THE FAKMERS A1.1.1AJNCE: LINCOLN, JNEJ3., SATURDAY, MAR. 1, 1890. V PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING. -i BY TILE ALLIAEE PUBLISHING GO. BOHANNAN BLOCK, Lincoln, - - - Nebraska. J. BURROWS, : : : Editor. J. M. THOMPSON, Business Manager. " In the beauty of the lillies Christ was born across the sea, With a glory in his bosom That transfigures you and me. As He strove to make men holy Let us strive to make men free, Since God is marching on." Julia Ward Howe. Laurel crowns cleave to deserts, And power, to him who power exerts." 44 A ruddy drop of manly blood The surging sea outweighs." Emerson. EDITORIAL. A NEW PREMIUM. A Souvenir -for Old Soldiers. This is a Cabinet Photograph of Gen erals Sheridan, Merritt, Torbert, Davies and Gregg, taken in the field in the Shenandoah valley. .Gen. Sheridan is standing in front of his tent, the other Generals on either side. This picture was reproduced by Noble, of Lincoln, in the highest style of the art, from the original now in the possession of Mr. Burrows. As a staff officer of the 2d Brig., Cav. Corps, Mr. Burrows fre quently met these Generals, and he pro nounces the likenesses perfect, the best he has ever seen. This is a historical picture, the only one of the kind obtain able, and will be furnished only as a premium to The Alliance. The Farmers' Alliance one year and the above splendid photograph, $1.50. The pic ture alone 5s worth twice the monev. The Next Legislature? What shall it be? Will you haye it made up of machine politicians who are -what they are for - what there is in it? who swing with every changing breeze, and are all things to all men, and have no principle, no stability, and no sin-, cere devotion to any cause? There "are plenty of such men. The3T are the flot som that comes to the surface. They are blatant and noisy and aggressive in their professions, but treacherous and unreliable in their performances. It is time this subject was being considered; it is time the right men were being looked up and consulted about, and means provided for bringing them out. A good principle to tie to, now-a-days, is that the office should seek the man and not the man the office. The men who lay their wires for positions as a rule should not have them. Good men ;are modest. Good men are thoughtful ;and quiet, and are not watching for op portunities to toot their own horn. Experience is a good thing. If there are men who have . been to the legisla ture, and have made a good record on the side of the people, send them again by all means. Let us have the benefit of their experience, as well as the fact that they have gone through the ordeal of temptation without being scathed. We know but little of the virtue that has never been tempted. There are in every precinct in this state a certaiu few individuals who have been in the habit of fixing up the precinct delegation to the county con vention, and then going to the conven tion and fixing up a trade between a few precincts to control its action. Everybody knows these men, and everybody knows that their influence is used in the interest of the corrupt ele ment. They go to the county seat and get their orders from the ring, and are perpetuating the riug rule of the old panics year oy year, bpot them this year. We have no use for them. Se lect your own representatives. And the senate look out for the sen ate. Seventeen senators control that body. The railroads have found it pretty easy to control seventeen sena tors. Keep the Howes and Funks and Ransoms at home, and vote for no man for senator whom you do not absolutely know to be straight. It is time you were thinking about it. CO-OPERATION. Method of Operation in Co-Operative Stores. There is much desire through the Al liance for co-operative effort in busi ness lines. Many enterprises are talked of, such as mills and elevators, more frequently the latter. There are a few Alliance co-operative stores in the state; i but as far as we can learn none of them are operated on the correct co-operative principle. It is generally thought that the store is the most difficult of the enterprises earned, when in fact it is the easiest, and should be the primary move, leading to the others. We have asked some who were talking of build ing an elevator or a mill why they did not start a co-operative store, and they replied, "We are. not strong enough yet we'll start that by-and-by." Now the fact is that the capital that would build one mill would start twenty co-operative stores, and the capital that would build one elevator would start half-a-dozen; while the benefits of the store would be much more general and equally distributed among the mem bership than those of the other enter prises. We will first try to give a clear idea of the true co-operative principle of co operative merchandizing. The store is started oa the joint-stock principle. The shares should be put at $5 each. No person not a member of the Alliance should be - allowed to own shares, and they not more than ten each. A cer tain rate of interest is agreed upon which the share capital may