" WIT"1! -- vfrv-jp i rnpn BW But What is the Remedy? Tho Chicago Chronicle says that to a larger oxtont than over before tho wealth of the country is enlisted on tho side of tho republican party and it oharges that this is due, in part, to tho fact that tho republican party favors manufacturing and other enterprises, and, in part, "to some re cent doliveronccs by democrats which have been construed as hostile to public and private credit." The latter suggestion, taken in connection with previous utterances of tho paper, justifies tho inferonco that it refers to tho speeches made in defense of tho Chicago and Kansas City plat forms. Tho Chronicle itself has been inclined to construe such speeches into an attack upon wealth, whereas a distinction has always been made be tween honest accumulations and money made by illegal means. It is chief among the western ad vocates of reorganization and is persistently using its great influence to make tho democratic party more like the republican party with a view to winning back those former democrats who havo been supporting tho republican tickets during re cent years. Tho charges which tho Chronicle has so often brought against tho Chicago plat form, tho Kansas City platform and tho men who defend those platforms arc wholly without found ation. There is not a plank in either of those platforms which can fairly bo construed as an at tack upon jJi'oporty or upon those who accumu lated money by legitimate methods, neither can the speeches made in support of those platforms bo so construed. The democratic party and those who believe in its policies are really the conservative element of the country, They aro trying to protect life and property and to advance the public welfare by tho application of old, tried and well settled principles; they would relievo that wealth which is the reward of industry from tho odium cast upon it by wealth which is tho result of exploita tion or governmental favoritism. There is no tenable middle ground between the position occupied by tho republican party and tho position ocoupiod by the democratic party. Republican policies are all of a kind; they all vio late tho doctrine of equal rights to all and special privileges to none. It is not a mere conincidonce that tho party which in 1800 was willing to turn over tho fi nances pf tho nation to tho financiers, was also tho party which, in 1900, furnished nearly all tho advocates of imperialism, a largo army, trusts, subsidies, etc. Is it merely a coincidence that the Chroniole, which in 1890 aided in the election oi a republican prosidant, celebrated Mr. Mc Kinlpy's second election by repudiating the posi tion taken by tho democratic party on tho Phil ippine question and tho financial question and by adopting republican phraseology in protesting against the use of harsh words in condemning in dustrial combinations? Tho democratic party cannot accept the repub lican ppsition on one question and then make a successful fight against the republican position on other questions. In other words, the democratic party must bo consistent and apply democratic principles at all times and everywhere. It must be tho exponent of popular rights and the friend of the producing classes, or it will become the tool of predatory wealth. After discussing tho purpose of the republican The Commoner. party .to run the government for the benefit of the few and after warning the republican leiders that there is a limit to public endurance tho Chronicle makes this significant prediction: The democratic party is opposed to class privilege as exemplified in protective tariffs and subsidies. It has made an unsuccessful effort to eliminate the evil from our government politics. It's failure in this re spect under Mr. Cleveland is what gave rise to the more radical movement under Mr. Bryan. If the great conservative class of the republic, the men who stand between the very rich and the very poor, and who have twice saved the repuolican party from de served defeat, shall at length revolt at the practices which havo made republican triumph synonymous with robbery and jobbery, we may bo sure that in their wrath they will call for some remedy more radi cal than any that has been proposed by the demo cratic party of Cleveland of the democratic party of Bryan. It will be noticed that tariffs and subsidies are the special privileges emphasized. What about the other evils that demand attention? In prophesying that radical measures will be resorted to if conservative ones fail, the Chronicle is simply judging the future by the past; but what remedy docs it propose? Tho democratic party must bo prepared to meet every emergency, to combat every wrong, and to apply a remedy to every disease which afflicts the body politic. The democratic party declares that the Fili pinos should bo given their independence and then protected from outside interference as the republics of Central and South America have been protected. What other remedy is. there for im perialism and