nr- DIRECT ft w Mr vAlue tot your wool t.. The fewer ' ... ...... V- Nebraska. K reaching c you. VOL. XII. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, MAY 16, 1901. .nnt m M 5 rv s. Mb 111' w - RS THE 6AHBUK8 CRAZE Ws. mm Wall ftlrt Wb M a ad THir All-How tbe ' Lasatte Wer IWm4 "Wt after wte of psychic Infla- nccs scra to sweep over this country Sorting a large portion of the pop Klatlca. Sometime U it one thing. ijZzu&-3 another, but the sane and CKicl-Ciis;4 men are unaffected by thrs. Vcvt yeara ago it was the de rutnd for dear coney which went to urh an extent a to produce the worst panic that erer afi"ted the people. That havls; ten overcome by the !. daring the lit year of $245, 1')J of additional money, a new enure has in that of gambling. Started Sn Wall meet it ha spread oter the hole country and thousands of mn and worses tare been irre trietably reined, while a few have the money t.i the unlortunates safely fo-rtd away to their credit. That ms count 4 tane thould buy nock hkh would only pay interest upon a valuation of from forty to eighty rest cf their face value at pr r-i that ran vp Into the hundreds. U jta.it azd-mndlr-g upon any other hypcthf: than the wt!l-kcon one cncrniEg all fad and crates. The larr. are regularly sheared year af Ur j ear. tut that make no difference New osea walk up to be sheared the txt time with J-t much enthu iam a evrr. ThU iajt game played by the sharks u the tlrsp!et ever manipulated. Two firms, Kuhn. Lx-b & Co. and J. P. Morgan & Co.. get hold of prac tically all cf the Northern Pacific stock and lock! it cp in their vaults. Th-n they tnn to run up the price of Northern Vrrltc. Thousands began to eeil Northern I'arjhc h-n they did cri have a share in th-sr poaj-sslon w:th the her of Laying it bsck when th fall ran &i much loer prices. Whn th-y came to buy it back there vii not u hare fcr sale and it ran up to !.v-:. Sixty ir cent interest was r-r-4 f'r the Joan cf the stock over nlfcht. but the two bloodsucking bank ing tima would not let it out. No doubt tJ "j Intended to push tfa-ir ad :.xzs to the extreme, but the con K'l'iM.tu would have leen so terrible thvutand4 of his firms under such c!rurirtEts would have been forced Into ! sn;; try thzt the whole finan ce! pith of N-w York took a hand to i-:tz.l .; h r inhuman end to the crvr. and forced Kuhn. Loeb & Co. and J. P V organ A Co. to settle with the u r. !rt u a !i who had fold North ern I "arise atock wfcea fcy dldn'ti h.tf It Kith a hope tt buying it back at a iOw-r f.sre, at Ym. The stock wiil pay intc-ret at atiout i". and that Is a!l ihii it i worth. These two bvnking Srsi would have wrckd tns C'f thoasands more and created a tradition in New York that would late femora Hied trade in every direc tion if they had not ben called to a hat ty all the great financial inter cut in the city. The two pirate firms had ti e po-r to do it. They had the ttork locked up in their vaults. These other men had aereed to deliver them stock and they were forced to do it or to Into bankruptcy ani there was no !ock to be boujebt at any price. These pirate hankies firms could have made them pay f !," or 2.i.t for that mat ter for stock worth only 43 cents and .!ey would have done it if there had not tec-n a rebellion ail over the coun try at urh an enormous highway rob bery proceeding. The grtai tonkins institutions that lntrferred did nLi do to for any phil anthropic purpose. They saw that if the two pirates were allowed to take all that was in sight there would be little business left for them for some time to come, and it was a purely sel 13 motive that made them Interfere. Chlsacu bankers put up f and New Ycrk banker put up HSOO.OoO and took what stocks and bonds the' Unit could muftfr for security, thus enabling the shorts to hoid on. Then the tmo pirate firms were forced to compromue with tho&e who had sold Northern PaciSe and couldn't deliver the goods because there was not any for sale at any price, at three times the value f the stock, namely, at 150. Wt n Northern Pacific went kiting under the conditions above named, the wfeoie country seemed to go craty. Every other rt of stock, bum stocks, fair stocks, and gilt-edged stocks all began to jump upward under the ei c.ted bidding of the fools who thought that they wou'd all get rich in a min ute. Everybody went to buying stocks. The result ts that there are thousands r f people bankrupted. They have lost thetr all and will from henceforth live live of want and poverty. One New York reporter describes scenes around the stock xrhanjre as follows: There have be: n financial cries be fore this in V.'til street, but none where the excitement was so intense sr.d C;en were so paralyzed. Brokers