13 - TITE OMAHA DAILY REE: HATUKDAY. KOVEMM2I. 7. 190.1. Tim Omaiia Daily Bee. B. ROSE WATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED KYERT MOftNINO. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. r!Iy !! (without Sunday), On Year.M 00 l'nlly lire end Bumlav, One Year SO) lllufttmtnd Dee, One Year ....Zk PundHjr Boo, one Year HMturdny Hee, One iear ., 1-W Twentieth Century Firmer, One Year.. 1.00 DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Dally Hoe (wltnout Sunday), per copy So Dally llee (without Sunday), per ween. .12c Dally Bee (Including Hunday), per. week. 17c Sunday Hee, per cnpy, 6c Evening Une (without Sunday), per week 6c Evening Bee (Including Sunday), per week 10c Complaint of Irregularities In delivery hould he addreaseU to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha-City Hall Building, Twenty-fifth and M etreets. Counrll BlufTB'-IU Pearl Street. Chliwgo ltwo -1'tilty Building. J New York 235m Park Row ilulldlng-. Washington ftd Fourteenth Street.. , CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to newa and edi torial matter should be addressed; Omaha Bee, Editorial- Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order payable to The Bee' Publishing Company. Only 1-eent stamps accepted In payment of mall accounts. Personal rheeks, except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. TUB BEE I'UBlAsHINCJ COMPANY." STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. , State of Nebraska, Datiglns County, ss: Ueorge B. Tsachuck, Secretary of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, says that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the mouth of October, 19"3, was as follows: 1 2N,K4M 7 'AfifMit 2 itO.OUO 18 iil,lUO 3.. '..... SIS.TOH 19 BOJiMO 4 27,IO '"' 20 ........80,370 B IW.TIO 21 IMKWMI , 2M.8UO 22 .:f.tO,T0 7 ; ihmkm. 23...,;,........an,7B t X8.710 24....., 3,0 9 1 mat 26 ,.2,0H 10 : ' M. .81.1TO 11... aO,50O ' 27 ..31,100 13 28 31,l(IO 13.,. Jt8,S40 29 a,U40 14 2,BOO SO. .."..'..'.40,500 15. IMJiBO SI. . .33,885 If lt,3flO Total :.. 032,020 Less unsold and returned copies..., 10,68 Net total sales. 422,34ta Net average sales SW.768 OEOROB B. TZSCHUCK flubscrlbed In my presence and sworn to before me this 4 in day of October, A. D., 1803. ' M. B. liUNGATE. Chairman Webber- of the populist stato coiimlttee seems to be the only populist In evidence In Nebraska just now. The Lincoln Star has set the mark at 25,000 majority for Roosevelt in Ne braska In 1004. That certainly is modest. . With those who are already booming Senator Ilanna for the presidency it is not that, they love Ilanna more, but that they love Koosevelt less. The Missouri legislative boodlers are each trying to put the culpability for their crooked work' upon the other. That is always what happens when the boodler is cornered. ' i.'i- The republican plurality in Tcnusyl yanla is a little less than 300,000. If this could only be properly distributed it would turn half the solid south into tho republican column. The sum and substance of the river Improvement meeting may be con densed into a sentence If congress makes any appropriation for rivqr bank work, we want a share of it Lewis Nixon's testimony in the Ship building trust case is a confession' that he gut into very bad company. People have to be very careful nowadays when they associate with . multimillionaires. J- The Russian cur and German emperor have met once more and wished each ether peuce. If they do not repeat this performance at reasonable intervals, the, portents of warlike conflict are sure to , he read in the stars. . ' With the weather man favoring us is he is, a little extra pressure on the itreet repairing gang might eradicate (he worst holes still left in our pave ments before the snow covers the round; Hurry it p,- ' What distresses the democrats here Hbouts most is not the loss of the sfnees, but the horrible thought that Ihey will not know where to turn for tainpulgn contributions next year, when Lee Ilerdman is a private citizen. President Htickney should be backed op vigorously by our Omaha shippers in his refusal to rescind the grain rates i bus made for traffic from Omaha to (he east. .As long as Mr. Stlckney Hands by Omaha, Omaha should stand y him, The night schools Just opened by or ler of the school board are starting Hit with an unusually large attendance, ambition for an education should be moouraged, especially in the people prhose early opportuultle have been nirtailed. The fusloulsts in this state showed Iheir wisdom in insisting that Judge kulllvan make the race again for su preme Judge, although