THE WEALTH MAKERS. Be Series at TES ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT. OOBMUdstlOB l UM ffcrawr AHUnee and Ntlk ladependeat. rVBLUHB ITIBT THOBSDAT IT Ik Wtaltk Kaken PabliiMir Oempsay, UM II tt, Llaeaca. Nebraska. mm Bowau Omeos.. J. B. Htatt -. Editor H Maaagst ..Boils N. I. P. A. -U aay asaa nut fan for bm to rise, Thea eeet I iot to climb. Aaotbar! pals I ahooaa aot lor my good. A golden ehala. A. rob ol koaor, la too good a prlat To tempt my baaty hand to do wr"; Uato a fellow aiaa. This life kath woe SaffleWat, wroagat by maa'a aatanle tot; Aad who that hath keart woald dara prtdoag Or add aorrow to a strlckea aoal That aaaka a healing balm to makt It wholaT Hj hoaom owu tbt brotharhood ol an." Publishers' Annoanoement. Tha sobeerlptloa prlo ol Til WiAIrs If ab Bt la I.M) per year, la advance. Agaata la soliciting aabaerlpMoaa ahoald ha tar eareral that all aamea ara eorraetly polled aad proper poatoffloa given. Blaaka lor retara aabaorlptloaa, retara envelopes, eU., aaa ba had oa applieatloa to tbla offloa. Alwits alga yoar name. No matter how ottaa roa write n do aot aegises tbla Important mat ter. Brer WMk wa receive letter with Incom plete addraaaea or wltboot signatures and It la sometimes dlOcolt to locate them. Cimei or addbbss. Subscribers wlahlng to bangs tkelrpoatofnos address must alwaya give their former aa wall aa their praaeat nddrees whea thange will ba promptly made. STATEMENT ST CIRCULATION J. 8. Hyatt, Baeinena Manager ol Tha Weal til Makers Publishing Company, being dnly (worn, aaya that the aetoal nnmber ol tall and oomplete copies ol Taa Wealth Uiltu printed during tba six months end ing October 11, 1HM. waa r 2H.200. Weekly average, 8.123. Sworn to before ma and subscribed In my presence this Uth day of October. 184. ISKAL.J IS. if. BUBKETT, notary mono. ADVERTISING RATES. Miner tack. aaate par Agate Has. 14 llnea to tha inch. Liberal dlaeosat oa larga tpaoa or time contracts. Address all adrertlalag commaaleatloaa to WEALTH MAKERS PUB LI8HIN0 CO.. 1. 8. Htatt. Bas. Mgr. Send Us Two New Haines With f ft, and your own subscription will be ex tended One Year Free of Cost. Judge Ricks received a vote of censure, but the vote in the House committeenus against imiieucli men t. Tun Populist Senators, All u, Kyle and Peffer voted agaiiiHt theNienrngua canal 170,000,000 gnaruuty bond bill. Senator Allen moved an amendment to the Vest resolution, the amendment calling for the annexation of Hawaii. It was defeated and non-intervention cur ried by oue majority. Ten percent of the peopleof tbe United States are illiterate. And a great many less than ten per cent of all our citizens are independent thinkers and sufficiently well informed to know what is the cora mou interest. Mrs. Lease in her new book proposes that the oppressed classes emigrate to South America. We believe in staying . in the' Uuited States and securing our rights here. Who will Bolve the problem of civilization here if we run away from it? Senator-Elect Thurston is in Wash ington and, it is reported, is lobbying for his client, the Union Pacific. "Old timers declare that a lobby so numerous, so powerful, so loaded with money, ho flagrant in method, has not been here since the rotten days just following the war." Thurston, as well as all the rest of the railroad lobbyists, is workiug for the Reilly bill. The farmers of Illinois got np a little one-horse milk trust, 1,500 of them, to hold up prices in their interest, so their business would not be ruined, you know, and straightway the "unconstitutional" anti-trust law, which has been o! no earthly use except to harass labor or ganizations (a use not dreamed of when it was euacted) is invoked to DreuK up and sweep away this unlawful farmers' combine. See? The supreme court of the United States has decided that the Sugar Trust is legal Justice Harlan dissenting. There ; therefore no law allowing us to restrict this monarchial power which greedily decrjes prices to every household in the land. But liberty lovers in this and other lands have in times past rented despots, law or no law. lhe supreme court has found it impossible to uphoi slavery by its decrees once, and it may again be taught that judicial dicta are not t'lperior to natural rights. THE PRESIDE' ME88AQE The president In hi meaaage to con give last week, urgm that "The secre" tary of the treasury should be authorized to issue bonds for the purpose of procur ing and maintaining a sufficient