T . , JCDK- DIP Wealth Makers and Lincoln Independent Consolidated. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1898. NO. 33. VOL. X. OWN THE TQM Judge Maxwoll Introduoeg a Bill i for Government Ownership of Telegraphs and Telephones LET EVERY ONE READ IT Sea What an Easy Thing It Would he to Copy "the Most Enlight ened Nations." Thin I ropullmii. Judge Maxwell ha Introduced u bill in the bouse of representatives roviJirir lor the constructing arid maintaining of telegraph ami telephone Hue and io authorize tint purchase ot such line us are now in existence and to fix reason able rate for the use of tbe same. Judge Maxwell's great learning and long ex Irenes upon the the iwucb CHlllieiitly qnriliflee lilrn for iha task of drawing such a bill. Tb,o mountains of difficulties tb ut loom up in the mind or men wfien they contemplate tli taking over of the telegraph system of this country and making It ft piirt of tb postal system will disappear wliea they read Judge Maxwell' bill. All that I needed is that the "be it enacted" shall bo sanc tioned bv our representative arid sena tors and then we shall have a telegraph and telephone system after the pattern of "those enlightened nation" of whom the republican used to talk no much. The bill is herewith printed in full. A bill to construct and muintaln postal telegraph and telephone line, and to authorize the purchase of tele ttrnoh and telephone lines now in exist ence, and to fix reasonable rate for the ohm of the NHM0. W hereon the meuns of cotntnunieation bv teleurraph and telephone within the United Htutee are Insufficient and ninny important portions ol tne nation are without adequate means of such com ninnicutiou; 'and Whereas it would lie attended with great advantage to the nation, as well toe merchants, business men, com mercial agHucle, and the public gener ally, if a cheuer, more widely extended, ami more expedlou system of tele f;raphy and telephoning were estnb isbed in the United Hi a tee, and tn that end it in expedient that the government of the United Htate construct, purchase own, suit operate the telegraph anil tele phone linen in the United Htutee: There fore Be It enacted by the senate and house of representative of the United Htate of America in congress assembled, That the postmaster-general is hereby author ized to construct, purchase, ami miiin tain a system of electric telegraph and telephone line uloug the side of the streets, public road, and hiKbways of the United States, either upon pole of ufllcient height to render the earns free from obstruction to those piotsm along uuh streets, roads, and highways, or who may have occasion to pane under the wirtu; aud in all canes where it shall be deemed Juexpediint to place the wire upon such pole or the safety or nouven ieuoe of the publio or Individual muy suffer or be in danger from the name, the postmaeter-generel is authorized to have plans aud specifications prepared for the const ruction of subway in or through any city or tWuk or between diffurttnt noiDts in the country In which Mthe oecMwary wires shall be placed. No Inula contract (or th construction of subway shall exceed one mile In leugth, nd shall be let to the loweat bidder Itrdu public notice ol four werke to at elect, such bidder tu present with jin bid a bond in a sum to b stated in tb itottc with good aud sultli ivut ur tie lor the peilorumue ot tint bid la the time and niwuuer iwitld. Any li.-r, h. . .. MftUB . 1 1 I t ,1 UllMPMli. Ill I I. . eaca aiUe to u eouetrue led. The pst- '"Vj naeler-general way r auy ami an r II lu bis opinion iu pa one iuivrt t H tkfrby l ubrvd. Are.il. That every post-oUlo a here )e grtfs rweipt hir the prvMnliMg jtrar tveaut twea ke thaw threw liiiit4 l tillers HSU peeamieii i ieureia or ihue"Utn'MiiU, aav im illum etMNtial: I'ruveM, I bti a Mia irity ot the Inhabitants wilhia the hw jtuiWtiry rwat a tviiouit ik HmI aitrge,"i entliutf lurlh the atiy (of eut h line and thlr dMtiie hit the oairwotha wt the eaate, IM, a. muwm a eea m iu I eostttraelvd, aud II U pf'lwlW that rlMie a ra