0 ' 6 ffl If i VOL. XIII. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, OCTOBER 24, 1901. NO. 24. ROSEWATEH ANSYEHEO Tt Te i'mtd 14 tm T rbl at Beatrice tVaitvstiaj-j Miid4U-MUr Bleffs tfe Ketliaa Cemtaittee The little comparative table sent out by ttr fusion committees last week aroued the Ire of Brer Rose mater of tie umaha 1W. The showing ia that Uvds. tats was a stunner. Compar ing tiie laat tU moats of I'oynter's frm tthat is. the last semi-annual period of ti.2t term) with tie first six months under republican administra tion, it is found tLat tie republican csp-:-d U7.tv4.i7 In caring for 1. 'dj incite in tin state institutions. wi.il tt futioniiti expended but S!.(4 4 j caries for l.C9 inmates :a tuocth. In viLr words, the in- rai !-. u'itin of I-y lnmatea cost iLe la i- i.nri of Nebraska $48,019.53 additional, or iXW- apiece. That ma csore tLn Mr. Ko water could atand a L relieved his mind by writ ing the iy.l-jxz.g editorial: t Oman a Iw. Oct. li, 1901.) There ! nothing misleading as figures i.-Xi they are wilfully Juggled for a purpc-a-. This truth it again striking ly jiuatralei by the statistical tables ahUh the popocratlc campaign man agers are putting out with a view to rt.aU:;g the peopie believe that a great ti-su " Las taken place In the con duct cf the state -institutions since they pa! from fusion to republi can control. With shrevd cunning the C cures have ben prepared to .how the ex pense cf maintenance of nine asylums. i. ?l1 reformatories "for the first :s tu?.z.vs und-r rrpuhlican admin .:ratix. and the last tlx months ud t,r -.:,-' I'oynter Assuming ttat the jiniTj'.tj are correctly given. !t "j Jxjuire what this means. The t.i months taken under Governor ojnter cover the period from June 1 To No ember 1. I while the six re yi lu u inosth cover the period from Iwrr t-r I. iw, to May 21, Wi le tie hfkt place, for mot lnstdiu t. ;.... tte first tlx to ejht weeks cred ited ta a repatlican administration it-r t-'.-X under r publican, but under th- fuios hul J-o m, becauae the re puhlicAa appcitnt.e' did not take hold until the n-jii of January, or later. Ihe outeoins fusion oScials were not particular about the legacy they were y.-v:n.z t- their r publican successors in tl shiipe of overlaps, unpaid ac-f",-iT. and cot-tr acta for future deliv ery. that the rponsibility for these -a.ite outlaws. o far as they go, to tie I'oynter regime rather t!.:, to the rejabUcan. Ja ;te -'''nd place, the six months r.-i:! ia the coniparions to Gov t it. or Ioyner and h:s ap;olntees are tie zzitz.r-r month, extending from Ju.r to Ni-utnUr la thse-te months j2se c-f ti institutions, particularly the srf-ho-s, susp-nd their work 'al-ir.v-t entirely. Most of them use fup ;,!ies from farms and pardons in con-i.-vtu'-. ad the tusatr expenses are isturaliy the l:htot of the year. In tLe w;ntr raonths, on the other band, which are charged up to the republi can. ll the lntitutior. are in full Ll-t. winter clothing is more expen rle than fucr clothing, the coal MIL pile up. the supplies that must bw i -;r h2-I incrae and the gen eral cct cf maintenance, i at Its hlgh-t- lf the fuslonuiji wanted jo make a fair comparison of the mmagement f ttale institutions under successive fcilxintstration. why would they not r.pare the same months of the year? Is net the fact that they hare selected ieriodi not properly subject to cora frloa tisply further prof that they prefer to fool the people? F peaking 5a all candor, we believe there is still room for reform in reral directions ia our ftate Institutions, bat juggling the flrures for political purposes will not help tu effect the desired improvement. It will be candidly admitted that thre ifc wae juatice in Mr. Kosewa- ; ter's co:-ctivn regarding a compart- ' sojs t?f a winter period with a summer : period- Caref ul calculations made fron reports -a file show that the ; ratio cf winur to summer is about li to ly. The only object of making the eoirparifroa as it was. was simply to show the last cf Ioynters term as co3rare4 to the first of Dietrich's. It Is true that the who! of the month of Iecersber, !'."). was under l'oynters admin miration; and that the -new" republican heads of Institutions did not gt poietic3 until about the mid dle of January to the first of Feb ruary. Hut the semi-annual period ending May 21. 