BRYAN AN AGITATOR. HIS EFFORT ALONG THE LINE IS TO STIR UP STRIFE. Some of His Kerf Fl-tfc Expressions An Apostle of Discontent who Seeks to Ar ray lass Ag-lust Class. Mr. Bryan apparently started out with the Intention of discussing tiie coinage question as a question of pure linance and statesmanship. In his Madison Square Garden speech he said nothing which could be construed as an appeal to prejudice, unless perhaps It was his dee laratioa that "there can be no sympathy or co-operation between the advocates of a universal sold standard and the advo cates of bimetallism. Between bimetal lism whether independent or internation aland a gold standard there is an im passable gulf." The question at issue in the present campaign is not as Mr. Bryan would have the public believe, be tween bimetallism and the gold stand ard; it js between bimetallism and the 6ilver staml-ird. But when Mr. Bryan commenced shaking without notes the undertone of hatred and dissension which characterizes his public utterances be gan to be distinctly audible. By the time that he reached Syracuse he was in a frame of mind which led him to assert that men who do not favor silver monometallism are "enemies of this country, who think they are greater than the government and can make the government their instrument for private gain, the greatest enemies that this coun try has." He called them "plunderers of the industrial masses. In behalf of the money corporations of this country and Europe." At Erie. Pennsylvania, he acknowledg ed that he depended more upon an ap peal to the emotions than to the intellects of his hearers, when he said: "The heart is the place where conduct Is determined, and if you want to find out where a man is in this light do not look at his brain: that would find a reason for whatever his heart wants to do. I-ook at his heart, and find out where his sym pathies are. Show me the sym pathies of a man and I will mark out his conduct. Show me a man whose sympathies are with the Idle hold ers of idle capital, and I will show you a man who wants as little money as pos sible, and puts it on the ground- that he loves his neighbor better than himself. Show me a man whose sympathies are with the smuggling masses, and I will show you a man who will never stand up for syndicates and consent to let them control the financial policy of the United States." ard of this country one moment longer than I can help to get rid of It" . At Toledo he said: "A Republican suc cess would simply mean that while the people are nominally free they will be hewers of wood and drawers of water for those who control the money supply of the- world." And again: "The people who intend to strike down one-half of all the standard money of the world simply mean to do with you and your property what the fleets of the world and the armies of the world would do if they came to destroy one-half of all your pos sessions." At Milwaukee he described the present political campaign as a straggle over the question whether the people will "allow the host of the gold standard to enslave 7(1.000,000 of people, white and black, in this country." He said further: "They say that we are arraying one class of so ciety against another. I deny it But. my friends, if a burglar comes to my home I have a right to call all my fami-1 ly to keep him out, and it does not make hie mad if, when he starts away, he turns around and shouts to me that I am trying to array my family against him. When men array themselves against so ciety, society has a right to array itself i against them. ? The success of the Chicago ticket is dangerous only the man who wants to eat the bread that somebody else earns." In his speech at Lincoln, Nebraska, ac cepting the nomination of the silver "Re publicans, he said: "I believe that the gold standard is a conspiracy against the human race. I would no sooner join the ranks of those whose purpose it is to fasten it upon the people than enlist in an army that was marching to attack my home and destroy my family. r These extracts from Mr. Bryan's bar- rangues give a fair idea of him as an agitator and fomenter of popular discord and commotiou a man who would risk the horrors of an armed conflict between citizens of the republic rather than fail of his election to the chair which he as pires to occupy. It is diflicult to know whether he is to be taken seriously. He is either dangerous or absurd; dangerous if he succeeds in reaching the height of his ambition, but absurd if he fails of an election. By the time that he reached Buffalo he legan to sneer at his opixjuents, as, for instance, in the declaration that "when the Creator made man, he did not use any superior kind of mud when he made financiers."' It was here that he said: "Advocates of bimetallism (he ' should have said silver monometallism) are called demagogues. There has never been a statesman whose heart beat in sympa thy with tiie struggling masses who Jias not been willed a demagogue by those who opposed him. Young man, do you want to know how to keep from being called a demagogue? I will give you a certain method. Get in tiie employ of some great. corxration, and then call all the people anarchists, and you will be a statesman among your employers." At Lockiort. New York, lie became de nunciatory, and said: "They have driv en down the price of your products, they have increased the burden or your debts, they have foreclosed your mortgages, they are degrading and lowering the standard of civilization by driving people who want to work out tlixm the streets, and their idleness breeds crime, and (Time menaces the safety of every citizen of the land." He expressed the belief that "the gold standard has made more misery for the human nice than wars and pestilence and famines: more' misery than human mind can conceive or hu man tongue can tell." He began his ap peal to the passions of his hearers in the words: "The promulgation of the gold standard is an attack niton your homes and upon your firesides, and you have as much right lo resist it as you have to resist an' 'army marching to take your children captive and burn your roof over your head." Since a man has a right to resist an army by force, the only possible inference is that the friends of silver monometallism would be justified in a resort to violence to prevent the continu ance of the present monetary system of the United States. ; At Tonawauda he said that "the Chica go platform means that every man shall be defended in the enjoyment of that which he earns, but that no man shall be permitted to enjoy that which somebody else has earned and which Is taken from him by vicious legislation." This Is a palpable threat of spoliation of the rich. "The platform," he continued, "is a men ace to the wrong-doer not the small wrong-doer only, but also the larger trans gressor, who attempts to use the govern ment as his Instrument to wrong others." This is an attack upon government and upon the principle of self-government If the platform Is a menace what would the election of Mr. Bryan be? At Toledo he gave the workingmen some very bad and immoral advice in the words: "I will not ask him to anything which may endanger his position. Let him wear the opposition button if he will. Let him put his name on their club list If he must Let him contribute to their fund If he will. But let him remember there is one day in the year when he is his own mas ter and can use a pencil as he pleases. I am willing for you to be Republicans ev ery day In the year if you will just be Democrats on election day. I am willing for you to wear gold-bug buttons all the rest of the time If, when you enter the booth, you will remember that the gold standard never conferred a benefit upon those who toil, and that it was never in dorsed of approved or sanctioned by any body of the people except those who hold fixed investments and trade in money or profit by the extremities of the govern ment" This was equivalent to advising work ingmen, whose friend he claims to be, to make of themselves liars, traitors, hypo crites and cowards, if only they would .'vote for him on the third of November. ;ln the same speech be took a defiant at titude and said: "If I am elected the gold standard will not remain the stand- WH AT BRYAN SAID AND M'KlN- LEY DID. An Object "Lesson for fin Plate Workers. What Bryan SAID on tin plate Mr. Raines, of New York: "When the Industry of tin plate is established in the United States and three months ago there was not a gentleman on that side who would admit that there was or would be a tin plate factory in the Unit ed States" Mr. Bryan: "We will not admit it to day, sir." (Speech in House of Repre sentatives, March 16, 1MJ2.) What McKinley DID for tin plate: ToU8. Amprlr-nii tin nlate manufactured 18D2-18U5 200,000 American tin plntes plated, 1892 18U5 Actual product in four years Estimated product for 189G 12.000 212.000 138,000 Practical results of McKlnley's constructive legislation after live years. . . p . Tons. 330,000 Value of that Industry diirlncr this time to the United States $35,000,000 Number of wane-earners employed at the present time 40.000 Average pay of men In mills. . .J2.5Q per day .Mimoer oi tin plate nuns, lncura- nur (iiDninir mams, urouciit into- existence . 200 Result: Money kept at home, add! tional employment for American: labor and a product cheaper and better than we have ever had before, and the buyers of tin plate won over to the wisdom of McKinley s protection policy. Bryan said we could not make tin plate. McKinley has established the in dustry, and given employment to- Ameri can workmen at good wages. laboring men! Which do you want: What Bryan SAID or McKinley DID? WAGES AND COST OF LIVING- FN JAPAN. . There are no more painstaking, method ical, accurate statisticians in the world, than those of the new Japanese empire. Japan has published a rejsjrt of the com mittee appointed to investigate Its tnotLe tary system, which shows in vaxious parts of the empire the average prices paid for all sorts of commodities for a long series of years past. A correspond ent of the Cleveland World in Tokiij, has taken the trouble to examine this report with care, and has furnished to that joui nal a table in detail showing the general rise in the cost of living in- Tokio- ami Osaka since 1873. Taking the prices paid in 1873 as a unit and calling" it 100, his table shows that in 1894 the price of rice must be stated at 105, of inisoy 15S; of table salt, 91; of soy, 15Srf firewood, 141; of charcoal, 150; of cotton. 118; of rent. 228; of bath charges. 