he knew in ad fa nee that he could not win out Any ther candldute would have been mowed under by 20,000 plurality. The United States Steel corporation promise to dispense with some of its klgh-prUed ornamental official. These aieu evidently failed to turn enough f thHr money back into the trust treasury when the generous offer wa made to sell them steel stock at several time its real value. The World-Herald now admits .that lo Of the candidates nominated by the lemocrats on its pretended nonpartisan ticket were thoroughly partisan repub licans. It will probably admit also that two of tbetn were thoroughly partisan democrats and the rtt willing to be long to any party that would laud thuin In a Judicial crhY-tt. What become, however, of lu piteous pleas for uou- MB rsr WORTH CCLTltATlXQ. The Bee reproduces from the New York Pun a timely article reviewing the crop .situation in the wt and calls attention to the fact that our unsym pathetic farmers are so busy adding up long columns of figures representing the yU'lds of their fertile acres thnt the doleful cries from Wall street go utterly unheard. What is particularly gratifying in the Sun's review is lis concession to Ne braska of the Brut' place in the list of prosperous agricultural states for this year. "The lead," it says, "seems to bo held, safely enough by Nebraska with Its 45,000,000 bushels of wheat, which should yield f33.215.000; 222,420,000 bushels of corn, yielding $100,000,000, and-'5H,000,000 bushels of oats, worth probably $18,081,000; a total of nearly $152,000,000." Afld it adds: "This is money enough to give every resident of that fortunate state $142." Is it any wonder that, with these con ditions at home, Nebraska should be comparatively J unconcerned at reports of shaklness in the eastern money mar kets? ' The foundation of a nation's prosperity rest upon its food producers and If tho great grain and wheat belt of which Nebraska is near the center is soiind to the core,, the dangers of stow exchange speculation cannot go far be neuth the surface. With the farmers of this section eo strongly fortified be hind crops which can be readily coined at' the .mints into hundred-cent dollars the importance of these western states in the world's business affairs must be correspondingly enhanced. The home market is always regarded as the best market for American manufacturers and the best part of the home market for this year will be found in Nebraska and the surrounding states. The western farmer constitutes the most effective present demand for all the standard products Of mill and factory, to say nothing of having the money . to pay their bills as soon as they become due, and as a consequence the west should be worth cultivating just bow by the business interests of the entire country. . .. aiQHTlSa ruLlTWAL DASQKR. An eastern organ of financial and commercial interests and prominent nuiong the advocates of currency re form Bees danger for tho republican party if it shall neglect, at the coming ttf.ss.'oa of . congress, the currency question and fall to provide legis lation for Increasing the supply of bank notes. ' That paper says that rightly or wrongly President Roosevelt is not a favorite with large financial interests, that there is disaffection with the administration in New York and that "if this, is not to spread to other states and to create a tidal wave in favor of a conservative democrat next year, then if behooves the republican party to consider well whether it de sires to drive away the votes of inde pendent and thinking men." It adds that there are several members of Mr. Cleveland' cabinets who have sup ported the republican candidates' or have ""been silent during the last eight years, "who are likely to come to the support of a conservative democrat if the republican party deliberately ig nores its solemn pledges in regard to our monetary system." It would be interesting to know how numerous are the independent and thinking men who believe there is any present necessity for currency legisla tion of the kind which this organ of the reformers advocates. HoW many such men are there who favor, for ex ample, an asset currency, which is a leading feature in the reform program? It is safe to ay that the. number of such is not large and that most of them belong to the speculating and promoting classes. So 'far as the bankers of the country are concerned they are not urg ing any radical- measures jot currency reform and generally they do not favor an asset currency. The report of the committee of the American Bankers' association recommended reform of the sub-treasury system, so , that the reve nues of the government from all sources shall be deposited in the banks and thus made available for use in the com munity; the repeal of the present limita tions of $3,000,000 per month upon the withdrawal of circulation, and an emer gency circulation within careful limlta tlons, "upon the actual deposit with the Treasury department of securities . ac ceptable to the secretary of the treas ury." In regard to asset currency the committee Bald it could not recommend "any step that will tend toward a re turn to the miscellaneous circulation which prevailed in the country before the war, or any step which will disre gard the history of finance among the commercial nations of the world, nor can it recommend that any note should bo Issued without the certainty of its redemption, in .standard coin of the United States." This was unqualifiedly endorsed by the association, as it tin doubtedly is by a very large majority of the bankers and substantial buslue men throughout the country. The spec u'atorsi and promoters in Wall street and elsewhere will' of course "not ap prove it and it is this element which Is disaffected ,wlth the national adminis tration. There is no danger for the republican party in refusing to heed the demand of those currency reformers who would Lave the country return to the miscella neous circulation before the war. The duty of the party la to give attention solely to the requirements of the legiti mate business interests and these are being at present adequately cared for and consequently are not urging cur rency reform. . It may be interesting for Omaha people to know that the newspapers at Lincoln. Fremont and other surrounding towns, which never lose an opportunity to knock Omaha enterprise, are al ready out with thHr hammers for the prupoKud etablu.tmteut of a grain niar- patriots seem to be unable to get it Into their heads that anything that would build up Nebraska will redound to helr lneflt .and that the creation of a new grain market at Omaha cannot fail to prove of advantage to the producers in the entire surrounding territory. Pros perous farmers make prosperous towns and prosperous merchants. Prosperity for Omaha is Impossible without pros perity for all Nebraska. THC KtVUQ BIT lull OF PANAMA. Pauaina is already a state de fucto, made so by Colombia's abandonment of that portion of its territory, therefore the recognition of the provisional gov ernment, which undoubtedly will soon be made permanent, by tho United States is entirely legitimate and proper. The eminent authority ou international law, Prof. Woolsey, says that while old states cannot aid insurrectionists without thereby engaging in war with the parent state, "if the new community has bo far become independent that the parent state gives up endeavors to bring it back into subjection if, in short, the new state is without question a state do facto they cannot, with any reason" or propriety, refuse to concede to the com munity thus born a place among the parties to international law." This is applicable to the Panama situ ation. The Colombian government Bent troops there, but they offered no oppo sition to the revolutionists and after ne gotiations withdrew, leaving the revo lutionary element in undisputed con trol. It was necessary that the repre sentatives of our government should be able to transact current business and there being no Colombian officials in Panama there was nothing to do but recognize the new government The ef fect of this is to give Panama the posi tion of an independent state having the power, when fully organized, to enter into international agreements and as sume the rights and obligations of such a state. The provisional government has announced that the republic of Panama assumes all the former treaty and legal obligations of Colombia, bo that in regard to these there will be no issue or controversy between the new state and any other country respecting any treaty or obligation of Colombia. Of course, our government will now deal entirely with Tanama in the canal matter and since the revolution was due to the rejection of the Uay-Herran treaty by the Colombian congress it is safe to say that there will be no diffi culty or delay in coming to terms. It is probable that our government will make the propositions, at least in re gard to indemnity, to Panama that are contained In the treaty negotiated with Colombia, while as to sovereignty over the canal territory this will doubtless be conceded to the United States. At all events the construction of the Pan ama canal by this country la now as sured. It la quite natural that