V THE ALLIANCE. fUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY M03KJNS. BY THE ALLIANCE Lincoln, - - Nebraska. J. BURROWS, : : : Editor. J. M. THOMPSON, Business Manager. In the beauty f 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. M Laurel crowns cleave to deserts, And power to him who power exerts." A ruddy drop of manly blood The surging sea outweighs." Emerson. He who cannot reason is a fool, He who will not reason is a coward, He who dare not reason is a slave." EDITORIAL. Additional Twine Arrangements. The Alliance State Agent has perfect edadditional arrangements in regard to twine by which he is now enabled to furnish members sisal, standard manilla and pure manilla,in addition to the jute. This makes the Alliance of Nebraska absolutely independent of all combina tions in regard to twine. It is neces sary that all estimates should be in by May 25th, as the Agent is compelled to have his orders in. under this new con tract, by June 1st. So MAKEUP YOUR ESTIMATES AT ONCE. A circular will be sent to Secretaries, giving prices and full information, in a few days. Tiis Declaration of Principles and the Popu lar Call for a Peoples' Convention. Wo publish this week a Declaration Principles and a popular call for a Peo ples' Independent State Convention, is sued by an association of gentlemen who may, for want of a better name, be termed a Peoples' Committee. Who are these gentlemen? it may be asked. Well, it is immaterial. They are neither candidates nor politicians. They do not have to appear in the busi ness hereafter, as it will be seen that they have designated an agency to call the convention when the declarations iiave been signed numerously enough. They are simply patriotic men who are willing to do the preparatory work without even being known in it. The declaration which they have is sued is so modest in its tone, and the principles it states have been so gener ally accepted, that it will at once com ; mend itself to all men. Its principles arc plain and fundamental. The ap sples of discord, the isms and fire-brands . axa omitted. .. .'This convention, when it meets, will ;fIiave been called, not by any clique or faction, but by the people themselves. No fusion with any other party, is possible under such circumstances. No person Is authorized to speak for it there is no committee which can control it, and will assume to trade upon its action. 'Tfie principles of its platform are des ignated beforehand. It will be com posed of men who are pledged to those principles, and therefore must be har anonious. It will organize itself when it convenes. This will not be an Alliance conven tion. There is no power or authority lit the Alliance to call a state conven tion, a,nd it could not be done without nullifying its constitution. It will not ibe a K. of L. convention, nor an U. L convention, It will be purely and only a Peoples' Independent Convention in sthc highest sense of the term. The political elements are as follows: 'The republican party divided into two factions, one the railroad element with the organization, the passes, the pres- 'tige and the money in its hands; the other the so-called anti-monopoly ele mcnt which has begun a hopeless strug gle for possession of the machinery and the ollices, but which declares it will secure its ends in party lines or not at all. There can be only one result to a struggle under such conditions, and that is the dominance of the railroad .power. Another element is the democratic party, offered for sale by an Omaha po litical huckster on the one hand, and described as "little less than a wreck without life, spirit, organization or soliditv," by a Lincoln democratic edi torm the other. The other elements, opposed to all of these, and towering high above them :all, are THE PEOPLE, on their ear all over the state, demanding reform, de nouncing partisan fraud and corruption aind corporation domination demand ing lower taxation, and a restoration of honesty and integrity in government affairs. To the People the Peoples' Committee appeal. The hour is ripe. The people have refused to wait longer for the signal. Let them sign this Declaration one hundred thousand strong, and when "their convention meets it will only be to register the decree they have already -spoken. This shows the plain duty of all pa triots Mho wish to down the railroad power in this state who want the peo ade instead of - the corporations to gov ern, who place political morality, hon esty, integrity and good government abov party. , The printed declarations to circulate for signatures can be obtained by ad z-dressing Peoples' Committee, care o jTiiE Alliance, Lincoln. Mortgage Foreclosures. The Kansas City Times publishes from jne hundred and fifty to two humlret notices of foreclosure sales daily. This requires as much paper as all its other matter requires, anu reuioi ce iuc ai gu ments of the contractionists that "there