Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 August 1896 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS

JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2G, 1896.

Bearly all of the States will be represented at Indianapolis, but ridicules a convention whose debates are selected by a mere handful of voters at primaries. Mr. Richardson, having: served In Congress with W. I). Hynum for a numtr of year?, la not an ardent admirer of that politician and savs he stands no chance of being tttj nominee of the Indianapolis convention. He believe that Hragg and Buekner will rx the nominee?. They are the logical candidates, he say?, inasmuch as Carlisle and Campbell are not disposed to accept the nomination. He regards General l'almer as a possibility. Mr. Richardson says: "Senator Hill will take the stump for liryan and Swall. and will soon reiterate his famous declaration that ho Is a Democrat. If Hill had gone back on his Elmlra speech he might have been nominated .it Chicago instead of Bryan. The ovation accorded Hill almost equaled that given Bryan, although J fill was In a hopeless minority, and advocated gold money In a silver convention. I was presiding atthat time, and had the neatest difficulty In preserving order after the convention had cheered Hill for ten minutes. I had had some experience as chairman of political meetings, and by a little strategy order was restored. I whispered to Hill that I would pound vigorously with my gavel, and that when the. nol?e had partially subsided the New York Senator was to "sail in" with his speech. Our scheme worked, and Hill was allowed to proceed. If Air. Hill supports Bryan enthusiastically, as I believe he will, he Is likely to be the Democratic nominee In lDoO."

STATC TICKIiT NAMED. J C. Dlack Ifomlnateil for Governor by Illinois Gold Men. CHICAGO, Aug. 2S. The gold-standard 1 Democrats this afternoon, nominated the following State ticket: For Governor, John C Black; Lieutenant Governor. Chester A. B-abcock; Secretary of State, Charles S. Wiley; Auditor, F. E. W. Bruck; Treasurer. Edward Rldgely; Attorney general, William F". Forman; trustees of Stato University, fl. H. Buzy. C. E. Babcock and August fflehaus. Tho convention was bitterly against Governor Altgeld and the Chicago platform, and It had no hesitancy in declaring its . position. The platform omitted any reference to Governor Altgeld, although Monday night It was the intention to allude to him In terms more or less pointed. He was denounced by many of the speakers, Lowever, and President Cleveland's name waa cheered every time it was mentioned. The platform had but little to say regarding silver, but was uncompromising in Its declaration for the gold standard. It demanded "the retirement of the United States government from the banking business and gradual redemption and cancellation of the United States and treasury notes." The Republican convention at St. Louis was denounced as being In the control of 'inttigulng attorney of favorite Interests" and tha Chicago convention was declared to have been dominated by "agitators, sectional ists and demagogues." The "shameful demand for the uebased dollar" of the latter convention was denounced unsparingly. One plank of the platform 1 nulled President Cleveland and another declared uncompromisingly in favor of the constitutional lndependerce of the United States Supreme Court. The platform was culopted unanimously and all the nominations were made by acclamation, there bring no contest In any instance. The convention selected delegates to the Indiana plls convention and chose national electors .! large as well. Many Democrats, prominent In State and national politics, were present. Senator Palmer was heartily cheered as he entered the hall. John I. Hopkins, ex-Mayor of Chicago, and Benjamin T. Cable, ex-na-tlonal Democratic committeeman, occupied eats, as did Henry ltaab. Superintendent of Public Instruction during tho tlrst two years of Governor Altseld's administration. After the convention was called to order by Chairman Kwing Itev. V. li. Hamilton, f Calvary Church, offered prayer. Chairman Ewing addressed the convention and set forth the events which led up to the calling of the convention. The speaker alluded to the unseating of the Michigan gold delegates in the nation.il convention, characterizing it as "fraud and open robbery." Referring to the nominees of that convention, he said: "They ask us to accept them as representatives of the Democratic party. Yet they have heaind disgrace upon the party and have despised and abandoned the teachings of its founders." His references to Cleveland were received with wild enthusiasm, surprising even to, the close friends of the President. The names of John M. Palmer. Henry '' "Watterson and John G. Carlisle were also loudly cheered, while Teller, 'lillman and Altgeld were bitterly hissed. At the conclusion of Mr. Ewing's address Lloyd Hamilton, of Sprlnglield. was Introduced as temporary chairman. He spoke in part as follows: "We assemble here as democrats who are opposed to the free and unlimited coinage of silver and gold at any ratio, and particularly at the dishonest ratio of 16 to 1. We demand that every dollar, whether metallic or paper, shall be kept at the full value of luO cents. We understand this to be pure and sound Democracy. Wo are not bolters; we are the Democratic party. We stand by the faith of our fathers and against the waves of Populism, socialism and anarchy which beat against our ranks. Under the mad and frantic cry of free silver the odds and ends of political lunacy have banded themselves together to bring ruin and disaster upon our country. We now witness the humiliating spectacle of a large section of the triumphant Democracy of 1S32 at the feet of those chinch bugs of modern politics, called Populists. The polIcy of these aliens in political sin is rule or ruin, 16 to 1 or riot. If. this 16-to-l platform is to be adopted by the people and receive the sanction of law, then there is one addition which should be made to it. Provision should be made to build a penitentiary on everv section of land in the United States. The evil effects of this scheme of repudiation will fill them all within the next ten years." When Chairman Hamilton had finished his address the business of the convention was taken up. DAY STATE GOLD MEN. They Listen to Speech?, Adopt n Platform and Cboone Delegate. BOSTON, Aug. 23. The convention of gold-standard Democrats of Massachusetts to adopt a platform and elect delegates to the Indianapolis convention, was called to order by ex-Mayor Frederick O. Phlnney. lion. J. Russell Reed was made temporary chairman. Committees were appointed' to resolutions and on names of delegates to the Indianapolis convention and, pending tho report of these committees, Charles S. Hamlin, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, was introduced amid a tumult of applause. He said In part: "We gather together here to-day to preserve the prosperity of our people and the financial Integrity of the people. Our old ship of state ha got into the hands of a new crew and . . captain who Is rapidly running It on the rocks of destruction. We have seen delegates elected by the State to our national convention removed in order that their seats might be filled by those who would not vote for a certain man and so that they could have the two-thJrds vote to elect a man who told them truly that he was not a Democrat." Continuing. Mr. Hamlin paid a high eulogy to President Cleveland's. administration and his words were warmly applauded. Referring to the issues of the hour the speaker said: "We have conditions that must be changed, but the free coinage of silver will not put more money Into the treasury of the United States. We must tax the people if we want to get more money and Congress must appropriate such sums as will benefit our treasury. Our free-silver friends say legislative acts can make a 43-cent dollar worth 100 cent3. If that Is so I would ask them why they are aatlsfied to call for a lU-to-l ratio? Why not make an ounce of silver equal to an ounce of gold? The free-silver men have pictured a dire condition of distress throughout the country, but, my friends, these sliver agitators are. to be blamed for this picture by their agitation. The picture which they show to us is not true, but whatever distress there exists you may rest assured that a return of prosperity will come when this silver agitation has ceased. This is a time of public peril. We must nominate men who will stand by true Democracy ami our duty is plain. Let us attest ourselves to the true Democratic principles. The platform at Chicago has been repudiated by thousancs in every State In the country and now it is time for the workingm?n. the bankers, the merchants and the manufacturers to work together for legislation which will render inviolate forever the honor of our country." When the speaker had finished he was given a tremendous ovation. Fred O. Prince was elected permanent chairman with Hon. T. J. Gargan vice president. Ex-Congresman William Everett made a short speech, after which Col. John IL Fellows, of New York, delivered a brilllunt address, in which he attacked the Chicago convention and its platform vigorous !y. The resolutions repudiate the action of the Chicago convention ; and indorse the platform adopted by the State Democratic convention held on April 21 last. Opposition li declared to the, free, unlimited and

