Commoner Extracts From W. 4 t r-4-4'eW-Ta Tho NalkMt Mmr. The natkm Umj in aorrow and in humiliation in sorrow lecano its chief executive, it official head, is pawning through the valley of th hadow of death in humiliation he caux- the president of onr republic has fallen a victim to the cruel and cow ard ly method employed in monarchies There helplc- and hoiele.H subjects MWrtime nH"t arbitrary piiwrr willi t iolr nee. In niifr! n.l in the contemplation of law all lire are of otial value all are priv!esa but when evcnty-tivc ini.Uont of tople evt one of their numlvr n in rot hint with the au thority which attache, to tl.e presi dency, helveomcs their reprvnt.itive and a blow aimed at h'.ni rvscntett as an attack upon all. IVneatli the partisanship of the inli vidua! lies the patriotism of the citi zen, sometimes dorrr.vit. it is true. but always active in hours of peril or mis fortune. While trie president's life hangs in the balance there are no party lines. The grief of jersonal friends and close political associates may le inoiv pui jnant. but their sympathy is more sincere than that extended by po litical opponents. A! though none but his family and his physicians are ad mitted to his room, all hi- countrymen are at his t-dside in thought and sen timent, and their prayers a.vnil for his recovery. It was characteristic of his thoughtfulness that, even amid the excitement follow ?ng the assault, he cautioned his companions not to exag gerate his condition tohis invalid wife. The latest dispatches give gratifay ing news of his improvement, but there is still deep solicitude lest unfa vorable symptoms may yet appear. And the humiliation! Are our pub lie servants those who ai-e chosen by the people and who exercise for a lim ited time the authority lestowed by the people are these to live in con stant fear of assassination? Is there to be no difference Wtween our consti tutional government and those des (totic governments which rest, not iitMin the consent of the governed, but upon brute force? There is no place for anarchy in the I'nited States: there is no room here for those who commit, counsel, or con done murder, no matter what political excuse may lie urged in its defense. The line letween peaceful agitation and violence is clear and distinct. We have freedom of speech and freedom of the press in this country, and they a . essential to the maintenance of our liberties. If any one desires to criti cise the met li oils of g.. eminent or the conduct of an official he has a perfect right to do so. but his appeal must lie to the intelligence and patriotism of his fellow citizens, not to force. Let no one imagine that he can improve social or political conditions by the shedding of blood. Free governments may be overthrown but they cannot le reformed by those who violate the commandment. '-Thou khalt not kill." Under a government like ours every wrong can .1 remedied by law, and the laws are in the hands of the people themselves. Anarchy can be neither excused .i.r tolerated here. The man who proposes to right a pub lic wrong by taking the life of a hu man being, makes himself an outlaw and cannot consistently appeal to the protection of the government which he repudiates. He invites a return to a state of barbarism in which each one must, at his own risk, defend his own right and avenge his own wrongs. The punishment administered to te wouM-be assassin and to his cocon spirators, if he has any. should lie such as to warn all inclined to anarchy that while this is an asylum for those who love liberty, it is an inhospitable place for those who raise their hands against all forms of government. While the lalorers for the United States Steel corporation are fighting for the privilege of organization, it is announced that the president of that trwfct, wk is said to draw an aaaaat salary of ll.Oiin.OyO, has purchased a trr.ct of ground for a residence, pay ing therefor the sum of StfiO,ooo, and ihat when completed Mr. Schwab's home will have cost in the neighbor ho.nl of S2.noo,000. It would seem that if the revenue from the trust i sufficient to enable one of its officers, who, a few years ago was a poor man. to build a palatial home, that the trust is suffi ciently prosperous to give its working men the privilege of organizing for the pnrpoaeof protecting their bread and but tee. Jackson, in his celebrated message vetoing the extension of the bank char ter, said that the humbler uterabers of society were the victims of injustice whenever the government, by grant ing legislative favors and privileges, made the rich richer and the potent more powerful. If the men who eat their bread in the sweat of the face would act in concert at the polls, a speedy and inexpensive remedy would be found for every evil complained of. Fusion in Nebraska resulted in wrest ing the state from the control of cor rupt republican rings. Fusion prom ises to do the same thing in Pennsyl vania. Good sense and good morals demand that no one condemn a move that result, or promises to