as too much money" in the country. THE Statement From Pres. Powers. The First Man to Sign the Declaration. John H. Powers, President of the State Alliance, has sent us the follow ing statement: , Editor Alliance: I wish to say that while I heartily approve theDeclara tion of Principles and popular call for a Peoples' Independent Convention issued by the Peoples' Committee, the same was issued without my knowledge. In fact, 1 was not consulted about it. But put my name on the call at once. The movement has my sincere wishes for success; and I trust that all true Alliance men will support it, and see to it that it is in fact as well as in name a peoples'1 movement. - Fraternally yours, J. II. Powers. A Plea for Unity. A great people's movement is now fairly on foot in this state. Unity is an essential element of success. The seeds of discord are sown by those who wish to divide us. The false reports about our leaders, the ridiculous stories of bargains and sales, such as that of the proposed nomination of Mr. Powers by the republicans, and of the intention of Mr. Burrows to turn the Alliance over to that party. are started and circulated by our enemies to create distrust and confusion. The groundless suspicion of old men who have served the Alliance for years, and whose honor is bound up in its success, ought to be dropped. All Alliance men may depend at the start that this movement will not be used to advance the interests of either old party or any faction of them. If we cannot have confidence in each other how can we ask other people to have confidence in us? From this day forth let us war alone upon the common enemy. The Declaration which the People's Committee have put forth is a grand one. It embraces only leading princi ples, not details. While it is a long ways short of what many demand, it is far in advance of many others. It is such a declaration as four-fifths of the men of this state of all parties can read ily endorse. To be successful an independent ticket must have 75,000 votes. Work will get them. The work should be expended in getting one hundred thousand signers to the declaration. This is a movement to enfranchise the people, not only from corporation con trol, but from the bondage of machine politics. It will be well worth the while of the people of this state to know whether they have come to depend so servilely on political machines as to have lost the power to initiate political move ments for the purification of the state and the establishment of the principles they believe in. " The two great objects of this move ment are to break the corporation power and elevate to public position able and incorruptible men who are in sympathy with the principles of the de claration. These are objects which have the sympathy of a large majority of our people. It remains to be seen whether the party lash wielded by brass collared slaves will longer override con science and patriotism. Unscrupulous Lying. In its issue of May 8th the Omaha World-Herald published a dispatch from its Lincoln bureau, headed "Farmers take the Field, " and stating that "the state central committee of the Farmers' Alliance has issued a call for a conven tion in the Third congressional district, to be held at Grand Island, July 2, and for a state conuention at Lincoln on July 4." On its editorial page of same date is an editorial repeating the state ment, and following it with a lot of its accustomed slush on this subject. Now if the correspondent, when he sent this dispatch, didn't know it was a lie, he isn t nt to oe a newspaper correspon dent. The editor of the Wor.d-Herald did know very well. His editorial is an unscrupulous lie, and he is willing to prostitute his columns to further the contemptible fusing scheme he proposed a short time ago. The State Alliance has no "state central committee." No authority representing the Alliance, nor pretending to represent it, has called any convention, either district or state The World correspondent, by walking a block and a half to the Lincoln office of the chairman of the State Alliance Executive Committee, could have ob tained all the facts if he had wanted them. But he didn't. He sent what would suit , the editor. The present condition of the party which young Mr. Hitchcock is so anxious to sell is quite fairly stated by Mr. Calhoun in another column. This party hasn't vitality enough to maintain an organ at the state capital, and its pretended organ in Omaha is a nondescript, an hermor- phadite, half fish, half fowl, having no inflnence and no respect from anybody. And it is this organ that is hawking the remains around for sale to the highest bidder. There are many honorable self-respecting democrats, and these should make haste to repudiate the low down concern4 at Omaha, and sign, the Declaration of the Peoples' Committee. Be Careful About Seed There is nothing really inore vexa tious and embarrassing than to find