gold reserve and tbe redemption and cancella tion of the United States legal tender notes issued for the purchase of silver under the law of July 14," labors to im press the people with tbe idea that tha credit of the country can only be main tained by getting deeper and deeper into debt, by borrowing $6.00,000,000 or more of gold and bonding the country to pay it all back and one and oat-half to twice as much more. Principal and interest together at three per cent would (for the time he wants the people put in bondage) amount to $1, 500,000,000, and at four per cent, 800,000,000. This $900,000,000 inter est at three percent, or $1,200,000,000 at four per cent, would be clear loss to the country, because the money borrow ed is not to be invested, is not to be put at interest, it is to be simply exchanged dollar for dollar for other dollars, a use which is not productive, which does not increase the sum total of wealth or facili tate serviceable ixchanges. Nor is this the only loss; $500,000,000 of the na tion's money which this borrowed gold would be exchanged for, be says should be retired and cancelled. The exense for destroying this vast value is that there is no good money except gold. But every dollar in ciiculation has cost the people of this country a dollar's worth o lubor; for the $346,000,000 of green backs the union soldier's fought and poured out their blood and lives to save the nation; for the rest of the Cleveland discredited money the government has received the market value which it stamp ed in dollar figures upon the currency be would cancel. Therefore, as none of the currency (greeabacks and treasury notes) can be obtained by the government except for equal face value in services rendered, to destroy it after paying $500,000,000 for it would be to destroy $500,000,000 worth of the people's actual wealth. It would be the same aa burning up 500,000 houses or homes ot the people, each costing f 1,000. Tbe folly and wickedness of such enor mous waste ana impoverishment are frightful to contemplate, and should make the author of the proposed incen diarism stand aghast and horrified. But not all the evil of the act proposed as yet been outlined. It is seriously urged by the president that a currency equal in dollars to the people's dollars stroyed shall be printed and loaned to the banks at one-half of one per cent a year, and the only way the $500,000,000 to be practically given to the bankers) can be gotten into circulation is to put np satisfactory security and borrow it at high rates of interest, which, added to the three or four per cent interest on the bonds by which the government currency is to be displaced, would make an enor mous Interest drain to add to what we now are impoverished by. And it would bring all the money of the country that is not already, completely into the con trol of the banks and force each dollar circulated to sustain so many dollars of indebtedness that the banks would in ten years absorb all the wealth of the jountry not already monopolized. The proposal of the present is to de stroy a half billion of the people's dollars and practically give the same amount to the bankers to whom the people must pay perpetual tribute and who, will at frequently recurring periods, because of falling prices, lock up the currency and still farther reduce prices, destroy values, force liquidation, and more and more rapidly gather into few hands the capital and lands of the people upon which their liberty depends. Theexcuse for this proposal to destroy a third of the money property of the peo ple and give to the banks or allow them to issue as money an equal amount ($500,000,000) of banknote currency to give the usurers vast additional power to quickly gather np with interest the remaining money and resources and liberties oi the wealth-producing clans, is the assumption that the government must exchange gold dollars for other dollars, for coin notes and greenbacks whenever the bankers demand gold ex change. No one but the bankers ever asks for a particular kind of dol -are, Coin notes and silver and greenbacks are always acceptable and as useful and valuable as gold to everybody else. Whatever is good for its face in the markets and to pay debts, satisfies the wealth producers. And there is no law authorizing the secretary of the treasury to select gold alone to pay both gold and silver (coin) obligations with. It is a deep-lnid scheme of the bankers and their