7 3:,. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT Hay 29, 1902 tbt Dtbraska Independent Lincoln, Uebraska. PRESSE BLDG.. CORNER 13th AND N STS. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. FOURTEENTH YZAB. SI.OOPER YEAR IN ADVANCE When making . remittances do not leave money with news agencies, postmasters, etc, to be forwarded fey them. They frequently forget or remit a different amount than waa Jft with them, and the subscriber fails to get proper credit. Address all commanications, and make all drafts, money orders, etc., payable to the Tltbratka Independent, Lincoln. Neb. Anonymous communications will not bfl noticed. Rejected manuscript will not b returned. The "powers" did a huge amount of looting in China In the ordinary way that Tlctorlous armies have when in vading a foreign country, but the dl .plomats provided for more looting in their own slick way than the armies ever did. ' The Chinese indemnity was made payable in gold, and then the governments went to work to further depress the price of silver. As Chinese money is all silver, every time the price of, silver goes down a cent on the ounce the indemnity is vastly in creased without any invading army. When the bicycle first came into general use pedestrians had to run the risk of their lives every time they crossed a street frequented by the "scorcher." A few good-sized fines and the general contempt of the whole people after a good many had been killed and maimed brought the idiots under control. Now the same diffi culty has arisen with the automobiles. The class of simpletons who are en gaged in endangering the lives of the people with machines are the rich. There should be no mercy shown them. "For Democrats: How to Treat the Trusts and How to Win in 1904," is the title of a neat little book, 81 pages, 12 mo., from the pen of John Haggerty, published by the Abbey Press, 114 Fifth avenue, New York city. Mr. Haggerty believes that the democratic anti-trust plank defeated Mr. Bryan in 1900. "The democratic plan fright ened the trust workmen at the last presidential election, and as they held the balance of power in the three great states where trusts are most in evi dence, they ran McKinley In, although I believe that most of them wanted to vote for Bryan." Mr. Haggerty's ideas do not differ materially from those of H. Gaylord Wilshire, whose slogan is, "Let the nation own the trusts," but for the democratic platform of 1904. Mr. Haggerty suggests that direct leg islation be made the principal plank, promising to give the people a refer endum on the questions of what shall be done with the Philippines, the trusts, and other live questions. The Crowder report concerning the British post at Chalmette at this writ ing is still safely locked up in the president's desk, but the Louisiana legislature has had something to say on the subject. It unanimously passed a concurrent resolution approving "most heartily" Governor Heard's let ter to President Roosevelt protesting against the use of Louisiana waters and soil as a military base of supply by the British government in its war against the Boers. The governor also "is urged to take any such further steps conformable to law, as in his judgment may be necessary to estab lish and maintain in this state obed ience to the law of nations and respect for the treaties of the United States." If the colonel's report had been satis factory to the administration there is no doubt but that it would have been printed a long time ago. The suppres sion of news is one of the chief char acteristics of the republican policy. Our correspondent, H. W. Risley, in his Washington letter this week com ments upon the fact that there are 227 lawyers in the present house of repre sentatives, and shows why the. lawyer succeeds as a politician - where the -newspaper man fails. Mr. Risley's ar gument is good. The lawyer, is usual ly a conservative, rarely a radical and the newspaper man who is not a radical is usually not much of any thing. The pioneers, either in settle ment of a country, political move ments,, or anything else, are seldom the ones who are given the opportun ity to carry into effect or enjoy the im provements or reforms they advocate. But there Is no denying the fact that a legal training is a great help to the man who fills a public office, be it ad ministrative, legislative, or Judicial. The fact that there are so many law yers In the house is proof of several things: that the lawyer Is considered best fitted for the duties of legislator; and that he is usually a hustler for votes In the campaign. On the face of things it would seem that the lawyer has more than his share, but it will probably be so as long, as there are laws to make, to administer and to in terpret. Nearly every president had a iegsu .training. .Ui.titfU A. WORD TO WAGE WORKSR8 That there Is a conflict coming on between capital and labor more fierce and determined than any of the past is believed to be certain by many of the sociologists and, economists. The organization of trusts in every depart ment of industry with no. disposition on the part of the party in power to check or control them, and the recog nized existence of that partisan insan ity that influences the mass of the people to vote for a party name re gardless of the principles or tendency of the organization bearing the name, makes the coming of such, a conflict inevitable. Hundreds of thousands of wage workers will go on a strike and suffer privations indescribable in a fight against the oppression of a trust and when election, day comes will go to the polls and vote to give that trust and others like it control of the gov ernment. They will do that when they knpw that the organization that they are voting