mm m jpjm wit , g d u u mi ; Wealth Makers and Lincoln Independent Consolidated. NO, 30. VOL. X. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1898. WBO WILL IT BENEFIT Impanallem will Only Itnka the Rich, Blcher and Increree Bnrdena of tba Poor. CAPITALISTS ONLY WANTED farmer and Wf Workara Aak Qneetione of th Independent and Wants Aneweri. M I'eor Mm1 Apply. Beveral letter have been received ask ing that tbe iNOBficiiuieNT make some statement regarding what In meant by "Imperlallem," One old farmer In thM northern part of tbe state aeke the writer to point out what beuoflt It will be to him and ble neighbor to annex th I'bllipploe and other Island of the sea. Tbe latter request le made In tbe right piritand Investigation made on tbat line are the only luveetlgatlone that will result In any (rood to any body. II it le of benefit to thle farmer and ble neighbors that we go into tbe annexing bntlutMN, it will b of bensflt to all other farmere and mtighbore eni(agd in agri culture. A working man In Ornaba asks what le labor to get out of annexation. Happily tbe Indjcfkndknt le able to eatlefuctorlly anewer tbeMi quwstlone by printing tbe statement of llobert W. Wblnglo, who wae Hawaii Wmmlsaionor to theOmuba exposition, , Tbe Hawaiian Islands, be aaya In sub stance, are no place for a poor man to go. What I needed there lemon witb orn capital and experience. Haw labor, such ft only tbe poor roan bae to offer, (abundant ana cheap. Mr. Hhlngle pointed out that many pereone bad gono to Honolulu elno annexation wltb entirely falee notion, thinking It to be a place where it would be eay to earn a livelihood, Tbey eoon became a charge nd had to be sent home, Thle class, Mr. Bh Ingle declare, le not wanted in Honolulu, What le needed le men witb capital and managerial ability tod eelop reeouroee wltb tbe aid of labor al ready on the fluid. What le true of tbe Hawaiian Islands ia tbie respect le true of all the other newly acquired possessions of tbe nation Tbey are no place for tbe poor man, wltb only hie labor to offer. 1'reviouN terri torial acqulaltlone of the United Htatea have been veritable El Dorado for tbe poor man, not only of tbe more thickly settled portion of thle country but of i'.urope ae well, Such acquleltiona bare been of apurvely nettled territory, rich In natural reeouroee, needing principally labor for tbelr development. Tbey of fered encouraging field for the eurplue laboring population of tbe older por tion of tbe country. Tbeaurplue labor ing population of tbe preeent generation cannot look to the new territorial acqu itlone, a they did to the old, a a meane of alleviating their condition. It (a only capital and the higher grade of labor that will be welcome Immigrant In the new posaession. That being tbe case, it follow that the annexation of the Philippine and other eland will bring no benefit to anybody except thecapltaliata. The whole eobem i Intended to make tbe rlob, richer and Increase tbe already too heavy burdena of the poor. If there le a reader of tbe Inbkpkndknt who can point to one ben efit that will come to the farmer or the wage worker from tbe adoption of tbia acbeme of Imperialism, be la naked to do it. In aeking for tbleoorreepontenoe, we bar the "manlfeat destiny" and "divine puipoae" postulates. We will, 'not no capita etatemeut of any man that It ha been revested to him what the "di vine purpose" le, nnleee be brliiK a or tlfloat eitrned by the Creator that that k nested- baa been Imparted to him, A HEART OF SYMPATHY ttasvv Wrllea a Letter t a asiaier WMte e Ctalart Her la hmw. Uresiisburg, I'a, December I. The following la a letter received from Ad miral Ihwy by XI re, Nua of Mouut rieoaaal, whose husband, Jess No, wh killed la tbe battle of Matata, July It OlAVIlilU rUOHHU Manila. Oelhsr 13, 1191-My Dear Mrs, Noa 1 wUk to express ta you my deckel sympathy, It must leases, your soe mm ta ksra tbat your young bualsad foil flghtleg bravely for hi eouutry, the noblest death a ats eaa know, I'ruiM Ihe (Hytuphle I watched the fight that frtti night and wondered bw tit it y Americas boms vukt be ssMtMd by tbe tusrtyrdota amterad by r hi eoso, and tuy iakjr weel out to each end evary wit f . Yur Ium Km 1mm a eadder tk the Mkre ! I ant uaabl t ttre tKe mti I fe4 tar Tarj rni U ny ) ta I rv4 U tad t lae lather wk never aaw kia m!U mhI th liwa af all tket w Wtt tu tbe ! HiKtr. II le Ward auntetim'vi la ttW2 but ur tltatvbly laUier, tt III I alt etle fonUaeea. alwaya dtwa iklttf fwr Ike Wt, and awtiM (lay fata . MtuUM' atwt Jiu(litw Ul lt ken aeer Mela H be farted, Hila tbe tcndemtt eymjMithy, bidieve nie your liiccre friend, OKOIIQK DBWBV. (If MoKlnley kww on wrii ma pn-ecrit niHTluileliio ollcy. there will Im thouwixle more of Mich ill over tba land. Mony widow wlil nuura lor liuelxind, and many moth em tor on tlwt will .never rerturn. What will we get for It all? Military glory I Hut McKlnky know what the "Divine purpoee" and our "rriaiiJfeet deatlny" ia and we will all have to mbiiM, lit eenui to hvve lmjiarUMl that kfjowlcdge abto to Jehn I.. Web- Mter, mo Nebrkana have no right to complain, Ed. Ind.) IS FREE SILVER DEAD7 TheBaperlaneeef a Hew Verk Vmmuier owb In the Hank Wood el JorvU. TJie New York drummer, Ixn with a gold vpoon ia hi mouth, of coinrae, w to,lking to half dozen lieUvmlng (IriiiiiiiMTa, uy the Washington HUir, "A m&n in our biwlntwa," ho wiut Miylug, "la, a you all know liable vo tM'e end har atrunge thing, tuul .ill of ti have Juwl our eliarc, 'Imtu'm your bumble aicrvant, for Inwtniice, Four week ego I wu down in Georgia in a country where every proejmct ellvrr and only gold ia vile, and tbe man I wu ncillng a big bill of good to wa the Mlx-to-oiu'cat old chap you cvor m.w, Jnlwd, lie wa m bITocUnJ, in fwrffMl and inflicted with it that be even talked ellvor in hi elwp, and gave away the beat coon (leg he ever owned U-cauws It wu yellow and he lidU'd the color no. JJut to the atory. The day I epcnit with him there wa a funeral at the meeting bouao near the atore, the chief actor in it being one of the prominent elulzcnjt of the county, My friend aaked nie to go with film, a there would be intermitt ing exercUe in the aliape of brief funeral addrceem ctting forth the do- cmimmI' virtue by otlwir prominent cltlena who hod been hi friend, A he wu to be one, of courac, I prompt ly accepted the invitation, and we were thre on time, Everything went off beautifully, and tliere waen't a dry rye in the bouee, until my friend aroee to offer hi remark. There woan't a peraon in the congregation more deetly moved titan be woe, and a he wo quite a capable man I flxed myaelf to hear tlie beet epeech of tbe ot'cuaion. "If aroae lowly and looked over the people gathered about him with wvMtkig eye), I " 'Dear friend and fellow traveler to that bourne whence none return,' he ji1d with a sniffle, 'Inoamuch Drother Jack man ha Jut apoken i our kite lamented friend and fellow citizen a now upon tbe etreete of tue golden oity, I UiliUc it i only fitting for me to aay that tdio crime of '73' "Wliat elae he inJjrbt have eala no body know, but at tbe ame time an iiiipulae moved tbe man on the other Mo of him and the man at hi back to MlmuHaueouely grab for him, and iy noine mean they got turn hood id the other way, and hi remark were fully a appropriate a any othee." RECEIVED SALARY. In Judge Holme court lout Thur- day evening the qucetion of allowing bill of $6,500 to J. E. Hill, receiver of the Iilncoln Saving bank, which clott ed it door about three years ago, wa under conadderatlon. Much, Critlclwin wa made on Mr. lilll'a manageamut In settling the affair of the wrecked bank. Attorney Munger, for eome de. pottlbora, criticlaed tho receiver re iwrt a being too indefinite and alto gether unLntelliblhle, and that hi aer vice had been of very little value. Mr, Wbeeler, member of the court com mittee, woe oppoeed to allowing any uch eum, wa In favor of allowing only what the eerrlce proved to be worth. Mr. Dam, aitoUieol tne com mlttee, mode quite