Sept. 8, 1898 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT TUB WEALTH MAKERS UNCOUt INDEPENDENT, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY r mi Indipaijdeijt Publishing So. f! At HSO M ltrt, Lincoln, - Nebraska. 1 TELEPHONE 638. $1.00 per Year in advance. b AddrM nil ennir.tlaM io Mi rafts, bob rdn. si., tsrbl to Till INbEPKMUICIfT f VI. CO.. I,ixl., Mil. F THE WINNING TICKET, ? For Governor WILLIAM A. POINTER ol Boom. Lieutenant Governor K. A.CJILIlKRTof Tork. Secretary of State WILLIAM F. I'OKTER ol Merrick. Aadltor ol publlo Account JOHN F. CORNELL ol Richardson. Treasurer JOHN B. ME8ERVE ol Rd Willow. Sup, of Publio Instruction WILLIAM R. JACKSON of Holt. Land Commissioner JACOB B. WOLFE of UnciuUr. Attorney General CONSTANTINE J. BMTTB of DourIm. Lot populist remember that the object aimed at in the conversion ol re publican to populist principle. Thl canfedouby proving tbut th ujll- oation of those principle wiwflt com mon humanity. There are plenty ol proofs to be found In Nebraska, history the poet eight year. Present thorn to your republican friends, jiu 1 1 i r i i T)i WiHCoriHin democrat by a rota ol 830 to 21)0 In tbolratalo convention r fused to lot the populist join with them In naming a state ticket. The action ol the democrat In tat where they are In the majority contrast trongly with the consideration shown them by the populist In other tate. The trouble with the democratic inula cast of the Mississippi is that be has too much bl chloride ol gold In his system. Remember that the following day are set apart for the currency oonren- tion at Omaha: Gold day, Tuesday, September 13. SHrer day, Wednesday, September 14 Paper any, Thursday, September 15 Go on all three of tbera if you cun, but go anybow oa paper money day prepared to take part in the general discussion and to see that the friends of gorernmcnt paper currency hare a 1 full liearlng. Paul Shallcnbergcr, a York county boy, died of starvation while sick on a , hospital ship ea route for New York, j His father who holds a prominent po ! sitioo with the IS. & M. thus described ' the cause ol his death: "Paul died on his road home from Cuba, a victim of cruelty to our own i soldiers that would disgrnc Weyler, Hick with typhoid (ever lor two weeks with bncou aud hurd-tuck his only ! food!" l The Chicago It word's correspondent who visited the ship on which Paul died sent hi pniier a description ol affairs on board the vessel when she arrived in port as follows: 'The traueport Yucatan arrived from Santiago yesterday wi"h th7tV regular infantry on board and you ol them were 111 when toe trtd. rvvu men were starred to death on the pnsng and three more In I he harbor here Iwlore they could be landed, leeaue the ship It'll Santiago without proir food or supplies for the sii'k or anything ls but lb regular ar nv rations, "mi nor, sow Mly and shingles," as lbs soldiers call lbs corn sailei! hh k ami bnM tai k, wbU'b. Ik sk'k r unable to vat.' These latetlMBl do hut coins Irom pur tout a sonrtvs, l hir are lbs pit-tun ol a rosdnlou ol Ibiiig that ar too Iras to be aVk4 tad demand tut est t gatloa. The point wa le by lrolhr Hardy in kWroluttiu Ho k lk rvfc-rt to lhaitUI eate U :o4 use w I km wuk-r ai plU'aHua Ikaa thai gtta It ft UrMtbsff llatdy, Tke are tw 4ul vaplertsg Ike att Sitwl eftl Ostksef leti rpuM .'., M iwwttie tke M'Wiwa btl t tk waste araijeMiMis4 pv grsive wUUlaH a4 Ike shI i trMt, tke etrsti.s avr iwaks atiake lr Tkti' IW Is swtkf wai-lkal is lu amtt paHt t k lee t4 Ikeai la Iks Ute s ate kbei are l4itha Ikat wtfk ! M tia4 la a i wl U. at Uni sll itf, lleeoMsk i4 lkw t Ikses il U l:tt I all mI k4laal Mil wlalee Tke iH.i.alwt a tlfgM wtt loiaiHa M Iks Mie ate f t li W a.ad tt!MltkM4 mki tkf gssid tke ssaalMf bt sW ttk iWw wtaUit sdvf rpM 'i-aiMite .kcisttl Usrttaia Ike aoa.larti te bee rvw eiiniatUa lr'l, TIIK CINCINNATI MEETING. In the uews columns olthls issue ap pears a report of the middle-of-tbe road populist convention at Cincinnati which has nominated Wliurton Uarker for pres ident and Ignatius Donnelly for rice, president. The significant leature