A sim. THE FARM EHi? ALLIANCE, LINCOLN, NEB.. THURSDAY, OCT. 8,1891. OS Joracr' 2Ultoitcc, rahnebed In? Bettwdaj by TTmt Aixuncx PiriJLismxa Co. Oar. lltk Md M Bul, Llomla. Keb. , Editor .Bualaeee AtLtawnw. la the beuitj of the liBies Christ ras born across the sea, With a glory in bis bosom "That transfigures you and me. Xm be strove to make men holy Let as atriYe to make them free. Since God is marching on." Julia MariHoxe. "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 U a coward, lie who dare not reason Is a slave." TO CORRESPONDENTS. bii bueJneM communications to Bum lor pwtwm - ArUo" written on both side of the paper eaaaot be need. Very ions communications, aaanriu not be used. TBEFARMERS'ALLIANCE published wkiiit at CORNER 11TH AND M STREETS, LINCOLN. NEBRASKA. J. BURROWS, Editor. J. 1L THOMPSON. Business Ma'&T. Tse Smt alliance Weekly ana the leaslne laatawteenl Papar o( ths State, SEVEN COLUMN QUARTO. t trill always b found on the side of the ai pie and wholly devoted te the advocacy of aafena prinoiplee la state and nation. IT IS YOUR PAPER. tErlETE II EVERY DEPARTMENT. BaheorlpUon, 91.00 per annum, Invariably 3a advance. Five annual subscription! S4.0U. OUR BOOK LIST. The beet reform literature obtainable can 1w bad toy ordering- any of these booki, Tbe Hallway Prohltm (new) 8tlokney.... 0 loklna Backward, Uttllamy , M Sr Huuet,(new) Donnelly 60 Camera w lumn, M A Kentucky Colonel. Heed 50 Driven from Re to Sea. Post, W A Tramp In Society, Oowdrey 60 Stichard't Crown. Ww ,.,,.,,,. Ureal Hed Dragon. Woolfolk Ml Brtre'i Financial Catechism. Brloe AO Money Monopoly, Maker as Labor and Caplial, Kellogw 85 Maarro and John ribcrman, Mrs, Todd .. Vt ' Seven Financial Conspiracies.... Wots. 1 3e Hamard Circular, Heath.. ..10" 25 HaMea and Bread, Homer 10" j Otrr Republican Monarohy, Voldo X' Alliance and Labor Songster Km, perdoi I 10 Jlew Music edl'n, paper ooYerKj. " !(r jjjo, S50 Taa At.t.iAKCa one year and any Hot. book on our Hat for SI aft. Same and any toot, book on our liit for f 1.10. Address all order and make all remltt- payable to THK ALLIANCE PUBLISHING CO. Lincoln, Nebraska. Independent Peoples' Ticket Independent State Ticket. For Associate Justice of Supreme Court, JOSEPH W. EDGERTON, Douglas County. For BegenU of the University A. D'ALLEMAND. of Furnas Co. " E. A. UADLEY, of Greoloy Co. Independent County Ticket. Tor Dist rict Judges WM. LEESE, A. S. TIBBETTS, s OLIVER V. CROMWELL. For County Treasurer O. HULL, Mill Precinct. 3te Sheriff WM. F. ELFELDT, Buda. For Clerk of District Court ELI A3 BAKER, of Lincoln. For County Clerk ; WM. S. DEMAREE, , Saltillo Precinci. For County Superintendent Prof. H. S. BOWERS, Lincoln. For County Commissioner MATT MAUEL, LitUe Salt Precinct For County Judge W. S. WYNN, of Lincoln. For Coeonur DR. HOSMER, of Lincoln. For County, Surveyor J. A. ROBINSON, of Lincoln. For Justices of the Peace FRED SHEPHERD. J. C. McNERNY. IL C. PALMER. For Constables WILLIAM LIVINGTON, A. J. WARWICK. AsBeasors, Flrstward, Wheatley Mick tdwaite; Second ward. C. U. Waite Third ward, JohnCurrie; Fourth ward, . K. Kemp; Fifth ward. H. L. Klock Sixth ward, C. Marshal; Seventh ward, W.J.Coatos. J.V.WOLFE, Chm'n State Central Com. C.H.PIRTLE, Sec'y State Central Com, HEADQUARTERS OF STATE CEN TRAL COMMITTEE. LINDELL HOTEL. Lancaster County Central Committee. W. F. WRIGHT. Chairman. S. S. JONES. Secretary. far