wiilbeUkva l,f daid bf tbe wtOMtiat'tiua td ttith lal.e., ed k H are aeahie u Ate epa the anat l a4aMi(e, II efcli be Ik dsly . tb t'ailml aialve iluiiiut lluHf ol la ilri. I la aliwb h iwf tt wtnnu-l t a m tvtititie iMittel eitl KiaUe tiU etiari ol teal 4itiWI aVtitug the il8l triUUl4 a9kt aa l eUtisg lb aawaat tataea tkwd aitb a buss a eHawt las twa as la tlam Si i sad tbtttftia It shall t lb dxtf I ii tb ( t apnaat ahw, ' 1 Uiratia-bU, al Hernial , but . I V ifW4 I4 H , ste kH It j ftliat as l Jeka lb .l iht CI jtl tt-mttb-Hl etia4 WU abMKt aUt be altd If lb HMeo4 SMteia I . aad aul ethuaid, U I bat iMl aa id lk g iia4 l li4 shall Ungia 1 akvtaa U kaJ if I MWabi haeaa asd kfa ift",l whom no agreement has Iwen made at leant ten days before the time desig nated to flew the properly siieeitleil. in case the person whoee projmrty Is ob failed is a non-resident of the state lie may be served by publication of the notice In some newspaper of iteneral clr. illation once In each week for four weeks and a copy of the (xtiltlon to be sent to the owner's luet-knowa place of resi dence. The pout roaster-general may from time to time make regulation for deter mining the hours which the office desig nated for the receipt and the dixpatcli of meeeiiueM bill I be open for the trans action ol telegraph and telephone busl tiee. niid fixing the sums that from time to time be paid for the trutiMiiU-.ioii of messages, and for services rendered lu connection therewith, and for the gen eral conduct of the b'lcgrnidi and tele phone business: Provided, however, That the charges for the transmission of messages by telegraph throughout the United Htates, without regard to dis tance, be at a rate not exceeding t wenty cents for twenty words or part of twenty words of each messag and not exceed ing five cents for eicli additional five words, and that the names and ad drefses of the senders and receivers of the message shall not be counted as part of the words for which payment shall be rcoiircd. That the sums charged for the trans- mission of messages shall be held to cover the costs of delivery within the limit of the town postal delivery of that office, aud in case the person addressed does not reside within such delivery and t he sender desires to have his message delivered by special messenger t'lechorge to him shall not exrd flttceri cent r double mile or any part thereof beyond such limit. When the fierson addressed doe riot live within the above described limits and the sender does not desire to Incur t he cost of special deli very hi message ehall be delivered free of extra charge by the ordinary postal delivery tiexiloliow lug the arrival of his message, and if there is no postal delivery such message shall be placed in the postofllee of that place in an envclooe addressed to the person to wnom tne icessage was sen r, Hec. G. That the postmaster-general may from time to time make contracts wit h the proprietor or publisher of any public newspuisT or the proprietor of an.v news agency loriue iraiisimssiMii and delivery of any telegraphic comma ideation at rate not exceeding twenty cents for every hundred words trans mitted between the hours of six o'clock nost-meridian and nine o'clock ante meridian, and at rates not exceeding twenty cents for every seventy-five words transmitted between the hours of nine o'clock antemeridian and six o'clock post-meridian to a single ad dress, with an additional charge of five ccut lor every uuimrea worus or seventy-five words, a the case may be, if the stone telegraphic communication is ho transmitted to other addressee: rro- vided. however. 