THE NEBRASKA: INDEPENDENT February 27, 1902 1 be Nebraska Independent Lincoln, Uebraska PRESSE BLOC, CORNER I3TH AND N STS I": i; . v. Published Evkby Thcrsdat $1.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE When miking rermttsnees do not leave money with aews ageneiai, postmasters, elc. to be forwarded by them. Tbey frequently forget or remit a different amount thaawaa left with'them, and the subscriber ' faila to cat propr credit. Address all communications, and make all drafts, money pr8, tc, payable to the tlebraska Independent, Lincoln. Neb. . Anonymous communications will not be no ticed. Bejectod manuscripts will not bm re raeL i - Have you sent for a block of five Liberty Building Postals? If not, why not? Now that we have the Danish West . Indies the grafters will proceed to whack on the tariffs. Will there be some more supreme court decisions? The democrat who thinks that through fear or favor, he can get pop- ulists to spike their guns and, desert the field needs a course of instruction In the institute for feeble-minded. . The. United States, has furnished the British government 77,101 horses to help subdue the Boers. One consola tion about it is that De Wett and his men have found some hundreds ' of them very good animals to chase the Britten with. " A populist is amused when he sees the mullet head farmer shouting for a tariff that protects the 1 other fellow and robs the shouter. But when he reflects that the mullet head's vote robs the populist as well, then he is not so much amused. If all Is granted that the officers of the British army assert, concerning the purchase of horses for the army in which the contractors fleeced the gov ernment to the tune of hundreds of thousands, then it can only be said that a British officer is as incapable in a horse trade as he is when trying to catch De Wett. When contemplating the conquest of the two South African republics, Joe Chamberlain remarked that it would require an army of at least 10, 000 men. The official documents sub mitted to parliament on the 1st of January showed that at that date the British government had in South Afri ca 237,800 British soldiers. Joe is one. great prophet. The following is from a private let ter from Washington: "The Europ ean dispatches announce that pour parlers have recently been exchanged between some of the European power? " regarding the Philippines, just for what purpose has not transpired. I am of the opinion that it is in con nection with Prince Henry's visit to the United, States as I wrote you be fore." It Is said by the Washington corre spondents that 175 applications for the governorship of the Danish West In dies were made before the treaty was ratified by the senate and that they have been coming in ever since. On the basis of the salaries of the other - carpet-baggers this governorship ought to be worth $6,000 a year and a palace , to live in. .The. republican pie counter grows bigger very day. There must have been consternation In the office of the attorney general the other day when an order was de livered there from the president com manding Knox to institute proceed ings against the Northern Securities company. Knox musfhave said: "Woe is me. Has it come to this? Must I institute proceedings against a trust? Would to God that I had died before this was thrust upon me." About the time that the politician? have come to the conclusion that we must truckle to King Edward to get the English vote and to the royal de scendants of the Elector of Branden burg to get the German vote and to ' some other scion of royalty to get soma other vote, they will be left out in the , ' cold. As for the Germans in this couu . ... try, most of them have as , poor an ' opinion of royalty as any wild-eyed , POP. . , . r , vv . All the decisions of : the supreme court which in effect destroy the pro tection of the constitution to some millions of people' residing in all the . territories of ; the United States, was an effort to preserve the special priv " ileges of the tariff grafters. Every one , of the cases was a tariff case. That Is keeping up the record of similarity to - George III. The cause of the out break of the revolutionary war was a tariff on tea From that day to this ' "IV MEN ARE OUR RULERS - Under ; the 4 present - conditions, the form of government, under which we live,-whether it shall be a republic, ?n empire or a monarchy depends entirely upon five men, not elected by the peo ple, but appointed for life, who com pose the majority of the supreme court. A decision from that court to the effect that the president should hold office for life would be no greater strain of interpretation than the one that gave unlimited powers .