result, in good to all the people. Mr. Grosvenor is missing a golden opportunity when he fails to impress upon the farmers that the high price of potatoes is due entirely to the Ding ley law and the good graces of the ad ministration. Can it be that Mr. (iros venor ia growing careless in his old ge? It was noticeable everywhere that those who addressed the people at la bor day meetings pointed out the fact that wrongs could only be remedied at the ballot box. Mayor Reed of Kan tu City stated the case aptly when he toaid the laboring men were not law breakers bat should be law-makers. Ha aloha's Oplaloat of Kufcw. Prince too Hohenlohe Lb credited with having held an opinion of the German Emperor that was none too high, and Is said to have remarked of him: "Ilia greatest fault Is that he thinks there are no limitations to his will.- Comment J. Bryan's Paper. Tit Two should Stand Toaelher. The toilers on the farm and in Die factory have cause to believe that they are Wing cheated out of a part of their earnings. (hie of the things that labor has rea son to fear is the effect of private mo nopoly. The trusts have liocn grow ing rapidly during the last few year? and all wage-earners nre menaced by thetu. Nome have suggested that the employes should join with the employ ers in controlling the industries and then divide the advantages of higher prices. Such a proposition is immoral M well a impolitic. The employe could no more justify aiding the trusts to extort from the consumers, even if they could share in the results, than an honest citieu could justify giving aid to a highwayman on promise of part of the plunder. lilt t such an agreement would Ik as nnw ise as wrong. If trnst made arti cles are sold at high prices, compared with other products, the demand will be reduced and lalnr thrown out of employment. In a test of endurance the farmer can stand it longer than the man in the factory, but why should the lalonng man in the city array himself against his lest friend the farmer? The trust hurts the consumer first, and then the producer of the raw ma terial, and last and possibly most the laborer. All three should combine to destroy the private monopolies now in existence and to prevent the creation of any new monopolies. Next to the trust in its evil effect upon lalor is wnai is Known as govern ment by injunction. According to our theory of government, the executive, legislative and judicial branches should lie kept separate and distinct, but it is coming to le the custom for the judge to issue an order declaring an act to be unlawful and then assume the pre rogatives of the executive and enforce the law. while as judge he sits without jury to condemn the person whom he is prosecuting. The main purpose of this judicial process is to deprive the accused of trial by jury, and while every citizen should resist this attack on the jury system the employes of great corporations are just now its special victim. The wage-earners as a part, and as an important part. too. of society, are nterested in all questions which effect our civilization, but they areat present experiencing the necessity of reform along the lines alove suggested. m Will They Reniemner? Mr. Davis, vice-president of the amalgamated association, in a recent speech, charged J. Pierpont Morgan with a fixed determination to destroy all labor organizations. He said: The steel men are picked as the first organization to be wiped ou'.. That is why the opposition to us is so bitter, so uncompromising, so regard- ess of the possibility or arbitration. Next will come the poor old miners, if we axe beaten. Then the carpenters and machinists, anil after them one rade after another. If we are defeat ed we wil! all become slaves, and life will no longer be worth living. That the trusts, if permitted to ex- st. will ultimately destroy the labor unions, is too plain a proposition to admit of dispute, but will the lalioring men remember at the polls the lesson they are learning at the door of the factory? The wage-earners have it in their power to destroy every trust and. by so doing, to restore the era of indus- rial independence, but will they exert that power on election day? No one who understands history or human nature can doubt that private monopolies are a menace to employes, as well as to producers of raw material and to con sumers. The time w ill come when the evils of the trust system w ill lie recog nized " by all. but in the meantime many bitter lessons are lieing learned. 