co-conspirators, Carlisle, Cleveland, Sher man and others, to draw off the gold, make the people believe we are by law fin a gold basis when we are not, increase the bankers demands for gold till, under the false assumption that silver is not a full legal tender, the government seems unable to meet its obligations and, with a great hue and cry, frighten the country into falling down before the gold mono polists and consenting to the terms which will put us and our children in bondage forever to the villainous, devil fish, Sliylock power. So long as Cleveland and - Carlisle re main in office they will allow the bankers to loot the treasury of gold, and they threaten to issue bonds to borrow buck the gold as fast as it is drawn out, to bring us more and more under the power of the Shy locks. They ought to be im- poached for unlawfully bonding and eii slaving the people. The bonds are nn lawful, conspiracy bonds, ol no earthly service to the people and not authorized by them; and no punishment could equ.l the enormous wronga and burdens they will inflict. The cry therefore against the bonds should be multiplied into that of a thoroughly roused, incensed people), before whose wrath the bankers anfl their power-usurping agents would treii ble and fall back. J Down with the bond-makers I Down with the bankersl Down with tbe Sby- lock gang! BROTHERS OF TBE THIEF MOURN The resolutions reprinted below indi cate in what high esteem a convicted public thief is held (outside of the vigi lantes) in Holt county, if the Holtcounty lodge of Knights of Pythias are fair rep resentatives of the moral plane of tbe people there. Tbe man who steals $80, 000 of the people's hard earned taxec they love and esteem as a brother. He was one of their best and most efficient members, and of those nearest and dear est and least to be spared who are usu ally the first to go. The wings having already sprouted on the beloved em bezzler these K. Ps. submissively bowed to the will of an All-Wise Providence who gently removed bim from the trials (for stealing?) and cares of lifeand took hin home beyond the stars where aching hearts are healed and tears and sorroy never come. And these Pious Pythians pointed the afflicted friends to the pla of joyful reunion in tbe great beyond The following resolutions were adopt by Helmet lodge No. 43, Knights 'pf Pythias: I Again the ranks of our Pythian Army have been invaded by that dread foemu death. Again we are called upon to mourn the absence of one wbom we had learned to love and esteem as a brother. Whereas, The manner in which our de parted brother, Barrett Scott, met his death is most sad and deplorable, yet we humbly bow to the will of an All-wise Providence. Resolved, That while this lodge recog nizes in the death of Brother Scott, the loss of one of its best and most efficient members, we fully realize that all are mortal and must sooner or later return to the dust from whence we came, yet it seems strange that those who are nearest and dearest and least to be spared are usually the first to go. Resolved, That from our own great sense of loss, we appreciate the deep gloom that has gathered about the family of our murdered brother, and our hearts go out to them in their sorrow's night, eager to share their burden of grief, and with the light of hope dispel the gloom that they may Bee the stars that shine beyond. Resolved, That while Helmet lodge mourns his loss, there are others, still nearer and dearer, by whom this 1os must be felt more deeply and to whom the anguish and sorrow are as bitter as human hearts, can know. To the lovinn and bereaved wife and daughter we ten der our most sincere sympathy in I hi their dm kest hour of Affliction, trustii'v that their burden of grief may be lighten ed by the consolingtlinught that for hiiii whohns gone the trials and cares of lilV are forever post, ami hoping for h joyful reunion in that great and mysterious be yond, where aching hearts are healed for ever, and tears and sorrow are unknown. Resolved, That our lodge be draped in mourning for a jieriod of 80 days, that these resolutions be spread upon the records of this lodge, and that copies b sent to the bereaved widow and to the city papers for publication. Dlt. J. P. GlLLIGAN, - . E. E. Evans. " E. M. Gandy, Committee. If this don't just naturally beat the devi! then he doesn't know what to talk about at his own funerals. We are interested to know what the Knights of Pythias generally think o the above