homo demand. She does not pro pose to show any favors to our manu factures. The Canadian government not only proposes to protect the manufac turing industries of the country against American competition , uut It hh put int- > effect within the last four months rates which dl&crlinluate In favor of English manufactures. Wo cannot fairly find any fault with the protection accorded to Canadian manufactures. That Is a legitimate policy , essential to tholr development. But when Canada goes further and discriminates against the Industries of this country In favor of those of England we are warranted In asking where the principle of reciproc ity would come In. New England agricultural lutpreita have nothing to fear from Canadian competition. It woild | simply displace western competition and perhaps from the enlarged trade with Canada In nat ural products New England manufac turers would bo benefited. But It is necessary to take n broader view of the matter than this. If less restricted commercial Intercourse between the United States and Canada can bo ef fected upon terms entirely fair and Just to all interests the American people gen erally would welcome It , but we cannot see any hope of this being done so long ns Cann'da Is unwilling or unable to make concessions of equal value with those she.asks. . . The numerous efforts that have been made to renew reciproc ity Hlnce the abrogation In 1807 , of the treaty negotiated In ISol , should have convinced Canadian statesmen of the utter futility of attempting to effect a new arrangement upon anything like the basis of the old one. STILL HOLDING OUT. The dispatches from Madrid and Paris show thut Spain apparently has no idea of submitting to the demands of the United States , but on the contrary ecems to bo quite as determined as ever to per sist In Its' ' contention In regard to the question of sovereignty In the Philip pines. The meeting of the joint peace commission yesterday hasted only three- quarters of an hour , when an adjournment - ment was taken to next Saturdaj lit the meantime the American commission ers will consider and frame a reply to the Spanish communication , which Is said to be simply a roafllrmntloii of their position In regard to the Philippines. It Is quite evident that the whole pur pose of Spain In thus parleying has ref erence to a monetary conslderatlbn. It Is not at all probable that the Spanish government has any idea of attempting to resume control of the Philippines , buf It very naturally wants to get some thing for the territory and it will hold out as long as there seems to be any chance of obtaining a money considera tion for the surrender of the sovereignty It claims. It Is reported from Washing ton that the American commissioners will name an amount which the United States Is willing to puy in cash to Spain and if this Is done it will be very sur prising If It Is not at once disclosed that Spain's tenacious clinging to the claim of sovereignty is a play for money. DIFFERENCES SHOULD ItB ADJUSTED. Omaha has alv ays pursued a .liberal policy toward the railroads that con- /ergc at this point. Its property owners have taxed themselves hundreds of thousands of dollars to pay Interest on bonds voted ns railway subsidies and will eventually have to be tnxed more than $500,000 to pay the principal. Be sides donations In laud and money for depot grounds this city has given toHhe' ' railroads without price free right of way through public thoroughfares which to day they estimate as worth millions of dollars to their respective companies. In every other city of Omaha's com mercial Importance the raiiroaaj are compelled to pay their Just proportion 'of ' municipal taxation for pavements , direct cleaning , police and fire protection. In addition to local tares the railroads are also required to expend large sums for * subways and viaducts under or over street crossings traversed by' their tracks. Up to this time , however , ' the railroads centering in Omaha have con tributed little or nothing toward pro tecting their own roadways by bridges or viaducts which annually save them thousands of dollars damages and claims for Injuries to property and per son , At present the city has unadjusted claims against the railroads for main tenance and repairs of viaducts -which should have been paid long ago. In view of the fact that the city's funds for street repairs arc exhausted it would not seem unreasonable that the railroads should be asked to pay over the amount legitimately due. Iu > any event they should cheerfully comply with the request on the part of the city authorities to bring about an amicable adjustment of the city's claims 'at ' the earliest possible time. Such action would go far to allay pub lic feeling against the railroads for re sisting the demands of the city for com pliance with the law that rcqulrcn rail roads to constnict viaducts wherever they may be deemed essential to public safety. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ FISCAL CONDITIONS IK CUBA. The chief considerations In connection with providing a tariff for Cuba are to obtain sufficient revenue to pay the ex penses of administering the government of the Island and at the same time re lieve the people of the oppressive taxa tion to which they were subjected under Spanish rule. Mr. Hobert P. Porter , who was sent to Cuba by the adminis tration to Investigate financial and eco nomic conditions there , gave due atten tion to these considerations and has re ported a measure , which reduces the gen eral average of duties over 03 per cent from the Spanish rates. This serves to illustrate the excessive nature of Spain's taxation of the Cuban people in this one direction. Mr. Porter has no doubt that with the stimulus such a reduction of duties will give to Importations and with an honest collection of customs , there will bo an ample revenue from this source for mooting the expenses of governing the Island under American control and In this opinion ho is doubtless correct. It la well understood that a great deal | of the revenue from customs In Cuba as well ns from other forms of taxation did not go to the'support of the govern ment or Into the Spanish treasury , but was taken by the Spanish olllclals , many of whom made themselves rich by sys tematic robbery of the people and the I government Tills Is true ns to all the colonial possessions of Spain and was a potent cause of Insurrection in the Phil- Ipplnos as well as In Cuba , Mr. Porter also recommends the modification of other taxes and the abolition of somo' ' which are peculiarly onerous and could not properly bo countenanced by this government. It is interesting to learn that the Cuban people firmly believe In the gold standard , having been so taught bj their experience with the Spanish attempts to \ force upon them depreciated silver nnrt paper currency. When Cuba shall have an Independent government , therefore , It will be nn addition to the gold stand- iml countries. United States currency Is already being Introduced hi the Island and undoubtedly will be In general use , within a short time after full occupa i tlon of Cuba by this country. i Mr. Porter appears to have performed | the duty assigned him carefully and' ' thoroughly and his suggestions and recommendations generally seem to be judicious. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ The contact of the Spanish with the Americans during the late war Is having Its effect In many ways uopn the people of that unhappy country. The latest development Is the demand of the va rious provinces In the peninsula for homo rule , such ns is enjoyed by the states In this country. If the war which has been so disastrous to the nation should be the means of awakening civil liberty In that hitherto notiprogresslvo country It will not prove an unmixed evil. It was just such n conflict , though less lengthy arid serious , which opened the doors of Japan and started the her mit kingdom on the road to the most marvelous development In the world's history. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ There Is nn Increased attendance at the term of federal court now being held In this city. The setnl-nmnial con vention of bootleggers has been rein forced by a number who wish to rid themselves" the Incubus of debts ac cumulated In democratic times In order to be able to participate In the McKlnley prosperity , and the bankruptcy court Is the only thing which can rid them of the legacy. Governor-elect Poyuter has sufficiently recovered from the frignt which the first election returns gave him to appear at the state capital and make it survey of the gubernatorial chair to see how it will fit ; him. It Is reported that > \o In formed the custodian that he was of the opinion a smaller one than that required for Governor Holcouib would feel more comfortable. The police commission has announced that In the granting of liquor licenses It will avoid the bad example of ltd out lawed predecessor and follow the law strictly as Interpreted In the courts. If the applicants for licences evince the same disposition to 'abldo by the proVisions - Visions of the law there will be few con troversies over licenses and permits this year. On the best expert testimony the Joss by death of less than 1 per cent of the soldiers wounded at Santiago makes tin * record for low mortality In modern war fare. But the earplug critics of the War department will decline to see in this any credit for those upon whom rested the management of the medical and hospital service. South iDakota has , agreed to experi ment with the initiative and referendum , but hus > drawn the line at woman suf frage and the starts dispensary. 