ol the conven tion Is the withdrawal ol one-hall it members who were opposed to making any nominations at the present time. Someofthesa men who withdrew are among the most radical anti-fusion pop ulists in the nation. They will never again join in supporting a democratic ticket, but they simply don't propose to go into the campaign ol 1000 until the campaign ol 1000 is hero. They are populists and will stay by the populist purty , They cannot oe leu into the democratic or the republican camp, but will stay by the populist ling so long as (hat over populist principles. The suki'ISNDBNT believes that this is the nmtlment ol the great mass of populists east and west, north and south. They will not lew vo the party built up at so much sacrifice and cost until they find It no longer stands lor the principle they old dear. They are going to do all they can to advance those principles locally and await tbo action of the lonnl peoples pnrty convention In IJiOO before changing their present political affiliation or altering their present course, For the few people whs met and named a national ticket at Cincinnati there Is this to be said: A number of them are earnest, honest and sincere inert, veter ans In the peoples party cause, J- or the present they have chosen to act without the counsel and association of the great body ol populists just us honest, earnest and sincere as they. No good cun come from abuse or denunciation of them They are not the people purty and cun not act for It. They undoubtedly do represent (in part) the spirit of dissatl. faction in the people party over the treatment ol the party in the national campaign of 1800 and its troutment by the democratic party In a number of states since. They have taken a foolish and Impotent way to manifest that dls. satisfaction. The future of tht populist movement is in the hands of its mem bers. If they love It principles und its organization they can advance the one and preserve the other. lint to do so they must be calm not rash in action, considerate, not abusive in luriguug fraternal not factional in spirit. WOKItlKD AHOirr I'OKTKIt The republican machine i sadly wor ried Just now about Secretary ol State 'orter's odlce. A the official report of the work of secretary of state' office for the past two years go out over the state contrasted with that ol preceding republican administration people want to know about it. They can't under stand why Porter should have collected and paid In over 20,000 during bis 18 months while his predecessor only paid in fl.OOO in two years. Republicans pi'uially get mad aud write In to heud quarters asking it it is all a blank popo crutic lie and why the great Joebnrt.ley they dou't deuy it Instead ol letting the pops humbug the roters. One such com munication comes to the Lincoln State Journal from a prominent republican in the western part of the state which makes rich reading. Here it is: Hayes Center, Neb., Auk. .10. To the editor KtateJ ournal: I tlud the follow nit surprising statement in aWorld- llerald editorial of yesterday. II this i trueatiotaer ex-state official should le keeping company with . lo Hartley. If it is not true it should be correctly la belled as a lie, and tb author olsuch stories roMrly branded so that future eiueuutious ol this kind would bu known by the ear-marks. Truly yours, M. J. AllllOTT. Then follows the (ol'owing clipping from the World-Herald, giving some ol tli tacts about the seert tary of state's dtllce: V. F. Porter wi tit dirw-tlv from a Ne- tirimkn farm to the olliee of fr'eretarv ol tie fur Nebraska, aud the records show that the people made no mistake w lieu they elm tl Mr, Porter to that ottUx, Tim Uncollected lathe secretary ol state's olliee and paid into the slate tn-aurr during the two rr ol ai3 and l(d, under the reoublhan adutiU' Mirstiou, ainountiHl to il,U7T.lil The m eollteted in the em istary of twv's ltte and pab intothM slate tiYHMiry ilanng lli Br.i i,inti-u months ol Mr. rorter adui aUlratto i ouoiutl to J,VU t. Is olhfr word U'Hieg a rioi td (Mhtma utoalh Mr, Potior paid into lbs slate troaatirv oa