that you have-planted bad seed. The best farmers are sometimes caught in this way. But no mistake should be made in the crop that will be threshed out at the state capital next winter. Look out for the seed. It is being planted now. Bs sure it is good. The new crop Nebraska proposes to' taise this year has never been fairly tested in this climate that is, a crop of honest, in corruptible legislators. It isn't abso lutely certain that it can be produced here. So very extra care will be re quired about the seed. It might be well to plant a little hemp this spring, too. :.'" FARMERS' ALLIANCE; LINCOLN, NEB., The Alliance Business Agency. We are informed that there is a wrong impression in regard to the Alli ance Business'Agency, and its methods f nnn,inf,nn iiness. in the minds of nm f fronds. We are told that an officer of the Alliance stated at a public meeting, in reply to a question as to what was done with the fund which remained in the treasury at the close of the annual meeting, that "it had been invested in the implement business." Now this is a mfstake. No Alliance money has been invested in the implement business, nor any other business, nnr will anV be SO invested J under the present management. The annual meeting directed the Executive Committee to employ a state agent and open an agency at Lincoln, for the transaction of anv and all business which might be beneficial to our mem- bers. The utmost latitude which the committee gave to that power was to use Alliance funds for the necessary preliminary expense of that agency un- til it could be be made sustaining. The business is conducted purely on the agency plan. Goods are bought for members on orders. Arrangements are made with iobbers and manufac- lui iui iuc naic kjl liiin ww-to. auv no goods are bought by the agent and cameu in siock. We want no misunderstanding nor misapprehension in this matter. No money of the Alliance will be invested in any business enterprise, nor used in any manner not specifiically authorized by the State Alliance, and its financial affairs will be carefully and honestly managed. The State Agency is expected to pay its own expenses. The volume of busi ness should be such that a very trifling commission, say at the outside one-half of one per cent, would do this. Beyond this no advance will be charged' on goods, as there is no one who expects or will be permitted to make any money out of this trade . We trust this explanation will be sat isfactory. But if it is not we will reply to any questions. The Bee and Mortgages Again. The grand old soldier and honest pa triot, old Ben Butler, has been making some statements about western farm mortgages; and the Bee immediately be gins to buzz and unsheath its sting. Mr. Butler says the mortgages of the western states amount to three and a lalf billion dollars, in which he is un doubtedly within the mark. The Bee says he "was not careiul to ascertain the facts," and that he "had an object n making this obvious misrepresenta tion." In the very next sentence it says: "JN o one having the most cursory knowledge of the facts and it is un necessary to say that no one can pretend to have anything like accurate information can doubt that the figures of General Butler are wildly extravagant." Yes. How could the General have been was no source where he could get ac- curate information? The Bee is care ful net to publish the facts if it was not it wouia puoiisn the omciai figures . 1 via . . -. I irom oaune county, which we fur- A nished it some time ago. These figures prove that the Alliance memorial esti mate of Nebraska's indebtedness was too low, and that Ben Butler's state ment is not too high. By the way, Walt Seeley has bean ap pointed an assistant of E. F. Test, to obtain the amount of Nebraska farm mortgages. We'll get the truth now. It is enough to make a horse laugh. The Bee's Information Bureau. For the past six weeks evidence has reached us from various portions of the state of the enterprise ot the Bee in its searchfor information as to the strength, organization and intentions of the Alli ance. Money, suits of clothes, and for all we know old clothes, watches and tinware have been offered for reliable reports on these points. In fact, from the offer of clothes we were led to be lieve that .the gentleman who presides in the corner room of the fine building on Farnam and 17th streets had received an invoice from Chatham street or em barked in the old clo' business. In ad dition to these reports from the rural districts mysterious emissaries from somewhere have frequently dropped into our private office, all interested in the welfare of the farmers, and all art fully leading the conversation to the same general focus, viz: the real voting strength, of the Alliance, and its politi cal intentions. Now we want the Bee to have full and authentic information. We im agine if it had such it might flop back. In fact, we believe it