THE WEALTH MAKERS. December 13, 1894 THE WEALTH MAKERS. Hew Bailee at T3S ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT. OoaaoUdattoa of taa Fumn Afflane und Neb. Independent. PUBLISH KD ITIRT THDE8D4T BT , Tk Wealth Maken Fabliahbg Oompany, UW at Btreet, Nebraska. tniti Boab emao.. ......Bdltor 1. B. BT4TT. .Baelaeee Meaawer N. L R A. "II aajr mil noil fall lor me to rise. Then atk I not to climb. Another's pala ' I ahooae aot for mj good. A goldea ahsla, A rob of honor, la too good a prlM ' Ta tempt my hut; hud to do a wrong Uatu fallow maa. This lit hath woe -Baffldent, wroaxht by mas' eatanle loe; Aad who that hath haart woald dara prolong Or add a sorrow to a strlckea eoal That eeeks a healing balm to make It whole? . Uj boaom owns the brotherhood of man." Publlahera' Announcement. Tha eabeerlptioa prlee of Taa WlLT Vfit Baa la thvu par year, la ad ranee. Agents la aolldtlng abaorlptloaa shoald b Terr eartfai that all nam ara correctly spelled aad proper poatofBea 1en. Blanka tor ret am aabeerlptlons, retara envelopes, ata, cao be had ea application to thla offloa. Alwati alga yonr nam. No matter ho often voa write ne do aot aeglaet thla Important mat. ter. Every week we receive lettere with Incom plete addreeaea or without aignatarea aad It la aometlaMS dlfllealt to locate them. CaARoa or Annates. Snbecrtbers wlehlng to change their poatotBee addreea maet alwaye rlre their former aa well aa their p recent addreea when eaaage will be promptly made. STATEMENT CIRCULATION J. 8. Hyatt, Baelaeee Manager of The Wealth llakera PoblUhlng Company, being duly eworn, aay that the aetaaf number ot fall aad complete eoplea ol Taa Wbalti Ussas printed daring tht elz month end lag October It, 18M, waa --2ll.200. Weekly average, 8.123. Bwora to before ma and anbeerlbed la my preeeae thla Uta day of October, 18W. BAL. B. J. BCBKITT, ; Notary J-oblls. ADVERTISING RATES. til per lach. I cent per Agate line. 14 llaea to the Inch. Liberal discount on large (Dace or Inag time contract. Address all advertising eommnaleatloaa to WEALTH MAKERS PUBLISHING CO., J. 8. Htatt. Bu. Ugr. Tbb Co-operators' Conference, called to Convene the 15th and 16th in Lincoln, will be held in the Y. M. C. A. parlors at the corner of 13th and N sts. Opening inset inp; at 0:80 a. in., Saturday, the 15th. The meeting is open to all who may wish to attend. Papers of great interest will be read and plans discussed, and steps toward organization will be taken. . "Confidence" doesn't seem to revive any since the Republican victory. Good political judges predict that the present congress will try to cover its sins by taking the duty off of sugar. . The People's party in Minnesota doub led their vote this year, gaining over 47,000. The Democrats lost 88,840 and ran about 40,000 behind the Populists. An interesting letter from Mr. Wardall ot Topeka, reporting the action of the Kansas State Alliance, will be found on oar eighth page. Mr. Willits, Alliance lecturer of the Kansas F. A. & I. U., will be present at our State Alliance annual meeting next week. Eton in Massachusetts we are gaining. Major Winn, our candidate for governor in 1892, polled 1076 votes. Cary this year received 0,037 votes. Falling off nowhere; gaining everywhere. The Bos ton Herald concedes that oar vote was 1,050,000 this year. Co-operation is the only way out. Co-operation to save money and labor, and co-operation at the ballot box to rescue ourselves from tht grasp of law protected robbers. We are glad to sat that the Farmers' Alliance is elsewhere moving along these lines. "The alleged proposed free silver party should recognise the fact that it lost its own strongholds and is hardened with the defeat of its ablest advocates (Bland and others) iu their own communities," says the Brockton Diamond, the state Popu list paper of Massachusetts. Tbc Jeffersonian Democrats, who Adopted the Populist platform and worked with the Populists for the same candidates throughout in the last three campaigns have now dropped their old same also, and henceforth will be known M Populists. To a man they all agreed to the change, and henceforth Alabama can be reckoned in the Populist column, Tht Bryan led Democrats should do the same thing in Nebraska. Will they doit? mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm The ladies cf the Woman's Christian Association of Lincoln art overran with Applications for work of girls seeking ' employment. Only two-sevenths of the number seekingemployment in November could be found placet. The suffering on , the part of the poor as reported by visitors is frightful. Families are being found whose entire possessions of cloth zi and furniture art not worth five :!'