THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT August 15, 1001 Cbt Jltbmka Independent Lime$1m, Etbrsika :mss bldg, cwe am and n sn 3, Firxxjtin tt Tvomoat .41.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE YWa K.kil- reawUrC do iMTt f UA ir aaai. jiatr. -. to Saraar44 by tlat- Taajr tirmXlf taf a wmlt a 4i2et aat taaa waa laf vilk tUm. a4 ta asbact tbar falls W peep craAUL aA&raaa all eeamsaajaieaii. a4 ataVa all aVafta, iaar ara. aMu. pay afcia C HtbrsskM Jmdtptadtmt, Lincoln. Neb. AJM9ayyaeaa mraa4. eematsaieatiafes will feoi to aucritt will ao to Who appointed Clem Deaver to a lucrative See? William McKlnley. It besiss to look as If Mark Hanna wald trzrjfter bit fatherly kindness and aTccrasjicff checks to the middle-of-the-road democrats during the text caraxlfa tn Nebraska. Jerry Simpson fcii removed from Kansas to the newly opened Indian reservations la Oklahoma. He trill en gage in the practice of law and farm 15. Or thins it certain. W. F. Wright was more successful in shooting rain Into I -ar ranter county than McKlnley tai ben in shootfru: Christianity Into the lipino. There: li neither money nor oScea for a rep mid-roader In this campaign, tut :t is cox fo certain that there woald t-'Jl be bcth for a democratic deal in that line. The republicans would teach the yours of this state by their example that e sa hear! etsent pay and that treason should be rewarded. They Il lustrate thce truth by the lives of Deater and Hartley. The lad:iiu.al. which, according to Sampson, la "the most distinguished living Auerlcan historian." draws a salary of 12. IS per day from the navy ' department and Is doubt less overpaid Jer the work that he do. John D. It ockf feller, the first bll The republicans wasted one dollar as good as any other dollar and the t-rtt thisg that they did was to issue oce fcacfred millions of bank paper dclla- tht were "redeemable"" In aosa other dollars that were thought 13 he tetter. The f rt thing that the reorganiz- rs heard is Kansas after they re- 1 spired that they would not fuse with j the pops mas that the very corn was j j-ojpirg on th cob all over the state, j An ear of it was sent to Governor Sav- j ace. I Ilenalre. owns one-eightieth of all the property In a country where 74.- j peopie dwelL A government j vnjler nhicfc that tMs was developed 1 is the ideal of tfce republican party, j thvt psrtf r ill fight with all its j pomer against any ch&cge la it. Go iij uu- 'or straight. 1 It as the Iteord-Herald and not ! the World-Herald that ran Hosewa- tcr'f picture aud labliel it lian Ia-ratnt- Thee hyphenated dailies are getting ao numerous that it is no won der the linotype mites them up once ia a while. Of course the comments were Intended for the Chicago hyphen ated and not the Omaha one. Te nc pendent remarketj last k that while that Ca'ifornla thief j Lad stolen less than half the amount that Bartiey ot away with. nanily J2S0.j. he had probably got enough to secvr? a pardon. The press dis patches now zy that he is not to be Imprisoned at ell sad will gtt fIS.OOO for ttl'irg where he hid the gold. The Savage and McKlnley precedents seem to be firmly established as a rule for the powers that be. Are cot some of the southern states xrra carrying the doctrine of heredity 3 an extreme? The Alabama consti tution maker seem to think that If a Eian had a grandfather who was qaali-Se-3 to vote that the grandson hat In herited Intelligence enough to make Lisa a sovereign- The entailment of land which Jeffersoa abolished rests Epos exactly the same reasoning as th heredity of Intelligence. When the republicans think that they have a sure majority, then pop- Klista are "lanatics, "anarchists." "social its." "repadiators wlld yt4." bos la a parlor," and every thing else that la vile and low. Now that they are not a acre about a mi "jorjty they aay, -please vote for our eandldsie for supreme Judge, for the supreme cvurt oeght to be non-partisan, yon know." They are equally resuSy t play the tyrant or the baby axt aa occaxlas cay indicate. . TBJS ASIATIC DXHGEK . - The other day the dispatches con tained aa Item saying that, in the strike at Saa Francisco two steamers bad no trouble In getting crews of Filipinos which they secured without trouble and sailed away, leaving the American sailors on shore with noth ing to do. That is only a foretaste of what is coming in an overwhelming avalanche in the near future. The treaty excluding the Chinese from the United States does not ter minate until December 8, 1904; but the law providing for the enforcement of the treaty stipulations expires May 5. 1902. Hence, unless congres3 shall before the latter date re-enact ' the present law, with such additions and exten sions as experience has demonstrated to be necessary, the gates will be thrown wide open for the full, free, untrammelled, and possibly over whelming immigration of the hordes of Chinese Into America. The McKlnley administration has given no indication that any such leg islation will be" introduced or passed aa will tend to continue the laws now on the statute books restricting Asiatic immigration and those who have watched the trend of events have no Idea that such legislation will be en acted when the present law expires. This is a question that affects every home In America. If the millions of Asia can be dumped upon our west ern shores and spread themselves out all over the land, it means