New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1896-07-29.€¦ · meeting bescan at Cleveland.. MTV AM»...

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FOUNDED BY HORAnT oniRET.TîT

WKDXïWPAT, .ULY 20, 18801,

SIXTKKX PAGES]TUL NEWS THIS MORXIXG.

FOIUE2QN..-Dr. Jameson and his nfHoers In

the TrsjurvasJ rsM Brers f"und guilty in tiio

llrltish HiRh Court of Justice. The In-

tsrnstional Rorlsltsl Trades OuiKrPF» BJSl In¦t Msrtln'a Town Hall, London; tlic Anarch¬ist dH^}-;''"«! f iir-l an SfltFSOCC Into tho hall.

t=r..Tz_- it is r"p«>rt»-d in Berlin that the PowersLave Informed Greece thai Bhe musí <..*»>.' aid-

Ine rebels sandnsl Ihe Turk».DOMESTIC- Mor«» than a score of lives were

lost and (real destruction of property caused bytbe Kt'ipns In Western Pennsylvania. The

karflB inp-r-maniifactiirlnR ilrm of A. (». Billot& Co., <,f Philadelphia, failed on ace,tint of the

depreciation in securities since the Chicase Con-

ventlon. Cornelius Vsnderbllt's condition¦ras reported ss much Improved, and he was

hiil«.- to walk sround his room a little. .

HuperiMen,k-nt AldrMss. of the Btate Depart¬ment of Public Works. Isíhuntir.K deletiates In

Westi m N.-w-Ynrk favorahle to his candidacyHfl Qtreerni r. The Grand CliT-ult trottingmeeting bescan at Cleveland.

. MTV AM» SUBURBAN..Mark A. ITanna,chslrmaa of the Republican National Commit-lee, arrived in the city, selected Kastern lu-ad-lOSrtSTS, and had a number of callers. ¦¦ ¦ ¦:

The Dsmecratlc Ftate Committee called the

};taie convention to meet In Buffalo on Septem¬ber 18 General Horace Porter gave theresult uf political «ibs 'rvatlons In tho Interior of

Ihe St;it.' BttehaM P. Lehmaler wa« «hot

ut t)i" liiardlnK-hou-e No. 4M West Thlrty-flfth-Bt by Charlea A. Johnson, who said he wa* Mrs.

Lehmaier's brother, and that he shot In defenceof hla Bister. The Appellate Division ofthe Buprems Court handed down a decision de¬

claring the RspM Transit act constitutional.Ths Manhattan Klevated Railway Com«

pany has decided to run faster trairs.The Brooklyn baseball nine was defeated by the

Washington team by 7 to 3. --. stocks were

weak under I ear attacks.tiiij: wkatiikk Porecast for to-day: Fair.

with continued heat. Temperature yesterday:Highest. i*o decrees; lowest, ".'; average, S2*^.

Jiuyerx of The ¡rilnin" irAl m >fer n fnror hyrej)ur<iii<i toth>> fhuiwm Qfkt o/fsfipoper, 1"»1A«a«i»t. St.. errry «¦<"?<. of fn<lure uf a train boyor MfSsVskfsi io MSB Ihe Jiilmne oh salr.

1'crnuno <j<>hij "tit of toim. rttktr to BSBtStrrrr*orU or th'ir toiniirif lióme», en lore J'lifPaily ttnti Snn<1ay T'-lbv»r mailtd tu tlirm forBljMTmonth or Wt.liOftif thr<e moutlm.lfwSSlsWa i/i /'.motif '(in receive The Tribune

during thtir abnmoe for $9 per moutii or Sf\p».".o/t»r three BHrnfaa. foreign paifffS prenait!. Th«udflri-88 cut V (¡iongeft a/i often «s <U$iri<1.

Ihe Broñttnn man, o< iUt New~Jtnmu man,

awayfrom '.me. tan get hi* horn" n bbj f» Tit"'Iribu/u; »rerji tiny vf the work, no m-tller írherehein lu .injf,'/. " ortib tio<l. Naother .\ete- ïorkpapar pn'sBB fss BreaUpn and Sam-Jartau nrivt/ii ;/*¦ egnlar city and mall editions. Two )>tt\.crtU,r the MSenSB oj One.

-«.-

Brooklyn Ib on the point of Bpsiidlag three-(JUtlteTB of ¦ iiiülion la providing an BddlUonaleosjdnll to »'«rry inore water from 1/onx Islandto im-ei the demainlK ,,f ¡ts «pewlag population. To complete the M'ork roaitemplatcd Willrsqnlre fourteen BMMMIm; the supply «rill thenbe Increas»-<1 to r.Ti.ofsi.ooo BjalkmB dally, provlded !h:,i .piantliy of wiiter i«; found arguableuu the lshind. Inder a new law Brooklyn is«-stopped from raakbai fmther »reads on theKireams of Suffolk County, mu\ it is plain thaiit must soon be looking for an iddltlOUBl supply iu boom oilier direction

. ?

Superintendent Aldridge has taken pera innlriaaVfBjg <»f the Aldridge boom for tin- nomina-Qui for (ioveiin-, jind I» now in tba westernpart of tlitf State en leavorinjr |g drum np d»«U*-psaa. Buffalo was th« sen« of his getlrltriresterday, bul owiag to tba bilgn faror In whichCaatroUcT Boberta is held in his own connty it

is not beUered tbal Mr. AJdrMfe Bu/>cerded Inmflklag much beadvay. Ho win bars betterIncfi in Moftros County, and win i>o doubt gelJ ffoixl fiend .iff there wlieii the local eonvei-

tloiis are in Id. It tvii! h,- Interesting to boa

vbetber in the other camal ronnttea Mr, ai

driiiire's use i,i patroaitje v.in produro thseffeet deatfltOd

?