a general ami ae ver eriticiain on lleceiver lUH'a man age-men U Dr. hlug, one oi tne uviowiiora, oy ptriikliiun of the court, proceeded witn ke4n avarpej to umwer aua ex poMe the conplraey through wbksh lllll nwaIvmI kla aimalntmoikt. ami nro- tMttMl arainiil the I mi rain lit of that or any other aura fur hi aorvUr. oUUni- lug 13 mt he baa remieml not, but on the coutrary, had been an iuipedl- mrut awmnng in me way oi m(te uxnA of the bank' affair. He alo prteut atrong evldetwe of 11 ill' iMHiiuitetemy out! aaked for hi remov nl Mm. K1iii. amilhaP ilriMait4ir. ltd- hMed ber huatMad in an appeal to the HHirt Imi o Htucn iur roiwhi, ivir thtw of her , im1 alao of the orr elaaa wtto laid bwn rubbed o f I heir hard erud fh. Hhe haudled the uf. tWr of the twitk, Atturitey ItMwta aud liwlr lllll, without gluvea, rail Ing thing by their rUpUt tutiiie nry wuh to the aaiifntu it all prMM euepUng Kill aiut 'llilmtla, J ml Ui4i4ia ut4i(tt In-, ami Mr. King In h tbey had aU ikI gM ta hat grHtl thru an ip. H.Muutiy taaay It. T44 Mr, II til tht ai iKti amoual ae he UUmI wwuid be ais.wwt ami that hie reigMtWN MtmtUI Iw very acceptable, A Im the rveoMtateadalioa tdUMal JaMM ,tattirvl, iiHiHiaiae id radruad. tkal Ike ,avNMitt balM a datW Irerh U td rallrtiad riw Kaaawi (Hit u IUa lHl Cal,. will o he eerrt tt H eoaraes bat llakeeaahal rapid trtl f ivraaial rki to walla aaatg all td ti. It la eae wl tkewle Im talkie aatr,ta duairtol Nadv, TRANSPORTATN BOARD It Order tba Secretarial to Malta a Report on Local Freight Bataa THE INJUNCTION MODIFIED Nothing Now in tbe Way to Pre vent a Beduotionof Ex tortlooata Obargoa, Want Moinethlng Uone, The following resolution wo unatil inoimly wlopted at a meeting oi the tat board of tranportation and hnnded U the mvreiaritm, but up -o the hour of going to pre the ecre. tarle bod inude tie rejKirt. Whereo, The bjard of tranort4 railroad commnie in tne maximum freight rate cams to ImprojHjrly em body in the decree of the United Slate circuit court for Ncbraeka In Nilr cue two prohibition totally for eign to the question preacntcd to the court or dccialon, vlsti Flrat, a pro hibition whereby thl booird avnkl tlie ktgialature of the wtate, waai for. bidden to reduce any om local freight rato fixed in the maximum freight rt to tlie rate fixed in the maximum freight rate law, even though the re duction of euoh rate would not unreao onably affect the earning of the rail road companie, and aecond, a prohioi lion whereby thl board and the IcgU. latlon were prdblbited from reducing the local freight rate below the rate charged by the railroad companies in 1H04, thua, in effect, depriving the atate of all power to regulate loo.il freight rate while ald decree re miilncil unmodified. Where, In May laat the upivme court of tbe United State on the ap plication of Attorney General Binyth, truck out of eald decree the two pri hi hi lion aforcauid and thu r-iorw lo thin board and to the legislature the power to regulate freight rate. Wheree, .Thi board immediately after it wae relieved of the aback lea Impoeed upon it by it predecceaor frceeded to inquire into the reawon ablene of the local freight rate charged and to that end called upon tlie railroad compande of the atate for information with reapect to the cot of construction, preeent value of the rond, expense of operation, earning, etc., etc., all of which neceaaarlly in volved a great deal of time in iirepar.i tlon, Now, therefore be it Itcaolved, That the accretarlce be and they are hereby instructed to vig orously proaccute the investigation heretofore commenced and report to thi lord at the earlleat poaaible date the reault of the Investigation. And be it further lUwolved. That the eald ecretarle le and they are hereby instructed to report to thl board on Mouday, the 5th inat.. whether the local rates on grain to Omaha are unreasonable n compared with tlie through rate to Chicago on tbe ame commodity! whether the local rate on cattle to Bouth Omaha are unreasonable a compared