resolutions. Whut do the peo pie of Holt county who have not spoken think of them? The president in his message says: "Besides the treasury notes, which cer tainly should be paid in gold, amounting to nearly $500,000,000, there will fall due in 1904 $100,000,000 in bonds issued during the Inst year, and in 1907 $000,0(10,000 of 4 per cent bonds issued in 1R77 Shiv t in nnvmelil Ol lliest i II J w i e - - j tr obligations in gold be repudiated?'1 These are not gold obligations. Ihey are simply coin obligations, and Cleve land knows it. He has used his exalted position to spread an untruth, to secure general credence toon accursed lie, which, widely accepted as truth, will make it possible, perhaps, to run our country in to five hundred million dollars bonds to the gold power lor which (!) a perhaps sufficiently corrupt congress will be re- Quired to burn up the same amount ol currency nearly a third of the money volume. And he also seeks to have the $000,000,000 1907 coin bonds paid in gold or refunded in gold bonds. This is a clear case of accepting a big salary from, and swearing to faithfully serve, the people, and then using his position to mislead and force them into bondage "Repudiation," Clevelaud calls it, to do exactly as we contracted to do, to pay coin, gold or silver, whichever we have most of in the treasury, either or both as best suits our convenience. Perjury, swearing falsely to serve the people, lyiugin theinterestof the gold monopoly and doing his worst to destroy the re maining liberties of a people once free and independent is what Clevelaud is guilty of today. The country is in imminent danger of being boughtup and practically owned by usurers. They own more than halfof it already, and have the president sure, and congress, we fear. Subscribe for Thk Wealth Makers. THE GOLD FGW.bnFIIFGUS The Statist, les t'- ; financial paper of Ioiidon, England, h-iiHse the financial situation in the Umied States, thinks oar present congress will do nothing to re lieve the treasury, that an extra session would be able to do it only after long debate and then not satisfactorily, says the $220,000,000 drawn from us within the last year is accounted for by our debt (interest on foreign-owned securi ties), and says that "with the prospect of continuous borrowinglendersof course will insist on better terms." This voice of the money power says we are losing gold "because of the redundancy of the currency (!) and the widespread distrust," predicts that the drain of gold will stead ily continue, that repeated loans will be necessary, and that "If neither this nor the next congress passes a satisfactory bill, or if tbe mints should be reopened to the free coinage of silver," it will result in "a monetary panic with gold at a premium. The latter result it consider certain whenever tbe government stope borrowing and its gold reserve disap pears." Then it is perfectly clear that they who wish us to keep borrowing are plotting our financial ruin while they seek to in crease our obligations to the gold mono polists. If gold is going to a premium whenever n e stop borrowing it, the soon er we stop borrowing it the less of the darned stuff we shall be compelled tc pay. The men in congress who are in tent on running us in debt to the gold power are the tools of our destroyer and are themselves the worst sort of traitors. They deserve to be hung for their premeditated crimes, or committed for ten years to a home for the feeble( minded. The Statist in another article "advises abstention from tbe purchase of al' American railway securities until there are clear indications of wise and vigorous dealings with the currency problems with congress." This means, the application of financial pressure in England to con trol the action of theAmericau congress. GRINDING UP THE 0HILDREN Illinois has in Mrs. Kelly and Mrs. A. P. Stevens the best factory inspectors that any state provides, we believe. Mrs. Stevens was formerly one of the editors of the Vanguard. Mrs. Stevens has pre pared the yearly report. These ladies have during the year 1894 visited 3,440 workshops where 97,600 men, 24,335 women and 8,130 children were employed. The description of the sweat shops of Chicago reveals dreadful conditions. Men, women and children are there herd ed together, the decencies of life are per force disregarded, and physical injury and moral deterioration are the neces sary, manifest results. In eight estab iseineuts at the stockyards 302 boys