ere were crowded with customer who aked for additional margins, and waited dumbly, watching the broker trying to decide what to do. Out In the streets people from up-town came crow ding and running toward the ex chin r and a great many Incident iBsilssg or touching were noticed by theme w tote business it waa to be there. Jufct before noon a hansom cab nuhed up to the entrance of the ex change and an elderly woman alighted. Her fa was pale and she leaned on the arm of a colored attendant- En tering the building the inquired for a certain broker and was told that he was not on the Coor. How is steel preferred? she asked of the doorkeeper. -Eighty-three." was the indifferent rc5tcrc.se. God help me. I'm ruined. sobbed the woman, burying her face in her handkerchief and blindly staggering lsck to her carriage. On the fioor of the exchange the scene w& cne of extraordinary confo- slon. Some brokers practically threw up their hands and stopped doing business. One refused to buy a hun dred shares of stock for a customer who called him to the entrance and of fered him a certified check for the amount of the 20 point margin. C. A. Missing had a customer short 5.000 share of Atchison common at S8. When he received, an order to cover at 72 the price was 75, but Mr. Missing walked rather deliberately in to the crowd and said quietly: "What's doing In Atchison common?" The mob leaped at him and one broker yelled: A thousand at 41." Take it." said. Mr. Missing. "Any more?". "A thousand at 42." The broker got his 5,000 shares all under 47. Zimmerman & Forshay bought 1,000 shares of Louisville & Nashville at SO and sold it a few minutes later at 93. Room traders were enormous buyers of stocks on the Vay down. They; were covering their shorts and reap ing a harvest of profits. In the rotunda of the Astor House so great a crowd gathered around the ticker that the quotation had to be called off, the men writing down the figures hurriedly on bits of paper. Ev eryone in the lower part of the town seemed to have a personal interest in the market. In the elevators, on the street corners, the same anxious faces could be seen: the same nervous, In coherent stock talk could be heard. Fme men who were in hard luck themselves were talking of others who were worse off. Said one man: "I was dining last night with a friend of mine and his wife. I knew that he had gone heavily short on Northern Pacific. The dinner proceed ed gayly. Finally his wife said: 'Did you make any money today, John?" "No. he said, laughing. "'Did you lose any?' " 'No. he said, laughing again. "And the dinner proceeded gayly. r3 r. matter of fact everything he had had been vlped out." One of the big private banking houses, which was reported to have lost heavily, was a scene of tears. The principals wept, and 6o did two old clerks. The "Btar customer," how ever, who had lost 1700,000, received a reporter with this outburst: "Say, look here, will you? The nerve! Here's a man up in Maine has sent me a circular, 'Where to Spend Your Summer. Think of that!" He held out the circular, thoughtfully, then he added: "I'll spend my vaca tion up in the park. Central Park, on a bench." In the midst of the excitement a handsome, gray-haired man rushed up the steps that lead to the exchanging fioor. At the door he calmly asked the price of Manhattan. ' "If dropped over 30 points," calm ly replied a uniformed employe, who had been watching a ticker near the door. There was no note of sympathy in his voice. "Oh, my God! I'm ruined!" half screamed the gray-haired man, who a moment before had been himself so cooL He tumbled over in a heap on the steps and several men rushed by, paying him no heed, for they had af fair of their own too important to waste time on a human wreck. Tne ruined victim of speculation was helped to his feet by two messenger boys, for messenger boys, even in time of panic, have leisure, and he went away. He was but. one of thou sands. Men sauntered into their broker's office, looked at the tickers, read-the story of their own ruin; then laugh Ingly sauntered out again, with no look of worry on their well-schooled face. It was wonderful study of character there around the entrance to the ex change and In all the brokers' offices. The victim accepted tne news in a thousand different ways. Some did not even seem to care. Many of the wom en who have been making thousands in the last three weeks and who nev er once thought that a break could come laughed when they learned they had lost their all. But to others it was a tragedy, the grimmest tragedy they had ever known. Loss of fortune is more ter rible than death to the men and wom en who risk their money on the stock exchange, and even those