with the through rate there on to Chicago; whetflier the rate from Omaha to point in tbe atate are rea aonable aa compared with tbe rat from Council Bluff to the nvi point, and whether any city or town in the atate 1 being unluetly dlscriiiuiisteii Rgainet, ANOTHER RADICAL aFAIU llasle Httae Keloraa OflJa lletaar Vr4 ta k Hsdlesl. VaUux I ndejieiMlent i Yea, '"the cam Nlgn of 1000 i now on," and your ug geUonM Uit it be a conn t lgn of edu cation i einmlnetiily curmt. Hut It In my belief that while th rank and file are taking leaMias tbat they ebould lm giving Mini leMMtn along tlie line of official jHvldty. for liuUnoe, tlut a brilie Is a bribe wltether taken by Mcrt oftlcal or a republican, That official ecouomy by irofesHl smsm'Rv h tr Nrttvrra caivwtt in tne leset sx puug lb crime of bribe taking, Thai when prufrased refiruira htrr the landerd of rf'nu to a Mr atrautbi fu the offices aa hss brM the esas in ma Miuutle ta th atte, an h aril dy ought to be atul wtil tie rrputtlsuM tv m intsiltgvHt HiUtia, That nftloul dsiausahip slit im W tt'lsraUat by thiat who h uughl freotUiut fn.tt Mih party tyrant by aimulvinf lleg isiu ta itid party luavhlnaa. 'lb writer ! wtih eiuphaaiv t to MkiMing from au ankle by (apt, Ahby Is the WurM Urk ul th nthi M tUMkithat has Itesa Nttel foaled la enteMuU ami HMt(MSls, Aai hlrMt dirair u placst th 4uttMrs ey h Urea shusw, The aaaurauea M4Milv glv thrtMtgh Mvpsrad le tew ihat Vahln rs4kl wumVI te tl. ma' titsv k alll tu the resist aUhty of B'ir bslera Is the eyas f the cqutMMi, bt it iUI t nu gvim wtsriur Imi iat 14 tit ri ami won th battle in the assured lelief that many tiling radical would follow." I . Mr. Aohby probably thought it in expedient to tell mors of tlie facts. Hut expediency wlien dcall ng with those who betray the people is a something the writer never learned. If the act of official will not bear th open day light, then the X ray aliould be turned on. The people had labored for and voted that many things radical be done, lteason, Jtietlc and ifrht de manded that corporate greed be curlied. After six year of labor and Mierlflue, 1x year of bue, levuni and vituperation, the people as tliey tiuMight, bad gotten poiawsaion of th law-making power, honestly bellev ing that aoma of WieLr burdens would be lightened, aoms of tbelr grlerancea mlrcwted, but m consoling procla mation that "nothing radical would be done" was about all they got, 1 apeak from the record when I lay tjJmt it was like pulling bene' teeth to get any meusur of relief from corpo ral ojiprea1on through, th last leg! Idiurc, Th fact t th freight rat law being held up by the court might be made a pretext, but a valid reason never for the failure to enact much needed Icgialation. There must have Ix'eu Nome cause for thl other than fear of being "too radical." It was th breaking of faith with th people that mad Benator Allen' defeat possible. Had not tlie re-electing of that great triinii been at take,many of the renotn iiiatcd lcglwlative candidate would liav been burled beyond boiw at vr hearing th faintest toot of Oabrier horn, , Many of Wis people became di heartened, their old tint seal and en thulani had gone, and enough of them vtuyed in th cornfield to liar vet the beautiful crop Hanna gav Uicm to nuike possible the retirement from the United Btatcs aenate one of the ablest and most) feorles cbam piona of tbe rights of the maaees that ever entered that body of able men. The responsibility of thl great col amity to the natlcn ehould be laccd where it belong. Tlie laviidi vm of money no doubt had aomething to do witb it, but all know that only a very mall per cent of the farmer vote I purchasable, It was not that thl vot wu purchased, but was disgusted with nomination for th ieglMlatur two year ago by the aly and to moat of the people unen hand of paid cor poration capper, who again carne be foie th conventions under the plea of tlie custom to give two term. Far iHie benJH of thooe who question tit prcMtlge of the corporation, I