1 hat the postmaster uenerul may Irom time to time let to hiiv such proprietor, publisher, or new agency the special use of a wire for the purpose of such newspaper or news agency, at a rate not to exceed one thousand five hundred dollars per an num: And provided furtlmr, That no such proprietor or publisher of such newspaper or proprietor of a news agency shall haveuuy undue priority or preference in resptct to such rate over any other proprietor or publisher of ft newspiier, orol a news agency. For the use of the telephone any distance by one person for five minutes the rate shall not exceed twenty cents, and to the pro prietor or publisher of a newpaer, or of a news agency, in obtaining or trans mining new not to exceed oue-thlrd of that rate. m Hco. 7. That copies of all cortracts and arrangements for the transmission of news at sMH:ial rates shall be trans mitted to congress withlu ten days if congre I In eslon,and ifnotln aiou shall accompany the next report of tb postmaster-general, and shall at all times be opeu to lnctiiui; and copU of all regulations mad by the poNtmaster geuerul from tuns to tim shall b rtnrld lu the same manlier. The pot master-general i Imreby au thored aud required to purchase ail the t.-legrai'li and telephone llnw In the United Hi a I.- at their fair cash value, and ti L'uitd Htates, by aud through Hi piistiuaaler-gxuetataud hi audit null's asd employe, ebsll, Iroui aud alter Hi pg aud tskiug ttfeclof litis act, bav th xclust privilvg of transmitting tlegram or coiumuuica lion by telephone wilhia th United Mtair exeept a heroin alter provided, and shall elt, wilhia the I mw-d Ktate. have Ut titlusiv t'tfki and prmbg ol i!uf mm ad th laeldenlai mat ol reviving, wulltN liug. or dwlivng ll gram aud Islephnua aieMOrfsa slept im lurwi uair pro vi.b J. Tbvr I bfiy ee Ph iroai said l rlus.vs pnlleg ol th govramwl h bIUiwsg' 'tri. TlaiaH or bdrphon aie. la lb lraatalsioa ol alin h ao rhsigs m utade, lxsa lrsnolll or ir aiaaiiad tly br lb rivt ae aud fvUuaa o lb bUH4 of J-rl-alaaoid lb waar Ibsrnd. Meied. l v-trsHt or il'h"e a agw Imssuotud by wi eiislied im b pmet a ot a .itauia, vaKM, or it'a, 4 lb oj tthah, Mr id lU riUetHa, rpl, asd IraesaiWMiua r dbr l whwb a Hotasf o valaahla raih-iliw bal ts uai as-l tu ttwdtir ta I bird. 1Ufet and tl'b'a Sa mm iraasaiilied ib lb M sl id lb istalf-gal aad Uli la tb bwttseM ol k 'l.He aiatiaeal. Thraaa aad Ub,boa Smhmw Iraasaoltcd lit of tb j i it. Mat. Nia lb bualai abniiy itb ha a vitf w tnUai PruvKnl, Ibat b lw aav rsl their llaa b WHAT IS SOCIALISM? Mr Sheldon glvei iomo Dictionary Dcflulnons of the Ancient Cult. THIS IS A POPULIST PAPER. Tho llavorhill, Musi , Bc-formen are Denounced by Socialist as ropuiisti, C'su'l Serve Two Masters. Kdltor ludcpcudeuti The editorial attacks upon socialism in recent Issues of the Independent arc, I believe, wrong', both us mutters of act end as mutters of policy, Bo believing I de sire briefly to criticise then and to pdescnt soc-Jein. lis I understand lb and as I know very muiiy jopulists voters in tho state of ftcbrusha under, stands it. For a text covering1 purt of the field of controversy let me quote the following purugrupu from the lost issue: "There will be 110 more football games after the socialists, the trusts, and the corporations get to rough with us. "Competition" is to be eliminated from the field of human activities. Of course, if it is wrong to cuter luto competition, for property, it is also wrong to compete lu a foot nice or for a prize at college, ihe trusts are dowu on, competition, it thinks that if some other fellow should build an other line and compete with it for pas sengers, that it would be all wrong Tba-thing that is wrong is not compe tition. In very few occupations is there any chance for competition. The monopolists and socialist Vork to gether in such a way as to completely destroy It." It may be said in reply to the above paragraph that the system ol using prize and "head marks" in school work as a means of stimulating schol arship is disappearing. The philosoph ic reason for this i that it only siimu. lates the very few who are in the front and discourages the many wlio know form the outset that they are not in the race. The plillosopny tnat unuer lies the best educutlou today 1 that of broadening the knowledge of all not of banging up prize for the leverisn competition of the few, Ho with regard to the illustration of building another ruilwuy line ia com pete in carrying pusseugers with those already built. If