THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. August 23, 1900 f if 7 Ctjt Uebraska Independent Linctla, Etbrssks .CO PER YEAR III ADVANCE fsewr44 by tLm. TWf frjt!y for ct or ,it .Srtt ctt ta t Wft with IIm. a1 It .iecr.Lr !.- la t ffepvr A44rM 3 rac:il.raCet. at.-! m all 4ra&a, akottvy or&et, u t-t j t; U C&r tlthrssk tnitptndtnt. MtiMti(t Will Mt t &4- ticwdL TTi.it win poor Mortoa do cow? ant!-ln:periallt league, of which fc vu Tic prtsldest. hu Indorsed Eryas! A chore to one of tee cam pal ga to&gM Is as follows: Mc Kit ley trusts la ail trusts, Ard Haxna fries the fat- It look raw as though It was going to be a landslide. Let u make It the Lies aicce tLe glaciers ground tbeir way &on froa the north and covered tt! costliest a thousand feet deep. Uettecatt Colonel Eager of the first Nebraska was elected by the anti impexialUt convertica held at Indian apolis Tlce prid ct for the state of Nebraska and fcas accepted the po irttioa. Is 1156 the silver republicans left the g. o. p. The other day the anii lr:periaiit rrputlicaju left. Now If all the acti-trust republicans will walk out, there will be zurthing left but Rockefeller, Etete Elkiss and Mark llama, Orgaaiie a Bryao club in your pre- elict rlsfct away. Any se. male or fe- j male, over ftfte-ra years of age can be-j com a member. With such a club in j every town and precinct the manage- j Beet of the eacpaiga will be a very J easy affair. The Chicago Inter-Ocean In com meatier oa Bryan's neecb at Ind ianapolis says: "He :s a voice and5 cothlsg more." John the Baptist was "the tolce of ose crying in the wilder-Bess.- Vat that voice has been rever berating down the ages and is now heard la all the languages of the world. I flag, they honored It. for mat flag rep For four years the g- o. p. papers, nte4 freedom ana. dependence, declared every day. morning and night, j Whea the patliots charged the British that tre silver was dead. Now tbejjUne, at Yorktowa Kurr0Unded Lord say that It is not only a live issue, but j 11 and his force, rorced him to the paramount issue ia this campaign. The question Is: Did they lie then.sUrs anJ Etripes were hoisted over a do they lie now or do they lie ail the time. la the republican ranks. Mark Hanna Gettysburg, In the wilderness at Peters en cot eeia to be doing anything ex- burS and thousands more followed cept trasySn cp newtpapers. Let him Grant and Sheridan on to Appomattox, buy them. He played that game on &lwa'8 following the flag, then they the people once and they understand It now. If he bought nine-tenths of all the papers, he could cot carry this country for JdcKialey and ImperialUm. The State Journal and the Omaha Be suppressed xaost of the associated press report of the second day of the acU -Imperialist convention at Indian- a polls. The first day's report was such a daxspner oa their feelings that they doubtless gave orders cot to let any more of that staff get in. The telegraph 'eitprs Set a few paragraphs go and thejwLil doubtless get the grand bouse, oa the first pay day. Gre&t tews" papers are tLoe concerns. If you wart the cews. read The Inde peadexX On wotild think to read the Monday Journal aad the same date Omaha Bee that there was aa avalanche of gold democrats to McKinley. but the five coSmos devoted to the matter only covers ten nea, mott of whom voted for JJcKJpW la 1S6- The Independent! can furcUa enough republicans who have changed to Bryan sine US to offset that record several times. The tact Is cobody care what George L. Miller. Billy Paxtoa and J. Sterling Mortoa ar goizz to co this yr- they hav known for years. The cablegrams acnomsc that the Gmaa papers In the Fathtland are j always Coated as the emblem of all the all Gp ia am. The cause of the tip-j people of the United States and of all roar is that Emperor William is fol-jtbe world who love liberty and degrad lowirg too clofteiy la the footsteps of j ing it to the position of a banner of a Emperor McKlaiey and is making war political party. As long as it floats without the content f the German there as a banner of a political party, parliament. The kaiser evidently j the f usioa forces of this state will see thought that If McKinley. a ruler of j a so-calM rt public, could make war ; withost the csat of congres. he.! lis said Laiser. and acknowledged em- j peror cf the German empire, could dc the same ihisg. But it mi that this was too muth Imperialism for subjects of aa empire to endure and there is i general protect. There Is no emperor like oar emperor and there are co sac J-org eadarics. complaisant subjects ;n all tha wo3ld as are the mullet heals. ' KII BA6 K A REPUBLICANS. Until tea years a$o the republican party ruled Nebraska to such an ex tent that a republican nomination was equal to an election. But its leaders in the meantime had become the obed ient toots