aocount ol h t,imi is istsiinuis f i v.n'ii, i tnr ihvtu was psid ia b kU rpubliea pre i.tMf dun; the satire ! )ewr ol I an and h'J". The liU J.mrssl wabbles Ikrvaak soar a etilama tryia tu 111 k it U. U I Ike ( si id Ms sal-bU U simply Ibis Ikat Ike lee' 1 1 as stid-lke m r tsry t4 it" wrtu li4 y ia r ;otHMhs Kt latatk asdoslt U.off Hike rU. tsu , but titr4il t ! lVtt s4 Ike h oa tkatftti'MasN Not bit ol It. lies ! da tut U stkk 1 -vr4 Ike ra la Ike sriar)'s .!. Iksllkwstkwe twake lletst eorpora I utss aa M b ' Ikaa it kily d.4 ! as4 4, N. l N kr.ke, IkaMW in) , is. I ! I'e1 11,'h a iufeopxftts lis ttiwi asi W wkit nsvKr Ik id 1 1 II wo)4 k ot Iksai uly tl&. Tkalks altlkmttf la il-lks B..1 ... J.il.1.. .1. I 1 1 . .1 ... ' . .. IMM.tas i im ..p ' l vebl. Ik ttpUaatioa ll t wJis la sy is a (till richer piece of humor than the letter of Inquiry. The facts, well known to most of our readers, are that the new law relating to corporation fees wa drawn in the secretary of state oiIIm'. That Htcretary Porter himself took one copy of the bill to Senator Farrell and another to Representative Sheldon that It might be introduced in both senate and bouse at once. That the bill was vigorously pushed through both bouses, being advanced in both houses out of its regular order oud that under it the cor porations that make use ol the laws of the state to do business pny the expen se of the secretary of state' office in stead of the people paying them by tax- utleu. I'OI't I 1ST KKKOHMS, The Omaha Reo sny this week: How lucky the populist state officials have not fullllled all the reform pledges they made when they were before the people two years ngo or tney woukj noi be able to promise any reform now. It Is true that there are yet more pop ulist reform to be accomplished In this stale. Let us admit that, mutisms reason why we need another populist legslat ure nnd the election of the popu list state ticket. Let ns now consider a few populist reforms, legislative nnd ex ecutive, accomplished ill the past eight years, Here are only a few; The Investment ol the permanent school fund. The Iree school text book law. The stock yards law. The treasury depository law which has secured the people of the state thou sands of dollar In interest on public money, The mutual Insurance law. The corporation fee law under wnlch over f 20,000 has been collected from corporations the past 18 moths. The school laud law which puts nearly 2,000,000 acres of school land bt.yond possibility of being squandered by future state officer. The deficiency judgment act which top the process ol piling up judgment against a man after taking his property, A reduction In state expenditure of nearly $100,000. A reduction of state debt ol over 1700,000. The prompt payment Into the state treasury of foes belonging there. Bringing the penitentiary to a self- upportiug basis. The rigorous prosecution of public criminals. Improved management of state school funds aud lands. Raising the value of railroad corpora tion proiierty in tlestate,orer 1700,000 This makes only sixteen items olre- form in a list which might easily be ex tended to sixty important Improve ments In legislation and public affair made by the populist party since Iti or sauization in the state ol Nebraska, That there are still more of them to ac complied is no disgrace and no impeach ment of the populists. Now will the editor of the Omaha Ilea take the witness stand lor a few mo ments while the Indki'Kndknt asks him the following questions: 1, Is it not a fact that the anti-mo. nopoly and other reforms agitated by your piiMtr for the past twenty years have depended, sinix the organization ol the peoples party in this state, almost entirely upon populist votes aud the populist organization for their advance ment? 2. Is it not a (act that the majority of republican legislators and republican state ofllcials iu the past ten year have beeu opposed to said reforms? !l. Ij it not a (act that nearly all the active anti-monopoly leaders In the re publican party ol Nebrnxkn have btn turned down by the party maibiuery during the past twelve years? 