receive. This should not be over 7 or 8 per cent. In this particular the share-holders are on an exact equality. They receive the same rate of interest on their shares. The man who has $50 in shares receives interest on $50. The man who has only $5 receives interest on only $5. Now we will suppose the store has been started and done business for one quar ter, or three months. The books must now be squared, an inventory taken, and the profits divided. To ascertain the profits expenses must first be ascer tained and paid. These consist of goods bought, rent, fuel, light, insurance, pay of store-keeper and assistants, if any, and interest on share capital. These all belong to the expense account and must be paid before there are any profits. After these are paid the profit remaining is divided among the share holders in proportion to their trade at the store. That is to say, each share-holder receives the profit on the goods he has bought. To illustrate this point clearly, suppose A has $50 worth of shares, and buys only $10 worth of goods dur ing the quarter, while B has onlv $5 worth of stock and buys $100 worth of goods. A would receive interest on $50 and the profit on $10, while B would receive interest on $5 and the profit on $100. It will be, seen that A and B are on an exact equality as to their interest, and that their profit depends on their own trade. Tt will also be seen that this principle tends to induce trade, and not induce any effort to monopo lize the shares, as there is no induce ment to invest money for the profit, as it can only draw the agreed upon per cent. . It will also be seen that this is pre-eminently the plan to put the poor man on an equality with the rich one. They are in fact on an absolute equality. LITTLE CAPITAL NEEDED. It needs but very little capital to start a co-operative store. This fact arises from the ease of the1 purchasing system of the present day. All kinds of goods are sold by commercial travelers right in the stores of merchants, by sample. Goods can be bought in this way nearly every day, so only a small stock is needed to start with. Thirty and sixty days' time is considered the same as cash, though even these bills may be discounted for actual cash at a small profit. Trade is capital. Suppose twenty-five members of an Alliance wish to start a co-operative store. They need a store-room, fixtures, and money enough to pay freight and running expenses for two months. If each of these twenty five members will trade at the store, and pay for their goods when they buy them, good business management makes the success of the store certain. With fifty members we would ask no other capi tal tha.n their assured trade. THERE MUST BE NO TRUST. This is an essential to success. The business must be ready pay, either cash or its equivalent. . This makes it necessary for the store to deal in truck, which is a great disadvantage, but unavoidable in the country. With Alliance agencies in Omaha, Lincoln and Denver this disad vantage will be partly neutralized. THERE MUST BE NO CUT IN PRICES. It would be extremely bad policy to start a store in a country town, and un dertake to undersell or injure the other merchants. This Would tend to excite enmity and demoralize trade, and there would be no compensating advantage. The better the prices at which goods were sold the more profit for the share holders. If members of the Alliance wanted the benefits let them become share-holders, one share entitling them to all benefits. If non-members of the Alliance want the benefits let them join. In a store of this kind there would be some trade from outsiders. The profit on this trade goes to the stock-holders; so there would be no gain by destroy ing this profit by selling goods at cost. Neither would there be any gain in selling goods to members at less cost than to others, as the total profits are divided among-the members, and each gets all the profit on his own trade. If there was no cut in prices the other merchants would be apt to say, "Well, there must be room here for another store, or these men would . not start one; and if there is room some one else will start one if they don't, so I guess it is all right." But if prices were cut en mity would be engendered, profits wiped out and nothing gained. OTHER ENTERPRISES WILL FOLL6W. If a store is started in a small way with a stock of staple dry goods, gro ceries, boots and shoes, hats and caps and clothing proportioned to its mem bership, and is made successful, other branches of trade will soon be added For coal only a shed and scales weuld be necessary. The implement agency would soon be attached. Then would come the lumber department and the grain-shipping department, until the establishment embraced every branch f it. m i oi me iarmers trade, ana in every branch the members would have the profit on their own trade, and thus come as near eating their cake and keeping it as pos sible. This hasty sketch is already too long, though much remains to be said. We will recur to the subject, or explain any part of it when requested. Government