221'. These are the princial items in the cost of liv ing in Japan, and it is said that in 1894 the total cost of living is- expressed by the figure 162 as compared with 100 in 1S73. This Is equivalent to saying that the cost of living has Increased during twenty-one years by G2 per cent on the average. The rise in priees is due to the decline in the. purchasing power of sil ver which is turn U due-to its deprecia tion in comparison with gold, or more properly speaking, to the greatly in creased output of silver compared with the output of gold. The effect of this rise in prices upon persons with fixed income is stated as follows: "It will be seen that a petty official who could subsist in 1873 on ten yen a month required at the beginning of 1S94, yen 1C.20 to live in proportionate style, while a person who lived on 14.40 yen a month in 188G re quired 2C20 yen eight years later. It is, therefore, easy to see that people living on petty fixed income, such as clerks in government service, whose income is practically, stationary, must now be ex periencing considerable difficulty in mak ing ends meet, especially since house rent, which constitutes the largest item in the cost of living, is steadily going up ward." The same correspondent prints a table of wages of mechanics upon the same plan, which shows that if the average wage paid in 1873 was 100, the average wage paid in 1894 was 133, that Is to say, wages had increased by one-third, or a little more than one-half as much as the cost of living. This statement Is in teresting and Important In Its relation to the fierce discussion now in progress be tween American workingmen in favor of the election of Bryan and those In favor of the election of McKinley, as to the ef fect of the free coinage of silver at 10 to 1 upon their personal pecuniary inter ests. On the one hand, it is claimed that while free coinage will result in an in crease in the prices demanded for com modities, wages will rise in proportion, so that a workingman for his daily or weekly stipend can purchase as much comfort as he Is able to purchase now, This is the claim of the Bryan men. The McKinley men deny it, and assert on the contrary, that while wifges may rise slightly, they will not double as it is sup posed that the prices of commodities will therefore the workingman, while he may receive a larger sum of money in re turn for his labor, the money will have less purchasing power and lie will there by receive less of comfort His condition, instead of being improved, will be worse than it now is. The experience of Japan since 1S73 goes to show that the McKin ley men have the best of the argument and this experience is confirmed by the experience of all other countries on a sil ver basis, in which wages and prices have risen in consequence of the depreciation of silver. Wages never rise in proportion to prices. For this reason the free coin age of silver at 1(5 to 1 would be an in jury and not a benefit to the working- men of the United Stares. MR. BRYAN'S TARIFF DODGING The refusal of Mr. Bryan to discuss the tariff question Is causing comment unfavorable to him. In view of the fact that while in congress Mr. Bryan was one of the most radical advocates of tariff reduction, in order to cheapen prices for the benefit of the people, whereas now he is urging that prices are too low, very naturally suggests that he was either Insincere then in his plea for the people or he Is insiu cere now. Cheapness was then the great desideratum with him. Ho railed against the "tariff robbers" and urged that a reduction of duties was necessary to give the people needed re lief in lower prices for what they con sumed. It was not the currency, but the economic policy of the Republican party which Mr. Bryan then regarded as the source of all ills. In a speech in the House of Representatives in 1SD2 Mr. Bryan characterized protection asj a cannibal tree which had crushed the farmers within its folds and declare that the only thing needed to give re lief to the farmers and to the masses of the people was tariff reform. Ther- was no trouble with the currency, which was the some then that it is now. The whole trouble was with the tariff. Referring to the attitude of Mr. Bry an when in Congress and his presen attitude, the New York Times says "For some years and up to s recent date, Mr. Bryan, in and out of Con gress, . earnestly and constantly de manded a great reduction of tariff duties and urged that many dutiable products should be placed upon the free list, because, as he contended, the prices of the necessaries of life ought to be reduced for the benefit of the people. The tariff, he said, made prices unwarrantably and unjustly high; the interests of the masses re quired that these prices and the cost of living should be cut down. Nov he asserts that the prices of the necessar ies of life are very much too low and that they were too low at the very time when he was saying that they were too high and was exerting bis in fluence to reduce them. He proclaims the doctrine that the cost of those things by which life is sustained should be Increased not decreased by legislation and advocates a policy de signed to increase It. It was, lie said, for the benefit of the masses that he then called for legislation that would decrease this cost; it Is, he says, for