SCUTTLE ADD PANIC RURAL MAIL SERVICE MANUFACTURERS HAVE APPROVED BY BRITISH. ARE BRYAN'S POLICY. STARTED BY M'KINLEY. A VERY BUSY YEAR. Crockery and Glassware Maou Why Rkhard OIney Support j the Nebraskan. History of the Daily Delivery Exports Under the Dingley Law lactu.inz Stimulated. in the Country. Show Vast Growth. The British Consul at Chicajo Makei He Alwayt Has Been a Believer ia Hiai. lof Uowa the Flag and Shirkiuj Responsibilities Falling to tbe Couo ry. Demerits Said that th Plan Wat Inv practicable, but the Republicans Have Thorourbly Demonstrated Its Value to Farmers. The Demand lor Ra Material la So Report to Hi Governmcat laJora- Great that Imports ol Manufacture era' Material Have Also Greatly Increased. Idj the kcpub.icao Proac tive Pol.cy. PROTECTIVE TARIFF BORROWINO. LEMIU. . i . i i r i ' i w i at r i l m am -x. m ijkr. a am i j Roral free delivery of mall i the off spring of the McKinley admlnUtrstiou t the Postomce Department. It de velopment from aa iuslgnitieant begin ning of forty-four routes end so appro preattoo for the fiscal year which closed la 1897 to Its present maguificent pro portions with tin null routes numbered y the thousand and an appropriation of Sl,7f0,OUO voted for lt further exten sioa during the preseut fiscal year, has all been brought shout by the McKinley administration. A movement to. broaden the free deliv ry sf the mails was stsrted by Post master General Wanamaker under the Republican administration of Gen. Har rison, ft took the form of village frea delivery, and wn more au extension of city delivery to smaller communities thaa a free delivery to farmers, but limited aa waa Ita scope and euecessful tliougli It was In lnrrcaing postal receipts and postal facilities. It encountered Demo cratic opposition. When Mr. Cleveland came In, his Postmaster General fearing lea effect In popularizing Itepiiblieau prln clplea and disseminating Republican lit erature, ordered It dropped. (t was a Republican administration that conceived and executed the Idea of brightening the home of tlie farmer, ed eating his children, increasing the valui f his laud, compelling the iinprovenieu of the road, and bringing the news of the market an. I the weather so as to se cure him a better price for hie crops by delivering daily his mnll to him on h farm. Every Dviii.wratic House of Itep- resentativea since the idea was firs broached of carrying the mails into the rural district. ha declared against it. The Forty-third Congress, with a Demo crat from North Carolina as chairman o the committee on postofilces and post roads, proclaimed the plan Impossible, and turned it down. Postmaster Gen eral Bissell, Postmaster General Wilson and First Assistant Postmaster Genera Jones In the - Cleveland administration all took nj the cry of extravagance and Impossibility of execution. Consequently tittle or nothing was done to give the farmers access tp the mails nntil Cleve land Went Out of ofllee. When First Assistant Postmaster General, Perry S. Heath took up the rural service tinder the. direction of the President and the Postmaster General I Vlarch, ISO". It was languishing to the point of extinguishment, and in a few months more would have been starved to death, like Mr. Wnnainnker'a village de livery. The official reports of the Post- office Department record that it was with surprise that President McKinley and thoae to whom he entrusted the adminis tration of postal affairs, learned that there was such a thing as an ex per1 mental rural free delivery mail service In progress. They at once grasped Ira possibilities and advocated Its Immediate development and a Republican Congress generously seconded their efforts. Under this vivl fylng touch. It has grown until there Is aot now a State In the Union that haa not felt the civilizing and educational in fluence of rural free mail delivery, and aot one that does not desire a further expansion of the service. On the 1st of June, 1000. there were 1,200 rural ser vices In actual operation and 2,000 ap plications for an extension of the system In process of establishment by specla agents appointed for the purpose. The appropriations for the rural free delivery aervice have been Increased from 130.000 In the lineal year 1807-U8 to tM), 000 In 1 SOS-flO, and then to $40.000 In 1S90-1900, and lastly to $1,750,000 for the present fiscal year 1000-01. Three years' experience haa shown that la well-selected rural districts the msils eaa be distributed to the domiciles of the eddressees or in boxes placed within rea son a hie distance of the farmers' homes at some cross roads or other convenient spot at a cost per piece not exceeding that of the free