7 > 'lth the Initiative and referendum , however , It will stand a goou show of .having woman suffrage and thellqubr question poked nt the voters every election. Hope for Mlimoarl. .Kansas-City . Journal. Nevertheless and notwithstanding , before the next century 'Is half gone wo' expect Mlraourl to take-her place In the republican co/umn. Mark the prediction. Omahn'tt-CrnoU Shot * . Chicago Post. In a battle between two bandits and four Omaha police-men over 100 shots are said to have been fired and no one was hit. It Is evident from this that tbcro were no Inno cent bystanders.- I'erfcctlnnr Voting Machine * . - Minneapolis Journal. The voting machine at Rochester , N. T. , told the result In thirty-seven minutes after ' the polls closed. The next thing In line will bo a voting machine that hands out a $3 bin when the voter hits It the right way. DcalliiRettl \ the Wrong 1'nrty. Philadelphia Record. If the Filipinos have taken the Island of Ncgros , as asserted In a Land-n dispatch , our commissioners at Paris would appear to be dealing with the wrong party for the cession of that particular member o the Philippine group. Aliened " 1'ull" of the Went. o i Springfield ( Mass. ) Republican. One of the oJdlttes of the era Is that the supposed opinion'of the great west should be regarded by the administration as In fallible ou the expansion question , but very uneafo on the money question , The cast's opinion on "money goes but Its view on expansion la stamped "N. G. " Will some one explain ? \VhlttIcr Strll.cn n Light. Philadelphia Record. Just at the moment when wo had im agined ourselvea''almost eunctlpotent in the Philippines , General Whlttler , collector of customs at Manila , Insists that our "celerity should be contpmpcred with cuncta- tlon" in our dealings with the Filipinos. Rome was not built in a day ; Manila cannot bo Americanized In a day and a night. Wlso Whlttler ! Cunctatlon la the word I Let us go sfow ! Lot us cunctate like a very Spaniard ! i Advice from Alirond. Phlludlphla Press. Henry Norman Is very kind to tell the peopleof the United States that they must not make the mistake of putting Into effect a protective tariff in Porto Rico or the Phil ippine Islands , or any other of our newly acquired powcH ! < > lon.i. It ia > all right that the United States whould grow and prosper an no other nation h.ia ever done the result of sunh n , ttrirf ; but wo must not appfy It to colonies. V.'ell , this country will not go to any Europeans nation for advice on that point. AVIlil lluntmiuin of Cranbnrjr. New York Sun. The New Jersey village of Cranbury was filled with alarm last week by the perform- ances of a wild huntsman of the name of Cleveland. Kind friends of the wild huntsman had collected some real rabbits at Cranbury. Everything was made easy for him. With two hounds ho entered the forest glade or warren , Ho came back without the dogs. It is supposed that they must have been foolhardy , or that the huntsman mistook them for real rabbits. We wonder if this Cranbury dog destroyer is a relative of the Mr. Cleveland who. ac cording to archaeologists , came from CaUl- well , N. J , The Caldwcll Cleveland once went out hunting tariff barona. Wlien the hunt was over the tariff barona brought him back in their bag. CCIIUK9 OK Till ] WAIt. The chaplain of the First Alabama , \\lio ' was extremely anxious to remain In the ncrvlce nnd draw the fairly handsome Btl > pend provided by the regulations , became 68 offensive to the rank and flic that they hun& him In cdlgy , at Birmingham , the day they were mustered out. The men took that means of resenting h)3 ) interference with their wishes. , The boasted courage of the Fifth Mis- I eourl was sorely tested in St. Louis a few days before retiring from the nrmy. Somt of the boys were hitting the regimental canteen - teen qulto enthusiastically , splitting