0 THE OMAHA. DAILY 333335' .F1UDAY. INOVEMBER 3. 1809. THE OMAHA DAILY DEE U. IIOSEWATER , Editor. PUBLISHED EVERY. MORNING. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Ueo ( without Sunday ) , One Ycar.J6.00 Dally Ueo iml Sunday. One Year. . . . . . . . 8.00 Dally , Sunday and illustrated , One \cnr s. & Sunday und Illustrated , One Year 2.2j IlliiHlraled DCS , Ono Year 2.00 Sunday ijce , Ono Year J- Saturday nee , One Year l-l Weekly Bee , One Ycar , . . bj OFFICES. Omaha ! The I3eo Building. . _ , , „ South Omaha : City Hall Building , Twenty-nftli and N Streets. Council Uluffs : 10 Pearl Street. Chicago : 1640 Unity Building. Now York : Temple Court. Washington : 601 Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial mnttar should bo addressed : Omaha lice , Editorial Department , BUSINESS GUTTERS. Business letters and remittances should bn addressed : The Bco Publlsning Company , Omaha , REMITTANCES. . Remit li y draft , express or postal order , pnvablo to The iico Publlsning Company. Only 2-ccnt stamps accepted In payment ot mall accounts. Personal checks , except on Omaha or Eastern exchange not accepted. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. ST.ITIJMCXT OV CIUCUI.ATIOX. Slate of Nebraska , Douglas County , BS. : Ueoren B , Tzsdiiick , secretary of The Bee Publishing company , being duly sworn , say that the artuiil number of full and com plete coplM of The Dally , Morning , Even ing nnd Sunday Hro , printed during the month of October , 1S93 , was us folIowH ! 1 2 < IOOO 17 BI , 8O 2 2itio : is 2iuo : 3 2II.1O ( 19 21,5.10 4 , 2-li.10 : 20 21-IK.I fi 21,720 21 2IJ4 > 0 fi 21.150 22 2.1iio : 7 2I.5OO 23 2I.47O 8 2.1itO : 21 B-M70 ! ) 2 < II20 23 20,2(1.1 ( 10 21.710 28 2.1.010 11 21,1,10 27 2rJOO ! 12 iM.IIW a > 2.1.200 13 U1.-l 0 29 2.1-HO 14 2I.-17O SO 2l , fM 15 2.1,0.10 31 25.-I70 18 . 24-UO Total . 77i , S Less unsold and returned copies. . . . , SIH : Net total sales . 701.SB7 Net dally average . BIB7J ( QEOUGE B. T2SCHUCK. Subscribed and sworn before me this 1st day of November , A , D. 1"09. " ; M. B. HUNGATE. ( Seal. ) Notary Public. Ho sure to resistor Saturday If not al ready on the registration rolls. Saturday Is the lust day of replstra- tlon. If you nro not registered then you will not bo able to vote. It takes a popocratlc press nRent to figure out a crowd of 2,000 people at a Bryan meeting held In a county which contains only about 400 population. Bryan , Poyiiter , Ilolcomb and Neville form the fusion quartet for the Sixth congressional district. It remains for thn election to show whether the voters have been hypnotized by their music. Nebraska farmers have two serious problems confrontlnR them at present. One Is whore they arc. going to put all their corn , nnd the other Is whore they arc to secure the necessary labor to gather It In. Bryan's special train Is having a hard time dodging the numerous freights which are an Incident of the present prosperous times , duo largely to the fact that the people In 1S9U preferred prosperity to five silver. The railroads arc certainly doing the handsome thing by Colonel Bryan when they give him thfe use of an engine nnd train with the right-of-way over every thing on the road nt a time when they are unable to provide rolling stock to handle regular business. The nmnlty between the World-Herald nnd the political hold-ups Is ugaiu wit nessed by the avidity with which the newspaper fonre hns taken up with a roustabout who wanted $34 for two days' work which ho had never per- formed. Birds of a feather. Within n few days trains will bo run ning over the now Fort Dodge-Council Bluffs-Omaha extension of the Illinois Central system. This event Is , worthy of proper observance and the subject Is respectfully referred to the executive committed of the Commercial club. Ono Industry which has nourished for the past two years threatens to show a falling off In activity. It Is the reor gantaation of concerns which were bankrupt by the stress of democratic times. The work hns progressed so rap Idly that the reorgunly.ers have about run out of material. The. Klfty-llrst Iowa volunteers are al ready on their way homo , having been mustered out Wednesday. It Is to bo hoped the train will makn reasonable time and that ( ho program foriholr re coptlon at Council Bluffs may bo carried out without any postponement on ac count of delayed trains. Kansas is one bright streak of car mine bincu Funston nnd his men have roturncd from the * Philippines. The weather man could not keep down the temperature In the fnco of the ton-It' ' tlmo the people nro having down there The Sunflower state had n shout com ing and It Is using Its privilege to the limit. If the popocratlc organ 1ms such a yearning for fnc-slmllcs Thu Bi > o wll gladly loan It the fac-slmllc of the un paid note given by the fusion candidate for county commissioner to make goo < his cmibei'/liMiU'nt out in Howard county lly the way , why hns the loform orai boon HO silent about this defaulter mask ing In the guise of reform on the loca fusion ticket ? The Filipinos display n hunpntabl lack of knowledge of the conditions pri1 vailing In this country when they Issu an appeal to the colored soldiers In th islands to comu ovir ; and help 'them The Spanish pretended to believe ut tin breaking out of their war that th south would ilt > o up and help them , bu they robe tip Jn the same wiiy the col cnvd troopers In LUKOII will rise. Wlu-i they rlso It will bo tlmu. for the Fll inlnos to move. a TUT DKST JVMIES OF muSPCRirV. While the popocratlc leaders nrc It'llJ' Ing ' ' their credulous followers that prostl pcrlly Is only partial , suporllclal nnd will not last , the mm who manage great business Interests arc making preparations for it protracted period ot prosperous conditions. Xo class of buslticxs mon arc bettor < ] imllflcl ( to Judge HH to the proipoet of a continuance of prospcilty limn the man- agcrs of the great railroad' systems of the country , who are constantly In close touch with Industrial and commercial conditions. The pres ident of the Xow York Central re cently sjiltl that ho looked for at least three years of nndlmmod prosperity for all freight carriers and1 the directors of the company showed their concurrence In this view by ndvlslng the Issue ot ? 