"i PROSPERITY IS NOW GENERAL Business Improvement Moves Forward by Great Leaps and Bounds. The Doleful Cries of Calamity Howlers Cannot Check the Advance of Good Times. Being unable to deay that prosperity la come again upon the country, the Topocrat statesmen and organs with tne accord are loudly proclaiming that It Is all due to the failure of tho foreign wheat crop. The growers of wheat, they gay, are prospering, but other wealth producers are getting no bene fits. There Is a great deal of difference, however, between mere assertion and well authenticated fact. There Is abundant evidence on every hand that all classes of the people, lucluding "wealth producers of every description, are sharing In the new prosperity. The failure of the foreign wheat crop could not start hundreds of Idle shops aud factories to operating and give employ ment to hundreds of thousands of Idle worklugmeu. The failure ef the forel?!i wbe-at crop would not suffice to stimu late all lines of 'business and produce a feeling of confidence and security atuoug Investors and merchants throughout the country. The failure of the foreign wheat crop would not quicken the domestic wool xrnde, the leather trade, the trade In print cloths and sheetings, the tin, cop per and Iron trade, the boef, pork aud krd trado, the trade In petroleum, iglass, lead, cottonseed oil, lumber, pa per, brick, coal, salt, hay, hemp, pota toes, corn, barley, rye, butter, eggs and fruit. According to Bradstreat'i, which has kept a record of the business duno In all lines for the last four years, the trade In all these commodities and cores of than has rapidly lticreBsd Inet July the mouth In which tho Re publican tariff was enacted. Regarding the stories of Western farmers paying off their mortgages In such enormous amounts, the Urauge Judd Farmer has made careful Inqui ries and says that while It finds the newspaper statouients somewhat ex aggerated, there Is unquestionably im Immense amount of liquidation goln;? on. During the past few years the farmers have practice 1 such economy that the marked Improvement In'wheat and other prices has wonderfully Im proved their financial condition. Ouu great Incentive to pay off old mort gagee Is the lower Interest rates at which new loans cau bo oblaluud. Cause of Good Time. Advocates of the theory thnt the revival of ImihIiu'hi throughout the country is due to the w limit crop Instead of the tariff found something to ponder over In the trade reports of Dun and Brudstreet a for lust week. From these It appenra that the runners have not yet marketed one ten ill of their wheat, but are holding It for the higher price which the foreign domainl Implies. Hence 00 per cent of the einli returns already credited to tfawiu in Hem- ecru no estimate bua not ft gone into Americas circulation, ami cannot possl bly fear canned or ftilluenced titer aTtijs.ral renpeitng of iron, loot, ruhher and fVx ttte tmlustrlt-s and the Increase in the tyra nts of all private business which Wn In evidence since July. The iieeSnt point at Interest ald from tlila tn the trade reports are: An Increase altiea one' year ago of 34 par cent In the employ Kent of members of trade union; a gain of Pi per cent la one month In the output of pig Iron. Implying an Increased ton- uniptlon of luti.liuo tone; a rise of 8 cents in tlie price of wheat; an advance for Au gust In prices of mora than 100 staple farm ami manufactured artlclca of a. 4 per rent, follow Ing a 3.1 per cent advance In July, aud a marked deciense In failure, both In number and the average amount of linhilltlea. la tula chapter the tariff plajra a leading part-Sea Fraucieeo Chroulcle, high prices, ana It Is little wonder they are making the best of It. The people are mak ing an earnest effort to get out of debt, and when they succeed In doing this the Kansas farmer will be the most Independent person on earth, because he knows enough to keep out of debt when once he gets started In the right direction. Kansas Is to-day the most prosperous State in the Union. There will be 40.000 home steads cleared of mortguges this fall. Think of what that means. The mortgages will average $1,000 each, which means the ex penditure of $40,000,000. It means also that this State Is becoming a Commonwealth of homes. If Breidenthal had said last November that In less than a year 40,000 Kansas farmers would pay off $40,000,000 of mortgages, under a Republican President and the gold standard, his fellow 1'opu lists of Kansas would have chartered a special train to convey him to an insane asylum. Kansas City Journal. same aenaltlveneas to the maket. This proposition was brought out vlth special force by Gov. Tanner In