1131, is the first one of tht "new republican administration, and the only one from which compari sons can be drawn, even though a por tion of the time was la fact put In by the fusionirds. The Insinuation that "the outgoing fnslos oSida's were not particular ec fall fiat when it is known that thee -overlaps,- etc. were not paid anl are not accounted for ia the semi annual reports made by the republican head cf Institutions. The $157,664.17 expended as mid out for mainten ance the tlx months beginning Decem ber 1, l'Afi. and ending May 21, 1&01. hi ore than two-thirds of the time all the Institutions were in republican Lands and the !gurs tell the story themselves. Anything to oblige Mr. Rosewater. He Is doing a noble work la his ef forts to have State Treasurer Stuefer cctsp with the resolution passed by the Iut fepuhlicaa state convention. He demanded an explanatoa or a with drawal from Mr. Goold and he got a withdrawal. And he deserves credit for hit frank statement that he be tfcere Is still room for reform in etral directions In our state Instltu-tl-uL Hence, lie would be fc.ard-b.6art- ed Indeed who could deny Mr. Rosewa ter the pleasure of examining a com parative table showing the manage ment of state Institutions under suc cessive administrations, and compar ing the same months of the year. Ac cordingly, the following table - shows the number of inmates, total cost of maintenance, and cost for each inmate, in maintaining the same nine state in stitutions (Hastings, Lincoln and Nor folk asylums, Mllford soldiers' home, school for blind and deaf, two reform schools and home for the friendless) during the five different semi-annual periods, each beginning December , 1 and ending May 31 of the next year, for the years 1S97, 1898, 1899, 1900 and 1S0L Six months No. of ending inmates May 31. '97.. 1.754 May 31, '98.. 1.668 May 31. 9.. 1,758 May 31. 00.. 1,864 Total cost. $146,501.93 144.222.25 162.685.76 166.756.16 Cost for each inmate $ 83.62 86.46 92.54 89.46 Averages .1,761 $155,041.53 $88.04 May 31, '01.. 1.919 197.6G4.17 103.01 Is there any misleading comparison about this table, Mr. Rosewater? You can pick out the republican semi-annual period with your eyes shut, now, couldn't you? That's your comparison of winter months with winter months. How does it strike you? That in crease of practically $15 in the keep ing of each inmate for six months rep resents substantially the amount of republican extravagance and incom petency in the mere routine work of running the Institutions. It does not include about half a million dollars loss from fires resulting from Incom petent republican officials and em ployes. At $15 a head additional cost, 1,919 inmates means a loss of $28,785 clear as a whistle in six months. It means that much money absolutely wasted because the inmates had no better clothing or board than they had under fusion government; doubtless they were not so well fed and clothed but the officers lived fatter. It Is well known to those who have studied the matter, that the cost of maintaining each Inmate at any in stitution ought to decrease, under proper business methods, as the num ber of Inmates increases. The reason is plain: Officers' salaries are the same whether there are 10 inmates, 100 or 500 Inmates; fuel and lights cost practically the same; and the items of board and clothing alone in crease directly as the population in creases. This rule is like the saying, "All signs of rain fall in dry wea ther," because It hardly ever applied when the republican party is In power; then the usual rule Is: Increased pop ulation, increased per capita cost. Let us look at three different per iods in the history of these nine in stitutions. We will make each per iod three years. The years 1892, 1893, and 1S94, are republican years. 1895, 1S96. and 1897 are mixed, part of the institutions and part of the time are chargeable to the republicans, and the remainder to the fusionlsts. The years 1898, 1899, and 1900 are wholly charge able to the fusionlsts. No. of Cost each Year. inmates. Tot. cost. Inmate. U92 1.275 $311,897.66 $244.62 1893 1,489 304.755.73 204.00 1894 1.642 304.452.74 185.42 Averages .1,469 $307,035.38 $209.01 1S95 1,716 $315,611.95 $183.93 1896 (a) 1.777 287.413.65 161.74 1897 1.716 287,309.11 167.43 Averages .1.736 $296,778.24 $170.96 1898 1,690 $208,70L98 $166.09 1899 1,815 301,408.11 166.09 1900 1.869 316,400.80 168.76 Averages .1.791 $299,523.63 $167.24 These fl mires are taken from the public records. They are official. They tell the tale. It has been demon strated that the average inmate can be fed and clothed and cared tor at a cost of about $168 per year unless re publican officials attempt the job; then the cost may run up as high as $200 or more. At the usual ratio of 11 -to 10. the cost of running these nine institutions for the six months ending November 30. 