4. Is the rHord ol the republican party in this state the pant twelveyear or Its oltleers and orgniiinuiou this year such as to jimtify genuine iiuti-utonopo lists iu leaving the peoples pnrty aio joiuiug the republican party at pnwiil? 5, It so, why? n. U It sut a l o t that in such re- lorms as tsisial savings bauks, uiuiilcl pal ownership ol m.uop'lie and rvt'i lion ol gover uiiieat per ni.iney-liilb rto advocated by lbs li e III Mpb party is lhir Imw( Irmn I among the po litic.! orguu itl mis of loday? 7. Ult not a liti t that iml ol Ik rslorms iu admiaiatrattoa l slat af faire 4vamle4 by Ike Pw ia time pas ar in biMg varra-4 out by popnnu' a. I it sot a Url Ikal rpubluu wttvN ia oitlc kavs Hud la retry ihh ottl? U, iirssiis l tkslsna be ttulkfyll l4 la t r W ol iu4iMtl psll a4 wf the popalisl parly It kat a Ul tkal ti-vre v4 kgislalioa aa4 Isttsie tralHM la Ik peoples laisrsai ka ! Mr4 Ikrtoigk ikal tMraautUa la lkel(k tr Ikaa lkruuk tke tviHtUx aa ois kia Ik W lo Mlal? Sti rptt ka U tw 4 by Ik i "V i . . . , ... ...... . .... ...... , '- f4 .kUer- w. isaa ktaaiiiwwa ia jer risiy wkttkrf k k a tHfk rHHs4 if kil wktlksf k tkisk ky r bsk II. I llUasladf la ! a tb.t lttiklf . itr Uf aa.,,lw.wili, Ik ..s , A w H taa ! Imh. U)wftHy twiay i huut, TIIK KKI'CIILICAN CAMPAIGN; The plan of the republican: cam-! palgn In Nebraska n originally plaur ed ha received a aevere Jolt. At the time the convention met at wa expected to carry on a "war cam paign" and make the shedding of Kpunlsh blood the remission, of sine for the ipubllcan. party. So the re publican state plalfonn wa beaded for war. Since tlien the war lia end- d and tiie Tnlsmaruigement that has accompanied It I ao plula that a war cumpalgu" la simply a tfumpalga f explanation and opvjlogy. Then It wa Intended to make the enmpuign one of attactf upon the state bonnl of traaajKrtatUm for fail- ng to secure reduction of rate, but the railroad themselves control the n new council of the republican; par ty atul they promptly vetoed that proposition In audi an emphatic man ner a to entirely disconcert t'houe who proposed It. Then came the letter of Judge Ben linker exposing the fact that the rnil roud bod dictated the nomination of Hayward. It was like a bombshell from a 13-lndi gun in the republican eadquarter. Chairman Sdinelder took the first Elkliorn train for Fre moiit, where lie went out Into a eugar IsH-t patch on the bank of the Plutfe and swore In. good old-fashioned1 Platt- deiitsch at Hen lieker, John M. Thur- toii and the wliole punclii until un- down. Then came the revelation from the back flic of the Omaha Dee and Kear ney Hub establishing Ben Baker' srlateiiienit that lfsyw rd was the cor- iNratbm candidate and even P. O. 1 fed I und threw up both band and ex. Ie lined that they ought to have known better than to let Rosewater l:k Into the republican party. Then another anag was struck in raising cumjxilgn funds. There are about a dozen prominent republican like R. E. Moore, John h. Webster, G. M. Lamb!rtson, A. E. Cody and John C. Cowln, who would like to go to the United State senate If the republi can get the legislature. The plan wu t asses them $2,000 to $3,000 apiece for their osplratlom, hut the first one struck balked hard ia the harness and the fund lugs, So at present the republican, state campaign at state headquarter lanr giiibe nnd trembles reM-U'ssIy oa It 'ouch of txiln. Unless speedy com munication is establish with Mark llutinu and the associated bankers, it Is lifeless A KKI'dlLIUAN KNUOKSKMKNT. One ol Nebraska's leading citizens and manager of one of our large institutions, wrote to auditor Cornell, under date of August "Oth as follows: 'I desire fsirsonully to compliment you on the success you have mad of the auditor' department and the grutifying showing as given from the record of your office. Certainly such faithful ac counting of your stewardship entitle you to the favorable consideration of all well Informed und honestly disposed voters, I take pleasure in assuring you that I shall personally vote for you and do till 1 can to secure your re-election. I nm a