of the corporation interests nd bad committed such gross blun ders that they drove thousands upon thousands over to the populists and alienated especially the German ele ment. A decade ago they betrayed the true republican cause by putting an honest republican Judge of the su preme court, when his term was out, on the shelf for ten Ions years because the corporations did not like his stub born and Incorruptible independence. And some years later they elected him a great flourish of trumpets one of the most obedient railroad tools to the United States senate. These were a few of their misdeeds and hundreds of sim ilar vicious and stupid blunders had the natural result that every candidate was In bad repute when it was known that he was a favorite of the republican railroad attorneys and other corpora tion leaders who controlled nomina tions by packed caucuses and packed conventions. The above Is not a pop editorial, but an extract from an article In the Oma ha Bee. signed by Fred Hedde of Grand Island. Ten years ago, when the populists proclaimed those facts, no one denounced the statements with more bitterness than did Mr. Hedde. It Is only another demonstration of the fact that the old moss backs who run the republican party are .always ten years behind tee" procession of in telligent " and progressive reformers who have redeemed this state from the power of the corporations. It would seem that one who could see the evil that the republicans of Ne braska have done and could state it so forcibly would rejoice over the triumph of reform. But Mr. Hedde takes his place in the front row of those who mourn over the defeat of the republi cans and corporations and at consider able length explains bow they can be put back in power. And he wants that done after the republican party has added the awful crime of imper- laijEm to those whIcn he enumerates. Mr- Hedde's logic Is simply this: "The republican party in Nebraska has been obedient tool of the corporations. Because of that, it has been hurled from power In this state. For all that I mourn But there is a way that this corrupt party pan be put back into power. Let us go to work and put it back." HONOR THE FLAG. When the patriots wltn bleeding feet i marched through the snow to Valley Forge following Washington and the haul down the British ensiern and the conquered foe, the flag was honored. When tens of thousands of sons of Tirf"thtn mnt Vi trj f nr r'.tf and Acr at honored It. for that flag represented liberty for all men everywhere and of every color and condition. As that nag floated above Lincoln when he de livered that Immortal speech in which he declared that "a government of the people, for the peopte, ty the people should not perish," the thousands as sembled there and millions more in ev ery land where a hope of liberty ex isted honored that flag. When McKInley sent a general of the army to the sultan of tne Sulu islands and that general, under orders from Washington, purchased the privilege of ra!elng the flag over him, his wives ! and his Islands, bribed ii:m with a pen sion and agreed to protect slavery un til the slaves were able to purchase their own freedom - at the "market price," the flag was dishonored. When the half crazy partisans of imperialism stretcifed that flag across the mala street of Lincoln, cesecrated It with the portraits of two candidates for office. It was again dishonored. That flag has been until now the iroTertv of all the teoDle. of everv )micaI beIieft every Bhade of TeUg. JoQS oplnion of the Hch and of the uett? fov a o..c9 wuu uiaac it a flag of a political party. When the rebeU tore It down from the walls of R sampler, they did not disgrace it more than these Lincoln republican degenerates have. In 'tearing it down I from the high position In which it has to It that O street is deserted by all thoe whj honor the flag as the emblem of liberty for all the people. In some way they will endeavor to show that that flag: shall not be taken from the portion where the love and affection of the American people have always exalted It and degraded to the low po sition of the banner of a political par ty. It shall still remain the banner of the free and the emblem of hope of all men who love liberty the world over, The Independent does not advise the commiting of any unlawful act. It has always stood for law and order, and for obedience to the decisions of the courts even to the infamous Income tax "decision. But there are ways in which men who love liberty and re vere the flag can show their detestation of the degenerates who would desecrate it, that' will be very effective. SETTER WATCH OUT. The news from China Is to the effect that the American minister has been rescued with all his family and be longings. Now that our minister Is safe, our missionaries safe, our mer chants