i . (3V tittv 444 N O ww 4y 1 VOL. II. LINCOLN, NEBUaSKA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, Iy0. NO. 9. aM6 V 3 4. r' r T:J notice to Subscribers. EXPIRATIONS. As te easiest and cheapest meti of noti- Cmg subscriber of the data of their xpira ni wa will mark this notioe with w blue or Md pencil, on the data at which their ub faription expires. We will tend the paper twe weeka after expiration. If not renewed r tat time It will b discontinue. A Farmer Speaks. Written for the Farmers' Aixiance by Mrs. AdellaL, C. Twas just about corn plantin' time, ten years aro last spring, ' Old Ball face fell and broke her leg, she was a clumsy thing. r? But strange and true for alio that, she'd pull right with the best. She was my father's grift to roe before I went out west. Nowso'sto buy another horse, and bu ild a pasture fence, I'd bargained for a harvester and been to some expense.) I had to have a little cash , not thinking- any harm, ' To give security I put a mortgage on the farm. The new colt was skittish like, a big high stepping roai; She ran away with little Joe and broke his collarbone. She smashed the wagin all to flints, the har ness strung apart. I tell you I felt pretty blue, but Mother, bless her heart! She said we ought to thank the Lord the boy wa nt killed outright. But doctor's bills and fixin Up, and hirin' of a hand, Ail cost so much I could'nt raise the mortgage frou the land. " But never mind." says Mary Jane, " next year we'll do as well." We didn't raise mor'n half a crop, and what we had to sell. We almost had to give away, grain was so pesky low. We couldn't keep the interest up, and it be gan to grow. I'm sure that "we worked hard enough all through the summer heat; The Interest worked hand over hand, a thing we couldn't beat. It kept right ou through hall and rain, and when a blizzard come. It took the best chair in the house and made itself at home. It set right down among us there, and with a fiendish grin. It opened up its awful mouth and bid us shove thiDgs In. We gave it our potatoes, and our corn and oats and wool; It gobbled down the sheep 'mselves, and still it was not full; It took the porker from the pen, the butter from our bread, C And every race I run with it the thing ceme out ahead. Ses I at last to Mary Jane, one scalding Au gust day. We'll have to let the old farm go, there aint no other way. We're growing old and gettin' gray long years before eur time. I say let's turn that mortgage out, if we don't ' save a dime! ; We'll have te have an auction sale and sell off every thing; We'll look the world square in the face and then commence agio. And filch a sale! We posted bills a week or two ahead. An a m an won't miss au auction unless he's sick in bed. 1 Mother fried some doughnuts up, and made dried apple pie. xtmade 'em feel good natured, and I tell you th ings went high. Them as could give security I give 'em tlme, becase A man '11 buy most anything when he can run his face. " I sold the notes and paid my debts, and had enough besides To buy some tools and furniture where farm ers are supplied. I'd joined the Farmer's 'Liance, so got my goods half price; (For when a good thing is going round I'm bound to have a slice.) . We rented a small plot of ground with build ings, pretty cheap. They're only sod, but-even sod beats none at all a heap. We don't have any tax to pay, and no small item that, , v. For all the live stock that we saved was Rover 'and the cat. ' I'm going to work out by the day for them as wants a hand, And soon wc hope to have enough to buy a little land. We're taking sugar in our tea, we didn't for a spelL , We're going to have a Sunday pie, and make . a little jell. So mother ses, and bless her heart! before the snow flakes fly, She'll have a new print dress or we will know the reason why! Tve voted for high tariff for twenty years or more, The very thing with usury that drove me from my door. The railroad ringsters lent a hand my votes helped to elect. " They worked for their own Interest, what more could we expect? Their promises were fair and fine, they left 'em all behind, . When they packed their grip for Lincoln. - How blind we've been! how blind! But, brothers,there is hope ahead, with better days begun. We've tolled for others long enongh, " hur rah for number one !" Repudiating the Frontier County Farmer. Indianola. Neb., Aug. 9, 1890. " Resolutions passed by Centre Point Alliance No. 962, Frontier county, ssett. Whereas, Mr, A. G. Harlan, of Curtis, Neb., has been in the habit of publish ing extracts from republican papers without comment, said extracts . advo eating republican sentiments; and Whereas. He has unjustly attacked the character of the people's candidate for congress, and given the influence of his paper (the Frontier County Farmer) to Mr. Harlan, the republican candi date for congress, thereby failing . , - r i.1 A 1 1 r to vindicate ine principles oi ine Alli ance: therefore be it Resolved. By Centre Point Alliance No. 962 that we disapprove of Mr. Ha lan's paper as the official organ of Frontier Countv Alliance, and we do hereby respectfully request the Frontier County Alliance, at its next regular meeting, to rescind its action making the Frontier County Farmer its official