wilt aay that In Furnas county a change of corporation attorney 1 made whenever the control of th county pnc from one party to an other. When th republican were th dominant party, tlie attorney wa a republican. When the populista came Into power tlie republican attorney wa transferred to a republican coun ty, and a pop appointed. Now whom we understand what I the chief du ties of Much attorneys their political manipulations, etc. the hand of Jacob 1 made plai n. JONATHAN JIIUU1NH. Not an Abitraot Conception but a Combination of tba flhrewd eit Minda on Eartb Khali I'iury Cease Mr, R. Penton bos a pewerful arti cle In tbe Silver Knjght. He start out with a quotation from Ixrd Ba con. Hut It ehould be understood that when Iord Haoon need tbe word "usury" he meant what we now mean when we aay "Interest." Every acbol ar knowa tlut the old KoglUh word "uaury" meant hire for money, In later year it came to mean xoesslve or unjust charges for the uas of mon ey, Many ok! words have changed tbelr meaning, aotus of them taking on an opposite meaning, aa for in atsitc the word "prevenV which, when th lUbls wa drat trsmtlated, meant to aiat or go before, rkim laorsona will have to settle with ML t'eter fur th retention of th word uaury la th revUed verakm of tbe lUbla which was tsaued only a few year ago. Let the fullowing aetlole h ral not only th nuotsUoa farn Un Itscon but alt of II with th un derstso'Unfr that "usury" atesns aay payment for th uas of money, eithr gvrat or amatl t'aury ia th Kstal juwerful facte la th ruin of nations Ue I , Mioy I power, wwr la Us ttual ewneest rated and UMt aubtly appll raldy fno. It I ths lever of tha thn.lt I vslv of Ih tuetdtselstu t.f riv. Iliaallost and lit "moitey qusathts" the iaaue furtu it aattleuMMtt will aha and nuitnd all other taaues -f Mir itstksuU ast apratsal btusnaa lies ssta her Is A amies h( m Mwk "What hsU lt aa Awwrt doltarf a "Wha hU etstmd Ih Ameetoms duller f I SI he wwdo, "WtH hi the iviev4gs wt(l, aland by aiMl alk,w that 'leva' to ha pWd by atrsiei' brtUiln la ths hsmla f a piievlv fs'iiat ai lrvsawslUls fur eisa uaury ajiulUslei r sill ,tou sol rather nln Ut 'iU' Is )ur u lisar, Im m wtMketl a a puUiietv iMKel MiblU awlity by thise Mi GREAT MONEY POWER neera of your soclologlo machinery, over wliout you have at lraat a par tial control through the pre and bal lot box?" Till ia th hearts core of American politic now) and th iasue 1 about to b forced. With an in f) nit Mtlenc and an In finite skill th hereditary captain of the eosrnopolltan army of uaury have Imposed their financial domination upon tlie nation of th world, until of ths clvlllxed government titers re ineaiii but three which ar not com pletely conquered lluiav, France, and, Kiipremely, these United State of America. For nearly a hundred wear th head center of a mighty cmiaplrv cy for the commercial domination of til whole world has sapped, mined and exploded one by one ths social and political aclMiooda of notion after nation by nieans of on ootiaistsni and nerslMtont acheine, Th bug bait and lethargio aelf-ceutrcd commerc of th Hujstlon empire, ttiough they hove mad the field the gombeen mans par ad la and its pcol a benumbed care, wherein tba gluttonou mag- Jots of uaury have filthy burrow, eve hitherto baffled th th Intrigue of the great pollthxU money king, liy a gotdu as forseeing a even that of th ubliia Nathan and m aeli will which scorns th financial ophiMtriie of the agent of the epochal Hebrew, Napoleon eetbllahed for France tlut automatic and aidf-centered ytm of national finance which, though now Momowhat shaken, auntains her at 111 In commeroial and political inde tmndctice. In thi great empire tf Iioiu ruled commonwealth the army of th cosmopolitan gold conspiracy occupies nearly every commercial, financial and political fortressi yet still, because the business sens of tli great common people is ag gressively awake and alive (to a very considerable degree at least) to th terrific changes which the "firm