The Wealth makers of the world. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1894-1896, May 31, 1894, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    VOL. V.
LET US EX0HA5OE VIEWS.
(In tbe time lntorvenlng between now and
tbe law of the People' Independent State
(invention this and succeeding columns will
. open to the PopullaUof the Htateto pro
lrtft candidate for the ticket of 'W4. and for
Unlo-d Btatee Henator, anl to show reason for
Individual preferences. We Bhall not have
space for aoythlnf more than name and brief
rsavri for the choice wade, becau we wloti
Ik if at flora a great many. Lkt wo maw
HKBB PKOFOBBD rOROrrlCB WHOttBCHABAOTBB
AM W-l.t. A JBTELLEOTOAf. QCAIJFIOATIOHS
THI WKITIR WIU. HOT PBKBQSIAI.LT VOITOH
row. If any candidate seem to be leading
whom our reader cannot conncleBtloumy mip
port, by ail mean let u know why thy are
HtrenuouHly objected to. Hut let u reupccton
another' view, avoid aoythlng tending to
dlHhartnony If It be possible without sacrifice
of principles, and hear willingly thoee who dif
fer wlih um. "In a multitude of counselor
there I afety." But with mny lo bmr from
each taunt be brlef.-Edltor Wbai.th MAKSim.
Wants Power. Gaflla and Other.
J i ROM FIELD, Neb., May 21, 1804,
Editor Wealth Makers :
It seems a certain sign for victory tbla
fall, to not only see so many PopulliU
join in bringing to the front tbelr
choice for candidates, but to see them
all name the "finest of the wheat" all
honest, good and able men. ,
I 'Jeane permit me to name a few as
my choice; For governor, Hon. John
li. Powers; lieutenant governor, Hon,
J. N. Gaffin; treasurer, Hon. Valentine
Horn, of Hamilton county; U.S. senator,
jJon, W. 1. Green, of Beatrice.
W. L. Stark of Aurora will be the
next congressman from the 5th district.
Yours for justice,
Dan Burkey.
In support or Congressman Item.
Shermak CocN'ir, May 19, 1884.
1 am not of that class who worship at
the shrine of individual excellence, but
there are times in our history when the
right men for the exigencies of the oc
casion are providentially chosen as
..leaders and prove eminently successful.
No man ever gained a more signal vic
tory than the Hon. O. M. Kem in the
big Third and afterwards in the Sixth
congressional district. A man of the
people, without wealth, but with a
fieart beating in sympathy with the
toiling wealth producers, whom he has
faithfully represented in. his congres
sional career, his name will live in the
memory of his constituency for all time
to come. I do not claim that there are
not ' other men in the Sixth district
who would represent us as ably and
faithfully a Mr. Kem; but I do claim
there is not a man in the district that
will meet with a more enthusiastic
greeting from the People's partyt and
more cordial hatred from the twin rellos
of i corruption and maladministration
than Omer M. Kem.
Ills uatrlotlsm and fidelity to our
cause has called forth the vilest sland
ers a press utterly prostituted to tbe
service of plutocracy and the devil
could invent, and for this reason, if for
no other, I am In favor of his renomln
atlon. To mv mind there Is no surer
way of stifling these emissaries of Satan
who attempt to blast tbe reputation of
honorable men, than by placing them
ajaln at the front.
Fraternally yours,
. C. II. KING.
X Platte County Man's Ticket.
Humphrey, Neb., May 21, 1S!1.
F.dltor Wealth Makers:
As per your request to announce can
did ate tor stato oMje, I wUh to add my
preference and those of a stoat many I
have Interviewed cn the subject.
Fifteen favored (Ufiln for governor,
four for Weir and one for Billy Hryao
Each one gave a reason for the fHh
there was in him. My own preference
is Gaflla for governor; Mayor Weir for
UeuUsnaot governor; Honest John II
Tower, treasurer; and lion. Warwick
Saunders of the Piatt County Argus
for st retary of tat.
We elect, d Mr. Powers oihhs as gov
ernor, but the Republican at.d I'orou-
crU Counted tho ballet, and we as I
party had nothing to say, Homo t
your correspondent want ti nominate.
men fir their ura'ortcal ability, and
others U eu aathSr. fan b sld
against them. I'ul l seems to me that
lru and tried hhty and tr!lrif In
i4iT tit shimld U cmKiwd far Rwra
thtit t imuenlUy, of t ra'urUml atilllty,
UnoM th a'Uvitt ft orat-ry t!l?
la lh ha'si n th IhiII m-ar.