organ. MCLkan uoddard, sec. P. D. Asmstrokg, Pres. AN EVENTFUL NIGHT. vrrrcten for the Tribune. The years of a lifetime are too few to efface from memory a scene in which I was an active participant one night more than twenty years ago in the wilds of East Tennessee." The speaker was an old volunteer officer who served through the war in an Ohio regiment. He had seen a great deal of war in all its phases, and had been once severely wounded. At this time he was one pf a small company of friends who were talking of those stir ring events. Being pressed to tell the story of the night in question he con tinued: "I belonged to the old Fourth corps, army of the Cumberland. When Uncle Billy-' Sherman laid Atlanta in ashes and pulled out with five corps for Savannah, he sent back the Fourth and Twenty-third, under 'Old Pap Thomas, you remember, to take care jof Hood, who, by a wide detour to the north and wes, had turned up on the Tennessee river and was threaten ing Nashville. The repulse ot Hood at Franklin, followed, two weeks later, by the magnificent victory of Thomas at Nashville, almost destroy ed the confederate army. From the day those demoralized remnants re crossed the river we never again look ed into the muzzle of their muskets. I have said all this so that you may understand how it happened that we were away up among the mounta:ns of East Tennessee. "Late one evening there came to us news that threw the camps of the va rious brigades and divisions into the wildest uproar. No language of mine can convey more than a faint con ception of the reality. Nobody ever saw or heard anything lik? it before nor, probably, ever will again. I suppose you want to know what it was all about. It was near the middle of April. Darkness had settled down over the great bivouac. " The bugles had sounded the tatoo. The grizzled veterans who had been squatting around the camp-fires, talking over the scenes of the past and wondering when the war would be over had knocked the ashes from their pipes and crawled within their little 'pup' tents, or their shelters made of boughs. AU was still, save the measured tread of the 3entinels as they passed to and fro upon their beats around the sleep ing army. "Suddenly then came rattling through the clear night air a sound that aroused every soldier in an in stant. We had often herrd it before, and it always meant business. It was the long roll at division headquarter;?. And such a long roll as it was! The drummer handled his sticks as if he were pounding for his very life. When a soldier hears the long roll he never waits for orders. It is an alarm that has but one meaning. His duty is to get his 'traps' on and take his place in line, and to be very lively about it, too. The drums at the headquarters of each brigade took up the sound and the piercing blasts of bu gles joined in the chorus. Started from their sleep the soldiers kicked off their blankets and it wasn't a minute till the companies were formed, every man with his accoutrements buckled on and his musket at a 'shoulder,' in response to the 'Fall in!' of the orderly sergeants. Again drums and bugles sounded, the com panies marched to the color line and the regiments were ready for action. It was a moonless night and the dark ness of the oak woods was but feebly dispelled here and there by the flicker ing light of the smouldering fares. "Everybody inquired of everybody else what the matter was. We had hot supposed there was any consid erable force of the enemy within a hundred miles of us. But such alarms had always betokened some great emergency and the soldiers thought of nothing but a night attack upon the camp. Every ear was strained to catch the rattle of shots on the picket-line. No sound was heard save the bustle oi the assembling troops and the voices of the officers as they gave the necessary command. It was one of those moments of anxious suspense that test the courage of the bravest veteran. "An orderly from brigade headquar ters daahed an and handed a nanerto the colonel of our regiment. A bit of candle was found, and by its spatter ing light the colonel glanced at the message. Jumping about four feet in the air he gave one wild, piercing yell, that an Apache chief might strive in Tain to rival, We all thought for the moment - that he had gone crazy. When he came down he handed the paper to the adjutant, letting off an other yell, and told him to read it to the regiment. It was a copy of a telegram From Secretary Stanton, announcing the surrender of Lee's army. The scene that followed no words can adequately describe. The colonel and adjuntant swung their hats and danced around and fairly howled. Every officer and soldier in the regiment, and in every other regi ment, did the same thing. We bad heard shouting and yelling before, and had done our full share of it on occa sion, but never anything like that which greeted the reading of this dis patch. From one end of the camp to the other the confusion and uproar were prodigious. Men laughed and danced and hugged one another, and rent the air with every kind of noise possible to the human voice, pitched in its highest key. It was as if the inmates of a score of lunatic asylums bad been turned loose in those Ten nessee woods. "When the