is getting ready to do that very thing, and we will not be at all surprised to see it in the fraternal embrace of Van Wyck within a month. Rosewater can only be happy as a kicker. If he was put in party shackles so he couldn't kick, he'd explode and that would be an end of him. To begin with we will say to the Bee that the voting strength of the Alliance to-day is sixty thousand, and it is in creasing rapidly. Its political inten tions is to make every vote count for the welfare of the farmers, morally, financially and politically. It isn't at all important that the Bee should have specific details as to local and general arrangements. But fill it chock-full on the points we have named. The Third District. We invite the attention of our readers in the third Congressional District to the call for a conference in that District to be held at Grand Island May1 29. The call is for representatives from all labor organizations, which includes the Alli ance. We hope this conference will be well attended. Leading men of the or ganizations should see that representa tives are sent, even though it is not pos sible to call regular meetings for that purpose. TOO LATE ! TOO LATE I Benton, Seen and Co wdery Trying to Jump on the Wagon. The bulk of the corn has been moved, and is out of the farmers' hands. They parted with it at 10 to 15 cents per bushel. It is now selling at 20 to 23 cts. Four or five million dollars which the farmers ought to have had, and would have had if fair rates had prevailed, have been corralled by railroads and speculators. The bulk of the coal has been shipped in, and the consumers have paid outrageous rates on it, and the roads have pocketed the money. In novt, the horse has been stolen, and now comes Messrs. Benton, Steen and Powdery and propose to lock the stable uoor - J-hese gentlemen are candidates for renomination, and they begin to realize that there is a storm brewing in lact that it is raining quite hard, lney hope it will not be much of a shower, but still think it politic to start for cover. The following is their reso- lu"ons just adopted too late, eternally to late not to adopt a fair rate, but to mentl the broken political fortunes of Messrs. Benton, Steen and Co wdery: Whereas. The SUbiect Of freight rates . . - , j t ifevfnfffintSf tta&oStoJSl tne railroads oi the state are identical; the and that a reasonable rate is one that will produce only a fair and just re muneration to common carriers, based upon the present actual cash value of their roads and fore be it appurtenances; there- Resolved, That the secretaries of the board of transportation be. and thev are hereby instructed to formulate and present to this board at its next regular meeting, June 4th. 1890. a reasonable freight tariff. Resolved, lhat the general managers of the various railroads and anv citizen or citizens who believe that the roads are earning a high rate of interest upon unreasonable valuations, are hereby in- vited to meet this board on Mav 21st next, at 10 o'clock a. m.. for the rur- pose 'of giving such information as to the actual value of railroad property. The above resolution is suggestive. The gentlemen who passed it are can didates. Mr. Laws played it very fine under the same circumstances. He de clared for reduction until the conven tion was over, and then repudiated. Ihese gentlemen are just good enough to to do this very thing. This resolu tion is probably the result of an agree ment by the railroad politicians, such men as Kimball and Holdredge. The gentlemen of the board are acting un der their orders. Our versatile and able friend Church Howe, who is out of politics, wasn't snooping around the capital last week for nothing. He came from Omaha, and was probably a bearer of dispatches. Who got the Corn? An exchange says that a Kansas bank er has just sold a large quantity of corn at 23 cts. The few farmers who were able to hold corn have made a good thing. Xhere has been an advance of from five to eight cents pqg: bushel in the last month. But where one man was able to hold fifty were compelled to sell. The railroad me who have interests in ele- vators, ana speculators are the ones who have made the money. A fair re have saved the farmers of Nebraska five million dollars. Five million dollars more money would have gone into trade in Nebraska under liberal railroad man agement. The short-sighted greed that has held up rates has reacted disastrous ly upon every Nebraska interest. Col lections are slower, fewer enterprises are started, less goods bought and hauled into the state by just the extent of the influence of this five millions. Besides all this, a liberal course on the part of the roads, instead of the hoggish and greedy one they pursued, would have tended to allay the excitement of the people on this rate question. But perhaps it is well. . "There is a power that shapes our ends, rough-hew them as we may." CESAR'S COLUMN. A Story