republican on general principles, but could not stand Tom Majors und later the gold platform. I believe I have the honor of beiug the only man iu a similar position who espoused the free silver cause in 100 and did what lie could for its success. The secretary of state, auditor of public accounts nnd the state trenxiirer have made excellent records and are certainly entitled to re election." "Money Chart" proves that when all mouey, gold, silver aud paper, is made a legal tender to pay nil debts Iu the Unit ed Stntes, and all money is made re- deeuiuhlu iii government dues only, all our money will be held firmly at a parity, and nil control over the quantity of Its circulation will pass from the tniili- Amerii'rtii oligarchy to the people of this country, and th twople will pns Iroiu bondage to Irto-ibuu nnd newr before. Aud wlo a the m ople are outs ma le Irre and Isks coutrol of tSs quantity ol their tiiouoy circulation they ran tilth per capita circulation at a iy amount I hey ill, tlfly dollar -r cupila mors or hm, a Ihey Ww. And having control tt lh.ir luoaey niruUtiioi, ol rourw Ihry will bavs control osr all prbfs, pulling wheal at fJ r buii il lhy wth snd otlo't lhiiiH4 ia pro4rlioa. Oa '5 I il f I giM lb ey uiol bod olfl lieg I hi ahmilau rontrol uvr Ikstptaaliiv ol n-jr lu nrvuUilo. O pttf' I H so I I IU are giva eikl rt!e wkwfvby II MI4.V ImmIvMhI4 wk h nouy virvaUiiiia Is slH sl a4 drs il is ol. i iISr suk U', pVKtxal, liatktal, as4 eoinprvksusiv bNk oa lk satqrl kss r l-a lur kkkl la Ik popl a "V..s.f I bst I." lSittUl tlat kw4HarltfM at lb l.k.j kowlii bf l.4l . A tf kvf rNHNia4' I Mm J 4. 41 l (Mad kit pmkf 4 lata ifiaaltiy 4 liistslur Ms hn, t karaot tUitl I 'V'! k e ) aiuwisia vtf Jf la Ik wik. WsUry TkMptf y k e. (h. U. to Ml d oi l llm .tin ir lkiwwi a4 Ikal riU ld wi Iks itst Is l.u a Utw llo oa tke pari ol Ik f lr la Ikat lklls wvwrlt U lka at awtkw4tolk Haiasi 14 year Ikat tki kat ! U Ik l. The Nebraska state university be gin anotlher year' work next week. It is a great school end becoming greater every year. It ia not an in stitution for literary dude and rich men's sone. Most of it student ere hardworking, eelf-denying young men and women. The Institution itself has made a great advance In the paat few year in providing the mean of securing a genuine working education for young people who expect to earn tbelr living with their lane!. Atten tion i called to a erie of article on another page which set forth some of the work being done at the university along thi line Current Reform Topics. UY T. II. Tllint,KS. When a railroad superintendent was asked why the roads persisted In the continuance of the free pass system, be answered that "free passes returned very good dividends." For year before the failure of the wheat crop in India nnd other countries nu ounce of silver und a bushel of wheat in the Liverpool tnirket were always equal, Since those countries begun to recover from their wheat mtnine, silver and wheat have begun to approach the same price apoln. Upon that subject the republican press have 01 late no re marks to make. Last year wheat brought a dollar a bushel In Chicago. The republican news pnfiers declared that it was tbo result of McKiulcy's election. McKlnley is si III e'eded aud wheat bus gone down to about sixty cents, Will some republican editor please inform us of the wherefore ot this thing I Plant life is the source of all animal life and limits population, manufactur ing and every industry of mankind. Upon the production of the furms de pends governments, armies, navies school, churches, art, literature, the very existence of the race. The man who follows the plow is the Atlus upon whose shoulder rest everything else. A on his profession all other profession de pend, he should ut least nave equal con Hidoration. Poyuter is a farmer, Tim Sedgwick is claiming that Attor ney-General Smyth is a republican. He aay that Rurtley wa sent to the peui- tentlury by republicans. There were an even dozen of cotton mills shut down last weok. Wonder if the working men who were turned out to graes remember anything about