safe, it is time to get our mili tary forces out of China and home again. We have no more business there and will have none until the long di plomatic negotiations are closed that will settle the amount of damages. We have no more business in China. Com mon sense, statesmanship, the true in terests of the American people all de mand that we get out. No true Chris tian will ask that we make a way for the propagation of our religion with Krags and cannon. We have no right to provide for profits of American ex porters by sacrificing the lives of Am erican soldiers to obtain them. No American will claim that we should sacrifice the lives of sons of American mothers to obtain profits for the mil lionaire merchants who reside In our sea coast cities. If they want trade, let them get it in open competition. The Chinese will continue to buy goods from them if our merchants will offer to them such goods as are salable in China at the same or lower prices than merchants of other countries offer them. But The Independent warns its read ers that the McKinley administration has adopted the Talleyrand politics, who said that the use of language was to disguise human thought. If the republican party wants to accomplish anything, it starts out by denouncing it. We had therefore btter watch these utterances from Washington. At present McKinley declares he has no intention of a permanent occupancy of any more Asiatic territory, Dut the flag has been raised in China and accord ing to his former utterances it can nev er be hauled down. We had all "bet ter watch out." MOSEY WABXEK FOR UK VAX. Mr. Warner has published the Lyons Mirror for a long time. It is the old est republican paper in Burt county. He has been struggling with his con science in an endeavor to stay in the party to which he has belonged and to whose success he has devoted so many years of his life, but he gives it up at last. He writes to a friend in this city that he has published the last edition of a republican paper that he will ever publish. He says he can't stand trusts, imperialism, standing armies and turn ing the financial system over to the money power. Mr. Warner is one of the best known citizens of northern Nebraska, where he has resided since the time that the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. He is a man of unimpeach able honesty, whose life has been an inspiration to all who have known him. For a long time he has been writing articles against the money power, the trusts and imperialism, although he has kept the republican ticket at the head of his columns. He has now done what a great many cf the men who helped form the republican party have done in the last few weeks, left it, and, like Governor ' Boutwell, will do all in his power to destroy it. The pop ulists of Burt, Cuming and Thurston counties should see to it that his sub scription list is made double what it ever has been. IRREDEEMABLE PAPER. The republican party having spent years in denouncing irredeemable pa per money has ended up in flooding the country with it, for national bank notes are practically irredeemable. They make a pretense of redemption, but it is only a pretense, for the only place where they can be redeemed is at Washington and tnere only in lots of $1,000 and upwards. As far as the people generally are concerned, there might as well be no' redemption at all. In this, as in everything else, when the plutocratic managers of the repub lican party start to accomplish a thing, they begin by denouncing it. That is the policy they pursued with silver and that is the way they managed to intro duce an irredeemable paper currency, They are attempting the same thing with imperialism. They, with one voice, declare that they are all against It. But look out for them. That is the way they always do. Republican primaries have been held In Pennsylvania and the result has been announced that in the next legis lature there will be 52 Quay republi cans, 62 anti-Quay republicans and 64 democrats. That settles the question of whether Quay will be finally retired. He has run his race of corruption and the end has come. Whether that leg islature will be able to elect a senator remains to be seen. There are three parties and no one of them has a ma jority. If they fail to elect, it will only be another demonstration of the necessity of adopting the populist plan and elect senators by the vote of the j people. HAVE A HARD TIME. The position of editor of a republi can paper is a very hard place to oc cupy these times. . To fill the place, a man must of necessity abandon all the attributes of honorable manhood. He must have no opinions of his own. If he writes before he gets orders from headquarters, he is very likely to say something that will displease the em peror and then he must take it all back, flop over to the other side