the at mosphere with yc-lls and things. At tht moment when patriotism and schooners wire- at the highest pitch Colonel Dtllygcat broke In , sleuth like , on the scene. Not a were of protest did he utter. Neither did ho kick. He Jumped In headforemost , butted the boys out of the shack In three minutcj , then jumped upon the bar and calmly viewed the scene oC his triumph. The colonel has been promoted tea warm corner in a local armory. The war with Spain has served to popufar- tze In common language many terms usually employed only in a mlritaiy sense , and baa frequently furnished the smart men of the prcas with a new flguro of speech. "I shall have to ask you , Mr. Paddom , " said a city editor , looking over a largo bun dle of manuscript which a now reporter had turned In as a description of a trivial occur rence , "to deploy that stuff. " "To deploy it ? " said the now reporter. "I don't understand. " "Turn that column into a line , " rejoined the editor. An incident In connection with the surren der of Captain Eulatc of the Vlzcaya , after the battle of Santiago , was told by Captain Robley O. E\ans of the Indiana , at the C rover Club dinner during tbo Philadelphia jubilee , which Illustrates the amenities ot naval warfare. Captain Evans depicted the arrival of Captain Eulate , covered with blood and dirt and soaked with salt water , on board the Iowa , and the scene at the blowing up of the Vlzcaya. "I offered him a cigar , a ten-cent Key West , " said Fighting Bob , "and holooked at It a moment , and then drew from his own pocket a long , beau tifully rolled , pure Havana , and , holding It up , he said : 'I left 15,000 of thorn on board the Vlzcaya. ' " He paused a second to al low his auditors to appreciate the < fact fully , and then continued : "I am the last person In tbo world to deprecate the bravery of American seamen animated by pure hero ism , but If wo had known those cigars were on board the efforts to save the Vlzcaya would nave been positively heroic. " Former Senator George F. Edmunds of Vermont , now a resident of Philadelphia , In discussing the proposed annexation of the Philippines before the Contemporary club of that city , said : "Our sons nnd daughters cannot live in the tropics. Look at the case of Great Britain and Its hundreds of years of Indian mastery. Everybody knows that there has never been an English settlement within the tropics and of civilians that go there nine out of ten die before they are 60 years old and the loss of the battalions that go there U greater than that of our sons and brother * who went to Santiago and Camp Alger , or whatever the name of It was. " Referring to the Philippines , Mr. Edmunds said : "We now have from these Islands all. the commodities they produce on the same terms that other nations do. Suppose wo take them and adopt the British colonial ! policy and make them a close colony and allow no one to trade with them except ourselves. How soon would the other na tions meet ua by saying : 'We will treat you the same In par colonioj ? ' and then * the balance of commercial gain would bank rupt ttie United States in ten yearn. "We told Spain and told the world by a solemn declaration of our congress when we began this war against Spain that we re jected the idea of territorial aggrandizement. Was that a lie , a sham , a false pretence ? and we stand up in the .face of the world and say : 'Yes ; we have been lying. ' " Among the touching camp stories told in Leslie's Weekly Is one concerning the dog of the Sixth cavalry , and a dozen soldiers swear It Is true. "There was ono man of the Sixth who had always been good to this dog , and would give It a bit of bacon from his own scanty store , and pot It and remember It when things were going badly. This man was killed at San Juan hill just after his troop had forded the river and come Into open , ground before starting on the charge. And | all day long he lay there In the long grass dead , the bullets and shells singing over him , nnd nothing mattering any more. Sol diers pressed on , wounded men staggered back , many passed near him but no ono touched him or cared for him since there ( was nothing to do he was dead. "But the dog found' ' out somehow that his j friend was lying there on the ground , the ' hot sun burning him , the cold night chilling him , and came there with a dog's faithful ness and licked Bhe white face and stretched Itaolf out on the still body and stayed there , guarding Its mas'er , until the soldiers on burying detail