15,000,000 of now stock for enliirglng the equipment of the road. The I'entii sylvnnln ; railroad has made contracts for stool rails to the amount of about 51 0,000,000 and Is otherwise Improving and Increasing Ita equipment , thus In the most substantial way attesting the confidence of Its managers In n coiitlnn uanco of prosperity. Other railroad managers feel the same way , as shown by the rush to contract for steel rails at prices nearly double what they wore a ypar ago. Unusual orders are also being placed for locomotives and freight cars. It is plain that railroad managers ' generally believe that the existing bus- , lucss conditions are cot tain to continue , for ( several years and prpbably will grow bettor , as there Is good reason to expect. Against opinion of this character , backed by substantial evidence of the conlldence of the men who hold it , the assumptions of popocratlc leaders who have no practical knowledge of business and do not come Into contact with affairs which would enable them to orm an Intelligent judgment regarding he industrial and commercial outlook , rill have no weight with thoughtful topic. Men who want sound business pinion g'o to practical men to get It and lot to more theorists and the most xporlcnccd and sngaOlous business men u the United States the mon of capital iwl the managers of great Industrial ud commercial Interests believe that he era 6f prosperity will be prolonged ud nre giving substantial manlfesta- lou of their confidence. GEXElt.lL IVOOZJ'S General Leonard Wood recommends i reduction of the military 'force In the u-ovlnce of Santiago. Ho states that ho best part of the population Is en- Irely friendly and In thorough accord vlth the military authorities. There Is in element of political agitators which causes some friction , but It Is evident hat General Wood does not regard It as at nil dangerous , or at any rate note o much so ns to render necessary the etcutlou In the province under his coin- uand of so largo a number of troops as s now there. Ho thinks that two squad- ous of cavalry and two battalions of lu- 'autry will be sufllclcut to maintain order. The conditions in Santiago province are doubtless better than elsewhere In ho Islands. The excellent aduilnlstra- lon of affairs by General Wood has had : he effect of creating among a majority > the people there and particularly the letter class of thorn a feeling of rosp.ect 'or and confidence In the Amerlcau authorities. That very able otticcr has comprehended Just what was needed and from the very beginning his course KIS been such as to convince the people that he alined to conserve their Inter- > sts and welfare. He has taught them o feel that the occupation of their coun try by the United States was for the nirposc of helping them and he has leuionstrated that it is to their advan- tnge to give a ready obedience to the new authority , exercised with the solo view of establishing peace and order , restoring Industries nnd Improving the condition of the people generally. Per- liaps he has had to deal with a more tractable population than other com manders , but there Is reason to believe that had his policy and method been generally adopted the results in othei [ irovluccs would have been more.satis factory. There would have been cre ated throughout the Island the name degree of friendly fooling toward the United States , the same willing obe dience to American authority that IB found In Santiago province. It Is obviously unwise to keep Amor lean troops In Cuba when there is no necessity for doing to. When the objecl or our military occupation , paclllcatlon Is accomplished and there is a reason able certainty of Its continuance , out soldiers should be withdrawn. Such n course , as an expression of our contl donee In the good disposition of the pi > o pie , would produce a wholesome mora effect It would tend to silence the polit leal agitators who profess to see In our continued military occupalltm , notwith Mantling the fact that peace and trail qullllty prevail , u sinister purpose , mu In no'wny could we hotter reassure th Cubans and convince them of our gooi faith. T1IK FUTUItH-OF * AMUA. According to report frop Washlngto ; there Is favorable promise' ni early agreement between Great Biltaln Germany nnd the United Slates ii : gaid to the future of the Bninonn Islands. It hcems that these powers concur In the opinion that the tripartite government should bo terminated nnd the question under consideration Is the partitioning of the inlands between two of the powers and the establishment of a dual government. The American am bassador at Berlin recently stated that the full report of the joint commission bint to Samoa to effect n provisional arrangement shows that the present status of the Islands Is untenable for any length of tlmo and ho said that the dlfllculty regarding n partition Is that them Is not enough of the Islands for throe powers , though probably enough for two. Germany would Hko to secure the en tire group , or falling In this to get ; Upolu , where ne.uly all the Gornuin plantations and property nro located. This Island Is the most valuable part of the group and Great Britain would UUo to have M. The United States desires Tuliilla , on which Is the harbor ot Page Page , now tinder the contiol of this country. There hns recently been a good deal of r.ithcr hysterical talk In the German piess on this subject , nil of whk'h , It Is said , Is qulto Incomprc- honsiblc to the Statu department nt Washington. Great Britain appcnts dls ; posed'to accept any proposition which the United States shall innke , so that thpic seems to bo no danger of any hitch hi the negotiations by reason of n ulsululcrstandiiig between this govern- n ncnt and the British government. .It Is understood that the United St lies s entirely willing to join In the parti- ion program and would be glad to bo reed from the dangers nnd cmlmr- nssmcnts i Incident to the existing U-U mrtlte i arrangement. This was entered It nto twenty years ago and has been a f allure. ( All the United States requires n i Samoa , If Indeed it needs that , Is a onllug station , the possession of which s perhaps desirable In connection with Oriental operations and AVhich would give ns no trouble and cost but little to n milntnln. This country has little coin- n ncrco with the Islands and their trade an never be of much vahle. A mistake rf made In our going Into the trl- lartlte arrangement nnd If we can now : et out of It without doing anything M infulr to cither of the other parties to n t our government should not hesitate to lo i so. There should be no dllllculty In caching nn amicable decision of the " "tter. 'UK SCAXUALOUS JT7S/OA CAMl'AlGX. The desperation of the popocratio . . rammnny , which Is running the fusion " iiachlne In this county , Is dls < 'losi'd in he tactics it Is pursuing in the present campaign. Instead of doing anything to convince icople that the candidates on the conglomerate - glomerate ticket are deserving of sup- > ort or are In any way entitled to the votes of citizens Interested In good gov- rnment economically administered , the fusion speakers and organs are devoting hcinsclvcs entirely to attempts to black- vnsh republican candidates and to make believe that the republican party is In a sad state of disorganization. Unless we mistake the temper of the people those uncalled-for attacks will react upon the fusion candidates in whoso behalf they are made and the brazen falsehoods uttered In order to array one nationality against another nul to arouse religious and race preju dice In the hope of creating defections In republican ranks will fall utterly of their purpose. Analyzed In Its elements the pope cratlc campaign , as waged so far , may ijc summarized as follows : 1. The general attack upon private reputations of republican candidates based on wild statements entirely de void of truth , unsupported except by : uen whose words would not bo taken by any reputable person. Every assault of this kind has boon promptly refuted and the bold fakes exposed. Still further libels upon republican candidates ate said to be hatching , but the public Is forewarned and will place no more cre dence In eloveuth-houc popocratlc roor backs than it has in the exploded am munition -already set off. 2. An attempt to drag Into the present campaign Issues and candidacies In no way Involved. The local election next week will decide only who Is to hold the county offices for the next two years , and no one will be bamboozled Into the belief that It will determine In advance the outcome of next year's city election or next year's county election. 3. An effort to array factious of the re publican party against one another. To j this end stories have been concocted about alleged discord Inside the repub lican organization , when the fact Is the republican party was never more har monious ] than tc > lay. 4. Appeals to race prejudice. This In cludes the exhortation of negro voters to take up ns a grievance against the re publican party an unfortunate occur rence In which n colored man lost his life nt the hands of some unknown as- snllant , In which no political element can bo injected. It also includes the at tempt to stir up the Bohemian voters to take up the personal grievance of a dis appointed olllce seeker of that nation ality. 5. The Intrusion of religious bigotry , dibclosed In the effort to raise an anti- Semitic agitation by inflammatory let ters to llebrew voters over the signa tures of paid emissaries who resort to brazen falsehoods in order to play upon religious sentiment. Such warfare cannot appeal to the In telligent and thinking people of any creed , class or color. On the contrary It should disgust all Intelligent voters und Impel them to administer u rebuke to the men responsible for It by burying the fusion candidates so deep that no such' scandalous campaign will ever bo repeated. The country has lost faith In the nbll Ity of the democratic doctors to either cure the body politic when It is HI or to proscribe n course of treatment which will keep It In good health. It has al ways failed to diagnose the case cor rectly and with each recurring season 1ms a new remedy to offer which It pro Bents with the utmost assurance. It has not oven the merit of the old country doctor , who could cure fits If nothing It threw the country Into flts In 1890 nnd nothing but calling the repub llcun phy&lclan Into the case snvod It from bcconilng a permanent Invalid , Wouldn't It bo Interesting to know