new york tribune.(new york, ny) 1891-10-26 [p 6]. · 2017-12-25 · remierert letter. caah ar...

1
^mnacments. ACADEMT-B-The Seudan A.M1IKAO THEATRE.8 :1&-Kahale and Elabe. AMU'liAN IN.s. 1 ll'IE-10 a m to 10 p. m.-lnflua nt»l Kair. BTJOIT THKATUE.«:16.Kiobe. BROADWAY THEATRE.8-The Merry Monarch. CASlXO-a-Cavalierla Rua'-leaoa and The Tvrolean. COt.I'MBlra Tnr.ATRK.» Jft-Sh>iiancloah. i-.UKX MfSEE. Wax Tableaua. HARDEN THEATRE-8 la.lm, Cigalc. (iKAND OPERA HOl'SK-H-Ode-te. haki*f.m okeka BOVthV-Bdav-A Vena HAIIRIOAN'S Till ATRE-8-IUilly ind BM llERI-.MANX'S TII I-.ATKF.--8:30-The Sollcltor. HOYT'S MADISOM BQUAJUI THEATRE 4 So-Jane. KOSTEIi 8 m.Vl.'S---8-Vaudcvllle. liTCF.r.M^Tll.' All.i B:18-Tha Haaclng (ilrl. NEW PAKK -llli MKK 8:18.Til\edn. PAIaMBBVa rflUJATBtK.8.08 kmf lU>b«art. PKOCTOR'S TaUtATBB 8 ThaildBi. oi'ANDAltD THEATBT 8 BnMa Hood. .sfAR THEATRE.1> :li.The Iroiimanter. THALIA TUEATRE-8-The Dwirfi' Weddlng. 'lOXT PASTOK'S THEATRE-?-Vaudeville. i'XIOX SQl'AJU. TIII.A'iKl.-8:15-The Cadl. 14TH STREET TII EATRE-8-Mavo.irne.-n. Jnoct io ^oucrii5frnciits. ~7*a**e7coL, Faae. Coi. AnniwmtnU .11 8-8 Icstrud'on . b 2-A Anno-incr-nenti .12 4 Manlig-i A Deatlr* 7 8 Ai-ctlcn Sale K.-ul Mlac-lUnaoui .Ii: 4-u Ealala .11 biMuaa-al Ii.rtrun.nriU.il . Aiitun,n Resortl .10 f>; New I'nb'i. »t otis ...8 laoiier- k Brok-ri .11 4 Oeeaa Steaaierj .... 8 4 Uu* d and Rooa* .. 8 PoMUcal Jfotirea.... 7 '} ..I- nev* Cbancei 9 :;¦ FroioiaJi 8 .. l(ii*«eii Nottcai ... « 1 Public Nottce .10 8 Oa-i.-iiig Acadero'aa.. 8 4 \u-_l E.-t»te .10 8-8 Dlvidfid N'oti.ea .11 '. Keal Eatate. 8 1-'-' UrewniakUig 8 H Kooma aod PUU.... 9 2 tsUuat-oni Kot>ni« and P1BM....10 8 W-Mited . ** h-8-Rallroada . 8 5-t. nrrsooaa .10 SiSnevlai NoUeca . 7 « Pttaaclal .u 3-4 stcan.ioat-.ll 8 Finaoclal Maetlnee 11 4 Te<wi.-!i . 8 8-4 Kar Sale .8 »¦ rh* Turf .11 " H. ii. Wantod ... 9 8-8 Wliitei Keanrta .10 6 Iloraea * C«rrla*f« 0 1 Work Wanted . 0 4-5 Hoteja.10 81 Dnaii i-BS -\oicrs. Keep'a Dreas Shlrte to roeasure, 6 for f 0. None better at aay prlre. 800 and fall Broadway;_ Roi.L TOP DE8KS And Otlce Furnlture MaaattBOanM bp t. o. seiiew 111 Ktiltau-sL, BJ, T._ TRIBUNE TERM6 TO MAIL St'BSCRIBERS. 1 j car. 0 i. '.-. 8 inoi. 1 mo. nallj, 7 daya a weak.B10 00 06 00 92 io Bl 00 Uaily alUioul Sunday.... 8 00 4 00 2 VO 90 to nday Tribuac. 2 00 100 60 - Weehlv Tilb-me. 100 - . . i*i*ii.vVe«kly Tril-une. 2 00 . .. Ptatare prepaid by Tribtmc. eacept on Dally and SunclaT prper fcr mail nibierlbers ln New-York City and on I-ally. bMiil-Weeklv ind WeeKly tu foreign couiitrlts, ln wulrti laaea extra pcitage wlll be ral'l by iiibacrlbcre. Hetnit bv Foatal Order, aMpraM Order, CheaB, Draft or Remierert Letter. , , Caah ar Po»tal flett, lf eaat ii. an unretiitcred letter, will be at owrcr'i riik._ _ Maln otTUe of The Trlbune. 164 Naaian-at., New-Tlork. ACidrmi aii eori.M.oiidei>ce aimply "The Trlbu*e," Wew- T*rk. BRANCH 8PP1CPJ OP THE TRIBUNE. AdveniiiE-enu for i".bl!catton ln The Tribuna and .rdcra for regular dellver.v ol the daily japer wlll bo re- ct'i\ed at the fwlcwiri-; tranch oltices in Kl v.-.-itrk: Maln bianih aflre, 1,-So Hroadeay, icrncr 31it-at. i:,S tth-are., corner l4th»t. 270 Weat 23d-at., cen.er 8th-»ve. 10'. Weit 42d-at. uear tth-ave. (2 Av-nue A. tiettr Eaat Ith-lt. -,00 ad ave., eatrance -tTth-it. 1.021! 8d-ave., between (.cth ind Glit ita. 173 r.aif BDtn-sl Beai .Hdave. lpo Earn i-j.'.'.ii .. nenr Bd-ara. -43 We»t I23tk.il b»-t*-een 7th and 8th avea. 1,081 Mb-ave., near 88th-M 1.708 let-ave., near M»th at. ItiO flawarr, near Hroome-sl. t*9 I.lbttty-at. IN OTHER CITTTV?. Brooklyn idmblilBg Agency, .197 Fulton-it, op. City Wa-blngton-No. 1,322 F it FOUNDED BY HORACE GREELET MONDAY. OCTOBEK 2G. Uii. TWELVE PAGES. THE XEWS THIS MORNIXG. Foreign..The to«-n of Merrinpen, Bwltterlaad, abaoat entirely swept tv.vay by iirc. s Much damage ha« been t-ause.l by flooda iii B^aln and France. rssss A laaftM to estublish a socialiBt rcptiblic has been for.ueil in FrBJaOB. A mur- .ler af thc "Jaoh the Rtpaer" bdad araa oomailtted iu Berlin. Doniritic -r'overnor rftnipbellh (ILsjrraceful ottt- hteak at Ea«t Urarpeol, ObJo, on Thoradap night is met by an ojirn letter Irom tlie pottcry uianufiictun-rs of the town. - ¦" Tlie coii.c:- btone 01 the Divinily Sebool boildlSB at TufM Collegf was ttid. =a= Dr. vou HoUcben, G«r- uiau Miiiuster t<> Japan, has beea appointcd tt bucoee-d Coast vou Arco-Valley at Wafhington. -A hcavy wi-iatration is reported from thc varlonn cities of this State. =r= BMhop .oxr spoke in Baffale againf-t "So»Called Hlfhet Crttt (isni aod Mi'd'Tii Tliouchl." t'ity ati'i Siibiitbiiii.-A maoiae i-i WeBteaeater ('..ui.ty "held up" three men wlth B abot-gun aml cliaseil two of them a lon« dtttaaee. Apelloe raid on a green-Koods gans brought to llght a numl>er of lcttcrs from reputabfe people. Misa Marir Tcm^st \va« setiousl.v injured by a fall as aae araa Marlaj the OaM ia stage. I he Weatlii-r..l-'orec-iist fcr tn--':..v Warmer and falr. Tetnperature yesterday: liighcst. ".:. de- pteea; Mwiaa, 4o: average, 47. Civil Senrioe CoaMBJaakmer RoosbtbIi baa arrithoB .tii onorgotic letter to the Bon. Andrew I). Whito in aopport of the Kopu'jli.iin State ticket and in deiiiinciation of Tammany HaU. lt is Ifl Mr. BooBereaVa beal Btyle. With ad- mii-'bl'le UHMHIOaa flBld Inci'lMy he tells tvli.'it th" Kiiccess oi' Mr. Knssctt will iiir-in. at:'] whal :i fOfajnlrj the triuuiph in the ShBtCJ of thfl BBkHfn and corritpiiiig fonv-s t!iut Tammany Hall ataoda f ,]¦ wntil'l }¦(-. Mr. Booaarelt/a letter will be found in anothor column. llead it. » A <trf'HK atraignment of Tammany mis-gov- einment ia made in an appeal to hajrparjrers, uhii-h is ho be ritcttlated for da^Matnita through- r.nt the city. Every taxiiayei- slitniltl read. niarU and inwaidlr digi-st it.aiid vote aooordinjsly. The falaepieteaeaabout^oer taa raeee, in rea'it.v lO'tght aboul by hbcraawd real eatate valua- tions. is eNpos^d, and the inade<-it:i<y of onr lOB<l^BM0888, the fonl condition ol our 6trf>ets, in"t!io;is nf tlie city depailiii'-nis. etc, 888 ticiicliaiitly deociibed. This (kn ument |i a pow- erful atgument for the redtactloa o.r Tammany'a j> mer arid infliience in both city and EHfltt). In Bflite of irequent disctiurageraent^ and sef- ba< ks. the " green-goods"' busin-es i-<,ntinties to tiour.sh. For aome time to oome, though. it will no' floniish so much as it has. fur Bfl Satiiidfiy [napeobor Bjlfleafa men captun-d one of tha lead- (i-s of the civoked fraternity and laid violent hatids upon his valuable " plant.r' Many in- ng letu-ts were found in Brooks's con-e- fc|Kindence, not a few of the miaflia and would-be ptirrjhaeers of " green goods" lx*ing respectable dl 88818 and even church OaVoBrB. After the in- lniiufiable cxposure". of this Bpef888 of fruid, it is amazing that the swirdb-is lind v> many and pf vi< t.ms. The evideniv afalflBl BriMfU, ara ira gtad io aay, Beaaaa anfflcJatd to pot him ©ut of batal'a ttmjf for a long period. There aeems to be an impresKion more or NM8 widely pi-i-va'ent that tho M8 pavemetit. which h:is been p-it down in aome parfs of Uroadwav is* a BjfMMa Ol what a pavement OfJghl to be, and (' .tuia< tor CHBBP888M has b«en hail"d (p affosivt 098888 a public benefactoi. A oarefully pre* pai '! Brlkae in our coliunns this B801-nJflg sh'.-.-s that, su far as tho lower .section of Ilroadway is ...ticeriied. this iJBtaaajaaJoji is entirely BtTiEkMmMk, The paveiii'-nt there has been -thrown open to public use for a fortni^ht, but by loasnn of tha condition of tlu- sli-n-' finther np i' ha- by ny xtiiinis b<-en laaad aa fuliy as it, will l* bbV r, Yet it avlrc'idy Ls in ajead fll ra8BMra! 'lhe fact doiibtltMS that it wac not projierly laid, and in aUoes this ia painfulij evident, even on a caaual glance. Moreover. in the matter of cros«waJka, the contractor has indulged in all sort* of abaord vagariee. In brief. this pavement, whieh ought to be as good as the chief thoroughfare of any great at} po*.se«sf-s. is a miserable piece of work .a Tamniany job of the worst sort. Kvery pav- ing-r-tone ought to help drive a nai! in Tam¬ many's coffin on November S. All eity Ropuhlicana BBO-t- bear in mind that one of tiie great<y»t politic-al d^monstrations of ibe campaign will be tho meeting that occurs ti the Bfekdiaoa Bquare Ger_en to-night. lt i* under the direction of the Hepnblican Connty Committee. Much labor hn«. been expendetl in preparing the (Jnrden for the first- political meet- lai to ba b*H thero. Ez-Saaaket Miller is to preside and mako his first speech in behalf of thc Fassett-Yio'-inau tieket Tho other speak- era will be Banator Riaeoek, Colonel Jo"! B. Er_ar_l and CoBgraognaa Pavne. The bai-e announcement «.f this list of speakers is euffi- cicnt to pack even thc big Gardeu to the floois. WHAT A FULL VOTE MBAXS. The elosinj* week of the camoaign opens wi'h signs of encouragement for the opponenta of the Tammany State and local tickets. It is oertaio that Mr. Flower OBBBOt be elected (Gov¬ ernor of thi* State, imless he get* larger BBtjor- itics in Xew-York and Kinii* County than Mr. BBd got in 1888. The reports from all ovei the 9tat0 indicate that the opponente of Tammany misnile are enthn*iavie. ardent and hopeful. In New-York anrl in LSrookl.n the tigurcs of the extensive registration mako it clear tbat a large vote will be poiled. A large vote in the two citiee Bb BB8 the defeat of the Democratic State tieket, and the election of the Hepnblican candidates. Tammany's followers ;uv alwaya at rhe polls. A large vote mea.n.s tliat the BepobHeaaa and Anri-Tainmany Deniu- erata turn out in force. Heaee, it bbbum anocen for thc right oauae. It means the strengthen- ing of the Kepub ican reprcsentation in the As- senibl.v and tho Senate from the lower part of the State. It means a deci*ive victory for clean und honcst government. In the loca canipais-n against Tammany mi«- government last year, rhe Taminany candidates would have been defeated but for ine_c_sable apathy on the pait of many thousands of J.e- publicana who remained at home aad did not regi*ter, and on the part of other thousands of citizens arho did aol approve Tamniany tyranny, plunder and profligacy, but who failed to take tht- trouble to vote. even after thev had been regi.-stered. The .irnest. vigarOQB and oggies- sive campuign cjndiicted by the Republieans, aided by their frienda and aeaociatea, arho in the paai have voted for Democratio candidates, hut who are BOW det.-rnuned to check tlie in- tolerable abuaea of Tammanv aaceadeacy, has been ao effeotive with th..- inteUigeaoe and eon- Boience of the voters-in ail parta of the State, that Tanimany ha- been t __oed ' deaperatioB. Ii haa practised fraud in oolonlzation aud in natui-aliz ition with cvei; inon-, freedom and bold- ness than in any prevkxu oampaiga. lt baa Impoeed opon its anscrnpaknia aervaata ta ever* branch of the munlcipaJ aer_8*e heavier taska tii:in ever before. lt has exacted larger con- tributioaa from ita offioeholdera than ia pre¬ vions yeara. lt has blaoknuiled the liquor aebona and tho diaorderly ho:tse,s, tho j»ool- rooma, and all the resorto of the/vidotu and thc crimina! claaaea, with a heavier hand thaa in any preceding year. li has applied the sumi extorted in thia/way from the evildoera tf thc city to every scheme whieh its ingenuity and cx- perieaee in oorruption and viliaoy can aa{ to atrengthen its poaition and-increa-e ita rote on election day. Yet, th'.. inten_ity of the public feeling that has been aiouaed kgainal Trbbbbbj control of State is so great that Tamniany can hardJy expect to prevail. Its only hope Hea in it.s eol- onizataoo and natoralization fiauds, and in the bribery, whieh it has been using 11 generaUy and propoaea to uaeetill fnrther. if every regia* tered oitixen in New-York aad Brooklyn who h ls tbal the doB-aation of Tammany id a menace to the be*1 intereata of the two greal cities and of the State will come out aad eaal his vote on electioo day, there can be no doubt of the eleotion of Fassett and the Republican State Hcfcdt, and no doubt that a number of s*'.iis in the Aaaembly __d in the Senate will be gained by the Republkana in New-York and Kinga County. Th"la*t week of the campaign will be crowded with great maas-meetinga, and will be filled with Repnbliean appeala to the reaedn, intelli¬ genee, and ci naoience of voters. The Republi¬ can? and their alliea in thia campaign have WOrked with marve, lous eneigj, vigor- and de* teraiiaatiOB. They have preaented the iaaoe oleariy aud foreibly to all voters. There will )-<¦ ^ exenee for the failure of every voter who is registered to ca«t his ballot on election day. If the vote in New-York and Kinga approaches cloaely to the t .ra'. of the registration, Tam¬ manv und ita State tieket are doomed. THE ocEAX MAIL BJDS. The bida for Government propoeah under the Qoean Mail .\<¦; enacted by the last Coogresa are to be opened t .-day by the Po_a_aater-Qea- eral. So taa m \se can iearn all the Americao lines now in Si.utiieiii tiadc, with 8 fiins*!o ex- ception, will offer bids tor aa improved iser- Vioe. Whethcr any Hik^s havo been brought lnto existence by this legislation will BOt be known until rhe b;ds are opened. The amond- iju-.ii. sealing down the paynoenta far mail «er- \-ieo -Bprived the Frye bill of mach of its origiaal e_W4S_ey a* ¦ aaative mc-asure. Hur Bufficieat energy waa left in laaat-va, we are glad to add, to involve au enlargenient ef the com- in< ii ,il BMtrine. The mo*: DOtabk reault of this legi.- latiou wi]] probably be the estabh-hmeai of rcgular s:ea.m servioe wi-.h Montevideo and Bnenoa Ayre* under the Ameiican Bag. The New-York and Cuba Lin^ will BOl only c.!T<-r bids fur thr-'e routea alraad* Utdnded ia ik aervloe with the Bahamas, Ouba ani Mexioa, bat it will also reapond to the propoaali for B,600*toa ateam- ers of the BBOOad class. BVt-Bging 1'i kuots, to run between New-York and the Platc, r-topping Bt Kio on the retara vayaga. If these bid» ai-e acce|tf>d, at le_*t'four now ships will be built, three of them siperior in bOBBBge and -p-.-ed to any m'-ichan*. .-hit.-s no-. mtder the Aaierleaa Bag. This will bo a great gain for _M inter- e.-t* ol tlie g 'inine.cial inaiin.- and th<- exjiort .tiade. No Amerii_n gtaBBIon aie now */.-n south of th. ooffee porai oi BrazU. The Plate i, crowded with m tonnaga of Btarrtime Enrope, bat the old aratahipa al the South At- lantic Station a one Hy the ABMrkaa llag. The organi_*tion of the new bmiu-h of the Ward lervice will r**4ore tho inereantiln prestige ol the Natioa in thus watera and be very heipful to thc export trade The Paciflc Mail Oompaay wiii have to bufld six or aeven aew ships if lt bids for the routea now covered by it-* aervice, as we naderstand is its int.-iition. Then- will al**i be an laiprov meiit in |_6 \onezu.-hui servicc, whieh is now controlled hy Ihe eotgetie Red 1) Uae. lt will be niost nafortunate if th*- Paited Btatea aml llrazil Line iLh-s n<it tak" advaotage of the piopoaal* ol the -oat_u_.taa>Geaara*i aa im- prove.l and rBpid steam coiiimuiiieaiioii.-. ,n.- ic.