militarism? The democratic party has declared war on every form of private monop oly. What other honest course can it pursue? The democratic party is in favor of the green back as against the bank note. How can those democrats who favor a national bank currency, issued by private corporations for private benefit, oppose other special privileges of the same kind? And what are such democrats doing to prevent the conversion of five hundred millions of legal tender silver dollars into subsidiary coin or to pro tect the jury system from the assault that is being . made upon it by government by injunction? There is some encouragement in the fact that a paper like the Chronicle admits the dangerous tendencies of republican policies, even though it has no plan for meeting those dangers. Having discovered the disease it may now seek a remedy, and when it does set out in earnest to find a rem edy, it will find it in converting republicans to democratic principles as set forth in the party's latest platforms, rather than in the conversion of the democratic party to republican ideas. The Root of All Evil. Rev. W. B. Wright, in a sermon recently de livered at Buffalo, N. Y., discussed the dangers which threaten our republic. After mentioning the disinclination of many to take part in politi cal affairs, the abuses of party organization, the corruption of officials and the demoralizing in fluence of tho war spirit, he condemned what he called the "cult which the euphemism of today has named 'the spirit of commercialism' but what .Christ called 'the worship of Mammon,'" and added: I am not sure but this last includes the four preceding dangers, as an acorn includes its oak. Democracies, we aro told; are specially tempted to seek money with excessive eagerness, because where there is no recognized aristocracy the pos session of great wealth offers to ambition tho same prizes which in aristocratic nations are conferred by birth. Calm and conservative thinkers view with alarm the dangers with which the worship of money threatens 113." Dr. Wright is correct in emphasizing the evils which come from the worship of Mammon. This-is the tap-root of all the trouble; out of it grow all the dangers enumerated. It is the over weening desire to get rich that so absorbs the attention of many that they have no time left for the discharge of civic duties; it is the same thirst for wealth which perverts party organizations, corrupts officials and rushes nations into wars of conquest. Experience, individual-and national, confirms the truth of Holy Writ: For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred -from the faith and pierced themselves through with many sor rows. W Two years ago this month the war in the Phil ippines was begun. During that time the United States has sacrificed more than 3,500 soldiers and expended upwards of $250,000,000 in money in an attempt to show the Filipinos the benefits of American rule, and incidentally to secure com merce to the extent of about $10,000,000. Im perialism comes high, but the promotors have nothing to lose as long as the people pay the ex penses and offer their sons' for sacrifice. TiAashington's Nam. x (, By Howard S. Taylor. -:. S&P t Washington's Day! and our memories dwell51' fn t-li,VM. t 4.I.- !. J i. tV- " Tri . H "fJA On the book of the Dictured nast: The fearless Congress; the liberty bell; The wacer of battle at last: The buff-and-blue in a thin, thin line As it fronted the tyrant George; The struggle from Boston to Brandy wine; The winter at Valley Forge; The Yorktown siege and the deathless fame That settled forever on Washington's name! Washington's name! Time only endears That name to our patriot pride; He draws our hearts through a hundred years As the moon draws upward the tide! And we thank our God for the plan Of a providence, strange and great, That brought together the Time and the Man In a swinging pivot of fate That turned and turned till liberty came 'And the whole world thrilled with Washington's name! He knew no section, he served no class, No furtive and foreign control; And felt-shod plunder could find no nass. To the tall Virginian Y$ soul! ' "' True to his trust, in deed and in word, He spurned the bribe of a crown For freedom he lifted his valiant sword, For freedom he laid it down; For freedom he ruled till freedom became An answering echo to Washington's name! The years have sped! We stand at the gate Of a century new and strange; We know we are reaching a crisis of fate In the drift of a mighty change; But we vow to heaven that no hand shall fix A bound to the hope we hold, And we drink from the vintage of Seven tvsSix A toast to the days of old! Confusion to Tories! Confusion and shame! " And honor, eternal, to Washington's name! Judge not tho workings of his brain And of his heart thou canst not see; ;; , What looks to thy dim eyes a stain, 7' ; In God's pure sight may only be HJ? A scar, brought from some well-won -field& Whetc thou wouldst only faint and yield'.'- Adelaide A. Proctor,- I