of the Twentieth Centnry. The exact opposite of Bellamy in his Looking Backward, and instead of de picting beatific conditions of society un der the humanizing influence of Na tionalism, it depicts in fearfully real istic colors the condition a century hence under a continuance of the pres ent selfish and greedy system, when all the wealth of the world has become concentrated as it necessarily will in the hands of a few who constitute a powerful and soulless oligarchy, with the press, the political machinery, the courts and the army in their control, and the vast mass of people in abject and hopeless poverty. Splendid cities, warmed and lighted by natural forces, traversed by electric, underground and elevated railroad and connected by aerial ship. But underneath the glitter and splendor, a wild, desperate discon tent and ferocious despair that ultimate ly culminates in an organized rebellion the world over. Slaughter and de struction of the rich and their property and then the mob gone wild drunk with revenge, blood and riot become utterly ungovernable, and a reign of terror ensues ending with the blotting ing out of our great civilization and a return to a savage state where every man is against his neighbor. It is a powerfully written book and very fascinating, and should be read as an earnest appeal for reiorm by every thinking man and woman in America Its conclusions are awful, but they are inevitable unless a change comes over the spirit of our homes, and that soon. The Congressional Grab. Thehouse, having voted to reimburse out of the treasury all members who lost money througrh the Silcott defalcation, Messrs. Savers of Texas, and Bland of Missouri, have returned their loss to the treasury on the ground that the law was unjust and a grrab game. jsxenange. . . We have not heard that any of the Nebraska delegation have returned their share of the plunder. We will be pleased to announce it if they do so. SATURDAY, MAY 17, The Real Proposition Made by the Alli ance Meeting. It is being stated by some of the pa pers that the meeting of the County Presidents and Organizers held in Lin coln, April 22d, recommended the mem bers of the Alliance to remain in their old parties, and look to them for aid in getting the proper men in the legisla ture. This is a mistake, and is mis leading. What the meeting did recom mend was that the Alliances, both Sub ordinate and County, should select the men they wanted elected, and then should take the most available agency at hand to secure their election, it also recom mended that the Congressional Districts should adopt the same method. If this advice is not sound all the way through we fail to see it. Knights to the Front. T. V. Powderly has proposed for na tional action exactly the same plan that the Peoples' Committee have proposed for this state; that is that the people shall sign a declaration of principles and a pledge to support them, and des ignate some one to call a convention; and when one million have signed, the convention shall be called. Let us have fi ft v thousand sicmers in tho Nebraska J -o a! then haV" the tion called, ihese names can be pro cured in three weeks by a united effort. Alliance men and Knights, pull off your coats and go to work. The Limitation of Money. D wight, May 5th, 1890. Editok Alliance: As a subscriber to vour valuable naDer I notice in corn- menting on an article in the Omaha Bee vou say there is no doubt that excessive issues of money or representatives of wealth will produce injury. As a searcher after truth, wherever found. will you please answer these questions and very much oblige a seventy year old (green back) farmer. Why should the representative of wealth be limited? Unless you limit population and the products which the representative was made to exchange? And by limiting the first will it not have a tendency to limit the second, as mon ey is a tool labor uses in the production of property and products? l wish if convenient you would an swer through your paper and oblige, thine for the right, , J AS. VV . LISTER. ANSWER. An unlimited supply of money would be as much a disturbing element, and would tend to unsettle values, quite as much as an unjustly limited supply. But unlimited" is a broad term. The law of supply and demand finds its expression in the enect ot the relations oi money and other things better and more fully than in any other way. Price is the ex pression of this relation. Contraction lowers price, expansion increases it. With free and unlimited coinage of any metal the money composed of that me tal becomes a natural product, limited only by the capacity of its mines. Now suppose unlimited deposits of gold should be found, rendering the produc tion of gold as cheap as aluminum or iron, and that its coinage continued free and unlimited. Prices would imme diately advance. Up to the point when a fair ratio between labor and wealth was reached this would