the benefit of the masses that be now demands legislation that will increase It. Why should he not desire to avoid any discussion or any expression ol opinion that weufd exhibit this differ ence and this evidence of inconsis tency? Mr; Bryan In 1892 and in 1894 did his part ami did it well In deluding the people regarding the tariff and he does: not now dare attempt a defense ol his course; the disastrous effects ol which are known to everybody. He is now engaged In nrnother effort to de lude and mislead the people, but what he now proposes Is far more dangerous to the welfare and prosperity of the country thai the- policy of tariff reduc tion he advocated In Congress, In ordei to- reduce prices. -That policy has done great harm- to an interests and espec tally to the agricultural and the .labor interests, but ft Is trifling in compari son to tile fnjTrry that would be wrought by the free coinage of silver. Mr. Bryan has the- very best of reasons for avoiding discussion of the tariff question' He cannot defend the re sults of the policy for which he 's In part responsible. Having deceived tha people- once, to their immeasurable loss, wiD he be allowed to do so again': No- one cart think so who has any faith in popular intelligence. Omaha Bee. POWDERLY AT COOPER UNION AN ADVOCATE OF ANARCHY. The silver Democrats and the Popu lists do not say very much abont the "Anarchy plank" in their platforms. Tet Mr.. Bryan declared in his lettei of acceptance that he approves of thai pians witn ail the rest Here are the planks as they appear in the two plat forms. The first is the Chicago plank and the second is the St Louis plank: We denounce ar-i The arbitrarv course of the courts In assum ing t o imprison citizens for Indt r e c t contempt and ruling by in junction sboulil be prevented bj proper legisla turn. bitrary interference by federal authori ties in local affairs as a violation of the Constitution of the United States and crime against free institutions. and we especially ob ject to government by Injunction as a new and highly dangerous form of oppression. I have carefully considered the plat form adopted by the Democratic Na tional convention, - and ', unqualified' Indorse every plank thereon," says Mr Bryan. In his Labor day address, Air Bryan told workingmen that the gov ernment should provide some way ir which they could settle their differ ences with capital "Instead of resort tag to violence to settle them." St he declares violence one means of set tlement Thus he proclaims himself, beyond all doubt or cavil, an advocat of anarchy. Buffalo, (N. Y.) News. It was not strange that an organized ffort was made to disturb the proceed ings at Cooper Union at the wage-earn ers' meeting on Thursday evening, and by riotous interruptions prevent Mr. Powderly from obtaining a hearing. Not strauge at all, but entirely charac teristic of the methods and th- man ners of that faction in the labor move ment which has been striving for years to prostitute and degrade the move ment for their own selfish purposes. They are marketable, and both vicious and lawless. It has not been the prac tice, even in our most exciting political campaigns, for the emissaries of an op position party to invade the meet'ngs of their' opponents In turbulent and disorderly gangs with the sole view of creating disturbance and inciting rloi. But the fellows who endeavored to break up the Cooper Union meeting with hisses and howls and catcalls, in order to prevent decent and law-abid ing citizens from hearing Mr Pow derly deliver what every one who either heard or read it must iidniit was a perfectly calm, logical and rea sonable exposition of the Issues of the campaign, were of the new order of political disputants the sort engen dered by the doctrines of the. Chicago platform, and accurately represented bv the Boy Orator and Ins auarcmst following. Their highest conception of political discussion consists In drowning the arguments of their oppo nents by unmeaning noise; tneir only answer to calm and intelligent state ment is lawlessness and disorder. The only purpose of these disciples of the Boy Orator was to prevent. Mr. Powderly from obtaining a hearing. In so doing they were only exemplifying the principles of the Chicago platform, onlv following, and bettering but small degree, the instructions of the candidate who has for the last two months been engaged in inciting just such demonstrations by appeals to the ignorance and the lawless passions of those whom he calls the toiling masses, nut wliy siiouiu tney maive this violent and disgraceful lemoii stration against Mr. Powderly? They pretend to be laboring men. and to be nctuated bv a sincere desire To pro mote the interest of laboring men: to make labor Itself not only "worthy its hire from a material point of view, but deserving of the highest consideration, both from its inestimable consequence as the most important factor in the world's progress and from the intelli gence with which its responsibilities are weighed and its duties considered. They pretend, in short to be the npec ial advocates of the rights, and the champions of the dignity of labor. It was under color of this advocacy, and by virtue of this championship, tnnt they set themselves on Thursday night In Cooper Union not to listen to the