-' to con gress to set up any form . of govern ment it pleases over 10,000,000 people, tax them without representation and govern them without their consent. If one of the judges should die and an other holding different opinions take his place, our form of government would again be changed. Instead of having a stable government, admin istered according to well settled prin ciples, we have the most unstable, it can be changed from a republic where every citizen has equal rights, to an empire where large numbers of the inhabitants have no right except what it pleases congress to grant them, or back to a republic without the people having one word, to say in the mat ter. Five men, holding office for lit? and over whom the . people have no control, fix these matters to suit themselves. Under the .republican party, the American citizen has about as much :tO' say concerning the form of government under which he lives as the Russian peasant This is imper ialism pure and simple and against it this editor will fight while he lives. A government that depends on the whim and caprice of five men, who are guided by no settled principles, is sure to develop into the vilest despotism. No lawyer ever asserted .until since the recent supreme court decision, that congress had any power not "granted" to it by the people. The constitution says: The powers not delegated to the United States by the constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respec tively or to the people. It is not possible that any one can find in , the constitution any power delegated to congress to govern tea million. people outside of the United States, either by, implication or other wise. It follows that the decision of the supreme court i3 simply imper ialism and by that act five men changed the form of this government, j DEPEW'S CONFESSION , . j Day by day as the world wags along the predictions of populism are ful filled. What the populists said in the campaigns of 1896 and 1900 are now ; declared to be true by so shining a light of plutocracy and railroad dom ination as Chauncey Depew. In a re-! cent eulogy upon President McKinley this distinguished Vanderbilt poten tate said: , Though always a poor man, McKinley made possible the gi gantic fortunes which have been ; amassed by master minds in the ., control, ' use and distribution of ' iron, coal, oil, cotton and wool and. their products. Though never ah organizer or beneficiary of com binations or trusts, yet the con- stant aggregation of most indus tries in vast corporations of fab ulous capital received tremendous acceleration from his policies. The substance of those remarks could be duplicated from a thousand populist speeches. At the time the populists were making those speeches their declarations were denounced as anarchy by the whole class to which Mr. Depew belongs. Having accom plished the purpose of piling up the wealth of this country in a few hands where' its political power will be used to still further increase it, we are now told in t a eulogy that It was the pur pose of the McKinley administration to do that very thing. That is what Th? Independent said during all those campaigns. It is somewhat strange that Depew . should make the state ment at the present time. SCIENTIFIC Dtrl'I.ICITY There never was a "mere dishonest and disreputable sort of scoundrels than the men who fought the last republican-campaigns, and senators representatives and economists are ail included. They denied every well set tled .principle in political economy and relied entirely upon ignorance to succeed. The economists were the most dishonorable and disreputable o? the whole lot, for they prostituted the science which' they pretended to teach to the lowest and foulest political ends. They would , write long articles couched in the ; terms of the science, denying the quantity theory of money. When the banks wanted to go into wild cat banking, they would write other articles pretending to believe that, there was. ,no difference between checks and drafts and - money issued by banking corporations. After de claring that gold had an "intrinsic value" that never changed, after talk ing about "measuring" value with a gold dollar and a thousand other things of that sort that every one. of them knew .were absolutely false, now one of them comes out; and abandons every claim 'about gold that they ever made. It is enough to make St. Thorn- notTthe spoils of office, but "reform sure of these men and read an argument from his pen declaring that gold pro duction in the world will so far in crease under the application of new appliances in mining, as possibly ," to force a change in the monetary sys tems of the gold standard countries. If gold has an "intrinsic value" thai, never changes what difference does it make whether the mines produce 12, 804,344 ounces, as they did last year, or twelve billion ounces? The Independent has referred to P-of. Shaler's - article once or-twice before, but the continual reference to it, in the eastern dailies show, that these scoundrels are preparing to de ceive the people again. The most de spicable political scoundrels in the whole United States have been the professors of political economy in-tria great' universities. They knew the truth and know it well, yet they went before the people with lies couched in scientific terms for the purpose of de ceiving them. They should be stored away for an eternity on the hottest shelves to be found in all hades. FORAKER STATESMANSHIP The other day the narrow-minded partisan senator from Ohio made the statement in the senate that Tom Cot win was retired from private life be cause he was opposed to the Mexican war and had declared: "If r I were a Mexican I would welcome you with bloody hands to hospital graves." Senator Hoar gave Foraker a drub bing that will be remembered for many a day. As the editor of The Indepen dent was named after Tom Corwin and is a distant relative, he read Senator Hoar's remarks with a good deal of satisfaction. Lincoln and Tom Cor win took exactly the same view of the Mexican war and in denouncing Cor win, Foraker denounced Lincoln as well. Foraker