1901. will be about $179,694.87; that will make the cost for a whole year $377,358.87, on a basis of 1.919 popula tion a cost of $196.64 to each inmate. It would be much better if compari sons could be made of the cost of maintaining all the state institutions. the whole thirteen. But this cannot be done, because under this new republican administration four of the inetltutlons have no report on file in the governor's office. Four superin tendents are delinquent more than four months with a report that Is expressly required by law. They should be re quired to report at once or resign. Hence, we are obliged to take Into con sideration only the nine institutions whose heads have made reports. Are the above comparisons to your taste, Mr. Rosewater? Always glad to oblige you. The dispatches say that General Kitchener has approved the sentence of death passed upon the Boer general, Letter, who was tried for treason. Gen eral Lotter is guilty of the same sort of treason that Nathan Hale was ac cused oL Nathan Hale tried to get Information for Washington by going over to Long Island. He was captured by the English and hung for treason by the order of General Howe. Kitch ener is playing the old act over again. The American tories stood by General Howe then just as th same sort of Americans uphold Kitchener now. Are you not glad that you can "point with pride" to the fact that you have co association with that crowd t X ' "'7 m : : - V Republican General Orders. "Go lower the tax on railroads, that's according to rules, And hold up the hoys attending the schools. They'll hand over the tax if ,it takes every rag, We've ordered it placed in Stuefer' s big bag. "When we go for a state and finally win it, The rule's never broken: Get all there's in it. The boys and the girls must pay Dietrich's big tax. And give Stuefer the f unds-those are the facts. . 1 A thousand a month he'll lay safely away, We're holding the state, why not make it pay? One mill on the dollar the people said t- - . To support the big school those are the facts, , But Dietrich, he said : No. We'll give it to Stuefer, We'll hold up the boys, that's what we're here for. I'll hold up the boys and Stuefer the bag, I'll make 'em pay it if it takes every rag." The boys and the girls, they chip in their money , And Dietrich and Stuefer, they gather the honey Hold wide the bag! Hold wide the bag! Now is the time for republican swag. (Note. Dietrich's veto of $90,000 of the money appropriated to support the university made it neces sary to levy a tax of $3.00 for each semester upon every student attending the university to pay current ex penses. Thus the principle of free education has been overturned by "Si republican governor. The one mill tax is coming in all the time and goes to swell that big item in Stuefer s official reports entitled "cash on hand.") WHERE THE SGHOOL FUNDS ARE Stuefer'a X.tttl Bank t West Point U In vesting in Chattel Mortgages all Over the State The Holt County Independent is one of the most wide-awake country week lies in Nebraska. Very few good things ever get away from Editor Eves. He has made a discovery up In his county that is quite startling to say the least. Probably we had best let Mr. Eves tell the story himself. "Holt county is known as the hot bed of republican boodleism. It was the republican leaders of Holt county who first said that it was none of the people's business what the county treasurer did with the state funds; it was the republican leaders in Holt county who forced the nomination and election of Barrett Scott when he -was kown to be a defaulter; it was the Holt county republican leaders who condoned Bartley's crime and demand ed that he go free, and it is the Holt county" republican leaders who are now making excuses for the present state 'treasurer not taking the people into his confidence as to the disposi tion of state funds and who are laud ing his "Independence" in refusing to account for the same. If a republican state treasurer wanted to speculate and use state funds for his own personal benefit there is no doubt that he would select Holt county as one of his fields of. operation, and knowing this fact your correspodent made a diligent search of the Holt county records for traces of any such distribution. The result was rather more startling than he had hoped for. Treasurer Stuefer is president and manager of the West Point National bank, a comparatively small banking institution, having less capital, sur plus and deposits than our First Na tional bank of O'Neill, which does not solicit business from without our own county. The West Point National bank is about two hundred miles from here, yet what do the records show? The West Point National bank, of which State Treasurer Stuefer Is presi dent, has seventy chattel mortgages on file in Holt county which are given to secure loans aggregating $12,664. Is it not a queer and suspicious coin cidence that the little bank of West Point should branch out over the great state of Nebraska In the loaning busi- state funds are. $267,524 at 10 per cent per annum amounts to $26,752.40. This handsome rake-off is a very nice thing for Mr. Stuefer a shrewd steal. Should prices go down and a panic ensue the principal undoubtedly would go with the interest, and the state would again be disgraced and humil iated by a second half million raid on the treasury." It might not be a bad idea for in terested persons up in Stanton, Madi son, Pierce, Wayne, Thurston, Dakota, Dixon, Cedar, Knox and Antelope counties to take a little look through the "chattel mortgage records at the county seat and see If the West Point National