'Kxperience is a dear teacher,"' but apparently the only one whose instruc tion is heeded. The republican party is determined to retire greenbacks and substitute bank notes, to be issued by the banks for their own profit and controlled by them for their own advantage. . W must resist this effort or place the democratic party in a position entirely antagonistic to the position of Jeffer son, Jackson and all the democratic leaders down to the time when Cleve land betrayed the party into the hands of the Philistines of finance. The pa per money issue is entirely separate and distinct from the silver question, and jet it lis a significant fact that those who declare the silver question dead have nothing to say about the ir reconcilable conflict tietween govern ment paper money and national bank notes. The increased supply of gold does not affect, one way or the other, the question of paper money, but the influence of the money power is such that whenever it can bribe or terrify a man into the support of the gold standard it can silence his opposition to banks of issue. Dodging tBe Trust Qaestlon. The St. Louis Ololie-Democrat says that Vice President Roosevelt's Minne sota address was the ''most interesting address which labor day called out anywhere in the country." Then the Globe-Democrat pointed out certain features of that address and omits to touch upon the most important part that wherein the Vice President frank ly admitted that it is ''more and more evident that the trust problem must be grappled with by the federal govern ment." It is true the address was a most in teresting one. Perhaps because of Mr. Roosevelt's conspicuous position in the republican party it would be fair to call it the most interesting address of any delivered on labor day. But why is it that republican organs hesitate to touch upon the all-important feature of Mr. Roosevelt's Minnesota speech? rertaMo Mouse. Portable bouses are made in Con necticut for shipment to Venecuela. Four handy men can in three hours erect one of the domiciles. rHE ROBBER TARIFF N NO WAY PROTECTS AMERICAN LABOR. itlll a Mendacious Representative of the Party of Trust and Combines Keeks to Holster l'p Its Alleged Benefits to Oar Working Men. It Is not very satisfactory to quote that mendacious representative of tv president. Gen. C. II. Grosvenor. for he has u babit or crawling out of any tight place he gets Into by denying the Interview, but as the one about to be quoted sounds grosvenoresque and Is being quoted by the trust organs who take Grosvenor seriously. It may he well to expose its absurdity. Speaking of the Increased number of American products he found for sale in Kngland. he said: "1 understand that Mr, Rab- vWk would take the duty from all these articles. W hile that misht not fatal to our prosperity, it woul l cer tainly cripple our .strength. The tariff insists in developing our fore's i trad. If this tariff is removed the goods Of foreign mills will be rushed ill on us. weakening our m:inuiarturng strength. I find we are soiling barley ?n Kngland. If the tariff was off. Can adian barley would kiil cur barley production. The same arguments are as good now as when the McKinley bill was passed. "I find in this increased transporta tion for foreign markets an additional incentive for the building up of our merchant marine. We should not hesitate to take prompt measures to bring this profitable carrying trade nn- i der American control. Mr. Habcock's , proposition is practically one for free trade." In the first place. Grosvenor knows very well that the Babcock amendment to the tariff bill only proposed to place th iron and steel products of the trust on the fre? list and especially provided that articles manufactured from them, such as cutlery .should still be protected. Grosvenor calls that free trade, which will arouse the ire of Babcock. who lately declared he is still an ardent protectionist. This dis agreement of these Republican breth icn can be viewed with equanimity by those who wish to see real tariff re form. Grosvenor. like all the trust repre sentatives, knows that the weak spot in the tariff policy is that the farmers of the country get no protection while they have to pay the tax that the trusts add to nearly everything they use. This i why he cites the tariff on barley and says he found we are sell ing barley in England, and that 'if the tariff was off, Canadian barley would kill our barley production." He might have added that he found our wheat and flour there also and that the same result might follow if there was no tariff on these articles, but that would have leen too barefaced even for this trust advocate to argue. The tariff on barley Is thirty cents a bushel and we are evidently growing more barley than we can consume or we would not be exporting it; the sur plus, like our surplus of wheat and corn, has to seek the best foreign mar ket it can find. The surplus of the bar ley crop of Canada has to find the came market. The price is fixed by the English buyers and the price of barley in this country is fixed by the price of the surplus sold abroad. Would Canadian barley, even if the tariff was removed, be sold here for less than it will bring in England? It would surely seek the highest market. The Year Book of the Department of Agriculture on page 781 reports that the exports of barley in 1900 reached 23.661,602 bushels and that the export price fell from 60.7 cents a bushel to 47.4 cents. This official information is rather unfortunate for Grosvenor as with this large surplus to sell and