came the next day and laid the remains in a grave. " GENERAL imOSPEIlITY IN HAI1DI.E. Baltimore American : With the free sllvct Issue killed and with populism nearly dead , this country can now enjoy its new pros perity in peace and with no fear of further trouble from these dangerous theories. Philadelphia Ledger : It seems to be gen erally understood by the press , the states men and tbo financiers of the country that the result of the congressional elect ! ns puti a final quietus on the free silver issue. Tht danger which threatened the country from this source in 1896 will bo no mera-e in 1900. This being the case , there is nothing In sight to hinder the progress of American prosperity. ' St. Louis Globe-Democrat : More than Is ordinarily the case after on election , tht tone of business was Improved and strength ened last week. The upward movement li less a flurry Ihan a general Increase ot deep-seated confidence. It la not difficult to find the reason. The senate , the moat stable legislative branch , is soon to become strongly republican. A further change in Its political balance for seven rr eight yrars is quite improbable , for .the gains just made are of seats that usually have been democratic. | Philadelphia Times : Business has been. quickened in every channel and public con fidence strengthened by the solemn verdict of Ihe nation. Our sound financial policy has been overwhelmingly maintained by the j people In a contest In which the admlnl.tr.i- j tlon was at Its feeblestpoint , as all ad-I ministrations are at the Intervening con gressional contests. Public and private credit may be regarded as Inexorably estab- j Ilshed as the policy of the great republic , of the world , and that means confidence at ' home and abroad and a long season of subI I Btantlal prosperity. TIIH 1'OLITICAI , MOIUil'K. ] Chicago Tlmcs-Hcrald : With Bailey de throned In congress and Bryan dethroned In Nebraska , the outlook is discouraging fur boy orntorp , Minneapolis Tribune : Rx-CongrrAsmim Tonne was snowed under again. In this cose the line between Towns nnd country Is not by any means an Imaginative one. Kansas City Journal : If Senator Alien and Senator Stewart are both defeated , the wicked money power has gone to greater lengths of diabolism than wns anticipated. The outrageIs really too shocking to contemplate template- with calmness. I Milwaukee Sentinel : It Is not nt all nice for the friends tf Senator AlTcn to crltlclso Colonel Bryan for the lots of the Nebraska legislature. Colonel Bryan Is a volunteer soldier in the service of the United States nnd should bo Immune from base attacks ' by coarse partisan tolltlclaiis who have no I conception of the thrills and promptings ot , exalted patriotism , Nashville American : The senate of the United States without the presence of the venerable Senator Stewart of Nevada will present ttn odd appearance to the old stag ers , for the Indications are that Senator Stewart will bo retired. Late returns seem to show that the Nevada legislature baa been carried by his opponents and that ho will not bo re-elected. Now York Sun : Prof. Coin Harvey , chairman of the democratic committee of ways and means , Is goaded by the great democratic defeat to say that "we must arouse ourselves and organize In a practical way , or the conditions In Asia and Europe will soon be these of the American people. " The practical .way consists In sending $ t a monUi until October , 1000 , to Prof. Coin Harvey , Chicago. Springfield ( Mass. ) Republican : Colonel Bryan looks across the c-iutlncnt nnd finds In Joseph H. Walker's defeat by Mr. Thayer the best news of the election. It's a sorry mess , then , for Colonel Ilryun. Thayer Is a gold bug and a protectionist. Ono would suppose that the election of the Bryanlto candidate for governor of Nebraska would seem more comforting to him. Poynter'S victory helps out the colonel considerably ns a political possibility. Louisville Courier-Journal : John P. Jones of Gold Hill. Nev. , not so voluble as Stewart and Allen , but conceded to be the ablest of the silver leaders , will lose the primacy he has so long maintained in the senate as possessor of the control ! Iqg vote in the nuance committee. Kansas , Ne braska , Washington'Wyoming and the Da- koUs by sending sound-money senators have made the deposition of Mr. Jones pojslilo The loss to the cause which ho has cham pioned so long and so well la great. Philadelphia Press : The news coming from Nevada that Senator Stewart cannoi bo re-clecttd