Ownership of Railroads. President T. B. Blackstone, of the Chicago & Alton railroad, in his anuual report to the stockholders, recommends that the national government shall ac quire the ownership of all the railroads in v the U. S. which are used for inter state traffic, and operate the same at such rates as will pay operating ex penses, interest on cost and repairs Many of the people have been advocat ing the same thing. As intelligent rail road men study this question more of them will be of the same mind with Mr. Blackstone. I3PThe Farmers' Alliance is the oesi aavertising medium in the west. "Grievances of Farmers." The Bee of Feb. 20 has an editorial containing a lot of vague generaliza tions as to the "grievances of farmers," and what they should do to redress them. In this case it gets down to busi ness close enough to object to some specific propositions for the relief of the people. It says: "Such a proposal, for example, as that the government shaltfoan money to the farmer disc? edits the Intelligence of those who make It. That is not a i unction of government, and, if it were, its operation could not be con fined to the farmers." The Bee shows an entire misappre hension as to the nature of the proposi tion. Does the government lend money to bankers on bonds? The Bee will say no, it issues money on bond security. Very well, that is just what it is asked to do on land security. The govern ment issues metallic' money. It buys gold, giving a dollar for the gold that a dollar contains, and coins it into mon ey, or . it coins it free for the owner. Now, if the farmer or artizan wants that gold dollar he must give a dollar's worth of labor, expressed in wheat or corn or some other product, for it, and thus when it gets into circulation it has cost two dollars one dollar in taxes to pay for its material, and one dollar in abor; at the same time there isn't a business man in the community who does not prefer the government paper dollar. But the belief in intrinsic value money is so ingrained in human nature hat we make the concession to it of consenting that money when primarily issued by the government may be a representative of actual intrinsic value, and that it may be issued upon land that is represent land values and draw a small annual interest from the pro ducts of land. Hence we ask that money be issued on mortgages, at cost of issue, or not over two per cent an nual interest, in sufficient volume to hold interest at that point, and that no other money except coin be issued. The Bee alludes to the objection that this would be class legislation. This is true, but in a verv different sense from what the Bee supposes. It would im pose upon the owners of land the bur den of furnishing the circulating medi um of the country. This burden would amount to two per cent per annum, and would be drawn directly from the till ers of the soil. A land owner borrows money on mortgage, and uses it gener ally only once. He pays a debt, or builds a barn, or buys some stock or more land. If he is a good, manager the added capital pays the added inter est. But it more often happens that the benefit is merely temporary and the burden continuous. If money was issued upon land at cost of issue, the burden would be light, and it would be continually shifting from one land-owner to another. Fi nally when prosperity had settled all over the land, and all were out of debt, a new basis for money would have to be formed, or else government would have to resort to purely credit money, which it ought to and could issue now, without passing through a vale of tears and blood to reach it. No man of sense now supposes that a money based upon coin alone will ever again be adequate to do the business of the world. Land is the only other thing which affords a general, unfailing and invariable security. It is better than coin, inasmuch as it annually re produces wealth, while coin or metal produces nothing. The Bee says lending money is "not a function of government." Isn't it, in deed? It loaned or issued $300,000,000 to the national banks at one per cent. It loaned $65,000,000 to the Union Pa cific railroad, and then consented that its security should be impaired by a second mortgage. A grave senate com mittee now proposes to extend this loan for fifty years, at a lower rate, and to extend the Central Pacific loan for 75 years, at two per cent. The differ ence is that in all these cases monopo lists get the benefit, while in the case of the loans on land the people would get it. The "functions" of the government of the U. S. are periodically imposed upon it by law; and the function of issuing money on land security may be im posed just as well as issuing it upon bond or railroad security. Twenty years ago the government sold bonds and bought $100,000,000 of gold with the proceeds, and locked it up in the treasury. We have paid by taxation over $100,000,000 interest on those bonds, and the gold we bought with them might just as well have been, in the deep sea. Suppose, instead of those bonds, the government had loaned $100,000,000 to