the conse quent low price, the Canadians or any other foreign growers would certainly not look to this country for a market. It is also an equally unfortunate argu ment for protection that the price of tarley is almost the lowest on record with the highest tariff. This Is the wonderful protection that the farmers are getting under the Republican tariff, showing that protection to any farm product is Impossible as long as there is a surplus of that product that must be sold abroad. CONTKOI. BV TAXATION. It is well to remember when legisla tion to control the trusts Is being pre pared that the most potent power that can be used against them Is taxation, this n be applied by the state3 them selves. Not oy any unfair mode but by making them pay equally in pro portion to what other people pay ac cording to the amount of their prop erty. At present the monopolies do not pay but a small part of what they should. The steel trust owns or con trols 80 per cent of all the Iron mines in the northwest which in a great measuse enables them to be the gigan tic monopoly they are, on this they do not pay one-tenth of the taxes that they rightfully should.. Mr. Schwab testified before the Industrial Com mission that these iron mines were extremely valuable for the reason that they contain only a limited supply of ore, a supply which cannot "last very long, perhaps 60 years." He continued: "We own something like 60,000 acres of Connellsvllle coal. You could not buy it for $60,000 an acre for there is no more Connellsville coal." I believe that Connellsvllle coal will be ex hausted in 30 years." The Columbus Press Post In commenting - on this said: "That monopoly control of the raw materials, without, which there can be no industry, furnishes the trust an impregnable fortress against which the hosts of labor cannot hope to pre vail with their present methods of warfare. "It is contrary to public policy to permit such a gigantic monopoly of raw material provided by nature. "To prevent such a monopoly there are bat two courses open. One is so cialism. If we were to try; to cure the evil of private monopoly by tak ing the remedy offered by socialism we should probably be like the Irish man who said that, on account of the awful medicine prescribed for him, he was sick a long time after he goi well. "The other course is that suggested by the platform of the Ohio Demo crats, the most radical anti-plutocratic platform ever adopted by the Democratic party. Mr. Schwab says that the Connellsvllle coal is worth 160.000 an acre and declares that the ore field of the northwest are of almost inestimable value. "The employe of the trust, if he says enough to own a house, will pay taxes on 60 per cent of the full value ot that house. Would it not lie interesting to know how much taxes the trust pays on Its 60.000 acres of coal fields? "President Schwab says the value of the great ore fields of the northwest Is more than equal to the entire cap italization of the I'nited States Steel Corporation. "Why dots the triu-t acquire prop erty in all these fields? "Certainly not because it has any present use for them, but because It wants the legal power to keep others from usiiiR them so that It may com mand a monopoly price for this raw material. "Thf way to destroy that monopoly power li to tax it to death. Let the trust pay taxe.- on the true valuation of its property and it would not find it si profitable to hold idle the raw materials without which competition is impossible. "The power to tax Is the power to drFtroy. Willi that powor intelligent ly used, the people could eliminate the element of mouupoly from industry, increase the security of all legtimate forms of property and increase the op portunities for remunerative employ ment for both labor and capital. But no one is going to drive them to free dom. Until they gain wisdom we must expect their blind protests to end in failure." Willi 11 Ml U.I. IT HK? That disinterested capitalist, Carnegie, made millions out of Mr. steel and has for the past e;ir been trying to appease his conscience by building libraries. But the Homestead horror is a. spectre that will not down and his vast fortune that was wrung from the exhausting -labor of thousands is but of little use to him. The trut has taken his place and it too wants its pound of Hesb and being a corpora tion it will never make restitution like Carnegie. In commenting on these ex traordinary matters the New York Journal says: "Is it better for the United States that the steel industry with all the minor industries depend ent on It. should support in comfort a million human beings, the steel work ers, their wives and children, or that It should make a dozen human beings enormously rich -so that they don't know what to do with their money, or in fact, how to give it away? "Is it better for the United States to have a quarter of a million fteel work ers wtll paid, educating their chil dren, feeding their families properly? Or is it better to have Mr. Carnegie scattering millions, Mr. Morgan