an Interview given to the St Louis Globe Democrat. At the time the Governor spike the ad vanoe In wheat had been 30 cents per bushel, and he added: But railroad stocks, manufacturing stocks, and all other atocks of a character to feel the effects of prosperity have lucreised all the way from BO to 60 ner cut. on the former values at the same time that wheat Has been making thla gain of '0 e;iis a bushel. Cattle, hogs, corn, oats, redtop seed, all farm products, have gone op aluost. If not quite, in the proportion that stocks and wheat have. Bonds and mortgafea nave en hanced. Taking the vast lute esta repro sented bv stni.ka on i. .mi, la vtu Will find that the Increase In the total falue made during the oast three months . s-i.wo.ui"-',- 000. The advance on toller ihngs, cattle, hogs, corn, and so on, has uiuouited to more than Siioo.ooo.noo Thorn la a irr-ind total of $1,300,000,000 added to the wr'ilth of this country, it has been done by Ice auopnon of a wise and encouraeine ecotoinlc policy wnicn has restored the conncimce oi our people. Chicago inter Ocean. Why Do the Croakers Croak? Solemn silverites whose knowledge of affairs Is wider than that of most of the men who voted for Bryan lust full, are not altogether silenced by the rise in prices under the conditions existing since the complete triumph of sound money in the United Stntes. Some of them, like the luhugrious Ritchie, of Summit County, essay the weary task of persuading people who like the change in the times that it is the result of famine in India and ruined harvests in Europe. These persons pa rade before the voters of America the dread procession of gaunt victims of star vation in Hindustan, and they quote the gloomy reports of crop failure in Irelnnd. They point to meager grain fields In Rus sia and to the shortage of fjU.OUO.titiO busn els in the wheat crop of France. "There," they say, "is the source of higher prices in the United Stntes. Let famine and ruiu abroad be followed by normal weatb er and harvests, and the general level of the markets will again be as low aud weak as the price of silver." , This sort of explanation can never be effective, for two reasons. The first is that It goes too far for the average voter to follow with much interest. The second and the best is that it wholly fails to ac count for the advance in many important commodities which have nothing to do with the harvests in Europe or the famine in India. Has there been a famine In hides anywhere? Has the leather crop failed? What bad weather has made Iron scarce and raised the price of steel? W bat Is the force that has lifted the mar ket for wool as far. in proportion to for mer quotations, as wheat has risen? Why are lunibs much higher than they were when the Dingley hill was passed? How about the butter crop? Has that failed in India? Is the cheese market feeling the effects of the harvests In Russia? Where is the cotton crop a failure? Who has heard of a lumber fuuiiue? Cleveland Leader. BRYAN AS A DEADBEAT. No Time far Creakiest. Tbe pro...ail or the calamity bowler to predict misfortune for this cum try ami to emphasise the dark aide of life, , nm little encouragement by contrasting the preaeut condition and prospect of the American people with thus of Hie ret of the world. Fur im h a comparison will re veal the fact that we are vastly better t.tT today than timet peoplca. While other Countries are threatened wllh distress ow ing to abort crop, we American lutr been blessed with one of the tim,t abun dant harveite In our history. W hile the far Kast la auftVrliig wllh famine and bile the harvest In liuland ia reported ruined by unprupltloiia weather. Me In America are chiefly roiicerucd with the problem of translating to market the surplus prod net a of the farm, hie ris lug prltee will bring dismay to those parte of the world which are under the eve!ly ef buying, the American firm er, with granary overflowing with wheat and corn, looks wltb rumpUeeiii-y iiti.in the eteedilj climbing grain markets. The great laws of supply and demand are working la eur favor, ami ate bound m bring renew J prosperity to eur country. Detroit Ft Pre, ftreltteatbal Adiutto It. One of the mml remit and rttUu.i,t etamplee of a IVptilist who has .1 ar.l.-J the calamity howl fur tlie pr.trity hep I J. W. Kreldenthal of K it it He la the Hank t Viiniil.i,.!, r of the Slate, and less than one ) rar aro he mi Hranite, who fuM ne tin ptor ty ad no elvatlt.n for the country nnVss the t..y Orator t.f the Plm'e an ).