there shotild be a belief that the revolution was in spired by the United States, but it must be remembered that the people of Panama long ago threatened to secede if the canal treaty were not ratified. It i evident that for months they were preparing for the revolt Having been successful it is not to be doubted that they can rely upon the protection of this country. ntLitr fcr our lawmakkbs. Nebraska lawmakers, past, present and prospective,; will heave a sigh of relief at the news that the state su preme court has affirmed the validity of the constitutional amendment adopted in 1887 after a recount of the ballots by a legislative committee, by which the pay of members of the legislature was increased from $3 to $5 a day and the remunerative part of the session extended from forty days to sixty days. No one familiar with the circumstances for a moment conceived the idea that any part of the excess stipend paid out of the state treasury for these inter vening years would find its way back into the state bouse vaults even if the decision had gone the other way, but until a new amendment should have been adopted 'ratifying the salary in crease the strain qn outside interests represented in the legislative lobby might have expected to bear a corre spondingly Increased weight As a matter of fact, no taxpayer of Nebraska will begrudge the salary paid to members of the legislature as fixed by the amended provision of the consti tution, providing the service is honestly and conscientiously rendered and the money earned by standing up for the people as a whole rather than for the special interests which are constantly seeking favors and privileges at the ex pense 'of the public. The decision of the court does not change the constitu tion materially as to the urgency of im mediate constitutional revision with reference to the much-needed enlarge ment of the supreme court, the invest ment of the school trust funds and the strait-Jacket limitations on executive officers. These defects ought to be remedied at the earliest possible mo ment by the r submission of constitu tional amendments at the election next year instead of deferment for a con- titutlonal convention, which ts ques tionable at best ajid whose work could not be ratified and put into operation for another two years. The highest competitor of the lowest republican candidate on the Judicial ticket in this district is more than 1,400 votes behind, while Nfbe low man on the republican ticket vpon whom such a terrific onslaught was made by the democratic organ, U only 227 behind the next republican candidate, against whom no personal fight was made. These figures tell the story how the public questioned the good faith of the wanton attack in the local hyphenated. The promise is mad that next year Nebraska populists will have a ticket of their own In the fit Id Uiat will en Nebraska in. the Lead New York Sun. The unsympathetic farmers of the west crop worth $278,600,000. Theae total 12,377,- and south are so busy adding up long SOO.OnO, and no account la taken of the columns of figures task which employs various other products, them far Into the night these days that The crop record of soma of the Indtvld- the doleful criea from Wall street go utterly ual states for this year are amazing. The unheeded. They are trying to puzzle out lead seems to be held safely enough by Just how much of the $2,500,003,000 that the Nebraska, with Its 45.010.000 bushels of enormous crops promise to yield Is going wheat, which should yield $.13.21S.OOO; 222,- lnto their Individual pockets. 420,000 bushels of corn, yielding" $100,000,000. They have got so far along In their cal- and 6JV000,000 bushels of oats, worth rrob- culationa that their , wives and daughters ably $18,581.00; a total of nearly $152,000,000. are already negotiating with the piano This Is money enough to give every rest- agent, the sewing machine vender and the dent of that fortunate state $142. Kansaa Is piano lamp man. Bteam heat and electrio a close second In the running. Its crops are lights will probably follow the last aJdl- great enough to give each man, woman and tion. child within its borders $115. The estimates show that, It la reasonable The $2,500,000,000 which these crops of to expect a corn crop worth on the farm corn, cotton, wheat and oats promise to $1,036,000,000, a cotton crop worth $575,000,000, yield Is sufficient to give each citizen In a wheat crop worth $492,000,000 and an oat the United states about $31 np and be counted. Tho populists In this state have been working with watered etock so long that they have not the slightest