and eighteen girls fiiand ankle deep in water used for flowing the floor, for the purpose of carry im.' "If blood and refuse into the drain. They breathe air so sick ening that a man unaccustomed to it can stay in the plnce but, a few moments, and their work is the most brutalizing that can be devised. Other boys cut bones with a buzz saw placed within fifty feet of the drying racks where skulls and horns are scorching over a flame, and the smell of the smoking bones, rags and hides excels in horror all the smells for which the stockyards are notorious. The buzz saw unguarded is also dangerous. These ladies also fonnd 712 children in weat shops working in conditions that must bring on curvature of the spine consumption and pelvic disorders. The state law forbidding the employment of children under 14 yeursof age is in thou sands of cases broken. ONE MINISTER'S W0RD8. Rev. Dr. Louis A. Banks of Brooklyn, in his sermon Sunday, January 27th, on the Brooklyn strike, said: "It needs to be said so loudly that it cannot be forgotten that the dangerous lawlessness which we are now compelled to use bayonets and bullets to put down did not begin with the strikers, but be iran innir gn wlien the raileoud com panies defied the laws as to stock water ing, and endeavored io earn uiviueuus ou watered stock hy pumping it out of the life blood of their laborers. It began when the railroad companies defled tne flu, Inw oa n rumlirefl hours of labor. and when they began to defy the law as .... mi ... U to speed ot their cars, mere heo-nn. When the work- ingman is lawless, we all agree that we are in danger oi annrcuy, uuu mav u must be stopped if it takes all the mili tary force of the state and nation; but it seems a hard lesson to teach a good many people that the lawlessness of a railroad company or a sugar trust has as much incipient anarchy in it as the cutting of electric wires on the street or throwing stones at a streetcar. The trouble with us is, that we call it 'finan ciering' on the part of the railroad di rectors or sugar trust officers, und we call it anurchy when it is a band of trol ley car strikers. Let us have one stand ard for lawlessness, and know that it is as truly incipient anarchy for a rich man to v i. ti... low ua frr h. imnr man. urrniv i" , .... 'Whoever shall win in this strife, the undeniable fnct will remain that tne men ought to to have received the wages they asked. Thr hounds are after the greenbacks, riovoinnd is leading them on. Tuke Mil vi v ' v -- rttiM. tliev are the same money exactly that they have always been. Tbey need ..rluriinn- tllB.Il theV flBVe ID ne hi w i n ,ruv,u"..B nrovions vears. From 1879 to 1891 only $29,000,000 of the $340,000,000 wers nresented at the Treasury lor reqemp inn. But in 1893 alone, when the scheme was originated by the Bankers' Association to contract credit, bribe fnnirresH to close the mints against su ver. and by draining gold from the Treasury induce i .and and Congreag to issue bonds aim "ire the $500,000, 000 greenbacks an Treasury notes and so give all curreucy is-ues into the bands of the banks, in tli- first year of their great conspiracy, in 1893 alone, $44, 493,512 of greenbacks were presented and gold demanded for them. And last year, when tbe first $100,000,000 of bonds, of the amount conspired for, were issued, as a preparation for those issues no less than $123,941,059 of these dol lars, which were good enough to pay ths soldiers for fighting, were sent in by the banks to be "redeemed." These green backs have been and are being used as an endless chain to draw gold from the Treasury and roll bonds upon the peo ple, the bankers manipulating them in completing the round. Greenbacks first were brought to the Treasury and gold was demanded for them. Tbe Secretary was not obliged to pay gold, silver dol lars would have beeu lawful redemption; but to serve the conspirators he paid out gold only. Then the greenbacks were naidont to meet government expenses, deposited in the banks by government employes, and by tbe banks returned again to the Treasury with a demand for a second redemption in gold. In this way the Treasury has been three times so looted of gold that the Treasurer bas (while carrying out the conspiracy) de clared it necessary and twice has as sumed unlawful power to issue bonds to borrow back $50,000,000 at a time to keep the chain runuing, and has bor rowed it back for an unnecessary use and fastened fresh burdens of debt upon the