1 by tha Utaatta lta f May lih'
that they pri(WM u rl M.J.tMi,tM
annually tut the heuelit tf Uaard, and
)ul King Unnafd's 4 ttiala a, tttU
c ixf Js t hlr fre Awerloaa
Utar, The part In tha hm ftUi
is tha wor t "U44a ' ' N )
ae4 apply
Iio Uaf will this llaU of thlsfs
continue before wa have such disturb
ances as the Pennsylvania coke riots?
We must nominate and elect a? Mi
who are unalterably opposed to such
things on principle, and have the man
hood and backbone, to sy so; ana just
such a man we will And in Mr. Haund
ers. He Is a hard workwr; Has edlttd
a reform paper since tfye jicepiion of
the movement, and h4 struck as many
hard blows in favor oJ .MbeYty and Jus
tice as any man In : Nebraska. He is
favorably known all over thi state, and
is right in the middle ' 'of the public
highway.
No fusion or tie-up with Democracy,
Yours for the best,
A. W. MoitOAi.
John Itebblna Warmly KndorsesMr
Ouatin.
SheltoN, Neb., May IS, 191.
Editor Wealth Makkks:
We are very glad to e the name of
A. J Guitln mectioaed for tbe portion
of state auditor. ' v
Since the campaign of 181)0 wo have
known that Buffalo county could
reap honor for Itself and do the state a
great service by pushing the name of
Mr. Gustln for the position above men
tioned. , X '"'
Mr. Gustin is known here as an htV.
;st, energetic, capable business loan,
nd bis nomination would please tin
rank and file of the party In this
county.
Men who are acquainted with the
campaign work done by Mr. Gustin ia
1800 (when tbe party had very few
workers) believe he can conduct a cam
palgn among the business men of the
state that will add to the vote of the
party. .
Probably there isn't a man In the
state and very few in the nation outside
the general freight offices who under
stands the transportation question as
well as Mr.' Gustin.
For years Mr. Gustin has made the
railroad question a study from a business
man's point of view, and in a campaign
he can show the business men of tbe
state that their interests and the inter
ests of their customers are Identical on
the freight rate question ss advocated
by the Populist party.
We have seen J. . Gaffin in trying
positions and know the people will not
make a mistake when they nominate
him for governor.
Where men have been tried and
found true we do not believe they
should be dropped for any uncertainty
and we believe the farmers ought to be
very careful about dropping farmers
out of positions they have hoaorsbly
flllsdtoput lawyers in their places
Where changes are made we should
demand the strongest pledges of fidelity
to party measures and principles.
In the Sixth district we favor the re
nomination of Mr. Kem, In voting for
him the people do not take auy ohaaues.
We know that in him we have honesty,
ability and a tenacity of purpose that
ay we will "fight it out on this line if
It takes all summer "
John Stebuuss,
A Wheeler County Man'a Opinion
Enicso.v, Sob., May 17, 191
Editor Wealth Makehs:
I read with pleasure the many inter
eating letter and able editorials in
your valuable paper. will simply tell
your many readers that Wheeler county
is allvo to the real Issues confronting
Pio American piople and elected a full
county ticket tat! fait, except one torn
io!loner and the county oierk; and
these two relic of tHe two old pattlos
will toa be wtpt-d wt.
liar UlMeadettU?uuty omoers are
filling their reicUv !'!' la a way
Ihtt reflect Junior on theni.'lra and
tMr party, Oor tniuoty lroturee,
i'fik P, Huston would t splendid
lualerlal for tt treasurer if he was
mur widely known tor th tt
rWelttf -ih'gll"it regardiatf atnitla
attorn far stat fPiJes, I niaka tha fat
luwittf , Ulltag this would tui our
tit,t tU;aet'-and w tuust tnak
no miataa this fail Iwf. at tw wnt
f'f years. le-ry min the
will I -a rvdxemci ri oorrupvU e; a
(titc u t hoiteel sttUf w.H t H la
as Ut tut4 fitf pU'tlaj th reins if
laUi h hand f th w'i Uly
Mrayd their trul
I s-get for gtnraor Mf W. lr,
I bPv h is tm to lh oofa ad wH
draw support m othff una if our
LINCOLN, NEB., THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1894.
I
POOR Al
OBBED
Tb Friends of tbe Poor are Bandcufied
" and Dragged to Prison.
THE 1I0H OYEBIIDE THE LAW.