and denounce his own writings in the most vigorous terms at his command. Here in Nebraska we have a conspicuous ex ample in the editor of the Omaha Bee. He wrote against imperialism until McKinley changed his notion about "plain duty," and then he had to flop. The editor of the Des Moines Register is another example. He was red hot against imperialism and wrote as fol lows: "We believe it to be safest to aban don our old-world possessions. But this will not interfere with our holding them until we shall have fully satisfied ourselves as to a war indemnity. We can hold the Philippines until we have effected an advantageous settlement of our difficulties with Spain. Nor will it interfere with us in our desire to re tain a coaling station on the islands. We are entitled to that much. But. as to holding the islands for ourselves permanently, that is out of the ques tion. Unless we abandon our own policies and endanger our republic." Shortly after he heard from Mark Hanna and he flopped. To do so he had to abdicate his position as a free and independent thinker and writer, but he did it. It was the demand of the emperor's favorite and it had to be done. It would not do to . antagon ize the favorite. That Is the position of every republican editor in the land. It is a most shamefu and wholly dis honorable position, but ir one edits a republican paper that is what he must do. "Ain't you glad" that you are a pop. You are no man's intellectual slave. You think what you please, write what you please and never have to wait to hear from a Mark Hanna before you publish what you have writ ten. If anyone should come around this office dictating what policy the paper should pursue he would get kicked into the street. If he. said that if you don't do so and so, -you shall never have an office, he would be told to stick the offices in his pocket and "git." "MARGARITAS TOP-SIDE." The two "margaritas topside" of journalism in the west seem to be the St. Louis Globe-Democrat and the Lin coln State Journal. The other day the Globe-Democrat had a leading edi torial in which it declared that Bryan was an anarchist of the same kind as Bresci, the bloody-handed murderer who assassinated King Humbert. Of course that writer did not expect that sensible men would believe that Bryan was an anarchist that he went around murdering people. It was simply an appeal to the mob, such as the repub licans daily engage in. There does not seem to be any other course for them to pursue, if they are to defend McKin ley and his policies. How can they defend the government of Manila as it is administered under the imperial orders of McKinley. Ma nila has simply been turned over to the rich Chinese to establish their margaritas topside," their opium dens, their whisky shops and to rake in their boodle from every side. Mc Kinley is the emperor in the Philip pines. Everything is done by his or ders. There is no lawmaking body anywhere to make laws for Manila. The orders of McKinley are the only laws that are in force there. To de fena such a thing as that, of course it requires "margaritas topside" journal ism. The Globe-Democrat and State Journal come up to the scratch and furnish it. The cost of the war In the Philip pines so far in men and money is re ported from Washington to be as fol lows: Soldiers killed in action.... 533 Deaths from wounds 193 Deaths from diseases and other causes 1,668 Total number of deaths..... 2,394 Total number wounded 2,073 Cost of war in cash $186,678,000 There is no meaner, contemptible, dirty trust in the United States than the English thread trust. When the McKinley tariff on thread was pro claimed, the Great English manufac turers just packed up and brought their machinery and workmen over to this side and raised the price of sewing thread up to the rates imposed by the McKinley tariff. Not satisfied with that, behind that tariit they proceeded to organize a thread trust and raised the price again. They have finally got prices so high that there is a falling off in the consumption of thread. Ev ery house-wife is very careful with her thread now. The other day the thread trust posted notices in all their factories that the time of workmen would be cut down to four days in a week, which decreases their earning power just one-third. While workmen suffer and economize, the trust hopes to so curtail 'the supply that women will be forced to pay their prices While the mills were m the hands of the Co nants, Americans, who were in keen competition with, other thread plants, they were kept running on full time, and their operatives received full pay. Now the English trust, which has absorbed them, curtails production for an indefinite time. - This trust lives and has its being solely by virtue of the tariff. Repeal the tariff and it would die. The old state of affairs, when