.ara. and with no food or firs. BETTER THAN 0ABLI8LE'8 PLAK The Secretary of the Treasury has pub lished a plan to get rid of what green backs we have left, and bestow upon bankers alone the power to issue flat money, money that hasnointrinsicvalue in it, but which, being clothed with the power to make exchanges, tbey can loan to the people and draw fruin them for the use of mere pieces of paper an enor mous amount of usury and wealth. His plan is unjust, unequal, unconi titutional. It would be class legislation of the worst tort , A better plan for providing safe, sound, sufficient currency must be found, and we propose the following: Repeal all laws permitting private cor porations to issue their notes for use as money. Enact a law providing that every state may make and deposit non-negotiable bonds in the United States Treasury in sums not to exceed in the aggregate twen-ty-flve per cent of the actual value of its taxable property, and that for bonds so made and deposited as security, bearing an annual revenue to the government of one-half of one per cent, it shall be per mitted to draw from the Treusury ninety percent of their face value in coin or greenback dollars, which shall be full legal tender for all debts public and pri vate. By utate laws that may beenacted such state bonds shall be in quantity dupli cates of county bonds deposited with the state treasurers county bonds to be issued to provide only what money each county needs, and to be limited also to twenty-five per cent of each county's taxable property, and made to bear to the state one per cent annual interest. For each deposit of county bonds with the State Treasurer the state shall de posit the same emount of state bonds in the United States Treasury, and the money which shall be advanced on such bonds shall be paid directly to the prop- er officials of the counties whose bonus are deposited as seenrity with the state. The funds so provided and secured by bonds shall constitute the capital for county government banks which shall be in charge ol regularly electea county (bank) officials whose bonds shall be ap proved in four times the sum the people may nave on aeposii at any one nine. The presidents, cashieis and directors of these public banks shall be paid reason able, fixed salaries. The counties shall each provide their bauking representatives the necessary safety deposit vaults, ore prooi sales ana other needed furniture, blank books, etc., to conduct the entire loan, deposit and exchange business" of the people of the county, furniture to also include a com plete set of abstracts of titles of all real estate in the county. TI19 county government banks shall be by law required to receive all surplus cash which individuals may. wish to de posit, and to pay back to depositors the full amount of their deposits, but no iu terest shall be paid on such deposits. Loans annlied for shall be passed upon by a board of three bank directors, who must be agreed that the security is worth at least double the amount of the loan desired. Finding the security amply sufficient, loans shall be made on im proved farms in size not exceeding 04U acres, up to half their selling value, at two per cent per annum. On homesteads in town (Iota built on and owned by the parties living on them), mining towns excepted, loans limited to 83 per cent ol their cash value shall be made at two per cent. On business property up to 83 per cent of its cash value loans at two per cent may be made, provided the owner does not possess more than a half block of such property. On warehouse receipts for grain and cotton stored in county, state or government warehouses, loans at two per cent may be made up to 00 per cent of their market value, rer sonal security for thirty, sixty and ninety days, or fractions thereof, may be taken when notes are signed by three parties of good repute, two of whom are established in business in the community and pos sessed of ample property to collect the debt by law, such loanstobediscounted at one-half to one per cent. Above rates to be reduced to cost of conducting the business when found above it, as doubtless would be the case as soon as all money came to be deposit ed in the government banks and all loan ing should be done by the people's banks. The above plan, would make losses ex ceedingly small if adopted with all the safeguards, profits even at these rates, cut down to perhaps one per cent, over labor cost, would much more than make good such possible losses. The tax-payers would thus be secured by the profits exceeding losses, and by ample bonds against the occasional dishonesty of an official of their own selecting. The state would be secured against any fraudulent or over valuation of particular counties by a Btate board of tax rate or valuation equalicen and by the entire taxable property of each county, and the nation al government would besecured absolute ly in