Tbe Rapid Absorption of Our Lands and
Liberties by Conscfousless and
Insatiable Corporations,
A Sample Corporation 8tea,l.
It will b a sad day for the rich when
the masses of the people become awar
that there Is one law for tbe rloh and
another for the poor that railroads can
steal the people's land and play forever
the modern highwayman act without
punishment, but that the homeless, the
and Ions, the hungry and moneyless
work-sockcrs, cannot fake a free ride
on the highwaymen's iron horses for a
day or two without receiving swift
gal retribution In the shape of months
of imprisonment. Judge Klner has just
sentenced A company of Commonweal
eas (whom the r'allrtfad will not suffer
to ride for eitlwr ; love pr money) to
suffer four niffntbs .Irimrisonment for
teallog rld ,io fit here food p.nd
work could be soured, i '.,.
Mr. Coxey who tfts eveti jBoocent of
tbe contemptlblw triwt' for which he
was prosecuted, vU ' that be had car
ried a 2 z 6 inch banner of peace and
trodden on the grass, was by the testl
mony of perjured policeman convicted, I
sentenced to Imprisonment in tbe
district work bouse, handcuffed, and
with twelve white and colored every
day work-house convicts (who were not
handcuffed) was carried off to jail bis
real offense bting that he wished to
(peacefully) speak in behalf of the un
employed and against bondage to the
Haylock power.
This nation Is no longer a democracy,
a government of equally free and Inde
pendent citizens, but a government of
tbe corporations, landlords, capitalists
and money . loauers. They own Con
gresj, the legislatures, the courts and
the laws. ,
The great body of the laws are for
them, to protect them in enforcing and
enjoying usury. '
A few hundred peOplts have under
sanction of the laws, spread titles of
absolute ownership over the authraclte
0 ml deooslts which Providence placed
o tbe subterranean fields of Pennsyl
vania for the common ownership and
use of the people of the continent of
North America. They are robbers
whose hands reach Into the pockets of
almost every man who works. The
stockholders of vhe railroads have also
secured title deeds to almost all the
blturtlaous coal fields of America, and
demand tribute from the millions of tbe
peopl whom i'rovldence did not care
for "? whea tbe coal was made. The
Standard Oil company has legally stolen
th stores of oil which the Creator
plao d in the deeps below for all His
children. The lumber kings have got
all the poop!,' lumoer. The iron kings
have got bold of all tU best of our Iron
ore, and the same or others of all af our
copper and lead and silver and gold,
And a few have got absolute titles to
moat of the land on which tha elth s
hay to grow. And a few people own
all the privilege and means of trans
portation, and have power to rob pro-
oucer and consumer "all the tiefilo
will bear." And a few own tha machtu
ery which Is nievary to tnak ua of
the fret) and tlrtdes natural enarglea
which belong by divine Inheritance
equally to all, an! iako ojprel us
ot thustt iokn energies waka God gav
also to tha .
And U has come lo pais ttal tbe
robbers are eothione-J.and tha defraud
vA grind la thu prin housa f U 11
U thv l'otied Stat'S hrw were, ac
Uttif Hi tha !l e-hius, I2.i 0,1' ttmt
ilea, C Jff ll.U iiumHer ner ha t are
trttanU-ttt lct Oiurva ,' and
ne arly third part tf tha rtuaUdr
hava llulr la'te and flty hn. tttiit
garf d. And tins peroa'atfe of the tasd
It i4 h 'an l U laervaig at a ut
a!aru!P4 rata. Figure lrs'lty rtaVrs
want fcotUWa UtU l u, aid
tie HitprU eamtot bi ea r e t l,
but U. farm t- aut fsmUlea of ii ae
wro4 figure had ! raado up la -airh-
r shewed aa istirras d( this das
of 0 per aat. la tha dresda, and (ami
lire tft tb sams itatal who twad
t i
farms, in the same period Increased but
I per cent. The landless in the cities
, Ithout doubt Increased faster in num
bers 11 not In per cent, actually If not
relatively. And besides, 30 percent, of
those owning farms have thern mort
gaged an average of 11,130 each, and 2!)
par cent, of the families owning city
horn 's are under mortgage averaging
11,139 each.
