The Wealth makers of the world. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1894-1896, July 12, 1894, Image 3

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    4
THE WEALTH
i
?
ft
THE
WEALTH MAKERS.
New Serie of
THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT,
Consolidation of th
fcizas AlllaicesMiastaliiieptiiflest
PUBLISHED
EVERT THURSDAY
BT .
The Wealth Makers Publishing Company,
ito II Stmt, Lincoln. Neb.
Cdltor
niuinoH tnairar.
c A m 'iv uiinu,, r.."
J.B. HTATT Advertlaing ngr.
Ononoa Hew abo Omo,
Okas, t. ourrw,
i
ft.
rt hit nun most tall for me to rise,
mi aeek I not to climb. Another'! pain
I choose cot for mr food. A golden ehUn.
A obe of honor, la too good a prize
fv tempt my haatj hand to do wrong
' Unto a fellow man. Tata life hath woe
sufficient, wrought by man' laUnlo fee;
Ai4 who that bath a heart would dare prolong
or add a sorrow to a stricken aoul
That seeks a healing balm to make It whole?
Ky bosom owns the brotherhood of man.
N. i P. A.
if
' Publteherw Annonnnemant.
The subscription price of Th WSAwa
Makbrs is Sl.Wper year, In advance.
in solfcltlng sibacrlptlons should be
vm-v careful that ail names are correctly
m .iimi ud nrouer ooatofflce given, maniis
ft t return subacrlptlons, return envelopes,
anew mh aval nnn nn kiiiii tuauiu u aw ium vauwa
itnavi iiam vnnr mama, nu txiavvot
ton yon write us do not neglect this Import
j matter. Bvery week we receive letters
Ah lDAomnlete addreaaes or without signa-
JTCSM
05 THE YOLOIBO'B EDGE.
We are as a nation resting on the edge
of a volcano, and not even a slumbering
volcano. The Inalienable right of every
man to life and liberty, recognized by
the founders of the nation, bat been
disregarded by our corrupted lawmak
ers, and millions of our people during
the year past have in Tain sought a
place to work that they might live in
dependently, or that they might save
themselves from a choice between pau
perism and crime. Many unemployed
hare been driven to suicide in their
utter desperation. Many more have
starved to death, or have died from
anxiety, overwork, lnsunclent nutri
tionclothing and shelter, and from
unnanttArv surroundings which the
poor are forced to accept.
Charity has been appsaled to as never
before, and has proven Itself, as H
alwavs does, utterly inadequate to
remedy injustice.
Flaming forth from these conditions
are the visible dangers of the present
In the town of Pullman, owned by one
man, live about 9,000 families whom be
has made entirely dependent on his will
for their very existence. They nave
been forced to submit to reductions in
wacrea 2S to 50 ner cent, while in the
mean time their rents, water bills. Ac.,
Duke Pullman has not correspondingly
reduced, has not reduced at all. They
endured this until increasing debt and
the limit of their credit made further
livin? uoon wares dictated by tbeir
millionaire master a degradation and
suffering which they could not endure,
And so, being organized to stand by
any number of men. Private em
ployers cannot keep men at work, be
cause they demand more purchasing
power from the wage-earqers than they
pay them. Hence wage-earners cannot
draw out of the market as much as
their labor produces, and production in
consequence Is periodically stopped.
The government, however, Is not seek
ing profits on Its capital, and the en
tire product of its employes Is there
fore distributed among them and they
can buy back as much as they produce,
and so can be kept at work. t If the
government had last fall put the un
employed at work they would not have
been a burden to anyone, they would
how dare we
od'swUl? Christ
rty, accumulated
Pita with Him,
ruction, had one
Itted this to re-
thief, but tt was
and we consider
possess our own. B
question that this Is C
had no private propt
nothing. The disci
living under His lnst
purse. He even pern
main In the hands of
kept so nearly emi tf
tintr ... -i.i.IH..!l not being min
isteredunto, was the eXftmPl6 a,Ten u
by the perfect man. AJndth,thou,n
who believed in Chn P nd "11
His Spirit at Pentecoed iim
were by that Knlrlt lLr w "ve " He
- . . .1
iiothlnar that weLuir m v .1 l -
f - . i v w au iwoir mm men
rule and are selfish.