General Honice Porter i-, a keen and IhfaUl«pajM ohseiver lf(. has Jr.st returned from a

tour through the ri mini j ;:ii of i;.- Slate. Inthe cours.- of which he funde careful Inquiriesreicardin« sentiment gg th.- k:1v. r question. I1Urei»ori. which will ba found in another column,'s eiiconraKln,- ]¡v f,nm\ V(.rv frn, ,(,.,,.),.llcnns who have hBSSJ ciucht hv »!.. free silveraasjga, bast «sarnad of aaaay namoiiBia who n>tend io vote for McKIn)of men of prominence.uid lulluenc« who realise tust this lg g time

when Patriotin cMlaens should get together.What General Porter says will be read withInterest and satisfaction by all believers In hon¬est money and honest drilling.

The proceeding In which th« constitutionalityof tlio Rapid Transil gol Las bee« affirmed bylli«> Appellate Division is a totally diuVrent on«

from tlint In erbten it srsj mently beld thai theplans of the ('(»mmisslon..).* for undergroundroods slioiil.l not be carried lino «.íT*-«'t. Tbepoint Just deckled «as whether or not thebuilding of a railroad was a legltlmgte cityparpóse. Three of lbs .lodges declara lbg| it¡s. ¡mi two dissent, Tbe opinion <>f tbe ma¬

jority Is thai such an enterprise is as legitl-mate for the city to engage ;-i as (be construe*lion of erster »rorlis or th«« building of a bridge.The people nf Now-Vorl. have voted in favorof municipal construction of rapid transit roads,an«1, tiny will be glad la see tmi, enursc <»n-

firmed liy the courts. The ConilUlsSroncrsshould have no hesitation iuiw in gidngi for«ward with tbe plan to which ihey have latelyturned their attention.

SENSITIVE AND UNSEASONABLE.Really, this is eu Interesting political situa¬

tion! from /i perfectly disinterested paint ofslew or.'' of (be most Interesting, and we nightslniosi say amusing, ittnatlone thai ever taxedth.« Attention or piqued tbe curiosity gvf tbeAmerican people! litre is a great politicalparty holding so strongly to its traditions that¡; eras bardie a figure of speech to call it hide¬bound, ond describe it as "Bourbon," öfter pas*lag through, sol merely successive political de¬feats g| tbe polls, bul the tremendous disasterol failure in the field win n Its Issues were suh-

Itted lo the arbitrament of armo, and which,baring survived all. and having been restoredto full power In tin- Notion. suddenly jimls it¬self well, when« does il lind Itself. Nowhere.Iti record, Un prestí};«., its name and its or¬

ganization hive been stolen away, l-'or hun¬dreds of thousands of Demócrata there Is nowUO party h.nne. Since the Populist! seized nndcarried away all they had to held to and be¬lieve in they have been beating the air andseeking n place of r« rage' There Is none ex

oept in t'le Republican party, and tbey Ire loathto enter the Ilepabtlcnu party because- thoughthey are at one with it upon tbe issue of soundmono/, which, they say, is essential and all-Important they are at odds with it upon tbeeconomic question of the tariff, They wantto coiitrilnite lo the SIlCCCM of the only snunil-money candidat, in the Held, hut they cannotbear to think that that sonnd money candido**Is also an advocate of a Protective, tariff.The Republican party has thrown ils doors

wide open to them. ps newsjuipcrs and iis

representative men, Its leaders and its man¬

agers, bore offered them a most cordi.il wel¬come -not lo the party, which might-have givenoffence bul i.» the support of the only candi¬date for whom tbey could conscientiously vote.

The way has been diligently made smooth forthem. We may safely appeal t<> tbe record ofthe metropolitan Republican press for verifica-iimi of the Bsscrtlo!) thai with alweornte unanim¬ity the metropolitan press and. for that met¬ier, the Republican press of tbe whole Stateand tin* «-mire Boot -Conceded, what they hadnot before, that tbo action of the Chicago Con¬vention, by its open advocacy of free coinageas tbe leading issue of the campaign, bad set

tbe money question before oil others Whenthe Chicago Convention dismissed with a fewstereotyped phrases und perfunctory lines tin-whole subject of the tariff, which for years theDemocratic party bad made Its leading issue.and thrust Into the foreground a new financialdoctrine, Involving repudiation and Nationaldishonor, there was nothing l««ft for Repub¬licans but to recognise the fact of this aban¬donment by their opponents of the old Issueand accept cheerfully In all Its fulness ihe new.

Ail Republicana Republican newspapers andleaders and managers, and the Republican can-didates themselves, have been doing it. No-body bas been thrusting the tariff question tothe front, except certain Democrats like Mr.Whitney, and certain Democratic and Mug¬wump newspapers unnecessary to name, thatkeep Insisting not merely that the tariff ques¬tion must be kept in abeyance, but that Kc-

publlean newspapers and Republicano generallymust forswear their conscientious agonvlcttonaon The subject of the tariff In order to make ifpleasant for sound-money Democrats who ex¬

pect to vote for McKinley, not because tbeywant to, but because they cannot vote for any¬body else. Well, now, without taking the riskof "disturbing tbo mourners," may we notventuro to say that this is asking a trifle toomuch? We Republicana take the view thatbeyond th«1 negation of llie In to 1 free-coinageheresy something positive is needed in order toestablish tbe retenuee of tbe Government upona self-sustaining basis ns well 00 to promoteour Industries and enhance the general welfare.We an- v*ry much in earnest about it. We be¬lieve just aa much lu the necessity for a changoIn the tariff as we do in honest finance. Webelieve that the two nee«ls of the Governmentrun togetbet on all fours, and that a change inthe tariff is as important in maintaining thesolvency of tin- Nation ns the seseilion of thesound-money principle is in maintaining itsCredit and its honor. We are not saying so in

any manner that can be construed as offensiv««by the most sensitive Democrat. Hut we arc

h tiding to that view all the same, because we

believe in it. The queer feature '»f the situationis that some qucrhlctjs, but probably honest.I>enuK-rats are bnluied wl'h the notion that we

«hoiild abandon our distinctive do«trlnes Inorder that they may vote our ticket. Doubt¬less they mean well. But. after all. the Repub¬lican party is not so short of honey that itshould gleg op Its own hive because | wander¬ing swarm, that has iielieier hive aor home.desires to occupy it. i«et us i»e considerate m

this matter, but self-respeel and self-preserva¬tion «re nor to be entirely forgotten.