idea what an inventory of their political assets would sum up. President Roosevelt's message to the extra session of congresswill be short and deal with only one subject The regular session will begin three weeks later and the president will then have another chance and doubtless go into greater detail upon a variety of needed national legislation. The French government is said to look without displeasure upon the develop ments of the Panama revolution. Any move that will improve the prospect of the stockholders in the French canal company to get some of their money back -will be looked on with favor in France. Bumping; Your Uncle. Baltimore American. N China wants .the United States to turn Russia out of Manchuria for it. In the matter of help In any direction the rest of the world seems to look on Uncle Sam as a sort of ambulance, commissary and dis trict telegraph messenger service all In one. Crsuska Looking; (or Treakle. Indianapolis News. Another crank has been arrested at the White House. This season's variety of cranks, so far as the returns show, are not looking for trouble so much as they are fleeing from It Maybe the president's rep utatlon for being a good fellow la what makes so many of them turn to him. A Cheap Promoter, Minneapolis Journal. A New York promoter who had Incor porated a company with a capital of $300,- 000,000 was arrested because ha couldn't pay his board bill. Still there Is not such a great difference between him and some other promoters we have heard of.. In his case the landlord suffered; In the case of others the public suffered. Brace I'p and Look Pleasant. Cincinnati Enquirer. This la the time when the reflective citi zen of the defeated party finds consolation In the fact that the other fellows are not so bad, after all. There will be buying; and selling as usual, and the government will go right on. - In time the men who are fol lowing torches and wheesy brass bands may be on the sidewalks and upper win dows, mournfully looking on, but trying to "look pleasant." Railroad Management DeAclent. Chicago Chronicle. The loss of life and tujury to limb on the railways of the United States proportion ally exceeds that on the railways of any other country In the old or new world. We boast the most competent mechanics and the most enterprising capital, and railroad progress in the United States owes most to their combination, but American railway management Is fundamentally deficient In a sense of the -alue of personal safety among both employes and passengers. Mysterious Force of Nature, Philadelphia Record. All that Is known about sun spots Is that their appearance Is due to terrific dis turbances In the solar photosphere and that they are coincident with magnetics storms In the terrestrial atmosphere. To say that the latter are caused by the former Is a very loose way of stating the case. The two phenomena are evidently connected, and both are probably caused by an Identical and still undiscovered force of nature. Keeping Oat of Trouble. Pittsburg Dispatch. It Is said that In a war with any naval power of equal strength this country would And the Insular possessions a very doubt ful advantage a truth that has been re peatedly expressed since the acquisition of the Islands. The present excitement Indi cates that the jingo element bas just dis covered that while It Is all right to have naval bases these Isloated outposts have to be defended, a somwhat belated discov ery. As a matter of fact and common sense there Is no earthly reason why this country should be Involved la any war between Russia' and Japan or any other powers In the Orient ' Bo long aa wa at tend to our own business no one will molest us. Crook Hast Pay k Penalty. Chicago Tribune. It will be Inexpedient to approach the president with suggestions that It will be politically Inexpedient to prosecute some man who ha party friends who will take offense if he Is called to an account for hi misdeeds. "Let no guilty man escape" Is the motto of President Roosevelt a It was of President Grant. Whether the offender against the government 1 republican or democrat, poor or rich, prominent or ob scure, with or without friends, the course of Impartial justice will not be stayed. That is the highest expediency. No policy can strengthen more the administration and the party than that which the president is pur suing, of unearthing and punishing Influen tial offender who have belonged to hi party. ( Jiapeleens ( Finance. Engineering Magasine. The flippant term 'Napoleon of Finance embodies a fundamental truth. The same restlessness of conscious power, the same hungering