bank is doing a thriving chattel mortgage business there. MORAL YICTORY Bryan at Banquet Sulogizet Charles a Town for Sticking to Ills Principles Eight hundred men of all shades of political opinion sat down at the fare well banquet tenedered by Duluth citi zens to Charles A. Towne at the Ar mory in Duluth, October 16, while ful ly 500 ladles were present In the gal leries to hear speeches by William J. Bryan, Mr. Towne and others after the discussion of the menu. IThe affair was non-partisan, and carried out the intention of the promo ters to make it a testimonial to Mr. Towne's personal popularity among his friends and neighbors. Scores of prominent democrats, however, were present from all parts of the state to add their tribute and listen to the elo quence of their brilliant leaders. Mr. Bryan's subject was ''Moral Courage," and he took occasion to 6hower encomiums on the guest of the evening for his notable display of that quality in 1896, at the time of his withdrawal from the republican party, to follow silver. He saidt "Some may be disposed -to stamp the word 'failure, upon the political career of our distinguished guest. Taut he has set an example that must weigh heavily on the side of civic virtue. He has faced without flinching a fire as hot and hellish as ever came from cannon's mouth, and he has won a vic tory greater and more glorious than ever crowned the life of one who fawned at the feet of power or bar tered away his manhood to secure an office." Mr. Bryan did not inject any politics ness as soon as its president gets con- . into his speech, which was brief and trol of the state's fiances? A like directed largely to Mr. Towne. He amount loaned in a very few counties ! said: might account for the $267,526, and 1 "Great issues are at stake; great in f urnish a most reasonable excuse for J terests are involved, even our civillza Stuef er's refusing . to tell where the tlon itself r-an4 through as the- civili zation of the world. This nation is a world power; it has not acquired its influence by war, but for a century its ideas have been permeating the world, and every citizen owes it to his coun try as well as to his generation and posterity to throw the weight of his influence on the riglit side of every public question." The above is the Associated press report of one of the most remarkable ovations ever given to any man in the United States, but brief as it is, most of the republican editors cut it out of the dispatches. If Mr. Towne had made a speech anywhere within the borders of the United States in which he had said one word against Mr. Bryan or the Kansas City plat form the Associated press would have sent columns about it and every daily in the land would have had scare heads, some of them reaching clear across the page. That is the way the news is . handled In this country and will continue to be handled until plu tocracy is overthrown. IN THE SOUP Republicans Wot Happy Orer the Record They Have Made and are out Playing the Anarchy Dodge The republican, party Is again on trial In Nebraska. Is its administra tion of state government satisfactory to a majority of the people of Ne braska? If so, they will give their ap proval by electing Judge Sedgwick and Regents Ernst and Calkins. If not, they will rebuke it by electing Judge Hollenbeck and Regents Hawxby and Bayston. The real Issue Is on state questions, and there is no dodging it, Are the people satisfied with the do nothing legislature of 1901, whose sole claims to distinction are the passage of B, & M. Pass Distributor Ager's game law, and a senatorial deadlock which was broken by selecting about the poorest sticks the republican party could' find In Its political timber yard. Scores of big, brainy, brilliant repub licans were shelved in order that the railroads might be satisfied. Are the people satisfied with Diet rich's pardon record? Are they satis fied with Savage s? Do they feel elated at the release of Murderer Dlnsmore, of Embezzler Bolln, of Embezzler Bartley? Have they respect for the spineless Savage who, after paroling Bartley, allowed his party convention to usurp the -gubernatorial prerogative and compel Bartley's return to . the penitentiary? Are they overjoyed to receive school apportionments $50,000 smaller than the fusionlsts apportioned? Are they chortling with glee because the audi tor, acting in the interests of the in surance trust, ruled against the re ciprocal fee law and thereby caused the state to lose some $20,000 a year in fees? v Are they hugging them selves because Treasurer Stuefer suc cessfully lobbied against and killed a bill to reduce interest on state war rants, thereby causing the taxpayers to pay about $20,000 additional in terest each year? Do they feel elated over the disas trous fires at the penitentiary and the Norfolk asylum, caused by negligence of republican officers and employes, whereby the state loses nearly half a million dollars worth of