independent coinage of sliver at the ratio of 16 to 1: to the Supreme Court pljink of the Chicago convention, and confidence and pride in the Cleveland administration is reaffirmed. Delegates and alternates were then selected and the convention cdjourn:d. THE "JEFFEKSOMAX PARTY.

Xarue Chosen hy the Gold Democrat of Pcnnnylvnnln. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 2C.-The goldstandard Democrats of Pennsylvania met In convention In this city to-day, nominated presidential electors and delegates to the national convention to bo held In Indianapolis on Sept. 2, and adopted a vigorous platform responsive to their views on the money question and denouncing In unmeasured terms the ncmlnees chosen and the principles declared at Chicago. With this convention a new State party came into existence, to be known henceforth as the "Jeft'ersonian party." Singularly enough, its birthplace was Musical Fund Hall, where, forty years ago, was held the first national convention of the Republican party. The word "Democratic" was regretfully omitted from the name in deference to Judicial decisions that the title of the older party could not be infringed uron. The platfcrm declares that the Chicago platform docs not bind the Democrats of Pennsylvania and realllrms its allegiance to the Allentown platform. It continues: "We hold that the Chicago convention violated the established laws and traditions of the Democratic party and trampled upon its time-honored principles by declaring the purpoje to subvert the Supreme Court to partisan control and the dangerous dictation of popular passion and excitement through changing its membership to conform to the varying will of the legislative and executive branches of government; by refusing to indorse the patriotic and pure Democratic administration of President Cleveland; by encouraging lawlessness, rebellion and anarchy in the reoJutlon denouncing the enforcement of the laws and the preservation of peace and public order through the legitimate functions of the courts and the executive. When we observe that this betrayal of the Democratic party has been supplemented by an alllahce largely brought about by the solicitation of the Chicago nominee tor President and tho party organization created by the convention with organizations openly avowing the purpose to destroy the Democratic party, to revolutionize the government, to confiscate the property of its citizens, and to arbitrarily divide it amongst the thrifty and unthrifty, and when we find a majority of our constituted State organizations deserting Democratic pilntip'es for the selfish purpose of success we declare there is no alternative fcr the preservation of Democracy other tiuin the nomination by the National Democratic party in convention assembled at Indianapolis of Democratic statesmen for President and Vice President on a sound Democratic platform. E XT H I' S I A S T I C K A S A X S . Delegates to Indiana poll Will Vote for a Xntloiial Ticket. TOPEKA. Kan.. Aug. 2-". The goldStandard Democrats of Kansas held their Stato convention here to-day in Representative Hall. The hall was well filled, though the three hundred delegates expected elld nor materialize. Thomas Fenton, of Leavenworth, was elected chairman and in accepting the honor delivered a spirited speech In denunciation of the Chicago convention, lis platform and its candidates. His laudatory mention of President Cleveland provoked much enthusiasm. The preliminary business was quickly dispatched during a short session and when the convention reconvened in the afternoon a platform was adopted, twenty delegates were elected to the Indianapolis convention, and after the administration of President Cleveland had been inaorsed by a unanimous and rising vote as "fearless, honest, patriotic and purely Democratic." the convention ad.lournc-d sine die. The resolutions adopted repudiate the Chicago platform as un-Democratic and unpatriotic, repudiate the nominees of that convention and declare the gold-standard Democracy of Kanras to be in favor of the nomination of. third candidates for President and Vice President by the convention to be held at Indianapolis. The resolutions declare for a tariff for revenue only and against the government ownership of railroads. The railroad plank of the Chicago platform Is roundly denounced. All mention of State politics seems to have been stuuiou3ly avoided, r.nd as no Stat nominations were made, it is the general impression to-night that the vote of the gold Democracy will be cast for Governor Morrill and tho Republican ticket as opposed to the DemocraticPopuiist fusion. Following were elected delegates at large to the Indianapolis convention: Thomas Fenton. Leavenworth: Samuel Kimble. Manhattan; W. II. Rossington. Topeka; W. E. Carver, Lamed; C. F. Hutchins, Kansas City, and G. Boyd, of Harvey county. Also two delegates from, each of the seven congressional districts. California Dclesrnte. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 3. The National Democratic party of California has selected tho following delegates to the gold-standard convention at Indianapolis: Casslu3 Carter, San Diego; John Roth, Visalla; James H. O'Prien. Marysville; Thomat R. Hord. Lakeport: Warren Olney and John Stanlev. of Oakland; Clay M. Taylor, Shasta; F. S. Lipoett. Petaluma; Gen. Nathaniel Harris. Jere Lynch. John P. Irl.-h. William Thomas and E. S. Heller, San Francisco. The selection of delegates was preceded by a lengthy debate as to the advisability of taking such a step. William Rosenthal urged the sending of delegates to the Indianapolis convention on the ground that they would represent from 29.0j:) to 5,(00 citizens of California "who would not be drawn into the Populist camp." Call Signed by 1.7) Democrat. CHATTANOOGA. Tenn.. Aug. 23. Tomorrow the gold-standard Democrats of the Third congressional district will meet at the courthouse In this city to select delegates to the National Democratic convention at Indianapolis, elect an executive committeeman from the State and to adopt such plans as may be necessary to secure a permanent organization. No candidate for Congress will be put out at this time, the object being to get the opinion of gold Democrats as to a third ticket. The call for the meeting to-morrow is signed by ir0 leading Democrats of this city, all of whom pledge themselves to vote against liryan and Sewall and the Chicago platform. May Pnt I'p n State TlcUct. WACO, Tex., Aug. 23. Several hundred delegates are In attendance upon the State gold-standard convention here to-day. The personnel of tho crowd includes some of the most prominent Democrats in Texas. The prospects are that in addition to selecting delegates to Indianapolis a full Stato ticket will be put out and a straight light made. The convention was called to order at 1 o'clock at the City Hall, with fully GOO people rresent. Charles Hum?, of Galveston, was elected temporary chairman and J. A. Read, of Corsicana, temporary secretaryCommittees were appointed on credentials, permanent organization and platform. The convention then took a recess. Michlgnn Men to Meet To-Day. LANSING, Mich.. Aug. 23. The State convention of the National Democratic party will be held here to-morrow. Further than this everything Is in the air. Large delegations from Grand Rapids and Jacuson have engaged quarters at the hotels and the indications are that several hundred persons will participate in the convention. It has not been definitely settled who will be chairman or what speakers will be in attendance. IMPEACHED AND REMOVED. Summary Chancre In the Lonisville Hoard of Pnbllc Safety. LOUISVILLE. Ky., Aug. ZZ. The impeachment trial of the Ioard of iMLlle Safety, which has been la prcsres before the Council for the past week, resulted to-day in the removal of the members tf the board. It. J. Tilford. Dan E. O'Suilivan and Charles U. Wilson. Mayor Todd immediately nipolnted George Crawford, Juhn Searcy and WiiUam Kvans ts their successors. Tiw biarJ removed Chief rf I'olUe Taylor and apiointtd K. M. Cunningham in las ilnce to-niRht. The trc-b! dates back to the accwnum of Mayor Todd (iteiu!ltoan). who succeeded the late Mayor Tyler. The Board cr Public Safety, which controls the Are and i-ollc departments. t-M ever, anJ there has hern cenftant friction between Us Dennx'ratle majority and the Republican Mayor and Council, culminating in the plan cf the latter to oust tJe board. The last hours of the impeachment trial were rather exclltiifr. ing h?M behind dosd doom, while the city hall coi riders were filled with heriff deputies ;nn?d with restraining onler. ifsuw.t by Jti.Jge Toney. f the County Circ'ilt Court. The Mayor an J Council have beta daflarcd to t in crr.tfnii t of thU court for Ignoring the or-icr. ant mut ar.u-r to it to-morrow m-.rninj;. The el l beard of nfetv will rrf''y contest th legality of the hup-achm nt rocecd-Inira.