the people on land secur ity, at two per cent. The government would have received $2,000,000 a year in terest, and the money would have been doing beneficent work among the peo ple in exchanging products and paying wages from that day to this. Can the Bee see the difference? When money shall cease .being made an instrument of oppression, and be brought back to its legitimate use as an instrument for exchanging wealth, will prosperity return to our land, and not before. Silver Dollars as a Basis lor National Bank Notes. There is pretended to be great anxi ety just now for a basis for national bank notes. The premium on bonds has reached so high a point that it is not profitable to use them for that pur pose. That is, they bring a great many more dollars by selling them to the government in advance of maturity than they do to be in the treasury as security. Mr. Windom has proposed to use silver bullion as a basis for bank notes; and some distinguished lights in congress, among them our own Geo. W. E., have proposed to issue a new two per cent bond especially for the use of bankers; and Senator Farwell, of Bl., who is a good judge of dry goods, has proposed to use the stocks and bonds of corporations as security for bank bills. ;--V?,: ; -;r J' ' Now isn't it a little singular that with all this anxiety about a basis for bank ing, no one has proposed that the na tional banks should issue bills secured by silver dollars deposited with the U. S. treasurer? And isn't this fact evi dence that the anxiety of the national bankers to -restrict the volume of cur rency so that the greatest possible amount of wealth can be packed into a dollar, is much greater than their anxi ety to find a safe basis for banking. National bank bills based on silver dol lars deposited with the IT. S. treasurer dollar for dollar with the issues, the banks to continue as now under the strict supervision of the treasury de partment, would be popular money. While we are deadly hostile to the U. S. issuing its money in any form through a corporation, if we must have such money let us have it on a solid basis where we can get good silver dol lars for it when we want them. As for the banks, wouldn't it be a pretty soft snap for them to be able to take seventy-two cents worth of silver to the mint and get a silver dollar for it, and then be able to get them changed into national bank bills endorsed by Uncle Sam? Of course the snap wouldn't last long, as silver would soon be at par under such an arrangement. Silver would come here from abroad, too, we have no doubt, and some of our surplus productions be moved with it, and our idle labor employed, and the price of corn and everything else ad vanced. There are two obstacles to this plan. One is that the banking class want to keep money scarce. The other is that the bankers have got used to sucking a government teat, and they want some special legislation by which they can get something they don't earn can get something by gift of the people. Think of men like our George, worth three or tour hundred thousand dollars, father ing a scheme by which the government should give him as a free gift ten thous sand dollars on every hundred thousand his half-dozen banks have deposited as security. The infant industry business isn't a circumstance to such cheek as this. But let the national bankers bank on silver dollars, by all means, if they must have a new basis. Secretary Garber's Letter. "Acting for the board of transporta tion," as he says, Secretary Garber has written a remarkable letter to our Alli ance friends of Hamilton county. We agree with what he says against "co ercing the railroads into a reduction of interstate rates by threats of annihilat ing local rates." We do not think that plan would work, nor that it ought to be tried. But we believe that lower lo cal rates should be made. We believe that justice demands that, without any regard to the through rate. This is what Secretary Garber says about it: - "Our transportation board has undisputed power to' fix local rates, and its sworn duty is to regulate and maintain the rates with utmost justness to the shipper, to the limit of allowing1 a fair return upon the capital lkoitim atk ly investkd In railroads. If local rates are excessive and extortionate, beyond the limit above mentioned, then it is the sworn duty of the board to reduce them; a duty which cannot be evaded by passing: be yond its Jurisdiction, and, in consideration of a cessation of unjust exactions on through traffic, permit a continuance of local extor tion. That is pretty nearly solid. By the first sentence of above extract the board admits that capital not "legiti mately invested" is not entitled to any return. We had not expected a board constituted as this one is to reach such a conclusion. But we accept it as quite satisfactory. Ihis narrows the matter to the question whether capital '-legiti mately invested" is receiving more than a fair return. We are willing to join the issue right on this point. The roads have been built for the bonds. These represent the amount of