delivery In many of the fltlea of the United States. In the vast majority of communities where it has keen tested, the rural free delivery ser vice has obtained so strong a hold that public sentiment would not permit Its (lis eontlnnanee. It has been a revolution and revolutions do not move backward. It costs very little more than the old tolonlal style of postal service which It nperscde. and It Invariably hrlnas large and compensating Increase In the tmouut of postal receipts turned Into the treasury. But even If It does cost more than the obsolete old plan, are not the farmers entitled to some of the benefits ef the government which they help so lib erally to support by their taxes? The country can well affurd to continue and extend a system which makes better citi ens and happier homes and contributes largely to the mental, moral and material advancement of all the people. Rural free delivery of mail has come to stay, and the Republican adminlstra tJon which brought It into belug will atay with It. Trade Kxpsnslon In Honth America According to the Manufacturer, the prevent disturbances in China have em phasised the necessity of American man factnrera developing an outlet for their goods In Central and South America above what they now control. Produc tion baa reached a point of development that manufacturers are seeking every eutlet for the production of their mill and works. Quite a number of the lead ing exporters are looking south for new fields of enterprise. This U as It should be. for the mure good that are manufac tared and exported the greater the pros perity and chance for wage workers at vine. ' Grow tli of Foreign t.'ntnineroe. Onr foreign commerce under a Kepnbll au administration In pas) was wortTi $2.!M1.l'.i3.--i:l; under a Demitcratic free trade administration In 1 St Ir was worth enly l.."."l!i.."iM.i;t!. an Increase of seven im died million dollars a year In favor f the Republican party. The manufacturers of the United States are making their greatest record lu this closing year of the century. Busy workshops, smoking chimneys, factories running on double time aud, In some esses, the full tweuty-four hours with three shifts of bauds, ore an evidence of this; but exact proof is found in the re port of the chief of the bureau of statin tica, just Issued, which shows an enor mous iucreane In the Importation of the raw materials which they use in manu facturing and an equally enormous In crease In the exportation of finished man ufactures. Importation of manufactur ers' materials in the fiscal year 1000 were more than double those In the fiscal year 1804 and, during the three fiscal years lu which the Dingley law haa been in operation, have- exceeded, by more than 100,000,000, the Importa of raw materials, in the three yeara in which the Wilson law waa In operation, while the exportationa of finished manufac tures. In the three yesrs under the Ding ley law, have exceeded, by more than $.100,000,000, the exportationa of manu factures In the three years under the Wilson law. Evidence from Official ftonrces. Here are the official figures showing the Importation of manufacturers' ma terials and exportatlons of manufactures In the fiscal years 1805, 180(1 and 1807, all of which were nnder the Wilson low tariff, contrasted with those during the fiscal years 1808, 1800 and 1000, which were under the Dingley tariff. The Wil son tariff, it will be remembered, went into operation Aug. 28, 1804, and the Dingley tariff on Jnly 2(5, 1807, so that the fiscal years ending June 30, 1805, 18'Jfl and 1807, were practically all with in the operations of the low tariff and those of 1808, 1800 and 1000 were prac- tically all within the operations of the Dingley tariff. Importa of manufacturers ma terra hi and exports of manufactures nnder the Wilson and Dingley laws, respectively: Imports of materlala Exports sf fur manufacturing, mauufacturea. Per ct. fer et. Wilson law of total. of total. ISM.. $11)1. 119.810 26.11 l!3.Sa43 23.14 1NU8.. glW.WUl.TlT ZO.H3 2iS.R71.178 2U.4H 1897.. 214.91(1,025 28.10 2 1 l,2S3,3ul 2U.KT Total. fOl.V403.15a IGS9, 452.312 IMngley law 1S98.. 204.R43.917 33.20 1WSJ.. 222.013,23! 81. 8J 1900.. 