its state loans by the Btate bonds deposited in the U. S. Treasury. There would be no more money called for, (or bonds given) than the people with secur ity judge they individually need to era ploy labor, and it money could be bor rowed of county government banks at rates, say, not to exceed one per cent a year above the labor cost of loaning it, all private hioiiey foiuMii wOirid'detfrfwa out of business and their money would either be turned into more labor-employ, ing capital or directly deposited with the government and so would go into the circulation without enforcing usury trib ute. The volume of money would not be greatly increased by the system we pro pose, because with government banks furnishing money at cost it would draw all money not for the present needed by individuals to their care for absolute se curity, and when deposits exceeded de mands bonds could be paid off and can celled. But an amount of perpetual state bonds drawing only one-half ot one per cent a year and of county bonds drawing one per cent a year should be kept de posited and not paid off, to supply se curity to the government for whatever money can be used profitably aa capital and is needed in excess of coin to make exchsnses and maintain prices. The half per cent national and half percent additional state charge would be some more than the labor cost of this machin ery of credit, but it would not be a bur den, for it wonld furnish an income that would reduce other taiation. There would be no interest tax, except the slight one going to the government. ' Now are there any who wiH object to the above financial system. Yes, the bankers will object to it; all who own bank stock will call it frightful names. It is not in their special interest, as are the Baltimore and Carlisle plans Were it to be enacted into law the money power would be destroyed and honest la bor would be enthroned. It would pro vido capital at nearly labor cost for those who new mast pay from five to a hun dred per cent a year bonus for it. It would prevent panics and periodsof com mercial paralysis and enforced idleness and starvation. It is a just currency system that would bring to the masses unheard of prosperity, therefore the classes, the bankers especially, will view it with, alarm and will frighten fools with their cries of, "Socialism!" "Anar chy!" "Fiat lunatics!" "Floods of irre deemable paper!" And for the time be ing they will have their way, and will put through Congress a bill to destroy the greenback and turn over to the bunker alone the sovereign power to make fiat money, money which costs them nothing and which has no intrinsic value, but which they can loan to the people at from six to a hundred per cent a year. And the people, as now, will have to de posit their surplus cash with the banks, which, as now, will furnish depositors no security, and so for all the money in use, the bankers and everybody's, we shall have to pay them (-the bankers) a high rate of interest, besides paying tribute to all capital at the same rate. ; PLAN OF THE ADMINISTRATION Secretary Curlisle has drafted in out line a plan for currency reform (?) which Cleveland has endorsed and recommend ed congress to enact into law. As it is the Bankers' Association plan adopted at Baltimore at their annual meeting, with some immaterial modifications, it may be expected that it will be put through the present congress, which is owned by the money power. The plan is therefore of great interest to the people who will be still farther robbed and per petually enslaved by it, if they continue to vote the old party tickets. The follow 'ngcurrency legislation recommendations we clip irom Carlisle s just published re port: "1. Repeal all laws requiringor autho rizing the deposit of United States bonds as security for circulation. "2. Permit National banks ' to issue notes to an amount notexceeding 75 per centum of their paid up capital and un impaired capital, but require each bank, before receiving notes, to deposit a guarantee fund, consisting of United States . legal tender notes, including Treasury notes of 1800, to the amount of 80 per centum upon the circulating notes applied for. This percentage of de posits upon the circulating notes out standing to be maintained at all times and whenever a bank retires its circula tion, in whole or in part, its guarantee fund to be returned to it iu proportion to the amount of notes retired. "3. Retain the provisions of the law makinx stockholders individually liable, and provide that the circulating notes shall constitute a first lien upon all the assets of the bank. "4. Impose a tax of one-half of 1 per centum per annum, payable Bemi-annu allv. upon the average amount of notes in circulation, to defray the expenses of printing notes, official supervision, can