ar guments of an opponent, of their own class. In order to be able to answer them nor. Indeed, to answer iheni mi the spot with some show of order and plan but simply to suppress his argu ment by lawless disorder and howl or his him down unheard, by mere noise. And who Is Terence . Powderly that these so-called and self-styled ad vocates of the rights of labor should with such deliberation and set purpose undertake to nowl ana niss down in a community whose boast is the freedom of speech, which under law is accorded and by la-w protected? His record as a labor leader answers the Inquiry. He was for many yeaTS- the highest iflleer of the organization of Knights of l-i bor, the- most successfnl association of Its kind ever known in this country Under his administration It was the most respected and' Influential. No combination of workmen had ever ccromanded' such- respect, and certainly none had ever made its Influence and power so universally felt, as thp Knights of Labor under Ms adinlnls tration. Self-poised and firm, he was no less conservative- ana conciliatory, and his administration was marked by more real advancement for the cause of labor and more actual achievements In its behalf than were ever known before or since. His policy was op posed by the demagogues and agi'at ors in the labor movement whose only conception of the labor question !s that there is." and must necessarily a I ways be. bitter and' relentless war be tween the employer and the employed between capita! and' labor. Ont of such constant contention these men made their living. Labor strikes were and are their opportunities. Reconcilia tions and mutual' understandings were and are the- destruction of their bus! ness as agitators, and consequently the bane of their existence. They put Powderly out In 1893. Since then that queer counterpart of the Boy Orator, Mr. Sovereign, has been wabbling round In his place, making more noise in a minute than Powderly did in a year, and doing a thousand times mure mischief In the- same time Powderly ever did'. The labor movement has been divid ed into two distinct parties ver sin'.-e Powderly was deposed. Powderly ad dressed with- Ms own method and his own ltne- of argument one of thee di visions the other night at Coopor "Onion. The other division met him- flu their own way, with' their own man ners, and by their own and only meth od. The result was that Mr. Powderly was heard, and his disturbers had to be ejected by the police. The lesson can not be lost npon honest laboring- men, who desire to hear both sides and form their own judgments upon political questions and do not believe in the sup pression of free speech. New York Tribnne. M'KINLEY EXCELS HIMSELF. The steel and Iron Indnstrv has been quoted as the barometer of trade, and It Is true that when the steel rail mills, the forges, the great foundries, the nail mills, the huge establishments' in which structural iron and the thous and household articles and implements of agriculture or of mechanics are busy the whole community . is prosperous. There may be exceptional causes lead ing to exceptional activity in one or two of the many branches of the great Iron and steel Industry while tlrn gen eral commerce of the nation lan guishes, but it universally is true that when all the branches of the iron trade are vigorous the whole country is pros perous, ana when ail of them are life less the wholei country, is prostrated. This condition gives peculiar signifi cance to the visit made to Major Mc Kinley by 2,000 wage-earners from the steel works at Braddock, Pennsylvania. The voice of these men is representa tive in the voice of the nation. They are men who have passed through a season of adversity; they have suffered from reduced wages and from lessened hours of work: the savings of th pru dent have melted in the slow lire of enforced idleness. These men have di agnosed their own case correctly they know "what is the matter." They have been prosperous uuder protection and unprosperons uuder reduced tar iffs. They went' to an experienced and sympathetic physician In quest of a remedial prescription. They talked to McKinley and he an swered them In tit words: "I bid you welcome to my city and to my home. I can well appreciate wky the workingmen of this country should have a deep and profound interest in the outcome of the present national contest. I cannot fail to remember that one thing which stands between your labor and the labor of Europe-- the one thing which stands between your workshops and the workshops of the old world. It Is a wise, patriotic American protective policy. There are two qualities that strive for pre-eminence in the nature of Ma .ror McKinley sound common seine and unaffected brotherly feeling tow ard those whom Mr. Bryan delights to call "the plain common people," as if they were of a class to which he stoops from the height of a real or suppoi tiously intellectual supremacy, but tj whom and of whom McKinley always speaks as "my fellow citizens." These two characteristics never have been more finely displayed than in his ad dress to the irou and steel workers. An ostentatious man would have seized the opportunity for a display of his scholarship In economics, and in so do ing would have "multiplied words without wisdom." The Republican nominee