Bat It Is not simply thai they may
seoure the same degree of jlstlce which
men demand for themaelvfcs that we
wouia place In each womanlt hand the
ballot which makes heroarJ The ballot
is me neceasar lntrnm a At.,t .
8 h. ii. ai. I .. ' .i. uiiuwi
r uu. uiwe personality or unit of the skiai state
? '.aoi ffet- the Instrument not alone If defense!
but Of political PrOffreal ilmmrd mnA
into "tne KeDub lo of r.nA I xxr. v
per-
the Kepublio of God."
mereiy u.ia me foundations df the
have Uken care of themselves, kept up Wed by property un8hflred had I of oppression and build up the walls of
lived; and so living, iTot elflehJy dl- its use we are to tear dews the statutes
feet social state that Is to be
1 i .
iot is our instrument to ex
growing moral convictions.
The bal-
press eur
Through
wages for all, helped the market great
ly, and we would have been saved the
loss and ruin that have come to us.
Incomplete addreaaes or wuuouv bu- - -, ; ; . , "
and It is sometimes difficult to locate eacn 0tber at brothers, they struck for
rw Awnm n iiniiui. Subscribers wlshlag
'i t chanae their postofflce addreas must always
. five toelr former as well as their present ad
" 4fess when change will be promptly made.
PEOPLE'S IKDEPEHDEST PAETY
STATE OOHVEHTIOJT.
Lwcoui, Neb., May 18, 18M.
The People's Independent electors of the
mull at Nebraska are hereby reaueited to
tact and send delegates from their respective
counties to meet In convention at the city o
Grand Island, Web., on Friday, Auguit
St, at 10 o'clock a. m for the purpose of noml
oatlng candidates tor the following state om
a cere, vie: Governor, lieutenant-governor sec-
. retary of otate, tnaeurer, auditor, attorney,
'' .general, commissioner of public lands and
buildings and superintendent of public in'
' strmctlon; and tor the transaction of any other
business which may properly come before the
-' , i convention.
r L Tbt Aaala of representation will be one dele
JT'f at large from each county in the state and
Vuiddltlonal aelegate for each one hundred
V , votes, or major fraction thereof, cast In 1893
I ' Hon. Silas A. Holcomb for judge of the su
.hjkeue court, which gives the following vote
' counties: .
11
SO
A(UU14
Antelope
Banner
SlAlne
Boone ,
Box Butte.. ......
Boyd
! Brown
Buffalo. ...... ...,-.
THTt L
cam T?r:ii
Cedar
Chase..
Cherry
Cheyene.
Clay
Oolfax.
fuming.....!
Coster ..
Dakota.
Dawes-.
Dawson
Deuel.......
12i Johuaon... , .
10 Kearney....
?i Kelts .
"t '
). 14
f 6
... 2ft
... 2
Dixon..
Dodge
Douglas...
Dundy....
f KUlmore .
Hv franklin .
I I! Frontier.,
f Ji Pnrnas....
Gage
Uartteld..
i iionoer....
1 1 " Grant
I
I I Hamilton ,
aaU
.
Howard.!!.. ..'i si
' Jefferaon 7l
Kfrafaha ..
Kimball
Knox
M Lancaster. ...
Lincoln. ,
Logan.
Loup
Maotaon ,
McPberaon..
jjMerrlck..
jance .
Nemaha
Nuckolls......
Otoe
Pawnee..
Perkins
Phelps. .......
Pierce
Platte....
Polk
Red Willow..
Rlcharoson...
Rock
Saline , ...
aarpy
Saunders. ...
Scotts Bluff...
Seward ....
Sheridan. ....
herman
Ileus
Stanton.,
Thayer
Thomas
1 hurt) ton.....
Valley
Washing too..