for will use the army against them, will establish and main tain courts that will issue injunctions, depriving them of any or all of the rights embodied , in the first thirteen amendments to the constitution, will imprison them for months in bull pens aa has been done out In the west ern mining districts, or shoot them down in the public highways as in Pennsylvania. The fact of the existence of this par tisan insanity should be taken note of by the brighter minds among the labor leaders. These leaders are not all demagogues and fakirs as the press of the political party they support constantly declares. There are pa triotic men among them men of good thinking capacity. The reason that they do not have greater control, i3 that most of them have not had the opportunity to ground themselves in the fundamental principles of politi cal economy and government. The reading of the beautiful dreams of Bellamy does not give the virile strength of intellect to fight such men as run the coal, steel or standard oil trusts. It takes a different sort of education to qualify a man to enter a battle like that. Toward the close of the seventeenth century and at the beginning of the eighteenth, a few great thinkers and scholars through their works taught the active minds engaged in commerce the real principles of the wealth of na tions. Adam Smith, Ricardo and other writers for the first time brought with in reach of the creators and manipul ators of wealth the fundamental prin ciples. The first to make use of this knowledge for their own enrichment was the house of Rothschilds. Some thing over a half a century later, the "captains of industry" in this country began to comprehend and make use of them. Meantime labor was befogged with the old ideas and bound to politi cal organizations by the insanity of party fealty. What labor needs to en able it to fight for its rights Is not impractical dreamers, but men who clearly understand the laws that gov ern the production and creation of wealth men who think clearly and who are not influenced or overcome with political psychological waves created by a mental maelstrom, engen dered by political leaders for the ex press purpose of bewildering and be fogging them. It would be millions In the pockets of members of organized labor if they would take a small portion of the fund expended for other purposes and ex pend it in sending four or five of their brightest men to " some university to take a course in political economy and sociology and then put them at the head of their forces to fight the trusts. Then there would be a fight that would make the fur fly. The instincts of the labor leaders are right, but they lack the special train ing to make them effective antagon ists against the trained political eco nomists which capitalism brings Into the field to fight its battles. Suppose that when Edward Atkinson brought out his stove, which was to do th cooking for a workingman's family for a cent a day and the other economists of that kind were publishing articles telling how laborers could live on three cents a day, that the labor lead ers had had some economist of equal training to have met, not only with the justifiable denunciation that was used, but with a complete economic and un answerable argument showing the fol ly of such a system. What a world .of difference there would have been in the situation of the wage-earners today. Suppose that they had replied to Mr. Atkinson and the other hired econom ists of capitalism: Your system will stop consumption. - - The wage-workers are the consumers of the products of the manufactories. Reduce their cor.-r sumption to six or eight cents a day and nine-tenths of , the manufactures will close their doors within a year. You talk about the smoke from the factory chimneys. , In that day the skies will not be darkened with the clouds from burning coal any more. The roar of the machinery will stop. Neither capitalist nor wage-worker will get any more returns, from the factories. You have destroyed con sumption and " production ' must also stop, for there would no longer be a market for your, goods. .Mr. Atkinson, your theories would, if put in practice, bring disaster upon the whole human race. They would make a howling wilderness of this great and beautiful country. In the wreck and ruin the adoption of your principles would pro duce, you and your kind would be In volved as well as the wage-worker. An argument along that line and many others that a trained economist could have made would have driven Atkinson and his confreres from the field, while denunciations employed by the labor leaders had little or no ef fect. -. Labor leaders should get into their hands weapons with which they can do something more than irritate and annoy. They should be so armed that they can drive the enemy from the field. After getting hold of the funda mental principles, it would not be long until they could control the govern ment and bring its mighty power to bear upon the conditions of which they complain. ANSWER THE QUESTION Let every American citizen ask him self if the war in the Philippines has been any benefit to him. Has he been made any happier for It? Has his toil been made the least lighter for it? Has any inspiration come to him to make his life better? If he answers honestly, he will answer no. That will be true of every man who has not re ceived an office on account of the war or made money from army contracts. On the contrary, let him ask what he has suffered on account of the war. Ten thousand young men have lost their lives in the Philippines and that many American homes have been made sorrowful and desolate. Every man has had to contribute money to the support of the war and is that much the loser. Why