who laughed did it to hide the torture brought by the falling prices. Room traders up town had the usual assembly of fern inlne patrons. It was not so much a panicky as a hysterical market for them. "I'm ruined!" shouted a woman in the corridor of a build! pg that faces one of the large up-town hotels. "They've got every cent of mine in there." and she pointed to-the door of a well-known trading room. "You've got a husband to support you. screamed her companion. but when I'm out I'm out und that's the end of it. I've lost $3,0(K), and it's all I had." The voices were hard one hoarse and one very shrill. The women's faces were hard also, and one was flushed a deep red, while the other was ghastly pale. "If you could only be quiet, ladles, Implored a manager, "you might hear the quotations much better." But they could not. "Why. everybody's lost," exclaimed one woman to an inquirer. I guess nobody' made, except bucket-shops.' "Oh. I don't know how I'll ever ex plain to." The speaker caught her self, gave one quick glance around and then rushed away without telling who was to hear that explanation. She was young. It might be ber.grandfather. Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles commander of the army of the United States, is paid $11,000 a year. Field Marshal Charles M. Schwab, comman der of a single one of the armies of the trusts, ha an annual salary of a mil it MAYOR JONES He Says That m Political Boss is In Esseaco a King; and Rales In tho Sam Way That Kings Bale ' Willis J. Abbot has taken charge of the Pilgrim, a monthly magazine pub lished at Battle Creek, Mich. In the May number there are character sketches of Mayor Jones, mayor of Toledo, and Tom Johnson, mayor of Cleveland. It also contains a short article from Mayor Jones entitled 'Aristocracy and democracy from which the following extract is taken: "More and more I am settling down to the conclusion that although we are 25 years old as a nation, "conceived n liberty and dedicated to the propo sition that all men are created equal," we have hardly begun to understand 1 the meaning of 'democracy,' and we are to a very great extent, so far as our governmental relations are con cerned, ruled by a pronounced aris tocracy. In a remarkable book, "The Religion of Democracy,' that has re cently appeared, Charles Ferguson tells us that 'Europe and America to day are sick with the nightmare of their dreams; in their dreams they have dreamed of democracy, and in their dreams they have achieved lib erty, but only in their dreams, not otherwise.' 'We are all familiar with the old theory of government known as the divine right of kings, and we know that in theory our government was predicated on the opposite idea that all divine right was lodged with the peo ple; that the people are sovereigns. There are few in America today who will question the soundness of the undamental proposition of equality, but, on the other hand,, there are few ndeed who make any attempt to prac tice and apply it in their relations with their fellowmen, politically, so cially or religiously. We dream of democracy, but in our daily lives prac tice the most outrageous form of aris tocracy. "It is not to be wondered that the people did not go by one step from aristocracy to liberty. Such are not the processes of evolution or growth, and if we trace the development of the race from the primeval period of man's history upon the earth up to the pres ent time, those of us who are eager to see a more orderly, more artistic, more human society, will learn a much-needed lesson in patience. "There is in the popular mind a mis conception of the meaning of the word aristocracy.' I use it as meaning the rule of the few. The aristocratic idea s that there are a few who are well born, born to rule, while the many are born to serve, and considering that this idea possessed the world's mind for so many ages, it is not strange that it is yet the dominant idea in America; it is far less so than it was a hundred or even fifty years ago, nevertheless it dominates our politics, our business, and our religion today. "Aristocracy has its most virulent manifestation in the politics of Amer ica. We are not ruled by hereditary kings and queens, it Is true, but we are just as certainly, and sometimes quite as abjectly, ruled by the political parties and bosses who have merely taken the place of the kings and queens. "The king governed the people be cause God had called him to that ser vice, so he said; he did not want to rule them, but they were better for be ing governed, 'better because their necks were bestrode.-' So with party- ism and party bosses. The people ac cept the traditions and superstitions of the past as authority. 