buy ing fine pictures and yachts and brie a-brac, and Mr. Schwab drawing $1,- 000.000 a year? "For our part we are bound to say that we think a great national indus try should be made to support incom fort and in plenty a great section of the American people, that it should munificiently reward organized genius but that It should not be distorted into an instrument for manufacturing a few multimillionaires regardless of those who actually work. "If the founde.s of this ration could return, which would please them more "To see a miliio'n homes made happy by a great American industry? "Or to see a few individuals rendered cynical, intolerant and over-bearing by vast, useless wealth?" The Manila New American of July 12th publishes a full account cf a new outbreak ot the Filipinos against the friars. The New American calls it a peaceful protest. though in some places stones, tomatoes and rotten eggs were burled at them and the police nor the soldiers did not inter fere to protect them. This is rather a ticklish business for the administra tion to handle, not only regarding the peace of the Philippines, but from it effects on the voters in this country Absolute fairness to both parties and no connection between church and state is. the only solution of the trouble. The land question involved is. however, a much more troublesom question. When Lord Pauncefote returns tc Washington he will bring with hlro a new treaty that the "Birmingham Post" hears from a most reliable source will be satisfactory to both na tions. The Post also says an "im portant announcement" will be mad soon. The people of the United Statet will be quite anxious to hear this "an nouncement" and know how much oi our Alaskan coast and territorj is tc go with the deal. It is said that Pres ident McKinley . has smoothed out some of the1 rough places in the Unltec States senate for the new treaty. That is a strange tale that comet from Tampa, Fla., and monstrous l: true, that a committee of citizens or ganized by the cigar trust, kidnapper the labor leaders who were heading s strike of the cigar workers and trans ported them by sea to some unknowi place. One of the kidnapped is sale to have escaped from the vessel. How would it do for Morgan to kidnap tht leaders of ' the steel ' strike ' and trans port them beyond seas? These bt strange times, my masters. From the grove at Canton thert come no word about the naval scan dal, but there is a strong indication that the "man of destiny" intends t dump his secretary of the navy along side of Alger for making a mess of th attempt to down Admiral Schley. Wil liam of Canton is not going to shoul der any of the blame If there Is any one else to put It on. The Monroe doctrine need not wort? any of the European nations, if the) do not visit America on any lan stealing expedition. SLATES UNDER FLAG. THOUSANDS OF BONDSMEN IN THE PHILIPPINES. ftdlrlat Report to the National tiovmen meat Cites I-'act and Figures A fn ktat Hour re of Trouble to American Kulera Im Far Fast. Not long ago the Manila government sent us tht news that one of the dattes jf the Sultan of Sulu had abolished slavery. This was an evident effort of the censor to lead us to believe the whole institution as it exists in our new possessions was being extinguish ed. The official report of Col. Pet tit and Major O. P. Sweet, who are the commanders of the United States troops in the islands where slavery and polygamy exist, tell a different tale. The first named officer says: Under our orders I believe all Fili pino slaves and captives have been turned over to us, and fur.'her slavery, either by conquest or traffic letween islands, has been prohibited. Th? tholitdinient of slavery can be at tempted in one of two ways by war or by purchase. The latter would be futile. I cannot Imagine a more deso late people than the More slaves would be if set free. Their freedom would be of short duration. War could be had for the asking. K Is 'for the United States government to decide If it wants it. The Mores have plenty of arms and ammunition and a coun try passable only by its waterways." Major Sweet says: "The question of Slavery, although uot recognized by the United States. I still a fact, and Is a constant source of trouble on ac- ."unt of slaves escaping from one mas ter to another, or their being stolen. Whenever a question of relating to slavery conie3 before me, I simply make the owners prove they are slaves beyond doubt, in which case I have nothing to do with them, but in case I can pick a flaw in their title, I give the alleged slaves freedom papers. Thousands of Mores are held as slaves who are by right free people." Thousands of free men slaves under the stars and stripes and the Taft commission and the home government doing nothing to free them. "If they are slaves without doubt, I have noth ing to do with them." says this officer. Sixty thousand troops hunting down Filipinos and not a man or gun used to even attempt to suppress this trade in these unfortunate and miserable people. Congress