property? Is It with cheerfulness and approval that they see over $48,000 paid out to main tain 50 additional Inmates in the state Institutions? Are they quite content with Attor ney General Prout's dilly-dallying with all state cases against any corporate interests? And above all, do they feel easy regarding the : state trust funds, since Treasurer Stuefer has tried to fool them by making only part of a report and pretending it is complete? The redoubtable Lindsay Is wise in his day and generation. He is aware of the storm of noes which must be given in v answer to these questions. So he and his able lieutenant, the aff able Charlie Rlgg, seek to prevent these questions being asked, by re sorting to hypocritical cant and beg ging for populist and democratic votes "just to show your respect, you know, for President McKinley." rn thesfi astute noliticlans think the populists and democrats an aggre gation of fools, that such gauzy games are attempted? - ' ' Respect for the man, sorrow for his death, and abhorrence for anarchy and anarchists, do not of themselves re quire any one to vote the republican ticket. And the man who, without better reason, would change his poli tics and vote the republican ticket, Is simply a moral coward. THE POPULISTS WIN Unanimous Decision of the Supreme Court That There Shall Be a Circle for Each Party Name. The DODUllsts won in the - supreme court, By a unanimous, decision of the court the democratic and peoples' Independent parties will each he given a separate space at the head of the ticket and each party name win De followed by a circle in which a voter may make a cross and thus vote his party ticket straight without further marking.- - - The decision was given at a special meeting of the court called to dispose of an application fo ra writ of man damus annlied for by A. Wanmer, fu sion candidate for sheriff in Lancaster county, and Chas. Q. De France, chair man of the Donulist state central com mittee. In granting-the writ the court followed the ballot law adopted last winter but entirely disregarded tne diaeram of the form of the official bal lot as prescribed in the law. ' ' Section 140 of the ballot law, says, the name of each party having can didates on the ballot," shall be printed at the top of the ballot and at tne right of each party name a circle in which the voter may make a cross to express his desire to vote his party ticket straight. - The opinion of the qourt will be pre pared and filed later. The following announcement was made by the courts It is the duty of the proper officers In preparing official ballots to cause to be printed at' the top and left side of the ballot in black 'faced capltaltype not less than one-eighth of an inch high, the name of each party having candidates on the ballot, and to the right of each party name, a circle one half inch in diameter, with leaders connecting the party name to the cir cle. This is true though a person is nominated by two or more political parties. The form of the ballot should be uniform throughout the state. Writ allowed. ""'.''. The hearing in this case was before Chief Justice Norval, Judge Sullivan i.nd Judge Holcomb. George W. Berge appeared for ; the relators and Deputy Attorney General Norris Brown ap peared on behalf of the secretary of state and pointed out that the form of the ballot was specifically prescribed hv a. schedule In the ballot law. George A. Adams, chairman of the republican county central committee, appeared on behalf of County Clerk Frye, who Is the respondent in the suit, N The fusionlsts won also in a man damus suit from Douglas county, In which thev sought to compel County Clerk Haverly to place the name of Mr. Connolly, democratic nominee, on the ballot as a candidate for county commissioner in the Second commis sioner district of Omaha. A dispute had arisen in regard to tne districts in which elections should be held tnis fall. The republicans contended that elections should be held in the First and Fourth districts and they nomi nated candidates in those districts The democrats contended that a va cancv existed In the Second district The supreme court granted the writ of mandamus as prayed Dy uonnony. The people Of this country have been taxed at a pretty heavy' rate for the benefit of a British corporation. Ad jutant General Corbin says In his re port that the government has been paying $12.26 a word for all cable grams from the Philippines. No won der that Johnny Bull is delighted with the war in the Philippines and that he will uree the keeping it. up for the next century or two. General Corbin does not give the total amount paid for cablegrams, but it would doubtless be . enough to lay a cable a long ways toward the Philippines. W REPUBLICAN STEALINGS One Thousand Dollars a Month for Tea Months An Examination of Official Re ports Proves It Beyond Contra diction As has been said before, the per sonality of the two principal candi dates for