yelling had in some de gree subsided, from sheer vocal ex haustion, the soldiers began to cast about for other means to make a noise. It didn't matter what it was the more discordant the better, only so that it helped to swell the awful din. Meanwhile, all the brass bands were playing though nobody could tell what the tunes were the shriek of ftfes and rattle of drums were heard on every hand and the buglers strain ed to make themselves heard until it seemed as if they would blow their heads off. Then the artillery opened. Gun after gun joined in the mighty chorus until every battery in the corps was sending forth its thunders toedio among the mountains. Regiment after regiment began to fire their muskets. The men took the cartridges from their boxes, poured in the powder, jammed in the paper for wadding and blazed away. The balls they throw upon the ground; there was no fur ther use for them. Perhaps you can imagine the din; but it's more likely you can't. When the soldiers bad shot away their cartridges they hunt ed up all the camp kettles and tin pans and beat them furiously with sticks and stones, still yelling and shouting as fast as they co.uld gather breath enough to do so. The camp was a literal pandemonium. Heaped with wood the fires blazed high, and the forest was aglow with light. "Did the generals try to stop the riot? Not a bit of it. They felt just as hilarious and yelled as loud as any body else. There was no 'rank in camp that night. Officers and men joined in the appalling racket, vying with one another m producing the most startling effects. Half an hour after the trouble began an orderly from headquarters brought around an order. It said: 'Regimental commanders will issue a ration of whiskey to each officer and man.' " 'P. S. Give 'em a double ration.' "The army was not exactly a tem perance society, pledged to total abstinence, and you may well be lieve this order was received with great enthusiasm. It was not long till the 'commissary' was dis turbed, each man receiving his portion in his canteen or tin cup. An Illinois colonel mounted a stump and, as he h?ld up his canteen, declared that a man who wouldn't get drunk that night didn't deserve to have a country; and if any man of his regiment should be found sober in one hour by the watch he would be tried on the spot by drum -head court-martial. He then set an example by emptying h:s cant pen at a single pull while the boys cheered with tremendous vigor. "Under the exhilarating influence of the liquor the . din . became simpl infernal even that word seems weak and meaningless to describe such a scene. There was no violence, no fighting, every body had had enough of that. It was simply a happy drink all round. Thousands of voices joined in sinking the old army songs 'Battle Cry of Freedom,' 'Red. White and Blue,' 'Tramp, Tramp,' 'John Brown's Body' and the rude parodies of 'Dixie' and 'Bonnie Blue Flag.' If harmony was lacking the deficiency was made up a hundredfold in the "vast volume of sound. Now and then somebody would start up the doxology 'Praise God From Whom AH Blessings Flow' to the tune of 'Old Hundred,' and those leather-lunged veterans would sing it as it was never sung before. There wasn't a thought of irreverence about it, either. They sung it 'with the spirit and with the understanding also,' as truly as ever did the worship pers at a Methodist camp-meeting. "Men did all sorts of grotesque and ridiculous things. They climbed trees and yelled from among the branches; they made heroic speeches from logs and stumps; they turned their clothes inside out; they rode one another on poles they did everything that great fertility of resource in this direction could suggest. At the headquarters of our brigade a horse bucket full of egg-nog was made, and the general and his staff indulged in copious libations. After several 'rounds' they sallied fort' and seized the instruments of the band, and formed for a parade through the camp. The general head ed the procession with the bass drum, which he pounded so furiously that he broke in one of the heads. The staff officers, with horns, blew the most wildly discordant blasts. Ad they marched hither and thither, reg imental and company officers, and hundreds of soldiers feel in behind the general and his staff, until the col' umn of howling lunatics was a quarter of a mile long. "Now there are, no doubt, in this present year of our Lord, many most excellent people who will say that the soldiers of the Fourth corps aid a very reprehensible thing in getting drunk that night. While, perhaps, agreeing with them on general princi ples, I will say that no human being unless he has 'been there' can rise to the frill comprehension of such an oc casion, it was before the days of the temperance crusade, and the provoca tion was extraordinary. If there was, since the world was created, an excuse that would hold water for a tempora ry lapse from sobriety, it was then and there. Four years of toiling and suffering such as others know not; of weary marches and vigils by day and bv niffhtrthroueh fierce heat and beat ing storm; of facing the pitiless bullets and screaming shell, a ainst awful scenes of death and human anguish; long months and years that had thin ueu