Tin: BAIDBBb FOUND QUILTT.Dr. Jameson and his fife comrades, the lend

era of tue Transvaal raid, bavo been convictedof tbe chargea made ogniosi them, and bavebeen sentenced to Imprisonment, Dr, Jamesonfor fifteen months, Major sir .lohn Wlllonghbyfor ten nuinihs, Ifojor the Ihm. H. White forseven asentas, and (Vdonel ihe Hon u p.While. Colonel Raleigh (.'ray ami Major theHon. <*. .1 Coventry for five months each. Theprisoners received lue sentences calmly, ««ven

rondly. They decided to make iu» appeal, andwill therefore enter upon their terms of ¡mpris-oiiiueiit at once, ll-ini labor was not Imposedupon them, so tiny will be treated ns first-classmlsdemennanta, They win have many com

forts and even luxuries iu prison, though it isdoubtful if they will be much lionized Whenthey emerge from theh odia Into tin« ai; offreedom, The English are pretty well tired oftie« whole huaineSO, aid nut a little ashamed ofit, and will be ¡'lui to have it pass into ot>Kcnrity. Tiii raiders were tli" popular Ilona..r th«- day when they wen- arraigned at RowStreet, four montba ago. 'i'<- 'lay the,, ore deadlions, .'ind tie re will scarcely be any recallingtin in to life.Thus enda «»ne of tin- roool noteworthy rages

of tills generation In ilie British Umpire. Alli ihe others concerned in tbo raid bavo been re

leased, while Mesera. Rhodes, Bell and Com-pany, tbe real loetigoton of lbs whole business,have not been, and In all probability never willbe, broiigh; to book. Dtspite all erltlctsmapassed upon It, the British <!ov««rninctit has, so

: far as the raiders themselves oro ooucarned.

noted probably lu good faith, and eertalnly Wcommendable promptness. Tin» ruid was |UCd on December gfi. Ol .luiuary 1 the wll

expedition all that was left of It was led li

a carefully prepared ninbush, surroundedoverwhelming forces of Roaro, and forcedsurrender. On .lannary 0 Dr. Jameson's demtl«)ii froit. office as Administrator In Mashoiland was announced, and three «lays laterwas tamed orer by tbo Poors 11 the Britauthorities to be dealt with OCCOrdlnf to lann February 28 lie and his comrades aim

ln London and were arraigue«! at Row S;ie

Tiny had eight hearing* there, the last bel

on .Tun«« IS, On July W they were put «>n trin the Court of Queen'a Pencb, and en Julywere convicted and aentenced. There is

reason to expect a pardon lor them, and tliwill probably serre oui their sentea^ee to i

end, by which time, in these hurly-burly da'

tbey and their escapade will belong to andehistory,The Boers ought to b- satisfied with this d

jM.sirion of the cas.- against ilnj.se men. C<

tOlnly the trial and its result have been Imore creditable lo Jusilce than the far-leal a

spoetaenlar peseseslinga at Pretorio, whan >

Hammond and bis eotleagoes were erntencto death and then pardoned with elaborate oi

prearranged ostentation. But there will remain i lie Transvaal a deep-seated feeling of dsatisfaction at tin- socapa <>f tbe principalsth«' crime. Something of that feeling exists

England als ». as well as it may. It is, imle«a mockery of Justice t«t line Hammond and li

prison Jameson and le' Rhodes go fr«'". !'.

pie will ash and with some reason ugly quiHong Ihey will wonder if he would have beallowed i" 00 free if In- liad been Ie>s wealtland less Influential in colon..'il píilltics. and th

will assuredly not be reconciled, any more thihitherto, to the manner in which the CharterCompany has acted, or has been manipulateThe British Government lias fione well, b« jroicriticism. In this one detail of the case. But tl

rest of the ease, »hi- major part, is still a hiupon the imperial record.

THE DEMOCRATIC STATE COMMITTEE.The failure of th" Democratic State Cot

mlttee yesterday to Indicate in any way ka i

liMi.le toward tli«' Chi 'ago nominees leaves tlrank and filo of the party as unsettled as tiewere before this much-herald d meeting, whwit WO! hoped would give light and leadingexpectant Democrat* But the only light tin

get is thai Semit.«r Hill nd tie' other lead"

consider ihe aitnatlon so delicate thai eonvlIlona must lu- held in abeyance until Beptoiber 10, when tin- sítate Convention will deeliwhether lo atipporl Bryan <n- a third ticket, <

to ignore the fact that there is lo be a Pre*dential election and leave Individual Democraito follow their own devices in.trouble*.Meanwhile Republicans may wait with p¡

tience on tli«' dii'lslon to in- made. Tliey w|realise the difficulties umler which tl"' aouui

money Democrois labor, and wili not be it«.lined to emharrutei their (onnaela by nrginleist.«. however much gctive and luimedlate «i

irj»erat!on max be needed t«» combat ¡in« freisilvi-r eraste. It is to be assumed licit all snvtm

money Democrats are alncerely désirons af Ih..lection of McKinley, no matter how litti

either McKinley or Republicanism agrees wittheir political tasie, well knowing that in hi

election Is the only safety Iron repudiation an

dishonor. The only question for them to em

abler is bow they as Demócrata may best brinab..ut the election of McKinley. Since tin«nsk that, in view of their devotion to BOUDmoney, the Republicana lay aside all otlie

