MAJRCH 8, 1894 THE ALLIANCE -INDEPENDENT. Mr i OCR NATIONAL PLATFORM. The People's Party Platform Adopted at Omaha July 4.1892. Assembled upon the 116'h anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the People's part j of America, in their first national convention, invoking upon their action the blessings of Almighty 3od, puts forth in the name and on be half of the people of this country the following preamble acd declaration of principles: PREAMBLE. The conditions which surround us best justify our co-operation. We meet in the midst of s nation brought to the verge of moral, political and material rnln. Corruption dominates the ballot box, the legislatures, the congress, and touches even the ermine of the bench. The people are demoralized; most of the states have been compelled to iso late the voters at the polling places to pre ventuniversal intimidation or bri bery. The newspapers are largely sub sidized or muzzled, public opinion silenced; business prostrated; our homes covered with mortgages; labor impover ished and the land concentrating in the hands of capitalists. The urban work men are denied the right of organiza tion for self protection; imported pau perized labor beats down their wages, a hireling standing army, unrecognized by our laws, is established to shoot them down; and they are rapidly de generating into European conditions. The fruits of the toll of millions are hoMlv stolen to build up colossal for tunes for a few, unprecedented in the hostory of mankind; and the possessors .of these, in turn, despise the republic and endanger liberty. From the same prolific womb of governmental injustice we breed the two great classes tramps and millionaires. The national power to create money Is appropriated to en rich bondholders. A vast public debt, payable in legal tender currency, has been funded into gold-bearing bonds, thereby adding millions to the burdens of the people. Silver, which has been accepted as coin since the dawn of history has been demonetized to add to the purchasing power of gold by decreasLg the value of all forms of property as well as hu man labor, and the supply of currency is purposely abridged to fatten usurers, bankrupt enterprise and enslave Indus 'tries. A vast conspiracy against man kind has been organized on two conti nents and it is rapidly taking possession of the world. If not met and over thrown at once, it forebodes terrible eoclal convulsions, the destruction of civilization or the establishment of an absolute despotism. We have witnessed for more than quarter of a century the struggles of the two great political parties lor power and plunder, while griev ous wrongs have been inflicted upon a suffering people. We charge that the controlling influences dominat ing both theee parties have permitted the existing dreadful conditions to de velop, without 6eriouj efforts to prevent or restrain them. Neither do they now promise us any substantial reform. They have agreed together to ignore, in the coming campaign, every issue but one. They propose to drown the outcries of a pluudered people with the uproar of a sham battle over the tariff, o that capitalists, corporations, nation al banks, rings, trusts, watered stock, the demonetization of sliver and the -oppressions of the usurers may all be lost sight of. They propo-e to sacrifice our homes, lives and children on the j altar of mammon; to destroy the multi tude In order to secure corruption funds from the millionaires. Assembled en the anniversary of the birthday of the nation and filled with the spirit of the grand generation which established our independence, we seek to restore the government of the republic to the hands of "the plain people," with whom it originated. o We assert our purposes to be identical with the purposes of the national con stitution: 'To form a more periect union, establish Justice, insure dorres tic tranquility, provide for tbo common defence, promote the general welfare, and sejuro tho blessing of liberty to ourselves and our posterity." We il. oUro that this republic can only endure a a free government while built upon the love of the whole people for each other and for the nation; that It cannot be pinned togett. by bayonets; that the civil war U ove and that every aion and rebutment which grew out ot It must die with it, and that we mutt b in fact m we are la name, the united brotherhood of free OH'tl. Our country fled tUelf confronted by condition fur which there U no prvce dentin toe hlury of the world; our aeoa! agricultural pruetloa amount to billion of dollar la