|ii.site iu order to piomote the developnieni of trade under the reciprecit. agr*«_*ai. Ther* has beea muoh di-appointmont shown by the exiating line* over tbe defeat of the Naviga- tion Bounty Mll, but they have tokeu a sensi- ble view of tbe matter, and soii-ght to adapt thei__elves to the requir-ment* of tho Mail Ser- vico bill, even in the debilitated state in which it was 1-fS <Tn IM iinal passage. We bave been hopiug for large re.ult_ from this shipping me__ure. and while our expe ctations are not ful- lilled in all IBBpecta, WB r.joice over the pros- agel of the establishment of the Uae to the Plgte and of a substantia! faprOTBflMB- ot the o.uimert.al inaiin.. A great pottey has boen in- troddced. Jt will pi©r« a p ipular bmbbuib, en- listing the suppoit of the indttstrial inteiests of the country. ____________________________ MR. 1SLAJXE ___¦'_- HIS WORK. Mr. Blaine's retuni to hia DOBl at "ashing'on il BB ovent upon which the cuuntry. tho P_BBi- .ii :n and tho OotartaiJ hinwlf a." aiike to be oongratulated. Nbtbi a__ce tho war bave our fort'ign relations beeu more in need of sirong. consorvati.e treatinent than j.ist at this time. Thej are emt)._.r__-_d in soveral direrions. and in others they involve BBgOt-M-OM full f)4 im- i? dataiM, and .BBMIldllH tiie guidanee of tactful aud prudent hand. Mr. l-laine's Dl- BBdi has been to the President a most aerioai i. Had it occuiTod during tho session of Conpress it would have been a misfoi .une of the Blnt B-Bgnitude. Tho 1 .esident, who is capab'e of an iinmen. e amount <»f work, has been able to devote during tbe comj-arative quiet of the suiu- mer months a large part of liis urt. .i;ion to foreiffl alTairs, and certainly ho hns haiidl.ii them wirh skill. re-olutiou aml guooeaa. Hut had he been ovoiburdened with the intennin- able duties which Br. B n.ceMBTJ accompani- inrnt of CuUffBH. our re.ations in sevial pB_M of the world might not be to-day us ;.isfact.>i.\ _b they are. Even noiv the Secrctaiy will rcturn to a erowded desk. Affairs in Chfli are looking _B- c;_o*Jly blue. Tho hot-blooded people 01 tha. vexed country are appareutly having a good deal of trouble to compose tho pas-ion_. their doBMBtio war arouscd, and numbers of tliem are evidently bent upon a policy of ho.ti ity to Atnerica and its iatBIBBts. I'liis gituattoa will call ior the exerciso of much patience, tact and n-rsc, qualiiics of which, forfiinatoly, Mr. blaine poflseeaee an ampie fund. The Behring Sea dispute is sM'.l a dJgpute. Aibitiation has not yet been entered :up_n, if, indeed, the two Governments have been able to agrcc on tha points to be referred. The -ituation in iluwuii, in Central Amerlca and in tho West Indies i_ full of knotty quBBtions, th" ett]ein"nt of which cannot long be defcrred. RedprodtJ n.-p./iations with .cveral oooatl-M BN BW._-.t- Ing tbe approval or the atimulating impuKe of Mr. Blaine. He will need the health and atrength which, we aie glad to know, have beea ao tboroughly returned t<. him. Without implying thal Mr. Blaine'a condition .-. last few yeara haa been in an; of ao invalid, it is cort linl.v true t.. s::y thal he has not looked so well and robaat a.s le to-day .sinco he returned froa Europe. Hia re- oovery is oomplete, and he goea baek u> the Capital with every aaauranee of being ablo to meet wiiatever atrain upOB hia .- reogtfa and energy the winter has in store for him. The country will heartiv t-joioe in thit fact His auperb abilitiea wero never employed more laig.ly to the oountiy's benefit than they have been ainee ho aocepted his preaenl offlce. His mir.d waa never more ereatire than now, his pors mality never more impoa__g an.l attracttre. With an intelleel ripened by experience and en- riched wkb the le-ults of a long career of pub- Ho scrvice, ho is giving diroction and pi to poiicios which for man. yeara will be I ihe poiiticaT and OOBUBB-Cial lelatioiis of the coun'.iy. They ara oooedved in justice and peace, framed with a jntriotic aenae of the coon- i i-v's dignity and intereata and with a oonadoua- ii.-.. ns well, of her eaormoua reaponsibi they me ainK-d at, the lirin eatabli.hmem ol hei ins- intbenie in this bemiaphere, and al the extenaion among all natiom ilril of faii play and thedevotion to equa! righta which Ut the geniua of tho American people. THE OHIO COXTEST. \- preaenl Ihe DbbbwibM are daiming ma- joritiea in New-York, Maaaachuaetta, Ohio. lowa and any other Statea where there are ..!"'¦- ti.iiis. Within about- a we. lc they will know whether they are right in any of theee Statea. \ toOhio, theahrewdeai of them admitted wme time ago that th«- election of Major McKinlej aaaa Inwritable, bnt fual now they are giving e.-u again to the dream. of lainbow-chaaera. 15^- cau.-e the Democrut.- in Cinoinnati gave Qov- eriior CampbeU a btrge meeUng, they are caicu- !:it og that the light of fiu'tions there will cesi hini no votea. Uerause a small country nous- paper ha«s been induced to oome out for Camp¬ beU, they indnlge the htp" thal U repreaenM all the fanners, or all the woikingmen of these rities and town., who will VOBB t^olidly again»t \l; i-1 MeKlnley. It wou!d not be good «.ensc to assume that atrawa are entirely meaningleaa, even though all informatioB attainable jx.ints to the election of Major McKinley aa certain. The Democrata have been ;i* wgrk avlth deaperatioii, and with preat siims of mfiiu-y, ;itul it wonld not be a mai vei if th*«y had .'u-coinplislusl lOBWtbing. Tlie aenaible thing foi Repnblioana to do, when they bear Democrat boaats, is to redooble theii uw ii exertiona for the remaining daya of the eam¬ paign, and take care that tho full Republican ia |xil ed. They need not fi.; themselvea about Democratio dreama if they make aure of caating their own full vote. A worthier leadei they cannot wiah, cvearer lagnea npon which to appeal to the i>'syi)le they have n nrer had than in thia eampaign. .r McKinley has more than jaatified the confiderire e.f his fii.'iuls. __& haa won the ad- miration BBd tbe Hking of thouaanda of hia foea bv the magnifioent ii«ht he has made thia year. lle has taxed evn his preat phiMcal eudurance in oider to 80e the people in e\c \ parl of the State, aa far as poaMble. He haa exhibltad in his discus-i na bo. only great fhirneaa and tn. and a Btaatery of the one qneatioa v.ith which his name is now ii.-eparably BaaOCJBtad, but a thorough kaawledge of other National ipieatlnaia. and a piedsioii and exteal Bf inftrmation and a soundiK^s of nnderatanding and Integritg «.f pur- i'.¦.¦ 11 .-rate aflairs. which have pained him strenpth BVBIJWhe__. The >'T\ic- he has thu* rendered to the BepubUean obom demanda troa ,\ y rincere Rrpublican tha only return in hia p ,'\, -hi. atmoal ad make ;;i-- \ aure aad the me)ot_tj large. It is BOt eaay ko beHeve that Ohio can under an\ 0 BCBiVMble circum-iauccs, for the re- IH'Jil <>f ' M iailf Of I8tl, foi a tnv OB incomes, or for the iin.imit. .1 coi iape of Mlver. It is only becauae men are eitiber uaahle <u i obbornly ra- utd the real flwaaing of Ihe the; eaal thal there ia room For diapul the reanlt. In Major McKinley'a canvaaa through the State be has been able bo j oinl <.ut. hondn 'ls ot indiis'ii il eal iiit ii bave ien brolipht into life iu Ohio b.v the ii<m\ t.iriff. an.l ni-of its pnyviaioaa have bM beea in (broe f.iur months and BOtte more than a'. i;; _ year. lf iie-. araga-aarnera ..f ohio knea th_t Demo- cratk vi'i.in uoulil iinan the closing of thea worka and «»f hundied* b_sj_e_. the\ woii!<l not suff er any demagogue or pnrchaac-i organ to pia- ttnd that thoy could favor such a pohcy. If the capital and the trade of Ohio could realize what disturbanae in busine*w nnd indnstr.v a Froe- Tratre triumph in that State would be likely to prodtiu*. not many men would mn the n*k ot casting Democratic YOBaa, The attomRt' of Ohio Democraf.s to dodge their owa doliler.it'- dacfawation for free-coi^e of tflwejp marks them as nnworthy of support. No body of men has a right to propose a meus.ire so full of Pffffl to the country, withont 80 and absolute a conviction of its nccessily and their duty that Baythlna lUf8 evasiou about it afterward bevomw naked dishone-ty. The peo¬ ple of Ohio do not want, a linancial oarthrniakc. They know that free-coinase of silver, in the judgment of many of their own best leaders arould bring sorioua and widesproad dttaater. They know that a Dotnocratic victory on tho ohio p'atfr-rm w.mld have a tp-mendous power to weaken opposition to ftw-ci-iti:i?o in Congress next wiflter, and would malco the dfaflgef real and near. It is nat to be belioved that they wi!! uko a risk so great StaU leaa is it to be be- iieved that the Hepublicans themselves, by ov<*r- ronfidence, absenoe, or ncfilect of any honcsr. pf- fort, will belray tho public we!faro. MAKE THE LAST DAYS THE BB8T DA YS. Tho last we<k of the faVfrpaiga opens rmder oondiuons undcniably favorable to Kepublican success. The rifOi oi the lirst attack hus been more than kept up throushout the campaign so far, and every day has brought encoiuacjomoiit to those who am bearing the chief burden of tha siriiggle. The regisitation Bguraa ooataifl eridaaoa tliat the party is Brooaed tt Lha *>;,:- pifieaoca af the election, and thc crowded politi¬ cal meetings of the last foi-tnight contirm and s'l-engthcn the conviction that all is well up to baa present moment. Ti.o D m cr its have mado s.an-ely an elloit 80 BD8W8t the OBnYgaa of ina-1- (8888008 and hypociis.v provotl against th*>m. Ol thcir sido it has been a oaaapaiga of al- M chiittcr aad bluster, (MsingenOOtM and Lirelovant, boi Me b -lieve not misk-ad.ng. Thero ia nothmg to ahow that they havo succeoded in iniposing tiF>on voters not a!ready aubject to a gigantio imposition, and evitlence accumulates to snow that thoiisands who seldom carry their .iutipathy to'Tainmuny men and methods to thtj point'of voting agaim-t them are determined to bBBch the Wigwam a lesson this year. Tho last week is begiflfliflg. lt will be in- .stimtivo and inspiriting, and it can be made deciiivc for good goveininetit. Great, audiences will listen to eloquent and urgent appeals flight iiter night. and the faith ot tho laithful will be anatjiflad and tstreiigthciicd. but thia is not enotigh. Tho work.most nut end there. lt il ih" dury of every Rcpublican bo t:v feo make arta during theae last daya of tbe campaign. .Many are ready to bfl -peniUUled. Tha obliga- tiou to undeitako this so.-t of aorviee in too lightly eateeraed aad boo ofteo nc-ilctted. Per- nai, nnobtnariveeffort countsformnch. There is s,ar."!y 8 -ingle voter who eannot exeiris© a valaablfl influenca over Bomebody, and there is not one who eannot at le;ist register a vow that his own ballot shall go into tho right box. This is not a BBeanJBgleaa reminder, f<-r thmi- laada at every election dMcredit themselves bj ptrmitting -oine trivial accideot or tatjamrptiofl oi pieferenoe to Iceep thi m from thc polla. The ma;giu between and the rate il aiwayri large and always diagraojefrj] to those who aie reeponsibla for it. l'.-uk the last week ol tbe campaigD full of vigor and enthaaiasm, and make victory suae. MONEY AND BUS1XE8S. DontUBtlO trade is gradually expaadiAf, aml at ihe West is larger than ever. It is true thnt while crops of aoprecedented magnitude are com- mg forward more rapidly than ifl any prcvioua year, there in not juat at present a correspoi.d- ing foreign demand for tha auxplue. This a ipemtment a.s reapecM wheat, of which ev- porM were iieaily 8,000,000 btibheh* iu one week in Auguet*. '.ind 6,000,000 baabela in tl.e flrat ef SepMniber, bat bave dropped below ^,000,000 buaheta la eat-h of Mra weeka thia nmnth. The evports of provisions fall lar behiud thoae of last year. A decrease wae expected in beeaaae foreign stocks are extreraely large, ,\!nle last yearla exporta ln October were tha largcst ever known, bat thc decrease ifi felt M reoeipM of eotton from plantar tiooa Bxeeed even last year'a anprecedented more- uu-iit. Some beeltatlon ln the marketi foi the great, Ktup.es Satnrally foilowa. Wheat for Nmeuilier deTivery haa fallen 2 centa during the paat week, Weatern n-oeipta being Bearly *,OOO,000 bushels, and In lour weeks 28,580,838 boaheta Bgatnai 14,555,^24 laat year. Tiie exporta arcs aMa larger than a year ago, w*iien they were cttt down by speculation almoat to nothing at Atluntic ports. but for tho paat four weeka have been only 01400,000 buKhela wheat utMinat 61.0,000 hust year. Including flour, the exporta froni both coasts havo beea about doubla Mal yeor's in yttatitity. wliich does not mean a likc Inareaaa ln valoej, however, for the price a year BgO WBB BDOUt .". 1-2 eentfl [>er bttshel higher. Uorn doea not oome for >, and apeeolatioB has lifted it 2 1-2 ccntt. aml oats us much, in apite of the eeriaiuly that enermona crops must ni'.ve before long, Pork fiaa fallen 2;. cents per barrel. lard B fraetaon, aml hoga three-oighths, tiie evports Bhowing a large decreaae, 18,000 barrelh pork aRtiin-it 83,000 Uat year. and 44,000,000 ponada baeaa nnd lard atalaat 1:4,000,000 laat vear for three weeks. Oil is also deprested 1 1-4 cents. v.lth. a shrinkn-.-e in export*, whieh for the previoua eight montbj were very heavy. In er uie und cratiulated Migar prices are a Jittle lnwer. but eollee hiui reCOVtred a little. iwth foreign and domeatle itaeke of eotton are I'lKiruioua; tlio ddToeatto] 1,386,848 a S5| a year ago, and the torelgn 640,000 agalnat ItlJOOO a jrear ago. [natead of Burpriae that exports decreaae, thara la gtoand t"r wonder tl.;,t this month thne f:ir they have atin.tinted tn 548,703 balea againal 660,170 laat year. Y.-i .;.,. qaantlty whieh haa come Lnto Blghl month already is 1,482,121 balea* atrainal 1,275,673 fur the aame paii of October last rear, wlien UM en.p was neariy u tnillioii liales greater tbaa ever before. Ia view af aueh reoelpta and the |ow piii-w preralllng, it la not eaay te credit reaorta of ireat defiefeney ln yield. Darlng the :..,t i-i.it.'n f.-H and then roaean eighth* but I are a snuie higher. Americati "-[litni.-rs bave taken 61,000 bales nn-re thia in< nth ihan a year a«o, but the efloemOBB inerease in port re- cipts and deereano iu BBportB have a deprewtng intluencc. ln view of the.se sbaageB, it is not strantre thal iii.iiK-ti'' exporta rrom New-York ilffiifaan. bai bow nnn!i i-iiiiiuit be eoneetly itated, beeauae efflcial retiiiiis Mal yeai were inflated by ineludlng oargoea previou-.lv omittel iii thc ne.li prinr to tbe .Mietit. -I tl.e new l.uill. 1-r Minilir rn- ¦eaaj the decreaae "i J8.7 pei cent ln ralue of re- ,, i ImporM aaM la ael aapaeiaJly reliabk). But aome iMoreaaa la expotta la boi aarprMlng, Hinee last Ocaober the BBMUBt was over g0gt000,- 000, the Mrgeat thea btbt kmowa la any awath, ,,f whieh Bearly J47.000JOOO \\..s in value of OOt- t. ti. Hm toll retuma ir Beptember, just. pab- uahed, ibow espoita .¦' 182,587,887, whleh ara tbe bargeet ever reportni f.r tbat roontbj aad, ni'lei-ii, were oalj exceeded for the raooth "t (letdlK-r in ^^!i BBd Issu, pTTTTr t.i ilie last. lew Tin- uaaorta, thoogh lar below those of 8B8 same BMBth lis.t '.ear. were never HfMBded in tha s-'iiie month. uf anv nlher ve:r rvept 1883. iiotiiesiii'. trade falla UttM below laat al b year iwelled maaj raiDlona i.v ile- .listilimil'.ii ..I hmii"'ll,\ latported gooda. Exttbangea al clearing houaea eataide Naw-Yerk ahow a .ierre ..-,<. al l.an-ly .'; jm-i eent for tl,t- manth thus far, or leba than $00,000,000. and the exceptional movement of foreign goode probably added nearly aa muoh laet year. Kailroad earn- inga in two weeka of Oetober have been $17,037,- 651 uirainst $Hi,830,0t»4, **» i*cxe*se °- 6 9** rent. The consumption of iroii, of coal, and oi cotton is larger than a year ago, and probubly#thc conaamptioa of lenthcr and wool is nearly as large, while ln the N'orthwcst the demand for luniber is evtrn./rdinary and pricea aro rising. The great indnstrlcs, in sliort, are doiug remarkably well. on the whole probably exceediug last year's r.