-, tr, and ! er given free to'inge at t',e ! at eaord unrd tatfo of 10 to . It it ti thai ha (hntu'cd u. e thin, He Im eeee a great I !it. and tin I what he baa In any t d ir : Meter la the Ml..r of Ktnut M ISrr beea a aiitva mMiry alia iii It trt ! it. i a ae d.i.l In Mi t., i f : t kt lin k aii,lf,t niMsk, f hi k i dlltatt t.rtn (-hi fit ni rii .-r- p lli pn r 4nel, tair i p . t 1-u.l prica, t lir ..Ui,.,u f.,. Ki a la a "t pitiii. i i....at iwrto y tlmrvt.r. an4 a r a .nf li 1 fcra uM ka Iweu titt la tl, b !? Of the Slate a b ti n ft-iari n it taitmi eau(K la ur N nUr aleat feal, a Ilk ! cih aad Cotton'a Itcet Vcnr. Thla butchery Is sickening. There Is no hedge, nor bush, nor rock on ail tho stricken (icltt in whoso slim shadow some shuddering ailvcrile may not be found hiding from the statistician a ateel. i hey are tlilckeet behind tho refuge of foreign crop failure. A pole In these eeta all eorla and eliea t- V.t rlifxliiii.'. Oiaridnn Hand anil Hoy aud Teller wnil- a aaw lb "ChtUtiuutl-i' aud morn Iffy depend on mora lu,ln for Tsick tlm'a amelter. And aa thct wriggle they squeak: "famine, yon hrntcst You are gloating over famine, l on are exulting in the mis eries of the victims of the gold atandard In India and Austria and Kugland and 1' ranee, lucre la nothing tn tins wave of prosperity which ouch! la giving tit some temporary emhnrriimmit'iit but a for- eicu shtrtage in wheat. Let us atir up the wrlgglrra a little further. Titer baa been no foreign short at:e In cotton. If there hnd been, tt would not mutter In the sense that a wheat shortage mntters. for we supply "D per rent of the world a cotton anyway, and never more than -." per cent of Its wheat Yet we are getting an extra V per cent tbl year say, j:ui,()ih,ih)ii nn $:!on,nno, UtKt for our cotton. These are the tig ure. jnst compiled by the eerctarv of the New Oilcan Cotton Lxchange, Mr, II i ter: The Iron Barometer. Among the proofs of reviving prosper ity, which some people are trying hard not to see, must now be Included tne in crease of 12 oer cent in the output of pig iron within about one montt alter tne new tariff was enacted. For many years there have been not a few amoig the fore most practical business men who have re garded the production and consumption of iron as the surest barometer of the con ditions upon which depends increase or de crease of general prosperity. J-his is in part because the production is of necessity months ahead of the final consumption in finished forms, and is based upon all that some of the shrewdest practical men in the country can foresee of the future de mand for rails, car materiali and other railway supplies, for freight vessels along the lakes and on sea coasts, for business buildings and the structural shapes of which their skeletons are framed, for ag ricultural implements and the iron and steel entering into their construction, for extension and improvement of farms, and so for fence wire and wire rods, and for erection of residences and other build ings, and po for nails and hardware of all kiuds. When evidence points to material ly increased consumption in so many forms trained business men calculate that hpttpr times ere comine. The production of pig iron started this year with a weekly output of about KjU,- 000 tons, having enlarged to that extent from 112,782 tons last October, a gain of more than 40 per cent. There was a little further advance to about ku.uw tons In March and April, but as the pass im? of the tariff hill came to be considered more remote or uncertain and stocks of un sold iron accumulated the production was diminished to 104,000 tons at the begin ning of July, showing a conservative de termination to defer further increase of ontnut until tlie conditions necessary for future prosperity were more positively as sured. This assurance came with the passage of the tariff bill late in July, and the weekly output was slightly raised Aug. 1, and increased 20,128 tons weekly during that mouth. Rut the output Sept. 1 was already the largest ever known for that month, excepting in 1895 when a sudden Hurry lifted prices about to those of lSiiD and it was 34,000 tons larger than Sept. 1, 1S'J2. It Cannot ISe Concealed. Once in a while we meet a man who says that while he sees a good deal in the newspapers about a revival of business he finds no improvement iu his own condi tion and cannot ace any iu that of his neighbors. It is true that the marked im provement which has been so strongly felt iu the East and in the souimvesi iias uoi yet reached the Northwest in full volume, imnlv lici-nii.se our harvest la later. Our wheat crop has only just begun moving to market. The 100.000.0K which thia year's crop will fetch Into thla region hua mil hegun to be distributed. Neverthe less. If the Demon who complain thnt prosperity ho" t"t yet rmiched him will look