has given President Mc Kinley full power in the Philippines, increased the regular army to 100,000 men, appropriated all the money asked for and yet he has made no move to suppress this blot on our civilization. In his tour through the South and West his every hour theme was full of rapture and exultation that the flag waved over freedom and prosperity. How free and prosperous are these slaves? But they can dally gaze upon the flag. The Republican party has made President McKinley as great an autocrat in the Philippines as the Czar of Russia is In his dominions, and Russia with all her barbarous customs has none of this. Yet the American. people with their eyes open but blinded by partisanship or the pelf promised and distributed by the Republican machine, voted for Imperialism, of which this slavery in the Philippines is one of the attributes. MVST1RIOISLV DIRA Pl'KARKK. The politicians who are running the Republican party are having piled up against them a good deal of evidence that they are not only the greatest treasury looters that the United States has ever been cursed with, but they are also guilty of pillaging the gov ernment archives to accomplish their ends. Evidence of this was lately pub lished and the Washington Times says: "It was developed yesterday that all of the secret correspondence of the Signal Corps of the army relating to the Spanish war has mysteriously disappeared from the flies of the war department. Among the missing docu ments is a dispatch from Colonel Allen to General Greely, announcing the presence of the Spanish fleet in Santi ago harbor. This message, it is said, was immediately communicated to Sampson, who allowed eleven days to elapse before taking any steps to meet the situation. As the original of this communication and the official en dorsements which may have b?en made upon It are very necessary for Ad miral Schley's counsel to see. perhaps the public need not be surprised to know that it ba3 been put out of the way. The excuse is offered at the depart ment that possibly General Greely, ;hief of the signal corps, deliberately may have destroyed the records, with a view of concealing the names of per sons used in the secret service of the United States. But nobody will bo ieluded by any such subterfuge. If General Greely had done a thing of that kind it would be a matter of pub lic record and his reasons and author ity for the act would be spread upon the flies of the department. He is onveniently in the Philippines; and will not return until November 1, so there are several weeks during which he onus may be laid upon his shoul ders problematically. All the same, the American people will conclude that the signal service records have been stolen for a purpose, as many public records have been stolen or falsified for var ious, but always infamous, purposes during the past few years. , "One would think that the Samp son scandal had become too hot . for even the administration to bear, and that It would do something In the line of an attempt to convince the coun try that it Is no longer an active party to the conspiracy against the victor of Santiago. It would better make the effort before it Is too late; because every daynow adds to the proof that a plot has been hatching ever since August, 1898, to rob Admiral Schley of his laurels and transfer them to Samp Kn, the man of the Mantanzas mule. AN ADMIRABLE PLATFORM. The Democrats of Cambria county. Pennsylvania, adopted at the late convention a most admirable platform K-hlch shows that the fiscal policy of Tom Johnson, the mayor of Cleveland, is spreading beyond the confines of his own state and is worthy of more extended adoption. The most impor tant declarations are: "The Democratic party stands for equality of rights and demands equality of opportunities. It is opposed to the granting of special privileges to individuals or corpora tions. It. therefore, condemns the pro tective tariff and demands that taxa tion shall be for public revenue only. It condemns the trusts as a monstrous outgrowth of privilege and It propones to destroy the triieta by th simple de vice of withdrawing from them the benefit of the laws under which they have established and are maintaining monopolies. All goods controlled by trusts should he plated upon the free list; and every legislative advantage now conferred upon aggregation of capital should be. recovered by the peo ple. Taxation hhould fall, not iipox Industry nor upon thrift, but upon spe cial advantages; and it should ap portioned in accordance with the ijonntH conferred iiy tin govern ment. The denio atlc pai ty, therefore, condemn.