-e.t.rd of qiiantities produced, but prices are very low and piolits minow. Of the decreaae in wool inuniifacture it may be said that thc loss in some branches is cornpensatcd by gain* in others, and the nggregate Salcs at New-York, Boston and Phila- delphia for the year thus fjr foot up 19y,285,52^ poumls against 210,»>48,300 for the same part of last year. The iron manufactiire, after long walt- ing for activiry in stccl rails, was belped laat week by sales of 50,000 tons. iMoney markets throughout the country have t>een well supplicd, and New-Vorlc banks report gains in rrserves of $4,000,000, in spite of ship- mcuts to the interior of $3,149,000. Gold importi exceeded $3,000,000, aud the Trcasury disbursed about 9-1*600,000 more than it recelved. Lower prices for bar silver are uotcd, and it appears that in -cptcinber net exports were nearly $1,000,000, and in thf nlne montlis $5,696,646. Rurchas.-a by foreign operators have redoeed the stock ac- cumulated by umvitse sp.-rul.itors last year. Whil* there Ls some complaint of dulncss of trade at Fastcrn cities in some branches, the crowded streets and tl.e heavy traflic on railroads make it clear to evcrybody that the uiillions are eurmng ba much and spending as maofa in the iwgregate ns ut any past time in the history of the country. Tammany Hall is beaten and knows that it is beaten. It realizes that an koncbt count of honeat votes will clect -Mr. Fassett Governor. The news whieh has reaehed Croker and his lieiitenants coavinces them thal Flower is doomed, that the Stat* is bound to go RepabUeaa in November by a Bttbatantla] majority. Ifence, as is evident, they have determiaed if possiMe to win thc election by tha eruployment of Tammany's favorite weapons, fraud and corruption. Jttat 88 they o'rice robbed John A. Griswold of the Et- ocutivc ohair, bo they ure now puttinjf up a jub having for its object to viotiraizo Mr.' Fns-.-tt. Forewarned is forearmed. Tammany can and must be bafllcd. David A. Boody,' the Democratic candldate for Mayor of Bro.oklyn, on Wednesday evenlng said that, if elected, he would rely for guidance on th* members of his own party. One of the lcaders of that party, himself a oandidate on the tieket. is Henry II. Adama. He was indk-ted in 184i_ for allesred ballo.box stufling and never tried. He is runnini; for County Trenstirer for the fourth time.. Vet the Demoeratl refoaed to renominate Mayor Chapin, ostcnsibly because he had serveij twq terms. No member of the last State Senate from this city waa so faithful and useful a legislator as Lusjicnard Stewart. Mr. Stewart is acain a can- didete, and his record afford* a sufticient. reaaon f«>r hia re-elertion. Thf district is the only Senate district in thla eity whieh has usually been rep- resentcd by a Republican? There is no reaaon W_y a Deniocrat should be elected this year ex¬ cept that tlie Tamniany Hall caudidate has many peraoaal friends iu the district. Thia ia not a time, however, when personal friendship ahould !>e ailowed to interfcre witTT the election of * Senator who is opix>s<'d to Hilliam and Tammany Hall. Mr. .Stewart rhould reeeive hearty support, ond his success cight not to be doubtful. James B. Townsend, the Republican candldate for Congress in thc Xth District, is an aetive and cnergeffc young man, and would make an exoel- lent Representative in Congress.' Hi* opponent hns never shown nny wider undenstati'ling of politloal afTairs than is shown by a eonsistent support of Tammany Hall and all its misdeeda. Tba Xth District neods such a Repiesentntive as Mr. Towutend, and every Republican and anti- Tammany votcr should cast a ballot for him. Mr. Fassett has aJready had a tnste of the en. thiislasm of a Brooklyn audience. It almost reache.l whlteheat at the recptiou given him at the I'niou League Club several we»ks ago. What, then, may not be expected at the meetings he is to address to-morrow ni^'ht, ln the olosing days of this memorable campaigu ? The Republioan stand- ard-bearer will apeak three tlmea ln different part* of the city. Tlie most important me«ting will be that at the Academy of Music, where there will tm a strong tirray of speaJcere in addltlon to Messrs. Faaaeta, Vrooman, O'Conuor aud Sutherkiud. ThLs ir.eeting will be under thc ausplces of the Brook. lyn Young Republican Club, whieh announces aruong the other ottractions ex-Senator Miller, Mr. Meyer, the candidate for Mayor, and Mr. Dreeser, the candidate for Supervisor-at-Large. Tlie club haa been partieularly fortenat* ln seouring a* the preslding ofllcer of the meetiug Dr. Truman .1. Baokua, president of the Paoker Institute. Dr. Backus holds somewhat independent views on polirical questions, but in this campaign he is en listed hcart and soul against both Tammany and the Brooklyn Ring. He has rare gifts as a pre- .siding officer. There ls uo doubt that the Academy will l>e packed with an audience representing the befit sentiinent of Brooklyn. There should be no doubt this year as to the position of tlie Vllth Assembly District in the Re- pabliead column. By some strauge freak thc votera hist y.-ar ohoaa a Democratic Aseemblyman und a Democratio Alderman. Last yeara mistake ahonld not be repeated. Alfred R. t'onkling, the Hepnblican candidate for the Assembly, ha* ably repreaentetl tlie .listi-ict lo the B<iard of Aldermen. and Whltfleld Van Cott, the Republican noininee for Alderman, is one of tbe most popular candidates that could have been selected. Theae men should reeeive the votes ot* the Republieans, who certainly outnumber the Demoerata of the diistiict. The Vllth ought never to l>e a doubtful district. aou this year least of all. The Brooklyn Democraey, alarmed by the strenyt'i shmvn by Mr. Meyer aiiiontr the (icr- i .tnd in ihe Eaetern Diatriet, are aeeklBg t" frighten Repnbllcaad i.y Bsaertlag that Mr. Mey.-r lf tn be Bold <>'it by tha party mnnagera Far votes on the State tieket Lel no one be deeeirad l.y the.se oiit.-ri.-s. Mr. Meyer is reeeiving tha h.art.v, unbroken 'nnd b'.sal sapport of the Bepablieaa1 party la Brooklya. There is no reaaoa for dis- iitistins* the sincerity and aanwatoaaa of the party leader* oa tb* Bepablieaa atde Mr.' Mayer Btanda to win, aml with the ald of hon<-st Demo- ,i-its nnd GanBBB and independent votera he will be elect.-tl. This is the la*t week of the campaign. By Satordaj aight the work ol eBUfhteaiBg voters Will pia.-ticaily ba cnipl.-ted. This el.-sinj- week should be uiaiked by earncst, Baithfal efforts on rt. of all Etepablioaoa. Eaeh one can do ¦omethlng toward aebieriaf a Krand vietoey. The State oampaigB baa beea nn-kittv; apleadid progreaa from tlie day of the geeheatai Coavea- ii.ni. I.et tha aame apirit be- malatalned aatU tha end. _ The voters of the lld llster Distriot will ciak. no mistake if they aaad to-.tr^e B. Bibbard ta the Aaaembly. Mr. Hibbard i> .. nua of Intelli- Bnd lategrity*. aad ao ooold i* aoaated BDon if elected to mpreMBt liia ilis'ri'-t faitlirully ;,..,l well. A llfB-la_B BapabUeaa, wha has n-n- dered tb* party *_ret*al BBrtiea iu aaay ;> he has Bpeeial nlalma npon BepabUeaaa Thc preeeal Aaaemblyaain is ¦ Demoerat, but ainre fiu- dlatriel ^a\<- liarriMn ',''.': plarallty, there i-- oo reaaon way t'ii--» year, when the Um is with th.- Republieana, lt ahonld not ba r* d.-'in.'il. ln lus apeeen aa Stiui-iav night Mr. *\adr*w D. Whiu- |_.s.seil jiid-'i.teiii upon tiie remorkubU- spi-cchca whlch I'rcaldeut llarrianu kaa made lu varioua part* of the eonntry in tha laat frr* month... It M a judgment whlch tbe general «_. of thinking people will cordlally Indorae. "a0B flfty yeara," he aaid, " no Frwudent ha« p^ through tlie oountry maklng apeechea appeaUn- r_ore IhBfBBghlj to the BOblfl inatincta of tl* Arneri-an people." Then* are the eober, wtfl. coneidered words of one of our k-ading achoUa and thlnkera. And tbey are deserved. Stat* Senator Tantor, who la a candidate f* re-clection, haa been the faithful ally of Gov*^ Hill ln all hk political achemeg. Mr. Cantor, opponent in the Xth Senate Dietriot in Leroy \ (,'rune, who, in nrevioua local contesU, haa ahcari hiu_>elf independent and fearlem. The differtw, between the two eandldatea ia that one thinfc for himeelf and the other thinka aa 0o-.«r.ar Hill and Mr. Cruker d- sire him to think. TM Xth District ine.ludt'8 a Iar_e population of Intelfc jjent and proKreasve votera, and tboae who wufc to have a r.prcaentative worthy of them eiio.14 vote for Mr. (rune. Tlie regiHtration in thi- city ia gratifyin|ly _t^ fnr surpa*. inf? any previoua year except 1 i.a, whea 1 n-si.ien. Harr.sbi w.is tltBtsd. In I5r.o_.yn Ma registration in extraor.iinary, ev*»n the ;arg« reeer* ut the Prcsidential year bcing out/lone hy i,soa Tlils ifl, of course, .lnc la part to the four day. * registration and to the tael timt Um e!**^ ollicers sat continuously iBBtoad of, a.- lormerly, a lew houm in the mominjf and ai or seven la tba latter part of the day. Bat tha big rfgutraH-B, ...'!,,'IOG larger than in IMB, the MM time _ May* was cho.cn, BBMWI au tincniiuon degiea 0f ia, terest in political atfairs at t.l.is time. It indieet* B bitf vote, aud when all the Hepai.lieana af Broet lyn ro to the poll* the BiBg U likely ta a.fcr. M-verely. I>'t Here l.e BB stay at-h__iee io atr party this year, eitm r iu city or country. trery M.te aeettod. We rajetoe thal the cit.«ne m- done their duty so fully bf registenrig m (rcM numlwrs. The ne.vt Oufy is to vote, A full Ra- puhlioau vote BMBBB a. IWB-flBg Kepubllcan Tl* t_>ry. _# An unknown man ahot himaelf at the eariar of Fifth-ave. and Tnir'i. th-et. BB W*omtmmJ _tfL All that could l.w x-t out of him, in anevtr a the inquiriew of a polic-iuan, wa., ¦ I'm Dea, ocrat.I am, and you'd better «et away |f 1m don't want to aet ahot.¦ It ia diffloult to a___- stand why that sort of a Democrat aiiould aak| way with hiimelf at a time when there'a a Dra- ocratio bard on tap and Tammany U pajriac board bills, unleas he had been reading *H| World" and got the notion that the "aattaae' were after him. It ia to be feared that "TM World" has carried the satrap aoare too fax. Davld A. Boody complaine that the Reaubft. cans of Brooklyn give him only a negative \ifa by which to perform the duties of the offlce ta which he expecta an el-ction. larael ml._t far tho eame rea-son have complained of th- Dett- logue. It may be that it ia negative. tnit it is negattve with the thaaden of BiaaL " Thou .hall not, steal." "Thou ehalt not- apend $!,-.V),..# for a $'__0,000 water plant." "Thou ihall n<* spend millions fniudiilenMy at St. Johnland.' "Thou siialt n«t make atr. .t-eleanin. c__-*-B for the benelit of an Aldeiman." No wonder iii. Boody complains of the ne/ative«. PF.RSOXAL. "Sam" Jone* waa a drayman ln vUlanta belora M became a preaclior. and hl. otittlt is described u a "smaJl rlcbetty, ntttlinK. i-amaha- Wlng wagi.n, ao4a -jirei hyrse that whs ..id und exp<-rienced ©nou|l a luve como down from tlie R_volu_o__ry war. Tha rhiKI-qu--»n that nilea HTlland, whtle rer<lrlj| a lorcipi MiJil-ter romiUy, held her favorlte doU te hcr arm., and at lenpth mlaolUaTonaly obs.rre4: . wonder rhat you ar. ni.t afraM to come nrar ma: u my doiis imve had aaeaalaa, vou taaaar." Mr. Von Mumm, beeretary ot Legatloa »nd C_ap d'Affalree, la now represenUnf the Gern__i Ooaaa- ment at W_ahln_ten. He reoelfee many ti°*4_* coudolence upon the death ot Count Ton Ar.o VaflB. Mr. liarksdaJe. candidate lor Senator from MUBaBaal against Mr. Oeorge, w»e drlrlng acro-i a m_r__. track Monday, when a ft«-ght traln bac^e4 ton ea Ids bupgy _nd sma-hed it to fllnderB. ar. Boimmmt leaped out and r.s.aped anhurt. Preeldent Dwlght, of Y&le. «nd W*. Mmfly reached tlWr home ln >"ew-Haven ye-terday after en exte_-_-l trip ln Europe. The American Mlnlsler te Portugal, Mr. lelcta-er. i. apeaMBg in WaaBlaajMa paxt of has atxty-day l_*»a of absenee ; but he Intenda to leave hu wi.a aad dauih- t«-r ihere aeve.al BMMtha. Eugme Field Jocoaely auggests that lf Ij-aUna Don¬ nelly wlns hla $100,000 libel tult agalnM "The 11 Pn«l Ploneer Presa" he wlll probably eiMow a Sha_--P*ajM« pviU.¦ .soralilp (la lionor of Krancia B_c.ii) ln i_a -_i- v. r-lty of .-lnnesota. When the late King C_arlee of \Yaerterabnrg waa yel Crown l.ince, and he was urdered to becorne eaga|M to the Bu»si_n Grand Uacheae Olga, he w_i ahown a portralt of her. Afier rcgardlnK it lnt^ntiy. he ti- claimed: "llow darlngiy they have flattered Mrl The halr I* toe abur..lant, tlie eyea are too brllllaat,and tho complexloii too dilnty." llie contier- aa_e4ia asioni.hnient. " H.H Ao.t your Royal IlighnjM w* tlm Urand Daebaaal" - I do not know ber," waa ua reply, " but 1 know tlie cvurt palntet-." Etther throuch acc'.rtrnt or dealgn, the l-lnoe af Xaples waa not fort.inale ln the muslcal corapllmenu he rec_-lv. d from bamls and ©rcheatras whlle to««ag about ln Europe receiitly. lt ls relaied that. upon Ul appearanc. at Copcnhageu, by aoiae m;-U__a the "Bar- selllalae'' was played BMtoai of the >'aU.nal antheia. and during hU stay ln lloll.ind he haa been no le« oa- fortunate. I'pon tlie oo a«slon of hi. n_t to th* y-*M Qaaaa, at the Ca-tle of Loo, the band pres-nt bravalf fltruc_ up "aaaaa Laela," balMi-ag that Mal .* piaying the Itattaa aaareh. TBa Maaa BMk c.tt erw good-l.nmoi-dly, but the lncldent la aaM to Ba*a .au**'' ureut anuoyanc. at conrt. !)... BartawMBf MeBgl vlaltor waapreaent at Uie TbeaU. K.v_i, at to**f*_ Cpon hla arrlval, ln tbe ml<KU« < th- jeeond .*. "Haya-e." the repiaaentatton waa i"<'-""i".f'1- «____ the Brat note- fniiii tho o. h-_tr» tlie w ii.le MWJ ,-. bellerlng that <_.>> wera Httaalnf to.|-'« i^T NaUonal antbem. The Prtaee, wMvtevar hl- feeUnft exp-aaed hla Uianfca: an.l whea aU waa over |t *u«> corereB that tho air playefl »«_ a coaimon miman inarili. _._..___._._- ONCB MOBE IN THE BABWBB From The Pittoburg Ch._ul«.le Te-egrapb. All fttod clUiens r.;J«.i.. thut Mr BMMa «*"B and ...uu.!. t.-lv ln p.wlOB of ^\u,h?«_rfIM power. thal li" ean go to wor* ln the ¦'f;,"^«»J Mianif.'irt. an.l ofwn delleato, duti-- with a B«aa " j.v and aaUafactton that bave long toea atrangw w Ue inneriiKi.t reoceaea al the BMM BBBaraaBM A STATESMANMKE ADDRF^*. Proaa The n<Mon Adveatlaar naiaalarr Peatort apeeah <. riraar ran_a MTBJ J Uch a., the eloquent efleel wWoh fonnel **^Lm .,i,..it in tbe UBe of Beeretarj Wln-eaa, hl- P^Sr*^ taM ls a Ut anaarer to tho Democr-tic cra»« aw allver. ? BUBI-T-B- THAT BELONGS TO T_J-__a* From TlM * '¦'.'**¦ *,_*_¦ It la difflcult to _n_<_vta_4 how K ls thal: <^lf can people, who are >" aU-rt aud enterpri. «»-,,, dlrerhooa, »k on w;^fvtojSalBM whlle other n:iilo:i- ar. x-i/.ir.»f with ay..llt« WJL M of prefltable enterpriae whlch slwuw i^z_\_v-t o.cti[.i.'.l bv the Intelligeuco. encrty aml .ar** owu citizens. _ MORE WORK FOR THE AMF.RICAN MI-^11*- I'rotn Tho Mlnaeupolis lilbune. _M_\ ln all U.l ataaaaelMa oa_ar Amerlcan po. w ,x bow farea the Amerlcan b«an, and pmy y*\. 0^ itatu. of Amert-an hemhij WB a "'ir,^; o*_ n.an und lta_*a coaMaa kaw . V'.'.^ou*.*1 poaHe rlehneaa of tbe hof aud homli -_,,!«» -nuru Uie aavor of the port and »;',;>'0;1^,. U* land, -'ati.t. wlll le ponerles. to aean fflh_ar onr eonmereMI . -!'ei" * e Baaa at oi.ee. m_ ¦IIIUS WHAT WKKK W.'RKINO FOfc I'mm The bt. Louis lilobe-Hemocrat. ^^ no Hiicc-a of the llepublicaiu ln all «» . ^ «-«> T -"._ ;*^.t^."ra^tV PrP*i1tS. 11 . wult la ««*. thlna. and Me la_le-_a_B are UBM aaa* a **om likely to enMie._, BOOBB -r- BTtlM AllorMF.NT. Proao Tiie Boatou Jourual. , v. i- ui,v blll and augar, Br. MlUa <i:_ .'"' *' ' ' -.,, an;. .y'.»\\****g'E*A-m ,.i.l nol hurl ,l 77 w»»-» 2eU_.l-d for h tl.1 Iikiu V **'"' don't you?' Thal aaa -.? 1.AMM^^^ aW_0- 0OJWBCXB '' BtoaaTha Baa Hataa BalM-Haaa ,. ,u wlcked |.;.. ... i-nnrj the Kmplre ,..,,,iv i...f. '..'-.¦ li «-ot. i v.'ti. aaoaey levkd. "'...Cz '',.,.'. _.¦ ,,ill. oi N'-.n Yorh SUte. bi<¦ »rn «^B ;.,;tl,-.,t u> w,n. .. OM ;.f tbe mo.t alarmiag uicMa-" ia modern political bMorjr.