the saying of a certain gentleman who pro claimed that he was going to open the mills instead of the mint. The Investor in bragging about the prosperity ol Kansas says that the banks are lull ol money which the bank ers cannot loan. If any evidence were wanted to prove that there was no sueh thing as prosperity in Kansas, the luct that the bank were full of money that could not be loaned would be all that was needed to prove it. When business prospect are so bad that no man dare venture into any commercial enterprise, then money begin to pile up iu the banks. It is sometimes said that no man can make a gold standard argu ment without contradicting himself be fore be gets through, but lutely it seems tbut they are unable to write a single sentence without doing it. Knuks full of money that can t Im louned a sign of prosperity I Oh I get out. Yon make a sensible man weary. The sang froid with which a republi can convention will tinse a platform upon an absolute falsehood is enough to make Satan jealous. About alt the republican conventions that have met lately have resolved that they wore In favor of "maintaining the present gold standard," and then referring to the mild standard ns the standard of the "most civilued nations or ns tsang the standard of Kunqie. Now the facts are that there is but one gold standard na tion in the world, that ol (treat llritain. A gold standard nation is one in which uothing but gold is u legal tender. Such a nation mar have a subsidary currency of ppr, silver, eopjwr or anything els, but it muni be redeemable 011 demand iu gold. Now there is no such nation on the face of the globe afide Iroiu Ureal llrilain and she hardly tills the bill. Tnks n look at them Hint se how much gold standard therein in the world nivonliiig tiiotllcial reports of ourcon ills. There 1 itumila. She ha 110 gold mouey in circulation at all, but nlie has timet long over ',mI,(HMI,ihmi ol pair ruble redeemable III llver snd not re deemable iii gold al all, 1 her- is not vry much gold standard In llmoua, Franc ka $Jimi.immi,imio(i .ilver Irsiic and $ I jii.iMio.isio ol paper franc in nr ciiUtioii, all a (all leg it I lender, No gold standard lhr, Spaia has neither gold or ilx-r in cliruUnon but about f Jo.V INHI.IMIIt ol KOVvrUHHHit l4Uk wr, No H.,11 .uiol tra thsrw, tlmiu ha i.,. isHi.issiul silver aud .il.iiiio.omi ilr an l so gold ia rir. nUiion ut .r p-r i rluobi4i la itlor iltr of old. Ni gold laudard lhr. Urr ttiauy h t"i ixhIimM ol .lUvr is rir iuuiioad I Iihi.ikhi.ihmi ,, Mtr, both a lad (! lmkra4 lbpsir aoi rv-bwiHsb ia gol but i oms, No Bol4 ti mUt I Iksrw. aitwtias4 ks ikiMHi iuoMUtt iiUm f. Na "l I Udr4 lhr. Asti 1 IUsrv k Is roila IMl id ), f h IHHI.MMl an4 (, pt 1 1 tn.ixHHH.ti, ttu M ui u.., HH, Hon ol U fd nol ta i4 lou, o!. siadf4 Ibvrw, lUU wklls hontl swiiy iMmiu k voaslrji, 4o iftf all 4 kr kssM wila p r t sts U k IJM.laai.iasi, ,i aul. U4 sr4 isf. -)( k t tiMKUtim 4 oriNa bask aoi, ,ihi iss, h ptivi tfk. IH,(aMi,mm, Mitf iHM,iHm4 , 4. I I I jtytMMjL Nu il4 slaw It4 lW otwf kaslks MnMtsis Nt aol4 l4t4 lkpr " I kswtxl i In-4 ssi'o ar au .il. sissd trd 1 m, a4 ll wsik lo toslofM osr wosrisf r mitw la ikal l4kHtt tlllMn kWtHWIs" (l sl a4 l Ik o isdai4, kr I " a run it-1 kltoi i. Mtlk kl 4f ,. lksaoMUdM, H iitoaoy i k lfll lulwn lb to 4a ll ka Iks Ulf If )', kl II ka t sw.r4 ia gviiit, a single Damn wwm mewicp. mo . . 11 a. a .1.- .L . t . mi whole contention ol toe republican party is based upon a lie. All that the money power baa been able to accomplish is to in a measure stop the creation of more money. They have stopped the free coinage of silver. No nntion on earth dare to establish the gold standard. To resolve about "present gold standard" is to resolve about a myth. If the gold standard were established in any civil ized country, it would produce a condi tion betide which the puuio of '03 Would be a blessing to mankind. Kvery authority in the medical world ogree that typhoid lever is a preventa ble disease, With that fact staring the people Iu the face aud typhoid raging in every camp In the United Stntes, bow are the