Wayne
Webster
Vheeler
York
. 7
.. 10
. 4
. 4
. t
. 9
. 27
. 12
. 2
. 2
. 10
. 2
. 7
. 8
. II
. II
.12
. 7
. e
12
. 5
. 10
. 12
, 8
. 8
. 8
. 10
7
18
, 8
, 11
10
0
3
4
7
1
2
8
e
4
11
2
18
Total 781
J We would recommend that no proxies be al
I lowed, but that the delegates present cast the
V full vote to which their respective countlea are
entitled.
- JSBOIBTOW, D. CLSM D14V1B,
Secretary. Chairman.
This week we send a solloltor into
the f eld, Mr. H. E. Dawes, who first
goes out over the Elkhorn Valley It. R
flr. Dawes Is prinoipal of one onr Lln-
fltf-Shools and is a couila of Ex-Gov-
pernor Dawes. He is, moreover, a Pod-
ulUt clear through, whose heart Is In
the work of spreading the gospel of
Populism, Any oourtettles and assist
ance our friends la the field can extend
v to Mr. Dawes will be a kindness to uh.
Loa Day must be election day,
) great strike at the belli t box is
swnat is needed.
V Tub Ttias Populists outnumber
-T those of any state la the Union and
, j Yhey held a convention June 20. which
M proportionally Immeos. The
'delegates aumbered 1.100, Hon. T. L.
I Nugent was aoalaated for governor.
(J'and I tLoroufh golsg Popultat platform
(wm adopted. Texas Democracy U
, ts'uiy Hiaiawgrutiof anj ius upuilil
(arty Is o the short rvi to bucom.
rnmsmmmmmmmmm
IK) tni orgaalied workers of this
eountry observe that the old parly
prets Is rraiy to oruah them whenever
Uey dUpuU terms with the great cr-
V. , .1,...
; rerj lat Pupullsl paper and voter I
y V full syaipalhy wltt) thetar They are
L'ow aotvetag thle, we doubt al, and It
J saeaas imi a tnituoi votes added to
a from the raaki of the ellv worker
llVe3.
living wages. The strike began May
10, after an ineffectual effort to secure
a restoration Oi wages w a teas
living basis. Pullman played the auto
crat. Pullman must have dividends,
dividends upon a vast amount of
watered stock as well. The power was
in bis hands to crush, to subdue, to
reduce to abjeot slavery by means of
the property laws which protected
him and the scourge of starvation
which be could force most cruelly upon
the families whose unrequited labor
had made him a multl-mllllonalre,
Bravely the Pullman workers stood
together, and peacefully, until their need
and suffering celled forth the sympathy
of the whole powerful organization of
the American Railway Union, to which
they belonged. A sympathetic strike
was decided on at a given date if Pull
man would not, prior to that time, arbi
trate the questions at Issue with his
striking employes. The A. K U. has
130,000 members. All railway employes
are In it, engineers, firemen, brakemen,
conductors, switchmen. &c, and when
by a ms jority vote of their own askem
blies (not by dictation of President
Debs, as the corporation press falsely,
milloiouslv states) they refused to
handle Pullman palace cars the rail
roads of the entire central and western
par t of the United States were paralyzed
Bear In mind that the Rillway Mana-
erara' Association, comprising, we be
lieve, nearly thirty great railroad cor
porations, conspired to help Pullman
crush his employes, and whereated and
resolved that tbey would haul Pullman
attachments to their trains, or they
would not in any case haul the rest of
the train, including the U. S. mall. And
they confidently expected that the gov
ernors, Secretary of War, the Attorney
general and the President would allow
them to refuse to carry the mails and
oompel the strikers to handle the Pull
mans on the pretext that they could not
be separated from the mail and other
coaches. All the A. R. U. refused to do
was to handle the hated Pullman
property, which was being used to crush
their fellow workers.
The power of the A R. U. has proved
greater than the corporations antlol
pated; but they are stubborn, and being
anxious to begin the conflict with or
ganized labor, they will put forth all
their power and fight to the bitter end.