Republican doetrineo and «-««ase to bo narttaanior to consider their nomlnci as a partisan eardldatO in 111«' sense of being devoted to partprinciples not believed iii by them, donbtles«tbey concede the complement of what tiny ooland plan their course with a view solely to tli

present emergency and without regard to thfuture of th.« Démocratie organization. Tbelobject is MeKinii'.v's «-lection, and their profc.em is how t«> bring it about. That is a dellcate question, on which there may well be

difference <»f opinion. Republican observerare divided on it, Just as are the Democrat!leaders who Ih'ht thft burden of the decisionWill a third ticket draw mure votes from Rrysithan from McKinley': Can its campaign be s,

conducted as to bond 00 to McKinley the vo-ti

of every Democrat whoso sonnd-nioiiev convieetions outweigh his party prejudice, while bolding the vote of every thick and thin Democrawho is dissatisfied with the wild declaration:of the Chicago Conventionr if »o, a thinticket is desirable in the Interest of patriotismBut If such a ticket la likely to leave the strieparty man with Bryan and become a st topingplace for independent sound-money men windo not happen to agree with McKinley on otheitópico, If it will in the sllgbtcal degree endonger MeKinley's election or even reduce hhpluralities and consequently the force of th«rebuke to tli,» Anarchist propaganda, then meonslileralion of future party interest BhoukInduce the nomination of sejiHrnte candidatesThe supreme Issuo is the preservation of tincountry's financial honor, and no organiza!i<upolicy should stand In the way.

it will be said that the state Committee walle«l on the issu«' of event« less from a «lr-slre tcdlseovtM- from them the best way to fight for n

principle, than from a «b-sire to discover wh.ilprincipes II may be expedient to support in Sei»tomber. But it is to be remembered that partji

j rnanagers have to consider practical politics iuwell as obstruct principles, and, If possible, t«

hold diverse elements In check until the timeis ripe for making them together effective Inone direction, The determination of many ofthe Tammany men to go ahead nt once andratify Bryan's nomination somewhat mars theeffect of this Btudted reticence of the organisa¬tion, but notwithstanding Bheeban'a and Purroy's action outside, their subordination in thecommittee was purchased by keeping Boundmoney sentiment 111 the bad, ground, ami thefuture is left to develop a party policy, andthen- I« nothing on record to trouble SenatorrI ill. whatev.i course he finally determines to

pursue. Meanwhile the aounoVmoney Demó¬crata have an Opportunity to wear out thesensitiveness ibol alliance with Republicanacauses them by doing active missionary workIn their own party ami making sound-moneysentiment in ii s;> strong that Senator Hill andthe organisation will at th.- proper time seethat good policy dictates support of an honestfinancial system.

BIMETALLISM DEFINED,Tlie llrst m.ssily In tills campaign, as re

¦>im-«-is tli«. money question, is t.» leach peoplesTbal bimetallism mentis, fieareely anybody«ho nees tin word seems to know. CandidateBryan does not, unless in« Is dishonest. He doesant often argue: men of his stripe find eaaerIiofl c.i»itr thai logic, and passion préférableto proof lint his labored speech in Conventioncontain! d on«' attempt at argument which hassince been repeated in many forma by thou¬sands of his supportera, and that derived Itsonly for.-.« from a use of the word bimetallismwhich is cither dishonest or Ignorant. Mr. Un¬an said: "ir they lell us that the gold standard"is a good thing, we polttl to their platform and"t«-ii them tUnt their platform pledged the partylo ga| rid of a gold standard and substitute

"bimetallism. If the gold standard is a good"tiling, why try to get rid of li/'

Tli«« statement is wholly rrixmeotta TheRepublican party is not pledged to "get rid <»fa gold stiindanl nnd substitute bimetallism."Its platform declares; "We are therefore op-"posed to the free coinage of olivar except by

"International agreement with the leading ua-

"tloiis of the world, which we pledge ourselves"to panaOta, and until Biieh agreement can 1m».

''ohtalnrd tha existing gold Htawlard must ho

"preserved." Free coinage without Interna¬

tional ggreement would not ba bimetallism, botsilver monometallism, and therefore Is opposed.With international agreement, tho landingcommercial nations of tho world uiiqucBtlou-ably have nosref to fix a ratio at whlcli silver

can be coined and nial'ilaincd at parity with

gold, so thai tba gold standard of value couldthen be maintained.

Bimetallism« Is something thai It is not pos-alble for any one nation to establish Of main¬

tain. It nu-ans not the mere concurrent coin«Bgn Of two mótala, as one blgh otllcial statement

lias raceati] asserted, but tlie nmiuteiiaiice of

the two metsla in contlnned use. It means not

abandonment of tbe »jotd standard of values,

as Bryan Ignorantly or dishonestly says, but

tin« absolute gtalntenance of the gold standard,sliver etteulatiug side by Hide with gold, and

baring the same bnying posrer. If that cannotbe attained, bimetallism cannot be attained.If Is'argued by silver men that flic buyingjwnver of gold must continually lúcrense, If thatmetal alone Is used If so, the gold Btandardof value can be maintained only by checkingthat changa in value, it is argued by thecathat the additional use of silver, giving a

broader metallic basis, will check such a changeIn value, and so mainiiln the gold standardwithout the contlnned appréciation of gold. I>thai iu> true. International bimetallism wouldmore truly and perfectly maintain the goldBtandard, Rut In any event bimetallism Is

utterly Impossible without International agree¬ment.The reason Is obvious, and tba proof ein-

bracea the arbole monetary history of this amiother nations. No one nation can tl x a ratio If

any other choosca to draw away Its gold bypaying a little higher relative price for gold, or

Its silver by paying a relatively higher pricefor silver. Until 1834 this country liad only one

standard, and that silver, because the differ

aura between tie- American and Europeanratio sent our gold to Europe. Tha act of .lune

28, 1834, reduced, tin gold coinage fiinn 'Jl%| grains to gg.2 grains pure -old DO the dollar,and that gave tba country only one standard

namely, gold because silver was then worth

relatively more in oilier countries, nnd was sent

thither, The French ratio, i.v.j to 1, made everyounce of silver worth one thirty-second, or

al»out o per cent, more than the American ratio,

111 to 1. Since lM.'1-l we bare liad only one metal

circulating fr« ely as money, the silver In use

belli',' merely subsidiary-that Is, only a repre¬sentative of gold, just as the paper promise to

pay Ii a representative of gold. Because bi¬metallism ¡s simply Impossible without inter¬national agreement, so that other commercialnation« shall not take «way from circulationone metal or the other bj paying relatively more

for it. Mr. Bryan's sole attempt at argumentr» sts upon a glaring untruth.

I /'s' AND DOWNS OF ANARCBT.Anarchy gol a setback In London on Monday.