around oter tne wnole e a atau he cannot fail to perceive a very marked Improvement. The banka aje In better shape and are loaning money more rreeiy. The merchants are full of hope nd confi dence, and manufacturers are making ar rangements for a full output. L.oa idle men are seen, and, in fact. It la claimed by employment agencies that no person who la able and willing to work need now suffer from lack of employment. The in crease in the volume of business through out the country is unmistakable. It ia revealed In the statement of weekly bank clearings, which show a gain of 45.11 per rent, aa compared w ith the Corresponding week of last year. Minneapolis' gain ia 411.2 per cent, w hich may be taken aa an indication that from thia time on the re vival will he felt here iu full force. Miu neapolis Trsbuue. He Attack the Corporation and Then Asks and Accepts Favor from Tbem. The more Mr. Bryan tries to explain away his foraging expeditions on railroad passes the more he convicts himself of demagogy and willful deception. When the San Francisco papers made puono the fact that Bryan had solicited and ac cepted favors froin Huntington's South ern Pacific Railroad in the shape or rail road passes, Bryan's friends at first de nied the charge. They backed their de nials by producing the requisition written by Bryan in which he applies for the free ticket over the Southern facihc oa ac count of the Omaha World-Herald. Upon inquiry at Omaha it developed that Brvan had severed his connection with the World-Herald a year previously and furthermore that the World-Herald had no advertising contract with the Southern Pacific and was not entitled to any transportation for ally advertising done for that road. To parry this ex nosnre Brvan rptorted over his own name that he was still a stockholder in the World-Herald. By this, matters were not much mended for the reason that as a stockholder in a newspaper he could have no claim upon any railroad for free rides and furthermore that under the interstate commerce law interstate railroads are for bidden from giving free transportation ex cept to railway employes. The Southern Pacific is not, nowever, the only railroad on which Bryan has been foraging. Mr. Bryan traveled to St. Louis some ten days ago over the Wa bash and dead-headed his way with an 1897 annual pass. The pass is ostensibly issued on account of the Worid-Herald but bears on its face the flat contradiction of the pretense that it is a business trans action. Railroads do not Issue annual passes in exchange for advertising. In the nature of thlnes thev could not know how often they would be used, for what distance and how much advertising vaiue thev would represent. The discreditable nart of Bryan's dcad- hcndinir over the railroads arises not merely from the fact that he poses as the champion of the anti-monopoly forces and denounces the railroads for discrimina tion In favor of influential non-producers as neainst the common nconle who must pay their way, but also because while amply able to pay his fare he is resort ing to deception to cover up his accept ance of railroad gifts. Omaha Bee. to the savings banka. If the currency were depreciated 60 per cent, aS It would be were sliver coined free at the ratio of 16 to 1. the depositors would lose 15 1-3 millions. No friend of the free coinage plank mentioned that fact or argued that building and loan association investments would be affected injuriously. The constant experience of the world has been that when there is a change for the worse In the money standard the wages of abor are slow to adjust them selves to it. The price of commodities ad vance rapidly. The price of labor lags behind. Thus there is a real reduction la waces. Though thev may he nominally a (ittle higher, their purchasing power is decreased. Chicago Tribune. COME, MR. BRYAN. Try to Be Consistent In Tour Theories and Assertions. At Atchison. Mr. Bryan made a speech from which the following are detached sentences: "Last fall the republicans said we were repudiationists because we wanted to lessen the purchasing price of the dollar. The price of wneat and corn Is governed by the law of supply and demand solely. The law of supply and demand governs the value of a dollar, If there is a short crop of money dollars will rise. Nature makes a short crop of wheat. Man makes a short crop of dol lars bv law." A year ago Mr. Bryan asserted that the value of a dollar was not influenced by any cower whatever except the declara tion by the Government that it was a dol lar, lie asserted in season and out of season that such a declaration was sufil cient not only to make every silver dollar worth a gold dollar, but