THE C"GON f 4Y JOURNAL, PORTLa SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 16, 9ZL f ,f- y ! i 1 . - '-I -1 :" y CHIMMIE FAD D EN Account cf a Thrilling Bowery Melodrama ! Truflt Butter Revenge ."Witt a Moral ' ''1-'-J By B (Copyright 140 4, by W. Toewend.) PAUL looks up from hit Lbs '"one morning, and be VMyg, "DO COUHtSW BeeOOBW has nt her from de Count, f mm." . . "So eooor M7 Mlao FennlO. Tt ww very noble of do Cout te give her divorce wit only one settlement irw her ne." It'g ce result of oompetltion" aaya tin PauL - TC Uhn being ter& Amor. loan hilmiu de not twreaw oo foot W forn noblemen. Is fool, ds Hook of eligible noblemen InereasM tutor Just when 4a stock of American bilrmn de- rmw, and from hum oouooo Dad times. Bometaina' should M dona about It it ehouid bo planked la da at dish Of national platform - "Dew It montlca who Gountsw h) to marry Matt" oaks Mlw Formic. . "Not bom.'' Mrs Mr. Paul. "Dot tted tidings wu printed la do folat dispatch oat iM waa to get, nor oivoros. no Cpe dot vivos as do nowi of do brwo nd oot would watt for do eUvoree to tell uo who do next happy maa le." -Too, i remember," wye Funnle, To countlw la to awrry Horry nest Ho ww Number Two on nor llot boforo aae got do Count but Charles, her Num bor One. marrlod ataoa aba did. but bwnt ot bio divorce jot Harry folat married Oreoe, who la now Charley's wife, and Oraoa give Harrr divorce oo dot aha ooald land Charley boforo do CouatoM M bor divorce. Do OoanteM tHod to buiTr uo and oheek Oreoe, but nor pa ww ehy wit do settlement tola Tin Horn Trust had lust failed oo do CouBtoaa hw to take Jiarry ant 11 Oraoa releesw Charley. Sao won't havs to watt low;, for Grew la soon to aserry Jock, Who ww divorced loot wook; or abo may tako Dick, whose dlverw la announeod w a spring spenlng Jaat after Loot pare la a eomptloatioa, dough Oraoa hw alimony from Harry, which la rot off If aha ntarrloa eftoaor dan oooo .In two ywrs. and without bor alimony aho ow't rattlu bor favorite dlvoroa lawyer, ha hi quits provoked about It" "If society ww fan proper,' wye Mr. PauL -Oevornmwt would furaiah dlvoroo lawyer free. . couplo mar no to do City HaU and nt marrlod x by Mayor MoClellea, who noror eke ' but a smite, but whoa divorce tlmo 1 oomoo uanjr a doaolvlnf woman hw to r-J'' wait until oho oaa aavo up for lawyara' -rfaoa by waartn bats ami atovos oror Umo. Froa dlvoroa, aaya II No oisht hour'domanda by do judaw to shut out , ':? doaolvlnc oouplw who aa sot around to do Court Houoo uatll do ovontnao, bo- ' t oaum of dair oddor ooolal oaswomonta." i , . . "Paul, yoa aro abourdl ' says Miw v Fannlo. ! 'a "Womor says Mr. Paul "Horo am I, froa, whlto and Si and aovor a dlvoroo l',r,: to monamo. It hw boooma a numanoa : , at do elub to havo to wniaia to do abap 4,- ploa: 1 don't know whoa our dlvoroa . " - wUl tako pUoa. .Ma Mlanua aaan't sot do : day yoW - ' . , ,; Llataa to mo: It divoreo at no oaoy J w all dM it wouldn't make such a oorkor of a ploy w me and Duohoaa wont to w - Ir-4. 1 A. - IMI ao bewa band oot is too alow for Btao, because la dls plT. "Swift ami west, or oo Trust Bwtors Revenno," dors wasn't a minute aomstlrir'f loro waaat dotns. Nobody could tall. Ilka Mr. Paul WW osyins. dot ao-ond-so would atarrr uoh-and-aueb whoa Who roll sot dtvoreed. Not muchl Dot's no material for a rod-hot nation drama. Too SAustfC know too muoh on do Bowery what'B aoinaT to happen, or do amllary wlU call for a aonpsnd-daos. 'Let mo tell you about it Do loaalnff lady, Bvellne, ww a bllllonnlrO a dausb tsr. X used to know her off do stare wbea aho towed buna behind a qulck-luoeh oounter. Ih do play aho ww all rlht ho loves bor dad'a elolk, a doubls-ontry blond aamod Willis, and would marrlod him, only just don Count CadWW floats over on a ton-dollar . atwraojo ticket lookinp; for a mUlloa or two, ana ho hoars dat Eveline hssat yet boon dts oovered by do nobility. Ho aoos to dad and ha wya, "How muohT Pad wya dat Counts l ehoap, and bo won't asperate from mora dan two millifms, ano spot oaah, and ow whoa do dlvoroo Is araated. Do eount goes over da aituatton wit hta, oredltors, and day admits dat day ww up against fact not a fancy- Dad, wya day, ww no farmer; Counts ww aheap, all right far fair. Day aaya for him to nail da offer and depend oa do anxiety of Eve line ta aot her dlvoroa to make dad put up two more million instead of one. Do creditors says day would allow do Count cigarette money out-of do folat million, and 1 par oent of all poofcot money ha touched Eveline for. . Dat ww da foist dat In do Second Evsllnd tells Willis dot he la da white haired ladi aha le really strong for, but ho must oxoum her for a year or two. for aha had a date to marry a Count and would, be absent until dad and do lawyers fixed up de terms of dlvoroo. But Wllllo seta up a scream: Tut tut Eveline.