the over throw of our present civilization. Chinamen can work and live on one fourth what an American w age-worker can subsist upon. The Chinese do not spend money' in the education of their children and the support of churches and other institutions that exist in ev ery civilized community. The Ameri can workman does. When the China man takes the American's place, there will come such a change as the world never saw before. That Is what plu tocracy wants. They desire fawning servants who will work for a pittance. The McKlnley administration will see to it that they have them. After that, what? Will the American worker who has made this continent, which was once a wilderness, a land of cities, farms, schools and churches by the labor of his hands turn it over to a lot of Chinese servants and a few mil lionaires? The men who have fought the battles of the past and made this nation what it Is are not of races which would lead one to think that they wilL Old Waite's prophesy of "blood to the bridle bits" will become a reality before, that thing is accom plished. A CREDITOR COUNTRY (?) v The Chicago American, in answer to a correspondent. Insists that "now we have paid off most of our indebtedness to foreign countries, and the greater part of our huge excess of exports, amounting to over $670,000,000; Is help ing to transform us from a debtor into a creditor nation." This is a statement that has con stantly been made by those who have supported the policy cf "gold and glory." but of late most of them have abandoned It. They were forced to do so when-the proof of the state ment was demanded. If we were be coming a creditor nation on account of our continual excess cf exports, the proof of that fact would be very eas ily obtainable. To whom have we been lending money in large amounts? What nations have borrowed money from citizens of the United States? A very few such investments have been made, but they are all known. It Is an easy matter to make a bald as sertion without proof, but before thinking men - believe the assertion they "want to be shown," as the man from Missouri said. Not long ago one of the statisticians who was a government employe de clared that nobody knew what had be come of this great balance against Europe caused by the enormous ex cess of our exports over Imports. He made that statement after searching for the evidence tiat wo had become a "creditor nation" and finding none he said that foreigners had disposed of but little of the American bonds and stocks that they owned, but on the other hand had made recently very large Investments in this country and yet the evidence was Indisputable that we had exported an excess of SC65.000.000 of goods and instead' of gold coming back we had actually ex ported 120.000,000 of gold. Those be lag the undisputed facts, this pseudo government economist gave it up, and because he did not know .what had be come of that $665,000,000. declared that nobody did. . The truth about the matter, is that our debt abroad is probably larger than it ever was. ; Economists ' have for a long time estimated -that three or four hundred million of dollars had to be sent to Europe every year to set tle our Interest account and not one of them has changed that estimate in the last five or six years. Years ago they said that the "globe trotters' spent in fore!gn countries from one to two hundred million:! a year and everybody knows that during the last two or three yiara they-have spent more than ever before. There is an other thing that goes a long ways to explain why no gold is sent to this country. What the amount is no one knows because no one has taken the trouble to find out, and that is the millions that are sent every year to persons in the old countries by rela tives in this. The writer knows of two such cases. One a young woman working as a servant girl who sent to her old mother in her native land $100 and the other a young man who had sent $275 back to Sweden. There are hundreds of thousands of such persons in the United States and as most of them send the money by means of international postal orders. It would be an easy matter, if the gov ernment would permit it, to get the facts in regard to It. The truth about the matter Is that the United States is still a debtor na tion and that it takes many millions to pay the interest to foreigners. It will continue to be a debtor nation for years to come and the farmers will toil and sweat to raise the corn and wheats cattle and hogs, that are sent to Europe, sold there and the amount of the sales retained to pay that inter est, instead of the gold being sent back to this country. MORE CONVICTS ESCAPE The old State Hypocrite did not make a sensational paragraph out of a very ' interesting item of Lnews that occurred last Friday night. The following is the way it read in the dispatches to the Omaha and Chi cago papers: "Charles Bennett, alias Smith, and Ed Tuttle, the latter serving a third term, escaped from the penitentiary last night by climbing over the eighteen-foot wall. Both were on night duty in the bakery. "Bennett was convicted of larceny in Douglas county and sentenced to one year. Tuttle was convicted of bur glary in Cass county and sentenced to three years. Timbers for the construc tion of a new building for the Lee Brobm and Duster company were used by the convicts in making their ascent over the high stone wall. Up to noon today no