Upload: others

Post on 10-Jul-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1891-10-26 [p 6]. · 2017-12-25 · Remierert Letter. Caah ar Po»tal,flett,, lf eaat ii. an unretiitcred letter, will be at owrcr'i riik._ Maln otTUe

^mnacments.ACADEMT-B-The SeudanA.M1IKAO THEATRE.8 :1&-Kahale and Elabe.AMU'liAN IN.s. 1 ll'IE-10 a m to 10 p. m.-lnflua

nt»l Kair.BTJOIT THKATUE.«:16.Kiobe.BROADWAY THEATRE.8-The Merry Monarch.CASlXO-a-Cavalierla Rua'-leaoa and The Tvrolean.COt.I'MBlra Tnr.ATRK.» Jft-Sh>iiancloah.i-.UKX MfSEE.Wax Tableaua.HARDEN THEATRE-8 la.lm, Cigalc.(iKAND OPERA HOl'SK-H-Ode-te.haki*f.m okeka BOVthV-Bdav-A VenaHAIIRIOAN'S Till ATRE-8-IUilly ind BMllERI-.MANX'S TII I-.ATKF.--8:30-The Sollcltor.HOYT'S MADISOM BQUAJUI THEATRE 4 So-Jane.KOSTEIi 8 m.Vl.'S---8-Vaudcvllle.liTCF.r.M^Tll.' All.i B:18-Tha Haaclng (ilrl.NEW PAKK -llli MKK 8:18.Til\edn.PAIaMBBVa rflUJATBtK.8.08 kmf lU>b«art.PKOCTOR'S TaUtATBB 8 ThaildBi.oi'ANDAltD THEATBT 8 BnMa Hood..sfAR THEATRE.1> :li.The Iroiimanter.THALIA TUEATRE-8-The Dwirfi' Weddlng.'lOXT PASTOK'S THEATRE-?-Vaudeville.i'XIOX SQl'AJU. TIII.A'iKl.-8:15-The Cadl.14TH STREET TII EATRE-8-Mavo.irne.-n.