be benehcial. But that point would soon be passed; prices would continue to advance, and an era of speculation would ensue; men would be drawn into debt, and labor and legitimate industry would be dis couraged. If the relative increase of gold money continued this process would continue indefinitely. This is the history of unlimited issues of mon ey. It is simply the practical illustra tion of the law of price, or supply and demand. The reason these evils never occurred with gold money is because its supply has never passed the point where an equable relation between labor and wealth has been passed. Intelligent advocates of money re form have never favored an "unlimited" supply of money. Stability of values is the great desideratum sought for by la borers and producers. Instability of value is injurious to these classes. This stability can only be secured by finding the point at which the money volume would secure justice to all classes, and maintaining it at that point. It is now nianj' degrees below that point, and the producing and laboring classes are suf fering in consequence. Uy unduly limiting the money volume production will be limited and enter prise discouraged, as Bro. Lister inti mates. The First Nationalist Club of Lincoln. On Tuesday evening last a very plea sant concourse of ladies and gentlemen met at the office of Stewart & Rose to organize the Nationalist Club No. 1 of Lincoln. Twenty-three persons wer enrolled as members, and an orgainza tion was completed by the adoption of a constitution and the election of the fol lowing named officers: President, W. S. Wynn. First Vice-President, N. S. Baird. Second Vice-Pres't, R. W. Maxwell. Secretary, H. F. Rose. Ireasurer and Financial Secretary, Mrs. N. S. Baird. Advisory Committee, Miss Emma J. Fuller, Mrs. Edith Robinson, and Messrs A. Rose, S. C. Warriner and J. Burrows The object of this club is to national ize industry under the principles por trayed by Edward Bellamy. It is mo deled after the pioneer Boston club. The discussions of this Club promises to be of much interest, and it is likely to become a well-known Lincoln institu tion. bcarce and dear money makes men cheap. Abundant money makes men high priced, happy, intelligent and use ml. Are men made tor money, or money made for men? Is society or ganized to enslave the masses that the few may live in debauchery and ex travagance? Must brain, inventive ge nius, craft, selfishness, and the many mainsprings to advancement good or bad according to the methods of em ploying them reap all the rewards and emoluments, "while muscle, executive force, plodding patient toil go begging for subsistence? These are old thoughts, but must never be allowed to fade out of men's minds. Chicago Express. 1890. The Truth About Democracy From Democrat. t We clip the following from the Lin coin Herald. Its editor, Mr. Calhoun, being a typical democrat, what he says must be accepted as very near the truth: "It is true that the demo cratic party in this state is practically without emcient leadership, mere is not a democratic paper in the state hav ing anything more than a local reader- snip, me voters are ensiraugfu iium the men they have heretofore followed, and could not hear from them if confi dence were not undermined. The par tv is a little less than a wreck without life, spirit, organization or solidity, at a juncture when it needs them all as it did never before. If the Alliance nominates a state tick et and makes a contest for the state legislature it will in many counties bodily absorb- the democratic vote. This is an important crisis in the history of the party, but the only sign of life in sight is-an effort to chain it to the car of King Aleohol. Unless something is done, and that quickly, the party will disintegrate under the many influences that now affect it. The Herald does not know where to locate the responsibility for this condition of things. Nor does it know how to remedy it. It suggests the situation for the consideration of wiser heads, trusting to party cohesion to do good work until deliverance come." Well, the "wiser heads" are at the fore. The State Alliance will not nomi nate a state ticket. Nor will the Alli ance make anv fusion in any manner with either the democratic or republi can parties. But individual democrats can sign the ' declaration of principles and popular call issued by the people's committee, and can have their full weight in shaping the action of the people's independent'eonvention which will be held under that call. It will be no calamity for "the party to disinte grate' providing principles of justice and equality and good government re suit. Of one thing all democrats may be assured, the democratic party will not absorb the Alliance, nor ride into power on its shoulders. Fifty thousand men will sign the dec laration which has been issued, and democrats had better hurrv in out of the Avet. Uncle Jerry