is it then that there Is a single man in all these United States who favors the continu ance of the war? The war on the Filipinos was started and has been carried on without ask ing the people whether they favored it or not. It was inaugurated by a few republican politicians at Washington. Congress was never consulted and never declared a war on the Filipinos. It was done by a commission ap pointed by a republican president to make a treaty of peace with Spain and that treaty was ratified by a senate that waa not chosen by a vote of the people and all of whom were elected before there ever, was a thought of a war with Spain. The war is continued by the men who started it because of the political patronage that it furnishes. By means of it fat places are given to the friends and adherents of the few families who control the republican party. Service in some of the colonial offices for three or four years makes a man indepen dently rich for the salaries attached to them are enormous. But why should you desire its con tinuance? Do you expect to get an office or a big army contract? What sort of a reason can you give for vot ing to continue this war of conquest? Is it because your father voted the re publican ticket? WHO ATTACKS THE ARMY? The republican gag, "attacking the army," has been pretty much worn out before the campaign has begun. The question is: "Who is attacking the army?" All the witnesses who have given evidence concerning the employment of torture have been mem bers of the army. The general criti cisms of the army have been made by two regular army officers. Major Gar dener and Captain Grant. No demo crat or populist has testified against the army. When one of these mem bers of the army, officers or enlisted men, gives testimony concerning the Inhuman manner of carrying on the war in the Philippines, then the im perialist, with rage in his eye, turns upon the opposition in congress and shouts: "You are attacking the army," when not a man among them has given any testimony against the army at all. When some democrat or populist ap pears before the Philippine commit tee and gives testimony against the army, then Lodge and his confreres will have some ground for shouting: "Yovv are attacking the army." Until then they had better pay attention to the only witnesses who have borne testimony against the army. The be ginning of the whole thing was the remark of the lieutenant general in command of the army to the effect that the war was being waged with severity. All the testimony since has come from the honorable men of the army. The republicans appointed the inves tigating committee. They issued all the subpoenas. They brought to Wash ington every witness. They are re sponsible for all that has resulted. It has been so disastrous to them that, viewing their own work, they seem to have lost their heads entirely and accuse their opponents of doing some thing that they have had no part in at all. If any set of men has "at tacked the army," it is the Philip pine investigation committee of the United States senate, and that Is a body appointed by a republican senate POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Political psychology would be an in terestine study. There should be a chair established in every university to teach it. It is one of the practical things that should be included in the modern curriculum, Let the philosoph ers get at it and tell why it is that a 'man who has never attracted any at tention when nominated for office all at once becomes a hero to be wor shipped, honored and lauded by tens of thousands of people, the most of whom never saw him and who know nothing about him. Why do the masses watch every word he says as If it were tne law and the gospel? How is it that a psychological wave is created affect ing the minds of thousands, influenc ing them to spend their money and their time to go out and shout for him? How such a wave is ' started, its growth, its climax and its sudden sub sidence would be a study well worth the time of any scholar. Personally, what difference does it make to 999 men out of every 1,000 whether Mr. Jones or Mr. Brown is governor? There are many chances to one that the man who has shouted and worked for Mr. Brown or Mr. Jones will never see the man after he is elected, and whichever wins, it will not affect the life of the voter. He will still have to plow and sow stand be hind the counter or work in his shop just as before, yet this psychological wave will so affect tens of thousands that they cannot sleep nights and they will imagine, and for the nonco really believe, that if their candidate is not elected that the state will be ruined, men will lose their farms and merchants will become bankrupt. Such was the state of mind of thousands upon thousands of republicans when the populists elected a governor the first time. They firmly believed that the farms of Nebraska, being mort gaged, eastern creditors would swoop down on the state and sell it out at auction and that these fertile prairies would become a howling wilderness. The agony they suffered was terrible. Each individual is of course more or less affected by the sort of state gov ernment we have and perhaps more by a good or bad national government. While the fusion government was in control of the state, the debt was de creased over $600,000, and the first two years of republican government will increase it by about the same amount. That, of course, affects every man in the state. . What he must pay in in creased taxes 'Will have to be earned and handed oyer to the tax collector, instead of being kept in his own pocket to add to happiness and comfort. This matter seems, however, to have little effect upon the men who are under the