Corporations are fast gathering in
ill the wealth and natural resources of
ib people railroad corporations, bank
ing corporations, mining corporations,
fnanufacturing corporations, street rail
Way and electric corporation, the
(Standard Oil corporation and numer
ous glgantio trusts, milling corpora
tions, stock-buying and slaughtering
corporations, land syndicates, &c. tin
der cover of the law, usually, these
powerful combinations of capitalists are
ilemandlng for their comparatively few
Stockholders who produce nothing a
large slice of tbe product of each and
overy wealth producer In the nation.
Aisd so great is .this tribute beyond
what the profit gatherers use, even In
tbtlr princely style of living, tbat they
are able to go on buying up more and
ever more of the natural resources, and
the masses of the people are thns being
reduced to ft state of dependence upon
capitalists and landlords which amounts
to virtual slavery. Their birthright to
the earth is denied, and they are the
slaves of usurers, who are the rulers
over all.
Tbe insatiable greed of the corpora
tions and their disregard of the natural
rights of men is being exemplified by
the Illinois Central Kallroad Company
In Us gigantic steal ol the lake front
aroiod tbe city of Chicago. The story
tf this enormous robbery we clip from
the Chicago Times of May Pith, as fol
lows; Having already robbed the people of
Cnlcago of the lake front between lian
dolph and Htate streets, the Illinois
Central rul roaa is ex tending us steal
ings from iwelltn street to Jackson
parte, it stole a mile of lake shore
without snama or penalty.
Now it will steal six.
Wh- n the mile was stolen the people
stood by helpless. As the theft of the
six miles will be effected by exactly the
sarao methods as was that of tbe od j
mile the sovereign people may bo ex
pected to statul oy en btroro. . ,
First fig to out the value of the
plunder to bo gained by this gigantic
crime, inking tbe lowest valuation as
btutls of calculation, so tbat no Iujuh-
ilco may bo done the thief, the stealings
will bring a clar profit of $'00 :101 800.
Perhaps, for the soke of a clearer com-
prheKslon, It may be put tuus:
one nunurea minion, inreo nunarea
and s xty-one thousand, two hundred
nnd fifty dollars.
Aou the thief is tne Illinois ucntrai
railroad.
To throttle the law, to spit In the face
of juetlce, to rob tbe nation, the state,
and tbe city, to subvert the decrees of
courts and of legislatures. all tbls that
corporal I u will uo ana U doln la con-
iaortlon or tne sura oi f iuo,jtii,swi.
SCHEME IS HAflULY I'UwUHO.
Already the scheme bus bden put In
practical oiniration. Dally tho Illinois
Coutral railroad is driving tbe waters
bitck aud tkioir for ii own tiso lue.
land it makes in vllatloa of tho laws-of
the nation and in this face of decrees
from I s btith'St court. From Twilfth
tr-t Ui Jckson uark is six miles. For
a railroad to build land out from
tbe lakrt . shore for a dUtanoo
of one t m th of a mils is ea'
lerethan one might imagine, lo
uo tut is to create a strlu of laud con
IkIdUk an acva ot one and one half
o am sutlea. To tha Illinois Central
railruad ttvt ry foot ot ground tbus stol
en fiom tbe water ol Lake Michigan
I wurlti almoKt iu weight In gold.
This ualtla a the crime tha la and
Uio p to. At let in the judgment
wMu t il i dr It !
ror iiHtnihs tha UUnoU cvntral was
idanalba tills thioir. d already a W
tfloalug h it 's tuada UaUy toes ui
ou tuus oi earth ar dumped Idta tla
lasn aud tn water r:w l. Th ra I
road no a i3..mrl very footof tha lka
hor trm Tullth irt to Jai'k
t ara. tinni I winirid tf Iha riarlo
Uht svtea.Ud o-ljr ti Ihlrtt atuth
tUv-t, lt a tha hor Una ws twugrtt
u rtti nrt sn-'tv At that poUt Hia
iraik tf thalUtwis I vuiral ta
k tr th la rvui tMty Crt
to Jaia.oa pak ttterw was ao e
Wbiv reUeuo UUtrlct llog h-tae a
the ra lro.! J thu la, t hi ri
tliM ii rt at d tl strvat Uter
e ltf t tbu IKInoi IVntral
iHHihl mMt if ll.l tt has b.meht thu
tl i Iwefttf -thrva Uel uf S'a'U
wklvh Utiu.Ut'ii d tr(cto tha eaat.
ILHiyht It ery lly a4 UO'HUaa
tuml u bw sure, hut very prverlaj
iy.