MR. HOB ART AT CANTON

KC SrEXDS AX AFTERXOOX WITH HIS RLN.MXG 31 ATE. Ex-Governor 3IcKlnley' Letter Accepting the domination to De Published Thursday Morning. CANTON. O., Aug. 23. Garret A. Hobart, Republican nominee for Vice President, arrived in Canton on the Pennsylvanii road just before noon. He was accompanied by II. II. Kohlsaat, editor of the Chicago Times-Herald. This is Mr. Hobarfs second trip to Canton. The greeting between Major McKlnley and Mr. Hobart v.'cs most cordial. It is understood they considered their letters of acceptance this aficrnoon. Mr. Hobart Is reputed to have said that the situation in the East is as bright as the Republicans could wish it and that every Eastern State will cast its electoral vote for the Republican ticket. The only f.ght In the campaign is in several of the Western States. Mr. Hobart also expressed his hearty approval of Maj. McKinley's determination not to take the stump, but to remain at his home in Canton discussing the issues of the campaign to the visiting delegations as he has done up to the present time. It la understood that Mr. Hobart's programme is tho same at least to the extent of taking the stump during the campaign. Mr. Hobart left this evening for Cleveland on hi3 way home. H. II. Kohlsaat remained in Canton until 9 o'clock to-night, when he boarded a Chicago train. Mr. Kohlsaat reported the campaign as progressing entirely satisfactorily to the Republicans. The fight is confined to the West, he thinks, and the work of the Republican committee continues to bear satisfactory fruits. Realizing that Major McKinley's time would be well occupied by the visit of Mr. Hobart the delegates to the teachers institute did not call to-day, as arranged, but will do so ' to-morrow. Additional delegations were announced to-day for this week. The league delegates from the Milwaukee convention will arrive Thursday. Railroad workers starting from Chicago and picked up en route come on Friday. Three delegations are booked for Saturday, one made up of commercial travelers, a working men's club from Columbus and German residents of Cleveland. Accoraing to present plans Major McKinley's letur of acceptance will become public property on Thursday morning. The intention in to give it to the press associations to-mcrrow afternoon tor use in papers the following morning. MAXV .HW CLUBS. Republican OrtruulzliiK in Silver and Populist Stronghold. CANTON, O., Aug. 25. The following telegrams of organizations of McKinley and Hobart clubs have been received by Major McKinley: From Lewiston, Ida. McKinley and Hobart League in this place, one hundred strong, sends greeting. Total vote in precinct in lb04 was 193. Patriotism has not all fallen Into silver. John L. Chapman, secretary. Greenville, 111. Our Republican club, three hundred rtrong, just organized, eends greeting and pledges support lor protection and sound money. H. R. lieninger, president; John L. Hunch, secretary. St. Louis Park. Minn. Sound-pioney club of St. Louis Park, one hundred strong, sends greetings and wishes you success. W. S. Shaft, president; J. S. Hunter, secretary. t Rock Island, III. Rock Island Lincoln Club, 1.2U0 strong, sends greetings and assurances that Rock Island, in common v.ith Illinois. Is all right for protection, reciprocity and honest money. C. J. Searle, president; John Rinck. secretary. Wadsworth. Nev. Wadsworth McKinley and Hobart Club organized with 110 members. Precinct pells ZA. Nov. 3 will give you 1.7) votes. Senator Stewart's dozen Republicans in his so-called silver stronghold will materialize many hundredfold. We tire for patriotism, protection and prosperity. R. E. Jackson, president. Harper, Kan. McKinley club organized, ir0 members, in the midst of Populists. George Melvin. St. Jose-ph. Mo. The McKinley club of St. Joseph, seven hundred strong, sends greetings to the great exponent of protection and sound money. E. D. Atterbury, R O. Martin. O. M. Gilmer, committee. Omaha. Neb. Sixth Ward McKinley and Hobart Club organized Saturday night with 1.C1C member?, pledging you support II. T. Lcavitt, president; Duncan C. Lowerie, secretary. Garrett. Ind. Garrett, Ind., this evening organized a McKinley ami Hobart club with three hundred voters enrolled as active members. We send you greetings and predict for Indiana one of the largest majorities ever given. Charles Sullivan, president. Portsmouth. O. Second Ward McKinley Club, two hundred strong and growing, organized last night and sends greetings. Southern Ohio wants protection for her factories and worklngmen. A. J. Fumey, president: li. B. Dillon, secretary. Kranklln. O. McKinley and Hobart club organized with four hundred members and more to follow. Congratulations. Alexander rsoxwell, president; W. G. Alexander, secretary. Wunliin.uton State Republican. TACOMA. Wash.. Aug. 23. The advance guard of visitors to the Republican State convention, which will assemble here tomorrow, has arrived, consisting of about a hundred ldcgates, candidates and other prominent Republicans. The candidates for nomination for Governor are: Hon. Edward Whitson. of North Yakima; S. G. Cosgrove. of GarlWdd: P. C. Sullivan, of Pierce, and Editor J. O'P.. Scobey. of Olympia. Present Indications point to a businesslike convention, that will adopt a p'atform and nominate a State ticket In short order. MR. BRYAN AT ALBANY. (Conclndrd from First Pa?e.) Chicago met in convention and there the majority of the Democrats of the United States, sneaking through their legallychosen representatives, laid down a platform and nominated a ticket- It is not to be expected that a person will always find in any platform all that he -desires and nothing which he does not like. Rut when a citizen comes to vote he acts with that party and indorses that platform which gives to him the best assurance of securing the most important things which he desires. (Applause.) "It is proper, aye more, it Is necessary that the candidate who stands upon a platform shall indorse the utterances of his platform, and I stand before you to dclare in your presence that I Indcrse every word and every syllable of the platform at Chicago. (Applause.) Rut while I do so. I expect In this campaign the support of many Democrats who are not willing to indorse all that the platform declares for. (Applause.) In a campaign there is always some overshadowing issue, there is in a campaign always one great paramount question which more than any other will determine the allegiance of those who support that ticket: and in this campaign we appeal with confidence to those people who are opposed to a longer continuation of the gold-standard policy in the United States. (Applause.) THE GOLD STANDARD. "Our opponents have at last taken a definite position upon the money question. The Republican platform adopted at St. Louis declares that the gold standard must be maintained in thl3 Nation until other nations shall consent to its abandonment. Wo believe that that declaration, which commits us to a gold standard until other nations come to our relief. Is equivalent to a declaration In favor of a permanent continuation of the gold standard, because we do not believe that other nations will take rlty upon us before we take pity upon our own people. We have then to consider this question: Ought the American people to submit longer to a gold standaid? (Cries of 'No. no!') "The Democratic party has begun a war of extermination against the gold standard. We ask no quarter, we give no quarter. We shall prosecute our warfare until there is net an American citizen that dares to advocate a gold-standard policy. (Cheers.) You ak why? We reply that the gold standard is a conspiracy against the human rare, and that we would no more jcln it than we would Join an army marching to despoil our home and destroy our families. (Applause.) 1 ask you not to take my wont for the evils of the gold standard. I call as a witness a gentleman v;hose voice has been heard in the councils