I.ed by the not,nions Kdr Hardie, a gang ofpotential dynamiters tried to iret control of theInternational Socialist Trad" Congress, bur

failed. They made their attempt, in accordanoe with their creed, by physical force, and

were beaten back by physical force ihe forceof sturdy British list and bleeps, The Bccne

was one of disgraceful dborder, and provokedfrom a spectator, himself a member of the Con¬gress ami «n advance i Radical, the despairingcry "And these are the people who wain to

govern the world!"Far different was the scene at Chicago, scarce¬

ly three weeks before. There the AnarehistH,led by t ht» notorious Altgeld, tried to get con¬

trol of the so called Democratic National Con¬vention, and succeeded, They did not bgveto use physical force. Tho Convention sur

rendered to them without g blow, ,«>nd at their

bidding adopted, by an overwhelming majority.thla abominable resolution:"We denounce Hrultrnry interference liv

l'cdcrnl ii hi horitlea In Inenl nlTitlra na n vlo-

Intion of I lie i iiiiNliiulliiii of the I lilted«I» tea und n crime lignina! free Institution«,nuil - <. e<,|i, ein 11 > ol»|eet tt> ar<> » c re mer t l>»

Injunction na . ncv. »nil liikI» 1 ' tlaniternt!*fnrnt of »iHircaalon '»>' »»Mel, 1<V<lern! Indue»,In i un Ieni|ii uf tl»'.» Inn* of the Stale« and

rlulili of t-ltlsena, heenme nt «nee learla-Intora, I mint-» uiul rxccuttnncra: it nil «vc ap-

pr«»« th- Mil ftuaaeil til the litat aeaalnn oftlie I ulle.l SinteH B«)«1«H. ¡i ml no» pe ml 1 im In

the Hi unof H'.p:'<-aeiitiill ves relative Io run-

tempt*, in IVili-iul ciMiil.1, nuil p.-nvidluK for

trióla h.« Jury In eerlitln en sea «if contempt."

And William I. I.rynn, candidate for the

Presidency »t tba United states, says ip« fullyapproves ami is in entire accord with that nt-

terance! In the words of Benjamin Ptckard,president of the Minen' Federation of OroalBritain, '"These are the peopla who want \agovern the world!"

LIFE INSURANCE IX DANQEB.There is, on the whole, no more admirable

feature of modern economics than Ufa Insur¬ance. It la a system well designed to encour¬

age thrift. In nil its forms it affords to the

dependent members of families protectionBgalnsl disaster, and In some of its most popular forms It adds a profitable scheme of in¬vestment for the benefit of old age. While It Is

practised by the rich, It Is proportional ely with¬in the reach of tbe poor. The humblest wage

earner can, by laying aside g few dollars each

year, make sure at once that a snug legacywill come to his family In ease of his death, or

lhal he himself will enjoy a handsotn« ac¬

cumulation of savings and profits if be livesto a certain Sge. In thla way every year thousands of stricken familles are cheered and suc¬

cored, ami thousands of men, happily surviv¬

ing the prescribed term, are rewarded with the

proceeds of years of saving at the very time

Whan stieb na I >/.at ion la of most value to them.Put to the test of popular experience ami

Judgment, the system baa indeed received the

highest possible approval. lièrent statisticsshow that there are now In force In the United.states no less than 10,407370 policies, repre¬senting f0,0B>l,497,447, which stupendous sum

is being paid to tba beneficiaries of t lu* policiesat the rate of more than 1160,000,000 a year.a certain proportion of this insurance is in fra-lernal orders, of which we have already spoken,and aV*amallr4pihars is in so-called assessment

companies. Hut In ths "regular" life Insurance

companies. Including ths "old line" and "Indus¬trial," there are (»¿00,700 policies In force,representing 13,708,434,779 of insurance. Insome cases, of course, several policies are held

by one man, and aoma «re held by rich men

whose heirs might not be seriously embarrassedby the loss of them. Hut It is safe !.. reckonthat these polines are in Id by the heads ofat least OtOOOrQOO families, and that In the greatmajority of eases tlit» policies represent ihebulk Of the savings of the families, the bulk ofwhat the breadwinners expect to leave to

those dependent upon themTo say to titeas polley-bolderB thai their In«

vestments and the legacies they expect to leaveto their famlllefl are in danger Is no reckless

alarm, it is sober and serious truth Thedanger Is exactly as great as is the ponalhllltjof the election of Mr. llrviiti to the Presidencyund ihe enactment of the Chicago platform Intolaw. I.e| there lie no in lr-1 :: kt« about it. and im

delusion The free coinage of silver ut 10 to

1 would mean Ihe Instant reduction of everyone of those b\000,70Q policies to about half its

present value. The man a ho hud been payingIn so many hundred cent dollars a year, to se¬

cure to big family LOW buudrod cent dolían

at his death, would discover that they were

now entitled to only 1,000 fifty-threecent dol¬lars. The man who had been reckoning on

realizing *.1'U*>0 at tin« end of his tontine

period w«»uld find that he was to get onlyS.">,.':00. That is why life Insurance Is In dan¬

ger, In si'i-iou* «langer from the organize«! at¬

tack of the Uepudlatlon NejgUQ led by Bryanand Newall-Watson.There are &QO0,fJX) "regular" life Insurance

uollcy-holder* In the United States. How lire

they g'»iiij{ to vote on this question? They are

paying their premiums in bondredcont dol¬lars. Do they want their principal pah! Inhundred-cent or In fifty-three-cent dollars? Do

they want their heirs to receive ths full amoi nts

of their policies, or only fifty-three cents on thedollar? They have, themselves, rotes enoughto decide the question. If they VOte for He-,Kinley and BOSMBBt money, tliey voté for iny-ment of their pollclea on the same basis as

that on which they are paying their premiums,one hundred cents on tlie dollar. If they votefor Bryan und liât money, they vote for pay¬ment of their policies if at oil on the basisof fifty three cents on the dollar. Is It eon-

celvabie that they will vote for this, for therepudiation of debts honestly due to them¬selves, ami for the impoverishment of theirwives uiul children!