clue as to the whereabouts of the man had been found." f Ever since the republicans got con trol of the penitentiary the institution has been a disgrace to civilization. If these things had occurred there un der a populist administration, there would have been an uproar from one end of the state to the other. Not only that, but the great dailies from New York to San Francisco would have been full of it. A large part of the penitentiary was burned down. An other fire was started right under the nose of the guards in broad daylight. Convict after convict has escaped, some of them walking away while the sun shone brightly upon guard and convict. It is probable that not one repub lican out of fifty in the state knows anything about the conditions in the penitentiary, and the republican pa pers will see to it that they don't. The conditions in the other institu tions of the state are not much better. Under this condition of things, the only way to get the truth to the people Is to get The Independent and other populist papers into the hands of the people. It is by the subsidizing of the press that the evils that we now suf fer from and the dangers that con front us exist. The perpetuity of pop ulist principles depends upon its press. That fact should be made the para mount Issue at every county conven tion. Where were the republican guards when these convicts climbed over the wall? Were they paid not to see? Does money "get other men besides Bartley out of the penitentiary? IN' A BAD FIX One would think that the readers of the republican papers in this state would get disgusted after a while with the falsehood and trash that is served up to them day after day and week after week. Everywhere they had been led to believe that there would be what they called "a hot old time" when the populist state committee met. There was to be a fight against fusibn in which hair was to fly and blood was to be shed. But the re porters and sneaks who hung around the doors were dismally disappointed. The doors were not closed and all the proceedings were open to the public. When the meeting closed and the subject had not even been mentioned at all, they were the most disgusted lot of politicians that ever were seen on the streets of Lincoln. The pop ulist committee proceeded to elect a secretary and then without any dis cussion appointed a committee to call on the democrats and silver republi cans and indicate a day for holding the conventions and that was all there was to It. There was not a dissenting voice in the whole crowd. There is ons journal in the United States that ia always the fawning sychophant at , the feet of the mil lionaires and the open, blatant de fender of the trusts and trust mag nates from John D. Rockefeller to Morton and starch. It is published In Lincoln and .edited . byjthe P.. Street fcC io 4k - T - A RARE CHANCE- FOR AGE NTS.. v- f : dt THE INDEPENDENT DESIRES TO SECURE A GOOD AGENT & .:: v.; if,v..- .. . . , V IN'EYERY CITY .AND COUNTY IN NEBRASKA FOR THE f. SALE OF THE INDEPENDENT IN COMBINATION WITH & , ; "OUR ISLANDS AND THEIR PEOPLE." 3,000. SETS OF THIS REMARKABLE WORKS ARE SOLD EVERY WEEK IN THE 1 0 UNITED STATES. EVERYBODY WANTS IT. . THE BEST & & SELLING WORK EVER OFFERED TO THE PUBLIC. AGENTS MAKE BIG' SALARIES. WRITE THE INDEPENDENT, LIN-. ?8 " COLN, NEB FOR FULL PARTICULARS. J & J t 2 5 "".Jl -1 1 J J J & jt Idiot. In its Sunday issue it declared that Shaffer, the "head of the strikers against the steel trust, was "an arrant and . dangerous demagogue," "an en emy of s society,"; "and probably an anarchist." That is the state organ of the "redeemers" and they all swear by it From it can be . gathered - -feeling toward the wage-workers the men who produce .the wealth of this nation by their , sweat and toil. . . - A man in Greeley county writes to The Independent and wants to know if something can't be done to make the republicans obey republican-made laws. He says that the republicans up there are defying the game law that was passed last winter and , ha thinks that the game commissioner had better put in an appearance pretty soon for it will be no use in a little while as the republican , vandals will have it all killed. The steel trust will soon distribute $71,000,000 in dividends on stock and interest on bonds. They are . able to do that because they have a tariff of $7.87 cents a ton on steel and can squeeze, high prices out of American cqnsumers. ' To further increase their unlawful profit they ' now propose to destroy all the labor unions. The re publican party, has aided it with a tariff and it will now stand by it with the courts, the militia and the regular army. Without the backing of the re publican party the steel trust could not exist. The election returns show that the vote in Nebraska was increased by over 20,000 at the last election. Mark Hanna and the railroads did that. When the republicans reflect that it is not probable 'that they can get their uncle Hanna to do that again, this fall, there is no wonder that they feel blue. There will '"benb mid-road treason at this election. jClem' Deaver has killed that for all time. - The republicans feel , sorrowful again when they think of that. If they could only scare up another Clem peaver, they would fill his pockets wjth cash and his ears with fulsome!, flattery while -, they cursed the old Clem with the "fury of a demon. (' The republicans have all at