whether the new Omalm-Slanawa motor Hue is but an expansion of the present bridge motor line ? No protest has been filed by the latter against the poaching qf the former on the streets of Omaha or of Council Bluff * . They all bcem to bo dwelling together In perfect unity. The presumption Is that there Is a very happy nigger In this woodpile , and ho limy bo expected to Jump out any duy. Bryan Is trying to delude foreign-born citizens and make them believe that a large standing army will bu necessary to hold the Philippines and that consequently quently the government will boon begin to improbs young well Into the service , ns Is done In Kuropeun countries. Am this In face of the fact , au stated bj President McKlnloy , that when 100,000 men were called fof the war with Spain 1,000,000 volunteers responded. Should United States territory ever be threat ened with Invasion by a foreign foe no less than ' _ ' , OOt > , COO men would gladly en- list. Impressment would be regarded a national disgrace and Bryan knows It. When llio Omaha Fnkory concocted Its He about ? iio,00o of Mutk Hunnn's money being sent to Nebraska to buy populist voters no one with it grain of Intelligence was expected to believe It. It Is rpiunrkablo , however , that Colonel Bryan should lake up and repeat this silly falsehood. Colonel Bryan Is sup posed to be-riibovu such a despicable piece of Imposture. He knows that no ? ( W,000 , nor ? ( l. < )00 ) , IIIIM been sent to Ne braska by Mark ilnnnu , and ho cer tainly domenns himself by becoiiilng the ag ont for the dissemination of such cheap fakes. The popocrntle effort to save the tall of the ticket ott a non-partisan plea Is n confession of weakness hardly ex pected of them. Well-posted men of cotii'M1 knew that the confusion forces wotv hi a p > iH'tlcal state of collapse , but they have neVer before been known to lose ( heir nerve. Their plan gen erally Is to elalm everything and never give up until long after every one recog nized their defeat. While this gen erally takes nt least : t week after elec tion , 1o throw ujt the sponge n week before IH an unusual proceeding. The greatest prlzo light In the history of the country Is Impending. The ad vance ticket sales already amount to over ? : )0,000. ) It goi > H without Miylng that ] the event will attract the close at tention of every sport In the hind. Opln > Ions as to the result uttered by alleged experts are not the best evidence. Bet tor < go It blind and place your money on your prime fiivbrlte if you want to drop It. The Fifty-first Iowa boys are coming us fast as train's can carry thorn across the country. Kvory one In Omaha should prepare to Jo'ln with the good people of Council Bluffs to make their home-crtmlng an euthusla&tlc ovation. The city across the river should have half the population of Omaha there next Monday to help swell the noise that greets the incoming soldiers. Remember that the conglomerate ju- llclal ticket is made , up by the bargain and sale process which would disgrace be bench. No one who wants to elevate he standard" pur courts cni : afford o endorse such trading tactics. Tire of a Kind. Baltimore American. ' ' The Matrmzas m'ul'o finds a running mate n the Mnfeklug dog. Good TlmcN at That. Buffalo Express. Official figures collected by the Illinois Bureau of Labor ehow that the average In crease In miners' wages In Illinois during ho last year has b'een flOO. These are re' publican tlme& ' ' ' Ilulilt. , Post. ( . * , Mr. Bryan talReil In 'the dark at Hpldrege , > Jeb. , and kept1'It'up" ' until midnight. Mr. Jryan doesn't mlndjtalklngx In the dark. In act. bo' ' has teen groping abbut on several mportant questions for several years. IllRliUy nendH the Slwn . Minneapolis Tribune. D. Clem Deaver , national populist com- julttecman In Nebraska , Is out against uslon , and advises his party In that etato not to support William Bryan any farther. D. Clem Is no clam In reading the signs of the times. Experience Worth the Price. Chicago News. The Shamrock is on Its -way back across the ocean and Its owner Is a wiser but ap parently not a sadder man than when he carao over. It isortu a good deal to find out howfast , an. American boat can sail -when : here Is a cup at stake. American Rule 111 Santiago. Buffalo Express. General Wood , the military governor ot Santiago , has added to bis excellent admin istration of' tbo affairs ot that province by opening an Industrial school In Santiago , where 200 Cuban orphan boys can find In struction. A work ot this kind le philan thropic In the highest sense and It Is hoped that similar institutions nre soon to bo es tablished In other Cuban and Porto RIcan cities. After I'ence , the I'ollcj- . Chicago Post. It Is announced dn good authority that the president will not ask congress to make a positive dcclaratlo' as to our national In tentions In ( he Philippines. This accords with tbo opinion repeatedly expressed In these columns. The tlmo has not come for a discussion of permanent retention , at least In congrwa. The people are debating the Issue and eagerly studying the pros nnd cons when presented by Impartial and com petent witnesses. In due tlmo the popular will must find expression through congress. Kor the present there can be but one ques tion the pacification of the Islands. To that everything U to bo subordinated , alike by pie administration , commission and con gress. Sc-If-Covorniiient In Culm , Minneapolis Journal. General 'Leo bays the tlmo to let Cuba begin on tba establishment of a govern ment of her own bas come. It Is to be hoped that the president will take note of