- aaya he. "It s Willie now or neverl Btfora yoa can get a divorce I will have dueketa to corner all de Counts coming or going. I know your dad o gam, and can boat his trusts and make a million out of each of 'am. Wit a few millions to start wit, any honest trust boo tea ought to make a comfort i , ' ' donb wrr you," satb the count. ' ' 1 1 , . DWARD W. TOWN5END able pile, Bo mlne." says be,' -and ahako Cadasua ' But BvallM WW rhoy. ' T0 1 took like a roU who would try to butt into society witout ma title clear t No. sir rah I A title and a dlvoroo for mer Bo day ww married. Only five or Six froa Amerleaa women ww crushed to deal trying- to got into do Cauntsso ear ns go to aioai her rings w do happy pair, aooompaalad by delr lawyers, drove irom cfaeleh, - . ( s-Ita atrootr anosred Willie, do elolk seeing dat da street ww blocked to only half o mllo wit JefmrsontaJi ! e-ieiM.i.ie.oi'ex. . i n ..i. m . .,1,,. - V' s -Bt HBAYBK, WILLIAM r BATS 1HE. " ('': 3--- -s., .vokinoi- aimplos. If a A fTOOtl .. Mow Id do up do old auuL r-f, Dat ww ho end of do aeeond aot In do next WUllo oalld Information to do street of do billionaire's craft and by dat and oddor hard wotk be scrapes togoddor a few millions, so ho oaa op erate on his owa hook. Dea be makes a fat killing out of do game of busting" truato. He wnda for do count and aaya: 'How much la bid for a dlvoroo r Do count at In tears of rago, for he ean't aot a aont mora dan ww. de posited by do old maa at da time of do naerrlaco. Truo.'' says Willie, wit horrid lausTb. "Too wouldn't not oven dat If It wasn't up la your law yer' e hands, for I've got da rest But do not despair., mo dear oouati -oh. do not deepalft 1 will give you two mUliona aot to Jot Eveline aavo a dl voroa." r - "Good heavewr - erlod ft oouat Dere aro tiaga I would not do not oven for me orodltoro. Eveline - baa el ready smashed swot Of do old family ehlaa aver mo oonk, and I fear aha will tote her hands to do kit ebon ware. I havo stood all dat etiquette .rooulroa. Can mo e rod I tore ask more? . "Be ealzn." ears Willie. "Tour orod ltoro oaa go shase dotreetvw; my two mil 11 one aro for you. Too need not live at homo, and can havo all do ehooo Uta -caramels and absinths your hica bora appetite demands.' "Done wit your says be eount Dob Willie anarrieo his typewriter. buys ata ottormobiiw and a yacht, goes to all do shows at Coney Island, and oven don hw bales of boodle left Ha ww a trust buster for fair, and District Attorney Jerome eonldn't And him whw do grand jury wanted ta and out where be got It- " v In do next aot Eveline nomas none, at Is Interviewed by society report- ers, and fetrw cut do propsrsst way to drew front hair and salad. Don she looks up Willie, and aho wya to him: -Willie,' wys she, "all I need Is money to got ma dlvoroo and dan I am yours." Willie ho takes do center of do' stage and all do luneilgat, and be wys. wya hot "Woman I be says, "Woman, on your Wayl . I havo married me type writer and already she Is do tender of do swiftest set of Boeky-Blufl-by-do-nana Ton would not have me whoa 1 ww poor and honest: do you link I will let you In now dat I am nelderT" "By h seven, Wllllaml" wys aha dusk ing Into do limelight and running her Angora trough bar frisson. "By heaven, bow provoktnsj If I oannot got a dl voroo and marry you. at least give mo a look-in on wwlt and prow actloas W your typewriter." ' Per a minute It looked like Willie was going- to give bar de Job. and ds gallery get ready to trun benches and ting at him. But just dsn Willie's wlfs sups from behind .a aereen, where aho had boon making gco-aoo eyes at a Wlno agent fa s stago box. and aho wys, "Quws again, countess. Willie hires no typewriter, till 1 have looked bar over aad drive aae oeweeaL , 1 do not oOBaont 'to a moshanlosl blonds wit an Bnalloh aooont a Italian title, a Japan w noodle and a Preach frock. To do forest for yoursl" Sho crowds bote Willie and Eveline out of do corner and do limelight and tho saltan falia wit da ore nostra plsylng. "Derea only One ootl Ib All Dla Wolld for Me," and da audi ones yelling. Uko ooavonUoa votlng for a suro looaa . aay, ww dat a pur Whatl jl tsiu do atory to Mr. PauL aad aaka him what he taught of It "Wen, Chamoo," bays ho "do Stage Id a grand moral tsaober, but It don't -BT BEATEN. HOW PBO- scam to medat ds proper lcssoi taught by do drama yoa wo wohV re late. Wo must bo true to Mtura, -or blow up trying to be. Willie, tt ombm to ins, should havo took Eveline when bcbooamo a billionaire. Don ho could have want Into dinner wit his wife ahead of dow laay ladles who havo neglected delr opportunities and never married oven a Blngle forn title. , "I believe ta reciprocity, and .'how can wo 'olprooato do kindness of fora counts who wed our fair daugntera hot ter dan by taking dow golls, when day taw solved dor sentences, -and plaos 'cm at do head of de foist soicles of our foist society r Wit do glamour of dl voroa and nobility has sing over Bvellne, and boodle and Indictments hanging ever WlUle, what a social team day would make! Toor playwright loot good moral point wbsa ho did not naarry veiine ana win is. "But sir." I says, tlsy triad tt dat way ow performance, and do gallery tore out do bonchw and Is id do lsad tea rnan up In a hospital for a weak." Whlch