802,264,196 35 o7 29O.fi07.354 24.02 837S,fi.r.A 2H.13 432.284.3G4 81,57 Total. (728,821.352 11.061.057,278 The above table la worthy of careful study. We have been hearing, for years, from Democratic oratora first, that free raw materiala would help the manufac turers, and, aecond, that a protective tariff destroya our chances In foreign markets, yet it will be seen by thia table that the Importations of "Articles In rude condition for use In domestic In- lustrles" amounted. In the three yeara indcr the Wilson free trade law, to $U15, 105,152, while In the three yeara under he Dingley protective tariff they amount to $728,821,352. Look also at the narrow column, which Indicates the percentages of the total Imports which there raw ma terials form, and you will see that they form a much greater proportion of the to- al Imports under the Kepublican system of protection than under the Democratic system of free trade. Why? The an swer la simple enough. Under the Dem ocratic low tariff, absolute free trade In ome particulars, many manufacturers were compelled either to close their works or reduce their ontput owing to he heavy Importation of manufactures from abroad under the low tariff rates. Hence the small consumption of raw uaterial in manufacturing. Thia dlffer- nce of more than $100,000,000 In the uantity of raw materials Imported in the hree years means a difference of several hundred millions of dollars In the amount f goods manufactured and hundreds of millions in the amount of money paid to vnge earnera in the various manufactur- ng linea. Failures Are Fewer. The total liabilities nf firms that failed n the yesr ending June .10, 11100, was II0.87II.8SI. In the year JSJItI the fail- ug firma owed $22(i.0!XI.K34. It win thus aeen that the amount lost Is only boat one-third what It waa la 1895. It telle the story of prosperity. JONES AND HIS COTTOH BALE. How Did He (Jet His Trust Stock and What Did lie Pajr fir It t The composite Chairman of the Popu list Democracy, Senator Jonea of Arkan sas, Is still resenting with considerable beat the charge that aince be la such an important officer of the American Cotton Company (capital 17,000,000; John K. Searles, lately treasurer of the sugar trust, grnnd mogul), it must be that he is a high priest in the trust temple, or, at least, that be la a reckless, abandoned plutocrat. To do Mr. Jonea entire jus tice, we suppose that the American Cot ton Company Is not a vicious trust which deserves to be destroyed, any more than a number of other corporations of $7,- 000,000 cspital In the hands of former officers of more monopolistic trusta. Pre sumably the American Cotton Company will make all the money It can. will mke dividends. Indeed, npon Ita f 7,000,000 of stock. Mr. John E. Searlea can be trust ed to look after a little thing like that, even if Mr. Jones devotes all of his at tention for the next three months, or for the next three years, for that matter, to Populist Democratic politics exclusively. The phase of Mr. Jones connection with the American Cotton Company which we would like him to explain is this, ratner: How much of the $7,000,- (KM) of the stock of the company has he got, how did he get it, and what did he POLITICAL SITUATIQ aeUHKS' WHO IS MARK HANNA? Who is this Marcus Ilanna, pa. That people call bim great? Is he the man who holds the helm Which guidea the ship of state? Ts he like old Goliath tall Like some steeple in the aky, Or, la be that awful wicked man Who winks the other eye? Tut, tut, my son, he's Jnst a man Like good old Iteuben Blue, Who has his way of doing thin fa, And "knows a thing or two!" Bnt why does Bryan hate him so, And Popocrata berate? Is It because he'a old and alow, And Isn t np to date? Oh, no, my son, yon bet your life He's not so very slow, For when his shoulder's to the whee. The cart la bound to go. The reason why the Popocrata Now tremble at bla name, la 'cause be did It to 'era once An'a goln' to do the aame Again this fall, and bury deep Bill Bryan and his host ,In some dark place where Tagal clana Forever more will roaat. Where boiling oil, bolos and apeare And Aguinnldoa dwell A place, my son, so hot and bad, Ita name I must not tell. 8. L. a. Plenty of Money Circulating. President McKinley's letter of accept ance called attention briefly but effective ly to the per capita circulation of money to the United Ktatce. Thia per capita circulation marks the high water of American prosperity. It la now $20.83 for every man, woman and child In the country. To show Its growth, In spite of the predictions of the calamity free silver cries, this table Is appended: Circulation Tear. per capita 1870 1375 1880 1RH5 1800 181)5 1W $17 ro IT 1U IV 41 2 02 21 82 V. I3 ft 00 give for It 7 la bis name, undoubted);, an eminent one in some quartern. ucd it the board of directors an a lit to i-:it-li! mvesiorsr iiu .ur. jonen miiin im., par in "cash money" for the Mock that he holds? I bin poKxexsinn nf it. or an part of it, due to the fact thtit he is in flu-n t i ul In the limin.