'You must have a party,' they tell us, and I ask, Why must I have a party? 'You can not do anything without organization,' they repeat, but I say I am for the organization of the human whole. " 'I'm a man without a party, A free, untrammeled soul, An undivided atom Within the human whole.' "Under the party system, as I view it, the party bosses occupy the place of the kingr of thepast. We are sup posed to have a popular government a government of the majority, and yet, as a matter of fact, in real practice we are governed by a very small and very select minority; and in almost every political division of our country, in the primary political divisions of town ship, precinct, ward, and city when election time approaches, a "commit tee" rises out of the ground, as it were, and makes an announcement through the public press of the holding of a convention on a certain date, the busi ness of the convention being to pro vide candidates for the people to elect to office. Clearly this is a kindness in the committee to do the people's work for them, just as it was a kindness in the kings of old to rule the people In stead of letting them rule themselves. This is the rule of the few." Mr. Abbot's remarks upon the "no party" idea Is contained in an intro duction and are as follows: "The Honorable Samuel M. Jones, who appears this month for the first time as a contributor to the Pilgrim, holds a really unique position in Am erican politics. Other public men have left one party and gone to another, carrying with them a great and en thusiastic following, while still others have abandoned all existing parties and created a new organization of their own, state or national, so that within the last half century we have seen no less than fifteen so-called third parties, the republican party itself having at one time held this position Mayor Jones, however, has smashed all precedent by denouncing partyism as both useless and hurtful, and shap ing his political career purely as an individual, instead of as a member of an organization. He ignores all the established precedents of politics. De siring an office, or feeling it his duty to serve the people in some capacity, he nominates himself, and the organi zation which is formed to accomplish his election is disbanded as soon as its end is attained. Three times he has been elected mayor of Toledo, and once as a non-partisan candidate for gov ernor, he polled more than 100,000 votes in the state of Ohio. It is not too much to say that his success has puzzled politicians, among whom the virtues. of organization, . and, indeed, the absolute necessity of organization, are .regarded as mere truisms. The one possible criticism of " Mayor Jones theory in the face of his undoubted success. is that while.. his methods en able him to secure election, they -do not carry through -with him other nominees , for other offices who will, after his . election, assist in carrying out his policy. The politicians say that while you may elect a non-partisan mayor without organization, you can not elect a mayor and a council t)oth, and they point to the fact that in none of his terms of office has Mayor Jones had a friendly council behind him, and therefore the results of his elec tion have been comparatively little. Besides his activity and success in purely original politics, Mayor Jones is widely and justly celebrated for the kindliness. of his relations with his employes. Himself a manufacturer, and a successful one, he has assumed a position of almost perfect good fel lowship with those in his employ; has declared that his business shall be run in accordance with the dictates of the Golden Rule, 'and has, by the estab lishment of play-grounds, club-rooms, and other public enterprises, contri buted immensely to the happiness and well-being not only of his own work ing people, but of the working people of Toledo in general. Both as poli tician and business man, he has as sumed a position wholly anique and wholly original. There is perhaps no more interesting character in Ameri can public life today." A PLUCKY PREACHER Ho Lives at El faao, Texas, and He Preachad to McKlnloy About Greed, Gold and Glory President McKinley attended service at the Station Street Methodist Epis copal church, El Paso, Tex., and list ened to a sermon by 'the Rev. W. M. Leftwith, a friend of his boyhood days. The president, had been invited by his old friend to worship in the modest little church, and went in company with the mayor of the city, B. F. Ham mett. The place of worship was packed to the street, and standing room could not be had by a large number. The Rev. Mr. Leftwith preached up on "Trusts and the Present Social Con ditions Existing