Jnoct io ^oucrii5frnciits.~7*a**e7coL, Faae. Coi.

AnniwmtnU .11 8-8 Icstrud'on. b 2-AAnno-incr-nenti .12 4 Manlig-i A Deatlr* 7 8Ai-ctlcn Sale K.-ul Mlac-lUnaoui .Ii: 4-u

Ealala .11 biMuaa-al Ii.rtrun.nriU.il .

Aiitun,n Resortl .10 f>; New I'nb'i. »t otis ...8laoiier- k Brok-ri .11 4 Oeeaa Steaaierj .... 8 4Uu* d and Rooa* .. 8 PoMUcal Jfotirea.... 7 '}..I- nev* Cbancei 9 :;¦ FroioiaJi 8 ..

l(ii*«eii Nottcai ... « 1 Public Nottce .10 8Oa-i.-iiig Acadero'aa.. 8 4 \u-_l E.-t»te .10 8-8Dlvidfid N'oti.ea .11 '. Keal Eatate. 8 1-'-'UrewniakUig 8 H Kooma aod PUU.... 9 2

tsUuat-oni Kot>ni« and P1BM....10 8W-Mited .

** h-8-Rallroada . 8 5-t.nrrsooaa .10 SiSnevlai NoUeca . 7 «Pttaaclal .u 3-4 stcan.ioat-.ll 8Finaoclal Maetlnee 11 4 Te<wi.-!i . 8 8-4Kar Sale .8 »¦ rh* Turf .11 "H. ii. Wantod ... 9 8-8 Wliitei Keanrta .10 6Iloraea * C«rrla*f« 0 1 Work Wanted . 0 4-5Hoteja.10 81

Dnaii i-BS -\oicrs.

Keep'a Dreas Shlrte to roeasure, 6 for f0. Nonebetter at aay prlre. 800 and fall Broadway;_Roi.L TOP DE8KSAnd Otlce FurnltureMaaattBOanM bp t. o. seiiew111 Ktiltau-sL, BJ, T._

TRIBUNE TERM6 TO MAIL St'BSCRIBERS.1 j car. 0 i. '.-. 8 inoi. 1 mo.

nallj, 7 daya a weak.B10 00 06 00 92 io Bl 00Uaily alUioul Sunday.... 8 00 4 00 2 VO 90to nday Tribuac. 2 00 100 60-Weehlv Tilb-me. 100 -..

i*i*ii.vVe«kly Tril-une. 2 00 . . .

Ptatare prepaid by Tribtmc. eacept on Dally and SunclaTprper fcr mail nibierlbers ln New-York City and on I-ally.bMiil-Weeklv ind WeeKly tu foreign couiitrlts, ln wulrtilaaea extra pcitage wlll be ral'l by iiibacrlbcre.

Hetnit bv Foatal Order, aMpraM Order, CheaB, Draft orRemierert Letter.

, ,Caah ar Po»tal flett, lf eaat ii. an unretiitcred letter,

will be at owrcr'i riik._ _

Maln otTUe of The Trlbune. 164 Naaian-at., New-Tlork.ACidrmi aii eori.M.oiidei>ce aimply "The Trlbu*e," Wew-T*rk.

BRANCH 8PP1CPJ OP THE TRIBUNE.AdveniiiE-enu for i".bl!catton ln The Tribuna and

.rdcra for regular dellver.v ol the daily japer wlll bo re-

ct'i\ed at the fwlcwiri-; tranch oltices in Kl v.-.-itrk:Maln bianih aflre, 1,-So Hroadeay, icrncr 31it-at.i:,S tth-are., corner l4th»t.270 Weat 23d-at., cen.er 8th-»ve.10'. Weit 42d-at. uear tth-ave.(2 Av-nue A. tiettr Eaat Ith-lt.-,00 ad ave., eatrance -tTth-it.1.021! 8d-ave., between (.cth ind Glit ita.173 r.aif BDtn-sl Beai .Hdave.lpo Earn i-j.'.'.ii .. nenr Bd-ara.-43 We»t I23tk.il b»-t*-een 7th and 8th avea.

1,081 Mb-ave., near 88th-M1.708 let-ave., near M»th at.ItiO flawarr, near Hroome-sl.t*9 I.lbttty-at.

IN OTHER CITTTV?.Brooklyn idmblilBg Agency, .197 Fulton-it, op. City

Wa-blngton-No. 1,322 F it

FOUNDED BY HORACE GREELET

MONDAY. OCTOBEK 2G. Uii.

TWELVE PAGES.THE XEWS THIS MORNIXG.

Foreign..The to«-n of Merrinpen, Bwltterlaad,abaoat entirely swept tv.vay by iirc. s

Much damage ha« been t-ause.l by flooda iii B^alnand France. rssss A laaftM to estublish a socialiBtrcptiblic has been for.ueil in FrBJaOB. A mur-

.ler af thc "Jaoh the Rtpaer" bdad araa oomailttediu Berlin.

Doniritic -r'overnor rftnipbellh (ILsjrraceful ottt-hteak at Ea«t Urarpeol, ObJo, on Thoradapnight is met by an ojirn letter Irom tlie pottcryuianufiictun-rs of the town. - ¦" Tlie coii.c:-

btone 01 the Divinily Sebool boildlSB at TufMCollegf was ttid. =a= Dr. vou HoUcben, G«r-uiau Miiiuster t<> Japan, has beea appointcd tt

bucoee-d Coast vou Arco-Valley at Wafhington.-A hcavy wi-iatration is reported from thcvarlonn cities of this State. =r= BMhop .oxrspoke in Baffale againf-t "So»Called Hlfhet Crttt(isni aod Mi'd'Tii Tliouchl."

t'ity ati'i Siibiitbiiii.-A maoiae i-i WeBteaeater('..ui.ty "held up" three men wlth B abot-gun amlcliaseil two of them a lon« dtttaaee. Apelloeraid on a green-Koods gans brought to llght a

numl>er of lcttcrs from reputabfe people.Misa Marir Tcm^st \va« setiousl.v injured by a

fall as aae araa Marlaj the OaM ia stage.I he Weatlii-r..l-'orec-iist fcr tn--':..v Warmer and

falr. Tetnperature yesterday: liighcst. ".:. de-

pteea; Mwiaa, 4o: average, 47.

Civil Senrioe CoaMBJaakmer RoosbtbIi baaarrithoB .tii onorgotic letter to the Bon. AndrewI). Whito in aopport of the Kopu'jli.iin Stateticket and in deiiiinciation of Tammany HaU.lt is Ifl Mr. BooBereaVa beal Btyle. With ad-mii-'bl'le UHMHIOaa flBld Inci'lMy he tells tvli.'it th"Kiiccess oi' Mr. Knssctt will iiir-in. at:'] whal :i

fOfajnlrj the triuuiph in the ShBtCJ of thfl BBkHfnand corritpiiiig fonv-s t!iut Tammany Hall ataodaf ,]¦ wntil'l }¦(-. Mr. Booaarelt/a letter will befound in anothor column. llead it.

»

A <trf'HK atraignment of Tammany mis-gov-einment ia made in an appeal to hajrparjrers,uhii-h is ho be ritcttlated for da^Matnita through-r.nt the city. Every taxiiayei- slitniltl read. niarUand inwaidlr digi-st it.aiid vote aooordinjsly.The falaepieteaeaabout^oer taa raeee, in rea'it.vlO'tght aboul by hbcraawd real eatate valua-

tions. is eNpos^d, and the inade<-it:i<y of onr

lOB<l^BM0888, the fonl condition ol our 6trf>ets,in"t!io;is nf tlie city depailiii'-nis. etc, 888

ticiicliaiitly deociibed. This (kn ument |i a pow-erful atgument for the redtactloa o.r Tammany'aj> mer arid infliience in both city and EHfltt).

In Bflite of irequent disctiurageraent^ and sef-

ba< ks. the " green-goods"' busin-es i-<,ntinties to

tiour.sh. For aome time to oome, though. it willno' floniish so much as it has. fur Bfl Satiiidfiy[napeobor Bjlfleafa men captun-d one of tha lead-(i-s of the civoked fraternity and laid violenthatids upon his valuable " plant.r' Many in-

ng letu-ts were found in Brooks's con-e-

fc|Kindence, not a few of the miaflia and would-be

ptirrjhaeers of " green goods" lx*ing respectabledl 88818 and even church OaVoBrB. After the in-lniiufiable cxposure". of this Bpef888 of fruid, itis amazing that the swirdb-is lind v> many and

pf vi< t.ms. The evideniv afalflBl BriMfU,ara ira gtad io aay, Beaaaa anfflcJatd to pot him©ut of batal'a ttmjf for a long period.

There aeems to be an impresKion more or NM8widely pi-i-va'ent that tho M8 pavemetit. whichh:is been p-it down in aome parfs of Uroadwav is*a BjfMMa Ol what a pavement OfJghl to be, and(' .tuia< tor CHBBP888M has b«en hail"d (p affosivt098888 a« a public benefactoi. A oarefully pre*pai '! Brlkae in our coliunns this B801-nJflg sh'.-.-sthat, su far as tho lower .section of Ilroadway is...ticeriied. this iJBtaaajaaJoji is entirely BtTiEkMmMk,The paveiii'-nt there has been -thrown open to

public use for a fortni^ht, but by loasnn of thacondition of tlu- sli-n-' finther np i' ha- by ny

xtiiinis b<-en laaad aa fuliy as it, will l* bbV r,Yet it avlrc'idy Ls in ajead fll ra8BMra! 'lhe factdoiibtltMS i« that it wac not projierly laid, and inaUoes this ia painfulij evident, even on a caaual

glance. Moreover. in the matter of cros«waJka,the contractor has indulged in all sort* of abaordvagariee. In brief. this pavement, whieh oughtto be as good as the chief thoroughfare of anygreat at} po*.se«sf-s. is a miserable piece of work.a Tamniany job of the worst sort. Kvery pav-ing-r-tone ought to help drive a nai! in Tam¬many's coffin on November S.

All eity Ropuhlicana BBO-t- bear in mind thatone of tiie great<y»t politic-al d^monstrations ofibe campaign will be tho meeting that occurs tithe Bfekdiaoa Bquare Ger_en to-night. lt i*

under the direction of the Hepnblican ConntyCommittee. Much labor hn«. been expendetl in

preparing the (Jnrden for the first- political meet-lai to ba b*H thero. Ez-Saaaket Miller is to

preside and mako his first speech in behalf ofthc Fassett-Yio'-inau tieket Tho other speak-era will be Banator Riaeoek, Colonel Jo"! B.Er_ar_l and CoBgraognaa Pavne. The bai-eannouncement «.f this list of speakers is euffi-cicnt to pack even thc big Gardeu to the floois.

WHAT A FULL VOTE MBAXS.The elosinj* week of the camoaign opens wi'h

signs of encouragement for the opponenta ofthe Tammany State and local tickets. It is

oertaio that Mr. Flower OBBBOt be elected (Gov¬ernor of thi* State, imless he get* larger BBtjor-itics in Xew-York and Kinii* County than Mr.

BBd got in 1888. The reports from allovei the 9tat0 indicate that the opponente of

Tammany misnile are enthn*iavie. ardent andhopeful. In New-York anrl in LSrookl.n thetigurcs of the extensive registration mako itclear tbat a large vote will be poiled. A largevote in the two citiee Bb BB8 the defeat of theDemocratic State tieket, and the election of the

Hepnblican candidates. Tammany's followers;uv alwaya at rhe polls. A large vote mea.n.s

tliat the BepobHeaaa and Anri-Tainmany Deniu-erata turn out in force. Heaee, it bbbum anocenfor thc right oauae. It means the strengthen-ing of the Kepub ican reprcsentation in the As-senibl.v and tho Senate from the lower part ofthe State. It means a deci*ive victory for cleanund honcst government.

In the loca canipais-n against Tammany mi«-

government last year, rhe Taminany candidateswould have been defeated but for ine_c_sableapathy on the pait of many thousands of J.e-publicana who remained at home aad did not

regi*ter, and on the part of other thousands ofcitizens arho did aol approve Tamniany tyranny,plunder and profligacy, but who failed to taketht- trouble to vote. even after thev had beenregi.-stered. The .irnest. vigarOQB and oggies-sive campuign cjndiicted by the Republieans,aided by their frienda and aeaociatea, arho inthe paai have voted for Democratio candidates,hut who are BOW det.-rnuned to check tlie in-tolerable abuaea of Tammanv aaceadeacy, hasbeen ao effeotive with th..- inteUigeaoe and eon-

Boience of the voters-in ail parta of the State,that Tanimany ha- been t __oed ' deaperatioB.Ii haa practised fraud in oolonlzation aud innatui-aliz ition with cvei; inon-, freedom and bold-ness than in any prevkxu oampaiga. lt baaImpoeed opon its anscrnpaknia aervaata ta ever*

branch of the munlcipaJ aer_8*e heavier taskatii:in ever before. lt has exacted larger con-

tributioaa from ita offioeholdera than ia pre¬vions yeara. lt has blaoknuiled the liquoraebona and tho diaorderly ho:tse,s, tho j»ool-rooma, and all the resorto of the/vidotu andthc crimina! claaaea, with a heavier hand thaa in

any preceding year. li has applied the sumi

extorted in thia/way from the evildoera tf thccity to every scheme whieh its ingenuity and cx-

perieaee in oorruption and viliaoy can aa{to atrengthen its poaition and-increa-e ita roteon election day.