once be come great advocates of a non-partisan supreme court. Isn't it a little strange that they never saw the beauties of a non-partisan court in all the twenty five years that they had a majority in this state. s In all that time every judge's first qualification was that he must be a republican and could prove that he had voted 'er straight ever since he was old enough to cast a ballot. Now a change has come over the spirit of their dreams. They, one and all, declare that the supreme court should be composed of one democrat, one populist and one republican. If they would apply that doctrine to the institutions in the state that are un der .their control, then they might possibly convince somebody that they really believed in it. In answer to several . inquiries j , con cerning Father. Murphy, The Indepen dent replies that Father Murphy is still in charge of his parish at Seward and performs his pastoral duties as usual. Catholics i declare that Bishop Bonacum had no more authority to ex communicate Father Murphy without charges and a trial Hhan he had to ex communicate the pqpe. It is further said that Father Murphy's church is an incorporated , religious society un der the laws of the state of Nebraska and that the claim of Jjishop Bonacum that he owns the church property at Seward in fee simple invhis own name is contrary, to the canon laws of the Catholic church and the flaws v of the state of Nebraska. Father Murphy is all right and the people, of his parish will see to it that? he suffers for noth ing. . . The dallies are ' printing ' more in terviews. This time 'tney assert that Coin Harvey declares that the5 -money with which international, balances are settled must be of "intrinsic value." Since the republican "authorities," like the director, of the mint, Yiave been talking, about "the variation, of the value of gold" and its "deprecia tion" on account of the tremendous in crease in quantity, it is hardly likely that Coin Harvey has adopted the 'old delusion that gold had an "intrinsic value.',' If its value, were "Intrinsic,'! the increase or deer-ease of the quan-1 tity would have no effect upon its talue. If it is "Intrinsic," the value is in the thing itself and, cannot be added to or diminished. Rosewater 4 would confer a very great favor upon his readers if he would tell them what he thinks value is. The beauties or a. billion-dollar trust is demonstrated at McKeesport, Pa. Because the citizens there sym pathized with the . strikers, the trust has gone to. work to tear down all the mills there and absolutely ruin . the town. Talk about imperialism and despotic governments! Has any ruler in all Europe the power of this man Morgan? What one among them would dare to undertake to make desolate a whole city because he had a personal grievance against the citizens thereof? But M'organ has that power. There was a time before the general degen eracy caused by republican policies had such an influence upon the people, that no man would have dared to Is sue. such an order as that against a great American city. Now they mere ly bow their heads to the great impe- rator and beg for mercy. For the last ten years plutocracy in politics has followed one policy. Ad vocate one thing during a campaign .and as soon as in power do the very opposite. Cleveland was elected on a tariff reform issue and then congress went to work and passed the highest protective tariff bill that ever got through that body. They made a re duction where rates had been placed five or six hundred per cent above the prohibitive point," but the bill was the highest protective bill that was ever passed." Mark Hanna made a cam paign on the ground that the coinage of silver must be stopped and as soon as in power went to coining more sil yer, than was ever coined before. . He declared that they wanted "one dollar as good as every other dollar" and then flooded the country with bank paper urder promise to redeem It in a better dollar. That is the way it has been all the time. The Epworth league disgraced itself and all men who respect truth and honesty by employing Eli Perkins to deliver a lecture before them. Among the many and brilliant liars who stand in the first rank of that profes sion, Eli Perkins is among the fore most. He was a newspaper man, but he has been blacklisted by every re spectable journal in the United States because he was such an ; outrageous and persistent liar that he got every paper that employed him into trouble. Not many years ago he sent what per ported to be a signed interview with a distinguished man in Washington when he had never seen the man at all. To escape from imprisonment he wrote an apology in which he said that every word of the interview was a lie and that he knew that it Was a He when he wrote it. Is that the sort of a man to put up before the young people of a church? From the way the New York city republican papers talk one would be lead to believe that the sweat shops in New York, the crowded tenements, the Wall street gambling, the trusts, the millionaires and all the social and economic evils from which the in habitants of the great city suffers, is all owing " to the rule of Tammany. If Tammany was once downed and out of power there would be no more homeless tramps, no more children without a school house into which !they could .be crowded, no more tenderloin district, : no more policy shops 5 and buncoe men. "Just