the wage work ers had work all the time at good wages would be restored. There are a great many other trusts that exist solely by virtue of the tariff. They sell their goods at just double the price to Americans that they charge foreigners. They have done it for the last fifteen years. They will continue to make a double charge to American consumers as long as the outrageous tariff is on the statute books. The prominent republicans in Ind iana who have renounced McKinley and all his ways are exceedingly num erous. Prominent among them are General Lew Wallace, ex-President Harrison and ex-Congressman Henry U. Johnson. Mr. Johnson will take the stump for Bryan. However, these de sertions are no more numerous in Ind iana than in several other states The old time republicans don't , like im perialism and a great many have the courage to say so, while others will vote against it and say nothing. All the republican magnates declare that labor unions are trusts. They also believe that there are good trusts and bad trusts. As they never have any tuing to say against the Standard Oil trust, the sugar trust, the steel trust or any of those sort of combinations, the labor unions must, in their minds, be the only bad trusts that exist. They introduced a constitutional amendment into congress last winter, if it had been adopted, would have enabled them to suppress the labor unions as trusts. When an amendment was offered to exempt the labor unions, the amend ment went over iue transom. McKinley has driven out, shot or im prisoned the Christian leaders of the Filipinos in Manila anJ turned the town over to the heathen Chinee, who has established his opium joints on every street and opened up a market for slave girls. American courts give certificates of jconcubinage, which is a worse form of polygamy than ever ex isted in the Sulu islands. He made a treaty with Mohammedan, protected him in his property in slaves and gave him a pension. The Christian men of Manila he would not treat with, but drove them into the wilderness, slaugh tered them by the thousands, impris oned them by the hunarecrs, taxed them beyond endurance and calls all that spreading the gospel of Christ! Bryan dominated the national demo cratic convention, not because he was the head of a machine, but because the members of that convention feared that he would not accept a nomination at their hands unless they promulgated a platform in accordance with his wishes. Such a thing never occurred in this country before and probably never will again. Think or It! A private citizen, without an office, without a machine, his party out of power, all the powers of wealth actively opposing him and yet directing the policies, and leading more than 6,000,000 of free and Independent men in paths they have not before trodden without a dissent ing voice to be heard among them! It will never occur again. Poor old Ignatius Donnelly. We knew that if he undertook to associate with the fuzzie wuzzies and republican assistants, that degeneracy would soon mark him for her own. In writing of Towne's declination he says of Stev enson, "He is the pure, unadulterated quintessence of Cleveland democracy." Now Donnelly knows that Stevenson never had any sympathy with Cleve land democracy. That he stood as firm as the rock of ages against Cleveland during all that long fight. Donnelly knows that, and yet he makes the above assertion without a Dlush. That shows the effect upon a man's char acter of constantly associating with bad company. THE PEOPLE SHOUTED. Guy S. Mitchell says that when the British government In India reopened the Delhi canal, great concourses of people accompanied tne waters as they passed slowly along through the new channel flowers were thrown into the stream, and the multitudes loudly ex pressed joy, and welcomed with glad cheers the sight of the long desired waters. Similarly the inhabitants of Milan collected in vast numbers along the banks of the Canal Martesana upon its reopening and cheer after cheer arose as the waters poured past, Such would be the case in this coun try if the government would store up the waters that now go to waste and then pour them out on the rich soil of the arid west, but Mark Hanna and McKinley prefer to spend millions that would bring gladness, plenty of peace to millions in our own country, fight ing Filipinos under the tropics. What is left after that, Mark wants con gress to give him in the shape of a ship subsidy. The mullet heads think that is all right. A FOREIGN COMMANDER. If American troops .are to serve under any foreign commander in China they would perhaps prefer a German to any other, and the appointment of Count Waldersee as commander In chief of the allied forces will cause no remonstrance in the United States. The question is: What will our troops be expected to do when