regiments Of alhou3and men down to a hundred all were past, the end had come, and before the eyes of those scarred and war-worn veterans arose, in a moment, blessed pictures of peace and home! Do you wonder that hey indulged in those wild and ex travagant demonstrations of joy? Added to these were the glad feeling oi victory at last, after all the blood and wretchedness and the patriotic rejoicing over a nation saved by their valor and sacrifices. Let me ask if you wouldn't have been very likely to make a fool of yourself for the time being if you had been there? Let us hope the recording angel veiled he face thatnlzht." A Boy's Idea of His Father, At ten years of age a boy thinks his father knows a great deal; at filteen , he knows as much as his father; at twenty he knows twice as, much; at thirty he is willing to take hies advice; at forty he begins to think his father knows something after all; at fifty he begins to seek his advice, and at sixty, after his fathei is dead, he thinks that he was the smartest man. that everUvedv--Atchison Globe. A Nationalism and Marriage By Laurence Gronlund in The Nationalist. Look at the mournful procession of women of the town, created by our wicked social order! For either the woman is pushed toward the pit by her small pay under the wage-system, or she is tempted by the incontinent vaga 1 IJJI.. .1 bonds from our middle' classes, which this social order keeps unmarried, or both. I , In our lare manufacturing cities and villages great numbers of operatives of both sexes more than half of them young women are gathered together. Here they are thrown in each others' company rather rudely in their work; the boarding houses where most of them spend their nights and Sundays afford them none of the restraints of home; their evenings are Ttont to find them in the streets and cheap places of amuse ment. The wages of these operatives, especially of the females, are ludicrously small. They muiti pay out of it for board and room, washing and clothing. What a pinching life this must be! The moral fruits of this herdisg together and exposure to strong-temptation are a very poor outfit for ahappy married life. Most of the present deterioration of family life is due to these industrial conditions, and to the necessary flitting of the operatives from place to place. The relation of the sexes is certainly the deepest root of human well-being; it is therefore no wonder that women call a chaste man " moral," though, of course it is an almost ridiculously narrow and selfish view of things. It is by the avenue of sexual love that man comes forth from his mere personality and learns to live in another, while obeying his most powerful instincts. If a man cannot love, it is looked upon as a moral misfortune, if not as a moral fault; for a man absence of a beloved form is the finest thing in life missed; he grows selfish, heartless, materialized this is not a good state for him nor a natural one for society. Instinctively we think of Rome in the age of Augustus. On the other hand, when he does love suc cessfully, it is held that his whole nature has burst into, blossom. That woman's nature perhaps with very few excep tions is to. love is admitted on all hands. ) The chastity of a nation, from any point you look at it, intimately depends upon the fact, that the men marry when young. Nothing is more natural, in our present social order, than to look upon marriage without sufficient means of subsistence with horror; or when one's standing in society, or the prospects of children are threatened.- Hence a con stantly increasing disinclination of men to marry, and the necessary consequence is our frightful prostitution that places us in a more degraded state than that of the cities of the plain. Appetites and passions never exert a controlling and therefore a degrading influence, until they have been rendered fierce by some foolish asceticism or-accidental starva tion. But as has been said, "reduce the appetites to a famished condition, im prison them as you do a tiger, and of course you infuse into them a tiger's form and ferocity." Normally the nat ural appetites and passions are a solace and a refreshment to our mental facul ties rather than a burden; and normally sexual passions are a source of divine unity and of heavenly innocence and tenderness. The first healthy influence Nationalism "will have on sexual love is, that it will enable every loving couple to marry young. Next, Nationalism, by conferring upon . woman the power of earning her own living by suitable work, will enable her to refuse to marry for a home or for maintenance. There is a loud com plaint of the frequency of divorce, but this is simply the effect of something else. Happily married people do not seek divorce. The trouble is, that the preceding marriage ought never to have been entered into, unfortu nately, our economic system, mark! turns marriage into a commercial insti tution, xoung women form a matri inonial market regulated by ' demand and supply, and enter into matrimony to gain a-support. What our law al lows to be marriage is often a very nasty thing. It is not I, but Henry James, Sen., who says, "the law of every so-called Christian country per mits one to sell his daughter if but the