Yet, th'.. inten_ity of the public feeling thathas been aiouaed kgainal Trbbbbbj control of

State is so great that Tamniany can hardJyexpect to prevail. Its only hope Hea in it.s eol-onizataoo and natoralization fiauds, and inthe bribery, whieh it has been using 11 generaUyand propoaea to uaeetill fnrther. if every regia*tered oitixen in New-York aad Brooklyn whoh ls tbal the doB-aation of Tammany id a

menace to the be*1 intereata of the two grealcities and of the State will come out aad eaalhis vote on electioo day, there can be no doubtof the eleotion of Fassett and the RepublicanState Hcfcdt, and no doubt that a number ofs*'.iis in the Aaaembly __d in the Senate willbe gained by the Republkana in New-York andKinga County.Th"la*t week of the campaign will be crowded

with great maas-meetinga, and will be filledwith Repnbliean appeala to the reaedn, intelli¬genee, and ci naoience of voters. The Republi¬can? and their alliea in thia campaign haveWOrked with marve, lous eneigj, vigor- and de*teraiiaatiOB. They have preaented the iaaoeoleariy aud foreibly to all voters. There will)-<¦ ^ exenee for the failure of every voter whois registered to ca«t his ballot on election day.If the vote in New-York and Kinga approachescloaely to the t .ra'. of the registration, Tam¬

manv und ita State tieket are doomed.

THE ocEAX MAIL BJDS.The bida for Government propoeah under the

Qoean Mail .\<¦; enacted by the last Coogresaare to be opened t .-day by the Po_a_aater-Qea-eral. So taa m \se can iearn all the Americaolines now in Si.utiieiii tiadc, with 8 fiins*!o ex-

ception, will offer bids tor aa improved iser-

Vioe. Whethcr any Hik^s havo been broughtlnto existence by this legislation will BOt beknown until rhe b;ds are opened. The amond-iju-.ii. sealing down the paynoenta far mail «er-

\-ieo -Bprived the Frye bill of mach of its

origiaal e_W4S_ey a* ¦ aaative mc-asure. HurBufficieat energy waa left in laaat-va, we are gladto add, to involve au enlargenient ef the com-

in< ii ,il BMtrine.The mo*: DOtabk reault of this legi.- latiou wi]]

probably be the estabh-hmeai of rcgular s:ea.m

servioe wi-.h Montevideo and Bnenoa Ayre*under the Ameiican Bag. The New-York andCuba Lin^ will BOl only c.!T<-r bids fur thr-'eroutea alraad* Utdnded ia ik aervloe with theBahamas, Ouba ani Mexioa, bat it will also

reapond to the propoaali for B,600*toa ateam-ers of the BBOOad class. BVt-Bging 1'i kuots, torun between New-York and the Platc, r-toppingBt Kio on the retara vayaga. If these bid» ai-e

acce|tf>d, at le_*t'four now ships will be built,three of them siperior in bOBBBge and -p-.-ed to

any m'-ichan*. .-hit.-s no-. mtder the AaierleaaBag. This will bo a great gain for _M inter-e.-t* ol tlie g 'inine.cial inaiin.- and th<- exjiort.tiade. No Amerii_n gtaBBIon aie now */.-n

south of th. ooffee porai oi BrazU. The Platei, crowded with m tonnaga of BtarrtimeEnrope, bat the old aratahipa al the South At-lantic Station a one Hy the ABMrkaa llag. Theorgani_*tion of the new bmiu-h of the Wardlervice will r**4ore tho inereantiln prestige olthe Natioa in thus watera and be very heipfulto thc export tradeThe Paciflc Mail Oompaay wiii have to bufld

six or aeven aew ships if lt bids for the routeanow covered by it-* aervice, as we naderstand isits int.-iition. Then- will al**i be an laiprovmeiit in |_6 \onezu.-hui servicc, whieh is now

controlled hy Ihe eotgetie Red 1) Uae. ltwill be niost nafortunate if th*- Paited Btateaaml llrazil Line iLh-s n<it tak" advaotage of thepiopoaal* ol the -oat_u_.taa>Geaara*i aa im-prove.l and rBpid steam coiiimuiiieaiioii.-. ,n.-

ic.|ii.site iu order to piomote the developnieniof trade under the reciprecit. agr*«_*ai. Ther*

has beea muoh di-appointmont shown by the

exiating line* over tbe defeat of the Naviga-tion Bounty Mll, but they have tokeu a sensi-ble view of tbe matter, and soii-ght to adaptthei__elves to the requir-ment* of tho Mail Ser-

vico bill, even in the debilitated state in whichit was 1-fS <Tn IM iinal passage. We bave been

hopiug for large re.ult_ from this shippingme__ure. and while our expectations are not ful-lilled in all IBBpecta, WB r.joice over the pros-agel of the establishment of the Uae to thePlgte and of a substantia! faprOTBflMB- ot theo.uimert.al inaiin.. A great pottey has boen in-troddced. Jt will pi©r« a p ipular bmbbuib, en-

listing the suppoit of the indttstrial inteiests ofthe country. ____________________________

MR. 1SLAJXE ___¦'_- HIS WORK.Mr. Blaine's retuni to hia DOBl at V»"ashing'on

il BB ovent upon which the cuuntry. tho P_BBi-.ii :n and tho OotartaiJ hinwlf a." aiike to be

oongratulated. Nbtbi a__ce tho war bave our

fort'ign relations beeu more in need of sirong.consorvati.e treatinent than j.ist at this time.

Thej are emt)._.r__-_d in soveral direrions. andin others they involve BBgOt-M-OM full f)4 im-

i? dataiM, and .BBMIldllH tiie guidanee oftactful aud prudent hand. Mr. l-laine's Dl-

BBdi has been to the President a most aerioaii. Had it occuiTod during tho session of

Conpress it would have been a misfoi .une of theBlnt B-Bgnitude. Tho 1 .esident, who is capab'e ofan iinmen. e amount <»f work, has been able to

devote during tbe comj-arative quiet of the suiu-

mer months a large part of liis urt. .i;ion to

foreiffl alTairs, and certainly ho hns haiidl.iithem wirh skill. re-olutiou aml guooeaa. Huthad he been ovoiburdened with the intennin-able duties which Br. B n.ceMBTJ accompani-inrnt of CuUffBH. our re.ations in sevial pB_Mof the world might not be to-day us ;.isfact.>i.\_b they are.Even noiv the Secrctaiy will rcturn to a

erowded desk. Affairs in Chfli are looking _B-

c;_o*Jly blue. Tho hot-blooded people 01 tha.vexed country are appareutly having a gooddeal of trouble to compose tho pas-ion_. theirdoBMBtio war arouscd, and numbers of tliem are

evidently bent upon a policy of ho.ti ity to

Atnerica and its iatBIBBts. I'liis gituattoa willcall ior the exerciso of much patience, tact andn-rsc, qualiiics of which, forfiinatoly, Mr.blaine poflseeaee an ampie fund. The BehringSea dispute is sM'.l a dJgpute. Aibitiation hasnot yet been entered :up_n, if, indeed, thetwo Governments have been able to agrcc on

tha points to be referred. The -ituation iniluwuii, in Central Amerlca and in tho WestIndies i_ full of knotty quBBtions, th" ett]ein"nt

of which cannot long be defcrred. RedprodtJn.-p./iations with .cveral oooatl-M BN BW._-.t-Ing tbe approval or the atimulating impuKe ofMr. Blaine. He will need the health andatrength which, we aie glad to know, have beeaao tboroughly returned t<. him.Without implying thal Mr. Blaine'a condition

.-. last few yeara haa been in an;of ao invalid, it is cort linl.v true t.. s::y thal hehas not looked so well and robaat a.s leto-day .sinco he returned froa Europe. Hia re-

oovery is oomplete, and he goea baek u> theCapital with every aaauranee of being ablo to

meet wiiatever atrain upOB hia .- reogtfa andenergy the winter has in store for him. Thecountry will heartiv t-joioe in thit fact His

auperb abilitiea wero never employed more

laig.ly to the oountiy's benefit than they havebeen ainee ho aocepted his preaenl offlce. Hismir.d waa never more ereatire than now, hisporsmality never more impoa__g an.l attracttre.With an intelleel ripened by experience and en-

riched wkb the le-ults of a long career of pub-Ho scrvice, ho is giving diroction and pito poiicios which for man. yeara will be Iihe poiiticaT and OOBUBB-Cial lelatioiis of the

coun'.iy. They ara oooedved in justice andpeace, framed with a jntriotic aenae of the coon-i i-v's dignity and intereata and with a oonadoua-ii.-.. ns well, of her eaormoua reaponsibithey me ainK-d at, the lirin eatabli.hmem ol heiins- intbenie in this bemiaphere, and al theextenaion among all natiom ilril of faiiplay and thedevotion to equa! righta which Utthe geniua of tho American people.

THE OHIO COXTEST.\- preaenl Ihe DbbbwibM are daiming ma-

joritiea in New-York, Maaaachuaetta, Ohio.lowa and any other Statea where there are ..!"'¦-ti.iiis. Within about- a we. lc they will knowwhether they are right in any of theee Statea.\ toOhio, theahrewdeai of them admitted wme

time ago that th«- election of Major McKinlejaaaa Inwritable, bnt fual now they are giving e.-u

again to the dream. of lainbow-chaaera. 15^-cau.-e the Democrut.- in Cinoinnati gave Qov-eriior CampbeU a btrge meeUng, they are caicu-!:it og that the light of fiu'tions there will cesi

hini no votea. Uerause a small country nous-

paper ha«s been induced to oome out for Camp¬beU, they indnlge the htp" thal U repreaenM allthe fanners, or all the woikingmen of theserities and town., who will VOBB t^olidly again»t\l; i-1 MeKlnley.

It wou!d not be good «.ensc to assume thatatrawa are entirely meaningleaa, even

though all informatioB attainable jx.ints to theelection of Major McKinley aa certain. TheDemocrata have been ;i* wgrk avlth deaperatioii,and with preat siims of mfiiu-y, ;itul it wonld notbe a mai vei if th*«y had .'u-coinplislusl lOBWtbing.Tlie aenaible thing foi Repnblioana to do, whenthey bear Democrat boaats, is to redooble theiiuw ii exertiona for the remaining daya of the eam¬

paign, and take care that tho full Republicania |xil ed. They need not fi.; themselvea

about Democratio dreama if they make aure ofcaating their own full vote. A worthier leadeithey cannot wiah, cvearer lagnea npon which to

appeal to the i>'syi)le they have n nrer had thanin thia eampaign.

.r McKinley has more than jaatified theconfiderire e.f his fii.'iuls. __& haa won the ad-miration BBd tbe Hking of thouaanda of hia foeabv the magnifioent ii«ht he has made thia year.lle has taxed evn his preat phiMcal eudurancein oider to 80e the people in e\c \ parl of theState, aa far as poaMble. He haa exhibltad inhis discus-i na bo. only great fhirneaa and tn.and a Btaatery of the one qneatioa v.ith whichhis name is now ii.-eparably BaaOCJBtad, but a

thorough kaawledge of other National ipieatlnaia.and a piedsioii and exteal Bf inftrmation and a

soundiK^s of nnderatanding and Integritg «.f pur-i'.¦.¦ 11 .-rate aflairs. which have pained him

strenpth BVBIJWhe__. The >'T\ic- he has thu*rendered to the BepubUean obom demanda troa,\ y rincere Rrpublican tha only return in hiap ,'\, -hi. atmoal ad make ;;i-- \aure aad the me)ot_tj large.

It is BOt eaay ko beHeve that Ohio can

under an\ 0 BCBiVMble circum-iauccs, for the re-

IH'Jil <>f ' M iailf Of I8tl, foi a tnv OB incomes,or for the iin.imit. .1 coi iape of Mlver. It is onlybecauae men are eitiber uaahle <u i obbornly ra-

utd the real flwaaing of Ihethe; eaal thal there ia room For diapulthe reanlt. In Major McKinley'a canvaaa throughthe State be has been able bo j oinl <.ut. hondn 'lsot indiis'ii il eal iiit ii bave ienbrolipht into life iu Ohio b.v the ii<m\ t.iriff. an.l

ni-of its pnyviaioaa have bM beea in (broef.iur months and BOtte more than a'. i;; _ year.lf iie-. araga-aarnera ..f ohio knea th_t Demo-cratk vi'i.in uoulil iinan the closing of theaworka and «»f hundied* b_sj_e_. the\ woii!<l notsuff er any demagogue or pnrchaac-i organ to pia-

ttnd that thoy could favor such a pohcy. If the

capital and the trade of Ohio could realize what

disturbanae in busine*w nnd indnstr.v a Froe-

Tratre triumph in that State would be likely to

prodtiu*. not many men would mn the n*k ot

casting Democratic YOBaa,The attomRt' of Ohio Democraf.s to dodge their

owa doliler.it'- dacfawation for free-coi^e of

tflwejp marks them as nnworthy of support. No

body of men has a right to propose a meus.ire

so full of Pffffl to the country, withont 80

and absolute a conviction of its nccessily and

their duty that Baythlna lUf8 evasiou about it

afterward bevomw naked dishone-ty. The peo¬

ple of Ohio do not want, a linancial oarthrniakc.They know that free-coinase of silver, in the

judgment of many of their own best leadersarould bring sorioua and widesproad dttaater.They know that a Dotnocratic victory on tho

ohio p'atfr-rm w.mld have a tp-mendous power to

weaken opposition to ftw-ci-iti:i?o in Congressnext wiflter, and would malco the dfaflgef realand near. It is nat to be belioved that they wi!!

uko a risk so great StaU leaa is it to be be-iieved that the Hepublicans themselves, by ov<*r-

ronfidence, absenoe, or ncfilect of any honcsr. pf-fort, will belray tho public we!faro.