Thty are fighting for th$
thtif power to dictate all
tmployu. The struggle for more
than a week has been a Titanic
war, and the waste and injury have
been vast. Violence, not on the part
of the strikers but on the part of the
lawless, made anarchists largely by
corporation rule, has spread, and much
property has gone up In smoke, and
many have been killed and wounded In
Chicago by the soldiery. This violence
has not been Incited by the A, 11. U. and
is not oondoned by them. It la not
their work, though of course charged
up to them by the corporation press.
The end Is not yet. The future looks
blaek and threatening. Organised U
bor, trade unions of every variety, W
ftdera'lons In Chtoago, and extending
all over the country, walk out Wtloee
day morning if Pullman refuses to ar hi
Irate before that Una. And It Is all to
overthrow the ktogly power which
rapt Wtltt aed corporations iturae q
have both legal and divine right to,
v i , the power to dlutau ws lorms to
their employee. The corporations ttaad
together to compel workmen lo earn
dividends lor Ulte stockholder. The
work met stand together lo establish
the claim that men must live before
dividends are paid.
Sli.'lt-UWTO-'UJ'.HWIUH
Taunt le no Industry which
THE 0AU8E OF IT ALL
Many men In the confusion of the
present struggle and the continuance of
the awful conditions which prevent a
revival of Industry and business take it
for granted that the evils which are
upon us came In the course of nature,
or if artificially produced that the
causes are so obscure and remote that
tbey cannot be certainly discovered.
It is not so, however.
The people who need to purchase
have not the money- to buy the goods
that are in the markets. Therefore the
demand for labor Is out off. If the peo
ple whose product are now In the
market had received and held money
equivalents for their goods, they oould
and would have bought back ..their en
tire product, and production and ex
change would go on forever without a
possibility of obstruction.
Why did tbey not receive as much
labor purchasing power as they gave'
Simply because a certain class monop
olize the natural resources, the means
of production, transportation and ex
change, and they demand capital tri
bute, profits, rents, interest, dividends,
from the workers. The consequence Is.
the workers can buy back not as much
as they produce, but as much as tbey
produce less these net profits which go
to the capitalists and landlords. And
as the capitalists, landlords and money
kings go on accumulating the money
waicn is needed by the workers to
empty the markets, panics are precipi
tated and periods of business depression,
enforced ldleoets and wide-spread, most
terrhle suffering follow, with a notice
able degree of regularity. Injustice
is at the bottom of It all, the Injustice
of demanding more value, more lhbor,
more purchasing power of the workers
than the men in power will give.
The remedy is to show this monopoly
demand to be sin, the blackest sin, sin
that is terrible in it effect; and laws
which will shut off the causes of panics
and enforoed idleness must be voted for.
A government banking system would
stop the taking of usury or interest and
save that enormous amount to relieve
the market glut. A land tax could and
should prevent the private accumula
tions of rent and land speculation, and
would throw open unused lands to the
people, still farther and vastly helping
the demand for goods. The railroads
bought up and operated by the govern
ment at cost would leave still more
money In the hands of the people with
which to empty the markets; and the
mines and oil wells and other monopo
lized common stores If purchased under
eminent domain and made free or oper
ated at cost for the people, would reduce
the expense of the workers and still
farther Increase their wealth. ..
These are the great sins, evils and
remedies which must be proclaimed and
preached to all, and when so placed be
fore them that the people all understand
definitely the causes of our calamities,
the forces of good and evil will grapple
in the final conflict
great favor with God ai
Now Is there anythi
uneconomical, unwise,
such a way of living?
We answer that it la
nomic, scientific law of
oute surpluses and ac
MKuwwusneis. xne ballot la a. nni
ig unscientific weapon. thould therefore i -
impossible la hand of every moral htlnn. ituih. i.