is one of those petty politicians who believes in such phi-ases as "My country, right o: wrong," and everything else that plutocracy propagates. The facts of the case are that Corwin was not re tired. Corwin was a senator until 1850 when Fillmore appointed him secre tary of the treasury. After that he was twice elected to the house of rep resentatives and Lincoln, remember ing that he and Corwin stood together in the fight against wars of conquest, appointed him minister to Mexico and that nomination was confirmed by such men as Sumner, Wilson, Hale, Trumble, Fessenden and Ben Wade, and Foraker is not worthy to unlatch the shoes of one of them. Lincoln fought that war with all his powers and he was a member of con gress at the time. On December 22, 1847? he introduced a resolution call ing on the president to Inform con gress whether the "spot" on which the first blood was shed was American soil o: not. On the 3d of January, 1848, the house, by a vote of 85 to 81, declared that "the war was unneces sarily and unconstitutionally begun by the president," Mr. Lincoln voting in the affirmative. According to Foraker, Lincoln was a "traitor" and a "little American." But Foraker is only representing the new views of the republican party and is no worse than Lodge and half ,i cozen other senators. They are all tarred with the same stick. Their statesmanship is of the order of Kin:; George HI. THE GROWTH OF POPUtJSM Every day brings new evidences that populist principles are being accepted as the true doctrine, and that the pres ent membership of the populist party is no index as to the daily increasing number of thinking people who accept the principles as being correct without perhaps any thought of affiliating with the party, for the present at least. The recent report of the industrial commission shows that populism has left its mark. The recommendation regarding taxation is especially inter esting, being populism pure and sim ple, adapted to present conditions an capable of being incorporated into the laws of most states without any radi cal changes in the ownership of public utilities.. The commission recommends: WHO MADE THE WORLD PO WER ? The natural conditions and situa tion of this country is such that . it cannot.be attacked with, any hope of success by any. Continental power or by all of them combined. What makes the United States "a world power," and it has been the chief of them for the last thirty years, is that it is tne: reservoir of the food supply of the world.. If all the fleets of the world should unite to blockade our coast5?, they would have to raise the blockade within three ."months if we did not have a warship or a torpedo ; boat on the seas. By that time they would all have urgent business at home to sup press reyolutlon among the , starving population that they had left behind. England's food supply, as has fre quently been pointed out, at no tim-j could possibly last more than, three months. Cut 'Off the food supplies that come from America and that nation a well as all the continental, nations would be suffering from famine in a very short time. If .England could not have obtained war supplies in this country she would have had. to give up the war against the little , South African republics long ago. She could not carry on a war against any civil ized power without the aid of the United States. . Where would her horses, mules and commissary stores come from if she did not get them here? Ail these statements are facts which any man of common sense will readily agree to after, ten minutes of consideration Two or three things folow from this condition of things. We have no use for great armies and navies if we mind our own business and do not start out "to conquer distant lands and hold them in subjection by force. No reasonable man, after thoroughly looking over the whole situation, can come to any other conclusion than ev ery acquisition of far distant terri tory weakens this nation in a military sense and will be commercially a loss That is the reason why the European diplomats . give such encouragement to all such movements. Possessions scattered all .over the world make necessary large navies and armies for their defense and government, and consumes just that much of the wealth and energies of the people with no returns whatever. To squander the wealth and direct the energies of the people into channels that make no re turns, just to that extent weakens the power and prestige of the re public, j What "makes this nation "a world power" is the agricultural interests The farmer furnishes the products that go to make up haost of what is called "the favorable balance of trade." It is he who makes the European nations dependent upon us. The man who has brought all the nations of the earth to our feet and set the govern ments of the world to quarelllng among themselves about which one is our best friend, is the farmer and not the general or the admiral. The whole world Is a suppliant at the feet of the American farmer. It, is he who has made this nation "a world pow er." Neither the big guns of the navy nor the rifle of the army did it. It was not the admiral in his gold lace nor the general In his epaulets, but the farmer,' the despised farmer, clothed in his overalls and armed with his pitchfork and plow. When it has been necessary to fight It was the farmer boy, sound in mind and body, who did the marching, built the