capital "legiti mately invested." Nqw they are stocked for an additional amount equal to the bonds, and that is water, and repre sents capital that has never been in vested. But the rates are adjusted, not only to pay a fair return on" all this bogus capital, but to pay extortionate salaries, on room expenses, an enor mous load of free passes, (the board of transportation having its share,) extra ordinary election expenses to eontro or defeat the will of the people, judi cial decisions and an army of law of ficers. This results in making Nebraska rates 100 to 350 per cent higher than Iowa rates, and in wholesale robbery of the people of this state. Now the question arises, docs the board of transportation know this? Everybody else knows it, and unless we assume that .the board is composed of an extremely dull set of numbskulls it must be assumed that it knows it. What then? Why, Secretary Garber says "it is its sworn duty to reduce them." J ust so. That's just what the people say. Why don't the board do it? Just because corporation influence in that board is stronger than an official oath.- That's the size of it. We might as well get down to the bottom facts while we are.about it. , The construction of the second sen tence of Mr. Garber's letter is note worthy. "If local rates are excessive and extortionate, beyond the limit above mentioned," etc. In the opinion of the board, then, the rates may be "exces sive and extortionate" up to the limit of what it may choose to consider a "legiti mate investment" of capital. If this is to be the rule of action, the opinion of the board on the interstate business is im portant to the people of this state. But there is great danger of a divergence at this point. The U. P. people think $105,000 a mile a legitimate investment. TheB. &M: folks think $50,000 about right. The people think the actual cost of the road, with oil rooms, free passes, figure-head presidents, and Pullman dining car junketing trips dispensed with, much nearer the figure. Law will have to regulate it, or the government own and operate the roads. Mortgage Sales. '; The Industrial Age, of Duluth Minn.," of Feb. 15, contains thirty-two adver tisement of mortgage sales of lands. The Real Cause of Hard Times. The effort of certain papers which are devoted to the money power to ig nore the actual cause of the present in dustrial depressien leads them into. some peculiar positions. The Omaha Bee of a late date says: Everybody who has considered the matter at all knows that the chief cacse of agricul tural depression is the po:icyof the railroads. w&icn are leajruea to exact tne last inm mar the traffic will bear. Four and five years ago corn was carried from points in Nebraska to Chicago at fourteen cents a hundred where now the rate is twenty cents and upward. .. When the corporations exact from the farmer a bushel and a half of grain for carrying one bushel to market it is inevitable tnat agriculture win oe depressed, mere are other minor causes, but the one mainly ac countable for the existing condition of the agricultural interest is the unjust and un reasonable railroad charges for transporta tion. So loner as these are made with refer ence to supplying the greed of the corpora tions and meeting tho demands of excessive capitalization agriculture must suffer. Now, as the Bee well knoAvs, we do not feel disposed to under-estimate the effect of railroad extortions upon the welfare of the west. They constitute certainly an important element in the problem of prosperity. They go a long ways towards destroying tho margin of profit of producers upon which the commercial welfare of every communi ty rests. But that they constitute the "chief cause of agricultural depression" we entirely pnd utterly deny. In the first place the Bee is well aware that, while corn may have been carried to Chicago for 14 cents a hundred for a short time, for any lengthy period rates from Nebraska . east have never been lower than they are now. Second, the term "agricultural depression" used by the Bee is a misnomer. The depres sion embraces all classes and callings except simply one the money-lending profession. ' If the depression was caused solely by high rates on agricul tural products, city merchants who de pend on local or city trade would not be measurably affected. Freight with them is an element of price, and they care little whether it is high or low so they are not discriminated against in favor of their competitors. But these people are feeling the depression quite as much as the farmers, and failures among them aie occurring every day. Now, there have been times since the war when there was great prosperity among western farmers when freights on all kinds of goods averaged quite as high, in fact, higher, than at present of the depression, as the Bee says, why did they not have the same effect then as now? The average freight chai'ge per ton per mile in 1870 was 2.005 cts In 1887 it was .974 cts. This is an aver age reduction of about 1.25 cts per ton per mile, or 51.43 per cent. Now the Bee will not deny that the iarmers were quite prosperous in 1870 as compared with the present, while according to" the Bee's theory they should have been in the very slough of despond, and would have been, if freight rates were the "chief cause" of financial depression une or two onei comparisons may open the Bee's eyes to some important facts. The following table shows the lowest prices in the New York market of the products named for the- years 1870 and 1887. We have no official ta bles later than '87; but it is well known that prices now are lower than in that year, which would make a still greater contrast: 1870. 