-e ciiiumiiH-e 1 'l.t United IStates Senate, sud by virtue nf his position there could do bis company, or Mr. Searles', or almost any company of the kind in which he or Mr. Searlec might have an Interest, a very important service at a very critical time? We have never known a gentleman of Mr. Jones' financial prospects to grow rich suddenly except by some means of this kind. In other words, and in Ihv plain, it is fair to Infer, until Mr. Jones denies it, that he is "it." neither on ac count of his cash,- nor his property, nor some Invention of demonstrated value, but rather on account of his "pull" or I.I swing. We say that it is fair to infer this until Mr. Jones denies it. iMvaiise Mr. Jones, by reason of his unjust at tacks upon leading Republicans putr fiimself very much in the public e.ie nin! invites attack from any quarter. Mr Jones has no business to live in a glan. house with perfect safety if he is going to keep throwing such laree stoues. M'KINLEY ON THE WAR. The Government Will Curry Liberty Into All Ita Domain. At the exercises In connection with the presentation by the Navy Department to the city of Canton, Ohio, of a rannou captured at Santiago, the President, af ter repeated calls, responded as follows on July 4, 1900: ' "My Fellow Citizens I will not con sent to prolong these exercises beyond making acknowledgment for your gen erous call and expressing as well the pleasure which I have had In particinnt ing with my neighbors and fellow citizens in the observation of this anniversarv one of the most significant, if not the most significant. In Atnerienn annnls. Tin. aacred principles proclaimed In 177i; In the city of Philadelphia, advanced til nniphantly at Yorktown. made effective In the formation of the Federal Union In 1787, sustained by a nnlted people In every war with a foreign power, upheld by the supreme sacrifices of the volun teers of 18U1, sealed In solemn covenant at Appomattox Court House, sanctified within the last two years with the best blood of the men of the North and the men of the South at Manila and Han tingo and In Porto Itlco still animate the American heart, and still hsve their force and virtue. (Loud ami enthusias tic applause.) And adhering to them as we hnve alwaya adhered to them at anv cost, or at any sacrifice, we find ourselre. after one hundred and twenty-four years formed Into a more perfect union, stron ger and freer than ever before, strenctli ened In every one of Its grent fnmln mental safeguards, and mightier In l' power to execute Its hirty nil-Inn of lib erty. equality ami Justice. Ruinmnninr the precepts of the fathers, we will main tain inviolate the blessings of free gov ernment nt home and carry Its henet t and bcn-dictlon to onr distant novr..ir,,, which lie under the shelter of our glorlou nig. (Enthusiastic and long continued pplnuse.) Export Increase) $000,000,000. We extmrted $l..1!lt.47'.l.2l I worth of merchandise In the year ending June .TO 10O0. Thst was under s iiei.iibii,.,,. administration. In the year ending .lure 30. IHriri. nnder a Democratic admlnjs trarion. we exported goods worth 7!i:t 3!l2.r.!!. The Increase favorine th. nL Mibllean policy is almost exactlv six h dred million dollars in the yesr. Advantagea of the protective tariff sys tem accruing to the workingmen or imi .intrv it shown in a report of the Brit ish vice consul at Chicago to his govein- j went, in which be deals wltn tne cmu, ' .anhenware and glaaa trade of Chicago. ! if. rw.inr. nut that the high tariff on -...i- .,t this character haa enabled A...r.n t. start factories for the man '. nf.etur. nf these goods, and more will ! aoon be built. In hi report the vice For yenra the British potter baa been the supplier of the American market. snd he still continues 10 leuu, oui n fjje ,,,,1 jncrenne of the production In ,k. fni'te.l State, and the rapidly grow ing competition from Japan, thia lead . i ; I 1 .. ..l.. n-afh cttn only be mainiauicu ui m. heinir kent ou the market and the natun of the goods demanded, as well aa the uromut tilling of orders. Chicago buyers ifo over ouce or twice a year to Europe to buy for the local market aud the large district sumilicd from that city as a dis tributing center, and it should be the aim of producers to get In touch wltn tnem, Imuorts increased 13.03 per cent in 1899, aa compared with 1S98, and the value fl.R1S.riHS from fl.33i.4.i2. "There are no potteries In the consn lor district of Chicago, the chief onea being in New Jersey and East Liverpool, Ohio, and the output last year was ti. IHH).(MX). The sale of American crockery lias increased immensely, and Is only checked by the works having all they can do. The Improvements in the last few years In American pottery, especial Iv at East Liverpool, have been great, and there are now aixty factories, but of these only ten are turning out first-clnss work, and none can equal the best for elgn products, hut it must be remembered that the demand for the more expensive arriclc is limited "The high tariff. 