General Lee's advice in the matter Leo not only understands the eltuatjon , but It hoQIO Jp.strncted with the task ot turning over tlio control of the Island to tha Inhabitants and directing , as far as ha might properly , thp election of lead ers , ha could render a great service to thLi country and to Cuba , , The people of Cuba havq great confidence In General Leo. They respect him and believe in him nnd should bo allowed to Imve the benefit of bis ac ceptable counsel and help. In Culm. niobe-Demoerat. General Kitzhugh Leo says he does not think the people of Cuba are fitted for self- government. He favors a protectorate by the United States or annoxatlon. It is evident that the general will be among the most robust ot the annexatloiiUta before long. Kverybody who has had a chance to learn anything nboiU the Cubans knows that they are not fitted for Independence. If the United States should withdraw Ita au thority and let ( be people of the Island act up a government for themselves there would bo civil wnr In Cuba ulthtn a week. Just at present tbo democratic no\M > papers and stump Hpeakers are howling for the utli- | draual of the United States troops front tbo Island , because they tbluk that lhl sort of talk , wll ) embarrass the administration , but after tbo elections are- over all the demo crats -Kill acquiesce In the policy of the ad ministration on this aa on all other Issues which ( ho war pt 16DS caused. or ot u w.ut. The frlnrs of tha Philippines , ngntnst whom the Tagals and some Americans rail , receive respectful consideration from two unprejudiced army men General Joe Wheeler and Chaplain McKlnnon of the Cali fornia volunteers. The former Is now nt the front ! the latter hns seen service there , In peace nnd war. The Judgment of both Is bnsod on contact \\lth the conditions de scribed. In a letter to n rotative nt Nashville , Gen eral Wheeler says : "Tho friars and priests are charged with all sorts ot oppressions and mUdcmeanorn , but It must bo remembered that friars nnd priests are very numcrour . and In BO large a body there will bo found every possible phase of character nnd dispo sition. Some of them nro no doubt oppres sors of the people , exacting In the collection of rentals from the Innd , Indulge themselves in many ways and lead lives very different from what should characterize the life ot a priest. Hut there are very many good men among them. " Chaplain McKlnnon , In a recent lecture , said of the friars : "Whatever the natives have or nre they ewe to the frlnre. Every Industry or source of revenue the natives liavo was Introduced Into the Islands by these same much-abused monks. "They have also done much In the wny of education , In Manila they have the great St. Thomas ainhcrslly , In which there are over 3,000 pupils. Then there la the College of San Juan Latern with 1,200 pupils , the fine Jesuit colleges , with over 2.000 pupils , besides six fine academics for young women. There are also thirty-eight small municipal schools In Manila. In tbo villages and towns throughout the archipelago you will find none without these schools. In fact , there nre but fo\v natives who cannot read and write. " General Wheeler disputes the claim that the natives generally are able to read and write. Ho says : "Tbo statement that I have said that 70 per cent ot the people of Luron can read nnd wrlto Is a great mis take. It may bo true of Manila , but It Is not true of the rural districts , and the per centage of Illiteracy in the other Islands Is much greater than In Luzon. The nppear- ancc , 'inodo ' of llfo and method of perform ing work Is today very much like It Is de scribed In "the blblo nt tbo tlmo and even before the Cbristlnn era. " A Philadelphia house has on exhibition n massive loving cup for Admiral Dewey paid for by 70,000 dime subscriptions received by the New York Journal. The huge silver trophy Is , so far as known , the largest lov ing cup ever made. The cup , exclusive of the base on which It rests , Is of the same height as the admiral himself , flvo feet seven and one-half Inches. The base measures two feet four Inches , so that the height complete Is practically eight feet , while the capacity Is twelve gallons , or nearly half n barrel. Its general effect Is symbolical of fame and of the sea. Its panels show In relief etchings of the three principal events In the llfo of the foremost American of his time his birthplace at Montpeller , Vt. , the battle of Manila bay and the reception to tbo con queror at Grant's tomb on Ulvcralde Drive , New York. Of a height unparalleled In a silver cup , It Is graceful , symmetrical and beautifully proportioned. The cup Is ovoid , or urn shape , with three bandies and rests on a pedestal triangular In form , with base ending In three dolphin beads. The pedestal , an afterthought , made possible by 'the receipt of dimes not ex pected , is capstan shape , making a fitting termination to the whole design. Through out ino cup ino senuraeiuai inieresi uuu.cn- Ing to the dlrao contributions is brought for ward by the use of overlapping dimes In tba border of the removable core ? nt the bottom tom of tbe cup itself , and for the scales of tha'Holphln on'lhe base. IJKGLIMSIIACV OP A CANDIDATE. AhHnrdlilcM Prominent In the Chatter of FtiMlou'n Muiithnlece. New York Sun. Colonel Bryan Is marching rapidly through Nebraska , talking as ho flies. He doesn't seem to say very much about ellver. Although ho asserts that he Is faithful to the Chicago platform nnd Its Immortal principles , he ad mits that the old Issues can be "over shadowed" by new ones. So he pours