va'ue, which must within a tvn week or wont! 1 etehc ii fir blllioMol dollars of cow module cvutuiud la Iftelr produetlo; the tiUUtf run very supply U wholly lftl4iat la ftlt this (; the rwU am Utile ptUw;, tie formation eoub'ate at rUg and the tm Ht-rUfcmvttif h nluct g !.. We !Je pui tha, If give !'r, we Ut lUr t ooirt tfce evil by Ue end rvatoashle ttgl tt' le vdaioe with the Wit 4 eur ileWufM We kIWve that the power et geral-U eUtr weeds, el the pt,le-hHl4 be e)iaded ( U t l tie puelal service) at rapidly and as far as the good sense of an intelligent people and the teachings of ex perience shall justify, to the end that oppression, injus tice and poverty eha'l tventually cease in the land. While our sj mpathie as a party of reform are nrturally upon the aide of every proposition which will tend to make men intelligent, virtuous and temperate, we neve' tbeW regard these questions, important it they are, as secondary rr.-t issues now pressing for 6o.u ion. and upon which not only our individual prosperity, but the very exisei.ee of free Institutions depend: and we ask all men to first help us to determine whether we are to have a republic to administer, before we differ as to the conditions upon which it is to be administered. Believ ing that the forces of reform this day organized will never cease to move forward until every wrong is remedied, and equal rights and equal privileges securely established for all men and women of the country, therefore: WE DECLARE First That the union of the labor forces of; the United States, this day consummated, shall be permanent and perpetual." May its spiritenter into all hearts for the salvation of the republic and the uplifting of mankind. Second Wealth belongs to him who creates it, and every dollar taken from industry without an equivalent is rob bery. "If any will not work, neither shall he eat." The interests of rural and civic labor are the same; their ene mies identical. Third We believe that the time has come when the railroad corporations will either own the people or the people mus own the railroads, and should the government enter upon the work of owning and managing any or all rail roads, we should favor an amendment NATEBY SAFEGUARD 3835 (11986), BAY; FOALED 1889; BRED BY WILLTAM BRETHERTOM, ElBton, Preston, Lancashire, Enrlaud. Owned by Leeds Importing Co, Adrian, Minn., and Included in their great closlng-out sale of fine ho. sea March 28th and 29th, 189-1. Notice their "ad" on 6th ptge. to tbe constitution by which all persons engaged in the government service shall be placed under a civil service regulation of the most rigid character; so as to prevent the Increase of the power of the national administration by the use of such additional governueut employees. PLATFORM. We demand a national currency, safe, sound and flexible, Issued by the gene ral government only, a full legal tender for all debts, publlo and private, and that without the use of bunking corporations; that a just, equit able and tfllclent m of distribution d'u oi't to the H.o.l, i i Ux not to ex eoed two per cent, per annum, to bo provided, aiseti r: li In tbe eubtrcaiiury plan ol the Farmcre' Alliance, or ionic bettor system; alto by pay men's In dis charge of its obligations for public Im provements. We demand the freo and unlimited coinage of stiver add gold at the preM-nt legal rath of l to 1. We demand that tht amount of circa lathjf medium b pd Ij lncrtrd t not k's than 1-0 r eaplta. We demand a Krluc4 Income tax. We evllove that the money of the country should be kept a mut a as p alb! la the head of the jopU, a4 hace we demand that all stale and salkat reveeut ehil Ixi UutlUd ta the aeooMtty etpvam tt the gura iaat, ecoaoiuloally and htaU) at BtlitWWirvd. We .Umand thai fmm MUtaf Wake be'ab:Uh4 b Ut graMtal, for the te dvp Vtef the earalagi tit the (.le, an 1 le facilitate ii'ttMr, TriahrUlita btUi aaa tit et heage and a pahiid awwneHy, the fo erttmeat hmi and iae tk railroads la the lawrvat wf the pwole The e)rak aad teUfheae, like U preWKtMi ayiVsa betsg eiity for transmission of news, should be owned and operated by the government in the interest cf the people. The land, including all the natural resources of wealth, is the heritage of all the people, and should not be mono polize d for speculative purposes, and alien ownership ef land should be pro hibited. All lands now held by rail roads and other corporations in excels of their actual need', and all lands now owned by aliens, should be reclaimed by the government and held for actual settlers only. A Plea for Radical!