clergy gild the transaction to any un clean wretch whose pecuniary reputa tion is good. What an annual sacrifice is, in consequence, offered up by Christ endom to the merciless moloch of our civilization ! What a sacrifice of myri ads of innocent young ones ! What sort of purity follows ! Let our popu lar newspapers answer, with hints to clandestine commerce, with enigmatic notifications"of adulterous meetings and advertisements of abortionists." Our conventional legal marriage, instead of being a means for the highest possible human ization of the parties, becomes a hopeless degradation. ..nationalism, lastly, will greatly ele vate the marriage institution itself. Roman marriage differed from the Greek; Catholic marriage, again, dif fered radically from the former. These modifications have not come to an end, and all TrfiCfdinir modifications will nroV gressively develop the form. Marriage is a great end in itself, but is still more important as the grand avenue that leads to the organic unity of all men. The former is the highest possible humanization of the parties; but much more we ought to look upon the domestic life as the miniature of and school for our social lif e : the filial relation as the source of reverence for ancestry and sympathy with the historic . past; the parental as throwing a like enthusiasm into the future; the frater nal as the practising ground, for all re ciprocal social sentiments. Marriage must be elevated from its present degraded state, where it is pop ularly believed that only the legal sanc tions keep it in honor and that it is des titute of internal bonds. Yet its bonds are the strongest possible : chaste pas sion and the most profound friendship. To give these free play we must leave the institution more in woman's keeping and less in man's, make her most an swerable for its honor who is most in terested in its stability. This again, is accomplished by Nationalism, by invest ing the wife with the potentiality of eco nomic independence of her husband, to be realized every time she sees fit. First, then, just as it is in the animal world, the female sex should control the male in all matters pertaining to sex, declining and successfully rejecting the advances of the male, when not reciprocated- Unfortunately.remarks Les ter F. Ward, " woman has lost her scep tre and surrendered herself to his con- 1 S a 1 1 1 . S - . trui msieau oi, as sne snouia. ruiinr him I i by reason of his passion and the Isivor; which she aloue can coufer." Love al-1 hors nothing more than the license which even our best conventional con jugality permits. Yet it is true that sat isfied affection means aversion; affec tion in proportion to its tenderness seeks a perpetual gratification, that is, desires to be unsatisfied. When woman has resumed her scep tre, then, what is very important, the pastimes, recreations, and pleasures will be shared by both; the present separate spheres of recreation tend to render desire for association with each other prurient. Secondly, mvrriage ought to be in its essence an interior friendship, a profound bosom fellowship between man and woman. No other association can be so intimate as this which causes a com plete fusion of two natures in one. It ought to be, but, alas, how rarely it is ! It is precisely the absence of this friend ship that makes marriage now a failure, in the many cases where everything else conspires to make it a happy rela tion. The husband really holds his young wife dear, but his love is at bot tom nothing but admiration for her va rious charms, and no sooner does he find her person legally made over to him than this admiration dies out. He should associate her in his affairs, his ideas, his aspirations, make her co-operate, in her sphere, with him in his; their na tures are precisely constituted for that purpose: he is a master in specialties, she has aptness for general ideas. To will, to think, to enjoy, to suffer to gether shat would be true marriage ! But, unfortunately, as yet, she cannot be his friend. She has not been edu cated and trained for that. It is the nationalist commonwealth that will train her properly. Later on we will have more to say of friendship. Notice of Remission of Dues. Nebraska. State Alliance, ) Secretary's Office, v Lincoln, Aug. 13, 1890. y Notice is hereby given that the execu tive order remitting the payment of dues for the quarter ending Sept. 30 is extended to the quarter ending Dec. 31, 1890. This does not apply to initiation fees, which will be forwarded as usual. Alliances so disposed can use the fund thus left in their treasury in ex tending educational work, political or otherwise. Alliances in the eastern part of the state will be called upon to relieve their brothers in the west, where the crops are nearly a total failure. This fund can be appropriated for that purpose if thought best. J. M. Thompson, Sec. J. Burrows, Ch'm Ex. Com. Special Editions of "The Alliance." We are now prepared to furnish spe cial editions of our paper, with such an amount of local matter as may be desir ed, at a very low price. Localities hav ing no local orgau to fight their battles can secure a paper in this way at a much less cost than in any other man ner. These editions will be furnished