A f.i ).lat l. tinuU la the
baa's ef p'ltata o'a, it fwS
Motwtur ihrip ore raly uudetwaf and
ill H ennicu ud tw'. Morli tga'a
httiiut oatrt l l alt uf lake
frtutai waa not tha ultimate ta t vf
these purchases. Onoe having the orig
inal lake shore under its control it
would not be dllTcult for this corpora
tion to extend the shore line into the
limit of navigable water. Not difficult
tnougn quite contrarv to the laws maae
and provided by the United States gov
ernment. To nod a dumping ground
for the vast amount ot ashes and other
refus Incident to the running of soma
hundreds of trains daily has always
been a problem with the Illinois Central
railroad. By dumping these accumula
ttons along the lake shore not only
would they be cheaply and conveniently
disposed of, but two square miles of
land, worth at the loweat possible esti
mate 1100,361, 25li. would be created.
That it would be done in direct viola
tion of tbe law was the least of the
company's worries. In extending spurs,
building side tracks, and repairing
roadbeds It always happens that hun
dreds of car loads of. earth buvo been
drawn away, Tho c inpany figured
tbat tbls could be utilized as top dress
ing to the ashes whbh were to form
the subsoil, the foundations of tbe
tract It would create, The plans were
matured long ago, Beginnings were
made long ago, The completion of the
job is In sight. It is all being done
very quietly, very skillfully,
The Way Out of the Woods,
Blair, Neb., May 18, 180.
Editor Wealth Makers:
Somebody Is la the woods and don't
know the way put. It may be myself;
I don t know. Possibly it ii the other
fellows, ; I want you for, I know no
other man more capable than yourself
to snow me tne way out. if it is tne
other fellows who ara in tbe woods,
then I propose to show them tbe way
out. Possibly we are all blind and will
tumble in tha ditch together.
I stand on tha first sixteen words of
the land plank of tbe Omaha platform
Here they are; "Tho land, Including
all the natural resources of wealth, is
tha heritage of all the people. . '
Now , it Is an admitted fact tbat the
great mass of tbo people have been rob
bed, cheated and swindled out of this
tbelr rightful heritage, Monopoly in
land has robbed them. And you would
just as well try to make a hickory shad
climb a persimmon tree tall foremost as
to expect peace, contentment aid pros
parity among the masses until each has
restored to him his Inalienable right to
a spot of earth on which to live.
The masses not excepting Coxey and
all his lieutenants have not opened
their eyes to tbe fact that the distresses
arising: from enforced idlenn-e are
caused by ignoring and denying to each
individual bis natural, Inalienable, im
prescriptible, God-given right to a spot
of earth on which to earn a living. Tbe
denial of tbls right forces the landlcn
classes to bid against each other for the
opportunity to work to keep from starv
ing-
There is but one way out ot the
woods, namely, mort of the ptoplt must
tarn their Ifoinn by cultieating thi toil.
Tha main question to bo decided Is this:
Shall these tillers of the soil be tenants
living in huts and giving half of their
earnings to the landlords for tho 'priv
ilege ot working to keep from starving,
or bhall they hold a porpetual leae
from tho government for a limited
amount ot land for which they shall
pay into tbe puutlo treasury say one par
cent per annum of what his holding
cost the government?
To show bow this scheme may he In
augurated, lot me give as illustration:
town a farm In Hurt county that 1
would not sail and vacate fur ten th"u
at d di liars. 1 would sell that farm to
tbe government for one thousand and
take the pa la greenbacks, prold-d
the government will give me a leaaa ot
tha same, I paying hue not leas than
one nor tnorv than threw per cent, p r
annum on thti amount he paid ma for
the land. And I will biud uslf and
mv heirs to pay all taxr, keep th
premises ta good repair and not lt a
cue klit burr oor a sunuower go to sed
tin tha t!ao. Now suppa all tha
land owaor tf Hurt couaty should da
the ro lulnf Muutle tha amount
that any a maa should Teas ft tha
goveraufat ti noi mora man iu at m,
who would t lejured y pnsl
ur'f It M!fl that vh olisn of the
t'ulld tilaU would bar ait Interest
la ail th land In Mjru4oty, a tauch
i a tho who, o ouj t; hu the twmt
at would r tritatU tit th other
or th taturet thy had la It
l eki.tMi j it a tnr-4!r a twa ny
theory I u"V fatty ! frtH. I hav
J i.t ha4 wwrat tnoutatd priatsj for
a ult-Hi dt trtbutio.t. If a thenre
a tel farth la tha wlWuUr, ta not tha
H t PCM ble, waut ym tu a 't
U tter t la th iiiiuma m Til a
Vl.tlt MKia u potatout It a,
(et-; tbett I IU tuia wif atteattoa i
tha f coinage t th !,, aoruieat
oairhlptt ra h ad, A , .V
lour t r th rljfM.