the great grab game in China begins? Complimentary telegrams have been exchanged between the German em peror and Emperor McKinley over the appointment of a German commander. They were of the most flattering kind. Of course it was necessary to choose a commander in chief for the allied forces at the time that choice was made, but ' McKinley seems to have made no reservations at all in making the arrangement, except that our troops shall camp together, march to gether and fight together. Will the American troops,, be used to slice up China for the benefit of the European monarchies? At present England's eye Is on Shanghai. Ger many will compete for the Yangtse valley. Russia is fighting for New Chwang. France is lined up with Rus sia and the United States rs mixed up in the whole business with no stip ulated right to withdraw. What are Chaffee and the American soldiers to do over there? Since Pekin has been relieved and all Americans are in safe places, why should Chaffee in obedience to the orders of any com mander in chief go on killing Chinese? That is what the pops would like to know. , BRAVE WORDS "I helped to create the republican party, a party at that time of justice and principle and honesty. I believe now it Is a party of injustice and de spotism and I will help to destroy it." George S. Boutwell. These are the words or a man eighty two years of age who was the friend and companion of Lincoln, Seward, Chase, Sumner and the galaxy of statesmen, patriots and warriors who saved the union and abolished human slavery. They embody the sentiment of nearly every one of the early fighters for freedom who are now living. Before Boutwell helped to organize the republican party he .was a demo crat, He left the democratic party when it deserted the principles of Jef ferson, just as he has now left the re publican party when it deserted the principles of Lincoln. It is certain that Governor Boutwell is not afflicted with the disease known as partisan insanity, and which has taken such a firm footing in the system of Senator Hoar. That poor old man. says that the continuance in office of President McKinley and the carrying out of his policies means the overthrow of this republic, but nevertheless, he is going to vote for McKinley. No pop was ever troubled with that disease and never will be. If he gets it, he is no longer a pop, but becomes a fuzzie wuzzie. MUST SUPPRESS IT. When Senator Wolcott made his speech before the republican national convention it was announced In all the republican papers that it would be the principal campaign document of the party and that millions of copies of it would be printed and circulated. It seems now that it will have to be greatly revised or suppressed alto gether. William the Wobbler wobbles so much that it is impossible to make a campaign document ,-that will last six months and represent him. Wol cott said in that speech: "Through the policy of the repub lican party and the wisdom of a re publican administration we have not only made stable and permanent our financial credit at home and abroad, are utilizing more . silver as money than ever before in our history, but we have left the populistlc democracy a dead issue, they can never again gal vanize into life, and compelled them to seek to create new Issues growing out of a war which they were most eager to precipitate." The republicans have suddenly found out that silver is not "a dead issue," but in fact, that it is the paramount issue of this campaign. That is what they are all saying and it will hardly do to circulate this Wolcott speech by millions, side by side with present declarations. The press has continued to p.ttack the illogical, position of Senator Hoar with such rigor that he has deemed It necessary to defend himself. He now says that one reason that makes it im possible for him to support Bryan, al though the McKinley policy is sure to end in the overthrow of the repub lic, is that several judges of the su preme court are very old, and if Bryan is elected president he may have the opportunity of appointing a majority of the judges of that court, "for the overthrowing of the banking system and the establishment of the income tax." The logic of the senator is peculiar. It is this: "It is better that, this re public should be destroyed than that an income tax be imposed on the rich or the bankers should not have the sovereign prerogative of issuing money." Reformers sometimes sayvery hard things against the republicans be cause they , will not meet their oppo nents in debate and seldom if ever un dertake to make an argument. If they would only take into consideration how impossible it is for a republican to , make a logical argument to sustain -the policies of the republican party, they would show pity, rather than in dulge in anger. Senator Hoar Is one of