cellation, etc "5. No National bank note to be of less denomination than f 10, and all notes ol the same denomination to be uniform in design; but banks desiring to redeem their notes iu gold may have them made payable in sold. The Secre tary of the Treasury to have authority to prepare and to have on hand ready for issue, upon application, a reserve of blank National bank notes for each banking association having circulation. "6. Require each National banking association to redeem its notes at its own office, or at its own offices and at agencies to be designated by it. "7. To provide a safety fund for the immediate redemption of the circulating notes of failed banks, impose a tax of per centum per annum upon the average circulation of each bank until the fund amounts to 5 per centum of the total circulation outstanding.' Require each new bank, and each bank taking out additional circulation, to deposit its pro per proportion of this fund before receiv ing notes. When a bank fails, its guarantee fund held on deposit to be paid into the safety fund and used in the re demption of its notes, and if this fund shall be impaired by the redemption of the notes of failed National banks, and the immediately available cash assets of such banks are insufficient to re-establish the fund, it shall at once be made good by pro rata assessments upon the other banks, according to the amount of their oatstaudiug circulation; but there hIiu.II be a first lien upon all the assets of the contributing banks. The safety mud may be invested in outstanding United States bonds having the longest time to run, the bonds and the interest upon them to be held as part of the fund and sold when necessary to redeem notes of failed banks. "8. Repeal the provisions of the Re organization and Extension act of July 12, 1882, imposing limitations on the reduction and increase of National bank circulation. "0. Repeal all provisions of the law re quiring banks to keep reserve on account ol deposits. "10. The Secretary of the Treasury may, in his discretion,, nse any surplus revenues of the United States in the re demption ttud retirement of United States legal tender notes, but such redemptions snail not in the aggregate exceed an amount equal to 70 per cent of the additional circulation taken out by National and State bauks under the sys tem herein proposed. "11. Circulating notes issued by banking corporation, duly organized nndsr the law of any state, which tran acts no other than a banking business, shall be exempt from taxation under the laws of the United btates when It is shown to the satisfaction of the Secretary of the Treasury and Controller of ths Currency (I) that such bank has at no time had outstanding its circulatihc notes in excess of 75 per cent of its paid- up and unimpaired capital; (2) that its stockholders are individually liable for the redemption of its circulating notes to the full extent of their ownership of stock; (3) that the circulating notes constitute by law a first lien upon all the assets of the bank; (4) that the bank has at all times kept a guarantee fund in United States legal tender notes, includ ing Treasury notes of 1890, equal to 30 per cent of its outstanding circulation notes, and (5) that it has properly re deemed its notes on demand at its princi pal office, or at one of its branch offices, u it has branches. "12. The Secretary of the Treasury may in proper rules and regulations to be established by him, permit Statebanks to procure and use in the preparation ol their notes the distinctive paper used in printing United States securities, but no State bank shall print or engrave its notes in similitude of a United States note or certificate or National banknote. Read again Section 10 of the plan and notice that it proposes to give the Secre tary of the Treasury power to retire and destroy the greenbacks, $346,000,000 of which were by hard fighting with the money power preserved from destruction in the '70s. Notice that this plan gives the banks power to make paper money "notexceed ing 75 per centum of their paid up capi tal," authorizes them to make it out of nothing, and loan it as capital to the people. Why should the bankers be thus given hundreds of millions of paper money, or any money, to loan at high rates to the people? Why should they be allowed to draw interest on their notes while all other people are forced to pay interest on theirs? Why should bankers capital be exempt from taxation? Are they benefactors ol the nation! Notice that the above plan provides no security for depositors and only a partial security for holders of bank notes. Will the people of this country ignor- untly and slavishly allow this worst possible scheme of class legislation to be enacted, by which hundreds of millions of their money will be "redeemed" and