influence 'of "a political craze. The psychological effect is aside from this. It is a , wave , that sweeps men from their mental foundations and starts them whirling around in a vortex, dis connected from the ideas that usually control their conduct. It drives them into a madness that leads them to be lieve that the populists are bent on bringing destruction upon the whole community. They denounce them as scoundrels, idiots, traitors. Yet strange as it may seem, these populists are their neighbors. They meet them in a friendly way. Buy from and sell to them. Exchange neighborly cour tesies. Often belong to the same church with them, and yet when this psychological influence is upon them, they think of populists as being little short of demons in human form. The psychologist who will examine this question in a scientific fashion, collect his facts and draw his conclu sions -after the manner of inductive philosophy will do mankind a service. It is in fact a part of the science of sociology and has wide influence "upon the relations of men. If Dr. Ross should give attention to this matter, he would doubtless evolve something that would be of. vast interest to man kind, ss COMB OK WITH YOUR SHOOTING The catch phrases of the imperial ists are more senseless than any ever employed before. "We have outgrown the Declaration of Independence." Can justice and truth ever be outgrown? If we have outgrown the Declaration of Independence, then it never was true, and our whole government was founded on a lie, and the men who founded it were liars. If men who denounce the course which has been followed in the Philippines are "trait ors" and "copperheads," then Lincoln was a copperhead. He said that a people that denied liberty to others did not deserve it for themselves. The epithet, "Your friend Aguinaldo' which has been so often used on the floor of congress, is the hissing and spitting of a viper, not the statement of men who honestly defend a political policy. Those who oppose imperial ism are not personally interested in Aguinaldo, and the men who use the hissing phrase know that they are not, but are anxious to preserve the liberty that the founders of this re public bequeathed to us. They still remember the words engraved on the old liberty bell:. "Proclaim liberty throughout the land, unto ALL the In habitants thereof." . "To criticise the army is tr.eason." No matter if it kills the innocent and helpless. The army must not be crit icised. That is to say that the army can do no wrong, which is a thousand times more infamous than the old doc trine that the king can do no wrong. Men who dare to criticise the army should be shot, say the Funstons. Never in the darkest days of the dark est ages was there a more infamous doctrine promulgated Yet the great republican organs give support to such damning statements. All the men who fought for liberty and free speech in the revolutionary war are dead. Some of those who fought for these things in the, civil war are still llvin? and they are ready to die for them now. There are millions of others in these United States who have never bowed the knee to Baal and never will. Come on with your shooting. CABINET 1 ESPOTISX Secretary Root plays -despot with a nonchalance that no cabinet ministry in all Europe dare imitate. A state ment of the cost of the Philippine war has been demanded of him by congress and he refuses to make it. Such an act as that would cause a revolution in any European government. The Eng gllsh house of commons asked for a statement of the cost of the South African and Chinese wars and it was made within a very few days. The frivolous excuse of Root that he had kept no separate accounts of the wars we have been waging, first in Cuba and Porto Rico, then in China and the Philippines, was accepted as per fectly satisfactory by a truckling ma jority in the house. The war in the Philippines has cost the people of this country some hundreds of millions. The men who pay the money out of their hard earnings have a right to know the exact amount. But Secre tary Root refuses to give them the in formation. To any protest against such despotic action the reply is made: "Well, what are you going to do about it?" , HE WON'T DO IT The British taxpayer has one satis faction that is denied to the Ameri can citizen who has to furnish the money to pay the cost of foreign wars. The chancellor of the exchequer, with out any hesitancy, tells the Britisher exactly what each of his foreign wars costs him. Not only does the chan cellor do that, but he also gives an ex plicit statement that any working man can read and understand, of the cost of the home government, just what the Income of the government is and how much the deficit amounts to. The last statement shows that the cost of the war in South Africa up to" the first of March of this, year was $796,870,000, while the estimated expenses for the current year will bring these figures to $1,114,870,000. The cost of the China campaign will add $30,000,000 more to this total. To pay the war bills of the year and also meet a deficit in the or dinary expenditures the ordinary rev enue would have had to be increased by $80,000,000. The treasury will re ceive for the four years of the war up to March, 1903, $369,000,000 from tax es, leaving $775,000,000 to be obtained by adding it to the national debt, which will be a charge for years. It is no wonder that the English are anxious to patch up some sort of a peace in South Africa. If we could only get a like specific statement from our government of the cost of the war in the Philippines it might cause even some of the imperialists to have a sober thought or two. But Secretary Root will not make any such state ment and what are you going