forth great streams of words about imperialism and militarism. Occasionally be lauds tbo Boera. Apparently he Is as anxious to have the United States meddle with other nations' affairs In South 'Africa as ho Is to have the United States neglect its own business In the Philippines. It Is an unfortunate fact that Colonel Bryan has not added to his reputation this year. His championship of Goebel Is not tbo only black mark that 1S99 has made against him. His virtual attacks upon the treaty ot peace , which be was officious In recommending to the support of tbo demo cratic party ; his description of the Spanish war OB "causeless , " although it has been the boast of his democratic and populist sup porters that they forced It upon the ad ministration ; his attacks upon England , the ono friend of the United States during the war , and bis appeals to race prejudice ; In short , the whole stump-speech system of tbo man this fall has shown that bis senec of propriety and oven of veracity bas been degraded by his growing passion for office , [ n 189G ho was profoundly disappointed , hav ing formed hopes worthy of his permanent want of Judgment. He seems to bo en thusiastic now. but ho has added new and even shallower arts of demagoguery to his equipment. In 1896 much could be par doned to his evident Ignorance and to tbo oratorical temperament , which Is Inclined to leap over facts. But when Colonel Bryan repents mlsstatoments such as his fre quently exposed yarn about an Increase In the number of commercial failures In the year after McKlnloy's election , 1t Is Impossi ble to escape the conclusion thai Colonel Bryan has become shameless In tbo quest of the presidency. In his roamtngs over the country he utters a farrago rage of balderdash , as If everything weio good halt for votes. The real , faithful Bryanltes themselves must bo pained and scandalized or pnrzled toy their hero's reck less mixture of Issues. In 1S9G a new democracy was founded. Colonel Bryan eccmcd to bo planning still another one for 1900 , with death to expansion , militarism and tbe octopus for Its platform and tbo Chicago platform sunk Into a mere adden dum and annex. The crime of 1898 seems to be supplanting the crlmo of 1873 In tbe colonel's Intellectuals and eentlmentals. There U no pleasure in vaylng these things about the colonel , who Is a good fellow In private Ufa and has an amusing chatter It public life , Hut his own speech betrayetl him. He was a good deal of a demagogue In 1898 , Ho Is a good deal more of a dema gogue , more unscrupulous , more careless o truth , more concentrated upon the Imme diate effect of untenable arguments upon what ho conceives to be the Ignorance or prejudice cf hU audiences than bo was In ISflG , He Is degenerating. Perhaps some consciousness of the absurdity of bla cam paign agalwit the cameras has made bin especially averse to "militarism , " but tbo other absurdities and divergencies from the exact truth must be sot down to the fury of his longing for office. In prosperous Nebraska , still thrilling with pride for her soldiers and looking for ward to the great commercial and agrlcul tural boom tbat expansion will bring to al the vvi'-Bt , the ordinary anil the extraordl- nary arguments of the colonel will not ha\o much effect. What bo should say Is ; "Here I am a Nebraakan , Vote for me ao tba I may bavo a chance to be president an : tbo state may be honored thereby , " If be carries his state next month It will nebo bo bccaute bo Is a Nebraskan , but becaus Nebraska accepts his wild and scatterlni theories , .AsiM ; ( joi.n OUTPIT. i \nttirc A Iclila Vnnt Onnntltlrn of the I'revlOH * Mcfitl , Philadelphia Times. Gold IB produced In so many countries and he process of bringing It whom U can be if yp < V weighed nnd the amount tabulated s of necessity so slow that the total gold 'reduction of any ono year cannot bo nccu- tttely known until nearly the close ot the ollowlng year. The report of the director f the mint showing the gold nnd silver pro. uctlon for 18fS ) la only Just made public , but ts figures , belated ns they arc , afford little o subMnntlnto the theory of those who Inlm that there Is not gold enough In the vorld to furnish the basis of the world's iirrency. The total gold production for 189S was 3,901,363 fine ounces of the value of J287- 28,600. This Is an Increase of more than 180,000,000 over the production of 18S7 , bowing nn Increase that hns gone forward > y leaps nnd bounds. Of this amount South Africa produced $79,213,953 , Australia f6l- 60,800 and tbe United States $64,463,000 , the hrcc countries producing 5208,537,753 , or 73 icr cent of the wholr. All but 6 per cent ot lie balance was produced by Kussln , Canada , Mexico , India nnd China In the order named. \ significant feature of thcso figures Is th..l 2,800,000 flno ounces of this produpt worn akcn from quartz mines and only 318,000 rom placer mines , showing that gold mln- ug has become in nn Important sense n steady nnd reliable Industry , not dependent ipon new and rich placer dlifovcrles. But for the war in the Transvaal , which is Ikely for a time to paralyze gold mining In South Africa , the gold production for the current year would undoubtedly be greater than that of 1898 , but leaving South Africa out of the question entirely the gold product tlon of 1899 Is likely to bo twice that of ISS7 , nnd as the gold used in the arts for 189S wns btU little more than one-fifth of the olnl product the ptcady Increase ot the supply for monetary purposes Is assured. These who claim with Brynn that there Islet lot gold enough to form the basis