e tablishment" of the so-called "geld atandnrd" would effect In th eocliU and political condition of themselve and their children, we yet can be eald to be free from actual subjection to the He mi tic Manhedrim, and may vet, In the near future, too, turn the table on the conspirator, Iet im, then, all of u who are not usurers or th spiritless galley slave of tbe money power educate each other upon this most Intimately prac tical quest Urn, and so hold up each one otlhet-s hands In the struggle now on to resist the troltromly proposed trunafer of our call 11 existing sovereign power to control our national mone tary system into the band of a for eign combination, who would by their control of it etralgiitiway proceed to wipe out of existence every purely American banking institution would once more double our national debt upon our backa, and would reduce in short order the selling figures of ev ery bit of real property throughout the country to tbe half or lee its pres ent attenuated market price. And there Idee bid below the thin sophistries of the McCleary bill a still deeper pitfall, a gulph in which Uni ted States nationality would go down to devastation. Do not for a moment forget from now onward through ev. ery phase of this batUe, that the "money power" is not an abstract con ception, but la a personal combination of a number of the most ahrewd and indominabl minds on earth, working out a prearranged plan of world-wide domination in most faithful and in flexible concert! a combination mode permanent by hereditary succession, and the solidarity bf a racial purpose. To it discriminate .territorial bound are but as tbe different paddocks of the cattle man; and tbe several people who choose to "nationalixa" them selves therein are but a so many herds of stock to tie put to (iront Even If th lying figment they csil the "gold standard" system, were in Itself the Itest monetary system, yet yet would not Its adoption by Ameri ca lu the control of the world usur ers ring tie of ieraonul liewflt to Americana Individually or to ths Uni ted Hiates In it world struggle for iwtional wealth and Miwer hcsua the "homestead" of thi cosmopolitan farm la the city of I,iUm In tbe home paddock of Knglandi and if the Uni ted Htate should, tinder the cum of mI, finally and bind lug ly shoe kel hr jieopl slid Institution with the pre scription of Uat ssUililo Juggle, h will no longer iws ess a national mon etary system, but will as a air let po litical fact, b aubjecl to th demand ami requirement sf th financial eyv lent of the llritlah empire, which ,'a run almil'tuily (tests India) by (and for th wider Milicl of) th tkild HHidiedrint, wboas pismuIu cprrsUoiie roll JuggernsuMik over the mere Jo ci intrreata of any gten section it lsTllMy ih- eongaries vt th ephMtd hum mi, cal 1 1. lint if, aa the iiiiIcium t.f Ih (fin ing irlh grapple, lite AmerUsit e. pis ahoitld rnn ia Uia cnplisls and tutuie their eUtiug imKmohI iiM.ita lary lo Its tslgtiksl coital i lu- tttMtal Julliiria, that fuitiiaa eau Im (iwari, sa lbs wlh franklin intend' ed tl slHMikl lie, au a la supply thl itaiitxt stih pWnsry toiuui of Uu "AntrricsH" nwawy, smuimI, sls an. rkvatk., aiul, ) sit, ul a hi Itiiuoukly atslti ,alia," sim My hxug basiMl! and uiarll. s ssw i Un foe huiwaM atasettwHi uimn the ImU uf a iihss Jiwt ayststs tr ollU rl mssiHiy tksa Ih world hsa ever iuIim-,1 U svaletH Sheila "wauty" hall era- Hi A ml aitv place aiiMxig Ih "baint inlerasl4 CI th emlsg I'Mietl Ntala of lawries ast ! ic, A L t ui Beecna tbt Tampla of Liberty From tba Folttloal Baraoana, A BAND OF ENTHUSIASTS A Moral Foroa of loblima Oovraxt and Unoompromlalai Elghteouana, niev Th free lllver, F-dltor Independentl : ' A one in th rank who Im both felt and deplored the gradual ebb of that enthusiasm which characterised the early campaigns of our party, I wa glad to notice by reading tlie ar-' tlclca of W, II. Ashby, J, Burrows and your own editorials in your issue of November 17th that some, at least, of tbe