the line parallel a previous one certainly the people don't want it built, The building of the Nickel I'.nte railroad was a public Ions. To parallel the Lincoln street railway would be another. i tne first road can do the buslucs It u very oor economic sense to build another. What the publio need is railway aervice at cost. The law of competition a Is exists ia the world today is the law of flesh sud blood selling itself at a continu ally cheaper price year by year. To psrtially protect themselves from it destructive effects Wbor combines Into unions and capital into Combinations. Itoth acta are as natural and necessary for self preservation aa the herding to. gether of buffalo. Neither la against interest until it seek to do injustice to other as for Inst a no the buffalo lu gather iu herds for th purpose of driving the elk form the feeding ground. To come directly to "Ihe tiling which mean the imin and theory reins to frighten my frleud - blra What 1 socialism? there are three answer which I give In order. FirstWebster' definition! A the ory or sysieiii of stN-iut reform which contemplate a complete reconstruc tion uf lct), wiili a mora just and toluol dUiiibuiioo of property aud htr,M .Neil th tiianditrd dhtiotiaryi "A theory of i lvtl policy - that alma to cur lha revons trm lion of ataiely, lu tie of wealth, sod a tiiora stpjll aide dislribuluiu of th prodmla of labor thtuiigh the puliile vtdlwtitt OMi rhl of laud aiel capital di tlc-guUhed from, Sil tit public d It-tlne iitsiiatfciiirut of all I ml tut i Irs, lu imU is ,,Uijie. etVording to his UcU,w sHim, rUtowd by l adv I ,l.ll'Ui.lir. flMU iH.innmU- m ia uui d .i.dm a iuiiu unity of v.hhI or propily and friw uuMal Uiu la hut eMhg ll'l s i iudlvuluaU shati t rewards! sUb." ,i,4 Ihlid, Ih leulury diclbiaaryi "Aey thuty r )i" of wil oi ybuila whub wuuid aU..ih, ta in.! wr la kiI ! lb In Uldal bb so'tduit ! iH.u.pellil on lil' ma I ?r tm -le)r , Sim snustum iv " fi'fU at'U a, M alt!w a hums psittrt an I tipuiat I d sirta a vf lb plu'l uf Ular. and a ,.,,.4 ake Md d wpnal, h la traHut and ! t l'biUia, tlx t..ii iHtMstsUa of lb utetuorr K, twwMI,tt4l, ,Nuw, ub say we er an un i ih dt ttsiiioa. sad I aitim tbry ptlit belbUg tht I VnftlW la Mitm. (, I lurthsr affirm thai II th aU at lbs peapl' pHa tr a I dMd lu . la dv sentlally the very things set forth by these authorities s dcilning social. tuici en isi tine ca-onnrui on. ior coitipetltlou in the production and distribution or weaiin ana tiiereny to secure a "more perfect and equitable distribution of the product of labor." I know personally hundred of popu. lists who understand these tilings as I understand them and fortify their understanding with the sitma argu ments here presented and more be sldss. We are noiiiillst who believe in socialismwho openly avow its doc trine a herein defined and believe In securing its blessings ns rapidly as we can, vve uo not yieni to jrouier Tibbies nor to anv other man our right to understand socialism as de fined by the highest autliorities upon the Kmrllsh language nor to defend Its doctrine when so defined. lint, perhaps, the claim may lie ret nn III ii I. If Is kiudullstii a bounded bv the socialist party that I so objection able. I huv never been a member of that party, and cannot speak for Its orgonlwilion. I take notice, however- f hut the socialist party in fills fall's elections made surprising gains la all the eastern states and mat in naver hill, Muss,, a socialist mayorthe first In tb history of this country wu elected over both old parties upon a plttjlfortti which 1 here present as a sample of the tenets of the socialist party, The platform rends es follows: Article 1. The acquisition by the municipalities of the publio utilities, such a street railways, gas and elec tric light plants and nil other utilities requiring a frnncuise, the same to be operated by th operatives, co-operatively, subject to direct vole of the whole people the employes to elect their own superior officers, but no em ploye to be discharged for political reasons. Article 2. We