of the Democratic party. I ask you If you are inclined to accuse us of uslntr extravagant language. I ask you to read and reflect upon the language used by John G. Carlisle in ISTi In a speech made In Congress he said: 'According to my opinion, tho conspiracy which seems to have been formed here and in Europe to destroy by legislation and otherwise from threesevenths to one-half the metallic money of the world is the mcst gigantic crim-- of this or any other age, Its consummation would ultimately entail mere misery upon the human race than all the wars, pestilences and famines that ever occurred in the history of the world.' "That is the language of John G. Carlisle. I believe he spoke the truth, and If It was true then it is true to-day and will bo true, no matter who may change his opinion or his course upon this question. Truths once uttered will live, no matter what may become of those who uttered those truths. Men cannot retract truths. That prophecy was spoken eighteen years ago. and eighteen years of fulfillment has enabled us to believe words which were believed by all at the time they were spoken. "Our opponents tell U3 that the free coinage of siiver is going to disturb business. I ask our opponents to write down the worst thing they can possibly think of as a possible consequence of the Immediate restoration of the free coinage of silver, and when they have written their worst I would place against the most dismal prophecy they can utter the words of John G. Carlisle, and tell them that I would take the worst thlnr they could think of rather than bring a misery greater than war, pestilence and famine. (Applause.) Can you imagine the meaning of those words? No. my friends, the Imagination cannot conceive, the tongue cannot describe all that Is wrapped up in those words. Can you think of all the wars in tho past? When you remember that from the time that Cain killed Abel until now history has been little mere than a record of warfare? Can you remember, all those wars, and can vou add in one great sum all the misery that those wars have caused and then can you think of the pestilences which have visited the earth and the misery that they havo brought, and then can you think of the famines that haveafflicted mankind from time to time? Can you add into one great sum all the misery caused by theso three great destrovers of th's human race, and then tbdnk that the consummation of the conspiracy of thoso who stand behind the gold standard would bring more misery than all of these? Ah. my friends. It 13 because wo believe that thrt prophecy was true, it is because we believe that no language can overstate the infinite distress that the gold standard means to the human race; it is because v. e believe all this that no power on earth will prevent the advocates of free coinage from preaching that Rorpel wherever they can find those to hear Jt. (Applause. THE "CONFIDENCE MAN." "Some of our opponents say that they are afraid that we cannot maintain bimetallism alone. We reply to them that we have waited fcr twenty years fcr other nations to help us and if we are going to restore bimetallism wo have got to restore It alone because others do not come to our assistance. (Applause.) More than that, we believe that the assertion of American independence will do more to bring about international bimetallism than A servile dependence upon our enemies to bring it to us. (Applause.) Our opponents say that all we need is a restoration of confidence. Whenever the contldence man is abroad in a community the man who has the least confidence sets oft with tho mcst money. (Laughter.) And I am very much afraid that the confidence man is abroad in this campaign, preaching, 'Have coniidence. and all will be well.' "My friends, confidence must have a basis to res upon. Our opponents say that unless we shape our financial policy to suit the pleasure of foreign nations they wlil not loan us any money. We reply that as long as wo shape our financial policy according to their pleasure we will always be borrowers and can never be money loaners ourselves. Coniidence must rest upon a substantial basis. Suppose that a man In your community gives out his notes until everybody has them, and then somebody tries to collect h note and finds that the man has no property behind his notes, how can you restore confidence In that man how can he inspire coniidence in the community? Just in one way. and that is by putting property behind the notes that he has out. "My friends, how are you going to restore confidence in tho United States by legislating value out of the property upon which notes rest? You have tried it. and you have found that, bankruptcies have increased year by year and the only people who have prospered are those who own investments payable n dollars or money they are making out, of -the extremities of the government. If you want to restore confidence you have got to restore prosperity to the great masses of the people and talk as much about good property as they have been talking about good money. Money can be too good. It can be so good that you can long for It and pray for It, but can't get hold of it (Laughter.) Remember that whenever you make money dearer, when you increase its purchasing power, you have simply driven down tho value of other things, and if those who own money and who hold contracts payable in dollars are willing to so legislate as to make their property more valuable, how can they appeal to those who own property and owe debts to Join them in that sort of legislation? OFT-REPEATED FALSEHOOD. "I have asserted I assert again that without the aid of the money-owning classes the gold standard would not stand for one day in any nation under the sun. I assert that behind the gold standard in this country the only potent force consists of those who hold fixed investments and those who as brokers profit tho greater by greater bond issues. They tell the laboring men of this Nation that they ought to support a gold standard. The laboring men have never found the financiers of this Nation the men who have exerted themselves to improve the condition of the laboring man. As a rule the men who have spent their time trying to break down labor organizations the only protection that the laboring man has bad these are the men who now come to the help of the laboring man. 1 ask you if you ought to expect blessings from those from whom you have only received cursings in the past? (Cries of 'No! no!') "I notice that one of our opponents the other day said that the old soldiers would be opposed to free coinage. They gave the impression that the financiers are very much interested in maintaining .a goid standard for the benefit of the soldiers, but. my friends, these men forget that all of the soldiers lived during the war. and that during the war the soldiers knew that the financiers made their bonds payable in gold and left the soldier to offer his life upon the battlefield. (Applause.) More than that, my friends. I do not believe that the soldiers who are willing to ofTor their lives if need be in behalf of their country are to-day going to join in a conspiracy to enslave seventy millions of free people by fettering them to a gold standard. "Our opponents, at least some of them, have been appealing to the ministry. I have noticed some of these advocates of the gold standard have said that preachers, the teachers In religion, should favor the gold standard because their salaries were so small that they did not want them reduced. (Lauphter.) Well, now, I am willing to concede everything that is right to our opponents, but I must confess that this is one argument which they might make that would appeal to some ministers. If there wero any ministers who are in the business of ministery merely for the dollars and cents there were in it. (Laughter.) I say there is one argument it Is an argument that I cannot answer and I give it to you for all that it is worth. The gold standard makes hard times. Hard times drives men out of employment. Idleness is conducive to crime. Therefore the gold standard, by increasing the amount of crime, increases the demand for ministers to put down immorality. (Applause.) If there is any other reason why a minister should favor tlis gold standard. I have not heard it. and even the most astute of our opponents have, so far as I know, never urged the reasons which I have suggested to you. "My friends, there Is this general principle that you can use in governing your course. You may rest nssured that in the long run any policy which brings prosperity to th great mnsr.es of the people will be shared by all the people. If you cannot see just in what particular way any given measure Is going to benefit you in your business, if you can satisfy yourself that the general public will be benefited by that measure, you can rest assured that you will receive your proportionate share of it. Rut I chalIrnirft you to search in all the pages of history for a single instance where the mn3 of the people were ever benefited by legislation that Inreared the value of the dollar In which debts had to be paid. (Aprlause.) THE SILVER DISEASE. "My friends, our opponents sometimes tell us that this sliver sentiment Is a disease. If so, it will run its course, like whooping cough cr the measles. No, my friends, it is not a disease. The silver sentiment Is the outgrowth of a condition, and you cannot destroy the sentiment until you have remedied the condition out of which that sentiment arose. I can retaliate upon