in single thousands or any greater num ber. They will be sent by express, or mailed direct from this office, as may be desired. The work will be done at prime cost, we being willing to accept our compensation in the increased cir culation this will bring us. .To establish new papers is costly and precarious; and yet a paper is necessary to successfully conduct a campaign. We hope our friends will avail them selves of this offer. Public vs. Private Management. The Mayor of Chicago comes out strongly in favor of the assumption by municipal governments of services pub lic in their nature. He is evidently a Sractical nationalist. Nationalism is estined to find a rapid and healthy de velopment in the fertile soil of the vig orous West. In a message to the city council Mayor Creigier says: " Chicago supplies her citizens with water. She provides channels of drainage. It is equally proper that this city should fur nish her residents with light for house hold purposes as well as for public use. Nor should we stop here. To furnish heat, power, and intramural transportation are not only within the scope of legitimate legislation, but the practical establishment and operation of such under municipal control would prove a source of economy an4-eonven-lence to the entire community." Chicago's grand success in the estab lishment of its municipal electric light ing plant is proving a valuable object lesson that cannot fail to be widely heeded. Milwaukee, Chicago's nearest neighbor in the way of a great city, is considering a nroiect to establish an J electric-lighting system, owned and op- ! 1 - "a. A. A A A A A eratea oy me city, to cost, at me outset $600,000. The Boston Post, in comment ing on this, brings forward the thread bare old objection that such steps are unwise because the science of electrici ty is making such rapid strides that the apparatus of today is liable to be out of date in a very few years, and to keep up with the state of the art is a condition precedent to success " This," it says, " a business corporation can do, but a municipality, as a matter of fact, seldom does it, and should Milwaukee go into the business with the best plant it can buy today and get its lights at cost, it would be more than likely to find, in the course of a few years, that, owing to its antiquated outfit, its lights were costing more than other cities were paying to corporations which, with later and more economical devices, were doing a pros perous and remunerative business, and furnishing a more satisfactory result." An ounce of fact is worth a pound of assertiou. If the Post would rub its eyes and awake to what is really the case it might learn something valuable. Now, who pays the cost of renewing worn-out . . m 3 J T1T1 A.1 1 or annquateu ue vices t v uy, iub puu lic, of course! And in the case of pri vate corporations it roundly pays the cost, plus a profit on a capitalization al ways large and frequently "watered." Where the municipalitv or the nation renders the service, the only expense fallintr on the public is that of renewal It is almost universallv the rule that miblic administration of services of the kind is more economical, enlight ened, and efficient than private oae. The telegraph and telephone monopo lies hlthis country earn huge profits Jin watered stock, ami hae long either suppressed or refused to employ valua ble improvements on those devices in which influential parties in the compa nies are pecuniarily interested. On the other hand, the best managed water works are those owned by municipali ties, and the great economies and dis coveries in the utilization of by-products of gas-works, formerly wasted, were made in the municipal plants of En glish cities, and not in those of private corporations. If some of our leading newspapers would pay more attention to practical problems demanding solu tion at home, instead of assuming the interesting though thankless task of instructing Lord Salisbury and other European premiers from day to day, they might better fulfill their mission of mentors-to the public. Their attitude in opposing public control is usually in consistent, as the Post itself betrayed a few days ago, when it complained of the inefficienty of street-watering by pri vate contract, and demanded in the in terest of the public health the assump tion of the work by the municipality. Nationalist. The Surplus. The feckless manner in which the present congress has appropriated mon ey has been the subject of much com ment through the press and among the people. This feeling of late has inten sified to such an extent that a halt has been called in order to ascertain the amount of appropriations already made, those that must of necessity be made, and the probable amount of revenue to meet them. Investigation on that point shows that up to the present time the appropriations so far provided by con gress and approved of by the president amounts to $230,101,000 in round num bers. In addition to this sum $109,800, 000 have passed either the Senate or House. There are other appropriations not yet considered that must be provid ed for such as the miscellaneous ap propriation of about $5,000,000 for de pendent pensions, $45,000,000 more for the sinking fund, and interest on the