earth works, made the trenches and with clear eye and steady head pulled the trigger that did the execution. The farmer has not only created the wealth. Daid the taxes and done the fighting, but, he has supported in lux ury the idle rich. , Let the farmer fail for two years let there be no crops raised for two years and whers would the rich be? What wbuld be come of Morgan, the Vanderbilts, the Goulds, the generals and the admirals? The farmer does not behave himself unseemly, never seeks his own, is not easily provoked, and, worst of all. thinketh no evil and so the scoundrels and the scamps run the government, build great navies, provide for Im mense armies, but nevertheless it is the farmer who makes ,this nation "a world powef That the states abandon the gen eral property tax and raise their revenues by taxes upon corpora tions, inheritances and incomes, supplemented when necessary by indirect taxation. That corporations, public service and other, be taxed by state boards at rates fixed by legislation upon the value of their franchises, as sessed acor ding to the actual value of their stocks and bonded debts, less the value of their real estate assessed locally, and that the real estate owned by them be taxed locally as other real ; estate is taxed. That the system of levy ing graduated taxes on inherit ances be adopted by those states which do not now employ it and that it be abandoned by the fed eral government. That taxes upon corporations. Inheritances, etc., be supplemented by a graduated tax upon incomeu to be levied and collected by the state. ":- . That notes, mortgages and other like property be taxed by the state . fnir n " T7T.. i --i-ijij.vt r t Kinrimsn ivi a i Alan tq Tirn miiua m vuiujouu. -in CONGRESSIONAL FRAUDS Some months ago when Congress man Babcock.came out, with his state ment that he. was ; going to Introduce a bill to reduce the tariff on steel and iron and other trusts-made goods that were largely, exported to Europe and sold there for. a much- smaller pric? than the trusts, would sell them for in this country, The Independent told its readers that all that was a fraud, that Congressman Babcock nor any other republican would do any such thins. The other day the democrats and pop ulists in congress rallied to" a man to give Babcock such a chance and he voted t&t: he didn't want it.'::' When the bill to repeal the war taxes came up, the republicans passed a rule that no amendments should be offered for. the express purpose of preventing ouo that would reduce the tariff on any thing. Mr. Richardson plead with thV on trust goods to cast their votes for the privilege of offering amendments, telling, them that this was the only occasion when ; they would get a chance to amend the tariff. Every one of them voted that they didn't want any such chance. They will all come west after congress adjourns and relate to the mullet heads of their districts how earnestly they worked to get something through relieving the farmers from paying double price for all their machinery, plows, reap ers, mowers and so forth, but they could not succeed! Then they will de clare that if they are re-elected they will do it this time sure. Every mul let head will believe them and these congressional frauds know that they will, or they would act very differently from the way they do. SECRETARY LONG Secretary Long has not been half a3 good a prophet as Baalam's ass.- Ko has tried his powers on several occa sions with the most disastrous results. In a letter carefully prepared in the sanctity and solemn stillness of his own study which was printed in the harvard Republican just before the last presidential election, he declared that the cry about trusts and imper ialism would be as dead as Julius Caesar in three weeks. As we look at that prophecy as it appears In cold type, we have greater respect for Baalam's ass than ever before. A few years ago Secretary Long did not talk so much like an ass as he does now. In 1881 in speaking of Burke and Chatham in England and Adams and Otis in this country, he said: "The words they spoke, the sentiments they uttered, were eternal truth and had nc local habitation or name." Now he thinks those words are so far from being eternal truth that they are out of date, old-fashioned and the docu ments containing them ought to be thrown into the waste basket. Good bye. You are soon to retire from the cabinet and when the records are finally made up, your name will be founJ in the long list of tories which adorn history from the days of the revolution to the present time. SENATORIAL L.ESE MAJESTY The attempt that is being made by certain senators and the plutocratic press generally to make it a crime to tell the truth in the United States senate, putting the members of that body in the same position that the monafchs of Europe enjoy, making It in fact lese , majesty . to call attention to the fact that some of the senators that corporations and trusts have put there are criminals, scoundrels, and nothing short of the vilest specimens of humanity as far as their morals are concerned that can be found in this nation, will not be successful as lou? as one brave man remains in the Unit ed States who dares to tell the truth. No fouler wretches live than some of these corporation senators and the people know it. That the republican party has adopted a policy of purchasing oppo nents with office every man knows. Every organization