let the republicans once get control of , the city govern ment and New York city would je a real heaven on earth. It Is a little queer. that they never point to the re publican governed city, of Philadel phia as an example of what the re publicans can do in the way of city government. Labor is by far the greatest factor in the creation of wealth, yet." the writers who fill the pages of the econ omic magazines seem hardly to real ize that such a thing exists. Month after month they will discuss problems connected with foreign and domestic trade, the markets, money and other things, but as far as any one reading their articles could tell, these econo mists Jdon't seem to , know that there Is such a thing as labor. These super ficial, penmen will one day wake p to tha fact in a very unpleasant .way that there is not only, such a thing as labor, but it is involved in the whole interests of mankind. Two problems await solution and are in every, man's . mind: trusts and wages.., On. neither of them dare the great magazine to express an- opinion. They , are not cowards. They are simply reduced to what is coming to the whole nation. They are simply hirelings working for the wages that their masters please to give them. " , c Now the republican papers are at it again. This time they say that this is the end of fusion. When this elec tion is over, that will be the end of the populist party. The "democrats will have swallowed the pops." Those who believed the stories about the big row that was going to be, believe this Just as readily. The reason' Why these republican editors engage in this sort of talk is that they are not capable of discussing any question of government or political economy , and they are doing their very best when they fill their columns with this sort of silly gossip. It. is. a hard job to edit a republican paper these days. Vital questions vftilch are of Interest to the people must be tabooed. What would become of a republican editor if he should write an article against the trusts? He dare not write one openly defending them, so there he is between the devil and the deep, sea and he has either to say nothing or engage in idle gossip. A good many of the great foreign missionary societies report a heavy falling oft In the collections for for eign missions. That is what sober, sensible men have expected. Millions can be collected in the United States to send missionaries to teach peace and brotherhood, but this effort to shoot Christianity into the heathen will, in the end, be the wreck of the church and all its institutions if per sisted in." There are millions of men and women in the states who will gladly take from their hard earnings small sums all that they have to give to teach less favored people the ways of peace and righteousness, but if this doctrine of war, gold and glory is gen erally, upheld by the leaders of the church, they will find that they will have but few missionary contribu tions except from the plutocratic rich who give their money in return for the aid that the church gives them in their policies of imperialism and war. The Boston Herald says that "noth Ing can bo plainer to Jthe intelligent man than that the great 'prosperity of this country of recent-- years resulted chiefly from its western harvests. It it entirely clear that without them this prosperity would not have been. Now that is a different song from what the Boston Herald sung in the cam paign of 1896 and 1900. Then it in slsted every day and sometimes three or four times a day in extra .editions that McKlnley was "the advance agent of prosperity," that if she 'were I not elected, desolation .would . sweep.', over the land. This gold bug democrat has heard that there is a crop shortage in the west and he now fears that having persuaded the mullet heads that Mc Klnley was the advance agent of pros perity and 1 afterwards brought it about, that they will now turn on the republican party and go for McKlnley because he did not keep it up. Mullet heads and mullet head editors of the great dailies are a funny lot. Accord ing to them McKlnley produces pros perity, but adversity why "provi dence" is responsible for that. Aren t you glad that you are not a mullet head. PLEASE ANSWER The republican editors have, now come to the conclusion, that a -pop traitor is the meanest of all traitors, especially after he has got an office that they wanted. But .while this traitor was traitoring all over? the state and all of them were aware of the fact, they did not have a word to say. They drummed up. meetings for him, they paid for halls, they y declared that, he was the 6nly "true populist." They did that when they knew that he was a traitor just as well as they know it now. Who is most to . be despised In this outfit? Was it the traitor or the men who stood by him, kept him before the public and furnished him with money and profltted by his trea son? Clem Deaver's treason defeated the fusion state ticket. Governor Sav age and all the state officers hold their position by means of Clem Deaver's treason. The voters who were de ceived and Induced to cast their votes for the mid-road ticket and who would otherwise have cast them for the pop ulist ticket, elected the " republican state officers. Every one of these men hold their offices as the result of the vilest treasonever known in politics. They profit by It. Is Clem Deaver any worse than these men? Some