Du Mr. Bryan muau what he said when hesaid that if Bewail was not nominated at St.

Louis he wished to have his name withdrawn?If he ili«l mean It, how can he- hesitate about

refusing Hie nomination thrust upon him? If

he «lid not mean It, what did he mean?

The bare cost of the labor an»! material In de¬

pressing the railroad tracks in Atlantle-aw-,Brooklyn, Is astlsaated at 94000,000, ani ia ad¬dition provision must be made for engineeringexpenses, the <>ost of changes In sowers, water

mains, etc., Whtob will bring up the total to an

enormous flgur««. Nevertheless, the surface trackswhl^h divide Hrooklyn into two parts and are a

constant hienaee to human life Ought i > be pitrid of, Tt is amazing that after Broofclya oui'»

abolished »team on the surface of Atla».:ic-ave. it

ever permitted a railroad to be operated there

again. The important thine: now, however, is to

aee that it is got rid of again, and permanentlythis time.

-.*,-

Senator PsttlgVOW has resigned from the Re.

publican Congressional Committee. As he is no

l««nger a Republican, there was no other course

for him to pursue.

Nobody ever heard of Bartholomew Valette, of

Rhode Island, till now, hut ns he has just shakenhis fist under the nose of the chairman of the

Populist Convention and trampled on Mrs

Loose's slitrts, he is lifted into National Impor¬tance, and will probably take a high place in thecouncils of the new party. It took more than a

corporal's guard la drag him, bowling and eurs-

ing, away from the platform, when he pet oui to

play a atar engagement, with Mrs. Lease as lead-

Ing ladv and the chairman and eeereteriea andother officials as supernumeraries. Por ao emaila state Rhode Island haa turned <>ut an uncom¬monly large and robust deli gate, and. consider¬ing the thoroughness of his dramatic methods,the Kansas lady may congratulate herself that

she came through the ordeal wi;ii auaVtent rai-

m.-nt to preserve order m th< meeting, As T"

the threatened chairman, he la lucky t<. get offwith an unfractured head on his shoulders. It

would have been a go d Idea to have turne«!

ftartholomew Valette and the Texas Cyclone111« a ten-acre loi togcth -r end gathered up the

fragments after the adjournment,

How Bryan must rejoice In the thought of

having as a running mute a man who has said

such pleasant things of htm as 'Tom" Watsonhas said.

On the new one-d"llar hill It has been discov¬

ered tha» the word tranquillity is spelled with

one "1." T«i misspell a word is not <-ne of the

mortal aine, but it is hardly .he thine; for the

Treasury Department to engage in th<- spelling-I reform business In this way. Conformity to the

accepted usages in the matter of spelling is to

be looked f«>r In public documenta and papers of

alt kinds.

According to reports from Germany, the Com¬missioners of Immigration and quarantine physi¬cians of this cmiTitry should h<? sspselally vigi¬lant In the examination of Russians who come to

the United States. The famous Berlin physician.Professor von Bergmann, who was recently eon-

Btjlted liy thS ofllelals of the Herman Health De¬

partment, declarea that large numbers of the

Bosnians who enter Germany with the latenttonof proceeding to America are sffilctsd with lep¬rosy. The increase of the loathsome malady in

the west.rn provinces of Russia has become eo

alarming that the Oermaa Government has or¬

dered the immediate establishment of lazarettos

at various points along the Russian frontier.

Leprosy Is a diseise that cannot be trifled with.

and every effort should be made to prevent Itsgetting a foothold in this country.

-a,-

The Appellate Division of the Supreme Courttalks common-sense on the subject of rapidtrenslt. Its decision should inspirit the mem¬

bers of the Commission, ami spur them t<» putforth every effort to supply what the city so

greatly needs.,-a,-

Mr. Bryan's oratory possessed the preliminaryiridescence and soaring power of a BOBP-bubble,but time has prk'ked it, showing a watery basisand a capability of collapse equalling that of a

f'hines«» lantern or an opera hat. He will gothe studied In after time with those roaring old

olasslc hiad.ii who shook the Arsenal and ful¬minad over Qrosos, nor with Cicero and H«>r-

teiisius. lo say nothing Of Chatham and DanielWehster and Colonel InsjereolL He is a nimble*.omm-M young aspirant, whose sleep haa been

disturbed by the trophies of Mtltlades, and to

whom the sedative of defeat will be as hopaor popples. He Is abo il as fit to be Presidentas to be Ponttfoa Maxlmus, or the High Priest of

ApOllO, and his chances for one or the other are

happily about equal.

The fact that the death rate in many of therear tenement-houses of the city is so far abovethe average is a convincing argument In favorof doing away with a "lass of dwelllrga that are

dangerous to their occupants in all inspecta.

It is singular how the Democrats of the BayState refuse to persecute George Kr«'d WllllsmaWhen he became a silver-bug he distinctly : tstedthat h" Invited persecution, expect ¦«! persecutionand. in short, arooM not >>«* happy til he got

persecution, and sow his name dropped from tlu

visiting lists of the eilte In De.llmni. Yet there

are those who persist in orgar.Utng meetings in

his honor In Faneull Ilnll, knowing how re¬

pugnant such demonstrations are to his restinga,and only yesterday a number ««f bteonstdeeatepersona organized a "Hrynn-Sewall-WllllamsClub," and announced their determination torun George Fred for something, probably for

OovernOf <>f Massachusetts. The unkiinb-.t

feature of tru* whole brutal performance was

that they did It In Geori;. Pved'a own otile., andthe chances are that they witnessed his agony

and heard his lamentations while it was going..n. Poet «¡eorge Fred I Will nobody OSad ins

>earning for martyrdom''

The pulleemaii's lot Is proverbially not a hap|.yone, especially when a body like the Lesow c«>ui-

nilttea Is on the warpath, but tt has It« alb-vial-

Im; features. In lMnlntl.-ld, N. J.. for Instance,

the members Of the night pottos patrol force are

receiving i free lunch «it midnight, .m appropria'Ron Of «*1MK» having been made for UsS purpose.