1887. Butter.... 18 uyt vorn . . 7 85 Cotton 15 9? 'iour... 4 50 1 80 Bar Iron, per ton 70 00 47 00 Scotch Pig Iron 31 00 19 00 Lard 13 yx oats 52 30 Mess Pork 20 00 12 00 Liverpool Salt 2 40 75 Wheat 1 40 78 Here is an average shrinkage in price of over 40 per cent, while there has been an average reduction in freight rates of 51.43 per cent. According to the Bee, freights being the "chief cause" of business depression, the shrinkage in rates should have made a corresponding increase of prices. But they have not done so, and it is. appar ent that there is some other cause more potent and general in its operation to which we must attribute tho "agricul tural depression." This cause will be found in the enormous increase of wealth and business in proportion to monejr. The ratio of this increase has been such as to effect an enormous con traction of the money volnme in the period we have named. A shrinking volume of money brings falling prices, stagnation of business, depressed agri culture, commercial disaster. It is this cause more than all others combined that has brought our present calamity upon' us; and this calamity is to con tinue until the cause is removed. If the Bee and papers of its ilk will tell what they know to be the truth we will reach a remedy sooner. The Alliance and the Catholics. An article is going the rounds of the Associated Press giving an account of what is termed a "savage attack" upon the Alliance by Bishop L.M.Fink, of the diocease of Kansas, which is said to have been read in all the churches. If the whole letter is as unjust as one sen tence of it is, its correction need only be left to time. , It says, (referring to the Alliance,) "Its constitution and ritual virtually set up a farmers' religion and provide for a farmers' chaplain. " Bishop Fink is under grave misapprehension in this matter, and any intelligent Catho lic member of the Alliance could set him right. We believe all non-sectarian se cret societies aim to preserve in their social forms an adherence to the Catho lic principles of Christianity. If this is a ."new religion" then the Alliance may be guilty. Its constitution, provides, as an indispensable qualification for mem bership, that applicants must "be of good moral character, believe in the existence of a Supreme Being, be of industrious habits, and over sixteen years of age." This is the utmost extent of the "new religion" of the Alliance. The constitution fur ther provides "there shall be no politi cal or religious test of membership." In the meetings of organized socities it is well known that some simple cere- monial forms, with an invocation of the Divine blessing, conduces to dignity and good order. These forms are provided for in- the Alliance ritual. They are simple and beautiful in a high degree. A chaplain has a part to perform in this ceremonial. Where it is possible a Christian minister is selected as Chap lain. Where this is not possible a de- vout church member is selected. And it often happens that the Chaplain de parts from the prescribed form of words' provided in the ritual aud appeals to the rThrone of Grace in words of his own choosing. We suppose Bishop Fink be lieves in prayer; and we hope he be lieves if prayer is sencere forms of words amount to little. Wo are quite sure that if he knew the demoniac nature of the powers the Alliance is opposing he would admit that it needs prayinc for. Below we give the exact form adopted in the ritual of the Nebraska State Alli ance: Our HeavenJy Father, we pray Thee to lead us to revere Thy name and bo guided by Thy inspirations; aid us to secure the needs of our daily lives, restraining the tendencies of our natures to selfishness and greed; enable us to so live that we shall have no enemies. and to daily practice charity to all Thy crea tures; guide us safely through the dangers and ills of life, and finally save us In Thy Kingdom : we ask all in the name of Christ our Lord, Amen," We think the above is a broad and Catholic prayer, and that every Bishop and every other living sinner might say amen to it without any serious strain upon his conscience. We have now frankly given every re ligious feature of the Alliance. Sectar ianism cannot get into it. Partisan pol itics has no place in it. But both reli gion and politics, in the broad sense of the terms, invade it daily. But it has set up no "new religion," and intro duced no new forms of worship. If it can induce men who never enter a church and there are some to gather