"ST MV IV
strument by which human statutes
must be mad to conform to thenatura),
eternal, perfeot law of God; therefore
all who have moral sense and nunn
should be allowed to dm iL wn.
the wise, eco-
lety to dlstrl-
umulate only
communis! caoital. ThVJ WD0 we
to accept Christ's way ald ccunulte en lo great numbers, through defective
for themselves and famlf f'' "wtbard- moral education, doubtless aretaot ssk
a their hearts, must ciT!1,11 men- lna tot the ballot, but as it Ishhe in-
. . ... - Bf lAaaa 1aa a.nU .4 . ft. ... ... I
ness, must reel the fear or v" eiruiuent py wnich evil la toi be de-
bery and the natural destfJct,,re eBt- tn'oned and right enthroned, lis It Is
Tbey throw away the etaf" ' V", "e power which is to restore all natu-
also, and accept the stair1 01 com" rw r'hts to the oppressed poor and es-
petlng force, or force erlv.BroBea ana utDiisb the social erder which Is per-
... sWl ! IIL.k sL I i..a . .
Ing system ettabllshed during the -
to enslave the wholis people, the hlctoJ
of State bank wildcWt mooev.
Oen. Vandervoortfs little book eiouli!
be in the hands of all, because It eca
talns In convenient oomnaa a.-. .,..
form (the book Is but 25 t
tlon whl:h can be obtained In o ntw
one book, so far as we know. anJ h.
cause it Is arranged in a plain. s1ieb!
manner to give light to all ud
way the confusion which the csliiaj
press and money monopolist ha.. 1
their own interest crea'ed. XV 1...,
Hy commend the book. It does not a.
ome might fear, teach the intrinsic
value sophism, or that Bacor
must be redeemed in coin.
the waste of suoh a strugP1 u ,lk th
waste of war. They who
and truttone another, mus
one another. But if we
ope another we shall coml
refuse to love
fear and fight
ve and trust
together and
constitute a Christian comsun,t' wh,ob
will delight to distribute
duction to care for all Its y
ac2 lok and unfortunate.
nizlng It to be our prlvlle
to minuter to all Che wan
turpi us pro-
)ung and old
(And reoog-
'jh attjfl Ant &
gjbw smasjia umj
of Christian
brethren, each of us" lu trpn,wiU
I . . .
wi, toey can not refute to use It and
oe innocent. j
As moral convictions are not of the
masculine gender, are not confined to
the male sex, the ballot (whlcb, preperly
used, voices the moral convictions) be
longs not to the men only. As tb obli
gation to help the weak, the lgnerant,
the oppressed Is a universal obiicrittlon.
resting upon all men and women,! and
tne oauot is the most powerful as iwell
as the first absolutely necessary clans
lovingly cared for when a3C&?6Dt H to rescue and uplift them, women i
disease or failing powers take us ouf.v'
L I ... . a ,
vuo rants vi me producing sna minis'
tering ones. 8 distributing all we do
not need would not impoverish us, but
it would Insure returns of loving ser
rice according to the full measure of
our need, and all could live as God
would have them, without care and
anxiety.
He who accumulates against future
uncertain, unmeasurable need must ire
others poor around him and refuse to
pity; be dare not love; he never knows
bow mean and ungenerous he must
needs be to provide against possible
lOHses and unknown needs and expem t
"Lay not up for yourselves treasures
on earth, where moth and rust doth
corrupt and where thieves break
through and steal." Distribute your
surpluses with those who lack. "For
mean not that other men be eased and
ye burdened: but by an equality, that
now at this time your abundance may
be a supply for their want, that their
abundance also may be a supply for
your want, that there may be an equality
as it is written lie that .had gathered
much bad nothing over, and he that
had gathered little had no lack."
"Seek first the kingdom of God whose
law is love. Allow none in the kingdom
to be poorer than yourself James 2; 15
-17 and his righteousness, and all
these things useful productions of every
sort shall be added unto you." "By
love serve one another," Instead of, by
power gain from one another.
Are there any of our readers who
would like to communize their capital
and organize a Christian community up
on land adjoining Lincoln, where we
could produce all that the Nebraska
soil and climate will produce, carrying
on the most wolentlflo and economic
general and special farming, Including
fruit and stock raising, and where we
oould build up other industries, such
as the laundry, bakery, confeotlon,
broom making, and other businesses, 4
community where we could
ust
must learn how to Ui Jt
live An
equals, the wisdom of the wisest br-if
4
use It and
isely.
en and women must be broufhv to
getbeti tD6 bUot box and social! by
recognlB w equality of obllgann
to evolve ouV present recognized prk
clples the pe8(,t order of society. The
sexes now live IP Prate moral lad
social spheres, yei0 mOftl sphert is
really one; therefor tbere is need lo
unite, to insphere, as it were, the r(
separate six circles of' jpoUl act in.