pepple. And now comes Cleveland and says, the Treasury notes and green backs must be all redeemed in gold and burned up. and that bonds must be is sued to get gold to "redeem" this $500, 000,000 of the people's money which he and the banks wish to destroy, and that the banks must be allowed to issue, con trol and loan their notes, which cost them nothing to speak of. It will soon be seen whether the money power which was held in check in the '70s when it was trying to destroy all the United States notes, is able today to sweep down all opposition and complete its conquest of the American people. The coal miners of Iowa are reported in a destitute, suffering condition, the cause given being an over-production of coal. "With the mild winter, the pus eiveness in railway circles' and dull busi ness in all manufacturing institutions this over-production is made more fear fully prominent," says the Chicago Times. Over-production of coal and work stopped, while in hundreds of thousands of homes the "people are shivering ovei a scanty fire, or wrapping themselves in ragged bedding and going without fire, because they cannot exchange worn, wiw tne miners! Will not the people soon see that the demand of monopolists for profits is forcing people to quit work on the right and on the left, that it reduces their power of consumption, and so in jures the market by lessening thedeinand for everything? They who stand between the workers in the mines and in the fac tories and on the farms, and by their de mands for profits reduce the workers power to buy one another's products and so prevent needed consumption, and stopping the needful exchanges reduce the demand for work, with resultant des titution and beggary, are probably for the most part unconscious of the out rages they are committing, the rights and equities they are trampling on, the anxieties and distresses, the needs, temp tations and agonies they are causing. They accumulate, but at fearful cost und great waste. They grow rich, but it is by a way wasteful and destructive. Profits, interest and rents in excess of what is consumed by use, affect com merce as injuriously and bring things to a standstill as certainly us stones do the cylinder of a thresher. With equity there can be no over-production. Do you remember two years ago, near ly, that all the goldbug papers and poli ticaus were crying out that there was a "dangerous lack of confidence" caused by the too great coiuage of silver? The president aud all the rest of the enemies of silver assured the country that if the special session of congress called to carry out Cleveland's (Wall Streets) wishes against silver would do its duty gold would cease to fly or hide itself and pros perity would settle down in the commer cial world for something of a visit. Well, the mints were closed, and contrary to prophecy prices continued to fall, and gold has continued its movement away from us, aud bonds have been issued to try to hold it, in vain. And now in mes sage number two of the series Grover de clares that we have also got too much paper money, and that to get gold back to us we must burn up all our paper money and borrow six or seven hundred millions of gold and agree to pay back two or three times as much, and this thousand millions plunge deeper into debt will restore confidence and eoin- plete the work which Cleveland and con gress so patriotically and heroically be gan Well, truly, it does look as if the proposed burning up of a third of our money, bonding us for six or seven hun dred millions of fresh gold obligations and turningus over to the tender mercies of the Shylock bankers for currency, would about finish the job. The deal has been made, and $100, 000.000 of 4 per cent thirty year bonds to be made payable in gold, the press dispatchers claim have been secretly dis- I of by CurlM. It is aaid that gold for them comes mainly from Jlur"). This is from a moral standpoint such a job as would by the breakiug b.M force into the United States treasury and robbing the vault of $120,0)0,0iO. The bankers are doing it with the aid and consent of Carlisle. The gain of interest costs them nothing; they reallr give not even the use of the money thej lend for it, because they are allowed to deposit the bonds exchanged for gold and draw and loan to the people bank notes in place of it. The interest is clear gain to them and loss to the people. No juggling with words, talk about parity and the necessity of redeeming