shows," aaya Mr. Paul, "dat do gallery cloaca its oyw to do area-1 row of ctvllisatloni dat day don't aw dat do nag follows do marriage festiv ities. I would explain furder to you. Chamoo, but I must resume wotk on mo groat book, which Is to show how we can pay our national debt by makmaj a aobiuty of our own." . "How Is det oirr t wya, act' suite cop ring his duds hwgwvdB-s, "Easy," wys Mr. PauL Ceagrwa erwtw w many Counts and dukes w dere Is new fortunes mads, and auo tlons off da new nobility to do highest bidders. Do funds so acquired will not only, as my book will show, pay do aa tloeal dsbt, but reduce de tariff w much dat a free Amerleaa oaa buy bla trous ers abroad without being fined or wnt ta Jail by do customs officers." ' "I. object!" wys Whiskers, who heard Mr. Paul aay dat, "Protaotloa Id as- ii t it H orea. . - . "flurnr says Mr. PauL -My plan protects do buysr instead of ho sellers.' "FudaTci nays waiwsrs. the National Magaalno. - Tho Incident happwai M I ww being driven to tho station, and tt arose from my admlrattea of the pubUc library Ben- ator Hoar had pointed out toons. - ' The only Umo 1 wesf cvsr grutlty of wire pulrlnaV my host then remarked, "ww when I w used my tnfluenoe that Thucydldw Instead of Herodotus ro oelved honorable mention on that facade w the representative Qreek .historian. Why did I want to carry that point? Oh, only because rvc always had aa M portal fondness for Thucydlnes." Ww not that delldouaiy ena ram ens tic? Is there another man In American public life today who would pull wlrw for Thucydldw r .. , . .... : - x ; AaawanTdnp; la firm a shin. ,t. . k From the Boston Reoord. Senator Hoar used to relate with much gf.ee tho oonvrsatlon that reoentjy took lacs between two aouthernora. the first of wbom had but lately returned from a trip through New England. Maid the flrat man from Dixie to his friend: Teu know thow little white, round bwnar TSS." rcpMcd the friend, the kind-we ad to our horwsr ' "The very una. Well, do you know, str, that In Boston the cnllahtenod cltl aens take thow lltrle white, round bwns, boll , them for three hours, mis them with melnssw and I know not what other IngTsdlsnta, and bake them, and then what do you supposs they then do With the beans r . . They" . ' They wt 'cm, afr" Interrupted the first southerner, trapreeslvelyr "Bless me, air, they eat 'cm!" , '"V . r.; s Cajlsslby. . , Tram tho Houston Chronicle. " Visitor to Museum (In 144) Wbat'a thatT ' Atundant it's a piece of beef, ply, Ow of the bits now in existence It used to be quit plentiful, however. In fact, it waa need as a food up to the Twentieth century. . ' "Oh. Henry.' axelalrad bis wlfs. as ahd threw her arms rapturously about bla neck, "1 de love you aoJ Don't forget to )wve mo fie when you go to town this morning, will you dear?" "And this," muttered Henry, softly dimngaglng tilmsolf from her fond efn bracet "this Is what you might call be ing bard pressed for money." , Eolwarci r H true that our tncrww m wealth and prosperity elnce the rise of the HsoubUoan wrtv has been 1U work. Ha glory t Ww It an appeal to truth for Mr. Hay to treat as a result of 'Tlfty Tsars of the Bspubllcaa Party" our lnaioa se la populatloa between lite and ltuo, our four-fold Increase In farm Ins acreage, our five-fold I no res ee in corn oroB and alx-feld Increase In wheat oron. our Increase la manufacturing capi tal from tee.ooo,eoe to iie.cacuca.aveT Dow any argument deeerve less rwpeot from ew who hw mastered- that first rule of reawnlac wfaloh bids Um not In fer that eveat A le the effective and sole oauw of ovwt B merely beceuw la order df time event B comw with or after vant AT Were there not In the United Statw fertile eoU and moderate euna and rains, tho brains and baada and invent ive awnlua of American men and women. liberty, law and order all thow before there ww a Bepublioan party; and were aot they tw prima wuw ox our prosperity f The growth of American populatloa and wealth between uie peace of ITU and the lwuduratlea of John Adams la ITS? was but a emeu fraction of the like growth under MclOn- ley and Hooaevalt And in wow is years tho rears when Franklin and Jaffereon and Hamilton and Madi son, under, the ausniow of the nobis, un- boaatful oharacur of the Father of His oountrv. wtabllehed our repuoiie our material growth la absolute flfurw ww email indeed, oar railroad m usage nnus-ht Were thow writer statwmeng dwarfs, therefore, la oompartson with tho tetur-day Titans, who nave a wen in the White House stow March, liair What yeara, O Amsrtosn man and wom en, havo done more, material and moral, than thow wrly onw for their own geo- e rat km what years more for this very twentieth century prosperity oc ourar In u the Lincoln doctrine, or WW it ever, that the merit of moral aad pollt leal oausw la measurable by the wealth and luxury accumulated at the very time of their operation T Is It not the dootrtw of apoatlw and prop note sad the lesson of all practical history mm self-den lei. simplicity, eoooomy. rigbt sousnesa, sobriety, Iwd onnot In stantly, but