cur opponents and tell them that th's gold-, standard Idea Is a dlseare. It is the new yellow fever. (Laughter and applause.) Rut there is a difference between the new yeliow fever and the old yellow fever. The old yellow fever killed the people who had the fever: the nev.- yellow fever Is death to the people who do not have the fever. (Tremendous app'ause.) "How can you restore bimetallism? You bave got to have a plan if you want to do it. Our opponents tell you that our policy "would disturb business. Wo tell them that business is already disturbed. They tell us that if we succeed in this election there will be an interim of a few months before we can put our policy In operation. We tell you that if they succeed there will bo fcur years interim before they can put their poiicy Into operation. (Cheers.) You say j-ou want to stop agitation. How are you going to step agitation so long as you have no fixed policy? What is the policy cf the Republican party upen the money question? It is to wait until some other nation tells us when wc can act for ourselves. How long will we have to wait? "Ah. my friends, if our opponents succeed in this election, can they give any .issurance as to how long it wid take foreign nations to help us restore confidence? There is no arsurance. The success of our opponents in this campaign simply means four years more of agitation, and then the trial of the remedy which we ask you to give. We propose that this agitation which has lasted for twenty years shall culminate now in the restoration of the gold and sliver coinage of the Constitution. That is all we ask. and. my friends, thtre is no other way by which you can stop agitation. You say you do not believe in the ratio of ltJ to 1. I tell you that, whether you believe in that ratio or not, if you believe in bimetallism you have got to cast your vote with bimet.allists, and not with monometallists. (Applause.) We believe that this Nation, without waiting for the aid cr consent of any other nation, is ab!e, by opening its mints to free and unlimited coinage at 16 to 1. to create a demand for silver great enough to absorb all the silver that will be presented at our mints, and by so doing maintain tho parity between go;d and silver at the ratio of li to 1. (Applause.) "Now, my friends, my time is up. I must leave you and go to greet other people. I simply appeal to you to join with us, if your judgments sustain that action, in trying to bring back to the people a monetary system which they had, and would have had until now but for its being struck down in the night without discussion before the American people. When this has been accomplished other thing will be possible. Until this is accomplished no other thing is possible. I thank you for your very kind attention." (Applause.) The crowd which followed Mr. Bryan's escort to the depot rushed through the strong force of police which had been thrown about the building and yard and closed in upon the carriage, which was driven into the building, so that the candidate and his wife had a hard struggle to get to the car. Then the car was Invaded, and a dozen bluecoats were required to clear it. At 8:13 the train moved out toward Utica, where the party had docidej to spend the night, instead of at Syracuse. Rockets, the tiring of cannon and a vigorous band sped the parting guests. Those who have traveled with the candidate since bis nomination say that no demonstration In the campaign has excelled this at Albany in intensity, and only those at Chicago and Pittsburg in point of numbers. ALMOST A DISASTER.