public debt at least $100,000,000, and a deficiency of about $6,000,000, making a grand total of about $505,000,000. Even this enormous sum does not in clude the subsidy expense or the cost of operating Federal election bill, which taken together will doubtless require $20r000,000 more. Taken altogether this congress has planned for an expendi ture of fully $525,000,000. To meet this vast expenditure is the public revenue, which the highest estimate puts at about $450,000,000. These figures dis close a deficit of $75,000,000. But when this revenue is calculated on the basis of. the McKinley tariff bill, with the rider concerning the national bank de posits, was an acknowledgement of an expected deficit; nothing else would have induced congress to pass such a bill. It further shows that congress con sidered bank notes without any redemp tion fund fully as safe as United States notes with a redemption fund of 33J per cent. For many years the secretary of the treasury has kept constantly on hand $100,000,000 in gold to redeem $300,000, 000 in United States greenbacks that no one wanted redeemed, and consid ered this policy as absolutely necessary for, public safety. Now by the provis ions of this bill about $60,000,000 of money is covered in the treasury that has been held heretofore to redeem na tional bank currency that is being re tired. This leaves fully $00,000,000 of national bank bills outstanding which the law says shall be redeemed, without one dollar as a fund for their redemp tion. This whole legislation is a scheme to squander all available funds, and thereby force the government to fund the debt which matures in 1891, and through this refunding perpetuate the national banking system. Exchange. Reciprocity as a Sop. Chicago Herald. Two years ago the national convention of protect d mill owners and railroad attorneys that nominated Benjamin Harrison for pres ident declared that rather than surrender any part of the protective system the taxes on whiskey and tobacco should be repealed. That immoral pronouncement shocked the country, but in spite of it, and with the aid of an enormous corruption fund, the candidates who stood upon it were elected and are now in oBtee. The monopoly platform of 1888 went too far. It was the indiscreet work of men who believed the people to be ig-norant, and who, for the first time under the protective system were daring enough to throw off all disguise and avow themselves open and defiant advo cates of privilege and monopoly. Many of these politicians have slnoe seen their mis take, and, under the leadership of Mr. Blaine. as clever an agent of corporate and capitalis tic greed as the world ever saw, they are now vociferously advocating the quack remedy of reciprocity as a cure-all for the manifold evils that bear so heavily upon the people of this country. As urged by these masqurading agents of the protected barons,reciprocity is the veriest humbug, and the superficial arguments with which it is sustained are of so little conse quence that no one of intelligence should be deceived by them for a minute. The whole scheme is a tub to the whale and nothing more. It is intended to divert the people, to make them believe that something is really to be done in their behalf, and to intrench still more impregnably behind the barriers of privilege and monopoly the favored interests that have grown powerful on the plupderof the people. Every utterance of these new converts to reciprocity during the last twenty years shows them to be enemies of free unfettered com merce. . They do not now favor reciprocity in quarters where it would be of service to the people and injuiious to the monopolists who keep them in place. They have selected the poorest markets on earth with which to establish reciprocal trade, and they Ignore wholly all those markets in which so large a portion of the agricultural produce of this country must find purchasers. How not to do it is their motto. To fool the people is their aim. Frightened politicians and hysterical edi tors who .have seen and perhaps felt the wrath of the people, are hurrying hither and thither in an agony of apprehension urging, begging, threatening, In behalf' of the foolish reciprocity I fad, as though that alone was sufficient to placate the plundered masses. but . the average republican congressman's face is turned toward the tariff god and he sees and hears them not. The spectacle is amusing and in some respects pitiful, yet it can deceive no one who is apable of distin guishing between right and wrong, it is er ror's last ditch. Wrong tiers a sop to right. With courage and perseverance justioe must soon triumph all along toe une. A wine glass is never right" side up until it is upside down. -t ' DKHTKUCXION Oi' POKRSTtt. n4 BaTeeU mt This V..dlU mm Cllaate of the Country. Floods, cyclones, and droughts to the same family. The axe is father of them all. Ill stupidity is their mother. Natasw is bs more te blame for them than Is the blhvl earth which the digger undermines CH it falls on him. Ine axe kill trees. With the tree killed the snows of winter melt more quickly under the rain and snow of early spring. With the tree killed, swamps, fallen logs, and leaves that onoe told back the water for months