went right to the root of the matter in less than twenty words: "We know that the present monetary standard has not stood in the way of our prosperity in the past." (Cries of "No. no; free trade has.") The extreme gold men and the ex treme silver men alike are In error The present monetary standard has not stood In the way of our prosperity in the past." Nor will it in the future. It is-an excellent system; it makes the saver dollars as good as gold for the purchase of all things and for the pay ment of all debts; it prevents the pa per currency from becoming depreciat ed or irredeemable. The Republican party Is pledged to Its maintenance. The Democratic party is pledged to Us destruction. After this display of the soundest quality of sound sense the distinguish ed host of the visiting workmen gave utterance to sentiments of the truest patriotism and of the most implicit confidence In the good Intent of his countrymen: "My fellow citizens,- It Is gratifying to me to be assured by your spokesman and my old comrade It will be Inspir ing to the whole country that the voice of labor here to-day declares that no party which degrades the honor of the nation, no party which" stands op posed to law and order, or which seek to array the masses against the classes, shall receive Its vote and support. Golden- words are these, which will strike a chord In every American mme where- virtue "dwells nnd truth abides "We ha-ve this year resting npon ns as citizens a grave responsibility. The country has never failed or faltered In the past to meet every crisis. It will not falter or fail now to uphold the dignity and independence of labor and the honor and stability of the govern ment that it may stiir further exalt the American name;" Here 1 no demagogic flattery of "the Intelligence of. the plain common peo ple," no shoddy rhetoric upon "the cru cifixion of labor." but just a manly ap peal to the- patriotism and good sense of his fellow citizens and an expres sion of confidence In the- exercise- of them at the coming election. Major -ticiviniey has -done well in alT his ef forts, but in his address to the Iron and steel workers he excelled himsWl'.-- Chicago Inter Ocean; BRYAN AND THE TARIFF. Candidate Bryan shows a ' kind f shifty shrewdness in his avoidance of U' issue which his party has made the & most one in every campaign for man) many years, until now. He says: "What ever may be the individual views of citi zens as to the relative merits of protec tion and tarif reform, all must recog nize that until the money question is fully and finally settled, the American people will not consent to the consideration of .any other Important question." If he had said that the American people, having tried tariff reform, and declared fbem seves very, very sick of It, and were de termined to return to the principles of protection and stay there, he would have come much nearer the truth, but then he would have found the truth embarrass ing, as usual. Therefore, he acted shrewdly, accordinjr to his standard of practical prudence in saying as little as passible on the subject and making that little take the form of a claim that the people are not interested in the sub ject. , Nevertheless, the .' Democratic party stands pledged by many plyiks in many national platforms to oppose the protec tive principle, and remains committed by Its action of scarcely more than four years ago to the tjoctrine that protection is unconstitutional and must be extirpat ed root ami branch. A party cannot change its principles as a man can change his shirt, every time a change seems to be temporarily convenient. A party is re sponsible for its history and its 'declara tions in the past as well as in the pres ent. It may indeed undergo develop ment, growth and gradual change, but only as an individual, by rational pro cesses and in accordance with relations of cause nnd effect. A party cannot, mere ly by ignoring a subject or saying some thing non-committal aliout ft. relieve it self of all resiionsibility for what it has said and done in relation to that matter through all Its previous existence. The tariff question is one regarding which Amercau voters are deeply Inter ested in this campaign and million of them are impatiently looking forward to November 3, next, as the time when they will have a chance to ex press themselves on the subject at the ballot box. No matter how much this year's candidate for the presidency on the Democratic ticket may try lo run away and hide from the. tariff question, the voters will not forget that he is the candidate of a party which stands pledged by unrepealed platform declar ations to turn over the markets of this country to the unrestrained competition of foreign capital and labor, and that the long continued industrial stagnation In this country has followed an attempt of the Democratic party to carry 6nt its schemes in that respect: an attempt which the party lenders have declared ' to be only the first step in the way that tney intend the country to travel. Bos ton Advertiser. THE FREEDOM OF SPEECH. BRYAN IS-PREACHING TREASON Attorney General Harmon firms the flank of Bryanism neatly when he quotes Senator- Daniel of Virginia against Chairman Dan iel of the Popocratic convention In relation to the subject of "Federaf in