Fall of n riatform on Which Mr. Bryun Wnn Stnndlns:. UTICA, N. Y Aug. 25. William J. Bryan's eventful day ended with an accident which narrowly missed being a disaster. One-half of the platform from which he was addressing a crowd of several thousand persons in the square in front of the Baggs Hotel, in. Utica, at midnight, fell to the ground and although the presidential candidate escaped Injury, Clinton Beckwlth, of Herkimer, a member of the reception committee, had an ankle sprained; John T. Teller had a leg broken and several others were badly bruised and cut, but no one was seriously injured. The crackling of timbers and terrified shrieks of women nearly created a panic. Mr. Bryan raised his hand to quiet the crowd and after a delay of ten minutes, during which the police and bystanders helped out the men who had gone down in the wreck, he continued his speech. Overcrowding the platform caused the accident. The Utica crowd was nearly as large as that which heard Mr. Bryan at Albany and included several campaign clubs from Watertovn, Herkimer and other places. Before the accident Major Gibson had introduced Mr. Bryan. The latter, in the course of his speech, said: "I have been told that you have in this town four dally papers which are advocating the gold standard, and I have wondered If this Immense audience could gather in a town where there was not one single silver daily what kind of a crowd would we have if those papers were all on our side. (Cries of 'No more!') You say we would not have any more, even if the papers were with us? It reminds me of what a gentleman out in our country said the oilier day. Here the platform collapsed. When quiet was restored Mr. Bryan said: "I was about to tell you what a citizen in our country said. lie said that it used to be that the newspapers educated the people, but that now tho people educate the newspapers, 1 do not mean to indorse what he said. I appreciate the support of dailies and weeklies as well, but 1 would rather have the voters on our side than to have all the newspapers in tho land. "This year, as in no recent year, the people are proving their capacity for self-government. The people this year are preparing to take an interest in government that they should always have taken. You will find men who never spoke in public before who will be received on the platform this year and telling their fellow-men why we should restore the gold and silver coinage of the Constitution. 1 was reading the other day a pamphlet sent out by the Sound-moey League, and I never heard those words 'sound money' without wondering why the man who is in favor of. a gold standard has not the courage to say so, but resorts to the hiding of his base design behind a high-sounding phrase. (Applause.) It was a pamphlet, or rather an article, written by a French economist of prominence, and I found In that pamphlet these words: 'The capitalists and the financiers,' and then it added, 'the only persons who are competent to express an opinion on the subject, are in favor of the standard. My friends, there are many of our opponents who believe that the capitalists and financiers are competent and. the only ones competent to express an opinion on the money question. 1 beg to take issue with them. I bg to assert that no question has ever arisen or will ever arise that is too great to be settled by the plain people of the United States. You ask me if I think a financier is a good man to take care of the business of other people. I say that whenever his Interests and theirs are identical they can consider what he says, but whenever his interests are antagonistic to the interests of other people he would take care of himself and let the other people take care of themselves. (Great applause.) And when I say this I do not say of him any more than can be said of others. Each man is the best guardian of his own rights, and neither God Almighty nor the Constitution authorized a class of men to think and act for other people." In the closing Mr. Bryan said: "There may be some who think the treasury of the United States can only be maintained by a few syndicates who charge a high price for looking after us. (Anplause.) And. my friends, I believe I speak the sentiments of a vast majority of our seventy millions of people when i say that our people are able to take care of our own treasury, not only without the aid of syndicates but in spite of all syndicates against it. (Tremendous applause nnd cheers.) If you do not like the way the Treasury Department is bfing managed, you are the only people who can change it and you are the ones to b'.arne if it i3 not ehiagtrd. (Applause and cries of Oh, we will change it!') I assert that the financial policy proposed by our opponents, which is but a continuation of that which we have, is a financial policy which disregards the interests of those who prcdti"? the wealth cf the country and simply looks after the intercuts of those who profit by the government's extremities." Mr. Bryan's trip from Albany to Utlca was a series of enthusiastic receptions. At Schenectady the cheers of 3.000 persor.3 drowned out the music of a brass band. Mr. Bryan made a brief speech and was constantly cheered. Fifteen hundred persons heard him at Amsterdam, notwithstanding a circus was in town. At Fonda another large crowd grreted him and again he spoke briefly. The Fcrt Plain Band joined the purtv there and when Fort Plain was reached Mr. Bryan said to the crowd: "I think we have been enjoying from the band what we are enjoying during the campaign. I understand that the band was returning from the Republican convention. In this campaign wo are getting the benefit of the money our opponents are expending." It was 10:43 when Little Falls waj reached, but 2..V0 persons were present to hear the candidate. Fully l.LCi) iersons v ere at the Herkimer station, but the smoke of their torches made it impossible

for Mr. Bryan to ppeak. Red fire and fireworhs were prominent features of .each demonstration. rrsioN i. Missoi'iti.