demand the abolition of the contract labor system on all public works. Article 8, We demand that elglit bourn constitute a dny's work with a minimum wage of $2 per diem. Article 4. We demand that all sal aries and wages paid by the municipal. , . - .. ... . i I Ia . t. .awwIamM liy oe in j;roijruu w m khn rendered. t Article 5, We demand that the city, when necessary, furnish proper food, clothing and shoe to all children wlio are kept at home on account of a lack of proper food, clothing nnd sboes, Arili.ln A. We demand thflt the full pow,rs of tbe municipality be exer cised for the relief of the unemployed, rictvyliumy, out r tne esienusn ment of public works for their employ, trient. Article 1. We demand the abolition of grade Crossings and every other menace to human health and life. Article s. We demand that the bur den of taxation be distributed in pro portion to the holdings of each citi zen. .... Article 9. We demand the abolition of all secret aession of the ity council mid that a public record be kept of the vote of each member on nil question. Article 10, We demand the adoption of the principle of the Initiative and referendum and proportional repre sentation. Arill 11. We demand that all offi cer be aubject to recall by the respect ive constituencies. Article 12. We demand the aboli tion of tbe secret Balloting in the city council. Now read this platform over from lieglnnlng to end and point out the plenk In It that the progressive pop ulist in Jicbrassa cannot eubscrlbe to. There is, it seem to me, no good causa either in fact or in theory for lit tack upon socialism. I thlnlc the effect of them is to weaken the at tachment to the populist partv of that body of actual socialistic tbwkera who have don aa much as any clase to make the people'a party a iniwer for the present and a prophesy for the fu- 're- . . A. l Hu.;l.lN. Lincoln, Neb., Jh ermbcr SO, 191. Iteply by the l'ditor -lt w rd do la take refn 1 1, a liehlnd Ihe dictionaries. The definition that Webster give of re- nublicaiilsm is a follow) ilepublloanlsm I. A republican form or system of government the principle or theory of republican gov ri.,,i.,.l 1. A tl.ii'liinrlit lit. or tMilitU eel ymjMMhy for, a republican form of government. If ft mill itrtM-lnhit hllllsrtf a rt'liul- llean, will Mr. Hhebloit awept hl a a deHnlMon 01 Hi pliuci rn nf t There U ol a word In II atsmt "In Irlnsle" value, lha gold atandard or intiirt'tlv tariff. Th m tslism thai the editor of Ih tndiwlrnl oppose ! Ih amdaltwa uf th reil lder of lhl tjr vhhb Mr. thbii ) l organising in ... ui I Ih union. Their .4rt and tbir edr aeiue ulmiu with mora nei aii r beioeix- Ihsw Ih tepubl.ean db The ery titijil be gitea of -iiiw la IUrthltl, Mum, U daae. by Ihem p,i,uUia aad at iilli at all, Vt Mr, tiWba lUs lhl It U " rUIUm, Wha U Ih hot author na tive fi.mal, Mr. hl.M or lb iUitsi lea tvia and ir? Tb New Verb I'vopte, Ih bsdin sk Ub rwpf l Iks I Sited llr, dsioxiars th )lvlhlll les.Wt I det tsi thai they are sol clIUa. bul ..i.ttlut. lb I'eopl dwlsrta Ihsl l4 iMidrts ef th lUverlilll mnil r irt hlef all h lurditlr ol i-pubtiM. I k ladfjwHdsol I a pop alil paper II biltw I ami ada rle vvrv plash of Iks pUtf irW f t pipuUl j.llfrat. Thet la aalb " (l owttaatd (ia I'tflH lg) IFAV.'f hi Peopling tbe rialne of Asia-Rail road Building Through the Veld Region. GREAT EASTERN MIGRATION Vlewe of John W. Uooltwater, a Well-known Nebraska Land owner and Free Silver Champion . ' A tioveniaient Itsllway System, The historian of a hundred years hcuco will note two great landmarks of the lust quurter of the Nineteenth century the signing of the treaty of peace between the United States, and the building of the trans-Siberian rail road. These two events ma' th entrance of tbe two great future worlds-powers upon an era of world wide influence and control. The only two nations that have tbe territory and the peo ple Cupablo of expansion are Uussla and the United States, Fifty years from now they will so completely over shadow the other nations of the earth in all the element of material