for empire, the same craving for the Intoxication of victory, now find tn the field of Industry the outlet that one was to be found only In the field of battle. And the same glamor of Immediate success dazzle the people and throng them about the victor, delirious In the glory of the present, careless of the stability of the fu ture. But the sums law underlies all na ture, and will not be denied. The overblown bubble will burst the overstretched fabrlo will break the unstable structure will fall." The analogy la plain. The American leader of finance, beginning with under takings which had cimomlo juatlfltatlon, but alnce. drunken with success, have ex panded their campaign to U.e limit of BOMB DRY AIT REMINISCENCES. People Whose Purees Opened 'While Inder tho Spell. New York Commercial Advertiser. The attempt of the widow of Phllo 8. Bennett and her attorney to show that Colonel Winiam Jennings Bryan had mesmerlo Influence over the late New York tea merchant brings to mind that the erst while democratic candidate for president is "no slouch" In that respect Count John A. Crelghton, a rich national bank presi dent of Omaha, was such a worshiper of Bryan that It Is a well known fact that on the evening of the day Bryan was nominated at Chicago in 1S96 be presented him with a check for $5,000 with which to pay the expense of himself and wit in the campaign. Mr. Crelghton, with a brother, built the overland telegraph, which was the basis of the comfortable fortune that he amassed. It wa he who put up the cash to enable Bryan to run for congress In the old Omaha-IJncoln district, which then had a republican majority of upward of 10,000; and Bryan really had no more idea of being elected than that he could fly. But that was in 1890, and a big democratlo landslide sent hlra to Washington. Two year later he ran again In the same district and pulled through by the slim plurality of 140. He would have been badly defeated In the second race but for Crelghton's money. Another millionaire whom Bryan is said to have mesmerized In 1S96 was Charles D. Lane of California, the owner of profit able gold mines in California, Arizona, Alaska and British Columbia. On the way to Lincoln, just after the national silver convention In St. Louis, which met there the same week that the crazy populists assembled, Mr. Lane told the writer that he had never met Bryan, but that from what he had heard of him he expected to take a great fancy to him. I never atr anyone more infatuated than was the gold digger. II had been prominent In the sil ver gathering at St. Louis that Indorsed Bryan's candidacy. Lane claimed that he never owned any stock In silver mines, except In an old worthless one In Mexico, and he supported Bryan because he be lieved In a double-money standard. That year, In order to Induce other millionaires to subsoribe heavily to the democratic cam paign fund. It was announced In several of the party organ that.one man had given his oheck for a cool $100,000. People got to guessing. Some said It was W. A. Clark, at present United State senator from Mon tana. Others thought It cam from the pile of John R. McLean, owner of the Cin cinnati Enquirer; but they wer all wrong. It wa Charles D. Lane, the fact having leaked -out after the election. Had Bryan been successful In that contest Lan would undoubtedly have been a member of bis cabinet Mr. Lane, while en route to Lincoln, also informed the writer that he had never even heard of Bryan before hi nomina tion at Chicago. "While the convention wa In session," said he, "I wa Inspecting some of my mining property In Arizona miles from a railway station. An employe wa sent for the mall and I Instructed hlra to inquire there Jf a nomination had been made at Chicago. On hi return he told me that "Bryant" had been nominated. He did not ascertain where "Bryant," aa he called him, resided, and I thought the fel low was a fool; but later, when the St. Louis and Chicago newspaper were re ceived, I found he was almost right. I wa for Bland of Missouri and hoped be would be nominated, as I am a native of Missouri and had known 'Sliver Dick' since my youth." ARTISTIC GOLD BRICKS. Those Handed Investor by tho Mor gran and Schwabs. Detroit Free Press. In describing the organization of the United States Shipbuilding company as an "artistic swindle," Mr. James Smith, jr., the receiver of the corporation, use lan guage that seem sufficiently qualified and moderate. , The method .by which these properties were "financed" are now gener ally understood, and If there is a difference between this form of swindling and the gold brick form. It 1 a matter of size rather than kind. Mr. Smith asserts that the value of the plants, their earnings and the working capital, given In the report of expert accountants, vary so much from the cor rect figures as "to Impel the belief that the figure were wilfully mis-stated." He expresses doubt 'that these report were submitted at the organization of the com pany. The corporation wa organized by "dummy" stockholders, officers and direct tors. The statements made In the pros pectus of June 14. 