also to raise every ounce of silver bullion In the world to the value of gold at a ratio of 10 to 1. With such a record as this, how can the man have the audacity to now come babbling about the value of the dollar being gov erned by the law of supply and demand? He saya the dollar has grown too valua hie because It has not kept pace with the law of demand. The more money there Is In the country, he contends, the less the dollar will buy. Does history bear out such a claim? In one of his lectures Mr. Ifryan .present a tnble to how that lnc the crime of 1873tre ha been a ' M.flfc III m fcJ.lw; Ut 117 ducta. To make his flU-v rood h ut also show that there huiTTieen a diminish- ment in the number of dollar. On the cotttrary, there haa been a steady and rapid increase in the number of dollara a'uice 1n7.'5, uutil now we have a per cap ita circulation of 24.:i0, whereas in 1H711 we had but f 18.04. Kansas City Journal. t'ntnmen'lst crop. tVlne I1M7 1"?!. .'. n.H 1 Mi,', on '."it ire. 1'U O.i '."17 ii.IT. Mil 11.1 !' .1.1 IS 117 I VI.' 0.1 yM.:..-...M is.il v iti.-oi.! I.' Iu other word, we have ante pun ic values ami awepnnic price, me crop i worth f.'.i.iNHi.iSHi more than it h Im en in the best jear fur live )'cur. - l ew 1 oik I it Houltiern Cotton Mills. One of the most rut nursling fcjiurc of the bnitie season flidcd on the lint f tlii mouth was the show tit ttmde 1 .y Siiiiibi rn mining ami inanuf ii tuung rn letprise. Iliport from irliah'e .urct' indicate that all of them were f lirly prn iktoii. rvrn w nne aimunr in iuir w ere !t'pree(l in oilier part cf the etnmtrr the result bnj due in great men.ure to the advantage of the proximity ,,f 0ii taw material to point of cuiinmiipiioti or manufacture, ami to the favorable c mat W ci.n.l tion. 'I In w a especially true of cotton manufacturing, whi. h ev,.lcn, ,., growth both ti.iitliiuou and of tcntat lia ble ieiit. For the first tune the c.i. aiiitiption of HiiiUhirri tnil! excvedrJ a hid, ion bale. ilni h a Kcimlter. tine to KrpuMU'ea roller. It I only a ! ' while nil. the hm t cU of the .hi ii t r r wci teumlng tie II- ; i!- .mis wuh tl.e '.!,. of pr,, I . i) In i turning, lit re ti , .. t iiij, are the ni i f i' urn tig? Ti,e lira- tariff bid baiit'y been a gne. u j t'niitre at; -it e.l In f r the Im.hh 1t ..ii in ait U f .r.e a tn be uu .eiut. 1 1( blindest nsstiii st u the it mi iiic .(r tt had to a lmst it. 'I hen t sine the t la ui tli.it the s'i Hi i e of wheal abroad wa the Ma of it sit. lbl wa the burden uf Mr, Iti jsn' l ia i.f. h d. nit. I the h.iit,i-e in the wheal an t rje rri-p of the oiht-r gin exporting r...iiint ha .! an ! the pi ice of wtn-t j in lit rt.uniri. t ut tn f rest n mral f . t l the casr i thnt there km her ststatlat'r the . hi- t'ht advame in tie pri.-e ef ethef (loyert.r ef abuUl l'ie The Tariff and Farm IMce. Our free trade friend asert that the sole reason for the rise In the price of wheat i the grain ehortage abroad. They are Vot-lforou In declaring, in season aud out of season, that the eniii-tmont of a licimlilican tariff ha had nothing to do w ith thp farmer a increased prosperity lit u look Into thia claim for a moment. It ia nut truth aa many of the anti protec tion oritnna Imply, that wheat, of which we export vat quantiliee, i the only agrl- cultural tnp!e that lia risen In value. 'Du re ha been a marked increase In the pn e of corn, oata, rye. pork, butter, t hif.e. hops, hide and pttt"e. I.nmbs for slaushterlng are worth f l.'.Ti per head tiioie than tl cy were one year ago. The value of sheep kept for wool ha also risen significantly since the paee of a tariff that protect American nocka, Tltese aa erii.ui are not made rashly. They are based upon the olticlal statistics of the Ihpariuiriit of Agriculture. It will be seen at a glance that product- of which as export roinparauvely moderate summit have kept close to wheat In it Hint rtnl movriiirnt. In our estimating the tar. (I Im bad a great deal to do with this, Since the lUtis'.ey bill became law a ante sirnv of previously Id e men has been et to wi.ik throughout the I'tuted States. SViii'e earner who had been emplojed vu'y part time ate now Working tu t twit, No Haltlnii tne Advaace. Ihiu rt;ra, w boh h Uo jubilant In if prm Initiation of busnirs revival for setrisl icss, df. lart-t that there In n hiit.iitl in the Ivan; that Imamest ii. . s I .irr lit all w ) i ; that there I a s t ,i ! im it e In production and work in f-.r.e. and ttiat the power of the peo- t V to ti:. base i feature w h t h over s'- t.l-. s ail other. ,t w lorn rrpurt sli.. that win1! I hot the only ciuui vl liy thnt i a lt an. i.g in price, tor over one bun l ed staple at higher, and there Is l t. nt. n ued heavf tttmiaj for tuauii f j -luted f.t! ef ail k'li'l. The frtfr ire rap'.l'y grtnng ba the !