influential members of our par ty bad read aright tbe lessons of the late campaign and instead of attrib uting Hi falling off in our vote to ex travagant causes, ae ie tbe almost in variable custom, have had the cour age to frankly admit, tih failure of oar own method to arouse the enthusi asm of our party, Ae w olaim to be distinctively "the peoples party," I thlsk it would not be amis, In the quite interim between the lost and th coming compel -71a, to bav an expression of opinion from those member of the rank and file who, ihotigh not politician in th commoner acceptation of the term, ' may reasonably be supposed to bav some idea of the cause of their own lock of enthusiasm. I think yeu strike the noil on the head In the very first sentence of your editorUd "A Grave Mistake," vizi "The great mis toks of till reform pre ie tbe tendency to adopt the campaign method o long In vegue in the politic of tbe coun try," but I think yon ought to have coupled tlbe party kadere witSi tbe press in th iiiddment, aa roost of our editor take their cue . from nst In charge of our campaign, FwCer on you eayi "The reform enovemenl ie a purely intellectual force" moA fa "practically avlentlfio." In its inception it waa more than thai. It wa a great moral revolt from tbe corrupt and cold-bloody machine methods of the old parties which are fast undermining the very foundation of our free institution. It woe a new crusade to rescue the holy temple of our liberties from th hand of th . Saracens of political Infidelity. In spired by th Deue vult tbavt rote from tlie hearts of the reformers, our early leader entered upon it with, all ths frvered real of th heroes of the old crusades. What populist can ever forget that greet swelling tide of moral nthuai-' asm which swept through the Omaha convention on the reading of our first national declaration. What wae it In that grand document which stirred to its depths the heart of every delegate and sent them back to their several states to the very storm centers of. political energy and enthusiasm? It wo the moral fore In its sublime courage and unooro promising thor. oughnesa, from the beginning of tbe preamble, with its terrible summary of governmental abuses down to the lust resolution. Under th pell of that powerful manifesto, discord could not breath. It concentrated in on mighty utter ance tlie Mlitilcal wrong em rights of all. It thrilled through the party press and our editors wrote as men inspired. It breathed life into the dry lane of men who had been politically dead for a quartsT of a century. It oMited the eye of men born politi cally blind. It put "small politic'' and "MckHbok patriotism" to shame, It was pre-eminently the jieiiples plat form and not a alngl plank affair to accommodate th politicians. The rauk and file of our party hailed It a new declaration of Incdpoiuleuce and rallied around H with that whole hearted enthualasm without which no re fur 1 u movetitenl ca ever auweed. A blow struck at that dewlarathMt, iMiwvver covertly aimed, was a blow at tba heart of th party. Buoh a blow struck by soui of our lender under th pa'lo( pla of "practhl Kllllcs,M Hut four abort year efta thai memorable seen at Omaha that liitiiHSisJ dtwumenl, which brested th breath of llf Into th people' lisle lMuleut ny and mad It a living axil, was put la "abeyance" to fei(. tut fuahHt with a party not yet awak. sued to Uts Isrrild eundtllwa whltt rtutti II dec larai loos, I he laf tf one parly, In totally U which w war enrolled, aud whsh had v ered with ghiry la our first hsnss lakttis, huM down is favor of a free silver esital, Need ws huh, farther Kr th reus of ih hk at putstllvl valhtaaiaMS Is aaba)Mst esaHklg4T l wa as tf th etmUsestat etsigrsoa had put Ih devhwelUis of IimJmimI, enee la "sis; sees" after the are set II f 1 he rvsliiloN aad wtstiwesd the war o the alngl Usue of ewhMlsJ latatloH. t ws aa If an tftia army, staking a Wrilds aVewisj trslket beftw Iks elthlrla of ths (IVsUawed vai page -) FOR NEW CUUSAD3 T