-! th? existing Kern and prii ll (- In Iviiimy Ivitniu iiri'b r whl b the gruti t)iin'-fi of t-ik.ii;oii f&U.i upon the labor nod Ind'iMfry of tb people MI toKr.V7.i- monopoly pra'tlfally eapex. Corporal mo nopoly J M'ftlHl'llOHn'" f;ivof-d a! the expeime of the fanner, lb m" Uutit. the riixriiifu'-tiir'-r and the di(nii Th latter t out i IbuliM pr opoi t 'ofiti : hurulif-.l or perhap a tfi'Ufd t!fix as much to the -ot ft th wntinitut as the railtvay and otlor prUllegei ' i terests and they receive Infinitely s- in return, i n principle or oj lion In taxation shoiiM omnia ud t;- wlcest recognition " " Mill' SI IS I III HI 11.. A conference J noon to be held by j t.'j valley fro-n N'-w Mexl'o, who con the Republican leaders to arrange for ! tra't to thin -u at ho rnucb per acre, the Jamblng through the next Con- j ' tti the vicinity of Rocky Ford, gress of the $1&0.000.00 fch'p-Kubxtfy j Kh-re the land has b--n cultivated ex steal. The Pennsylvania r& II road's. tx-nnlvejy, Jt j pv-.mh!e under only fair team of experienced lobbyist U r-- j iou 'Monx Ui ralfe twenty tons of lied on to make Its pathway it'.-mnt . -...f tJ, tJ? are, while thrifty and In and profitable to those member of o'ltrlou farmers grow from twenty Congress who are open to thU kind of; ,t xj thirty ton to the acre, and in argument and the Administration will : yn, jrU.i.Vca as high as thirty-five aid the atrocity with all the influence tons it can bring to bear. The chairman of the Republican national committee, Mark Hanna, is the engineer in charge and will put forth all his power to pass the steal and our good kind and generous President will sign the bill and see that his good friends of the steamship combine get the swag regu larly. They put up a good stiff sum for the campaign fund last fall when Hanna needed the money and of course common gratitude would -com pel this promised favor in return. These people who voted for Presi dent McKinley cannot grumble if th steal goes through for it was well known and indeed proclaimed by those who are interested that it would pass early In the coming Congress and that President McKinley had promised to recommend its passage and he carried out his part in good faith in bis mes sage to Congress just after the elec tion. Doubtless a large number of Repub ltcans voted for President McKinley with their eyes shut to this and othe raids on the treasury; quite satisfied because he was labeled Republican and they voted for Congressmen who also are pledged to support it on the same broad basis Democrats can point with pride that those who have been elected by their votes are solidly opposed to this class of legislation and If a black sheep ap peals when the flock is counted, he will be marked for slaughter at the first opportunity, for it will be known that he has been bought and branded bv the Hanna herders. w nen some poor devil of a moon shiner with no political pull is caught by the government he is put through the courts and imprisoned without loss of time. If a bogus silver dollar or bank bill is passed,' the secret service is everlastingly after the forger. There teem.s to be great tenderness In bringing the larger thieves, like Neely and Rathboae, who are accused of looting the Cuban postal department, to justice. In the New lork customs department peculations have been going on for a long time and the treasury department had full informa tion to that effect but has not dared to even arrest the thieves because of their high political standing. It would hurt "the party" you know. The Rev. Father John Boyle is quot ed as accounting for the decay of Ire land by the fact of absentee landlord ism. But is it absenteeism or land lordLsm that is at the bottom of Ire land's decadence? If all the absentee landlords were to come back from I-on- don and Paris and Rome and take up their residence on the Irish soil from which they draw their rents, would it be easier for the Irish people to live? Wouldn't their rents be Just as high? Wouldn't their rents indeed be higher? What difference does it make to the Astor tenants in New York 'or to the Scully tenants in Illinois and Kansas where Astor or Lord Scully, lives. The report that the keg combine of the army and navy departments, head ed by Corbin and Crownlnshleld. are to represent this country at the coro nation of King Edward, is not extra ordinary in view of the other antics of these favorite ridden departments. Congress should stop this nonsense, anyway, we are represented enough row with an ambassador and attaches both military and navy and sons of some father to whom Hanna Is under some obligations for a good stiff con tribution to the Republican campaign fund. What farce this Neely business Is. there Is no intention to convict him, the Administration dare not do it. be cause as Rathbone said. If he suffered there would be others that would suf fer too, implying that some persona much higher In authority were impli cated. The government has been mak ing pretense of obtaining evidence la the case in this country, but nearly all those who were asked to testify or to go to Cuba as w '.messes refused to do so. Of course they did. KAILR0AD NEWS. MR. SEAQRAVES LOCATES 200 FAM ILIES IN COLORADO. Cobb froaa Northern Fa rope to Rale Mugiar Meets. Mr. C. I Seagraves. passenger agent of the Santa Fe, J as returned from the sugar beet district of Colorado, and completed arrangements to locate two hundred