after pa Heat years to pow er and wealth 7 Would not itepuouwn orators give bettor promise for future fruits of present-day Republican aomin lstraUoa If they sould rather end truly claim for their party under preaioent TAaMSvalt an enforoement of equal rights, a rigorous eoooomy, a puaotul ous regard for lawt But if this doctrine of "prcaonl wealth, therefore prwmt virtue, la prcaent rul ing politlca." bo not a shallow sophistry. stUl BW with Wbat awura xairnssa n is applied. DO Ibapubllcan apologlste say dare they wy what alone would be relevant to-tho aolltleal problem. that during the 44 years since tnsir party came Into power, the progrew of our country has been w treat, from ywr to year, as during tw as ywrs ox general Democratic ouprcmaoy boforo the civil wart If tho Republican party may justly ask another leaw of power henaiiee from lttS tS It CO- OUT popula tion increased from 11, too. ace ta wo. or It per wnt per decade, way may not the Democrats with greater Justice aak thdr return to power because from 1100 to lilt the Incroaw was irom l,IO.eeo to 1 1,441,004, or II per cent la sack decade T Wa not the Incroaw In the decade ltM-llto and In eptte of slavery from st.ew.eee to ti.ooa.cat, or at the same raw w ta the decadee lisc-lteer If the lncreaee In total wealth between 1440 and 104 ww from 9i4,eoo,tfee.cee to o,oco.ooo.44. or lie per oent per decade, and to wealth per oanlta of aooulatlOB from ttlt.t to Il.315.t4, or Is- per cent per dewdc ww not the Democratic Inerww in total wwlth between 1SS0 and last from t?.40e.4oo.oeo to it.oe,cM.eM, or ill per oent for tho decode, being still larg er than tho Republican, and In wwlth per capita from ttOT.lt to tll.lt. or at tho rate of 17 per oent for tho decade nearly double the Republican rate Al though tho value of farms and farm property Increased from tT,tlo,ew,ow In Ills to $i0.tl4.0M,eoo la 1100, or at the rata af It per oent ta each decade. was aot the Increase from $l.lT.se,ee la lilt to IT.ttO.MO.eoe In Ittt, ar at the rats of 100 per cent per decade; and were not therefore Democratic auaplow far mora favorable to prosperity than Rs DubllcanT Although tho corn oron In- orwaed from lll.OO0.440 bushels la 1140 to M0l.o04.tcs In lioo, or at the rate of 17 ner wnt In each decaoe, ww not the increase from S77.04C.CW la 1140 to 141,- 004,090 la 1444, w at the rate of 01 per oent In each decade! and If. therefore, wo wish largo Incroaw la tho next four years, ought wo not to prefer a Demo cratic orea! den tT Evw If tho wheet crop Increased from lft.000.0M bwbela la 1140 to tti.ow.OM in neat or at tw rate of to per cent la each decade, did it aot lnoreaw from t.ooe.ow ha. lata to 171,000.000 la mo, w at tho larger rate of M per oent per decade T If this kind of argument bo fit what shall be said of the Increases la wwlth under Pern oo ratio ausptow from t7.eC4.ew.4ca to 11 4.440,0m. 440 In 184C-144C, or at the decade rate of lit per cent w against tho increase under Republican auspices during the decade UtO-ltoO from 14a,- 000.OM.000 to t44.M0.0M.aCC, W 41 UM irate of onty 44.0 per eentT Or what shall be said or the incrcews m wwttn per person through oot the United States in the decade Itso-ltM from 1147.40 to I61t.lt, or at tho decade rate of 07 per cent w against the corresponding ln oreaw under Republican auspicw m llto-XOM from 11.011.47 to tl.llt.ll, or at the decade rate of only 10 per owtt Or what snail bo Mid of the Incroaw In export of American manufactures of Iron and steel from 441,144 in HOC m cb.s'is,- 114 In 1110. or an avaraao rate of list per cent per decade, oa against ths Re publican Incroaw from B,I70.114 In 1110 to 111,111,441 (at tho abnormally high flaurw of ltM, or an average Increase per decade of only 4M per oentt Or what shall bo Mid, and perns pa more reason ably, of tho tnerewe under Democratic rule la our export of acrleuiturai prog usts from tSB.4M.4M la 1000 to tlSI.OM. 0M In 1110. aa average of 110 pec oent per decade, w against tho lnoreaw under Bepuhiiwn rule from un.eeceee in 1840 to Rtt.cC,4M ha HOC, sn average of only It per oent per decade 7 What snail be aatel of the Demwratls la ersaM In our total domwtlo merchan dise exported from tll.0M.Mt In IMI to II 14.044.404) ta 1M4. or an average Demo cratic Increase of 111 per wnt per do eede, w agalnat the Re public an Inerww from I14.0M,400 In 1140 to 11.170.044. 