Is almost too good to bo true. And yet there 'Is ' no reason to question Its correctness. Ridding the senate of Stowari and the country of his tiresome harangues on the silver question would itself be a victory worthy of general congratulation But when It goes along with the eviction ot Allen ot Nebraska and White of California the cause for thankfulness 4s trebled. When < hese windbags with their obstructive tac tics are out of the senate there wilt bo less demand for a change of the rules. Bui they should be changed to provide against a recurrence of such a situation when two or three men can hold up congress and injure the business of the nation. PERSONAL AND OTHEHWISB. Ex-President Harrison denies the report that his health Is poor and declares he has not felt BO wen for many yeara. Henry Havemcyer , the sugar king , finds a hobby in amateur conjuring , at which he Is an expert and ban tbo beat collection of ap paratus In the country , The borrowing by the government of Nor way of 20,000,000 crowns for military pur poses just after adopting a design for a dis tinctly Norwegian flag , ono not bearing the union of Sweden and Norway , may properly bo placed In the war news column. Thus telegraphed Commander Walnright , the irrepressible sailor , to Colonel Roosevelt velt , the Irrepressible soldlor : Oh , such a day , So fought , so follow'd , nnd so fairly won , Cumo not , till now , to dignify the times Since Caesar's fortunes. Frederich Macmonnlcs , the sculptor. In speaking of the group of "War" which ho is at work on for Prospect park , Brooklyn , suld : "Whatever the war has done for jbo country , It has dono'mo undoubted good and given me fresh Inspirations and impres sions for a rifetlme. " The season's new chrysanthemums at a New York flower show were up to date in their names. The Theodore Roosevelt Is a largo bronze yellow bloom ; the Judge Van Wyck a rose pink shading to white ; the Ad miral Dewey a crimson ono of Japanese variety ; the Hobson a bright maroon , and the Clara Barton a delicate pink. John Arbucklc , the millionaire coffee king who Is fighting the Sugar trust , will not re main In a place In which the temperature Is a degree higher or lower than his theory thinks hygienic. Every room In his house and place of business is furnished with a thermometer , which ho inspects hourly. 1'AHTl.VG UK THIS WAYS. Drift of the Nation from the Anclior- n e of the Founder * . , Philadelphia Ledger. It is speciously argued that we shall find compensation for the Incubus of the Philippines in a monopoly of trade with the group. In this connection there Is an out standing question referring to the tariff which Is debatable. The relation of the business world to Philippine annexation will be ascertained approximately sooner or later by the action ot commercial bodies. Several representative business organizations have taken a position on the subject. It Is salt ) that American trade with tbo Phlllpplnca centers in Boston. Hero , if anywhere , Philippine annexation would be popular among merchants who know what the ac quisition means for their guild. The di rectors of the Boston Merchants' association huvo resolved that "tho acquisition of any part of the Philippine Islands , except what Is needed for a naval station , would be detri mental to the Interests of the United States. " The much-quoted Home Market club , of the same city , ttaunchly republican In member ship , has characterized the Philippine scheme as "an appalling risk. " ' The address of Mr. John C. Bullltt of this city before the Pennsylvania Bankers' association In dicates the Interest the Philippine issue la exciting in representative business circles in this Htate. Mr. Bullltt asks these search ing questions : "We have come to the parting of the ways. Shall we adhere to our past history and traditions , or phan wo embark upon a new and , for us , untried career ? Shall we remain ac a compact and well solidified na tion held together by our free , Independent and tolerant Institutions life and property protected by wise/and humane legal sys tems with no largo military establishment BAKING POWDER Makes the food more delicious and wholesome . . CTU VaUHt KXMH CO. i NtW YO 1 I ( d wAPto * tur substance or load Us down with otiptwslve luxation with no foreign entan glements to h.voi\c us In the Intricate m.izos ot Olplt'inai'y ' anil impend as a ceaseless menace to our peace and a disturbance of bur national repote , and with no let or hludrrnto to the working out'of ojr gieat destiny