Rusk. We have been requested to dissect the tariff message recently issued by Uncle Jerry Rusk from the agricultural de partment at.Washington. Wo have not thought anv notice of this document necessary. When Uncle Jerry in one sentence tells the farmers that they need a higher tariff on potatoes, onions turnips ami wheat, and in the next one tells them that one of the prime causes of hard times is the diminishing ex ports caused bv restrictions on their sale in Erfgland and Europe, it would seem as though criticism was time wasted. Uncle Jerry owes his position as Sec retary of Agriculture to the Alliance. It is a sad case, take it all-in-all, and there is not much to be said about it. Monumental Gall. The Omaha Bee of a late date asserted editorially that Mr. Burrows, the editor of this paper, was in favor of the Alli ance holding a balance of power be tween the republican and democratic parties. Mr. Burrows denied the state ment, and denied that the extract quo ted by the Bee justified its assertion The Bee pays no attention to the denial, but leaves its original false statement to stand. This is what we call monument al gall. If Alliance men who are send ing information to the Bee think it is friendly to the Alliance, or will neglect any opportunity to stab it, they are mis taken. . The Infernal Fools in Kansas." Topeka Democrat. "Kansas, as usual, leads in the pro cession," said a gentleman as he step ped into a banking house in Boston two or three days after the last presidential election. "Eighty thousand majority for the republican ticket and protection. That even beats Pennsylvania; What do you think of that?" said the Kansan, familiarily clapping the banker upon the shoulders. "Think," said the banker; "why I think you have eighty thousand majori ty of infernal fools out there in Kansas; that is what I think." Continuing he said: "I cannot understand it; it is ut terly beyond my comprehension why the Kansas farmer should deliberately continue to vote this outrageous and unjust protection tax upon himself, and for our exclusive benefit. If I was a Kansas or western farmer, I would lead a revolution before I would pay such an unjust and damnable taxi" "You pay us interest, or tax, now on nearly everything you own; on your court houses, jails, bridges, railroads, street car lines, water works, gas works, electric light plants, school houses, churches, city property and farms; and what little is left after all that, you vol untarily vote to us, as a pure gratuity, in the shape of an unjust, outrageous and enormous tax called protective tariff on everything you eat, wear, or use. thereby taking undoubtedly the re mainder of what the poor farmer can raise, and leaving him penniless at the end of the year." "But," said he, "I don't see why I should complain, as I am one of the manufacturers in New England, and consequently one of the beneficiaries of Erotective tariff" So as long as you Kansas farmers continue to drive up your protection cow, we manufacturers will continue to milk her; and the elec tion of Harrison with your 80,000 ma jority, gives assurance that we have a good hold on the teats for the next four years." To our old friend W. C. Holpen, of the Kearney Courier: Don't have the least anxiety about Mr. Burrows selling out to the repub lican party or any other party. An Improvement on Dudley. Louisville Courier-J our mal. "Let us do our own registration and our own counting," says Mr. Reed That is certainly the true method of making sure of an election, and it would save many thousands of dollars of elec tion expenses now borne by our infant industries. The man who says that Mr. Reed has not a great head is no reader of the news. OMAHA TAMMANY KNAVES. BROATCH'S SOLID TWENTY-EIGHT ORGANIZED INTO A BAND OF BUSHWHACKERS. CONSPIRACY TO DEFEAT ANNEX ATION. AN OATH-BOUND UANU kjv MORANTS AND TAX-EATERS WHO PROPOSE TO RULE OR RUIN OMAHA." -We clip the above display headlines rom the Omaha Bee of the 8th. Wo had no idea Omaha was getting so- fear- ully low-down. The eastern gentle men who are Hocking iuto- Lincoln will not find any thing of that sort here. Of course, under these circumstances, they'll giye Omaha the go-by. A Good Suggestion. Av measure known as the anti-truit bill lately passed both houses of con gress and received the earnest support of such protection advocates as Seuator Sherman and iiepresenuuivu iuciyuih-v. Apart of the first section of this bill reads as follows: Every combination or conspiracy In re straint of trade among the several slates or with foreign nations is nereDy aeciami ille gal. Every person who shall engage in any such combination or conspiracy enau on con viction thereof bo punished by fine not to exceed f5,000 and by imprisonment not to exceed one year, or by both said punishments in the descretlon of the court. There was never so dangerous a "combination or conspiracj' in restraint of trade" as that formed