re tired,' i. e., destroyed, and the money making power of the government turned over to the Shylock class, to be used by them to draw a vast volume of interest and wealth from the people on money that they simply print, fiat money, money that they do not labor for? THE DANGER JCT8T AHEAD We may as well come out and say it, we do not like the indications that some of our leaders (we do not know how many) are willing to letslipthecardinal principles ot the People's party and are planning to practically switch us off from our national platform at the un delegated conference called by our nation al chairman, Mr. Taubeneck, to meet the 28th at St. Louis. The way they think it can be done is ta draw tip recommen dations at that meeting that in all our educational work between now and '96 we give almost our whole attention to the money question, making that alone the issue. Say nothing about the trans portation and telegraph monopolies to repel people who will not accept our plat form utterances calling for the national zatiou of these monopolies, drop out of sight everything evcept free silver and an indefinite demand for "government paper money to supply the rest of the currency needed." This they call the money question. It makes us heart sick to think of the folly of this plan. The money question indeed! The money question compre hensively understood is the greatest, most pressing question. The time is ripe for us as a party to propose currency re form legislation which shall be adequate and just. But our party will assuredly go to pieces aud deserves to if it allows itself to be tied down to the silver dollar, Henry G. Miller, of Chicago, just back from the Bimetallic Conference at St. Louis said of that meeting, as reported in the Chicago Times: "Democrats, Republicans and Populists represented at the conference all were animated with the sentiment that the friends of silver should act in accord and as one party. To this end the Populists say they are ready to forego any declara tion of policy other than the free and un limited coinage of gold and silver in their present legal ratio of 16 to 1, and the issue of all paper money by the govern ment without the intervention of banks, This to be redeemable in coin." This may be an overstatement of what even the Populists he met are in favor of, and certainly no great number of Popu lists attended that conference. Those who did attend were naturally the men who magnify the importance of the silver question. slUa Ah.'tetlng &nie:.ci the .. .People's party. The conference is a wise move, if allowed to be representative, if its originators, through the national chair man and secretary, do not by sending out special invitations to the narrow minded silver men practically pack it with men who think the material of money more essential than government banks to keep it circulating,' and that money issued merely paid out by the government will not only take care ot itself, but ot all the great monopolies. The reverse is true. The monopolies will take caro of the money bo issued, and drawing it out of the people's banks they will continue to force us to pay them a vast amouut of interest, with which they will go ou baying up our natural resour ces.' " We do not question the honesty ot our men who, we have reason to believe, are trying to get the Populists to shelve the land and railroad questions, and the money question, also, in its vital part. that part which would, by a perfected system of government banks, provide the people loans and discounts at cost. loans at two per cent or less, and perfect security for their deposits. These leaders mean well, no doubt. They do not see that the scheme would break us up, in stead of building us up. The Populist party was the child of the Farmers' Alli ance and organized labor, and the Ocala platform ou which it was born and the Omaha platform on which it was christ ened cannot be taken fromnnder it with out scattering us. The Nonconformist wants to go slow in its talk about "fanciful and emotional measures," 'chimerical experiments and visionary schemes," or else tell us what it means when it refers to "the money question in its entirety." The money question "in its entirety" is all right, but we are likely to have a lively fight over what that "the money question in entirety" embraces. 