Home uf the taxpayers are Indignant, and de¬

clare that the police are better treated in Blsin-

ûeld than In any other city lu the country. Cloth-

Ing Is furnished to then at the public-~and bicycles ar- provided; the «upplyin, ¿lunches also Is declared to I,,, too much of AgrZthing The police of the town ar« not BSBUS»a»ZIn«; but oukM not the authorities to consider th.possibl- sffsctsjf ,hHr libera,,,,- on thl.

-

other plaosal 0|

The State'«, ahare nMh77,rls. moneys . t,be mon.- than SI..««,, us,. The rev,nue.,,'Outing quality of the Itainen law ,. not oPen't0question. Mut what about It« gfset m el ,rinrEuloons und Olsalnlablnj the- drlr.klny habit'

PEBftONAL.

Matthew Í.. P.rett. who died the other Urn .a

ITssklagtssj, Inri. wsa Btsl« Treasure! ,,t u, kn7during the war. II.- r*fu«< I -. turn <>v»r Ih« .S.'t«PurSs m <;. ernor Morton to i, »jaad f ,r mui». .¦-. nrhsrotipon i ... <;..v. rnor .. .. ... ',;.holdln* litrnaelf re«.il ih for uno|S loyal Lsgtslsturs should appropriât! - :< '

"Hie London Atar" «sir« "One of tai mor n.tertillng Americans ¦*. :-i I. BOOS Ifl Fudge An.STOWS, wro I* a BIMSt St IB« H »tel H- .atbi« rtgur«! m the lega] HfM n' Xew-Tork, a', |gjwork in eoasscttss with tas Buprem« C ;rt .,: ,at.-'. i--- 'il- irUB ths ,;n',.-;.:iK list'.ncl ,f r#e ring lee« comment ar the Bands of IrrTtiaju

Caricaturists than that t alino.t 4m ....

iurlsl .n ths L'nlte .-. it« Th m .'....: -,luî^n Arwlrews was »H! rn*ini; But, ai a rr <o».of fact, American caricaturists, whether Irreverentor othei ¦ »... are nut !r. th< 1..,'. ¦.; .,-> . ;r)n;Ju'lKe^. Posa'bly, however "T !i r is li mi3the ni!-« rn. T.iremarv n.i>» "judges," who - r,r t0.ties was ant irely i.t-h'n i ras has ."W;ih.n th.- paar there have de I Rl «fSSSBeSSJi

Bstta f ur o.:-«: Hem ara aast one Qsvnrnor, ssaSsBjas-Governor Alexander >í Rice, lull bj '««'.ex-Oovernor OÍ:ver Asnea, ¡!,,| o .

Qovcrnor fie rge I» It,.,, - .r. Peornan ¦..."Governor Frederick 'I ;.¦. r -. M«.reh I &Lai: ! SS«aSTSI U'''.,rn K. Russell, July ;. !«xA OOmspondSBt l'\ :i< in Peking, China, S/rttan

"The Kniper ..-'« resl .t ci-r died 1..»' Vr.\.^, af-eran lure-,h if BSVtrsI Breaks if h:s alo;,"'! »jatbSBthe Rmpress iJosaser, wife ..:' tl Boa T>insCh.h. had d >¦ 1. the Who!« nation would Be inm.iiirnlrs. and th» unpleasant *ui r of unstuv».hen Is ¦¦¦ ml be unlversil Ai li i.. th. wowlmwho ha« given birth to an Rmperor will (,. jr.t< rre.j with only the ceremonies lue lo rh- wi'a ofa prince, .nd «HII bo snmourned b. the nation."Ah mi i.vxi hfis iff.', noter be i to IBs fus l for the

erect ion of a memorial t> Thomaa liutrhe» .,Icng-by.

' «"

"The London ChroaK»I«rH ears: "Miss r^roth«,Klumpke, the «rell-kni es sato r ,n-..-r, has tassa tn-V.-..1 ». a company th^ Hr.tish expasltlos whiofcpro.-eejs Bhorttjr 10 N r.\.iv -...,. ,ht^.llr'«e Of the sun. s/hleh - ikes pi ¡«« a

M n Klumpk aîi. |i , ¦... ,v#l thirty o-mojage, Ib a sties of California, Bot nrrled oñ th«l.r.a- t 1,000 frasea .>(( .. \ by th« Par!« ". ierva>: v.- for .i tr .. te on cometa wren »he was hardh»out of her teens." '

THF TALK OF Till: MF".

A. .T. linier, n «reetltky merehsnt of BTankforlTml. haa oSJered to give Bata | u, :,i.. n;... «ri g wjjrestera Ms sight, lost three rears sgs By a i-trokaof paralysis.

¦\\'¡lllníí to Oblige."Popper," :.-'. \ the vom.woman, "whj la It tn.t you have never .¡on"snythlng ts ínak" you famoi."Never thousht of I:." sal man "What

had I bet i i ket nr take »e» en t.ut-.I.-.* i,( patent medl m'."' (Indli fournsLMrs Elisabeth geward Is tie pn .i i;i.

itor nf "The Otlllsrster (Minn.) at« isenger." 8h«¡a also a billposter, ..¡.il Is ssld to U IBs <-*.lywoman In the roiuury who follows t.ist I IDS»Mon.

Knildv.Hello, arot Iiaek flora the tn "¡ntanutThey tell me you stopped <»t the Uttl« Hotul Wa«it homaltbe IheraT"Vas; that is why l left it. HaMes ssuaillng frora

morning 'ill nij;iit, »nd not s room in th« housawhere a f.-llow eould have rest or quier I, --^nTranscript.

The "Politische Caere*000*3000*' !earnc fr^m StPetersburg that th« transportation of esnvlcts to¦Iberis is shout tn be broughl is ss sadL QansraJDuchovski, the Oovarnor-tleiiarul of aMt»arts haaui,-». In hiera guarters the seessaratlojí of tht«ne a- ire, ami it I* sspeetad that ¡¡n Imperial ordtrto this effect will be Issued shortly.