terference," MMlled, with the assumed rights- of mobs to violate tiie laws of the United States. Senator Daniel' Introduced In the sen ate that ringing resolution whfeb upheld Mr. cieveiana in- nis- suppression bv mil itary force of the interference of lawless men "with; the transportation of the malls of the United' States and with commerce among tile states."' It was Senator Dan iel who presided over that maniac con vention that propounded the assurance that the- president had no constitutional right to do that very thing which Sena tor Daniel formally and; vigorously an- provea ms aoing. It requires om little patience on the part of men familiar with the organic law of the Union to gravely meet and refute the wild assertion of Ignoramuses and blatherskites, but Mr. Harmon has simply to submit sections 3,297 and 5,2118 of the revised statutes to prove the obli gation on the, president to employ force against unlawful obstructions "in what ever state or territory thereof the laws of the inited States may be forcibly opiwsed or the execution thereof ob structed." The doctrine laid down bv Altgeld, adopted by the Popocracy and proclaimed from the stump by Brvan the attorney general rightly declares to be more dangerous that the doctrine of seces sion. The only plea for Bryan and his earnest followers Is that of shameful ig norance of the law. Ignorance of the law, however, is not a vnid defense. 1 his man is preaching treason and fools are applauding him because they know no better New York Commercial Advertiser. Tht Old Sonjr. Young Sewnll made a speech or two Hefore the Maine election. He talked apnlnat the silver craze And told of his deflection. His speeches they were heard and read. They caused the hosts to gather: They piled up 80,000 votes, "And the blow it near killed father." It is all right to make a campaign of education. But the effort of the Demo cratic leaders to array the poor against the rich, and make labor and capital enemies, is evil, and wholly evil. The freedom of speech nnd right in a country like the United States, where every citizen has his say, can only be maintained by jealously guarding the public utterances. It should Ie deem ed a menace to everyone when any in dividual descends to Incendiary or an archistic talk to accomplish a purpone. If anyone violates this- principle. It should always be taken against lilm. and in the ease of a political candidate. it should defeat him. a the people cannot afford to trust an Intemperaite or an Incendiary man. and they don't need to. The difference between ear nestness and anarchy in speech Is no clearly defined that there need be no mistake. When Bryan, in his speech at Chica go, said burn down your cities, etc.. he gave the key to his whole scheme and character. If the public trusts him af ter such a note of warning it must ex pect an Incendiary government, dan gerous at all times alike to friend and foe. Bryan will undoubtedly be beat en by his own party. It is justly ashamed of him. lie Is not even a Democrat. Ills party found it neces sary to get a. way from him entirely and hold another convention and Bom Inate a Democrat to gt away from the stampede and riot at Chicago that adopted a platform that mast sink any candidate that stands ou it. Never mind Bryan's promises for free silver to all voters If he is not to be trusted by his own party. If a bad man tried to assure us of a good thing we would all be slow to believe him. Here ia a man posing as a Democrat witbont any Democracy and so bad that tbe best men In bis own party cannot and will not trust htm. bnt find it necessary to go and hold a convention and nom inate a Democrat so as to beat him if possible. Instead of preaching to the publie Mr. Bryan should privately and religiously try to make pence with and satisfy the good men of his own party that he and his 1(1 to I nnd his anarchy ' and burn down your cities is right His position before tbe country at the pres ent time is that of a man utterly dis credited by tbe best men in what he claims is his own Democratic party, many of them tried and trusted Dem ocrats and patriots before he was old enough to blat. The pledges, promises and threats of such a mini as Bryan must fall flat in the face of such facts. Brvan's boasted eloquence must be de void of sense and argument when he can not convince millions of conceded Democrats that he is not a menace to the country and its business Interests. He must have tried it on the dog at . Chicago to stampede the convention, but the medicine Is no good when offer ed to real Democrats, nnd the real Democrats In the Chicago convention even rebelled. We are told level-headed people cannot le hypnotized, but that certain subjects can. We can eas ily place Bryan among the hypnotists when he handled enough subjects at Chicago to get nominated nnd fell flat before a level-headed crowd here. Such a man. with such a nerve, could only succeed like Svengall. New York Dispatch. Chips That In th (fight. Bryan's boom seems to be drifting In splinters toward Salt River. New York Commercial Advertiser. It Is not well to lose sight of the fact that the deficiency In the treasury un der the Wilson tariff is steadily in creasing. And the matter of raising revenue has nothing to do with tbe question of coinage. (SPECIAL NUMBER ONEX)