0M la 1100, an increase of only ll.l per cent per decade T Or what shall be wld of the Dcmocratle Incroaw in American tonnage engaged m foreign trade from 441.411 In 1400 to S.444J17 In 1M0, S Democratic Ins fee so per decade of 44 per cent, w asalnst the decrease from I.M4.II7 la M40 to M4.444 la 140, a Rpubltwn dscrww of 14 per cent per decoder Or what shall be wld of the Democratic Inerww of tonnage encased in domestic trade from tel. oil la lite. to 1107.111 In IMI. a Democratic la crowe of 111 per oent per decade, w against- the Rpubllcan Incroaw from 1.107.411 In llio to 4.111.141 in itot, or only It per cent per deosdsT If this In erww in railroad mileage be so alg-nlA- cant a Repuhllcsn glory. Is It not nt to point out that under Democratic bus- plow tad aiiieaga Increased from It M. Sliepard on mllw at 1110 to 10.II4 la 1M0; ow. If this be a crowding of the argument then tnw uo lacreaw under Demos relic aus picw la 1440-1IM ww from 0.011 to is.aia. a decade lncreaee of 111 per cent oa agalwt the Increase from 141,114 la UM to 114,114 in 1M. or at the decode rate of only 14.1 per coatT Or shall we take tbe laorww la total manufactures, which le the glory of the proteotloalstof Wa have not the ofnolal Ogurw wfors 1114 which would. M doubt show enormous proportional In creases. Let us, w wa must begin with 1140. The Democratic Incroaw for 1440 1144 was from tl.4lt.0M to tl.IM.444. 400 or at tho decade rata ef 14 per wnt But IB 1844-1 80S the KepuMloan and -protected" 'Incroaw (allowing the abnormally Tigh prices of ltoo) ww from t.lT1.0M,MO to -ll.0l,0M,M0, or at the decade rate cf only 14. S per cent la It not algnlfioant that while tho total manufacturing product tecrewed In 1IM-1IM by 14 per sent the lnoreaw in wages and aalariea paid employee was from only tt.18i.ooo.ooo to II.7I4.0M.4O0. or at the decode rate of ll.l per cent being only one-half tho ratable Incroaw la tho manufacturing output? Bo it Is ta be noticed -that, while populatloa In creased in 1114-1141 by M per wnt, the lnoreaw la staaufwturlng output waa It per nat, or 14 times the rate of popula tloa wcrewoi but that the population la creaw from 1I4O-1400 waa ll.l per wot while tbe Increwe. to wealth ww ll.l per wnt or only 1.11 tlmea the popula tion Increase. Indeed, la whatever Jwt way the nguirs'-of svsa aaanufac curing growth sre treated, they tell for tho pe riod of DemoeraUe rule and . greater eoonomlc liberty. The Republican orators and campaign book refer to the recent great incroaw la exports of domestls products w a crushing proof that, even if foreign trade be considered, Republican adminis tration and high protective tariff arc beet DM not w they wy-xports ln oreaw from II 11. 004,0m la 1444 to 11. 1 7 o.ooo. coo la ltoo, a per accede In- orowe of tl per cent upon the amount of lteor But here seals R Is owy to explode their argumeot For the In crease In 1144-1140 WW from 114.400,- 0M to ttlt.MO.MO, or W the decade rate of 114 per cent a Democratic rate of Incroaw under a revenue tariff half w large again w the Republican sad "pro tected" rate of laerease. From UM to lMt the Incroaw Ww from IMt.M0.4M to f 1.141,004,440, or at aa annual rate of 4.1 per wnt being less than half tho Democratic rate of la.4 per owt la 1U4- 1140. Mr. Hay ventured to Include tho de cade 1M0-1M0 la his ftarurw of Repub lican glory. Tst thow were years of Demooratle power; and the Walker tariff, enacted by Democrats la Ittt for revenue only, WW then la effect Is there anything- w truth telllnc la the vwt mwwe of flgurw la the Bepublioan oampalcn book w tho feet tt would aoa oeai, that thow warn ywrs of greater ratable growth ta material things thaa any our oouatry aw Blow known t I oannot Mavo this mws or agates. mads neoaswry by tho almoet over whelming depend once of tho Republl oans upon the "prosperity" arguraent without asklnn you to think of another point Dow It not Illustrate the de basing effect upon ths latter-day morale of tho Republican party produced by Its change of dominant purpose from tho restraint of human slavery to tho main te nance and tightening of the ahacklw of a -protective" tariff, that Mewre. Hay and Root and tbe authors of tho Republican campaign "book havo made no allowance for the regwerotive ano etlmulatina affect of tho abolition of slave tabor T If other things wore equal, the rates of Industrial incroaw from 1M0. when Hi nearly half tho oouatry the labor ww chiefly tho crude, waste ful, hopeless labor of slavery, to 1404, whw all labor ww free, ought to have exceeded thow Of the preceding decade. instead of to aavo fallen far ? below tkeas. - - - Mswra. Hay and Root, and even the sordid mm of the Republican oara- palaa hook, affirm a moral kinship be tween Abraham LJncoln and tw a la tee men who control their politlca In 1144, between the man and women who aavo the all necessary religious and humani tarian uplift to the anti-slavery strug gle and the war for the union, and. oa the other hand, the vast corporate and buslneee Influences, which, by and for their owa profit dominate tho Republi can party, i To thaw tnf luenew evw Its gallant ana strenuous candidate baa- after hie muck protecting aloquonw to tho oontrary in 1401 and 1401' bean com pelled to completely wbmlt with' prom) tew aot aaaia to "tub amuck," ana not agala to treat the tariff queetloa w oooa. even to tho extent to which Prwt- oent McKlnley at the last held that tho welfare of tho country leqalred It to be open. Surely the claim to tnm aawnip needs only to be stated to tonne itwir. What part, ' indeed, did a protective tariff play la the national uprising- af 1II1T How macb ww it oieouseeo w the Ltnoola-Dou gla ss debs tee la IMI or Uaoola'a Cooper Unlw speech to 1410, 5 tho