Men have moral influence . well i i
women. They hare the baliC alio t
crystallize their moral con vie tb" lit?
law. Women have moral InfluenS Ut
THE PB0BLEM OF LIFE-
We have bad pressing upon our mind
no Isduivry whleh the
gevereueat might not put the unem
ployed at work la, femlag, maeufae
turiag, treat portlnc. prod log capital,
ard keep thtat self supp-ir ting were.
preiertaiton or for years the problem of a rlo-ht sooia.1
terms to' their order, the ouestlon. Knw nuoht m.n n
. " ' I " m W
live? A vast number of us have come
to see that the Individualistic, compet
itive lystem is wrong, Is the cause of
the evils which a ill let us all. How then
must we esoape from it? How can we
obey the command, "Thou shall love
thy neighbor as thyself?" These are
the questions which confront us.
Our neighbors need our love. We
need at much, te muoh. the love of our
neighbors. Then why not begin to
love one another, really, actively, in
service?
The answer will probably be, we dare
not trutt others to love us as we wUh
to love and be loved. But love beget
love, does II not "re love Him )r
cause He first loved us. Cblldrff7.e
their parent because the parent r.nt
bear and eare for then la their ferlcd
ofmed. There I an Infinite i'S erwoee
between love aad charity, w'hartly,
when very charitable, glrei tenth t4
lie surplus to relieve dSeVeea. Lave
gives nil lu surplus, all fflle teniae.
and hoos to lite sj the it lovee
must live. Love V?$ op, aad levels
down,
We think iMfrjUWele, a v let!
mated, that wot, peeeeatdare netlruat
each other! Oj the ra wt date out
trust eflhC.r UbKaua we da nat
1 now ea tfei. If we were ah
solutelteelaUi titat twrnaJvatloi Mutt
eepen a d'-irltwUoi prwaeat svir-
pJuTJ with nvr hreihrta who terk, wt
wd tta aa the) early dkclr'e 4.4.
w T V
used to serve all Instead of to prey vpon
alL In such a oommunltf, btrlrC
common interest, the writer f to
live and love and work. "Bfvaj one
another's burdens and so fultVthe law
of Christ."
Let us hear from thoseaoare ready
and anxious and console jej driven so lo
live. Care Is killing y. Fear of want
1 brutalizing us.JVordeaa of alalia
in two states only of the Union arelb.
allowed a moral will, a will which
counted at the ballot box. It Is des-l
potlo and unnatural
the order of the moral
moral beings a voice,
the settlement of moral ques'tions. The
ballot is the voice, the srlll,. of one in
dividual, one only. Each free moral
individual must have one vote. The
marriage relation doe not destroy In
dlviduallty, does not merge the moral
sense of the wife iu that of her husband,
does not make htm her moral lawgiver
m
ana ruier. -
The woman was formerly a slays.
Man, because of superior brute strength,
ruled over her. It was not because God
commanded it, but beoause man was
selfish and Ignorant and hard of heart
The moral law is over all and when
men' aad women recornlxe a moral
aw they are equally under it and to be
governed by It, and neither is to inter
- a. Mm. e . a ( . am .
pret 11 iorine otner. woman is no
longer a ekvers until the ballot Is
given hes? sho y inlnj in an Inferior
state, ; ljr$ ra fre condition.
Her lEa'. lo-f .Uuality i reoog
nizti. ; r'A Us no orm& pin. no
wT.llBdrgnJzdii)oiety. Shelit-rcUl
( k .L . - ... i. a . - I
i Mint ua aw via too narrow a eiri
way, KB (Y0 grtppue; with tta
frert qucar cf the rlht social oriir,
atoclton of men la jutl:."