8n'b dopes are men to cuHtom, nnd so prone To rev'rence what le oneient, and ma-plead A co urge of long observimce tor Its utte. That even servitmlv, the worst of Ills, Because delivered down from sire to son, la kept and guarded as a eat red tblng. COWFKB. OTHER DECEMBER MAGAZINES The chief feature of the Century for 1895 will be the Life of Napoleon Bona parte, a just consideration of the man in relation to his times. It is written bv Prof. Wm. M. Sloane who has since 1882 occupied the chair of Prof, of the Philos ophy of History in Princeton College, in which he has distinguished himself as a lecturer. He has given years to prepara tion for the writing of this life, studying the written records aud making himself familiar with the fields of Napoleon's con flicts by traveling over the ground and studying French life and character. The opening paper in the Nov. Century gives an account of the Bonaparte family. which before Napoleon was obscure and apparently outside of the main channel of hnropean history. It tells of his birth, childhood, and youth and is continued in the December number with private study and garrison life, the outbreak of the Revolution, its effects in Corsica and on Bonaparte's relation to France, first lesson in Revolution and traits of char acter. It is fully, illustrated with por traits of the period aud pictures by con temporaries of events described. Other attractions are "Washington in Lincoln's Time," by Noah Brooks, "Rem iniscencesof Hawthorne"by his daughter; "the Making ol Thieves in Mew lork" by Jacob A. Riis,and poems by R. W. Gilder, U.r. Lathrop and JuliaSchayer. Marion Crawford's new novel "Cosa Broccio" be gan in November and "An Errant Woo ing" by Mcs. Burton Harrison in Decem ber, and there are short stories by Sarah Orne Jewett, Rudy ard Kipling and others. The December number of the Cosmo politan is as usual rich in illustration and fresh and interesting in its subject mat ter. The fiction is furnished by authors whose names guarantee the quality of their creations. Kudyard Kipling writes on "An Error in the Fourth Dimension," an amusing sketch of the cure of an An glo maniac. Mrs. Burton Harrison writes a complete story entitled "On French man's Bay." Wm. Dean Howells begins a story called, "A Parting and a Meet ing." Kathrina.Trask writes of "The Hall-Mark," and Albion W. Tourgeecon tinues his war serial, "The Story of a Thousand. The poems are furnished by Sir Edwin Arnold, Clinton Scollard, Ed gar Fawcett, James Whitcomb Riley and E. C. Stedraan. Other articles are: "The Relations of Photography to Art:" "The Tribes of Sahara" (by Napoleon Ney): "Marguereta of Savoy," "Musical In struments of the World;" "Great Pas sions of History;" "Abraham Lincoln m His Relations to Women" (by Julian Gordon). And there are the usual de partments devoted to art, letters and science. Tha Cosmopolitan costs but $1.50 a year and ranks in value with the highest priced magazines. The New Tork Tribune admitsthat the Populists have gained in the eastern states as well as in the west and south. The Republican vote in all thestateseast of the Ohio line is about 105,000 larger than it was in '92; but the Democratic vote is about 115,000 less in New Eng land, 123,000 less in New York, 58.000 less in New Jersey and 122,000 less in Pennsylvania a loss of 415,000 in the states named. In Ohio the g. o. p.' in' creased its vote 8,000, the Populists theirs 25,000 and the Democrats lost 127,000. In Indiana the Reps, gained 25,000, the Populists 7,000 and the Democrats lost 25,000. The Populist gains in Minnesota, Illinois and Texas were, considering the year, wonderful. In no state have we dropped back in the total of our vote. The tendency of the Democrats who fear the Populists to join the ranks of their ancient enemy, is a most encouraging symptom. This year this action elected Republicans and de feated Populists in many places, but it was all in the way of final victory for us and will greatly hasten its coming. Flour mills shut down in St. Louis to prevent "over-production," and the same day women and children in New York were thrown down and trampled on in a desperate struggle of the starving to get bread which was being doled out in charity. And the hungry are in every city, our own included. The millers' trust of the nation is now throwing out laborers and reducing the output of flour in order to hold the price up so that the big capitalists who own the stock can have their dividends while the people suffer. Within a week from the time of the bond issue and the completion of t he gold payments therefor into the Treasury 15,000,000 of the gold paid in was drawn out by the banking community which got the bonds. The devil has got us, sure. , . A CONFERENCE OF 00-0PEEAT0K8 The articles which have from time to time appeared in The Wealth Makhks on the question of uuitingour means and energies to provide work and wealth for all and to teach others the way of salva tion from selfishness, have awakened much interest and there is a general ex pressed desire that as many of us as can do so come together to talk over the matter face to face, and to find oat who are ready to join themselves together in a Christian corporation. We therefore call all those who are moved to join such