- is .i.inai wbuh they ht la the ta ut of thru sheep iiaelcf frx-e tftde. BEETS AND CAMPHOK, SECRETARY WILSON'S VIEW3 ABOUT THEM. Tens of Silver and Yens of Gold. It was very unkind on the part of the Director of the Mint to delay his recent statement about the comparative value of the coins of the world until the departure of those silver patriots who recently has tened to Japan to learn the true cause or the demonetization of silver there. Uaa they had opportunity to study Director Preston's little table they might nave stayed at home and devoted their ener gies to explaining to the farmer wny heat has gone above a dollar a bushel while the free coinage dollar has fallen below forty cents. Director Preston's table shows the comparative value of the silver and gold yens of Japan during the past decade. One minute's study of these figures would have been sufficient to show these peregrinating patriots the true cause of Japan's action. Here are the figures- read them for yourself: Value of Value of Tear. Silver Yen, Gold Yen. isss , 1889 iniio jn, , , 1801Jf. lKnJLJ. I8iw rr.. 18114 , 1805 , 1 81)11 , .75.3 .73.4 .75.2 .8H.1 .74.5 .firt.l .65.6 .40.1 .50.9 09.7 99.7 09.7 99.7 89.7 99.7 99.7 09.7 99.7 09.7 1897 (July) 47.8 Work of the Dingley Law. reports from the little State of Rhode Island are full of cheer. "The mill situa tion Is better than it has been for five' years," says a special dispatch to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The Lonsdale company has started on full time opera tion, employing 5,000 men and women. In the Woonsocket worsted mills, the 200 employes had their hearts gladdened by the restoration of wages to what they were in 1803, which is a virtual increase of 7 per cent. But more than this, ground has been broken for the erection of a new mill in the Olneyville district, and a plant near Blacltstone, which has been Idle for almost five years, will be purchased by a new company and started into full operation. It will not require a microscope to observe that the develop ment in the mill situation is the direct re sult of the Diuglcy tariff law. It meaus prosperity. UNAMERICAN. The rrlnclplea of Dch-lsm Wilt Not ft Welcomed by 1'utrlota. The ferocious hatred for the rich felt by men like Mr. Debs and his Social Dem ocracy ia utterly un-American. It argues Iu the men who feel and express It an estimate of the importance of wealth so Inveterate that It haa destroyed their self- respect. Apparently they cannofhreathe freely can hardly live, so miserable are they so long they see other men far richer than theniselvoe that la to say, p i- aeased in far larger measure than they of the only thing that they think of Imnor taoee. To them, the men who have wealth belong necessarily to different claaa front the men who have not Not brain, nor learning, nor character, mark the differ ence between men, they think, but wealth ouly. No men have expressed more ab ject deference to weullh than these K. cial lu-iiocrata. who wish to kill all who posw more than little of It. Tiny cannot, apparently, conceive Of a poor man wing a seir-respecting, a resected, aa nappy ana a useful a a rich one. It I a fortunate thing for the rountrv that the rWinl Democracy apeak out Its mind frankly, and government will tie very nnwise If it d e anything to rttv pre (ta apirit by pulling penalties on It excesea. A rear weak-minded nt ricknia men. It la true, may be misled and svrn rendered dangerous to society, but the bet argument against the aeml social!- tic, mi-anarchistic purpose of the SSu. rial Democracy that ran be addressed to the mass- of the American people r the utteran.e of the Social Prniocrata them aclvea. New Orlctin IVayune. I l atMir ami Free Mlxrr. The ll.itjoi l'iilrftioa of bur hat re ad. pied, a part of it platform, dnuaad for the free i-oHtage of silver at the ratio of Id ! I. Hot on tbi. a oa prevlmi occit'i-.. the advocates of the plank f! eJ to point n't w herein labor would be tn urti'.rd by the giant of of in, h ( d man J. No attempt wa mm! ta contro vert the ap'citie statement t a here free coinage woulJ do lrteprhl harm to lahnr. '1 be worklngmea of 111. not fcuve rtgh'y million dollar lutes!,. in budding nd loan as.Mtatioo. A t line to the motto. metallic iter standard of a free roiusi U7H, gram dollar Wuuid redum it. . of these investment shout iai jr rent, and Ubof wool I Kite fvcty kht tu ition doliaia ea one Iteia. The ot..n ps.p'e of it, gists, hlrt Waaed s.'1 nn...tos la g : j Ut 4 ' Political Bird Shot. Mr. Bryan has not yet issued his sched ule of prices for