Qoestlona nprtl, political, eciaocilcil.
edaeationd( the quests of vlul, an
groaslcj, rsfinlte latsrcct to etch aU
every individual, fill lham'.ndt civoUre.
But wocan, beeaun they am not voters,
take eoaparatlvely llttla interest in
these questions. When together they
talk) moat of the f ashltat, of the car of
baes, ef neighborhood news. And
'Then the sex meet they bridge the
HE IIITIATIVE AND EEIX2X3DUIT.
This is a time wben Deoola think h.A
and fast. We have been thinkin. th..
way lately, and we have
conclusion that the people of all partlee-
mu ne up and demand the Initiative
and Referendum, the means of direct
legislation. Is there a man who does
not see that there are great number cf
good men In all parties, men who know
wnat evils, oppressions, enslaving few
er exist, and who would be glad torn
against them, one at a time, if they
oould get a chance, but they are either
not educated up to or they are educated
agalnit more or less that tuS
demands? There la no ; way tinier
party-ruled government, party strife for
the offices, party ffrounln of m'
nd tb arraying of reform ara.
against esch other, to bring all of es.V
mind together. Under the rule of par
ties the land with its natural ream, 1
the basis of independence, tha rrtiim-t
of liberty, ha been taken from euro,
than half of our people he nndergrouri
stores for all have been secured kj tin,
few; the means of communication, tms
portatlon and exchange aro
and most of th remaining portlsa (Ic
than half) of our people, who bwt for
tbese and allied monosollea woau .
Independent, are being regularly rcb
bed of their productions and reduced t
a state of poverty and increasing dependence.
Now there I just one war br wfc!-v
the people who egree on an mi.
of legislation can get together asl 11
oure that legislation, aad aske tlj t
walityn govmnnt of the nf f.
we must get rid of party tla-u-a
politicians. Wo must aton btm.i,..
our reforms, and we must rcfrsa t
trust tbem to the oare of our ao-callii
teib wives, we must be abl in.
it VnbVtZZrU,n V0ta 9 rraVox.
w yototo fef St ver I
w v. i.swf...M- 'rjffwtuf -V l,i , a
handed struggle f je orushlBj us. Zilpbtkw which eepiraUt their ajitrtl
vatlon can oomMaiy by ioiaisg hati'll
heads, hearts (1 nosasxioaa. f ff
iQUAii::n3 aid trtru
wi Popullsti kearUly, ietr.
vediy Jleve in the t quai rights tf in
dlvkjsU? Do we hello It a'deiaa-
crvo form of govs rs meal H wktch
Uuh person of sousd alad u f atcura
'ge snail have a voloe, a r Vf It
oo not w are mi ooatisie i w are
not hoaeel with oureelvwA'
The writer believe w"jf aUhU heart
la a government of all.foeU,by all. Aad
w do not admit that "air Uoludee ealy
the msaJtiUne gender, Thai gender
eoatalae ke that) M, the people, Aro
not the women of Asaoriea eltltets,
euai Id right (tod duties, equal la
motel lateUIgeaov and par el volition
wUh tbelr brothers Yet they muet
mm obey th law wile eU!ur ev
aor their choaea lepretaatiUvei Uve
made. They nwi ?ty laita, ihotesl
denied the right to sty to what tee
Ihuee Use, their own aarnli's, sitil
Hit, They are ea?3l!ej nUt
a ide law to do Us ess werk tu
leeawsofe titn aro t4 c;a. Tiry
of thou; fit u tut tlty can. It Is c:a
rally small Ulk, htator, causfilmext--aoi
fellowship cf spirit and txchat?
ef lisu.