judge of the supreme court is one of the features in this campaign. borne days ago a representative of the World-Herald called at Fremont, the home of Judge Conrad Hollenbeck. and the result of his interviews with the citizens of that place makes a column or more of interesting reading matter.. We quote his remarks in re gard to Judge Hollenbeck's legal qual ification for the high office to which he has been nominated "As a lawyer and jurist Judge Hol lenbeck's standing Is high. The cause of this is not far to find. In the first place he has never been anything but a lawyer since he was admitted to the bar. He has taken in no make-shift side issues. The law has been his love. He has studied it assiduously and with all the application of a strong and powerful mind studied It not, primarily, as a money-making de vice, but as the instrument of order. equity and justice. He has been that kind of a lawyer who seeks to discour age and not to promote litigation. He has reverenced the law as the protec tion guaranteed the weak man against the strong and discountenanced it as a means of delaying or thwarting jus tice. . , , "In his three years' service on tha district bench Judge Hollenbeck has won a reputation, that extends beyond the confines of the Sixth judicial dis trict, as a justice-dealing magistrate. With him facts and the equities out weigh subterfuge and the technicalities of law. He has no patience with pet- tifoging or the pettifoger. His con ception of the court Is the old-fash ioned one of a place where the truth Is laid. bare and justice administered according to the broad and fundamen tal meaning of the law." Aside from Judge Hollenbeck's abil ity as a lawyer and a jurist there is another "matter which should endear him to the heart of every loyal Ameri can. Again we quote from the World Herald: "The little bronze -emblem of the Grand Army of the Republic Is found ever on the lapel of Judge Hollen beck's coat. When a boy of 16 years, not yet out of school, Conrad Hollen beck enlisted as a volunteer In the Union army. This was In the summer of 1864, and he served as a private un til the next summer, which brought the great civil war to its close. His regiment was the 207th Pennsylvania Infantry, and it saw service in . the Army of the James and Army of the Potomac. He participated in all the bloody battles that preceded the tak ing, of Richmond and Lee's surrender, on which occasion he divided his hard tack with the starving rebel prisoners. At Petersburg's bloody fight all of his tent mates were slain. "Judge Hollenbeck's trying service In the army during the tender years of his youth left an Indelible impres sion on a heart that has always been extremely tender. He rarely can bo Induced to talk of his war experience and . when he does, his eyes still fill with tears. "Judge Hollenbeck has always been a democrat, as was his father before him. Ha Is a good type of the demo crat that is bred in Pennsylvania, where democrats are few but uncom promising, and not to be dismayed. His first presidential vote was cast for Horace Greeley, and it is a vote of which the judge still feels proud. In 1896 he was a delegate to the Chicago convention on the Bryan delegation and in 1900 attended the Kansas City convention as a spectator. "'The Chicdgo and Kansas City platforms,' he said, simply; 'voice my political creed.'" ' In striking contrast to Judge Hol lenbeck's record as a loyal American citizen, stands the record of his prin cipal , political opponent. Judge Sedg wick of York, the republican nominee for Judge of the supreme court. Judge Sedgwick Is a man some two or three years older than Judge Hollenbecit. Today this republican candidate stands a physical giant among men. A man of powerful physique, notwith standing he has passed the noon-day of , his manhood. He does not wear the little bronze emblem of the Grand Army of the Republic. He has no right to wear It. Althougbrold enough, large enough, and physically strong enough to serve his country In her hour of peril, Judge Sedgwick did not enlist as a volunteer in the union army. He was never a soldier and has never explained to the people' why he did not go as a soldier to aid his coun try in her time of need. Members of the G. A. R., if not whol ly blinded by partisanship, will think twice before casting a ballot for Sedg wick, the stay-at-home, In preference to Hollenbeck, the hero. All the literature put out In New York city in 'advocacy of the election of Seth Low, Is dated at "Fusion Head quarters." The New Yorkers are adopt ing the populist brand of practical pol itics. Perhaps after a while they may learn something about populist prin ciples. The Russian glass trust busted up the other day and the price of glass Immediately fell 25 per cent. The American glass trust has raised the price of glass more than 300 per cent and shows no sign of busting up and never will as long as the republican, party is in power.