autu Titles at Washington toes cape responsibility lor the hundreds of death Irom that disease wherever the volunteers hure been camped Corpora tions may be able to ruu a government after a fashion, but they cun't run an army at all. Kverv roung man who enlisted bad a moral right to protection from typhoid disease germs as much a right as pro tection against the Interjection ol any other poison into his food. If through Ignorance or carelessness any oiner lorm of poison had been distributed through the camps there would huve been no thought of excusing anybody on any grounds whatever. A political inedicul corps, whose chief glory wus to wear a uniform and sirups, has been a very costly piece of business for the people of . . t 1 ! . .1 1 .. a . .. Ill UUlliCU piui.es. It Is the constant prophesy of tbo re publican press that "one year of good crops will mnkeun end of populism." Those chaps seem to forget that it was in an era of the very best crops that the populist party wus organized and achieved its first great success. Duriug the years 1HH7, 'HH and 'HO when the foundation of the party was being laid In the organization of the Farmer's Alliance, Nebraska had the best crop she ever had. Jt wus not the shortage ol crops that spurred the industrial classes to organize a new party. In the years IS'Jl and 180 we had the very best of crops, but the populist purty mudo an astonishing growth during those year. The year 18'Jtt and 1807 were yeur of good crops and higher print's, on account ol failures in other parts of the world, but the populist party continued to grow to such an ex tent that it Mwepttbe state almost clean. The farmer look at the question of crop after the following fashion. Under the present money system, when a large crop is raised prices fail to such a low point that it don't pay the cost of rais ing. When the crop fail und prices are higher, they have uothing to sell. Ttiey believe that the level of prices all around should be raised und they believe that a higher level of prices would result from an Increase in the volume of money. Of course a mullet headed republican editor, who does not know what value is, can not undrstand this thing at all. The Bee says that in the last two years "there bus been an enormous in crease in national wealth," The nssess ment rolls irom the states, tell a different tale. According to them the wealth of Iowa shrunk 110,000,000 during the lust year alone. The official return from other states are of like charucter. In the city of Lincoln more tliun twice as much wealth was lost by Hre last year than was replaced by new buildings und the repair of old ones. When we see new houses and barns going up on the farms nnd new buildings being erected in the cities, then we may suy that wealth is increasing. Not very much of that sort of thing is seen these days. The sugar beet fellows are circulating groat yarns these duys. Iu one of the document nent out they say that: "It has been Ion nd by experience that one mail and team cun take care of nnd cul tivate on an average, ten acres of sugar beets." We would like to see the fellow who did that "on an average." He must have been able to crawl on his knees pullingjweeds, more miles in a day than any Uussiuu that the Oxnurds ever imported. The organization of a million dollar trust a few years ngo created universal coiiMterimtion. I.at week a two hun dred million dollar trust was organized aud very little was said ubout it. This trust is to control and tlx the price of iron and steel for nil of the siople of the United Stntes. The John Sherman anti trust Ittw is still on the statute books and the purty 111 power makes no effort to enforce or nmeud it. It will not be long until everything inaiiulact tired iu this enuutrv will lie, both 111 amount of production and the price charged, wi. tirely under the coutrol ol organized eapltnl. In that day all lie n will I the erf of rnpital Nothing stsud ltween llm p'oiile wud such a duutntrous con dition but the amph party. With ucli su outlook nhvad, will any man taller? 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