Lot us reach out manly tzzli to our
iiwri nxi rest-xklrj tin cur ctrsl
nun I tie simo axil cur Ixtcrtx'j tzs
glv them i!t crown cf UiivliieJ
tie sjttr cf esrsJ frrtir tzl r
toiiUty, tU liitrt-txl ly mV -.ry
un Uvo n wUI vA U C,-.nl,
ys::4ti. en'sl er;lan. Lr r a re
rl txotr eyiral f rttisa, (.1 heeee
tlr aeoeeaary place utl ; J la the
oraaloitaio. liorsJe..iy rtqulree
political cqnallty. j
'
aro not yntt:sv4 In licJr tr:
pmjseiVy t jostle tdtttcl rljhU
Uea, Paul Va-f jfvorl, Comsnaader
ef the Uluetr"; Leglo of Atoerlwa,
Us just puh!4 a little beadboolc of
grtal valoe CUed, Cae for Hi Meul
kzx T7tU' bad tlmeU.oii batUly
erinUr hut tad they aie earthed
rt Hoiiloa, glvlag siausni
tf I1 . "oal fact aad th onlatci cJ
-1 winds, hlen eaezenllua uf
; Jahle toforaeUoa rwepvcUt ih
ry 01 the various ncy ksue.
rj alr vuluw aad law, fyhv,izs f
Ehti.llh baakerswho gollr MntsX aeek-
pe'Mooere demand It. T7o etui ti '
the itmpoMetvm fr?";--"-',
more and preeldcnte, Ul tt t;:'i ix.
our own hands, and so crevti! try Ur
or ordinance of importsss t:lrx ex
acted which tho usjoriJy da t;t f.:rr.
SwltEerlaEd, the o!iet rtrxr., i
doing this, has teste lla ttirtst lr"
tion plan for a period of ytsn, tX li,
worka perfeotly. Ttry tare no trrx.:
with party machines and iTC' ltfJi
politicians. But few laws aro tzziK
and those enacted aro notsaliy ti
people's will. Laws pasted hy the rep
resentatives of the piople aro referred
to the people and vetoed in tbelr putUo
assemblies If they are not what the
msjorlty will. Just as fast as the ma
jority are educated up to the point V
seeing the need of a new law, or the re
peal of laws that work injustice, they
can and do record their will. Mo power
can there prevent the people of cse
mind upon any question getting to
gether, and If tbey aro in a majority la
iylslon cf the nation upon thai cz
Ctheir will, by themealvta tt
rr; -prtd, is from th data cf its
aprt Zi Ire of IL land.
Nowllbv :Ct vs to do
nrty wii r"-"-" ,-nty r iliasry ,
uiawofttOc: jfft jlawa In
to err own tzzlu A,.ijrnl;IjleotiBj
lwf a! nzrtizz's' .J, wt vl at our
dizl (ky r- tlsa f lair)
milnctadct-'J to our atot and nn
Itsul tzzz.zu wtUh ah all thorn
after lavf k arching end vetaicj
power in ' e kaci of lb people, VtiX
we cr r H '-! t govractitl-t
ti tt" j t i IU people. TUxtfcr w
rrtz' , litJ C Boopt Incid la tLclr
rrl- tU oonveatlax Hit
e-.itj 10 stcU asl grtlrr-i
1 -iim ihaU flix Htn tli
'i c'tod at on I Utrtiue a
into Ih legislative ksjy to wki'
U go, or tot for asth kill if 1 tho
UtroducM if, aukalKix j to V'
the question of liccrrir-Vr,K
ittattva and rreiisn rr- - te
tawaekiaj Into our atit tz4 o1
onilltutics. All w fxrtitr -
that the PopuiUt tsrfcr cf tlb '
mak a demand far ti U!:lrtk ,0?tt
Kefereadum u tito Crtt ar hardly
platform a4 fUiz ti ttt-t tT a
will, U placti in tawtr, ky . t:r u
glv Iheuu lifts- wfc-'-VtUbrt J
thU qtUc I Cta, ti of thee
govrett fee U Cc trtfPT
lity want It. I'llr-! rat, rtvug
r:a In ti fc-ri-, 1
to n my Utit L'ttrtn -k
wUxu tottCUtj C'trt-xt-
ti ri, ij li r-;u f tt tt
tl, Vtlt'Jtit ti rt:t U t;j rJ
r' 1 t;t tizl wou'4
tuttitcrt: AhZ n ti l
csilr t tzl iz r :rty U tit t
t tinptrJtixlurci r:-
'Jk be
ht
)aad
n
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