families from northern Europe, the first fifty families to lo cate near Holly, about October 20. M Seagraves said: "The leader of the colony Is an ex pert agriculturist, and has visited and carefully Investigated all sections of the United States, and pronounced i-e Arkansas valley the most promising of any section visited, on account of tho 'iprb climate, rich soil and the most perfect irrigation system In the world, backed by a reservoir supply with suf ficient water to irrigate all the lands for two years without a drop of rain, thus Injuring the farmers against fail ure of rrnim. After the first movement the balance will follow as fast a hfim-H ran be provid'-d for them." Mr, H'aKrave advlB'-s that the farm er Id the vall-y are very prosperous. kini an that h.-rtion will be densely pf,pi!af-d jrfjd brought up to a hig'n Mari'5.irl of cultivation, if - ill in flvo or it yntn "m tf: k best and tt''l ,T,iif' st ttait'.'... in the ft ' f .' W r a v-ry profitable f '' i ' In th thln- ; ninjc e' KS'-h lajita aoout two i wk. Tt.'.t tt ir, howfver. Is be- i Ing overcome 7 labor brought into "The price cf beets Is determined ac cording to their sugar content, the av erage being about J3 psr ton. The cost of growing beers, including all labor, peed, as wpII as harvesting the crop in the fall is about $25 per acre, leav ing the farmer $75 or more profit aa aire for his beet crop. "The Arkansas valley of Colorado Is considered the ideal sugar beet coun try as they grow more tons to the acre and contain a larger percentage of sugar than beets grown anywhere in the world. The Rocky Ford fac tory is now rearranging some of it machinery, the beets being so ricu they will not submit to the usual methods employed at the other fac tories. "Cantaloupes are also a very profit able crop, and many growers estimato they will pay $100 an acre net. I saw two and one-half acres near Rocky Ford that yielded the grower one thousand dollars. This was on rented land of which the owner received one third of the crop. This may be rather an exceptional case, but it proves what intensive farming will do. "Alfalfa, as well as small grains, do well and are profitable crops to grow. Vegetables of all kinds, poultry and dairy products command good prices, and a ready market in Denver, Colo rado Springs, Pueblo and the mining camps. "Lands in the vicinity of Rocky Ford, before the erection of the sugar factory, that sold for thirty-five, fortj and fifty dollars an acre, are worth today from one hundred and fifty to two hundred and fifty dollars an acre. The question is what is land worth that will net over and above all ex penses from seventy-five to one hun dred and twenty-five dollars an acre? "Lands In the Holly district and the very choicest in the valley and under a most perfect system of irrigation. with a never failing supply of water, a perpetual water , right going with the land fa selling at thirty-five dollars per acre, with ten per cent down and the balance in seven years at six per cent. The company will also build houses." barns, etc., on which they require fif ty per cent down and the balance la seven years at six per cent. "The Dunkards and Menaonltes are now colonizing large- tracts of lands. while other settlers are pouring Into the valley from all over the country. the valley from all over the country. Topeka State Journal. Sept. 2, 1901. Where Eaton Cam From. Dr. Edward Dwight Eaton, the new president of Beloit college, is by pro fession a Congregationalist minister and was formerly the pastor of the Newton, Iowa, Congregational church. Brooklyn, N. T., Sept. 18. The Garfield Tea Co., manufacturers of tiarSeld Tea, Garfield Headache Powders, Garfield-Tea Syrup. Garfield Relief Planters. Garfield Digestive Tablets and Garfield Lotion, are now occupying the large and elegant office buildingand laboratory recently erected by tbem. For many year the Garfield Rem edies have been growing in popularity and their success is well decterved. Money invested in knowledge pays the best Interest. WISCONSIN FARM LANDS. ' The best of farm lands can be ob tained now in Marinette County. Wis consin, on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway at a low price and oa very favorable terms. Wisconsin la noted for its fine crops, excellent markets and healthful climate. Why rent a farm when you can buy one much cheaper than you can rent and in a few years it will ' be . your own property. For ;- particulars address F. A. Miller. General Passenger Agent. Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail way, Chicago. Good eaa to Jala. A recent addition to good Influences is the "Don't Kick Club." ef Buffalo, that already contains some 7,000 listed members. Its fundamental principle is: Better say nothing than speak III of your fellow men." To Moraaoalse the Or la at. Three Mormon missionaries have started for Japan to spread their re ligion, and from this beginning Mor monism wil! soon probably find itt way into China, the Philippines and t!a other lands of tie Orient.