DKSKRTIOJV.Under the trees where the branchas a-qwlverMurmur a melody lender and low,

Where the butterflies sport with lbs suabssms thatshiver

And shift o'er the waters that babble and flow-Alt, lu re iire rl« light» that our worJs cannot

measure;'TU tranquil from morn till the set of the «un,

For here -crowning bliss Is a region of pleasure-.There comes not a murmur of "li to I."

The phraso haunts the throng like a menacingspectra

To cast o'er the soul a deep shadow of care;Insidious It lurks, like s patient collector,To claim of your time aid sttentlon a shara

Su h.-re's for the won.!. wli«ri< In leafv sclualonWe miss the reproaches of duty urn: -, .

Ami ungallently hid« from the doubt and confusloaWhich rags hi this battle o'er "Is to .

"

.tWushtiigtoa Star.

Two churches in London that have been openevery day In the week, so that peuple n.iR-hi gsto rest and pray, havo found, to their cost, that

many went In to prey in another «ansa onu-

ments were stolen, and as the authorities couldnot afford to provide a regular attendant, theyfound It-fSBMsaary to do=,> the shur

Hardened.."If any man called mo a thief Ishould resent it nt oi"My dear young saun you will be wls*r whea

you grow older. 1 ave been called robbereleven hundred and ninety-two times t one Af¬ternoon, and never paid the ills .t' Bl at: '..uoa toit.""Are you a hlghwsytnsn, sir"No, fir, 1 am an umpin (t'lev< i. -1 Pads

Deal« r.

The Kven-tt N'on-Pa'tis in 0 IdBtS ..-! Leaguehas been orgnnlssd i Uli S of \\ '..nington.and already I as a IsrSj« ne ne ship fi both ofths »great political parties r r.ilvei '. nam«

from the fact that H »ss oi inlsed - E»*r<e.t,

BneaUMsish County, where th« ftepubitraa 8;at«

Convention mat on May 14, and sdopud a «tror.gresolution In favor of the gold BtaUSdsi .

Horssless. Advsnring then from the i ,»i«ot.th!Qreeks, 1'Iys.es engaged the Bslssguei I rrojaasIn parlay, . ..,,-*

"lleiio, there," be ailed, in n loud ca "«

are thinking .if prSCtUlnS a decepll OS 70S.No, no, not thst, somethlnn nen ar.«i ip-to-aai»A horsoless deception, v..- Would pr> grssoda motor or a Storage latt. i > V" A >¦ rott iría«

une.

The Hrltlah Navy Usasjus has decided arganUBJa general celebration of Trafalgar I'. '. tJetSSSgCl. and to enmmemorate the a' alven ry of li.S

death of Nelson througho'.it the empire Comm ins»

cations m-e i.einiî sent to the Mayors of sD tan

principal town* la ths United Klngdotn «rttB the

view of enlisting local support to the movement.

Latten are also BStBg writ! -n 10 tlM >' rOTS sf tBS

chief towns In Caaada, Australia, ai the I »I*»»

inviting them to «hare in tho OSlsBrStV H of Trafal¬

gar Ihiy. I

A BL Pow.ll. writing to a promit«- nt ^f**¡¡Sman In this city, from Devil's Lake, N 1». «>»r

"^nswertns your Inaulry. hforth Dsdtots,JêMcide.ih on the side of law and on er ««"«ansrehi or Popullstlo oi communl.il»- idea» ¦ *¿the silver question doss noi seem ¡i ",ke ?^.hold here In our State At the Repnl»llcss mawConvention, held in Orund oik« >; »V'V .r 'tvote on 'ho I'm.,mini platform Btood M lo farsrmsilver, e*l SSSlnSt." (Tiny TtSBSS

The sntl-clgaratts lew of lews, whaeh t'nitedstates Clrcull Judge Waltee BSiBtsra ha* pan '"

unconatttuttonal, weal lt.toefT.--i Isst «?BaO*

sry. it prohlMtad sssohitol« ths Bsaasfaetsrs "

aaie of -i: srattes m lbs gtau or tie H impstts^BBiinto the Slate. A man SSSBSd McQr«fer, ei CSSSf

Rsptds was put on trial mr rtvisttns 'be law Mai

lawyer quoted ths áseteles of ths ******* l '"*

Sf the fnlted Staien in the famo i. i.r.-t.tl.ltloocasa that wsnl sp from th. » .m. go hi ¦-",t,° >,'H^,

.age altar lbs prehlblUon la« was M^*-L"!f!,Thai dastslsn srss le ths sfwet ihst. lbs t«-,iira.t

CoasUtuilen having deleaatsd ts 0«MflW* "*

power to resnUats ssssmsrsa Bstwe s lbs *****

gtstes, ths lamsiat...o had ss Dover to pro^i.uthe tmportatlnii Of li'iuorst Into lbs i'''¦''"' !; '

saie m the srlgtsal paasaga- B| Ike I^J»Ittakja ataahern followed the d-\-¦ ¦» «« tas »».

preme i'otirt and grSBtH lbs Strit

Cha the farm of Anms M ÇotMns '^fJf^JS}ohln. dwells in undisturbed blls« » '\[i'uJi,l,,it*aa orted famll) presided o er b) - »¦.' ir», \0 éC.t. Several Wefts SS0 sbbvB^*%*£Jput,- of hsalthr BUtana «d»<». " ; . t0 fttevents, gras space v, ". ' ,' ,.,,..lo. m aabout Hey went on a fo aging »i .,Kr mwnod near By, aoeompan i \ .' ri(V ¦*.*>>their peregrination ihoy .'. -« ^; \- AeegW«l'B neat In which two you k a»! ¦.'; »'»JJ7 U|l(1 ,hryThe curioain vf ""' Rs"T2! w,'"ir'r.i- Tbetr over-

made friends With th« -,".,',.,, ,,..,l whileures were received n »!.. iam« >\'ir"]' kl,ten«

HUirrels Hre im»» ..»«'.. .¦----. ,nl, rcil *>i >¦«

nd ths cat watehas «;v" ''í« gwn sa^prlug»doptloit us carefully aa «*«r u« v"u

(Cincinnati Enquirer.