the ablest and most scholarly men in their ranks, and the above is. the very best that he can do. What kind of a muss would a degenerate like the one who writes most of the editorial mat ter for the State Journal get Into if he should undertake to make an argu ment in favor of republicanism when the brilliant and scholarly Hoar makes such a complete failure? The only wisdom that the Journal editor has ever shown Is in never trying to make an argument He knows that Is im possible, so he fills up his columns with appeals to the rabble. That is a kind of work in which he feels per fectly at home. A large number of newspapers are greatly interested in the amount of taxes that Bryan pays. They seem to have a great antipathy to a man who will pay taxes of his own rree will. That, is against all their principles. They point out how the amount of Bryan's taxes increase year by year. That disgusts them beyond measure, as his real estate has not increased. They are all very sure that a man who will pay taxes on invisible property is not fit to be president. McKinley doesn't do it. Rockefeller doesn't do It, none of the great millionaires do it, and when they see Bryan pay taxes on all his property, vislOTe and invis ible, they gnash their teeth in rage. Why do no( some of these republican editors publish something about Mc Kinley 's taxes? He was a bankrupt a little while ago. How much property has he now? How much taxes does he pay? Information has reached The Inde pendent from the most reliable and trustworthy sources In New York that Mark Hanna proposes only to put out enough speakers to make a show of campaigning. He expects to buy this election with cold cash. Curtis reports In the Chicago Record that fifty-four papers in Minnesota have transferred their allegiance from Bryan to Mc Kinley. The same sortJf thing is go ing on in every douhtful state. Be sides the purchase of papers, Hanna expects to invest millions in the pur chase, outright, of individual voters. Men are to be sent into every township and every precinct '.to buy voters. In fact, Hanna has v adopted the old "blocks of five" ? plan with unlimited supplies of money to back'lt up. Many men have been wondering why the re publicans did hob start their campaign. This information-frotai New York ex plains things. Roosevelt has reiterated his insult to all men who do not agree with him concerning the policies of this govern ment in. such offensive terms that it puts him outside of the pale of gentle men. No man is longer under any obligations to treat him as such, and if anyone . of the loyal men in this country whom he denounces as "cow ards" and declares that "they stand for lawlessness and disorder" should walk up to him and slap his face, he would be administering the only rebuke that such bragadocio Is capable of un derstanding. If imperialism is to become the policy of this government, every citizen will be liable to be abused in this manner by any one who wears shoulder straps or has ever worn them. Roosevelt is giving an exhibition of what imperialism is. To such Insults all men will have to submit when a large standing army is once installed. If any man who has an opinion that does not . coincide with the views of Roosevelt is to be denounced as a cow ard and a sneak and the insult meekly accepted in silence by the seven million men at whom it is hurled, then we had better emmigrate to Russia where there is some liberty of opinion al lowed to subjects. In commenting upon tie queen's speech to the British parliament, an eastern republican daily says: The war in South Africa, the Ashan tee uprising and the Chinese difficulty make up the topics to which 'extended attention is given. Home legislation has played a comparatively small part in the work of the session that has closed. Numerous bills upon min.r matters have been passed, but no great principle of domestic reform has oc cupies, the time of the commons and the lords and nation they represent. This is a direct and . natural conse quence of the entanglements in which Great Britain has become involved through the acquirement of vast terri torial possessions in all quarters of the globe. That is just the con ition in which the congress of the United States will find itself if imperialism is made the policy of this government" Much of the time of the last congress was spent in consideration of matters in Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines. In the future much more will have to be iven to them if they are maintained as subject colonies. The result of that T7..1 be, that legislation for the benefit of the people of the United otates will find no time for consideration. It is hard to get any reform through con gress now. It will be a hundred times harder then. Imperialism means the stopping of all advancement in these states. -I