Scheme for Sendlnc ieorr?e V. Vent Back to the Senate. ST. LOUIS. Aug. 25. The Republic (Dem.) this morning says: "Fusion in the doubtful counties is to be made the order of the day by the Democrats In this State. It is the intention of the State committee to bring about a union of the Democrats, free-silver Republicans and Topulists in every county where the Republicans cannot be otherwise routed. There are twenty-nine counties which are conrldered reliably Republican. A little figuring has shown that cut of this number tight counties could be certainly carried by the tuslon of the dements opposed to Republican rule and four others could be carried with a littbi hotter organiZHtion than the Democrats had In If tusion is brought about in the twenty-nine Kenubrican counties, as it bids fair to be. the Repub.lcans will not be able to carry half of them and there will not be the sdghtest chance of the Legislature being captured by them. The election of a United States Senator to succeed George V. Vest comes up this session and a harder light is going to be made than has characterized any Democratic campaign in Missouri in recent years. Fusion means that under ne circumstances can the Republicans elect a majority of the memlcrs of the legislature, and mans the re-election of Senator Vest and the blasting of the hopes of Chauncey I. Fllley, the Republican leader, who is understood to aspire to the place.' ADDRESS TO S1L.VERITE5. White-Metal Advocate) VrgcA to Form Clnbn and Lea cue. CHICAGO, Aug. 2-1. An address was Issued to-day to "the friends of bimetallism in the United States," and signed by A. J. Warner, president American Bimetallic Union, and George A. Bowen, secretary. After declaring the importance of the silver question in the present campaign, the address sajs: "The great contest is now on and It can only be settled at the polls. To tho end that the decision may be right, the American Bimetallic Union strongly urges the formation cf silver clubs and leagues in every State, county, city, town and school district in the Union. To all interested in the cause, we say: "Organize and we will assist you to th best of our ability.' Our means are limited, and the wealth of the country is arrayed almost solidly against us, but we will aid in the work of organization and education to the utmost cf our ability. Such literature as can be furnished free we will provide gratuitously, and that which involves expense will be distributed at cost. In every legitimate way we will assist in disseminating correct Information upon this subject, the correct solution of which means so much to the people of our country." South Carolina Prlmnrlen. COLUMBUS, S. C Aug. 25. The meager returns from the primary elections to-day indicate that Judge Karl, the candidate against Governor Kvans for Senator, develops surprising strength, but Evans may pull throuKh when the country precincts are heard from, lillerbe is nominated for Governor by an overwhelming majority. No disorder occurred. Silver Forces United. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 23. The union in this State between the silver forces on presidential electors is complete. The People's party State executive committee has decided in favor of the proposed agreement, giving five electors to the Democratic party and four to the Populists. ueneral Political New. The Democrats and Populists of Michigan met in separate conventions at Bay City yesterday for the purpose of adopting a plan for fusion. Nothing definite was done. The Democratic and Populist State central committees of Oregon have agreed upon a plan of fusion. The Democrats surrender entirely and the ticket in this State will be Bryan and Watson. The silver Democrats of the Tenth district of Tennessee yesterday nominated Hon. F. W. Carmack for Congress. Senator Isham G. Harris was temporary chairman and addressed the convention. At the Democratic convention of the Fifteenth congressional district of Ohio yesterday Gen. A. J. Warner, president of the Bimetallic League of America, presided. F. H. Southard was nominated for Congress and the Chicago platform was indorsed. SUNK BY AN ICEBERG. Tramp Steamer Wrecked, bnt All HamlM Saved by the Clrcaasla. NEW YORK, Aug. 23. Captain Burnside and twenty-two of the crew of the British tramp steamer Moldava were picked up at sea in three open boats by the Anchor line steamer Circassia, which arrived from Glasgow to-day. The Moldava struck an Iceberg during a fog at 5:23 p. m. last Wednesday, the 19th inst., in latitude 47:55, longitude, 40:19, and almost immediately filled and sank, giving the crew barely tim to provision the lifeboats and lower them over tho side. All hands were saved. Tho Moldava was bound from Cardiff for Halifax with a cargo of coal. She was owned by the Mercantile Shipping Company, of London, and was 1,477 tons register. Movement of Steamers. NEW YORK. Aug. 23. Arrived: New York, from Southampton; Mississippi, from London; Clrcassia, from Glasgow; Xoordland. from Antwerp: Ems, from Genoa. Sailed: Georgic, for Liverpool; Spree, for Bremen. SOUTHAMPTON, Aug. 2C Arrived: Trave, from New York for Bremen, and proceeded. MOVILLE, Aug. 23. Arrived: Ethiopia, from New York for Glasgow, and proceeded. Only a Side Remark or Tito. To the Editor cf the Indianapolln Journal: When Rev. Henry Ward Beecher was pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church in this city he took occasion to refer to a Methodist distiller at Lawrcnceburg in no very complimentary phrases. This so greatly offended the Methodist brother that he nddressed an open letter to Mr. Ueecher, which ho began by raying: "I learn that you devoted a sermon to me last Sunday." To this Mr. Beecher answered: "Devoted a r.ermon! Not so. Your business is so utterly indefensible that it would be a waste of precious time to devote a sermon to It. I indulged In only a side remark or two." It seems to'me that some Republicans are wasting pr?clus time in giving so much attention to tho silver question, which the Democrats have so adroitly thrust to the front, to divert us from the real Issue the utter Incompetency of the Democratic party to govern such a country as this. With the experienc3 of thirty-two continuous years, ending in 1SC with the national credit so low that we had to pay 12 ier cent, for money to pay running expenses with, and with a war already inevitable. It Is no time to Ignore the fact that in a little over three years of control of affairs the ship of state is again heading towards the same rocks with accelerating velocity, not through any one Democratic measure, but the whole interdependent measures whih constitute a Democratic policy. High tajces and low prices, with idle machinery and unemployed men, all testify that the Democratic party of to-day Is as Incompetent to govern as the party was the thirty-two years it was in power before the Republicans inaugurated the era of prosperity which marked our nation down to 18S3 If three years could work such a change, what may be expected of another thirty years? It is r.o time now to be turned from an Investigation of the party's general competency by a single economic question, however Important It may te. A side remark or two should suiilce to dispose of a question which is as uttcriy indefensible as was the business of that Methodist distiller. The o'.d orthodox preacher was wiser. Wishing to show the devil in his true character he took for his text. "Th world, the fles.li ami the devil." and began by saying: "I will touch lightly on the world, say but little about the fleh and hasten to th d-vil as fast as possible." So I wou'd suggest to Republican orators that thry devote only a side remark or two to the sliver question and Its k!n and hasten to the muin question the general Incompetency ef the Democratic party to govern such a country as this, and I would prove It by the result of their thirty-two yenrs of contlnuox:s mistakes before the people revolted and turned the government over to th Republicans, contrasting It with the thirty-two years of Republican prosperity and growth, an 1 I would show that these three and a half years point to the sani ruinous resuits. all of which I would emphasize by the fact that the partv is so i completely In the bands of the Altgelds

and the jsryans that the t;t -vein nr. and the Illi's and the Cccltrars and t!b Palmers utterly repudiate their management. Get at the main question and ?H-k to it. . , . , u. l. sun. , Indianapolis. Aug. 23. j