in the United States." When asked why he chose this sub ject, Mr. Leftwith said he considered it the most appropriate one that could have been selected. In part he said: "The term selfishness expresses all the conditions of human life that make necessary -the laws of the kingdom of God, because selfishness is the root of all evil. Paul told Timothy that the love of money is the root of all evil. But the love of money has its root in selfishness. "So long as the selfish greed for gold is embodied in our civil institutions and protected and fostered by our civil laws we will have financial and econ omic troubles, conflicts between labor and capital, strikes, insurrection, law lessness and crime, and with these-the unrest, uncertainty, insecurity and dis asters that visit our country period ically. "We condemn the largest-holders of wealth and hold responsible the trusts, the combines, the monopolies and the financial policies of adverse political parties. When self-sacrifice for the good of others is the law of the king dom of God, self-interest in spite of others is the rankest infidelity. "So long as our vast fortunes are built out of the wrecking of private industries, and trusts and combines and corporations, with multi-millionaires of capital, make corners of the necessities of life, and this is sus tained by public sentiment and pro tected by law, our land may continue to bring forth plentifully, our mines and mountains may continue to pour their rich ores Into the lap of industry, our manufacturers may multiply in every state and county, but the uncer tainty, the injustice, the oppression and the corresponding poverty and crime will continue. "Our social and secular life has dark ened our ethical vision until we fail to see the moral causes that underlie the economic and industrial evils that so often menace our public peace and prosperity, nor do we look in the right direction for the remedy. "We see the rich man and great cor porations increasing their riches by robbing the poor and then administer ing large charities for the relief of the poor. We see great fortunes, amassed under legal forms of oppression and extortion, standing at the head of great philanthropies and endowing great in stitutions, as if the selfishness of greed cotild atone for its own injus tice and cruelty by bestowing alms. "The remedy for the ills will not be found in this political party or that; in this financial policy or that; in this administration or that, but in the sac rifice of life upon the cross. By the sacrifice of Christ's life on the cross men are reconciled to God, and more, are reconciled to each other . in the brotherhood of higher relations. "The cross means death to sin, death to selfishness, to injustice, oppression, fraud and wrong in all forms and in all places, not only in the personal life of the believer, but In social life, se cular life, commercial life, , politica life, in the store, the shop, the factory, the school, the Church, the home. "WJth the cross of Christ the na tions would then have to reckon, the philosopher think, the statesman plan -the market calculate and the courts decree justice. We would then teach the nations that the Sermon on the Mount is the only Christian constitu- tion ol society;.", . , v , J STEEL TRUST DESOLATION Many Cities and Towns Etava Received Kotica of Their Destruction Wail ins; Will Soon bo Heard The first ten ible stroke of the steel trust has been announced. Many cit es and towns will be deserted and the property therein will become worth- ess. This destruction reaches from Massachusetts to west of the great akes. The announcement of the abandonment of scores of large plants was made in Pittsburg the other -day as follows: "The United States Steel corporation has adopted the policy of centralizing operations, of abandoning its smaller plants, those disadvantageously lo cated, and those that cannot be run economically. The work heretofore done at these plants will be trans ferred to those that can be operated to the advantage of the company. Of the details I can say nothing. I can only say that to work out some of the details of this policy operating heads of the concerns of the United States Steel corporation have been in con ference in New York. Undoubtedly the plan will revert with greatest ben efit to the Pittsburg district as the most favored of all which the United States Steel corporation operates." The above is the statement of Joshua Rhodes of Pittsburg, retired, as chairman of the directors of the National Tube company, now a con stituent of the United States Steel cor poration, in reply to an inquiry as to whether the new Morgan combine had adopted such a policy. Adoption of this