1903, were incorrect For property worth $12,441,616 the company paid In stock and bonds $07.997,000 more than five to one. The directors In acquiring these properties thus gave away millions in the stock and bonds of the trust, "whole sale plunder," the receiver calls It. 8o far as the Bethlehem Steel company is con cerned, Mr. Smith says It earning were withheld "In a deliberate attempt to wreck the United State Shipbuilding company." When one esteemed citizen sells another esteemed citizen a bras brick that mas querade as gold, the courts and the "police reporter have a very harsh expression with which they describe the transaction. When a person obtain money under false pretenses tn the more commonplace ways he 1 frequently punished. In the wild and untutored west they sometime lynched the enterprising- individual who "salted" a-. mine, and men have gained a bad reputa tion by selling property to which they had no title. None of these offense wa com mitted by the promoter of the Shipbuild ing trust. While their method aeem somewhat irregular, they war probably not criminal. In fact the corporation laws of New Jersey have been no adroitly drawn aa to mak practically everything legal which doe net Involve th actual sand bagging of th prospective stockholder or th picking of hi pocket on a public thoroughfare. We may assume, therefore, that th activ participant tn th organ isation of the Shipbuilding trust hare noth ing to fear from th law. They are finan cier, and financier are privileged per sona They may be subjected to criticism In th publio print. vbut bard words break no bone. Sawmill Istroyl. LA CHOf SE. Wis.. Nov. 6 The N. B. Iluiway eataiill In this riiy wa desUuyed r.wjf r m r Absolutely Puro THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE NEW TORK3 INCREDIBLE VANITY. Rooted Belief thnt th Bl- Town is th Whole Cheese. Chicago Journal. W have received a characteristic com munication from . on of New Tork's newspapers. We are Informed therein that vi wo uou are nxea upon Greater New York' forthcoming muhicl - pal election, and that nq event of such universal Interest is scheduled for the Im mediate future. We are given to' under stand that, all over the country, the people will be unable to go to sleep on the night of November t unless they . have first heard whether fusion or Tammanv has triumphed, and that we will be missing one of the great journalists opportunities of the age If we fall to subscribe for an elaborate series of special bulletins and a liberal allowance of general descriptive matter which our contemporary purpose to send out on the occasion In question. The whole tdne of the letter Is amus ingly Illustrative of the New York view point Your true New Yorker ha not a suspicion that ther Is anything of the slightest Interest or Importance outside of his own town. He labor under the Im pression that all those condemned to live beyond Its borders consume their time In longing to be there and that their atten tion I chiefly occupied with It affairs. So far a the western hemisphere i con cerned, his geography extends no further eastward than Sandy ' Hook and no fur ther westward than Hoboken. A broad brimmed hat would cover hi horizon, and hi Idea la that th United States, of which he sometime hears, 1 a aerie of truck gardens In Jersey, where food Is raised for the resident of Manhattan Island. The reason be believe that all eyes are turned upon his election is that he cannot understand how It could be otherwise. ' It would astonish and bewilder him to discover how little the 75,000,000 or $0,000, 000 person who constitute the remainder of th nation worry themselves about the metropolis. He would not be able to credit hi sense if he discovered the fact that not on In twenty of them I aware that he 1 about to vote for a mayor and coun cilmen. In short, he thinks his narrow dwelling I the whole plant, when, aa a matter of fact, It Is merely th receiving room and cashier' office. But his pa rochial outlook I so funny that we have to forgive hi incredible vanity. AS THE SMOKE CLEARS AWAY. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune (rep.): In the light of what Ohio has done the demo cratlo flurry In New York is of comparative insignificance. Atlanta Constitution (dem.): Altogether It wa not a bad day for the democrat even If Tom Johnson 1 somewhere under a glacier In Ohio. Indianapolis News (ind.): Messrs. Grout and Forne of New York, however, are feeling very comfortable today, thank you. Nothing give a man such a chestlness as to make a lucky guess. St Louis Globe-Democrat (rep.): In bis first senatorial - fight Mr. Hanna had a struggle for a single vote In the legisla ture. In the second there will be scarcely enough democrats left to oppose a motion to make it unanimous. Chicago Chronicle (dem.): Th day after th election your Uncle Thomas Piatt had no hesitation In saying that Mayor-elect McClellan is an uncommonly fine young man. Thomas Is still basking under th blissful beams of the honeymoon and even a victorious democrat' looks well to him. . Chicago Inter Ocean (rep.): "Golden Rule" Jones, after glancing over the elec tion returns, expressed the conviction that the democratlo party would never again elect a president. While there may be some ground for this belief, yet we are In clined to regard It a foolishly optimistic. New York World (dem.): It wa Mayor Low' misfortune to stand for re-eleo ion, a republican in a city democratic by more WW Are you prepared for colder days? A heavy Overcoat will be in order presently. "We can uhow you the most complete stock of Overcoats that you ever looked at. All Borts of good materials and in almost any color. All the prevailing styles the Chester field, Swagger, Taddock and Taletots. $10 to $45. No Clothing Fits Like Ours. BroWrvm'King B. S. WILCOX, Manager. RELIABLE than 120,000 majority, at a time when parti spirit could be successfully invoked. But he will retire at the end of hi term beatin with him the respect and the gratitude ol all good citizen New York Sun (rep.): Mr. George Brln-: ton McClollan has been elected mayor ol New York. We pledge to Mr. McClellar our earnest and hearty support of ever) ict of h administration of which we shal r - npov - . -nd t ta .urh .. approve, and in respect to such acts a we ' may elect to condemn may the lord have mercy on Mr. McCIellan'a aoul! New York Tribune (rep.): It would be too much to say that New York 1 until t for self-government. But It I th triW V that ther Is no visible evidence of Its fit- ' 1 ness to govern itself in the triumph whiofc ' Tammany Hall won Tuesday. Th verdlot ' ' Is the ftiore unsatisfactory because it was calmly and deliberately reached by the , great jury of voter. POLITICAL DRIFT. ' Too much Johnson. Ohio stands pat Can't help it Oahu went republican. So did Wahoo. ' Big Bill Devery and Big Tom Johnson are too much for an ordinary tureen. Still, they're In it. 'j It should be remembered that Bryan made no speeches in New York. He conversed ' two or three times in Ohio. Some time in the future, perhaps, history' will record the fact that there wa one a democratlo party In Pennsylvania. New York newspaper were evidently sin cere in their support of Beth Low. . Edl- ,' torially they exhibit several sore spots. General Daniel E. Sickles is one of the ', newly elected aldermen in New York. ' There will be something doing In that board when Dan get riled. He carries "a big ( tick." I The blackmail and extortion stories front j Pittsburg, indicating that the city council 1 Is attempting to hold up th railroads. Is very shocking almost aa shocking aa th fact that th corporations themselves are largely responsible for th corruption of city legislatures. A Johnsonian orator In Cincinnati tried to smash the record of Nebraska' cham-f pion long distance orator by talking eight I hour and a quarter without, pausing for : drink or grub. Th blast of hot air seems to have blistered th Johnsonian vote. Cln clnnati went heavily republican. Sylvanus Merriman Stebblns of Riverside, i Mass., who was born April 4, U17, ha th ' proud record of having voted for every dem- j otratlo candidate for president alno h . cast his first vote for Martin Van Buren ln 1S40. In 18S0, when ther were two demo- cratlo candidate for president, Mr. 8tebl bin cast his vote for tn "llttl giant, Stephen A. Douglas. Tne kaaus is rwrntmc. ' Esterbrook a a pea tvars&te ts atitltt Jo its excellence 2 10 1. I Probate No. nlar. stub medium Over 150 other stylet 3ijisapop pen, 'with points, varieties of to suit pO 711 eyery par pose. All atetione loners nVTiave them, eptnojjttbsitujle. Acc Trie Esterbrook Steel Pen Co. VefeC-,N.J. 24 Mm hnri. N. T. 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