in its halls and listen with uncovered heads to such a prayer as the above, it would seem that Bishop Fink should be delighted to know of it, if his heart is in the right place. We have no unkind words for the Bishop. But his conception of the Alii ance is' so absolutely false and mislead ing that we are impressed with the idea that his motive in assailing it is different from the one stated, and the complaint as to tho "new religion" is a mere pre text. Don't Tell. Brothers of the Alliance, don't tell! The Alliance is a secret organization. Its meetings are confidential. It is supposed that at those meetings discii.8 sions may be free, and that whatever takes place, there, whatever is said, whatever resolutions are taken, or whatever plans or measures are per fected for work or business, is to be kept sacred from the outside world. If we do not act upon this principle, if the proceedings or conversation or meas ures of these meetings are reported and discussed and criticised outside, our confidence in each other is at once im paired. Vlfe no longer feel those confi dential relations which are necessary between members of the same society. Not only this, . but we have betrayed ourselves and our business to those who are interested in destroying our organi zation, and have given them a great ad vantage Over us. If arrangements are made for goods if we can save by buying at wholesale, don't brag about it.' Don't antagonize local dealers by making statements to outsiders as to prices, or anything of the kind. Let all these things be con fined strictly to the membership. Let it be distinctly understood, as a matter of honor, that everything that takes place in the Alliance meetings is strictly and sacredly confidential. Nothing tends so much to disorganize and demoralize Alliance Work as shar ing commence witn men who do not belong to the order. If they are busi ness men with whom we are competing, they have no business to know about our affairs. If they are farmers, let them join if they want the benefit. Goldwin Smith and Marion Todd. Over the signature of "M. L." in the Chicago Express, Mrs. Marion Todd criticises Prof. Goldwin Smith's article on woman suffrage with an incisive vigor that is refreshing. She takes his statement that "men and women are two beings whose spheres are different, and who are the complements but not the competitors of each other," as a text for her article, and completely de molishes it and the Professor. We would be glad indeed to publish the ar ticle entire, and hope some day to have a paper from which we are not com pelled to crowd such .gems for want of space. We give one paragraph: This philosophy is getting quite clear to us. We understand more fully the position of the wife whoso daily lot in life is to meet upon the door sill her drunken husband whom she has to take in washing to support. This wife is not a competitor of the male laundry man next door, bless your hart, but merely a complement to her beautiful beast of a hus band who does her bossing and voting for her, and looks after interest in publio life so much better than she could herself. Also tho woman teacher performing her dally task better than her brother, is not a competitor, but will be the complement of some man if she does not die an old iraid, working for less wages and rendering superior service. The Express is greatly improved under its new management. See advertise ment in another column. A Financial Political Economy. The Executive Committee of the American Bankers' Association have ap pointed a Committee to secure the in troduction of a school finance in our Academies and Universities. The light of knowledge on the money question is breaking in the minds of the people. They are beginning to see that the men who control the money control the la bor and the wealth. They are learning that the creation and issuing of money is a vital soverign power of the people, and cannot be shared or delegated with out danger to liberty. And this know ledge of the people is endangering the power and the wealth, of the money Kings of Wall and Broad and Lombard streets. So they propose to put their vile tenets of a specie basis, and single gold standard and intrinsic value In money into text books for our youth, and inoculate them with tho poison virus of an old exploded system, so as to maintain their grasp upon tho wealth of the people. All right, Gentlemen! All we ask is study, investigation. The trouble heretofore has been that the peo ple did not study for themselves, but left you to think for them. Set them to investigating, even with your doctored up text-books, and progress is all right. Truth is mighty and will prevail, Be sides, some text-books giving the actual truth may be obtained. The State Agency at Lincoln. Mr. J. II. Hartley, formerly of Broken Bow, has accepted the position of Agent for tho State Alliance at Lincoln, ten dered him by tho Executive Committee, and has located at Lincoln to open tho business. It is intended to make this agency a medium for the procuring of all kinds of goods for the