of the republican editors . denounce the giv ing of an office to Clem Deaver. All the rest of them got their offices by the same treason. Is Clem Deaver fouler than Governor Savage who profits by the same transaction? Here is a question that - The Independent would like some of the republican edi tors who denounce Clem! Deaver's apv polntment to answer. ; - V - c - x-ox,i.oirBi m'kihijiy The republican editors who are criticising Governor Savage, l'or parol ing Bartley should remember that he is only following the exampl; of their great and holy McKlnley. McKlnley has pardoned one after another of the national bank embezzlers in such a continuous string that there is no keeping an account of them. (The last one was Charles Mussey of -Rutland, Vt., who used his position as cashier of the' Merchants' National bank' to steal $147,000.' His robbery brokethe bank, inflicting heavy loss upon his neighbors and caused k much suffering. He was "sent up" forrseven years. . r.u - In prison Mussey apparently fell ill. His family physician abandoned his case for unstated reasons which may now be conjectured. An out-of-town doctor was obtained by Mussey's friends. In a year he was said to be at death's door, and upon this ground McKlnley pardoned , hlm. ; That was a month aio. The Rut land dispatches relate that MHissey has just, geme into the Adirondacks on a hunting trip, as well as any one. The bank embezzler is necessarily and always inexcusable; always and necessarily he has, sufficient intelli gence to know what he is doing and what havoc he may cause. Perhaps the picture of Mr., Mussey gayly de parting upon a pleasure trip while, his victims toil, to- repair the ruin he wrought may cause the supporters of McKinley to do a little thinking, that is, if they can think which ia some what doubtful. The practic under this plutocratic government . is, if a man steals a loaf of bread for hi3 starving wife and children, send him to prison as long as the, law will al low. If he robs a public treasury or steals the savings of the poor .which they have deposited in a bank, pardon him. How long a government can en dure that administers justice after that fashion is a thing not very hard to figure out. WELL DEFINED Why any wage-worker should ever vote the republican ticket is one of those, things which the friends of or ganized labor can not understand. The position of the republican party to wards labor, has always been so well defined whenever a contest, came up between it and capitalistic employers that it '.ought -to be known, by. every man of sense in.the whole country. Of late the republican papers, have been making unequivocal statements upon the subject. The following from the Dakota County Record has been copied with approval in the leading republi can dailies of the state and . shows how the republican leaders regard 'la bor organizations. It says: "The 'labor, leaders of this country are a menace to the peace and future of both labor and'capltal. It 13 equal In importance to the trust question and the man who controls the unions is as dangerous as the president of a trust." That is, as every man of sense knows, the position of the republican party toward organized labor. That statement should be printed on , a poster and the bill-boards of the cities plastered with it so that wage-workers may no longer be deceived by the; hy pocrisy exhibited by republican candi dates during every campaign. Just before an election they are all great organized labor fellows. THAT IMPERIAL ORDER ; It turns out that the new' order is sued by the postmaster general in re gard to second class matter was made wholly in the interest of the railroad corporations and will not save a "cent to the government. Contracts for four years have just been' made with 'all the railroads for the carrying of mail matter. The order of the postmaster general will greatly reduce the amount and the railroads will get ,'all the profits. Thousands of publishers will now send their matter by express com panies. The result will be that there wttl be largely increased revenues both for the railroads and express compa nies. , When it is remembered that this McKlnley government Is by the cor porations and for the corporations. this new deal whereby the railroad and express corporations are to be en riched at the expense of the people, will surprise nobody. - - The order by which this piece of business was accomplished was an im perial order in the fullest senso of the term. : Year after year the nostofflro authorities had brought all sorts of pressure to bear to get congress to pass such a law, and congressmen hav- ng the fear of their constituents bv- fore i their eyes refused to pass any ucn a iaw. men tne postmaster general issued an Imperial order on his own authority and the thing was done. Now some fifteen or siTtn millions will go into the coffex-s of the railroads and express companies that ought to have remained in the pockets of the people. We will just have to grin and bear it. It is no use to kirk. f you tell the mullet hearts nhm.f t they will not believe what you say and they will go and vote 'er straight the next ' time just as they have for the last-forty years. You might get v hold pf some of the younger men and V explaln the situation In a kindly way to them. - But the old cod vote 'er straight while nhey live and 6 auaiBui wane muiiet head heaven when, they die, ; f. , .