policy of centraliz ing operations will mean to tht Pitts burg district, if carried intoYeffect. without delay, the bringing here with in a year of about 50,000 mill, men from plants of the company that1 will be abandoned. The American Bridge company has had plans drawn for a new $1,000,000 plant to be erected in the Pittsburg district. The American Bridge com pany has its plants scattered through the east, at points where they are at a disadvantage to operate and some are considered for abandonment. The recent announcement that the American Sheet Steel company had given up its plan to operate the new and costly plant at Chester, W. Va., was a reflection of the new policy of the new Morgan combine. The equip ment of this plant will be taken to Vandergrift, where the most modern plant of the company, that of the Apollo Iron & Steel company, is op erated. Since the sheet company formed it has abandoned a number of its plants of lesser importance and nearly, all of the apparatus of these was sent to .Vandergrift. Other plants of the company, located at Cambridge, East Liverpool, Coshocton, Denison, Creston, Niles, Canton, Canal Dover and Piqua, O., and Carnegie and Hyde Park, Pa., are among those which are being considered as best to abandon and their equipment to be centered in a large plant at Vandergrift. For the American Steel & Wire company, the United States Steel cor poration is expected to carry out the plan of the wire company to central ize all operations possible at Neville Island, where $10,000,000 works are be ing built. This has already led to the abandonment of plants at Worcester, Mass., and is expected to be followed with works at Cincinnati, the Portage works at Newburg, N. Y., and the works of Everett, Wash. Of the American Tin Plate works, those at Agnew and Johnstown, Pa., and Canal Dover, O., are expected to remain much as they are. Of the Na tional Tube plants, among these con sidered for abandonment is the Penn sylvania Tube Works, which although one of the most important companies, is not economical in operation. The citizens of many of these towns have donated heavily to secure the plants in land ar.d cash. Now with out a word not only all that they have given,? but the value of all the prop erty they have left will be wiped out of existence. In scores of places where there has been plenty and prosperity. there will be nothing but poverty and starvation. This is the first work of the big trust. More like it will fol low. On with the dance. NATIONAL DEBTS That of Franca Has Increased Thirty Times in a Hundred Tears Taxation of all , Nations Increasing- It will take ' something more than the assurance of a cable dispatch to convince the world that France can long maintain her credit and continue piling up peace budgets that surpass the expenditures of her wealthier neighbors. - French financiers are sup posed to be the keenest and most adroit in the world, and they always manage to figure out in advance some small balance of revenues over ex penditures. But the steady growth of France's national debt since the found ing of the third republic tells a tale of unrealized financial dreams which cannot be misinterpreted. The budget of France for the year 1902 just submitted to the senators and deputies provides for the expenditure of 3,600,000,000 francs, or $720,000,000, to which $20,000,000 is to be added for pensions to workingmen under a bill supported by the ministry. With this addition the budget for 1902 will ex ceed that for the current year by up ward of 140,000,000 francs. While this does not .justify the char acteristic French boast of being "the greatest budget in the world, the great est budget that has ever been paid, the greatest of all -budgets since the world began" (since the sum voted by .the second session of our Fifty-sixth congress was $729,911,000 and Sir Mich ael Hicks-Beach- has just laid before the British parliament a budget ask ing for $920,000,000), yet it is enough to stagger the economists and taxpay ers of France. If France, at peace with the world, since China . does not count, spends $720,000;uu0i a year, what would happen if she raii Across any. such problem as we did In the Philip pines or England did in South Af rica? But the financiers of the United Stat es and Great Britain, face their de ficits with increased taxes or open re sort to fresh . loans, while those of France delude their people with the promise of adequate ..revenues which perennially! fail. If France has not the largest budget since the world began, it can truly boast the largest public debt of any jiation on earth, and one that has dou bled during the last thlry years. In 1900 this was $6,010,000,000, against $3,140,000,000 for the United Kingdom and $1,379,289,464 for the United States. ' The annual interest charge on the public debt of France amounts to over $249,000,000, or more than the total an nual expenditures of the United States as late as 1886. - . , How the national debt of France has grown is shown in the following brief table: Veriod -1800 First republic. 