by the majori ty of the ways and means committee that lately reported what is known as the McKinley tariff bill. Compared with it the laws passed by the untisn parlia ment in restraint of trade among the colonies that rebelled in 1770 were like ant hills contrasted with mountains. The object of this bill is to completely turn some branches of trade out of their natural channels and to entirely abol ish others. It makes war upon the natural rights of man. It is a compact of conspirators to injure the majority of the people of this country. The suggestion is made uy tne com mercial Advertiser, of New York, that McKinley and his co-conspirators be in dicted by a federal grand jury if they succeed in their scheieie in restraint of trade. The suggestion is a good one. Our present tariff law has been the fa ther of a numerous family of trusts. The proposed tariff promises to be the ?arent of a still larger family of trusts. ?he protective tariff is the supporter of trusts of every kind. Remove it and they will necessarily fail. A fine of $5,000 and a years imprisonment for all who vote for the McKinley bill would insure tariff reform. These punish ments would also result in the extin guishment of most of the trusts that now oppress the people of the country. They would "fit the crime" in a manner that would give general satisfaction to a long suffering public. Chicago Express. Caesar's Column. The above is the title of the remark able book which we this week offer as a premium. Its retail price is $1.25. We offer the book and The Alliance one year for $1.75. We copy the following letter from Hon. II. L. Loucks, President of the National Alliance, in relation to it: Minneapolis, April 26, 18i0. I am ia receipt of a copy of "Cavsar's Column," and have read the same with a great deal of interest. Indeed I was not able to lay it down until I had fin ished reading it. The author has a clear insight into what must occur under cpresent pluto cratic tendencies, and though his treat ment may to many seem "heroic," yet it will take just such a picture to rouse the masses to action to prevent such a dreadful catastrophe. It is in such strong contrast with that other wonderfully graphic and happy Eicture of what might be accomplished y the judicious use of the ballot, as pictured in "Looking Backward,"th at I wish every farmer and laboring man in America could and would read . both. The only criticism I have to offer on "Civsar's Colum" is that the author ha postponed the catastrophe a hundred years. Unless the power of money to oppress is modified or destroyed very soon, the present generation .will wit ness the crash. Indeed, the first gener al failure of crops in America will cause a financial crisis such as we have never witnessed. The earnest desire of every man and woman who love our country and humanity should be to rally the masses to the polls, to save the country by the ballot and arrest the thoughts of the bullet and dynamite. Yours truly, II. L. Loucks. FACTS ABOUT SILVER. To President Harrison, Secretary Win dom, Vice-President Morton, Speaker Reed and Congress. Permit me respectfully to call your attention to some important facts which vou seem to overlook in your efforts to defeat the will of the people in the mat ter of again placing silver where the fathers of the republic placed it, side by side with gold as a money metal. I presume that not one of you not even John Sherman will deny that silver was demonetized by a fraud, or that the silver dollar was, on the day it was struck down, worth three per cent more than the gold dollar, and that, too, in spite of all the efforts England could make to depreciate it; or that England has, since the passago of that treasona ble act, purchased our silver bullion at an average of about 92 cents an ounce, has coined it into rupees for circulation in India legal tender there at about $1.29 cents an ounce thus giving her about 37 cents an ounce advantage over the producers of wheat and cotton in this country and by this means Jias largely driven the products of our farms out of the markets of Europe and great ly reduced the prices of them in our home markets, to the great damage of all our industries. Do you know that every congressman of the west and south w'horu you dra- f:oon into voting against free and un united coinage of silver, by that vote seals his own political death warranty Are you legislating for England or the people of the United States? L. G. Jeffers, in Xational View. Good News All Along the Line. Jacob Beck writes us from Decatur that his Alliance is booming, and that he will send us a new list of subscribers next week. So the good work goes on. See his proposition in another column To Correspondents. Write only on one side of the paper when writing for the printer. Many good articles go to the waste-basket for this reason alone. In writing to advertisers always men tion Tue Alliance. Ii n V I 1 V