And the reaping of the harvest ot prosperity which purely follows In Its wake ? Or fttirfl we assume a policy ot foreign colonial acquisition , seeking to possres and occupy vnst domains that are not concerned with us by imitunal contiguity and to domi nate populations that arc not afllllated with us liy tits of t > ) coi' , i > r race , or language , or lepat syslrn. ! " , or ff.tiai polity , or any con i genial Interests or sympathy whatever/ "Shall , wo now engraft upon our Dimple republican Institutions , under which we ha\c lived and grown and prospered , compli cated imperialism , which must wrench our organization from the foundations upon which It was erected by our forefathers , and encumber It with responsibilities and bur dens fraught with dangers beyond the power ot the human Intellect to grasp or comprehend hend/ Shall wo reach after the glories of an empire In the hope tnat wo can fmccaibfully deal with ite doubtfur problems and recon cile the contllct bctnoen the simple functions of the true republic and the tangled nnd perplexing environments of An Imperial sys tem ? "These are some of the problems which confront the people. They must be met and grappled with and determined. " imiGHT AND llHEEKt Detroit Journal : Possibly Jonuh wa no better than other fishermen mill paid u buy for doing what ho claimed tu have done himself. Chicago Record : "Hero's a writer \vho says nmrrleil people ought to live across the strict from inch other. " "That wouldn't do nt nil. They'd fall out then about things they'd borrow. " Indianapolis Journal : "I wonder why that ridiculous Miss Skinner wears such a\\uilly low-nci'kcd di esses. " "I huvo pondered on the subject myself and 1 cun't tell why , unless sh wishes to snow her age. " v * Cleveland Plain Dealer : "Sny , Weary , note's a feller what mys In do paper dot Uo average man of 60 years has worked e.GUO days an' drank 7,000 gallons of fluid. " "Well , Soapy , dero u exceptions to both items. " Wafihlncton Star : "What do you think of tne way the election went ? " "I , can't say , " replied the candid man. V "It Is useless tor mo to try to analyze my feelings. I can't bo sura whether 1 think the country Is going to ruin or whether I'm mourning over the bets I lost. " Brooklyn Life : "My friend. " said the visitor at the dlmo museum to one of the exhibits , "as n fat mnn you nro a rank failure. I have seen many a fatter man tlmn you running nt large. " "But do you thoroughly understand , " asked the curi osity , "that I acquired all tills fatness In a military camp during the Hispano- Amerlcan war ? Detroit Journal : The plnco was filled with people In the wildest turmoil. The pilgrim paused , for It was Franco. "Is it a fete chnnipetre or n constitu tional crisis ? " lie iiskcd himself. In much uncertainty an to what conventionality de- mundcd of him. But , perhaps , after nil , it did not much matter , in ! runce. AFTER THE BATTLE. Washington Star. The party strife Is over. Wo have fought nnd won or lost. And we've settled down to business enc again. The dollar's been a rover , Far at sea nnd tempest tossed , But we've settled down to business once again. There's a timeto keep , your temper and u ttmo to raise a row ; We Imvo had some hot discussions , but wo've Kotten through them now ; Each sought to save the country , though wo UllU'rcd ns to How , But wo'vo settled down to business once again. f" „ < r o i We showed wonddrful endurance When debuting was our care , But we've settled down to business once again. 'Twaa a definite assurance Of the force we'd bring to bear When wo settled down to business once again. i No matter if it's sliver or small currency or ' cold , Of if It comes In greenback * in a bundle neatly rolled. 1 We're unanimously out In quest of .ill that wo can hold ; Wo've settled down to business once OUR DAILY BULLETIN. CHICAGO , Nov. 17 , 1898. Under th State Supreme Court decree declaring the holding by the Pullman Company of real es tate not used in its business to be illegal , the town of Pullman will bo eold today. The purchasers will perhaps continue- the pres ent system. The Special Advantage of the clothing that we make is that it is good without being high priced When there is such a confusing clamor , of of ferings of cheap clothing , it is well worth while to know where you are sure of the best for the money or your money back again. The more you know about clothing the more you want to inspect kind and partic ularly the kind we are offering today at $10.0O and $8.00