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Show 1 told an A'aocinfcJ Press correspondent . I tli.il "if the Mdunley bill i suta'ticd iin the romiu,; election the Enir!in j trade niut reinain impaired.'' Thin i .!." En'.'hiiid turn her ves to the Ohio ' i democracy for help. Hut tho den:o-1 den:o-1 er.uie pur.v in that r trite is practically ' I.elpli-Ms. They would lilt" very much ) to re'i ue England's tra !o from its pre-; pre-; ent "imfiaired" roudition, hut they belt ' th aolitl endorsemeat of l!i Ohio ijerple. Major Melvinloy is carry ii Dverviliinn before him in that state. Ho is making a battle for thu conservation of American interests. England's "im-1 "im-1 paired" trada stands no chance of being ! rehabilitated through tu9 votes of the i Ohio people tiiis yeur. T;ilaoo firowjri tlanaflteil, ' Calamity lluswll will have a hard j timn this fall preachif? calamity to the : tobacco Kronint.; towns of Maasachti-! Maasachti-! satt.-i. Tha A' iv Emjlnwl Jw,.iUnt, after a careful inquiry and oxamication eatiiiiale-i that thu kiimvhi'8 of tobacco in tho fjonnecticiit ami llnnsatoiiic valleys val-leys will cut from S'.WO.iwO tj SJ.OdO,-(I SJ.OdO,-(I M) for their crop this your, as ataml j i5!.0i..i.OijU in lM't. The adtiitional million mil-lion anil odd dollars usotl to b paid to tho Hollander for Sumatra tobacco, but tho higher tariff placed by the JIc-Kiaicy JIc-Kiaicy law on tho Imported article Ji-verts Ji-verts tho money into the pockets of Amot'can producers. Calamity Huhm4-and Huhm4-and his nuiu ump admirers ou'ht to Iind something to chew in these plain facts and figures. On tha I.v r I'rotptrlly. B. I.oi.ts tjlobo-Democrat. ThoiM are some iudicrttions that e are 0. 1 the eve ot an era of speculate activuy almost m rusrkeil arid ext'n aive as tliat which Hot in about the ti.i.e that, epecio payuients were resuirod twelve or thirtbeu yars ago. After a j period of I tj 11 .(latioti, whi ih, however, v. as far longer then than it has been now, good crop here and poor one. in Europe .sent the total of our exportation!, exporta-tion!, at that time up sharply and started a gold movement in this direction, direc-tion, which gave the country confidence confi-dence in the government's ability to maintain s pecie payuieuls. For two or tlireo years, then, general trade was more active than had been known previously. pre-viously. Apparently the country is on the eve of auother period of business extension aud diversification. Not Orlnl. r m Veto. San lranciic(i Curonl-le. The New York Times is patting Harrison Har-rison on the back be-ausu he ha recently re-cently encouraged the goldhugs to hope that in the event of the passage of a free coinage bill by congress he wouid inturponu his veto, bull we are inclined in-clined to believe that the Times is mistaken, mis-taken, and that if sujh a measure pstse both houses by a large majority the president will not be foolish enough to imagine that Wall street voices the opinion of the country. SPIR;T Or THt Prl&SS. CnRtrot ot Curiori4tioa, Cliii :isro Inter-Oee .n. Chief Justice lileckiy, of the supreme ro.,it of (ieorgia. re-inforceo Mr. Jones v ii.ii a wise iuk im : "Ju public opinion, : ami in legislative policy, regulation iloes not require segregation.'' That is to ;ay. the operations of InTjTe aggregations aggrega-tions of carita! should be regulated by law, but it nf Ither is needful t r wise to compel toeiii to tsepaiaitt ami to act each for itself in a comparatively re ftrictad domain, h is not tlebatablo in the light of experience that iiiU.tlOG.OUU I ot capital invested nntler one ma'. age-uieiit age-uieiit and o.jeritling a g.veu line of rH.i-way rH.i-way will give cheaper ami better scrv-it.e scrv-it.e for freight and passenger movement move-ment tl'.-.ti would ten aggregations of S i.DoO.tK") each opeiaiing ten i nesequal Iu length, Mid over a space parallel to the iiue under t'.e :;:fi,tiK if.! uianage-nieut, uianage-nieut, and the same rule may hold true as to other bustne-ses. It is not the aggregation of capi'al tint is to be drcadel. It is the irrrspoii.dblo eggro-gatiou eggro-gatiou of capital. To tb lino and enforce en-force its just responsibilities seems to be the problem ot tne hour. Fr.DCh IIii:rnMs Tonartls (larraauy. I)"nver Ie;t..l llcan. The intense bitterness r. f the feeling against (icrmauy w lib 'u exisis in France i surprising. One would think that after the lapse of mote than twenty years the French woultt hav e learned to look iu a loss hostile way toward their old enemy, f he fact that public sentiment senti-ment is so bit'.cr at'ams. Germany leaves little room to doubt that France would not hes'tatc long to begin a war, if a gootl opportunity were presented. The French long u,r the recovery of j the lost provinces, aud the man who wing them back wiil gain a place in ; French history equal to t bat of the: greatest rulers that France has ever j known. His generation will never tire of duing him lienor. : r ngiaud', II ip. i riiilaiietiil 'a Press. ' A laio'e Liverpool exporter recently |