Then and Not Under the above leading the Wichita, Kansas; Demo crat proceeds to dump a few claps of campaign thunder on the dear people with the hope, no doubt, tljat the comparisons made letween present prices and those of 1896 will. cause a, fcjw soft headed ignoramuses 1o yearn for the good old fag-tag, .soup house times of Cleve land and Tariff Ref or n. The Democrat undertakes to but General Prosperity off the track and chase Marl: Hanna into a hole with the follow-ing-interrogatives: Do you know That it requires fifty per cent, more w'jeat to buy a stove thau it d; d in '96? That it requires' twenty bus hels more corn to buy a wagon than in ' 36? That it requires one hundred per cent, more corn or wheat to buy a c opper ket tle than in '96? That it requires twice as mu:h corn to purchase a coil of rope as in '95? That it requires forty per rent, more corn to buy a plow than xn '9S? That it requires seventy-five more corn to buy a hoe, a rake, a shovel, a spade or bolt than in '9V That a set of common whee in '96? and now cost $12.50? s cost $7.00 That the price of cultivators IS higher by $3.00 to $4.00? That galvanized barbed wire costs from $4.00 to $5.00 a hundred pounil more than in '96? That you pa forty per cent glass than in '96? more for The Democrat seeks to set up a regular bugaboo of liierh prices and rails out at the very things it demanded 111 96. Hardware of every kind is higher than but this tact will not in vo, righten many people into the demo cratic party. Prices of ev erything are higher. No body but a fool would expect anything else. Full' four million workingmen ire get ting better wages than they did in '96; and, wha : is of more importance to laborers, they are given steady em ployment, and all the idle are wa- la- men wno wisn to wont now employed at better ges. The money which the boring men are now earninsr amounts to hundreds of mil lions more every month than we paid for labor in l96. We could not have better times without better pric es. ue- mand for goods alw creases the ' price. ays in- When ?ho have times are hard men y goods will sell them below cost to get rid of th 2m. The people cannot buy be cause the money is locked up in bank vaults and hidden a way by those who are afraid to lend it. Laboribor men have little work and buy the necessaries' cannot of life. Everything, then, inust be sold cheap. Cheap goods in all lines means low wages and hard times. The Democrat sp eaks of the great advance in the price of copper kettles, which includes of course stills, caps uuu wuiuiB, duu LLiciL means an advance in . the price of Jicker. What a blow! it would be loathe democrati : politi cians if corn licker was to advance. No won ler this calamity howling c rgan of the grasshopper state views with alarm thei advance in tbe price of copper. When the Democ -at sa vs that a coil of rope costs twice as much now as in '96 solutely and everlastingly not so. vve recently purcnaseu several coils of rope, more than enough to hang every calamity howling democratic editor in Kansas and we know something about the cost. There has been an advance, we will admit; but if we had purchased this rope in '96 with corn it would have required 20 bushels more to have paid the bill than would now be required had we paid for it with corn this year. Besides this, it is plain to anybody with sense enough to know when day comes, that when raw material advances in price, as cotton has done, there must be a corresponding ad vance in the price of the fin ished product, It was in '96 that the democrats nearly TTT j 1 . - 1 1 vellimrfor free silver and 10-cent cotton. Now these same fellows are howling j o like a pack of wolves because one of the very things they wanted is about to be rea lized. -? There is a pretty good story told, on which the Democrat and other people would do well to meditate. An old Irishman lately came to this country, once dropped into a corner grocery and inquired the price of potatoes. He was t)ld that the price was seventy-five cents a bushel. 440ch," said Pat, "and sure and I could buy them for a shillin' a bushel in the ould counthry' "Why. didn't you stay there and buy them then?" asked the grocer. "Be jabbers and where would I get the shillin, will vez tell me that, now? said Pat. And the moral is that nothing is cheap when you havn't the money to pay for it. A Grand Showing. It has been a most pros perous year in all lines of business, and the reports that are now being" compiled furnish some very interest ing information. During the twelve months ending with the first dav of this month there have been 1,984 manu facturers who failed, as com pared with 2,475 during the year before.-That would not seem to indicate that republicanism closes up the factories and ruins business. During; the vear there have been 7,400 traders who fail ed,' while last year the num ber was 9,783. The banks have done well, too, and the failures this year have been 1 a. r . ; a : 4-1- oo uul c, corapareu vvitii oo last year. Exclusive of the banks "the ajrerejrate number of failures for the twelve months l is 9,700, and this is the smallest number record ed since 1887. In aggregate amount the failures were $89,292,750, and" that is the lowest it has been since 1881. There is some difference be tween that report and the one which was made in 1896. That year, when the whole nation was in an uproar bor dering on a panic, and the affairs of our country had reached a serious crisis, the aggregate of the failures was $226,096,834. It is a magnificent triumph for the late Mr. Dingley of Maine, the great statesman who was slandered. The New York 44 Wo rid" has always been .one of the most bitter enemies of tbe Dingley Pro tective Tariff, and it is now very gratifying: to the friends of decency that that paper has to eat its crow. After maintaining from the very first day of its passage that the Dingley law would not furnish sufficient revenue lt predicted last July that by the end of 1899 we would have a deficit of $45,000,000. j Instead of that deficit we have millions in surplus, and it is still piling up. It has been a prosperous year, and we shall have many more of them if the republi can party is kept in power. Republicanism stands for: Protection, Progress and Prosperity. Des Moines, la., State Register. THEY SAY THAT Figures wou't lie ; but liar3 may figure. People who make the least noise have generally got the most brain. The dog that irrsfsts orysleeping on the mat may be said to" be dog matic. Talk is cheap but not Billy Bryan's kind; he gets $600. per night per speech. The Isrealite3 made a golden calf because they didn't have gold enough to make a cow. One full dose ofUmocratic rule is enough to last Uncle Sam for a quarter of a century. The pen may be mightier than the sword, but it is not mightier than the new naval guns. The democrats stand on their platforms before they are elected end sit down on them afterward v -. . A southern democratic connt of the ballots would curry Heaven for the use of brimstone. . - Being hugged by a bear is fun compared with passing through an era of democratic prosperity. Some people don't know -nny-thing because they are so far a head of the world that they have to wait for it to catch up. The man who asks the Lord to do what he can do himself is too lazy to catch flies and too. mean to go to Heaven. ! . ,;'r,- The future of democracy grows brighter as it approaches the sul phurioiis auroraborealis of the North side of Hades. The man who asserts that worn- ! an hasn't got as much brains as 1 1 j "WW " n wasnt norn rignt. te is 'one of the accidents if nature on the man's side of the house. A fternifflife drives, on the lux- C7 - ' - . - urient cussions of closed carriage, t are delightfully pleasant; at the particular moment ; hut, ";'oh ! re- i member the fate of tooor llhe , and Madline. West Virginia has a boy who makes a specialty ot cougning up, taks and wire nails, and his par-j ents are besieged by agents of the nail trust who want him to be ABOUT THE YELLOW JACKET. This is the YELLOW JACKET, the only original thing of the kind published on earth. It preaches Republican gospel so straight that every issue brings many old moss-back Democrats to the mourners' bench in a trot. It "gits 'em goin' and cornin" It retails to Democrats, Republicans and Populists at FIFTY CENTS a vear and circulates over all the United States. If you don't like it, you don't have to take it. If you do like it, you are hereby invited to subscribe to-day. We want 10,000 new subscribers to this paper during this presidential campaign, that's what we do. The Yellow Jacket is now over five years old and is getting older every week. There are no life insurance features connected with it. . You merely pay your 50 cents aril take it whether you like it or not. Then you will take it again. You always get what you pay for, then the paper stops. We treat all our subscribers this wav, even the President of i the -United States. Our advice is ; When you see a good thing, push it along. The Yellow- Jacket don't crawl behind a tree to talk. It don't burst its crupper holding back to first see what somebody else is going to say. It has no "ax to grind' Everybody in the United States ought to take the Y. J. All Republicans should take it because it is helping to fight their political battles. Every Democrat should take it to keep track of the rascality and devilment of his party. 1 Every Populist should take it because it points out the only way to his political salvation. And everybody else ought to read it because each issue will be full of Originality, Fun, Sarcasm and Logical. Reasoning. The more Yellow Jackets you help to circulate, the more votes you help to make for the grand old Republican party When you have read this bor, if you love one another, and way and try it. If you can use a few sample copies, drop us a card. The politics of the Yellow Jacket in the future, as in the past, will be Republican. However we belong to no man and shall reserve the right to be as independent as a hog on ice, on all matters that come up for public consideration. We will frequently publish "Letters from the Devil, " as it is always interesting to know what f'Old Nick" thinks about the way things are run on earth. Eli Tucker will continue to be a correspondent. Some of his letters will be worth the price of the paper for a year. Each issue will also contain articles pertaining to the great questions of Protection and Sound Money prepared-by the lead ing journalists and thinkers of the day. If you receive a copy of the Y. J., it is an invitation to sub scribeYou will get more fun and. derive more information for for 50 cents than in any other way you could spend it. Now we want to ask you to send us a 50-cent subscription to this paper. Sena! us a club if you can. We want to also ask you to send along a list of your neigh bors whom you think might subscribe for such a paper as this. That is asking a good deal of you, isn 't it? Well, ask something of us. THE YELLOW JACKET, MORAVIAN FALLS, N. C. Ten for fie crts.t pTngK?!, Crorem, KesraaranN. mP-. Thrjr Uan.h pain, induce slp. a.d prol.c life. One gives relief ! No mxttcr what's the matter. ,e will do you T n san,Jca and one thotmnd tcsti- JnnJla,' . I7.'a!l to iir addre" cn r-reipu.lt.rire, bf Uk Kipan Cbcoiical Co., lopruce St., New Vurk City' copy , pass it along to your neigh- if you don't, make a bluff any- it asserts that which is ab- come a member of the combine.