opposed to the re publican party has suffered from It. Clem Deaver, Powderly and others were the fruits of this infamous policy in its attacks on the populist party, just as McLaurin was in its. same method with the democratic party. To point out these facts, which every intelligent man knows to be only plain statements of the truth, is lese majesty. It is only another attempt i) censor, not only the press, but men's tongues. '' This sanctity that Is attempted to throw around the name of a dead president will not influence men of sense. While that president was liv ing Senator Wellington went into ev ery state of the union and publicly de clared that he got his vote by false hood. He reiterated that statement in the senate last week. He declared that his vote was secured by meann as disreputable as was the vote of McLaurin. When a republican at tacked him Senator Wellington re plied that if McComas would repeat outside the senate chamber what he had told the senate in the speech hs had just made he (Wellington) would tell McComas that it was a cowardly and malicious falsehood, - The cowardly McComas never said a word in reply, and Wellington, fcr using the same language that was used the other day by McLaurin was only requested to take his seat. Evi dently, McComas is not the same cour ageous fighter that Tillman is. The Independent does not sanction this rowdyism in the senate, but it claims the right of, every senator to tell the truth in decent language and that is what Tillman did. The benevolent assimilation idea has struck Canada. A member of the Dominion" parliament declared on the floor of the house the other day, that if we did not give up the Klondike region that Canada would be ready for a fight in 24 : hours and that in six months the Cannucks would capture Washington and annex these United States to the Dominion. All for the! i - " V A ROUT' ROYALTY', The speech of Congressman Wheeler was not the speech of a scholar weigh--, ing the force and meaning of every word that was used, but an outburst of the feeling of the common man against royalty and sycophancy to "royalty. To that feeling we are more indebted to Teutonic scholars than tojany other race. It was the Germans, as has of ten been stated in The Independent, who ; first announced the -principles that were incorporated in the Declara tion of Independence and the consti tution of the United States and not the Anglo-Saxons. ' The wording of Wheeler's speech is not after the man ner of the diplomats nor is it clothed in the language of the scholar or scien tist. But in Its spirit it is the utter ance ; of the patriotic American . who does not believe that the royal . blcod is better or more divine than the blood that runs in. the veins of other men. It is the sentiment of a very large part of the German nation. It takes the full' resources of the German royal power, all of its special privileges and the regular army to keep that spirit in subjection today. Germany is the birthplace and propagator of modern science. Its scholars and scientists are not royalists. They no more be lieve in the divinity of the royal blood than does Wheeler) The social demo cratic party ' in Germany increases in number year by year notwithstanding that many of its leaders are lying in jail for offenses that very much re semble the speech of Wheeler. Wheel er was able to say in the house what any German in his native land would have been convicted for under the laws that monarchy has imposed upon them. It is lese majesty, that is, high treason, for any German to criticise the words or doings of royalty in his fatherland. It is hardly probable that when he comes to this land he will find it to his interest to vote with the republican party because a member of congress voiced his contempt for all royalty and all sycophancy to roy alty, whether they are princes or any other sort. The . republican party has repudiated the principles that the men of the German fatherland gave first to the world and for which the men of that race are fighting today the bravest fight ever made by man on the velts of South Africa, The repub lican party has furnished the means for the English to carry on the war against , them. A few Germans still inoculated with the virus of royalty may, because of the position of Wheel er, conclude that they will never vote a. populi3t-or democratic- ticket .-and give all the aid they can to establish royalty in this country, but they will be very few. After they have done that and find themselves in jail for some unguarded word of criticism of royalty they may change their minda. Meantime the patriotic Germans in the old fatherland will go on fighting roy alty and' in the end they will win. They have already wrested from .mon archy many things that the republi can party denies to us. They have a parcels post, . government savings banks, the telegraph and many othe things belonging to the whole people which the republican party here grants as special privileges to the favored rich. From the daya of Caesar until now the Germans, have loved liberty and fought for it on a thousand battle fields. They will finally down royalty at home. They have made more prog ress in the last twenty, years than in the two hundred that preceded. The Independent says: Hurrah for the German lovers of liberty and haters of royalty. A . patriotic German citizen languishing In jail under a sentence of lese