-in. Editor AliiANca-IsDEPENDENT. Wa there ever a time in the history of the world when those in control were more aggretshely radical in shaping events to their selfish purposes than at the present time? Think of Cleveland disobeying the silver purchase law, the Geary Law and the proposed illegal issue of bonds! Think of the courts deciding that the Knights of Luor have no standing in court and cannot enjoin anyone, not even to prevent disobedience to law! Then think of the courts at the de mand of a corporation reducing the wagsof the Knights and enjoining them to prevent a strike, thus prevent ing them from having any voice as to the amount of wages they are to re oelve! Think of the courts enjoining the Master Workman of tbe Knights to prevent him from going among the members of his order to talk his princi ples! From these expressions of corporation radicalism on. the pa; t of tho courts and executive it would seem the great common people have no rights the cor pora' ions are b uind to respect. Corporations rule the world. They keep In position Klcgs, Queens and Emperors. They set up presidents and obtain majorities in all law making bodies. They are aggressively radical in extending and maintaining their chartered privileges. All laws for their benefit and pros perity are rigidly enforcd; laws for their control remain a dead letter. The great majority deny the right of tho corp 'ration to fence the whole world, enjoy all its blessings and en slave all its poplatlon. Thoro are very few who aggressively and rallcUly pit against tbe corporations, thu natura', Inailicnable rights of the whole people. la this country thoso opposing corpo ration cruf ', cuuning aud rule aro In tho I'opUiUt parly, aud with them are mtny cocHrvatlves. With the exprosted and implied do Ipo t"f the corporations to cruh with law or without law all opposition to their schemes of self-aggrandizement, bow any one hoae-Uy oppt'ilng th-m raa be a conservative Ua iuytry to u. To oppone corp ration radicals with consrvatUio would end ta ejcl slav ery for the poor walc kneed oonsorva tivw. CouM the radicals who orund the Ufpu j.Uao arfy Le U"ii krpl In the Ua4 we would eot toUy m d anuther parly. If tbe pMty had Miowvd the lead tif Thadsooa Cloven the f rora hek would R have biea cringed by the saceptiwa ttaee and oo third tbe eipJOHssuf the tte war would have We avd. If Macula ha I orvd tul hit stvoiid U'rra the itro Im el the earrttef tklAud the peMo of 113 would tut have liv (1ik. Could the uld radWal, Horace (irveley, have ea aomlatWd by hU party i i i ijr rvacy Wad wwu!4 l-vvap lave Ua fkaed ta ed hmi, with kU vvke wnnld have 4fo4 theea tetry tt,. X0 llJ he bva!,a U HTi.tl would lot aavt We UeosoetUa d. tWfwee kU dsaUt Ike warty red Lift ' 1 "" ..... --. ' 1 ' -- coin saw h i party bad enthroned the corporations, and it broke tbe heart of tbe radical Horace Gre-ley to think bi ' child, Ibe Republican party, had become a conservative party controlled by baks and bondholders. Could Jefferson aud Jacason return to earth and behold the slavery and want of thoe they labored to make free and independent could they see that their child, the Democratic party, had turned traitor to the people, turned traitor to Its declarations aid tradition, no doubt, if these men could, they would "sweat great drops of blood. When we go to an independent gathering of any kind and hear men tf talent entertainingly discourse on the beauties and winning qualities of the conservative leader, when we hear them talk of tbe unlimited strength a con servative platform would add to our party, we cannot help the thought that they ought to receive largo pay from the corporations. Our prayer is, do not forgive tberu, for they know what they do and how to do it. Then we ask a kind Father never to permit the In dependent party to come to the front with a lot of conservatives in the lead, who would deny their master a dozen times before the cock has time to crow once. No! No! the Populists must meet and defeat the radicalism of those who would enslave tbe people, and destroy the republic. They must destroy the unlimited taxing power of the railroads by providing for government ownership and operation at cost price to the peo ple. A postal savings bant la every poBt office to do a loan and discount business for the people at cost price, as advocat ed by tho Populists, would take away from the banks and Wall street the power to start a financial crash any ilme, by simply refusing and drawing in loans. The government must take charge of all coal lands and mines