MAKE THE LAST DAYS THE BB8T DA YS.

Tho last we<k of the faVfrpaiga opens rmderoondiuons undcniably favorable to Kepublicansuccess. The rifOi oi the lirst attack hus beenmore than kept up throushout the campaign so

far, and every day has brought encoiuacjomoiitto those who am bearing the chief burden oftha siriiggle. The regisitation Bguraa ooataifleridaaoa tliat the party is Brooaed tt Lha *>;,:-

pifieaoca af the election, and thc crowded politi¬cal meetings of the last foi-tnight contirm ands'l-engthcn the conviction that all is well up to

baa present moment. Ti.o D m cr its have mados.an-ely an elloit 80 BD8W8t the OBnYgaa of ina-1-(8888008 and hypociis.v provotl against th*>m.Ol thcir sido it has been a oaaapaiga of al-

M chiittcr aad bluster, (MsingenOOtM andLirelovant, boi Me b -lieve not misk-ad.ng. Theroia nothmg to ahow that they havo succeoded in

iniposing tiF>on voters not a!ready aubject to a

gigantio imposition, and evitlence accumulatesto snow that thoiisands who seldom carry their

.iutipathy to'Tainmuny men and methods to thtjpoint'of voting agaim-t them are determined to

bBBch the Wigwam a lesson this year.Tho last week is begiflfliflg. lt will be in-

.stimtivo and inspiriting, and it can be madedeciiivc for good goveininetit. Great, audienceswill listen to eloquent and urgent appeals flightiiter night. and the faith ot tho laithful willbe anatjiflad and tstreiigthciicd. but thia is

not enotigh. Tho work.most nut end there. ltil ih" dury of every Rcpublican bo t:v feo make

arta during theae last daya of tbe campaign..Many are ready to bfl -peniUUled. Tha obliga-tiou to undeitako this so.-t of aorviee in too

lightly eateeraed aad boo ofteo nc-ilctted. Per-nai, nnobtnariveeffort countsformnch. There

is s,ar."!y 8 -ingle voter who eannot exeiris©a valaablfl influenca over Bomebody, and thereis not one who eannot at le;ist register a vow

that his own ballot shall go into tho right box.This is not a BBeanJBgleaa reminder, f<-r thmi-laada at every election dMcredit themselves bjptrmitting -oine trivial accideot or tatjamrptiofloi pieferenoe to Iceep thi m from thc polla. Thema;giu between and the rate ilaiwayri large and always diagraojefrj] to thosewho aie reeponsibla for it.

l'.-uk the last week ol tbe campaigD full ofvigor and enthaaiasm, and make victory suae.

MONEY AND BUS1XE8S.DontUBtlO trade is gradually expaadiAf, aml at

ihe West is larger than ever. It is true thnt

while crops of aoprecedented magnitude are com-

mg forward more rapidly than ifl any prcviouayear, there in not juat at present a correspoi.d-ing foreign demand for tha auxplue. This i» a

ipemtment a.s reapecM wheat, of which ev-

porM were iieaily 8,000,000 btibheh* iu one weekin Auguet*. '.ind 6,000,000 baabela in tl.e flrat

ef SepMniber, bat bave dropped below^,000,000 buaheta la eat-h of Mra weeka thianmnth. The evports of provisions fall lar behiudthoae of last year. A decrease wae expected in

beeaaae foreign stocks are extreraely large,,\!nle last yearla exporta ln October were thalargcst ever known, bat thc decrease ifi felt

M reoeipM of eotton from plantartiooa Bxeeed even last year'a anprecedented more-uu-iit. Some beeltatlon ln the marketi foi the

great, Ktup.es Satnrally foilowa.Wheat for Nmeuilier deTivery haa fallen 2 centa

during the paat week, Weatern n-oeipta beingBearly *,OOO,000 bushels, and In lour weeks28,580,838 boaheta Bgatnai 14,555,^24 laat year.Tiie exporta arcs aMa larger than a year ago, w*iien

they were cttt down by speculation almoat to

nothing at Atluntic ports. but for tho paat fourweeka have been only 01400,000 buKhela wheatutMinat 61.0,000 hust year. Including flour, the

exporta froni both coasts havo beea about doublaMal yeor's in yttatitity. wliich does not mean a

likc Inareaaa ln valoej, however, for the price a

year BgO WBB BDOUt .". 1-2 eentfl [>er bttshel higher.Uorn doea not oome for >, and apeeolatioBhas lifted it 2 1-2 ccntt. aml oats us much, in

apite of the eeriaiuly that enermona crops must

ni'.ve before long, Pork fiaa fallen 2;. cents perbarrel. lard B fraetaon, aml hoga three-oighths, tiie

evports Bhowing a large decreaae, 18,000 barrelh

pork aRtiin-it 83,000 Uat year. and 44,000,000ponada baeaa nnd lard atalaat 1:4,000,000 laatvear for three weeks. Oil is also deprested 1 1-4cents. v.lth. a shrinkn-.-e in export*, whieh forthe previoua eight montbj were very heavy. Iner uie und cratiulated Migar prices are a Jittlelnwer. but eollee hiui reCOVtred a little.iwth foreign and domeatle itaeke of eotton are

I'lKiruioua; tlio ddToeatto] 1,386,848 a

S5| a year ago, and the torelgn 640,000agalnat ItlJOOO a jrear ago. [natead of Burpriaethat exports decreaae, thara la gtoand t"r wondertl.;,t this month thne f:ir they have atin.tinted tn

548,703 balea againal 660,170 laat year. Y.-i.;.,. qaantlty whieh haa come Lnto Blghlmonth already is 1,482,121 balea* atrainal1,275,673 fur the aame paii of October last rear,wlien UM en.p was neariy u tnillioii liales greatertbaa ever before. Ia view af aueh reoelpta andthe |ow piii-w preralllng, it la not eaay te creditreaorta of ireat defiefeney ln yield. Darlng the

:..,t i-i.it.'n f.-H and then roaean eighth* butI are a snuie higher. Americati "-[litni.-rs

bave taken 61,000 bales nn-re thia in< nth ihan a

year a«o, but the efloemOBB inerease in port re-

cipts and deereano iu BBportB have a deprewtngintluencc.

ln view of the.se sbaageB, it is not strantre thaliii.iiK-ti'' exporta rrom New-York ilffiifaan. bai bownnn!i i-iiiiiuit be eoneetly itated, beeauae efflcialretiiiiis Mal yeai were inflated by ineludlngoargoea previou-.lv omittel iii thc ne.li prinr to tbe

.Mietit. -I tl.e new l.uill. 1-r Minilir rn-

¦eaaj the decreaae "i J8.7 pei cent ln ralue of re-,, i ImporM aaM la ael aapaeiaJly reliabk).But aome iMoreaaa la expotta la boi aarprMlng,Hinee last Ocaober the BBMUBt was over g0gt000,-000, the Mrgeat thea btbt kmowa la any awath,,,f whieh Bearly J47.000JOOO \\..s in value of OOt-t. ti. Hm toll retuma ir Beptember, just. pab-uahed, ibow espoita .¦' 182,587,887, whleh ara

tbe bargeet ever reportni f.r tbat roontbjaad, ni'lei-ii, were oalj exceeded for the raooth "t(letdlK-r in ^^!i BBd Issu, pTTTTr t.i ilie last. lew

Tin- uaaorta, thoogh lar below those of8B8 same BMBth lis.t '.ear. were never HfMBdedin tha s-'iiie month. uf anv nlher ve:r rvept 1883.

iiotiiesiii'. trade falla UttM below laat al b yeariwelled maaj raiDlona

i.v ile- .listilimil'.ii ..I hmii"'ll,\ latported gooda.Exttbangea al clearing houaea eataide Naw-Yerkahow a .ierre ..-,<. al l.an-ly .'; jm-i eent for tl,t-manth thus far, or leba than $00,000,000. and the

exceptional movement of foreign goode probablyadded nearly aa muoh laet year. Kailroad earn-

inga in two weeka of Oetober have been $17,037,-651 uirainst $Hi,830,0t»4, **» i*cxe*se °- 6 9**rent. The consumption of iroii, of coal, and oi

cotton is larger than a year ago, and probubly#thcconaamptioa of lenthcr and wool is nearly as

large, while ln the N'orthwcst the demand for

luniber is evtrn./rdinary and pricea aro rising. The

great indnstrlcs, in sliort, are doiug remarkablywell. on the whole probably exceediug last year'sr.-e.t.rd of qiiantities produced, but prices are very

low and piolits minow. Of the decreaae in woolinuniifacture it may be said that thc loss in some

branches is cornpensatcd by gain* in others, andthe nggregate Salcs at New-York, Boston and Phila-

delphia for the year thus fjr foot up 19y,285,52^poumls against 210,»>48,300 for the same part oflast year. The iron manufactiire, after long walt-ing for activiry in stccl rails, was belped laatweek by sales of 50,000 tons.

iMoney markets throughout the country havet>een well supplicd, and New-Vorlc banks reportgains in rrserves of $4,000,000, in spite of ship-mcuts to the interior of $3,149,000. Gold importiexceeded $3,000,000, aud the Trcasury disbursedabout 9-1*600,000 more than it recelved. Lowerprices for bar silver are uotcd, and it appears thatin -cptcinber net exports were nearly $1,000,000,and in thf nlne montlis $5,696,646. Rurchas.-aby foreign operators have redoeed the stock ac-

cumulated by umvitse sp.-rul.itors last year. Whil*there Ls some complaint of dulncss of trade at

Fastcrn cities in some branches, the crowdedstreets and tl.e heavy traflic on railroads make itclear to evcrybody that the uiillions are eurmngba much and spending as maofa in the iwgregate ns

ut any past time in the history of the country.

Tammany Hall is beaten and knows that it isbeaten. It realizes that an koncbt count ofhoneat votes will clect -Mr. Fassett Governor.The news whieh has reaehed Croker and hislieiitenants coavinces them thal Flower is doomed,that the Stat* is bound to go RepabUeaa inNovember by a Bttbatantla] majority. Ifence, asis evident, they have determiaed if possiMe towin thc election by tha eruployment of Tammany'sfavorite weapons, fraud and corruption. Jttat 88they o'rice robbed John A. Griswold of the Et-ocutivc ohair, bo they ure now puttinjf up a jubhaving for its object to viotiraizo Mr.' Fns-.-tt.Forewarned is forearmed. Tammany can andmust be bafllcd.

David A. Boody,' the Democratic candldate forMayor of Bro.oklyn, on Wednesday evenlng saidthat, if elected, he would rely for guidance onth* members of his own party. One of the lcadersof that party, himself a oandidate on the tieket.is Henry II. Adama. He was indk-ted in 184i_for allesred ballo.box stufling and never tried.He is runnini; for County Trenstirer for the fourthtime.. Vet the Demoeratl refoaed to renominateMayor Chapin, ostcnsibly because he had serveijtwq terms.

No member of the last State Senate from thiscity waa so faithful and useful a legislator as

Lusjicnard Stewart. Mr. Stewart is acain a can-

didete, and his record afford* a sufticient. reaaonf«>r hia re-elertion. Thf district is the only Senatedistrict in thla eity whieh has usually been rep-resentcd by a Republican? There is no reaaon

W_y a Deniocrat should be elected this year ex¬

cept that tlie Tamniany Hall caudidate has manyperaoaal friends iu the district. Thia ia not a

time, however, when personal friendship ahould!>e ailowed to interfcre witTT the election of *

Senator who is opix>s<'d to Hilliam and TammanyHall. Mr. .Stewart rhould reeeive hearty support,ond his success cight not to be doubtful.

James B. Townsend, the Republican candldatefor Congress in thc Xth District, is an aetive andcnergeffc young man, and would make an exoel-lent Representative in Congress.' Hi* opponenthns never shown nny wider undenstati'ling ofpolitloal afTairs than is shown by a eonsistentsupport of Tammany Hall and all its misdeeda.Tba Xth District neods such a Repiesentntive as

Mr. Towutend, and every Republican and anti-Tammany votcr should cast a ballot for him.

Mr. Fassett has aJready had a tnste of the en.thiislasm of a Brooklyn audience. It almostreache.l whlteheat at the recptiou given him atthe I'niou League Club several we»ks ago. What,then, may not be expected at the meetings he isto address to-morrow ni^'ht, ln the olosing days ofthis memorable campaigu ? The Republioan stand-ard-bearer will apeak three tlmea ln differentpart* of the city. Tlie most important me«ting willbe that at the Academy of Music, where there willtm a strong tirray of speaJcere in addltlon to Messrs.Faaaeta, Vrooman, O'Conuor aud Sutherkiud. ThLsir.eeting will be under thc ausplces of the Brook.lyn Young Republican Club, whieh announces

aruong the other ottractions ex-Senator Miller, Mr.Meyer, the candidate for Mayor, and Mr. Dreeser,the candidate for Supervisor-at-Large. Tlie clubhaa been partieularly fortenat* ln seouring a* thepreslding ofllcer of the meetiug Dr. Truman .1.Baokua, president of the Paoker Institute. Dr.Backus holds somewhat independent views on

polirical questions, but in this campaign he is enlisted hcart and soul against both Tammany andthe Brooklyn Ring. He has rare gifts as a pre-.siding officer. There ls uo doubt that the Academywill l>e packed with an audience representing thebefit sentiinent of Brooklyn.

There should be no doubt this year as to theposition of tlie Vllth Assembly District in the Re-pabliead column. By some strauge freak thcvotera hist y.-ar ohoaa a Democratic Aseemblymanund a Democratio Alderman. Last yeara mistakeahonld not be repeated. Alfred R. t'onkling, theHepnblican candidate for the Assembly, ha* ablyrepreaentetl tlie .listi-ict lo the B<iard of Aldermen.and Whltfleld Van Cott, the Republican noinineefor Alderman, is one of tbe most popular candidatesthat could have been selected. Theae men shouldreeeive the votes ot* the Republieans, who certainlyoutnumber the Demoerata of the diistiict. TheVllth ought never to l>e a doubtful district. aou

this year least of all.