strength as to make the disarmament proposal by the present cstur not only possible, but entorcable by their own mutual airrcement, Heverul times in tbe past year the column of the independent have re ferred to the opening of tbo great Si berian empire bv the Ilussian govern ment and the prospective incoming of its mighty rivalry In the production of grain aud live stock. Additional in formation end rropbecy is given o John Itook waiter, whosa residence 1 in Ohio, but who is an ex-tensive land owner in Nebraska. Mr. Uookwelter is not only a land owner, but ie an original and energetlo thinker on econ omic questions. Ilia little book, "Free Hilver or What" printed two yeara ago ia not merely a campaign docu ment, but a piece of literature that will be read with interest long after the other writing of tbe campaign of IbOO have ceased to be considered. Mr, Uookwalter has Just returned from a trip of 17,000 miles in Kusslan territory. He was allowed to go every where, to see everything and to take hundreds of phototrr phs, tbanki. to soeciul permits Issued to him by the minister of the Interior on the appli cation of the United Ktate ambaiuMMior at St. Petersburg. During his Journey he conversed with the governors ol province and with mlllUry ana civ. nvrnivK RUSSIA it officers of sir rank. In hi Interviews he speaks aome mo menlou truth. Among other things he snld: "Kverywbere - found the kindest and most friendly feeling toward Am. erica and Americana and heard many expreaslona of aatlafactlon over Am erica's success in our war with Spain. To this there wna not a single decep tion, Wherever 1 went everything was thrown open to ma simply because I was an American, Amerlca'e best open door to central Asia and China la through, ltuaala. Already all the locomotlvea awl roll ing atock on the railways are of Am erican manufacture. Central Asia will, In the near future, bo the greatest market In the world for manufacture of all kinds sud our obtaining th vir tual monopoly of thl market only de. ..ml on our retaining the friuedahip It ul hs now for u, .. great sur prise to the world I la prerUon in that part of the earth ami It will come, I bellev. very em, UUHS1A WJIXHBKK ALLfANCK. Not many year will ellipse before th world will are Uuasla, KnifUmt and China combining for th partition, of Asia. Th ry fore of circumstance will bring lata about. Kngland and Uussla will er b aW to agre oa partition between themselves. ftUl les will they allow the other pwrs l.i hr with ihem In Ih spoils of that eaiiplr. They will ft4 lo defend China, wh abne I betple galrisl Ih rev of lu wnUt awl share with It th doiuluatioa of AU. "Ih alllane of KngUad ad R" tU aM I bin, of two ihlrd ef lha human Me, wil! I h aa aHlawr a hlslury la bl yet seen. II will b i.s Ibsl will glv iHfa lo Ih world for eeiiturte. AU I' lurU will i.isU for pcv and II wilt l aid di. ut teini la Ih r-sl f ih wr4. l, fit dr athtiUr and ,NUra ka Uudnwaer htw4 awh ' ai.d wh .! of f Aiwrta i.ntlUiit and buna mew will tse-t Mt- -thai tbti I bill M A i" UU.r or InUrvsl la gta by th opw leg f Chin ar Ih wtottw lb ,4V -!' a M as) mm Ihts lli -,in. h rf Im' t fi by a Sqxew d-Mr' la I Ulua, 1! realty I an laduiill www, and what w ty tf.w b abl a sf tl la Ih Chlw lb lli Mt b bl la wh Ut lhw tlvs. U dsy-eed thai f U af I bad-hatr Chin buja fre Ihe rsl f IH we 14. Will l5 H ibiNHigli llil asd ttat ai Asia. -Itss.1. la Ih ll Ihlrif r VS 4m Wei I epea Ih 4r f lli than England and ell the rest of th world has done in fifty years. No one, unless he has seen it with hi own eyes, can have tbe faintest conception of what Ilussla has dona and ia still doing in Central Asia. "i have truveica over j,boo miles oi railway which that country ha, built from the Caspian sea to Tushkeud, ia Turkestan, over a branch of thl Una which runs to the northern frontier of India, over another brand which goes from Mery to the border of Afgbania tan, This last branch was not com pleted when I was there, but it will be open to trafflo next week. There are also ltusslun Hues along tbe 1'erslaa