and furnish coal to the consumers at cost price. Government ownership and manage ment of the railroads, banking and coal corporations would settle the?e great questions so they would not bother our posterity any more than chattel slavery troubles us. Three-fourths of the people aro In favor of theae just measures, but are prevented from enacting them tntw law by the conservatives that control the old parties. If the Populists arcrpt any settlement of tha-e grrat questions less radical they will disappoint the people and will utterly fall to maintain and secure to the people their natural, Inatlt liable and just rlgbta. Co.nsi kvativc. io You llrlieve It? "There U an evil under tho sun and It I o romon am. eg turn: A man to wnoiu U h! hattt Kivun rlcheo, wraith, ami honor, Hn.i he wan'mh nolulnu lr hi twin of all that hdlrwtb, y l O d tftvetb h'm eot the powvr t tat ihi-n of, but a tragcr oa eh l'l thl U v lty, and it U an evltd ." Tbe II. We. The qui'tiloa vf t dy, the meey uliott, I out a new oue a tde atave qu-talloa froia the ' toe of lUvtd. King ta Jtrutloiu' show. s j'oiimq la it Kr of bl wltdi ru looted hroh the afe Jt i oie aud wbraktta d "There It g. seraUon UvS are m td, and thvir jWth a kitf V Uveur Ibe otr fnon tit the tarlh, a 4 the frm awoof kHi, "did ke wta tM yu rat! a? It wit eot a (wr mi rntl f bi rk'H !kb?r, wh Uitiu otor (HiUd. Il was suit a Wnt aoeM' wtMlai ewpif t4H2ete trf l tleh Ual ke a'gk I Ms , rhw are k wrd el Ike g ee st aauacy king of tbe oldea tiaiet i the wisest man the earth has ever knvtn. Thls Is vanity and It fa an evil dU ease." How it has spreei among tbe people! until today it Is jJ valent among the high and low. A ctn4-rous disease polluting the heart of matl vith poison ous germs of greed and self kness, that grow, flourish and choks o of liberty and justice. germs "This Is vanity." Our rl a perish with us, tot a single iaven how wbich ever delicate the parchment it may be written, can the un "aimed soul bear across the border, ow what be possessed in this world ad for him a desirable place la the land. He must write with fingers "my last will and testamel and leave it though the price of soul, to be eaten by strangers. The thought ploughs furrows in brow, turns his hair gray and drives! nail after nail in bis coffin. Care with a fiendish grin takes his throne in the poor throbbing heart and holds high carnival, until death lays a sympathizing hand upon him, saylog: "Poor soul, your burden is too heavy; leive it all behind and come with me." He places the key In Its mysterious lock and tin freed soul bounds forward, free at last from the fotttrs of care, and his servants, selfishness and greed, to find that his inheritance war of the earth and that he had no treasure in heaven. How long shall the disease spread and flourish? Is there no cure? Must we endure tbe tortures, the Intense suffer ing occasioned by It? Must our children and our children's children inherit the malady? Is any one seeking fame? Let him present a cure, a disinfectant to prevent its spread, and the coming generation will honor his same, and he shall be considered a blessing to earth. Will 0 The Wisp. Box Butte, Neb. A New Kind of Crop Rotation. Editor Alliance-Indkpbndent: The agricultural papers keep telling the farmers they must rotate tbelr crops and their stock if they want to be suc cessful. And they, the farmers, have rotated from wheat to corn, from corn to oats, from oa!s to barley, rvo and flax; and loot from horses to cattle, from cattle to hogs, from hogs to sheep. And some have been rotated out of house and homo by the sheriff, while they wore rotating around, trying to make an hooet llv'ngifor themselves and fami ne. And they can't understand why It Is that they don't succeed. They know that they have worked hard themselves and a 1 members of their hmlllct have d no tbo same. Fri.ru early to late thy have sold alt thy could sell, and what no one would buy they have und theinelvri. Thry have worn their old clothes until th rag men would not ttke the in at a gift. They have dentrd Uu mwlv, their wivt-a and children tliu clothv and 1h) they ought to have hail, and stilt they are worse off than before. t till you brother farmers you have not Khb rutaUn In the rig hi field at rlhl time. Now don't tay you know betur far the fcu thoe for tbemlve, that you have n l done to. I know thai you are alt aotloo what tny plan u( rotation , and beiti r tt ha ba Ihumukly tried tad how far Ike femurs eaa wake um of It, I will ty tl kae bea lKort)ii 'y 'fid t vul of Ike - I rra ltt t axj k ftva