no longer act The waters rush to their natural outlets without opposition, The rapid transit of the waters clogs the great nat ural channels, and they overflow iato new ones, carrying devastation wherever they rush. The more the axe is the higher rise the waters Bad to wene. The end no human wit foretell. The destruction of the forest kes eliminated the principal factor in mod ifying the movement of the air currents, according to the Cleveland iVeea Like the trade winds on the ocean, the air currents over sections denuded of forests flow freely and persistently for long periods without change. As ohaage Is necessary in the movements of the air in order to have change in the rainfall It follows that persistency in air omr rents caused by forest destruction means ' long "spells" of dryness at one period and long "806118" of wet at another. Thus floods are sometimes aggravated as much by unusual wet "spells" as by the rapid transit of the waters to their natural channels in consequence of con ditions just mentioned. When both causes conjoin terrible floods are inevit able. Destructive droughts must follow excessive rainfalls, for the average rain fall varies but little from year to year la a given locality. An excess at one time means a scarcity at another. So, too, cyclones, like simoons, are only possible where enormous areas ef country unbroken by forests exist The winds gather force as they go, or rather freedom to move easily, whioh mease that they will go quicker than if ob structed. A point of refraction means that the surrounding atmosphere will rush ia to restore equilibrium. If there is nothing to oppose the oncoming air It will move rapidly. The forest is the greatest of modifiers to wind storms, holding them back and check! ag them, and, doing so, tend to modify suddesi and rapid cases of rarefaction. The flood, drought, and cyclone ad monish the people of the United States to be wise. If they heed not the admoni tion they must pay the penalty. The spectacle presented in the valleys of the Mississippi and its tributaries and along the track of the cyclone that devastated Louisville should be enough to cause some serious thinking. These spectacles can be excelled. Give the axe time and bribe it to do its uttermost and horrors now seen will be mercies compared with horrors that will inevitably follow. Edison' rtemoeratle Vav Edison is a count, a millionaire, and the most famous living inventor. His present wealth, which amounts to many millions, is as nothing compared to what it will be iu the next few years ; but he still work away in his laboratory, and comes forward to greet you in just such a suit of clothes as he wore twenty year ago. As compared with Edison's dingy little shop of 20 years ago, out at Menlo Park, in which he used to eat his bread and cheese seated on an old packing box, talking over the work in hand with his two. or three workmen, the present sur soundings are fabulously luxurious. Ev ery thing shows unbounded means, whioh may be the case, when we remember tliat his famous laboratory costs $200,000 a year to maintain. But the master mind is still the same. When he works it means work for his men. In the old days at Menlo Park it was no uncommon thing for him to remain at the bench for 48 hours at a stretch, Bending one of the boys for crackers and oheese when he felt hungry, and not giving up until his) assistants had actually fell asleep stand ing up. To-day he is just as interested. Pittsburg Dispatch. He ytmm Bnldmd and IMi Traveling through Alabama recently and stretching my legs on the platform of a station, while the train was waiting "twenty minutes for dinner, " I eeked est old negro if there was muoh buJdocing and intimidation at the eleotaone la thed section. "You don't live round yere, dojro, boss?" was his answer. I admitted that I did no& "I knowed you didn'A ease .yem wouldn't ax me no such aY rueetioa Buldozin en 'timerdation - yom dnm know what dey is tell yer see er 'leottom down ye re!" I asked him if he was ever intimidated. "Now you talkm boss! I bin 'timer dated and buldozed. Hit's outdacsxwsa, da'swhutl" "How did they do it ?" I inquired. "Huh! How? Go long, now! Don't you know how dey do it? Dey puts me en de rock pile fer ten days, caze a ma gin me a dollar to vote fer him fer tax o'leotor Da's how! Black man ain' got no show yere 'lection times, an you know it!" Pittsburg Dispatch. A Nlc Younar Lady. A young lady resident of a Wester city, not engaged to be married, and un mistakably fancy free, stated with a air of the most charming ingenuousness that she prayed every night for her hoe band, "Because, you know, if I am to be married my husband is living somewhere in this world, and I pray always that he may be delivered from all temptations be kept in good health, and be euooeee ful in whatever path of business he has chosen. " "And is this all you pray for in reference to him ? " was asked. "Oh, no, " and she blushed a little as she made) this admission: "I pray that we maw soon be brought together!" She Preached the Wrong; Doetrlae. Mother Yes, Willie, if you are a good boy you will go to heaven when you die and have a gold harp to play on. wiiiie l aon't want a. narn. I want a cioytue ana baseball. (Areoma trd, v