Important speeches. Republican Democratic of 1144 or 1II4T It WW not mentioned. The Republican plat form of 1414 wld act ow word in be half of protection nof did tt mention the tariff, although tw Walker tariff a tariff for revenue, and not for protec tion had been In operation 10 ywrs. The Republican platform of 1140 did not refer to protection or 0 protective tariff. Ia one of tho later and subordinate clauses of the platform tt did declare that "white providing revenue ceo by duties upon Imports, sound volley requlrw such an sdjustment of thow 1 an posit Ion a w to encourage the devel opment of tho Induetrlal . Interest of tw whole eountry." But oven this vaaw augwwtloa, ' which might mean high or low protective duties, or ao pro tective duties whatever, made no part of the campaign. Lincoln did not refer to It In hie letter of accepts nee or in bis inaugural. In 1414 the Republlwa plat form nande not a single reference to pro tection or the tariff; nor did Uneola Is his eooeptanee or Inaugural. Something; from Abraham Lincoln m be be If of a high protective tariff would bo preeloM indeed, to tbe RcpubUoaM of today. But they wn find nothing. For evw thdr campaign book the beet thev can do la to pick out a few aea- tencw from speeches of Mr. Ilnooln1n 1141 and 1447. a doses and more ywrs before he was president, and sven be fore W ww in congress, m which he de clared that the Justification of a protec tive duty would W Ha rwult in esteb- ItehlneT some new Industry an our coun try, w w to secure tho goods to the consumer at a cheeper rate than he could bring- them from abroad. The modern Republican Mws that tho um of a protective tariff ta to keep prlcw high to the Amerleaa conwmer in eraer mat the proflta of other Americans sngssed la gigantic and long wtsbllshed Indus- trtw shall w Increased, would have beea as abhorrent to Abraham Lincoln w It is to Judge Parker. Bven in 1144. when, the war, being three ywrs ended, buslmw questions began to be thought of, the Republican wrty wld not a word hi behalf of a protective tariff, but. rather to the ron- ftrary, dcclsred fhst "it la due to the labor of. he Mtloo that tawtlea ahov fssues of tke be ecjuallaad and reduced w rapidly w the wtlowl faith will permlV'i and (ton era! Orwt la bla letter of aeoeptanee ww equally silent oa this queetloa. Could there have then bees Republican sudoow In 1M0 or 1444 or evw 1441 sa lens Walker tariff maa and evw free traders waow eeonemlo views remained unchanged, had aot left the Democratic party for the A ntt-Slavery party t Would not that euoeew havo own defect If Chase, Summer. Blair, Bates. Jobs M Palmer, Trumbull wd a host of other former Demoorata and believers ta low dutlw had wt aad because the tariff ww aot la question joined the Repub lican party? Are you not Mr, Kay, for getful, very forgetful, whoa yea say that Only thow who believe tn hastes rights and . who believe ta tbe Amerleaa system of protection have any tit la te as me themselves by ths name of Unoota. or to elalm a moral kinship with that aueTust end vencratw spirit. r. - - . And what part did oolontet exploita tion of inferior raws or weaker eoun trtea, w the policy of "big atlok" suzer ainty over the republics to the south of us, or the policy of the "strong man armed In the trade and territorial dte putea of foreign oouatrlee, pter In the politics conceived or- directed by 'Lin coln or his party T - if, in 1144,- ths Democratic party boasted tho Oimstead i n if oot o behalf of a eoneawt ef Cuba, dM It not result In Democratic shame wd dieaetsrr If Seward, at the head of a Republican cabinet a month after Lincoln's inauguration, secretly urged his ebtef to avoid eomeetle dlfn- cultlw by plunging- ua into aa Europmn ir, did not Mr. Hays own disclosure la bla Llnwln's Moraphy of tho secret well air, blast Be ward's reputation for etatwmawmpf Quote, Mr. Root and Mr. Hay. If you can, any remembered and honored atterancw of honored Re- publlwn otatwmw before . MoKinley'a presidency, la bebsJf of your foreign and colonial policy. Quote, If you dare, tho Republican platform awartlw 1141. that the malotanance of the priwlplw promulgated la the Dectare tlon of Indepeneenw is essential to the preeervatlen of cur Repubilcaa te stltutlens, that the hlghwaymaa's ap peal" that "might makes right" would "arte shame and dlebonor upon any government or people." Or quote the Republican deelaratlM Of 1144 that tbe doctrine that govern meats derive "their loot powers from ths swaint of the govsrned,' la "essential to the preser vation of our republican Iwtluttons. Or quote the platform declaration by. the Republican party la 1140 of Its "sympathy with all oppressed peoplee struggling for their rights," and of Its solemn reoosaltlon of "tbe great prinet- ples Is Id dewa la the immortal Declara tion of Independence os ths true founda ttea of demeoratte government." If to thow challenges yoa must remain dumb, are yoa set, truly, in Mr, May's eloquent words, guilty of "swrilece to try to trade apea that benignant renown of the humanltartaa