speeches in Mexico. Those wretched Ohio editors will not stop talking about John McLean's gold bond. The Western farmers are not burning corn this year; they are burning mort gages. The silverites insist that the rise in wheat Is due to scarcity only. But how about wool? Wool has made as big an advance as wheat in the past year. Is that the result of "scarcity" too? The free traders are not shouting about that recent sale of American tin iu for eign markets. Altgeld (to McLean) Why didn't you take warning by my fate and keep that gold bond out of sight? A bushel of wheat now call for two ounce of fine ilvr. La at year on outlet wa mora than auracleut. Silver has fallen 25 per cent In value alncesMarch of last year and 20 per cent since the Jtovember election of lS'JO. Bland, Tillman and Bryan admit that there la "temporary" prosperity. A year ago they aald even that couldn t come without free coinage. Forty thousand farm mortgnges, aver aging fl.000 each, are being paid off Id Kansas this fait. That's "what's the mat ter with Kunnai" now. Over $2,000,000 In British money com lug Id to Van Francisco from Australia to pay for American wheat! How ia this for British goidbug control? Was It the "gold powers" of Great Britain that sent statistician Miilhull over here to show that thia is tha most pros perous country In the world? Mr. Bryan should hurry up with hit Spanlib lesions. If he doein't hasten hit trip to Mexico, another "crime" agaiuat silver is liable to be committed. Tom Wataon aays all the silver men will have to Join the Populist force, lit thinks the Democrat are going to heave over the lU-to 1 theury altogether. The silence In the vlclnliy of Yellow, stone Park, where Mr, Bryan Is neglect ing to speak np about the relative values of wheat and silver, Is becoming painful. The Denmcrala have laid aside their uual cry about Increaaed prii-e under the new tariff law. They tea that low tariff Is no lunger popular, eveo with their wi people. Will wonder never cease? Wm, J, Bryan, In recent article In a New Vrk puper on wheat aad sliver, says "ths who advocate let coinage mar be w rung." Fpejklng of the "growth ef export ef manured arte omler free trade," wdl th Democrats rlatm the recent foreign sales of Anirritaa tin as due to their boa pro tective theory? Tl fuel that the Make hate larger de posit than ef before and that rate of Interest are low seem te ara the IW ocrttie theory that Ib.s rouulry ka tut tttuury enouah. According to Tom Watson, there will nut be a xteea to-one fie.eii8 B,ln left la the Democratic party this fS. . at that the only p ate fur thria la la the I'tip il at rank. People w- are wondering whit the Di-uint-is's will Had f..r isto if ptj boulii pos'potie tbeif Worry, a thre my be ea Democratic part; by that t rue, the way thing are goitif. Hie Kansa farmers are paying off 40 millions of luJfblediies leaf, Jw Im ky for the Pi. p. ..-ran that l to 4 da t hippos year a-i. "Hey wouida't kv rartietl sa le, ur ant ahere. I thi royalty really an badly off f if ttioiief ba the i.iis bate lar.ef Jep.. I's tkaa eier before ia tht.r b stufy isd "'f tt Waa.tig at Uar fate thi at y Iwti immttf at the areata! g"uit- The Agriculturist and Arborlcnlturlat Receiving Bpecial Attentlon-Wilaon Saya There Is No More Season foe Buying Sugar Abroad than Wheat. Would Keep Money at Home. Special Wuslitugtou currespuuuencu: Secretary Wilson, the head of the De partment of Agriculture, coutinues earn est if not enthusiastic about the practica bility of putting into the pockets' of the farmers of this country the $100,000,000 that the people are now sending abroad for their sugar. "The more 1 think of this beet sugar business," said he, "and the more I look into its vast possibilities, the more I am surprised that the Ameri can people have been buying such quanti ties abroad. There is really no more rea son why we should buy sugar abroad thau wheat. We have in this country liiud as well adapted to the growth of sugar beets as anywhere in the world, and it is a re markable fact that our people have been so long in seeing the possibilities a ltd put ting forward every effort toward tlie ac complishment of this end. Sugar enter Into our consumption to such a large and national extent that the triumph of bring ing about the growing of all our own pro ducts In this direction would be no biihiII one. The way iu which the Americas farmers nre taking hold of it shows what ' a comparatively easy mutter it would have been at any time of lute years to es tablish the industry on a permanent basis, and as I say, it seems strange Hint far sighted men have not seen the advantage to result to those successfully fostering