Ti " ,0t '"W TTrrj'V iwrw "''" ,1,Prr" 'WWWHPIIPtiPffflWWWSPPf sv largo for a local contest, amounting tp about ninety per cent of the yoto cast last fall. If Mr. Wells and Mr. Parker had polled the same proportion of the total vote that the na tional candidates of their parties polled in 1000, Mr. Wells would have received about C 5,000 votes and Mr. Parker about 55,500. It is impossible to ascertain how many demo crats voted for Mr. Merriwethcr and how many voted for Mr. Parker, just as it is impossible to say how many republicans voted for Mr. Wells and how many for Mr. Merriwethcr, but it is reasonable to supposd that the republican vote which left Mr. Parker went largely to Mr. Wells, while the democratic vote which left Mr. Wells wont principally to Mr. Merriwethcr. Mr. Wells lost at least twelve, thousand democratic votes, if he gained no republican votes, and to this must be added a sum equal to the republican votes received. If, for instance, ho received 10,000 republican votes the account would stand thus: For Wells 80,000 demo cratic votes and 10,000 republican votes total 48,000 votes. But this would show a loss of 22,000 democratic votes; can the re-organizers afford to trade 22,000 democratic votes, good at all elections, for 0,000 republican votes, good only in local elections and when a repub lican is nominated on the democratic ticket? If Mr. Wells only received 5,000 republican votes, the account would stand: Wells 88,000 democratic votes and 5,000 republican votes total, 48,000. This would show a loss of sev enteen thousand democratic votes, or an ex change of three democrats for one republican. Is their anything in this victory to-boast of? If the democrats who voted for Mr. Merriwethcr had followed the example set by Mr. Wells and voted the republican ticket, Mr. Parker would have been elected by a considerable majority. But what of the future? The Republic with commendable frankness recommends a national application of the St. Louis plan of harmoniz ing. It says: .St. Louis has supplied the example of a thor oughly united democracy. With little evidence of reluctance all elements of the party joined hands in the recent campaign. They worked together harmoniously and voted without scratching. To obtain national ascendency this unification must proceed heartily all over the country. With a united democracy the party is certain to win the next national election. The republican party has drifted so far away from American prin ciples that the revolt of the people will he over whelming when the forces naturally democratic arc found acting together. The St. Louis democracy has set its face to the future. Give us such a union of popular forces in all the states and the next national election will ho from that moment won. This is exactly what might have been ex peoted. Mr. Wells was not nominated because the reorganizes were especially interested in a good munioipal government; he was nominated because he represents a corporate element which calls itself democratic, as a matter of habit, but gives its pecuniary and political support to the republican party. It will never bo found sup porting a democratic ticket unless that ticket is selected and controlled by those who have some special privileges which they desire protected by the government. If the democracy of St. Louis had defeated The Commoner. Mr. Wells, the democracy of Missouri would have been spared tho fight which must now bo made. The contest which resulted in the Pirtlo Springs convention was fought over the silver question, the light which is now opened will bo a broader one and will involve the very exist ence of the party. Tho Republic will lead the Francis-Wells clement and will be supported by the railroad attorneys and corporation agents as well as by the gold standard advocates. Every democratic newspaper in the state will bo compelled to take sides and a contest which might have been settled in a day, if confined to St. Louis, will keep the state stirred up for the next four years. What is the use, it may be asked, of oppos ing the Ropublic-Francis-Wells combination? Why not allow it to control the party organiza tion? The answer is found in the election of 1894. Such a slump in the democratic vote as that which occurred in that year or in St. Louis a few days ago would give the state to the re publicans. There is no room in this country for two parties representing republican princi ples; unless the democratic party faithfully and courageously opposes plutocracy all along tho line, it has neither chance nor reason for exist ence. .. If the St; Louis contest had been purely a local one, The Gommososr would have taken no part in it, but as it was a link in the chain a part of a plan, national in extent, to republicanize the. democratic organization, this paper called attention, to the facts and-pointed out the pur pose of the re-organizers The daily papers outside of St. Louis openly discussed the scheme and since the election the rejoicing'has been general among those self-styled democrats who have twice aided in electing a republican president. The election of Mr. Wells was a disastrous victory for the democracy of St. Louis, Missouri and the nation. An Unfortunate Comparison. A New York firm has published in book form an address delivered last November by Joseph H. Ohoate, our ambassador to Great. Britain. This address was dellivered before the Edinburg Philosophical Institution. At that time Queen Victoria was living. Mr. Choate read to the assembled Britishers the fa mous letter written by Abraham Lincoln to the Boston mother, Mrs. Bixby, who had given five sons to tho union cause. That letter cannot be printed too often: I have been shown in the files of the War De partment a statement that you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from your grief for a loss so overwhelmlng but I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation which may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to sate, I pray tht our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and the lost, and the solemn pride that must be'yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom. When Ambassador Choate had finished reading this splendid epistle, ho said to the as sembled Britishers: "Hardly could your illustrious sovereign from tho depths of her queenly and womanly heart have spoken words more touching and tender to sootho the stricken mothers of her own soldiers." Such a comparison was exceedingly unfor tunate. Mr. Choate was quoting from Abraham Lincoln, a man among the most famous of all the men of the world for his ability to say tho right thing at the right time, for the purity and the eloquence of his language, for the ten derness and the gentleness of his heart. One of the sweetest things Lincoln ever wrote was the epistle to the woman who had lost five sons on the field of battle, and yet its tenderness and its eloquence were characteris tic of the man, and entirely in keeping with his record as an orator and writer. .But this American ambassador, standing before a Brit ish audience, thinks he has paid a remarkably high tribute to one of the greatest orators and writers in all history when he has said, "hardly" could the British sovereign have done better. The British sovereign was a good woman, but she was not at all famous 'for her literary abil ity. The comparison made by Hi. Choate was doubtless pleasing to his British audience but it was unworthy of the great lawyer who made the comparison and it was a piece of flunkyism. of which no man in his position should be guilty. ' " ', W A Sample of Whitewashing; Whitewashing is so common in legislative bodies now-a-days that the ordinary resolution denying charges and vindicating the accused attracts little attention, but the resolution re ported by a special committee of the Nebraska legislature deserves to rank among the prize specimens of this kind of literature. On the last day of the session (such resolu tions are generally brought forward on the last day) Representative Wilkinson of Cass County presented a report from his committee but let the report speak for itself. "Mr. Speaker and Members of the Legislature: Your house committee appointed to investigate and report regarding rumors to the effect that un due influence was exerted by railroad companies and candidates for JJnited States senators, with the members of the legislature, beg leave to make the following report: "We have made a thorough and personal in vestigation, and find the members of this Twenty seventh session as a body, regardless of party, to be of exceptionally high moral character; that an hoiest effort was made by the members to pro mote the best interests of the state by the passage of good laws and the careful appropriation of tho state's money, and that class add unjust legisla tion was honestly opposed; that transportation given the members by the railroad companies (which is a common custom) was purely compli mentary, and without in any way attempting to influence the vote of members and their -choice of candidates for United States senators, or for the passage of any special act of legislation. "In the investigation the members were with out exception willing and ready to answer every question that would lead to the disccve.y of any th ng ; irregular, as far as they knew, with the re suit that in not a single instance could anything be charged or proved against any member or can- . . . i: 'r' iwf --2S-&, A,.