corporation and all who are in any degree interested in the subject to meet with us at Lincoln, as many as can possibly do so, on Saturday and Sunday, December 15th and 16th, to discuss what we ought to do and can do. The place of meeting has not yet been arranged for, but all who come from a distance will please report in person at The Wealth Makers office, 1120 M. St., for the necessary information. The first meeting will be held at 9:30 a. m., Satur day, Dec. 15th. The questions before us Will be: First The duty of co-operation under the law of love. Second The evils ofselfishcompetition and monopoly, and the various economies and benefits aud blesseduess of corpora tion. Third The means we have arid are ready to put into the proposed corpor ation to work with. Fourth The Nebraska law regarding corporations, and the form of articles to record that will give us andourcollective property and labor the pre it etion of the courts. , Fifth Theconstitution and by-laws we shall adopt, providing for the various departments of labor and directors or overseers to be chosen year by year to have charge of each. . Sixth The provision for those who can not at once be provided work except to continue where they are, doing what they are now doing, enabling them to be mem bers of the corporation by booking their earnings or income aud adopting thecor poration standard of living, which will be an equal division of thecommon product or product of all, after taxes are paid, in crease in capital provided for, and the common missionary fund set apart. Seventh The .plans for immediate brotherhood labor, the economic and in creased effectiveness possible with the means and men united The editor of The Wealth Makers wilt read a paper at the opening meeting. Other papers may beread, but it will not be a set program. Each one interested who finds it impossible to be present is requested to write and so give us the benefit of what wisdom or suggestions or inquiries may lie in his or her mind. Those who can come are asked to come prepared to discuss the whole matter or to freely ask questions and make sugges tions. Bring all the information you can individually gather up. Invite anyone and everyone whom you can interest to come with you. Come prayerfully, you who speak to the All-Father. Come lovingly, you who recognise the human brotherhood. Come rejoicing, you who see in oar Christian corporation the be ginning of what shall grow to fill the whole earth, and fulfill all prophecy. During the fiscal years 1893 and 1894, we have paid as tribute' to foreign credit ors in exported merchandise, including gold and silver bullion, at least $391-, 600,000, Carlisle reports, this sum be ing the excess of exports over imports. We furnish half this sum or more yearly to the people of other countries and get nothing in exchange for it. It is one item, the foreign part, of what it costs us to ignorantly worship gold. The gold we borrow of the people of other count ries, or of gold bugs here, is worth, no more to us than full legal tender green backs would be. It employs no more labor and serves no better purpose as money. But the gold monopolists have got control of the government and will not allow the people to provide for them selves the currency they need. Carlisle and Cleveland are simply the agents of the world's rulers, the gold monopolists, and are now urging Congress to destroy our three hundred millions and more greenbacks, and turn over the right and legal power of issuing paper money to the Shylock class. The Populists of Kansas four years ago cast 106,972 votes, the Democrats 71,357 and the Republicans 115,025. This year the Populists cast 118,329' votes, the Democrats 27,677 and the Re publicans 148,637. All of which goes to show that the Populists have made a gain ot 11,357 votes. The Democrats have lost 42,680 votes, about 83,000 of which went to the Republican party and 1(1,000 to the Populists. It was Demo crats, three to one, joining the Republi can party which defeated the Populists in Kansas and Nebraska. The Populists did not lose ground. And the driving together of the two old parties is just what we want. Under this plan of Secretary Carlisle's what is to prevent a few unscrupulous men joining themselves together, start ing a bank, with a paid up capital of $100,000, and by depositing $22,500 with the government receiving in currency $75,000; then, after remaining in busi ness until they had got these bank notes in circulation, quietly close their doors and skip? Would they not make a clear profit of $52,500 which the government would lose, which means in the end the people. If onr advertisers do not treat yon right let ua know. We want no "fakes" in The Wealth Makers. Isn't there something in our "Three Cent Column"" that will profit y ou? 'I 4