to do about it? "LOYALTY TO THE ARMY" The cry of "loyalty to the army" has in it the very quintessence of absolut ism. It was never heard in the United States until a few days ago. The ques tion is not whether there is loyalty to the army, but the more important one: "Is the army loyal to the principles of this government?" Men are sworn to support and defend the constitution. They have never been called upon to take an oath to support and defend the army. That American citizens should be required to do that is one of the advanced steps of imperialism. That demand has developed within a very short time. It belongs to the or der of things that was established by the supreme court when it tore the constitution In shreds and established imperialism in its stead. It has been expected by. every man who has been watching the trend of events. Imper ialism is based upon the army and m the very nature of things it must de mand "loyalty to the army" instead of loyalty to the principles of free gov ernment. The fiercest "attack on the army" during last week was made by Presi dent Roosevelt. In a letter to Bishop Lawrence of Massachusetts, the presi dent said : "In reference to these cruelties I agree with every word in your address. No provocation, how ever great, can be accepted as an ex cuse for misuse of the necessary se verity of war, and, above all, not for torture of any kind or shape. I have directed that court-martials be held under conditions which will give me the right of review." No democrat or populist has made any such an "at tack on the army" as that ; ARMY OFFICERS j It Is the inspirations of HbWty or influence of despotism that makes the difference in the record of array offi cers. In Cuba, the army officers, and they are the same sort of men who were.sent to the Philippines, have or ganized a system of, hospitals and charities; they have inaugurated a new system of custom houses and a new revenue service; they have or ganized and trained a native police called the rural guard; they have so cleaned and drained the cities that, In stead of being among the most pesti lential, they are now among the healthiest In the world. Yellow fever, which formerly menaced every south ern . port on our - Atlantic and gulf coastline, has been driven from Ha vana. A public school system of near ly 4,000 schools, aside from higher in stitutions of learning, has been suc cessfully started, and maintained. In the Philippines, officers of the seme race, education and earls' train ing, have desolated whole, provinces, formed reconcentrado ' camps, left a howling wilderness in their track, re sorted to torture, the destruction of private property and the general mur der of the inhabitants of at least two provinces. The former were under in structions to restore liberty and the latter to establish ,a despotism. The result is what; every patriot has said always was and always will be. 'A nation cannot long endure half slave and half free." "Those who deny lib erty to others cannot long maintain It for themselves." ' Our own liberties are more seriously threatened than those of the Fiiipinos. When the whole of the army has had Its turn In setting up despotism and returns to the United States, what effect will that have on this government. . Already one of the returned generals has declared that such men as Senator Hoar ought to be shot and if they had been caught In the Philippines they 1 would have been. No United States army officer ever talked in that strain until after he had been employed by a republican administration in setting up despot ism In Asia. SENATOR HOAR'S 8PEECH The speech of Senator Hoar upon the Philippine bill will undoubtedly be the most marked feature of all this session of congress. He has without passion clothed in the most elegant E'ngllsh the arguments and facts of the case against the imperialists. There is not a point made that cannot be duplicated in the writing that has ap peared in these columns, but begin ning at the very commencement f the abandonment of the Declaration of Independence he sums up the whole course of the government in language so pathetic and strong that it will be a powerful factor in the coming cam paign. It is an arraignment of the doctrine of government by force that will be read by lovers of liberty when every member of the senate will be mouldering in their graves. There will be millions of copies of the speecn printed and circulated during the n,ext few months. It should be placed In the hands of every republican voter. The speech is a terrific arraignment of the cruelty, inhumanity and despot ism of the imperial policy. The calm ness of the speaker gives to his words a tremendous effect. What is inex plicable to most men Is the fact that while Senator Hoar knows that If the republican party is successful in the coming campaign that this policy which he arraigns before the world as the embodiment of all the cruelties of the past and makes Insecure even the liberties of the people of the United States, yet he will go back to Massa chusetts and do all that is within his power to keep the republican party In power and thus perpetuate the horrible crimes which he denounces. Could a more evident demonstration be made of the power of partisanship? Let every populist thank God that he is not afflicted with such a baneful In fatuation. SENATOR JOHN P. JONES It is said in Washington that Sena tor John P. Jones has announced that he will retire at the end of his present term and not seek a. re-election. He will probably be succeeded by Con gressman Newlands. During the height of the silver agitation a dozen years ago Mr. Jones delivered a s eech in the senate nearly as extraor nary in its scholarly presentation of the money question