1815 Napoleon I ....... . 1830 Louis XVIII.. 1848 Louis Philippe 1852 Second republic. . . . Francs. 714,000,000 1,272,000,000 ... 4,426,000,000 ... 5,913,000.000 .. 5,516,000,000 ...12,454,000,000 1871 Napoleon III.... 1889 Third republic. . . . .21,251,000,000 1900-Third republic 30,050,000,000 During this hundred years, while the public debt of France has in creased more than forty-fold, its pop ulation has only risen from 27,349,003 in 1801 to 38,517,975, and is now sta tionary. What is it the poet, says of lands where budgets grow and people do not? , , - .-" . DESTROYING HOMES The Gradual Work of the Concentration of Capital Reducing the Poor to Worse Than Feudal Times A dispatch from San Francjsco of April 8 shows the condition among the poor of that city. Every year this mat ter grows worse. In Omaha and oth er cities of that size these sort of hospitals are constantly increasing in numbers. They keep advertisements constantly standing in the papers. The San Francisco account was as follows : An example of how the prevailing capitalist system destroys the home, and breaks the family ties is furnished by an. incident that came to light in the county hospital recently. Despite the great hue and cry of prosperity that the capitalist papers here are con tinually raising, more and more of the women of the poor are forced to re sort to the county institution to give birth to their children. . In the maternity ward of that cold, bleak charity institution -away Out on Potrero avenue, fourteen babies en tered this world of trial and trouble in one week. The nurses, hard-worked but patient, were at their wits' end to know how to accommodate this influx of howling infants. On several days there were as many as three and four births. ' They came into this world so quickly, in fact, that the doctors and nurses could not keep tab on them and when they gave them their morn ing ablutions often returned them to the wrong bed and mother. They were dressed alike, all about the same size v and,, except in one ' or two in stances, without any special identify ing marks. Then, how were these ma trons to know which was which? ' One morning when all of the babies were taken irom tneir motners into the nursery to be washed and clothed for the day several assistants from other wards were called in to aid. All the babies were out of their swaddling clothes at the same time and when the nurses began to dress and return them to their proper parent they found, to their dismay that they could not dis tinguish between them. If some nurse hadn't tipped the developments of the nursery off to the anxious mothers all would have been well and good. The mothers would have been none the wiser; certainly the babies themselves wouldn t have objected. But some conscience etricken attendant couldn't retain herself and let the cat out of the bag. Then there was consterna tion in the maternity ward. Mothers in their feeble, helpless condition, as soon as the hint was dropped as to the mixup in the other room, imagined that she wras being robbed of her child In the meantime babies are wearing numbers on the soles of thir feet, done In blue pencil. But in the days to come how will No. 2 know he is not by rights No. 4? And how will No. 3 persuade himself that he has not been changed from a seven?. ' Now that the mixup has been recog nized, the "people of the hospital have made atonement. They have numbered the feet of every infant in a blue that will not rub. But for the original 14 of that busy week this precaution comes too late. The Whole situation is sad and con fusing. Already has the problem reached the mothers' cots, and fierce has been the strife where the cots are close, reaching easy, and less than stage whisper enough. One infant of special beauty and precocious good na ture- was claimed by two of the pa tients, after the nurse had tattled. Put the doctor adjusted the matter some how. . But there are twelve other mothers who are not sure of their young since the mingling and the muddle of the bath tub and the prattle of the nurse The number Is on the foot and the name -Is on the register, but the chil dren of a week are much alike, and who car settle it that the mother's number calls for her own? If you want to do your neighbor a favor invite him to subscribe lor The Independent, r . r ' "7 BLUE PENCILED Tha Associated