different Busi ness Associations, and also for the indi vidual members of tho Alliance; and also a selling agency for all products. In short, the agency is established for convenience of the members of the Alli ance in every direction where their con venience can be promoted. Of course, there is a great deal of pre liminary work to be done before the agency will bo in complete working or der; but this will be done as fast as pos sibleand announcements of business arrangements made as soon as any aro completed. Mr. Hartley is a man of large business experience, of whom all his business associates speak in the highest terms We have no doubt the business here will grow to large, proportions under his care. The Executive Committee reserve supervision and control in matters of importance. The aim of all connected with the agency is to make it of the ut most benefit to its members. Of course our paper will lc the me dium of communication on business mat ters; and we trust all members will see the convenience of becoming subscrib ers. Corn Rate Notes. West Blue Farmers' Alliance No. 375 endorses the resolutions of Wabash Al liance, condemning Gov. Thayer and commending Gen. Leese. Claris Jleekly Messenger prints an open letter to Gov. Thayer asking him why he delayed so long to ask for reduced rates, and forcibly reminding him that the present condition of affairs lias grown up under Ids rule and that of his party. The Fullerton Post prints an incisive letter, headed "The Governor is too late." It says of Thayer: He has been In a position whero he could have acted with dignity and ctroct. During all these many years tho people have Iwhmi shamefully and cruelly robbed, and yet not one word of rebuke for the wrong or advleo for righting the wrong has ever escaped bis Hps. While this merciless. heartless, des potic greed has been gradually reducing the farmers to their present condition, this John M. Thayer has distinguished himself only In an equal greed for office." The correspondents pan out about the same as the public meetings. The Phelps County Herald says th governor is having a hard time of it, and that it is difficult for a man to serve two masters at the same time. The Farmers' Voice. The Editor of the Farmers' Voice, of Chicago, is a fearless advocate of tho rights of the people. His paper is now in its third volume, and is a marked success, lie appeals for subscribers for it; and his language may bo applied to . i e t . ... l "l - - - - - - ance, for instance. We copy: "When The Farmers' Voice can show a subscription list that rises 200, OOO.tlum the Banded Monopolists, the political bosses, and servile Congresses and Leg islatures will say "why these Hayseeder mean business after all," and laws for the benefit of rural Americans ami the producing masses will come along quit' natural all of themselves. But so long as farmers who know t hey are beingcrushed to the earth by unjust conditions, are not willing to contribute two cents a week in order to have their cause ably, bravely and prcsistently championed the Banded Monopolists will be right in declaring that they are merely first class material out of which to make cringing slaves. One good way for true men to show their sympathy for the great plain peo ple is to subscrilo for The Farmers' Voice, which speaks in the interest of a Government of the people, by tho peo ple and for the people first, last, and all the time. in iiim iiiriiipr IIHIII'IK . . w t I I IflBC J , Remarkably Good Sense. The daily Bee of a late date says: "Hardly lets absurd is the de mand that the government should incniaxe the duties on farm products". Obviously a country that exports such products, and the price of which is fixed In a forlgn market, would not benefit tho producing Industry by tariff duties, however high." The proposition to increase duties on farm products for the benefit of the farmer has come from the highest re publican authority, viz: a conclave of politicians held in the tower of the Tribune building, New York City. We are glad to see the Bee repudiate its party on this point. Now if it will look up tho "home market" business, which makes corn 14 cts and harvesters $175, and will admit that a protective tariff is a bonus to capital and a fraud on producers; and if it will take the side of the people instead of the banks on the money question, we will have some hopes for it. Chicago Gets There. The voting on the question of the lo cation of the World's Fair resulted de cisively for Chicago. Chicago has made a grand fight for the Fair, and deserves to win, aside from the fact that she is the representative city of the country, and from location, enterprise, wealth and ability was entitled to it any way It is hardly likely now that tho enter prise will be defeated; so in 1892 let us all be prepared to take an outing to at tend the World's Fair at the Queen City of the west and the World. Bro. Beal as an Editor. Bro. Beal, President of tho Custer Co. Alliance is a success as an editor. His Alliance department in the Leader la ably edited, and posses much interest.