"r ?s&i5,s ' V -. if V p' THE COURIER .t lk . i 1 somo on tho outside who are not bo discreet." Tho question of wages and labor is now uppermost in tho public mind, and it seems hard to Hnd a middle ground in the discussion of this topic. .Nearly every writer or speaker takes an oxtremo posi tion, and tho debate, conducted from a radical standpoint on both sides, does not, apparently, help things any. One very sensible ex pression on this subject lately came within tho observatory's range. It canio from Albion W. Tourgeo, author of "A Fool's Errand." Judge Tourgeo conducts a department in a Chicago newspaper and recently he received the following letter: "Tho black slave had nothing to think of but his task. Food, clothing, homo, family, in sickness or in death his body was provided for by his owner, by the law of the land. Ho had not to think of providing for 'rainy days,' nor for sickness or death of self or family nothing but a life of work, to eat, drink, sleep and die, his master being compelled by law to provide something, however liltlo it bo, to keep body and soul to gether, in health or sickness, and to bury tho poor carcass when dead. How is it with our greedy mine owners and soulless corpor ations with their workmen? Thoy can by reason of monoply of laws 'corner' all avenues of employment, and force thousands to givo them a life of labor at a beggarly or near starvation pay, Just suffi cient to keep death at bay for a few short years, and when sickness or old age claims tho laborer for his victim, tho law allows the em ployer to turn him out to die, or to shove him 'over the hills to the poorhouso" to bo a public charge uutil death is kind enough to claim the victim of bad laws and worse humanity. Then when tho poor wago slave dares to combine with his fellow slaves to secure a living wago for his labor, that has often enriched his master to a many titno millionaire, tho law is called on to protect the slave master in his robbery of the laborer of the only 'capital he possesses, and shoot him down in cold blood for daring to assert the right of a man to demand pay for his labor sufficient to support his life and that of hiB family. Thn republican party freed the negro slaves; what has it dono for tho liberation of the white slave is the question. We know tho democratic party has done nothing in the past; promises every thing for the laborer, but does nothing. Will tho republican party do anything to free tho great mass of the workmen from monopoly bondage?" Judge Tourgeo objected to tho language of his most radically inclined correspondent. Ho could not, ho said, with equanimity, hear the American citizen whoso speech and hands are alike un bound, compare himself or his condition with that of tho slave. "It shows that he does not realize how immeasurable is the distance be tween them. As a mere beast there may bo points of resemblance between them. As men, tho only relation that can subsist between them is that of contrast." He continues: "There has never in the history of tho United States been a day since the abolition of slavery, when tho producing laltorers of tho country, that is, tho wage-earners plus tho self-employing mechanics and agriculturists, could not have controlled the legislation of the com try and of every stato, if they had so desired. If they did not, and do not. it is their own fault. If orporations corrupt voters it is becau jo laborers are cor ruptible. If tho laborer is not true to himself, how shall he expect others to be true to his interests? No rights or privileges or oppor tunities were taken from them by force, but by their own assent. By far the most serious of monopolies, to wit, the railways, were chartered and promoted especially by tho laboring element of the country in tho hope of benefit from them. This fact does not niako the bnrthou any lighter, but it should restrain us from casting all the blame on those who probably saw no more clearly the end than we." Tourgeo also reminds his correspondent that people are nothot, nor allowed to be shot because they demand higher wages or refuse to work for lower wages. Men are shot when they forcibly obstruct others in tho exercise of common right or destroy property in revenge for what is deemed unjust treatment. It is bad policy to impute evil motives to one class as against another unless clearly shown to bo true. Tho employer of today is, like the employe of today, the product of conditions which both helped to create, and which can be peacefully and rationally cured by the co-operation of the best types of both elements only. He finds that much of the real trouble at this time lies in tho fact that unrestricted competition has produced a universal overproduction, and in the line of all great staples a con Bcquent cheapness which must entail a serious diminution of tho share which either capital or labor, or both, are able to derive from tho product. Charles II. Gould of this city, has alents that havu too long re mained hidden, as any one will readily discern by reading the follow ing resolution introduced by him at a recent meeting of Farragut Post No. 2T, G. A. R. Whereas, tho veterans of the lato war and all loyal Americans re member with a prido that swells the heart with patriotic blood and tills the eyes with joyful tears, the dariugdeeds of American heroes, who made "Columbia tho gem of tho ocean," and filled tho world with the names of Jack Barrie, John Paul Jones, Perry, Hull and Farragut, and brought honor to our Hag and glory to the American union, and whereas, wo have with unfeigned pride and genuine satis faction witnessed the clTorts of our congress and tho willingness of our people to build a navy that would rellect some of our national greatness, and lloat a wall nf impenetrable steel between our union of states and tho enemies of a free government, and whereas, in times of danger Washington's orders were, "Put none but Americans on guard to-night:" therefore be it resolved, that none but Americans, (and by that we mean tho test of loyalty and citizenship) should al lowed to pass ujxn tho defenses of the country. That wu cali upon our congressmen regardless of party affiliations to probe tho matter of defective armor, and defective and inadequate service to the very bottom, "allowing no guilty man to escape," and if there lives a shameless wretch, who would trifle with the honor of our Hag, and the lives or our naval command, or a spy who would barter the free dom of more than sixty-five millions of people for pelf, lot the drum head court marshal bo revived that treason may meet a speedy and just reward. "Like the wnil of the banshee of Erin, comes tho cry that a traitor or traitors, beside whose name Benedict Arnold's would shine like a beautiful diamond in tho lottomlesspit, have by tho uso of defectivo plate in the construction of our navy, jeopardised tho honor of our flag and the lives of our sailors, and to save a few dollars and some few hours' time willingly sacrificed overy principle of honor and vir tue dear to American hearts and committed an act of atrocious and and vindictive treason which bows the heads of tho living with sorrow and shame and, as wo must believe, troubles the sacred shades of Washington, Lincoln, Grant, and all departed patriots who from 1776 to 1SG5 made their country's honor their dearest desire, counting life cheap when weighed in the balance with national honor. Mr. Gould's resolution goes on to recommend the confiscation of the Carnegie plant as a military necessity and tho trial for treason of every person connected with this cowardly assault upon the very citadel of our national life and liberty. "That we recommend that in future trials of armor plate from this plant Carnegie and his man Frick be placed immediately behind tho target until tho test is comploted. Such a est would probably do away with tho numer ous blowhards as well as blowholes." and it is further Resolved, That wo call upon tho press of the country to sound tho tocsin of alarm, demanding in the namo of all the people such 'test of materials which enter into the construction of our national defenses as Bhall niako it practically impossible for such treachery and scandals to occur; that if there be unconstitutional law to bring such miscreants to tho dungeon cell and gallows treo that represen tatives of tho press urge national legislation to tho end that justice bo done and tho honor and glory of our flag maintained. Be it further Resolved, That tho thanks of all tho loyal people of tho United States, and especially of the state of Nebraska is duo to Georgo D. Meikeljohn, and to all other members of congress who aided his efforts in bringing about a full and exhaustive investigation of tho frauds that have been perpetrated upon a government by dishonor able, treasonable and inhuman contractors, who have furnished to the government of tho United States, poor, unfit and inferior armor plates for our ships of war, and wo do hereby pledge to tho Hon. George D. Meikeljohn our hearty support in all his efforts to bring the guilty to justice and disclose to an astounued world the depth of human perfidy.