00 per cent, which assures the American product of a mar ket, has had the effect of increasing the number and size of the American fac tories,-and with a rise in the price of the British article they will still further In crease. "The American enrtlieuware takes place near that of the English and is sn pcrior to the coarse (Jeruinn earthen ware, and the product of most potteries Is heavier than the former and is more durable than the latter. The colors are not so well put on as In the British, and the Whole article Is, as a rule, coarser, and yet uiiderglnzed patterns and Hon t blue have not been made successfully and, with the process the same, purchas era will not take the American article. Every manufacturer in the United States procures specimens of each new Itriti design, and copies are made if it is thought likely to take In the market. The manufacture of china in. the United Statea is not yet competing with the United Kingdom, but is improving rap dly. "Cut glass, for the manufacture of which there are one or two small fac tories In Chicago, has a large snle, and the American article Is said to be vastly superior in design, cutting, shape, polish snd luster to any other, and it is claimed that the polishing by acids has a great superiority over the hand polishing. Bo hernia n glass still has a pood market, bnt It is found that the British glass is made too fine, snd the thin stemmed goblets are not good for tlje rough treatment they receive in the United States. American or Belgian cnt glass Is preferred. The demand for glass which formerly came from Leith and Edinhurg, has now turn ed to the united States, which also ex porta cut glaas to Great Britain nfid Ger many. Demand for Hog and Cattle Prod acts. Through the Republican poller of onen Ing the mills and of restoring confidence to general business, practically every workman In the United Statea has be come able, since 1890, to have all the fresh meat he wants. The fact that the city workman can afford to eat more roist beef, chops, name, veal cutlets bacon, pork, sausages, etc., thon he could In 1890 means of course that there must be more money in the farmer'a business or raising corn to reed to cnttle and hogs. Take the many other products derived from cnttle and hogs, which bad been raised on corn, like lard, glue, gelatine, isinglass, curled hair for muttresses, etc., brush bristles, felts, soap, glycerine, am monia, fertilizers, hoofs for button mate rial, cnt bones for knife handles, etc., poultry fooda from dried meat acrnps. nl biimen for fixing colors and finishing leather, neafsfoot oil. etc., all these hiivo naturally more extended uses wln a times are prosperous than when they are not. For Instance, lard nearly every cracker made Is about one-eighth of It lard, hi prosperous times the families of work men go on picnics, travel, eat nv.t.. stews, and do other things which great ly increase me consumption of crackers. As a result of such Increased demands for the products from slamrhtcre,! h... and rattle, which in turn means better demand for corn, there baa been an en hancement In the value of live hogs and cnttle ss follows: J -n. 1. 1S07. Jan. 1. 1900. $M).4H(,li;0 2l.1,72.'i,fMsj Cattle $."i07.!I2!I.-I21 Hogs 1i(l.l'72.770 Total $ti74.202.1fl $!)3.-.21 1,200 tmerl. sn railway SuppP, Al.roatl. A 4.(Hsl ton steel rail i-f,n!ri,. h. been booked In Pmiiisv1v..iiI t.. .... Cape Colony government rallwars This follows aunt her order of 3.(HKI tons nf rails delivered before ti e war began An- uiin-r recent ampment is 3.IHS) which have been sent to Borneo, Is good commercial exiiaiKiuii. tons. This One . ,,,.. S,tw - T,..- I. . . ,.,. -" j nere is a siirtilus nt Nt 9 u ::i i.. .l. 1 ITnitml Hi.,.. .J " 1 unueu mates tre-in irv. Piv. . ... i .. ' - j'"'-.o, u" m.-.m, , Mf. Richard Olney baa done a puhM. aervice to tbe utire country by for,.,,,, every voter to face the fact tbt u Kryan'a election means scuttle. Mr. Olney wsa one of an adtniuisu-i-tlon which withdrew from the Hawaii,,. Islands.