majesty would likely talk more roughly about royalty than Wheeler did. . . . and" ask for A CONGRESSIONAL. NUISANCE Newspaper publishers have had to fight Loud of California for the last six years. He was made chairman of the committee on postoffices by the express interests and occupied much of the time In congress for three years in trying to ruin the present system of transporting printed matter at pound rates. It cost many, thousands of dollars to beat the bills that he in troduced as chairman of the committee in three successive congresses.. Now he. comes out with the statement that he favors the turning over the post office entirely into private hands. That It what he has been working for all the time. He comes from the city of San Francisco, Cal., and it is time that the people out there suppressed him as a public nuisance. The working men itrried the city at the ast elec tion and that gives us hope that hi extinguishment is at hand. Certain ly, wage-workers have no use for such a specimen on the floor of congress as Eugene Francis Loud. His duties have been transferred to Madden and there is no further U3e for him. The last thing that Loud has done was to get his committee to report his bill to let, rural postal routes to private contractors. That is to bring to .life the bid star Toute plan of swindling. Senator Elkins laid the foundation of Lis great fortune by the frauds con nected with that business and only kept out of the penitentiary on ac- FOR TWENTY-ONE YE n Catarrh Remedies and Doct Failed -Pe-ru-na Cured, jf'4 MR. A. E. KIDD. ELGIN, ILL. In a very recent . munication from this place orr. news that Mr. Arthur Ernest Kit! well-known architect of that oiu. made complete rccoverj- from cats.--, the head froin which ho had suffer nearly a quarter of a century. He v.- -from 18 Hamilton ave. : "I am 42 3-cars of cge, and hav catarrh of tho head for over half of life, as a result of scarlet fever, foil -by typhoid fever. I got so bad th. was almost constantly coughing . clearing my throat. The catarrh pr impaired iny eyesight, and tho hrr in one ear, and reduced my weic!. 110 pounds. , "I tried nearly every catarrh rrr. advertised, besides a great inanyci .:' ent physicians' treatment?, all of wl failed. "I had heard and read of Peruna. finally decided to try it two mnth . I have now taken seven bottler. , weigh 172 pounds. Never felt h: or merrier. Feel tip top." A. 1. KI i If you do not derive prompt and r. factory results from tho uso of Prr write at once to Dr. Ilartman, givi: full statement of your ea?o and h" v be pleased to give you his valuable Vice gratis. Address Dr. Ilartman, Presidn The Hartman Sanitarium, Colambu-. will help push it through. Lou! . plutocratic fraud, an unbearable i : . nd if the people of San Fran -send hjm to congress again tho . thould be made to pay first class.s r. on every uound of printed matter t goes out or comes into it for the i ten years. WHEN ALrAtERENTEItS The Independent has receive.! great many letters from single tax. There is one thing about thrm that -editor admires. They show that t! are written by honest men who earnestly striving in an unseiash to find the path that will lead out our present environment of inju:-f and wrong. It would not do. b ever, to hold the followers of ll i. George responsible for all they -Several of them declare that lan : now taxed to its full rental value .u. the only difference would be that : der the George system the rent w.. go to the public instead of private dividuals. If that is the case, wi difference would it make to the - mary workers on the land? Wo they be relieved of the exactions -the railroads, trusts and tariff gi bers If they paid their rent to the go ernment instead of the land own What kind of a country would we ha and what would be the appearance the farming regions if all the farn; were renters? There is a large pen; of country in northern Nebraska occupied by renters. One can 1 though he be a stranger, the monie: he crosses the line into that sectio The farm buildings are shacks, t' stables are straw-covered sheds, th are no orchards or groves and traveller has a feeling that he wan' to get out of there. If all land we taxed to its full rental value and v.: the farmers became renters Instead owners of land, would not the who agricultural districts have that sac appearance? If some German scientist shou! 1 come over here, who had done th world a service by his original invi -tigations In chemistry, biology, socio' ogy, or political economy. The Ind pendent would unite with every pa triotic citizen in doing him evr honor, but when It is atked to go wil ' because a man comes in who?e ve!r -flows the royal blood, who has nev done any service to the world, it r fuses to go wild. It would have hi treated with every courtesy as a rep resentative of a foreign government but In exactly the same way that ar. other German would be treated com in on a like mission. The editor of T! Independent may be prejudiced. 0 his forefathers fought in the war of tt revolution and the war of 1S12. Et male member of his family was In t late civil war. If he has an aversie- to the whole brood of kings an ! princes of the royal blood and can no good in them at all, the readers of The Independent will hr.ve to excus him. He will never get rid of it. It wras born In him and has grown with his years and he gets more radical on 'that subject every year. If you want