TROUBLE IN ZANZIBAR

BRITISH WAIt M!irS LAM) SAILORS TO PROTIXT PROPERTY. Seyj Id Kalld ScIec the Palace on the Death of th Snltnn nl Pro clulnin Himself Ilnler. LONDON. Aug. 23. Dispatches from Zarzlbar say there Is serious trouble there growing out of the death of the Sultan, Hair. Id Bin Thwain Bin Said. Seyyid Kalld has occupied the palace, taking possession of that building Immediately after tho death of the Sultan became, known. He proclaimed himself Sultan and barricaded himself in the jalace with 700 armed Askarls. Sailers from the British war ships Philomel, Thrush and Spnrrow have been landed no protect property ashore and all the ladles have been lodged la the British consulate, which is guarded by the ?ailcrs. Hamed Bin Thwain Bin Said, whoso death took place to-day, was about foty years of are nnd was a nephew of the late Sultans All Khalifa and Burghash, and succeeded to the Sultanate on the death of Sultan AH March 5. 1SS3. He was one of a number of claimants and was selected as being the most fitting by the British government, which exercises a protectorate over the Sultanate, DrnsU'ii Trouble vrttti Italy. RIO DE JANEIRO. Aug. 21It is rumored that the entire Italian legation will be withdrawn in consequence of the recent political conflicts In San Paulo between the Italians and Brazilians. The Italian minister Is stiil waiting tor instructions from Rome as to his course of action. Whitehead Deranged. SKIBBEREEN, Aug. 25. Alfred Georg Whitehead, the Jrlsh-Amcrlcan political prisoner, who .was , released from Portland prison last week, and who arrived here yesterday evening, became completely deranged after seeing his mother, and disappeared soon afterwards. CANADIAN YACHT WON. Vencedor Defeated In the Vlmt Rnrt for the International Cap TOLEDO. O., Aug. 2-The Canadian cup defender Canada defeated the Chicago challenger to-day in the first race for tho international trophy. The winner made tha course In Ave hours and forty-nine minutes, or eleven minutes, within the time limit. The race was for the most part a drifting match. There were occasional light breezes, in which the Canada did the best work. Twice during. the race there was a twelve-mUes-an-hour breeze blowing. In this wind the Venctdor showed some giin over hr rival, but there was not enough of that sort of weather for the challenger. The situation to-night is that Vencedor may win to-morrow if the wind blows mora than twelve miles an hour. With a lighter breeze Canada is almost certain to win to-morrow and thus end the international race. BILL DOOLIN CAPTURED. The Noted Ontlavr Found at Hta Homo In Oklahoma. GUTHRIE. O. T., Au. 23. United State Marshal Heck Thomas and deputies are en route to thl city from forty miles east with the body of Bill Doolin, the noted outlaw. They killed him in a flsht near Clinton, Payne county, lau night. One deputy was wounded. Doolin had been stopping with his wife. In Payne county, since his escape from the federal jail here July 4. and ottlcers had be-n watching- & chance to surxrU htm for several weeks. " Futures Don't G in Colorado. To the Editor of the Indianapolis Journal: The following pasage is from "Mills' annotated statutes" of the laws of Colorado, section 2221: "Sec 7. It shall be lawful for any Insurance company incorporated under the laws of this State to Invest its capital and funds accumulated in tho course of its business, or any part thereof, in bonds and mortgages on real estate worth So per cent, mora than the sum loaned thereon qver and above all incumbrances, exclusive of buildings, unless such buildings aro insured and the policy transferred to the company; and also iu, the stocks of this State or stocks or treasury notes of the United States; and also in tho stocks and bonds of any school district or incorporated city in this State, authorized to bo issued by the Legislaiure; and to lend the same, or any part thereof . on the security of such stocks and bends and mortgages as aforesaid, and to change and reinvest the same as occasion may from time to time require; but any surplus money over and above the capital stock of any such insurance company rray be invested in or loaned upon the" pledge of the public stocks or bonds of the United States, or any one of tho States, on the stocks or bonds or other evidence of indebtedness of any poivent dividend-paying institutions, other' than mining corporations, incorporated under the J-ws of this State or of the United States: rovided. always, that the current uarket . Juo of such stocks, bonds or other cvldenc indebtedness shall bo at ail times the continuance of such loan at lea per cent, more than the sum loaned .eon." Thus .t will be seen that Colorado, tho great silver-producing State, allows its insurance companies to loan money to rA per cent, of the value of almost any kir. j of legitimate securities that may le offered, but considers its mining stocks to be such poor security that they specially except them, and only them, from the li.-t of solvent securities. Can It be that tho Legislature of Colorado had no faith M the election of a free-silver candidate and the consequent future enhancement of mining Ftock? I'ossihly. however, they may believe In the future of silver, but want tho exclusive privilege of dealing In the "futures" themselves, and so prohihited th insurance companies from entering Into competition with them. C. C. G. Indianapolis, Aug. 25. Another Alnrmlna Fire. IRONWOOD. Mich.. Aug. 2.-.-Fore.t lire have been raging around Ironwood and Hurley all day and a southwest gale hjs tcen blowing Mnce 9 o'clock this morning. Property on the outskirts of tho city !j being damaged to a considerable extent. The lire department and volunteers of tKth towns are doing all In their power to check: the conllagration with poor re.ultK. X dense smoke has completely envelorn-d tho city, making traffic slow and unsafe. Th's evening the wind died down home, but the tires are still raging Financial Item. Texas Sifter. "Where do you stand on the silver question. Mr. Schaumburg?" said Gilhooly to a prominent Dallas merchant. "Vot you mean?" "Well, are you In favor of a single or double standard of value of money?" "Oh. I vas in favor of a touhle. stnndart von to puy mit and one to sell tnlt. Vy schiminy gerashtis! If der va only one standart of value, vere vlll der peronta come in?" NATIONAL Tube Works Wroc0ht-Iroa Pipe for Gas, Steim and Water. IvderTub.C3't and Mat'abl Irn I tuinr(tt.irk an I ralrkaUM). aJ-.ex. mo; !" llri'tne 1 rlintniiig, Mfiin tinuKfi. np Trjr. 'ii!tr. VIm-. rrw rbt an t IU. Un ii hf, Man Trat. J'ttuii. KnUtn Muk. Jio-. li, U.v.s. Iiatt:r Mui i.t. r. vi.;t sa l Cluv-d Wnn; Vt. and all v;h r l -t .a nm--tion .h Mf:a ail Ws..tcr. Nsrural Ols Huij.Ilrs a kj:nur. MeanthalU'7 A i;ar!is tor l'utli" bulUnrs. More-rooiut, MilKh";.artM.e. La tuurim. lt;inbr It-IIo ij-, fie. Cut an 1 Tarta.l to rW an Wrnwtbt'-lrua '!;e. from i lah Ut it lnh' ti.um trr. KHGHT & JILLS03, 'l anil 11

tef 111 I 1