- He would repeat the set Wa are in the Philippinea. Mr. Oluey woul. leave. President McKiuley'a adiuioi. tiation baa protected American citiu-i iruiu massacre ana American hquwb from outrage in China. Mr. Olney u nouncce ita acta as tbe acts of u,, "weakest and . silliest of aduiiuistrs tlona." Tbe administration has dcuuns ed the open door in China, aud wlies Mancbo reaction and niassacre threat ened to close and bolt the door fivsl dent McKinley haa thrust in tL wtdj of 6,000 victorious American troop t keep the door open from Chinese intol erance or European aggreasion. But this ia part of that policy on which Mr Olney urges Mr. Bryan's election, b cause "so far aa the injurious conss quencea of past courses can be averted or mitigated something may.be houed from those not primarily responsible to. them." . "From their official authors and Jiuti- Here notnlug but persistence in the$t courses can reasonably be expected," says Mr. Olney. lit is right. If r. j slstance to American authority comes on American, territory President Me Kinley will suppress It. Where the flag has been hauled down, as In Hawaii, he will replace It. and the Americau pea pie will vote to keep It there. Wher citizena are In peril President McKinley will protect tbem, lu all lauds. VVuer ' their claims to just Indemnity, u B Turkey, have been systematically Def lected by a previous administration, ot ' which Mr. Olney was Secretary of Stat, President McKinley will insist on pty ment. Mr. Olney objects to tbla policy. Tha American people approves. Vermont demonstrates It, That New Euiland State stands for the flag and all It pro tects. Mr. Olney demanda a policy of scuttle. To him thia "outweijihs" all else. He admits that panic wiil com with Bryan; but better, he say. In substance, "Scuttle and Panic" thaa "Sovereignty and Security." e accept the Issne. We trust Mr. Olney can be induced to accompany Mr. Bryan on his platform camnniL'u t urge scuttle with a vigor and iilainneu of speech his chief, his leader and bit guide dodges. Mr. Bryan talks of a "stable government" In the Philippines. Mr. Olney objects because we "forcibly expelled Spain from her Philippine pos sessions." Sir. Oluey returned the Ha waiian Islands to one tyrant. lie Is ready to return tbe Philippines to an other. Tbe American people is not. Mr. Olney is a lawyer. He knows that the legal choice lay between Spanish sot-' ereignty and ours. He prefers Spanish! American voters do not. Mr. Olnoy talks of much el.'e, but bis heart ia la policy of scuttle. He ricnui.iices tht iJincley tariff. Perhaps he thinks voters prefer the tariff his chief sieaed slid which brought depression, desolation ami deficits. He complains of "th most Intimate relation between th United Statea treasury and the money market." As be looks at our credit oa 2 per cent basis and British bond seeking a market in .New York he per haps hopes to persusde the country that those were better and more prosperous days when Mr. Olney approved secret contracts with money changers dictating their temis at the White House, whea our bonds had to be aold in London t usurious rates to buy gold and prop the sinking- credit of tbe treasury, which cowered before bankers who to-day bin, no word In Its policy. Mr. Olney haa done well for the Itej uhlicnn party. He has recalled to tha public those dire day of a Ieinocratle administration of which be was a part when our railroad were In the hands ol receivers, our factorlea closed, our tren n ry empty, our credit gone and our liaj disgraced. He demands again nays o! pauic, of a free trade tariff, (f crash anj failure, of breaking banks and h-mkrud linn. These "calamitous possibilities which were calamitous certain'" undJ the Cleveland-Olney administration, al outweighed.' arrs Mr. Olney. bf n certainty "of a policy of "scuttle" fro Mr. Bryan. Under aim citizens will t longer, in peril, aee the Dng coining wl salvation In Its folds, brought to 1'rk, by "the weakest sad silliest of aiiiiiim rations;" tbe flag will come down in s Philippinea. and it will be wiihdriiun.i Mr. Olney withdrew It in Hawaii. th'l In Cuba Mr. Olney Is willing to brx ath.nnl fnlth and protests agnmsi i Island being "alien territory." 1 proslnvery Democrat to grab Cuba i to insist, as he does, that It ninst com an "Integral part or .me i m Ktalea," which the Republican pint ot accept aa to annexed territory w rged for alavery and will not ren ed for scuttle. I Mr. Olney Is a Democrat. He mirtv. Ma haa mi other. It e. oi.il strange If he did not support a I 'I cratic caudidate unless he weir a lj peril. A puhMe peril he admits Bryan la. but since Mr. Olney m'-.st' port him. In spin of thia, It is of I ulilie service that be has maoe v" II men that Mr. Bryan not only snster at home but disgrace noro policy of scuttle, surrender and re Philadelphia Presa. i France I)lspioea of McKIn It appears that President MM letter nf acceptance hna met with ! frost v reception lu France. I'r ' ' r""l,,J 1'tn pp ties does uo nn-ei . . i.,on or the Freiien press, an i v . ' . .. . I - sn ror sustaining i"- ; k. ... ,.Jua trual memory. a - - -