food rMlU I I ... ft ILU.I ItW A.I ft t 1 a f !! tHis K the Urr the a u uH'i'Mkmi It The fiiaat l euiwt l a .w b i e tUorwui gruwer U ih Urmr wilt wy d t k' jarl ! ward eulvetla It &telt aad lalrw due tl eta kt e!kerau4 fr leads offc JSfc turn 4 buy tremUlg via. It will double his income. Now what must we rotate? Ia what field must we coamnct? We must commence in tbe political gId aad rc tate all the old party pjliUolans out of office, from road overseer to president of the United States; and keep an eye on all publio officers and as soon a they show signs of running to monopoly rotate them out and put in honest men. And don't do It half and half; for re member the good book says: We must sot put new wine in old casks as that would spoil the wine. Nor must we patch an old garment with new cloth, ai that would only make the rent larger In tkeend. Now brother farmers, let us all practice this kind of rotation and cultivate it with all our might. Let us rotate the rascals OUt. Your rftawntfnllv j , v W. V Wicun.n fcushvllle. Veb. Melt at One Thlako of the Cheap Ke- pnDiican rapere. r Alliancb-Indepekdevt: e other day I was looklnar over oaa of tpapers oeionging to tbe subsl- diziiA bress and I noticed an artl. mentlaaded la large capitals "Cheap neadMatter. It went on to any, "ImprA emontln Machinery and Large Volumu V Business Responsible." Now l seems a nice dish of hash. Bat whale want to know la. fa it tm that thoraiVs been so much improve ment in th fay of printing during the last year tn . . C w un mo hat readit , matter has become so cheap? I do h i believe It Again, are 11 newspaper men dolnsr such altrge vft'ine of business these hard times thaile are able to nut na prices so as to al!ta give their papers away to their suhAbers? I do not be lieve that either. do not HoIUm th . Is the reason wky Lioooln State Journal la able to in tract with the Chicago Weekly Inta Pcean, whereby It can give that paper ind the Journal semi-weekly for one wK9e year for the mull mm nt II K Inli ...V- vu.um.smm v .n Vt M LVOV i 1 Lid I Take the Railway Corpa ttlon and Shy- lock boodle from behind 1 and it could not do it. Samson would! ie shorn of his locks. The whole subsidized praAlof today Is nothing else than the pv tools of: tbe Shylocks acd Plutocrats S flo tbelr dirty, lying work for them, toV Urcpre- . aa K, sentthe truth, to throw chafl In the' eyes of the people and so bllQ them that they cannot see the truth, agkUhua haul In a big net full of suckernQext November. 1 sat, thank God, the common p are getting their eyes opened day oay ana weeic Dy weelc to tbe ta nature of things. History is only repeatlnir itself. fore the late civil war, did not the slave holders try to push slavery on every! border state? Did they not keen push ing till at Ian it terminated in war? Now what are our bondholders doing today? Are they not pushing bonds on the people to make them and their children, yea, children's children, to the third and fourth generations, bond men and bondwomen? If the people do not arise in their might and say by their votes this state of things shall not be, so it will be. May God help us to see before it is too late. For I, as an old man, do not want a repetition of 1860 to 1805, which must surely come if the people do not . see where they are drifting. Wm, Steele. Hampton, Hamilton Co., Neb. Where to Chalk Them. Senator Allen of Nebraska says: "It la necessary to chalk a Democrat in order to tell him from a Republican." Very well put. But you Bhould chalk the Republican In front and the Demo crat on his back for the Democrat h? been advancing backward since tbe time of Thomas Jefferson, and haa pretty nearly reached the aristocratic plutocratic platform of Alexander Ham ilton. But tho deserters from this crabrIgado are forming a regiment by themselves, D ied with tbe old spirit of their party Ex. We don't liko ta take Senator Allen out of tho aonate but we second hie noinlnotion for president mtde by Tun Allunck-Indki'kndknt, and would suggest the name Waton for vtoe prea tdent. Tccumwa Republic. To tho land of Kd Ar.pl via the M ourl t'vtcillo route i'uo. M. for one fare for the round trio gud 3U day. Cad on I'hll lUulel. C, I. & T. A. I AH O street Lincoln, Neb, Call on (too. Natwuian 9t Co. for earrta4t. wa-on, binder, and all farm iu,lomeu. We'll uw ye riftt- WALTER BAKER & GO, COCOA and CHOCOLATE Highttt Awards 4 fM4Hl MI H WoHI' C4wvteM rm e uttMM , taumwlf I HHMltt (tXlV, III 111 l (atttUTt, Mill MHf llfltUTa, Ullll favfsLUL (9tl IUUI, 9 f mAf 4 MM eM4 MaV XKft iV RMtei'itrvwMfMU ill () Or