of the necessary money to transact the business ot the world will find little In these figures to afford them either comfort or substantia tion. 1MMIM ! I.V IXI1IA. Sample of the White MniiV Ilnrden li the Fur Hunt. Philadelphia Itccord. The famine In India , which has resulted from the failure of the monsoon , threatens the exlatcnce of nearly 15,000,000 natives , for whoso relief the British government has or dered | 3,500,000 to bo expended. To cope with the emergency , however , will bo a seri ous task , fraught as It Is with almost insur mountable difficulties on all sides. Do what it may , the government Is powerless to effect much , and should not , therefore , be held responsible for the frightful mortality which must result. The great trouble is that white men willing and able to under- ; ake the task of distributing relief are not to 30 found , and the work must be Intrusted to natives. The native Hindus have no regard for the property rights of others. This Is especially : rue of the "bunlaha , " or native merchants , to whom tbe work of relief Is largely con fided. Of course , men presumed to be hon est are chosen , but honesty among bunlnhs B ns rarely found as Is ice upon a pond on a warm morning In July. The result Is that the bunlah waxes rich and fat , while his distressed fellow-countrymen die of starva tion , for the bunlah applies to his own use most of the relief funds Intrusted to his caro. These unacquainted with the facts of tbo situation are prone to censure the British government for the awful distress which jccurs In India whenever the monsoon falls. Great Britain Is , as a rule , none too careful of her colonies so far as the needs of the colonists ore concerned. But In t.b.is lnstancQ she Is little to blame. We have'entered tbe Held ot oriental colonization ourselves. A little further experience In the matter may lead us to appreciate the difficulties which beset the white man In his dealings with dusky barbarians , as well as tbe climatic trials with which the natives of the tropics have to contend. PEUSOXAL AXD OTHERWISE. Lieutenant Franklin Sobley , son of the nd- ralral , fell from a Columbus ( O. ) trolley car last Saturday and narrowly escaped serious Injury. Senator Beverage of Indiana owns a re markably good collection of autographs , In which Is a letter from President Kruger tea a friend distinctly foreshadowing the present war. Speaking of large insurances , a St. Louis paper estimates tbat If a roan secured all tbe Insurance ho could get In all the life com panies in the world , the aggregate would not bo above $10,000,000. Father W. D. McKlnnon , chaplain of tbe First California volunteers In the Philip pines , has been appointed a chaplain In the regular army and started from New York on hta way back to Manila on Monday. It Is said that | 10,000 was taken In at the box office of the Knickerbocker theater on the first day of the pale of tickets for the Irving performances. The tickets purchased were not , of course , nil for the same night , but It Is n large transaction ncvertbelcEs. An Idaho farmer , not satisfied with dip ping deep Into the tidal wave of prosperity , came on to Tienton , N. J. , to buy a nice lot of green goods. Luckily for him a detective saw the meeting between the "come on" and the steertr , tbo farmer being held In Jail as a wltnets against the awlndler. While Miss Frank , a spinster of 67 , was climbing over a stock train at Benson , Minn. , on her way to church tbo train started and she was carried thirty miles on the bumpers between the ears before it stopped again. She rode eafely with her bible In her hand and the rallioad company gave her free passage back to her homo. According to the Boer paper , the Volks- stem , Mr , Rhodes had a brother in South Africa who was a member of tbe Volksraud In 1375 and waa more welcome at Pretoria than Mr. Hhodea unices ho was now to be taken there In charge of tbo Boern. Her bert Rhodes sat for the Lydenburg gold- fields. U was alleged , when he was elected , that be had been guilty of high treason , but the objection was not allowed , Mr. Rhodes spoke Dutch , and never suggested that Eng lish should bo recognized In the Transvaal legislature. He died at Gaznland and hU property reverted to his brother Cecil , I * In n Another Conihlnullon. BOSTON , Nov 2.-At a meeting of repre- gnntatlvcB of the majority of the ! , ir cst concerns In the webbing and Korlng | n- iHiatrles In America the work of the ure llmlnary organization of u national com- hlnatlon WUH perfected. The combination IH capitalized nt 12,000COO. Lee , lllBglnson & Co , are the llnanclenr of the dful , The Lompunlrs take ull of the stock themselvr , OptlonH were secured upon twenty of the most Important plants In the country , among them the American mills , the Revere Uutiber company , the Kant Hampton Rub ber Thread company , thn Thomas Murtln & Uro. company , the Nuslmwamiock Manu facturing company , George P. Cotton , the N&w Haven Web company , the Hub ( Soi < j Maker * , thn Olendalo company , the Con necticut Web company , the Narrusansett Web company and the Ansonla Klustfc Web company. \ < - > v York mill AliinnnuhiiiiettH lleturii , NKW YORK , Nov. 2. The cruiser New York , lliiR8hl | > of near Admiral Furquhar. und the batlleithlii MuHbac-husettH returned last night to thn nnrhoraee off Thirty-fifth btreet , North river , after being employed for three days In evolutlonx for the purpose of demonstrating the working of thu Mar coni system of wlrele 8 telegraphy under varloiia practical condltlonx. The opera tions weit under the direction of u board of three naval otllcers appointed for the pur pose , namely , Lieutenant fommumler J , T. Nuwton , aboard the New York ; Lieutenant J , W. Hlihti , with the InatruinentB at Navulnk , N. J. . and Lieutenant F , K , Hill , aboardtho , Massachusetts. Tha opeiatlons were uulte satUfactoiy , 1USIM1 TII1K 01IMlOf HIIRO Order * for Smilillrit Ptnceil Ity Itnllronil Coititintilrii , I.oulivlllo Courier-Journal. The past week was the mcst active'of the year In the stool rnll mnrkct The hlfigoM roads In the connlry have been huylns rails nnd the orders they have placed amount to abouthalf n million.tons. Th New York Journal of Commerce given thi following list of specific orders : Road. To"1 ' IVnrsylvanln .105.00 ; Illinois CYniritt BO.NX Chicago & Northwestern .n. . I'n I on Pacific . . , . „ . 