frontier and penetrating into that country, either completed or rupldly approaching completion. - 1 th work on these line na oeen uone uj the soldiers, who, in that way, are not ia Ilussla as elsewhere, non-producers. Another matter of mighty moment to the American people that Mr. Itook waiter saw and recorded Is the agency of the government in this vast enter prise of opening up end settling a con. tincnt. Jie sitys: "All this tremendous Aslatlo rail way aysteiu is owned and operated by the government. All tbe line are ad mirably built and splendidly equipped. Why, I saw a bridge across tbe Amud arla in Central Asia, at point wlwre the river is three miles wide, that cost 20,. 000,000 rubles and is the greatest piece of engineering work ever accom plished. There is nothing like it any. . where else in the world, tho Celebrated Firth bridge, near Kdlneburgb, not ex eeptcd. "Wherever I went I saw citlc and town springing up, such aa Aobad In Turkomaula, for example, which al ready has 29,000 Inhabitant. Near Mery the csar is building a magnifi cent palace. New Bokhara, twelve miles form old liokbura, has 102,000 inhabitants, "The ltusslun policy in Central Asia is not to bring the new and the old in to too close a contrast, end so it builds the railway stations a few miles away form tbe old centers of population, thus forming new and entirely modern centers. "Where do the people come from to Inhabit these towns? Why, from Eu ropean Ilussla. ihe government la turning its aurplua KurojMson popula tion into Central Asia just as the Uni ted State turned it surplua popula tion of its Atlantlo States Into tba great western territories. What I have Just seen in Central Asia la almost an exact reproduction of what I wltaessed years ago in Illinois, Indiana and Mis souri, when tbe emigrant from tbe east were pouring into the w at. No human power stay the onward march of the Slav through Kuasla, which will be the feature of the twentieth cen tury, Just aa tbe march of tbe ADglo Haxon through America baa been the" feature of the nineteenth. No man who intelligently etudlee present event can doubt that the Rus sian and American nation are the coming powers in the world. Though widely differing they have yet many trait In common among them great power of endurance, tremendous ener gy and colonizing ability love of free dom and mechanical ability. When the ltussian people shall achieve con stitutional liberty which 1 certain to com in the next quarter of a century we may look for th long repressed energies of that people to go forward with great bound. America and Kua sla will be the rulers of tbe world's destinies in another fifty year. Am erica i mora than a hundred yeara ia advance of Russia in civil liberty and organised progress, llow Important to the world'a welfare that ah aball take no backward etep. Brr' ota . CiacotiATt, Ohio, De. II. Colon vVUllam Jennings Bryan will b pra ent hr at th Jackson day banquet of the Dusk worth elub. The dl ol th banquet baa ba ebanged ta Fri day, Jaauary a, to ntt bis eoava tene. Tb speoh of Mr, Dryaa her U pl4 tab his opealaf of th eaupetg against aapaasloa. Vfr Mal ay lb T Waiaiaeroa, !) If. Asllag AW taraay Qaaaral ttleaanta baa raadr4 aa enialoa la erhish he hold thai re tail dalrt ar aot repaired U pay the additional tag at II pr harrsl Wf rhe4 by them prior ta Jaa It, lilt, tba day Ihe we rae asl at lata etTt aad hl4 by the a that del. Hi t tUl tw4 llstlii, Mast, PY It -Mr. Jada ft, ru, wit of U eailvt l Ih UUa Ur14.lt4 to-day f f astrtlla, Ih ws Ih 4M. f 'ayaal Vfalho l Ue l'ail4 tla arasy aaV i aW at Ja ti U ia muumm t ir4 atmbj Ctavataawt tthha, lv l,-Tl atapra eea Ih at lira vUU llebaada. wk4 ol la tale CwUi JaiwM lkaJe aad slus 4 ieaalo U. A. tlaaaa, be Ur, J a Mam 4 lhif faresef rrvsiJewtei the U:lwte hiI epaay, t he rw) a4s itfte aad Itvo at the liltawfa fftal eoespaay hate W Netty ealUUM br the rtdiaJ iwd a aaay, aad it baa bw Mtissatad ttat its haUteft at ? aad lira. rv ida to thl ib i4 If wat wWasaaast ta!Ma,avh 7 aiU be lake) f daig'4 aad will (tkmusunl t ff I)