Jai Oki'K,
(Vir B ekaelrJ!af Isp ta'eJ it this
lu. A' a UvtU rir rv-ler In
aiwlU l1,ttv Wastitt MAKktti)
NO. 512
mm
FAVORITISM
Tha Populist Part Demands Money For
AH Borrowsrs at Cost,
OREGON SOW L0ASS ON LAUD.
How Bankers Chow Rich, and Farmers
v Woik Ha d and Gain Nothing.
Interesting Census Figures
Regarding Wealth.
Ooverninent fans,
dovernor Penuoyer of Oron mad a not a
hi fopulut speech ta about I0,U)Q people la
I'orUand rarsniljr, from wbtoli we iuta be
tow.-Kdltur vrsiam Makiud,
The government now loans money
only to the national banker. When he
wants money ne goes to the go ve en
nui tit and pawns his bondsat sine tenth
their face value. He receives his
money and leaves Ms bonds in paw.
The Populist party demand that this
exclusive favoritism shall cease. They
demand that every person having good '
security shall be placed on an equality
with the national banker, If the gov
ernment should follow tbe example of
tbe stat of Oregon, which loam its IV
500,000 of school money upon Improved
farm property In amounts not toes ed
f. 000 to any one person and at one
third of the appraised valua of tbe
property, there could be no safer loan
possible, and tbe effect would bo both
far-reaching and beneficial. - It la not
an experiment. The practicability anf,
usefulness of tha schema have been
most fully demonstrated here In this
state, And something cf this kind
must be done swn, or th money-loan-eri
will own tha' whole land and all
other classes will beoonao their tenants
and slaves, liven monarchical Russia
was compelled to adopt this plan to save .
Kb peasantry farmers from ruin.
Frank G. Carpenter, the noted syndi
cate writer, In an article which appeared
IV 'Vhe Oregoalan, October 20, ISUZ
said; "The government (Russia) has ft
land bank which loans money to the
peasants In order that they may pur
chase latid. This bank was opened
about ton years ago, and It makes loans
to both Individuals and to villages.
Tbe government puts about 12,500,000
into it every year, and since its organi
zation it has made ovtr 500,000 loans
to more than 200,000 families. In addi
tion to this there are various ways ct
loaning money to farmers, and the gov
ernment of Russia makes advances on
grain stored la warehouses or delivered
to otMals of the several railroads In
the country. . . , This system of
loans has been going on now for more
than four years. It is very popular,
and a great many of the peasants take
advantage of It.
It Is no wonder that they do so, lux 'he
charges are much lest than those ot the
usurers, who abound In every district of
Russia, and who are sucking the life
blood out ot tbe people," I. li indeed
somewhat humiliating toour pride, who
olalm to be the most enlightened people
of the earth, that we are compelled to
goto Australia for a perfect system of
voting, to Switzerland for a just system
of making laws, to Austria lor a needed
system ot government depositories, and
to Rula tor ft most arc try system
ot loaning money to (he pop!r. Let
the government accede to the demand
of the people and loau money, as in
Oregon and tluMta, on landed properly
at a rate not exceeding I per cent, and
In llmtud amount ta each person, and
establish government dt piltorl4 a la
Austria, pay leg notestovedtag g per e&t.
interest on deilla, and a peffeet (laaa
rial system wilt U) Ubithed that will
bath prutevt the borroaer and th ds
puttur, acd jleU a princely revenue to
tha governttuHtt, which, toa j great
iteat, would reflate the eop! frvot
UiaiUa (or Its support, wad which
would arrest IN ft aiful tendaavy In
tht wastry ta th eom-aolraltoa of
wealth tn the bauds it a few, Avrd'
g to tha vhsus reports U lft', V) psr
. l the paotde had VI ir !t. f
tha wvaltb. wL'.'a i pat ha,l th
reRtalblag H r . at , leading ml twre
ttiam i in t vxtit i (h is. t'he tu
of h) thoa that W fc'f tfaat art U
tug fiww ad t nu..th, I no Ua Iy
a t(ra, while 10 i-'t e. own 1 pf
Cat. tt tha w)U Tm S"u ftiteat
tariff legUlaUaa hat rvp.nlo.'e
itHiHiw4 a -a tt,