as in its length, and this speech was distributed on applica tion from the country by tens of thou sands. It became the chief work of reference for the talkers on the silver side. When the McKinley administration went to coining more silver than was ever coined before, Senator Jones went back into the republican1 party. He was always a protectionlHt and while not fully agreeing with the new imperial policy of the republican party he made no opposition to it. These transactions have thrown him out of sympathy with his state and as he Is nearly seventy years old, he thSnks it best to retire without a struggle. His great speech of 1893 is not a discus sion of the silver question only, but a work on political economy, covering every; phase of the money, question ex cept that of credits, which is referred to in an appendix, being part of a speech he delivered at the, BrusseU conference. It will take its place as a standard work and endure for all time. It was the result of twenty years of hard study, assisted by two secretaries of vast learning, and involved the col lection of perhaps the finest private li brary on the subject of political econ omy in the world. Senator Jones waa a millionaire, having made a fortune in the Comstock lode, and he never spared money in the purchase of books or in the payment of learned and ex pert assistants. For many years he paid his secretaries more than he re ceived as salary as a United States senator, and they were" known as the hardest worked men in the whole city of Washington. OBSERVERS AND THINKERS There are two classes of men take Interest in public affairs. One class, understanding the fundamental and -unrepeatable laws of political economy, put their reason to work and can forecast with certainty the economic effect of certain policies. The other class have only skill in de scribing those effects, being a sort of economic historians, as it were. The former are thinkers and the latter merely Observers. Of late the "observ ers" have been recording the result of their observations and some of them are ' extremely accurate reproductions of what populists said would follow the unchecked organization of trust,. A writer discussing the decrease in. the number of young men who can ob tain a college education after, men tioning the lengthening oftthe college course, says:' . 'A still more potent cause, however, and one which ought to have suggested itself to anyone giving this subject the most super ficial attention, is the unfortunate condition which has prevailed in ;the business world for at least a decade." The hirelings of the trust have no possible chance of a college education. This same writer tells of one youug man who entered the service of one ot them at $4.50 per week six years ago and after faithful and efficient service for more than half a decade now gets $6.50. He went into this service with high expectations of rapid prbmotion, but tnere is under the present syst m no hope for him In regard to this the same writer remarks: "More serious than the inability to obtain a college training is the far more important question. How are young men working for $6.50 a week going to establish homes? This is the alMraportant question for social economists, for prac tically it" becomes one of morals. A nation can live without college bred men, but not without homes." If the trusts are fostered and en couraged as the republican party anl the republican press have been do ing, the American family will certain ly to a large extent disappear. When all the inhabitants except the mag nates become hirelings of the trusts, the foundation of the home Is gone. The "observer" above quoted has bev taking note of that fact, but he is only reproducing in a very literal way wrtpt the "thinkers" said nearly a decade ago. He has perhaps been aiding by his vote to bring about the condition of things which he deplores. The Mor ganization of all industries goes on with astonishing rapidity and the con dition of trust hirelings spreads widpr and wider. GOT WHAT THEY WANTED The best lawyers look upon Judge Grosscup's decision in the beef trust case as the most tremendous ftretch of the power of federal judges ever at tempted. It Is in fact the assumpcion of authority by the federal courts cf the power to fix the price of beef in the United States. The only way tf enforcing the Injunction will be to bring the managers before the court for contempt for charging too much or too little for beef. There Is not a trust In all the land but would b willing to let the federal judges fix the price of all its products. That is what has come of President Roosevelt's at tack on the beef trust by way of In junction. The Independent had no faith in it from the beginning. It was simply a political move of doubtful utility to the republican party. There will be no serious attempt made to curb the rapacity of trusts while tn republican party remains in power. The only way to down the trusts is ta down the republican party. A prosecution of the beef trust under the criminal law, a trial before a jury, a conviction if the proof sustained the charge and Imprisonment in th penitentiary of the big millionaire moguls would have meant something. This Injunction performance was a shallow political trick and has endt d in establishing a more offensive des potism than the one which it was pre tended to attack. The way to attack tne trusts In the courts was so tlain that a wayfaring man, though a fool. couia not err therein. The attack w such a farce that the trust put up no defense. They accepted an Injunction just as the railroads did in a similar case. It was what the trusts wantM. and as has always been the cane un der republican rule, the trust got what it wanted. s