Llnooln whow llgnt folds la this orb a the earth' "1 The Hmlte of even thle long speech prohibit discussion of tbe grest Issue which Democrat a"" Wisely and courage ously raise by their sasertlon that the system called "protection" that la to wy. tho . support of specially favored Interests by dutlw. payment of which Is enforced upon tho whole people fa a "robbery." and by tw Republican vindication of It w a "cardinal policy" to bo followed. I point out. however, that, OdtwithetandlBg the former r gmcy of both Mr. McKlnley and Mr. Roosevelt for revision of tamt sehsd ales la tW Interest of larger wport trade, tho Repubilcaa party Is now pledged, not only sgBiwt revlClon. but agalwt any discussion whatever ef tbe question. Tho eltlaca who would undo any Injustice In the tariff or let down any of Ita obstructions by partial repeals or reciprocity treaties, or who would havo light shad upon tho operation In detail of ita multifariously complicated system eoTtatruetod by "give and take" between the attorneys of special lnter- eats before ways and means and finance committees. Is peromporUy refused any relief If Mr. Rcoaovelt bo elected. The policy of "stand pat" means that under Republican ausploes. aa oonunlttw snail Investigate, aor houw of con grew con sider, the worhinar of tho tariff. On this subject there must be mute obedi ence w before a dlety. If the. snaaa- facturo of steel and Iron bo no longer aa "Infant Industry" to be cherished, hut a practical monopoly wlthta tho American republic, out of whew profits tbe rwt wt fortunes In the world have been built up If 'It sell Its products to for eigners more ehwply than te Amert- cans-" nevertheless there must bo sllsoce. If Its charter of monopoly In tw Dlnaley tariff or any other schedule of that law te found to bo an Past or corrupt w op pressive otlll they ars never to W re vised until thow who havo made them thua vtctoua shall choow to revlee teem. Judge Parker has pointed out that, el nee tho sewte mwt be Repubilcaa during; tho next four yes re, no tariff reform oaa bo emoted without Repubilcaa sup port; but bo promisee. If elected, aa ef fort to obtain that support and. la any ant. a prscntstlon of tho wuw to public opinion from tho vantage ground of the preeldsnoy ef the United Btstes. A vote for Mr. Rowevelt, on tho other hand. Is a vots that not eve a an effort at tariff reform evw tho slightest Vrom the Maw York World. 1 TFHB modem tendency to give 4 young awn practical buelaow training? In the anlvcrslUw re eervw a striking- illustration ta the appointment of Cnarlee Earl John son to conduct tbe new oourae in under writing- at Tela Ths wtablishmwt of this course' In practical insurance w tw suteome of a plan eowelvW seven years no by a progrsestvs underwriter of Hartford. Conn., end recommended ay him to tho Talc faculty. , Ha received but little encouragement Prof. Arthur Hadley Became Inter ested la the Insurance man's proposi tion. It te wld that hs promised to aid the protect If over he had power to do so. The . plaa lay untouched, however. until test year, when Professor Hadlsy. bow prwldent of Tale, took R up and enlisted tW eld of wvsral reading In surance men of New Tor and Hartford, who freely gave their oervlew aa In structors, Their lecturw at Osborne Hell aroused such Wtdeeprwd Interest among- faculty and stooeatu tnw tns ecess ef the Idea was awn red. TW Insurance men sooq eonvtneed the fae- ulty of the anlveretty that a regular eourw of Instruction la underwriting should bo placed upon the curriculum. Then for several monthe the promotere searched for a al competent to teke the ww chair. The choleC fall upon Char fee ) Jnhneton of Hartford. In siHe of i tnC enmmtttM found f " 1 a VowMrful fund of k 1 1 -''V Campaign measure of It shall be made, and XK every Iniquity ef the Dlngley whed' hall be borne la alienee. The Re llcan - platform deolarea that wn England "agitates a wtura to protects the chief protective eountry should a falter la siatntalnlna It" This prau of Mr. Chamber la le for his policy e defensively economies! warfare agala the United States finds a dt place la the RepuMlow creed. They applaud tho re taliatory blow aimed at ourselves, so much are they art love with any blow Ctvoa by aay nation te another. , Boforo we Demecrato Propow amy spwlns measure wa ask the Aaiertew people to remember their owa hlstery. We atee begla with the marvelous sta tistics ef national growth from the first census la 17M te the last la 14M. with the tncrww tn populatloa. and ta the produce of farm and maaufctorw and forwts and mines, hi the e enlevements of American Invwttea and organised Industry. Wo do aot wy 'that thaw material results havo been achlevW by. laws, however good. Wa recognnM thear source in tbs wtural bounties of Ood, and the hearts aad hralw aad muaclo of A merle ee,. freemen. - We do add, however, thW here batwew the Atlan tic and Paolrta, betwsea Canada and tho gulf, ww first tried on a great scale the new experiment ef hemes and Indus trial freedom, of equal rights and no special Privilege, if