The Brooklyn Democraey, alarmed by thestrenyt'i shmvn by Mr. Meyer aiiiontr the (icr-

i .tnd in ihe Eaetern Diatriet, are aeeklBg t"

frighten Repnbllcaad i.y Bsaertlag that Mr. Mey.-rlf tn be Bold <>'it by tha party mnnagera Far voteson the State tieket Lel no one be deeeirad l.ythe.se oiit.-ri.-s. Mr. Meyer is reeeiving tha h.art.v,unbroken 'nnd b'.sal sapport of the Bepablieaa1party la Brooklya. There is no reaaoa for dis-iitistins* the sincerity and aanwatoaaa of theparty leader* oa tb* Bepablieaa atde Mr.' MayerBtanda to win, aml with the ald of hon<-st Demo-,i-its nnd GanBBB and independent votera he willbe elect.-tl.

This is the la*t week of the campaign. BySatordaj aight the work ol eBUfhteaiBg voters

Will pia.-ticaily ba cnipl.-ted. This el.-sinj- weekshould be uiaiked by earncst, Baithfal efforts on

rt. of all Etepablioaoa. Eaeh one can do¦omethlng toward aebieriaf a Krand vietoey.The State oampaigB baa beea nn-kittv; apleadidprogreaa from tlie day of the geeheatai Coavea-ii.ni. I.et tha aame apirit be- malatalned aatUtha end.

_

The voters of the lld llster Distriot will ciak.no mistake if they aaad to-.tr^e B. Bibbard tathe Aaaembly. Mr. Hibbard i> .. nua of Intelli-

Bnd lategrity*. aad ao ooold i* aoaatedBDon if elected to mpreMBt liia ilis'ri'-t faitlirully;,..,l well. A llfB-la_B BapabUeaa, wha has n-n-

dered tb* party *_ret*al BBrtiea iu aaay ;>

he has Bpeeial nlalma npon BepabUeaaaThc preeeal Aaaemblyaain is ¦ Demoerat, butainre fiu- dlatriel ^a\<- liarriMn ',''.': plarallty,there i-- oo reaaon way t'ii--» year, when the Umis with th.- Republieana, lt ahonld not ba r*d.-'in.'il.

ln lus apeeen aa Stiui-iav night Mr. *\adr*w D.Whiu- |_.s.seil jiid-'i.teiii upon tiie remorkubU-spi-cchca whlch I'rcaldeut llarrianu kaa made lu

varioua part* of the eonntry in tha laat frr*month... It M a judgment whlch tbe general «_.of thinking people will cordlally Indorae. "a0Bflfty yeara," he aaid, " no Frwudent ha« p^through tlie oountry maklng apeechea appeaUn-r_ore IhBfBBghlj to the BOblfl inatincta of tl*Arneri-an people." Then* are the eober, wtfl.coneidered words of one of our k-ading achoUaand thlnkera. And tbey are deserved.

Stat* Senator Tantor, who la a candidate f*re-clection, haa been the faithful ally of Gov*^Hill ln all hk political achemeg. Mr. Cantor,opponent in the Xth Senate Dietriot in Leroy \(,'rune, who, in nrevioua local contesU, haa ahcarihiu_>elf independent and fearlem. The differtw,between the two eandldatea ia that one thinfcfor himeelf and the other thinka aa 0o-.«r.arHill and Mr. Cruker d- sire him to think. TMXth District ine.ludt'8 a Iar_e population of Intelfcjjent and proKreasve votera, and tboae who wufcto have a r.prcaentative worthy of them eiio.14vote for Mr. (rune.

Tlie regiHtration in thi- city ia gratifyin|ly _t^fnr surpa*. inf? any previoua year except 1 i.a, whea1 n-si.ien. Harr.sbi w.is tltBtsd. In I5r.o_.yn Maregistration in extraor.iinary, ev*»n the ;arg« reeer*ut the Prcsidential year bcing out/lone hy i,soaTlils ifl, of course, .lnc la part to the four day. *registration and to the tael timt Um e!**^ollicers sat continuously iBBtoad of, a.- lormerly, alew houm in the mominjf and ai or seven la tbalatter part of the day. Bat tha big rfgutraH-B,...'!,,'IOG larger than in IMB, the MM time _ May*was cho.cn, BBMWI au tincniiuon degiea 0f ia,terest in political atfairs at t.l.is time. It indieet*B bitf vote, aud when all the Hepai.lieana af Broetlyn ro to the poll* the BiBg U likely ta a.fcr.M-verely. I>'t Here l.e BB stay at-h__iee io atrparty this year, eitm r iu city or country. treryM.te aeettod. We rajetoe thal the cit.«ne m-done their duty so fully bf registenrig m (rcMnumlwrs. The ne.vt Oufy is to vote, A full Ra-puhlioau vote BMBBB a. IWB-flBg Kepubllcan Tl*t_>ry. _#

An unknown man ahot himaelf at the eariarof Fifth-ave. and Tnir'i. th-et. BB W*omtmmJ _tfLAll that could l.w x-t out of him, in anevtr athe inquiriew of a polic-iuan, wa., ¦ I'm Dea,ocrat.I am, and you'd better «et away |f 1mdon't want to aet ahot.¦ It ia diffloult to a___-stand why that sort of a Democrat aiiould aak|way with hiimelf at a time when there'a a Dra-ocratio bard on tap and Tammany U pajriacboard bills, unleas he had been reading *H|World" and got the notion that the "aattaae'were after him. It ia to be feared that "TMWorld" has carried the satrap aoare too fax.

Davld A. Boody complaine that the Reaubft.cans of Brooklyn give him only a negative \ifaby which to perform the duties of the offlce ta

which he expecta an el-ction. larael ml._t fartho eame rea-son have complained of th- Dett-logue. It may be that it ia negative. tnit it is

negattve with the thaaden of BiaaL " Thou .hallnot, steal." "Thou ehalt not- apend $!,-.V),..#for a $'__0,000 water plant." "Thou ihall n<*

spend millions fniudiilenMy at St. Johnland.'"Thou siialt n«t make atr. .t-eleanin. c__-*-Bfor the benelit of an Aldeiman." No wonder iii.Boody complains of the ne/ative«.

PF.RSOXAL.

"Sam" Jone* waa a drayman ln vUlanta belora Mbecame a preaclior. and hl. otittlt is described u a

"smaJl rlcbetty, ntttlinK. i-amaha- Wlng wagi.n, ao4a-jirei hyrse that whs ..id und exp<-rienced ©nou|l aluve como down from tlie R_volu_o__ry war.

Tha rhiKI-qu--»n that nilea HTlland, whtle rer<lrlj|a lorcipi MiJil-ter romiUy, held her favorlte doU tehcr arm., and at lenpth mlaolUaTonaly obs.rre4: .

wonder rhat you ar. ni.t afraM to come nrar ma: u

my doiis imve had aaeaalaa, vou taaaar."Mr. Von Mumm, beeretary ot Legatloa »nd C_ap

d'Affalree, la now represenUnf the Gern__i Ooaaa-

ment at W_ahln_ten. He reoelfee many ti°*4_*coudolence upon the death ot Count Ton Ar.o VaflB.

Mr. liarksdaJe. candidate lor Senator from MUBaBaalagainst Mr. Oeorge, w»e drlrlng acro-i a m_r__.

track Monday, when a ft«-ght traln bac^e4 ton ea

Ids bupgy _nd sma-hed it to fllnderB. ar. Boimmmt

leaped out and r.s.aped anhurt.

Preeldent Dwlght, of Y&le. «nd W*. Mmfly reachedtlWr home ln >"ew-Haven ye-terday after en exte_-_-ltrip ln Europe.

The American Mlnlsler te Portugal, Mr. lelcta-er.i. apeaMBg in WaaBlaajMa paxt of has atxty-day l_*»aof absenee ; but he Intenda to leave hu wi.a aad dauih-t«-r ihere aeve.al BMMtha.Eugme Field Jocoaely auggests that lf Ij-aUna Don¬

nelly wlns hla $100,000 libel tult agalnM "The 11 Pn«lPloneer Presa" he wlll probably eiMow a Sha_--P*ajM«pviU.¦ .soralilp (la lionor of Krancia B_c.ii) ln i_a -_i-v. r-lty of .-lnnesota.When the late King C_arlee of \Yaerterabnrg waa yel

Crown l.ince, and he was urdered to becorne eaga|Mto the Bu»si_n Grand Uacheae Olga, he w_i ahown a

portralt of her. Afier rcgardlnK it lnt^ntiy. he ti-

claimed: "llow darlngiy they have flattered Mrl

The halr I* toe abur..lant, tlie eyea are too brllllaat,andtho complexloii too dilnty." llie contier- aa_e4iaasioni.hnient. " H.H Ao.t your Royal IlighnjM w*tlm Urand Daebaaal" - I do not know ber," waa ua

reply, " but 1 know tlie cvurt palntet-."Etther throuch acc'.rtrnt or dealgn, the l-lnoe af

Xaples waa not fort.inale ln the muslcal corapllmenuhe rec_-lv. d from bamls and ©rcheatras whlle to««ag

about ln Europe receiitly. lt ls relaied that. upon Ul

appearanc. at Copcnhageu, by aoiae m;-U__a the "Bar-

selllalae'' was played BMtoai of the >'aU.nal antheia.and during hU stay ln lloll.ind he haa been no le« oa-

fortunate. I'pon tlie oo a«slon of hi. n_t to th* y-*MQaaaa, at the Ca-tle of Loo, the band pres-nt bravalffltruc_ up "aaaaa Laela," balMi-ag that Mal .*

piaying the Itattaa aaareh. TBa Maaa BMk c.tt erw

good-l.nmoi-dly, but the lncldent la aaM to Ba*a .au**''

ureut anuoyanc. at conrt. !)... BartawMBf MeBglvlaltor waapreaent at Uie TbeaU. K.v_i, at to**f*_Cpon hla arrlval, ln tbe ml<KU« < th- jeeond .*."Haya-e." the repiaaentatton waa i"<'-""i".f'1- «____the Brat note- fniiii tho o. h-_tr» tlie w ii.le MWJ

,-. bellerlng that <_.>> wera Httaalnf to.|-'« i^TNaUonal antbem. The Prtaee, wMvtevar hl- feeUnftexp-aaed hla Uianfca: an.l whea aU waa over |t *u«>corereB that tho air playefl »«_ a coaimon mimaninarili. _._..___._._-

ONCB MOBE IN THE BABWBBFrom The Pittoburg Ch._ul«.le Te-egrapb.

All fttod clUiens r.;J«.i.. thut Mr BMMa '» «*"Band ...uu.!. t.-lv ln p.wlOB of ^\u,h?«_rfIMpower. thal li" ean go to wor* ln the ¦'f;,"^«»JMianif.'irt. an.l ofwn delleato, duti-- with a B«aa "

j.v and aaUafactton that bave long toea atrangw w

Ue inneriiKi.t reoceaea al the BMM BBBaraaBM

A STATESMANMKE ADDRF^*.Proaa The n<Mon Adveatlaar

naiaalarr Peatort apeeah <. riraar ran_a MTBJ JUch a., the eloquent efleel wWoh fonnel **^Lm

.,i,..it in tbe UBe of Beeretarj Wln-eaa, hl- P^Sr*^taM ls a Ut anaarer to tho Democr-tic cra»« aw

allver.?

BUBI-T-B- THAT BELONGS TO T_J-__a*From TlM * '¦'.'**¦

*,_*_¦It la difflcult to _n_<_vta_4 how K ls thal: W» <^lf

can people, who are >" aU-rt aud enterpri. «»-,,,dlrerhooa, »k on w;^fvtojSalBMwhlle other n:iilo:i- ar. x-i/.ir.»f with ay..llt« WJL Mof prefltable enterpriae whlch slwuw i^z_\_v-to.cti[.i.'.l bv the Intelligeuco. encrty aml .ar**owu citizens.

_

MORE WORK FOR THE AMF.RICAN MI-^11*-I'rotn Tho Mlnaeupolis lilbune. _M_\

ln all U.l ataaaaelMa oa_ar Amerlcan po. w ,xbow farea the Amerlcan b«an, and pmy y*\. 0^itatu. of Amert-an hemhij WB a "'ir,^; o*_n.an und lta_*a coaMaa kaw . V'.'.^ou*.*1poaHe rlehneaa of tbe hof aud homli -_,,!«»-nuru Uie aavor of the port and »;',;>'0;1^,. U*land, -'ati.t. wlll le ponerles. to aean u» fflh_aronr eonmereMI . -!'ei" * e

Baaa at oi.ee. m_

¦IIIUS WHAT WKKK W.'RKINO FOfcI'mm The bt. Louis lilobe-Hemocrat. ^^

no Hiicc-a of the llepublicaiu ln all «» . ^«-«> T -"._ ;*^.t^."ra^tVPrP*i1tS. 11 . wult la ««*.

thlna. and Me la_le-_a_B are UBM aaa* a **om

likely to enMie._,BOOBB -r- BTtlM 0» AllorMF.NT.

Proao Tiie Boatou Jourual. ,

v. i- ui,v blll and augar, Br. MlUa <i:_ .'"' *' ' ' k«-.,, an;. .y'.»\\****g'E*A-m

,.i.l nol hurl ,l 77 w»»-»

2eU_.l-d for h tl.1 Iikiu V**'"'don't you?' Thal aaa

-.?

1.AMM^^^ aW_0- 0OJWBCXB ''

BtoaaTha Baa Hataa BalM-Haaa ,.

,u wlcked |.;.. ... i-nnrj the Kmplre,..,,,iv i...f. '..'-.¦ li «-ot. i v.'ti. aaoaey levkd. "'...Cz

'',.,.'. _.¦ ,,ill. oi N'-.n Yorh SUte. bi<¦ »rn «^B;.,;tl,-.,t u> w,n. .. OM ;.f tbe mo.t alarmiag uicMa-"ia modern political bMorjr.