it. Iu my trip through the est 1 founu fnrmers generally enthusiastic over the subject, all of them anxious, and hoping that the analysis to be made or tneir ueei would show such a satisfactory percent age of sugar as to enable them to at once enter into the growth of the beet as a cron. In fact, the danger lies in over- enthusiasm; In the large outlay of money and establishment of plants In sections where the beet cannot be profitably grown. "The McKInley bounty on sugar operating well, and if it had continued would have so encouraged both cane and beet sugar industries thnt we would, by this time, be quite independent ol toreigu markets In this respect. The bounty pro posed for beet sugar In the Dingley tariff bill would have still furtner si uu u the Industry, but even as it Is, I believe we are on the way to seeing a good qual ity of sugar supplied from a great many i. i!iio,i Ktntos The sugar poiuia in me uuinu , beet thrives on a variety of soils, being best adapted to sandy loams of moderate fertility, and 1 presume tnni repon our analyses will show great areas in va ..! .iton. f th country capable of r nn section or me counui "i" raining beets containing a sufficient per centage of sncchnrlne matter to warrant the building of factories aud the plautiug of large areas. "About 2.200 of the farmers of the country have grown beets for tests, and we are now receiving samples for analy sis. If everything goes right we will have a complete report on the subject uy first of the year. This will show the tnont desirable sections for entering into tue beet Industry and will enable opera tori to erect beet sugar refineries with some degree of assurance that the industry will be a success iu their particular section. "Any new crop which lake the placl of present crops, and thereby reduces their acreage, tend to stimulate prices received for those crops, by dun if ishing their yield, and this is one of Hie Indirect ways in which a general cultiva tion of the sugar beet will belter the coo dillon of the farmer. The saving of 000,000 to the country will g ve I nat srnount to labor. Sucsr repieseata Inbot almoat entirely, from the growing of the seed to the sugar barrel. The diversifi cation of our ludt.striea to thia extent will have a tendency to help the prices of olhr crops. , The production or campuor. cmi""-" the Secretary, "ha been leccnlly cuiicu 10 my attention, and I think 1 ce in una connectlou another Industry to be devel oped and oue especially advantageous to the South. We are gathering statiatltl now In regard U the area la which the tree will thrive. It is known to do well lo Florida. In fact, there are now Iu that Slate large treea which were sent dowa there from this department years age ai little plants. Intended then for shad and ornament, but they have demutut rated clearly that the tree growi well In Flor ida, and what I want Is to see whole groves planted on the rich hammocks and bottoms of the State, where the mil il very productive, but not sufe from frosts for the growth of orange, lemons ana the more tropical products. K'ery part of the camphor tree la now used In the extrs tion of thia valuable gum: the leaves, chips, the roots, everythiae. All our camphor ta bow Imported from the far Knt, aud If we ran keep lb a money la our owd pocket, we are o mnh the bet ter off. The South, especially. Is ia need of a diveraificatioa of crops, and I hope It will lie found that the camphor Indus try will be practicable and profitable." GEO. XilCLVILLB. I! hot at ih Fatwere, The free tradera took their lal ht at the farnier In Juue; they aii.ilnl la ev erything availab'e oa which the new tariff law Increased the rate of duty. The UU lowing huai the value of some of the more Important farm products la Jsua, DPT, compared with June, IMat: J ib. inf. sua. , iTt l.-Hll . JA-jit fcwwg H vl !M) , 6-.; JiMlU , pitn.su asjr ?:ii4 Wild , J . . ei.w4 S.-l V ti. ' , i..ir. .i.s "i . lot.lU II !!J , ) s.,. i. 4 J.aV. .tj , s'tl.ili lii IM . 13 1 U..". . . i M i Is ssj . J ! ft s,,f , i .. i u. ft ; 4 , l is. tt .w,'4 m.iVii tli.2vi.le4 IwpoftaUuB. t'aliit HrslstuSS ,. i iii'ury I .ilMll I rsH.tr .... I ! Jut itat.tn I ,wra ttulall lung ..... Il.at Una a tit V l . .1 ii i al t ...!.., a -si X.iy. al , ftMial staving f anke. It I announced that 'otintef Oeaj. tl I'ury, after thutungh'y !m!ia Ike an!, jr. t, l lull, 1'i-l'd to (atur lb ettao Ushutt ut of p"ta! M'lig bank IU tti I rt.uulry, and a ,.l tusse the adtorrf al iml a measure a lis'or ef h.e iacyav W- y nf tk PusioC..e lprtttirat, lie h ! a t ! uu i J a pae, but a i, 4o so ia b tfurt to he 4haitte4 te the l'i ill a Ike bu ag U UM tit Mtatvt at Cutiaaas i )l n a?