coin (gold or silver) obligations can make this raid on the treasury by the bankers anything but deliberate robbery, getting more than a hundred millions of gold for nothing. Let the people now if thejf have any sense of justice and love oij liberty rise up aud burl the Sbylocks and their tools from power. It was not enough to steal or allow others to steal the state blind, and be allowed to go unpunished, in the face of unquestioned evidence. It was not enough to slip through the hands of the people who demanded the im peachment and punishment of our state officials by wbom or un, flap tvlirkii, tliooA Bt.nto vab nlnnripred- But knowing what kind of men the machine gang send to the legislature these branded butunpunished and appar ently shameless ex-officials have had the face to make use of Joe Burns to intro duce a bill for an appropriation of $9, 200 to reimburse John C.Allen, Augustus R. Humphrey, and George H. Hastings, impeached by the legislature two years nrrn fnp hio-h misHemennorH in office in - o c the conduct of state institutions. They want the state to pay them their salaries while tbey stood by and saw tbe state robbed. And they want the state to pay nearly ten thousand dollars to their attorneys for defending them against the state and saving them from justice. One of the New York bankers, Mr. Schiff, of the banking house of Kuhn Loeb & Co., rebuked the banks at the Chamber of Commerce meeting, which passed resolutions recommending Cleve land's bond scheme and theburningup of the greenbacks. He scored them for act ing in an unpatriotic manner in drawing gold needlessly from the United States treasury, and said instead they should place gold at its disposal. (They have about $40,000,000 above legal reserves ' for which they have no use, yet keep rtrninintr thfl o-nvurnnipnr trensiirv t,r r ' - - -- - i force bond issues.) Bray ton, Ives, press dent of the Western National bank, : plied that it was not a matter of seuti1 ment (patriotism, mora!ity)but business, umi l Im l Schiff HliouuicoMiiifhis remarks to business. Mr. C. M: Clark of Lincoln is working for a joint resolution in the legislature calling for the submission of a constitu tional amendment to raise revenues by a graduated income tax. His proposed law would add twenty per cent to the tax on land owned by one person, com pany or corporation in excess of 100 acres, and an additional corresponding raise on each additional 160 acres or fraction thereof. For instance. If the tax on tbe first 160 acres were $20, on 320 acres (20 percent added to the rate) it would be $i8, on 480 acres $84, on 610 acres $128, the rate rising as there was an increase in the area. The rich and the poor meet together ., and mingle their tears over the grave of Ward McAllister. Who will now be able to devise equally artistic and expensive pleasures for the millionaires? Who will with such inventive genius euable men to pour out $10,000 on asiugle dinner? Who will know how to conduct the New port picnics, the "Four Hundred" balls and receptions, and plan pleasures for ennui sufferers, who but for such men as Mac could find no new thing to enjoy? Pity the poverty of the rich who knfiw nothing of the joys of creation by luboV and have no power left in them to enjoy simple inexpensive tilings. 1 UK mew lurs jliiuuiic vreu ojo umt The people have not yet consented .to m 1- 1- T:l, ll pay bankers $750,000,000 for the use of public credit which can be better used without them. 'It is astonishing that so many bankers and financiers fail to appreciate the defiance of the public will involved in President Cleveland's pro posal. If any party wishes to attempt retirement of the greenbacks, let it sub mit the question to the people at any election, aud watch the result." Senator Stewart introduced lust week a joint resolution and memorial to congress against the issue of bonds and asking tor u sale and suthcient currency. But of course the Republican majority wants nothing of the sort. They prefer bonds for the bankers, bonduge for the people and the greatest possible interest tribute to the Shylocks. Is the milleuium so near as this indi cates? Receiver Charles P. Boswoi tli of the Chicago, Peoria & St. Louis railroad January 25th, petitioned Judge All' ii of the federal court, in whose hau ls tl road is now operated, to allow i he I ceiver io aovauce ine wages oi coirti;c- tors and brakeroen 10 per cent. Improve your time by getting up club for The Wealth Makers.