Press Censor Suppressed r Paris otth J. T. Hill Interview r Pow.ro? MoneV "f" b Curtailed ; ... TJ, InfnrvUm -writ, T T lUll S6nt ... A a sociated press was mangled and tha pertinent parts of it suppressed after the same fashion that news has been manipulated for the last ten years. The nterview which was obtained by James Creelman as 1t was furnished to the press was as follows: . "Out of the mighty chaos of Wall street, with Its tales of black ruin and blacker treachery, there emerges, the orms of honest men. And foremost among the great masters or nnance who stood at the heart of that vast scene of crime, untempted by the op portunities for plunder It offered, was James J. Hill, president of the (treat Northern railroad, the one man who could have given victory to thfi or ganizers of the raid on the Northern acific railroad "which resulted in the panic. Mr. Hill consented tonight to tell the whole story. "This has been terrible work," he said. "There are some men in this rkiinfiiir rw trVi wfi c Tri ncf eat t nr their consciences, and they are wel come ,to what they will get. I want no money taken as money was taken yesterday. There will be no pocket in my shroud. "There are men who have come to believe that money can do anything in- this country. If we have reached that point, then money must be shorn by aw of its power to do harm. I am willing to see money shorn of such power. I have no wish to have that kind of power. And, in my opinion, the events of yesterday will do much to bring about legislation that will make them impossible in the future. "I am sorry for the victims in Wall ctreet Tnut- T Tnavo not. hnucht. nr sold one share of Northern Pacific i3tock' since October. I have simply istood with my friends In defense of that property and refused to sell the con trol of the Northern Pacific to Itsi riv al, the Union Pacific, no matter how high the price of the stock rose. No price tempted us. It was a matter of ordinary principle. "In Mr. Morgan's absence we would not allow the railroad he reorganized to be seized by its competitor. "The control of the Northern Pacific road is safely In the hands of Mr. Morgan. The attempt of the Union Pacific people to secure possession of their great '!val haa completely failed. I am very, very sorry tor the un fortunate speculators who have been ruined. r I see what ruin and misery have been wrought. The theory that there is no limit to the power of money is modern feudalism. Combinations to wreck and destroy competition should be made impossible." The last two sentences of this inter view and which were blue-penciled by the Associated press censor, are very important statements. There is the same denunciation of the money power that the populists have continuously demanded. The readers of republican papers were forbidden to read such statements. It is along the same line that has been followed so long and against which The Independent hat made a continuous protest. The Lambs When the bull is on the rampage And the bear is in the air; When the stock is getting frisky And is Jumping everywhere, It's a bad time for the little fish. A bad time for the clam, A bad time for the sucker And a bad time for the lamb. Sometimes the bear is uppermost, Sometimes It is the bull, But the sheep Is always underneath And loses all his wool; When things are panicky and all Are caught within the jam, It simply hurts the bull and bear, But finishes the lamb.v They gave the game the proper name, It's worthy of the beast. The weak are prey unto the strong; The innocent are fleeced. For all exeept the ravenous It is a cheat and sham. . Whichever way the battle goes. It's death unto the lamb. It is a fight of animals, Each seeks the biggest share. Not only bruin and the bull, The wolf is also there. Yet unlike brutes, they're hungry still. However much they cram, They make their prey from day to day Upon the fallen lamb. Tis not aloire the one who's caught Within the robber's den; But back of him they shear in turn The common citizen; And evermore to hide the game, They play the old flim-flam; And evermore they keep it dark The public is the lamb. J. A. Edgerton. On the Roll of Hereos A civilian having applied for a com mission in the army- the president asked him: "What are your qualifications?" "Qualifications?" the civilian re peated -"what's them?" "That is what I am trying to find out," replied the president "what yours are." "Well, well," said the civilian ."this floors me! For. ten. years I've run the party in my ward, and I never before - "Hold!" said the president, "you've answered my question. Be a lieuten ant colonel and quartermaster." His name stands high upon the roll of heroes. It is John Smith.