the presence of negro slavery, until the civil war, cre ated dismal exoeptkms end if tho presence together la . the south ef a great or equal or even outnumbering msw of a colored race with profoundly different chamcteristlw and as yet vastly behind tho white raw la tw fac- ultlw of disciplined Industry and high claw government gave, and evw now gives rtea ta anomalies and lneonslstsrv clee they have made only clearer the wisdom and beneflcenw of our funda mental policy. Wo Democrats point out' that during- this period of splendid growth, there ww systsmatlo hostility to a urge military or wval expenditure, there ww ayatematle preference for sim ple and Inexpensive sdmla let ration, there ww systematic dislike of personal aad sumptuary reetratnie. Democrats do not like Republicans, forget bow vast during our wonderful economic proarreee bw beea tho American area of free trade between our 41 states, aa wtwt of free trade far beyond anything; aver be fore or now elsewhere Known. For that area bw included the wldwt differ ence of climate and wll aad human la bor, and also far differing; conditions la erganlsed society, ranging from settle ments nesriy three eenturles old to fron tiers occupied but a few years. They remember tWt tho Internal trade of thie truly Imperial domain which te free ef all tariff is la volume wd amount vast ly, vary 'many times, mora Important than Ita foreign trade which Is subject to tariff. They want out that for more than a owtury tho America a wtloa scrupulously refrained from foreign en tanglements ana made no forcible oon- quwt except w It took from Mexico as a war Indemnity tho practically unin habited country oa the Paclfle slops aad the Rle Grande. They point oot that, although the conditions ef Amerleaa life have, to a large extent beea thow of a new and frontier eountry. tw public men and the official lite of our country havo beea w dominated by low of tew as to oommond the Jwt tribute of every Intelligent foreign vtaiter, and that tbe very "lynch law" which hw ww and then In thinly settled parts of this vast domain disgraced portione of our popu lation, hw often hew mew reaction against technical administration ef law that Is te say. asaJnet misdirected re-' spect for law on the part of those hi autWrlty. - From all thow conditions and from thaw Inetltutlcw and la a pits of their faults We come oo the Demoerata aay the Industrial productivity and triumph of the American cltlsea. After pralw to Ood for His gifts to w of land and water and climate. It Is to these deep lying; and truly dynamto oausw. and above all to the Amerleaa devotion to liberty and law, that the Democratlo party awtgw our splendid results hi agriculture and mining; our vast treas ure houses our onormow Incroaw tn railroad and manufacturing- pianta, and all other material w well w political glory of our land. Democrats know, nor would they havo any American forget that tW most ctupendous foroe the world hw known. Is the free, wlf-gov- srnlna:. law-aMdlng-, wlf-rwpectlna cltl sea, regardful of tho rights of other men sad therefore Justly insistent upon his own. From tho marvslow sucoew ef our oouatry ousamed up la the waew of 1400 and its tabtes af comparisons with the results of other censuses, the Dessoorats draw the eowloelea, not that the general and broad priaolplw of tho Amsrteaa people should be reversed, or their wcrod traditions undone but that they should bo continued i that only faults and except low aad inoowlstowlw should be eliminated. They would aot have law rwpeot for law but mors re- speot; act lew freedom of trade but more freedom; net tew raapeet for tw rights of other eouatriw and races. however, lafsrtor to as, but more re spect; aot mora foreign wtanglsmwts but fewer; aot Increase, bat dasrawa ta the proportion of aallltary and wval and general government expenditure to the ability of tho people. such is tw general creed of tho Dem ocratic party; wd such must aad will W Its practice when It ret erne to power. about tho act saw of Insurance. Mere over, ho has aa raoelteat address and tho art of explalnina- sad impartias; what ho kwwa Mr, Johnston was bora hi Wtatteebnre, N. T.. hi 111! end graduated from Mount Hcrmoa academy In 1444, He then at tended Wesleyaa. sad graduated from that collage la tho claw Of 1440. with ths degree of F. H. P. For a time Mr. Johnston ww aa Inst rooter ta amthe Boat ice at Black Hall academy. Although his experience hw sew rather limited, Mr. Johnston hw ac quired a very complete compreheMicu of insurance subjects, and enters upn his wax dutlw with tbe unenaliri recommendations of too awsclaio com mittee. The present Intention hi to have the underwriting branch remain a eae-yv-oouree, apes to eootore aad Juniors, t It le not unlikely that Within i terms the act nee ef Iwurww will be treated ae a two ryes re course 1, year's lectures, together with "In awe," a text book by T. B tee. form the bwts of aludy, bt tn. vtsabls lectures bv pro' t u writers will be tn - cult subject a sre s Insurance wHI ev tW con" remaino - '