40.000 rhlrago , Milwaukee A St. Paul Haltlmnrc fr Ohio . New York Central 35.000 Total 350,000 fln addition , orders for about 160.000 tons more wore given to the Carnegie Steel com pany. Nor do thcso represent nil the hunt- ness. Judge Onry of the Federal Stool com pany says tto orders now being placed on the books of llio various ntccl companies will nggregato 1,200,000 tons , nnd nnothcr manu facturer quoted by the Journal said they would reach 1,000,000. It IB said the Penn sylvania alone will buy $3,600,000 , worth. Further evidence of the prosperity ot the railroads Is to be found In the Immeriso orders they arc giving for cars. Two weeks ago a warning nrtlcle appeared In nn en gineering Journal Imploring railroads and largo manufacturers net to crowd the market with their orderrt , but 16 stand back and let prices fall. The American Car Foundry re ports that all Its great i > Nurtn arc overrun with work , having received orders this week for 6,000 cars nnd negotiating for fresh con tracts. It Is wild this company has con tracted for J20.000.000 worth of equipment. .37.Y immrs. Chicago Tribune : "All things don't como to the man who wnllK , " remarked undo Allen Sji.irkH. between iwnnutn. "And , inure than that , ho doesn't Bet half the things he goes utter , either. " Indianapolis Journal : "The third heat , which would Imve decided the nice , wai "Ah ! What olac could you expect of the rubber but neck nnd neck ? " Judge : Ilupert How many quartz mines docs Stockson own ? Ilurold UlKht , I guess. He seems In a peck of trouble over them. Detroit Journal : There arc communities , wo are told , Whore they nre wearing puffed sleeves , nnd where u person may null become - come n recognized dramatic authority by pronouncing Cyrano dc Bcrgerac with con fidence. Washington Star : "Did you over make n , serious mistake In a nreqcrlDtlon ? "Never but once , " answered the drug clerk , us a gloomy look passed over his face. "I oharRcd a man 30 cents for u. pre scription Instead of thirty-five. " Chlcaco Tribune : "In order to settle a little bet , " the young man said , passing a rlnu over the showcase , "olnase tell mo whether the correct pronunciation of the name of the Htone In that rlnc Is turkeezo or turkwolse. " , ' The Jeweler Inspected It and handed It back. , , , , "Tho correct pronunciation Is class , " ho said. Indianapolis Journal : "Figures. " said the bookkeeper , "never lie. " "No , " replied the expert accountant , "but the people who use them do. " Then ho returned to his task of uncover ing shortages. Chicago News : "Do you play any iristru- ment , Mr. Jimp ? " ' 'Yes. I'm a cornetlst. " i 'And your sister ? " - 'She's a lnni.st. " 'Does your mother play ? " ' ' . " 'She's a zltherlst. 'And your father ? ' " ' . ' ' . " 'He's a pessimist. YD FfcEXIDLB CAXDIDATC. Denver Post. Now doth the candidate assume A smile 't'd 'knock a shlnlncr hole t In nrjy somber , cloud ot ulqom * . That ever happened to it soul. J f't He BOOB around'with outstretched' hand1' And golden pledges up his sleeve , . . And roars "Reform ! " to beat the band , The same Intended to deceive. For does ho mean a little bit To live up to his pledges ? Nit ! He greets the Indies with a smile And faultless Chesterlleldlan bow. And compliments them on their style Of face and dress , and tells them how The scheme has overreached buccess The female suffrage scheme , you know And this old state has cause to'bless ' The day 'twas granted them , and O ! In smiles their faces seem to swim As each ono vows she'll vote for him. Ho tells the temperance people ho Hesrards rum selling ns a curse. And If ho had the say 'twould bo In central hell , or some place worse. Then to the alcoholic nhrlne On Mercury's winged feet he'll fly And get the bums up In a line Along the bar , and gallv cry : . ' "Drink , boys , with ono who dares to think You have a moral right to drink ! " He swears that cursed octopus. The corporative clique , rihould be Sunk down In lowest Erebun. And If he HWlpes the cookie , ho Will use hlfi voice and Influence To 'send them there , then sneaks around Behind the corporation fenpq And tellH them he will sure be found JuHt where they want him In their scheme ? To realize their robber dreams. O ! he's a peach , that smiling beaut , The chamaleon candidate. Who chanKns color oft to suit Surroundings ; he can glibly prate Of one tiling to a gaping crowd. Then shed hlH views n crawling snake Discards MB skin , and howl an loud Upon thn other sldo ! 'Twould mnka An angel weep to BCO his tricks. Yet all Is fair in politics. JBoy's strong point is in , finding the ones ' " * ' * in his olothGs " " Wo find * 'em' ' first. - \ That's ' / - * IV/iy Jfiis : ' ' : \ OlOthGS ' from us resist " * ' „ , "i ( his \vGt\r. \ $2,50 $ , $3,00 , $3,50 $ $4,00 $5,00 $ mpj&