The able article on our editorial .page of this issue on the silver coinage joeetioa is from the pen of Mr. Alfred dark, formerly editor of the Chicago Xipretx. We ask a careful reading of the article. Mr. Clark wields a trench ant pea. We shall continue to publish facta and arguments on this question; which we invite'ths Journal to answer, laataarl of continuing its disgusting aud afeauedatioales scurrility against the eWUtsr of this paper. GT"Tbo railroad ring papers are now abusing Judge Edgerton as a man Jgaoraat of law. When elected to the swpneM beech, as he certainly will be, will be be so ignorant as to requite tkros or four months to decide whether a bosfus sToveroor is or is not a 41 th United States? citizen THE FREE PASS I7LLAIXY. We republish below from our last week's issue a list of some of the mendi cants who are pensioners on the bounty of the B. 4 M. railroad company. We do not wUb our readers to suppose that this list is at all complete. It is not. The Governor is not in it The Judges of the Supreme Court are not in it. Only part of the judges of our district courts are In it. Only a part of eur slate officers are in it. A complete offi cial list ought to be made and publicly posted, so that the people might know just how far the benevolence of that great and good corporation, the B. 4 M. railroad company, extends. Below is the list as we have it: F. M. Hall, C. C. Burr, C. W. Tierce. J. L. Caldwell. C. J. Dawback, D. O. Courtney, C. W. Mosher, S.J. Alexander, Ed. R. Sizer, L.C. Burr. J. D. McFarland, W. J. Houston, A. G. Hastings, Elmer Stevenson, Phelps Paine, A. Halter, Tom Benton, R. B. Graham, N. C. Abbott, I. M. Raymond, William Baird, D.C. VanDuya, H. D. Hathaway, W.H.Clark, C. H. Gere, G. Ensigs, Sam. Melick. O. Whedon, S. Talbott, Charles Magoon, John B. Wright. W. E. Stewart, D. Knight, R. E. Moore, Meyer, L. C. Pace, The following candidates on the re publican ticket hold annual passes on the B, & M. R. R.: Allen W. Field, judge. C. L. Hall, judge. Sam McClay, sheriff. . W. Lansing, county judge. W. Burnbam, county treasurer. Mr. Chandler, a republican senator from New Hampshire, has been making some marvelous revelations in relation to this free pass corruption in his state. We do not mention it because we hare to go out of this state for that sort of corruption, but because Mr. Chandler is very eminent republican authority. His present exposure of railroad and po litical rottenness is not made from any qualms of conscience, but because the other fellow got ahead of him, and it only illustrates the ndagu, that "when rogues full out honest men come by their own." Mr. Chandler says that "the sta'e of New Hampshire is now porsassed by two railroad systems," and adds that railroad passes and railroad money dominate the stnte, and the governor, councillors, senators and representa tives are the mere agents In their ollicea of the two great railroads." Substitute Nebraska for New Hampshire and the statement would be true, with tho ex- option of a portion cf the members of tho lust legislature. Jay Gould's testimony that "in a dem ocratic district I am a democrat, In a republican district a republican, but I am an Erlo man all the time" Is finely illustrated iu the New Hampshire case as stated by Senator Chandler. He Bays: Tho'oarvclorthoiltuatlon la that dotno- erailo bcm- coiurol!lnr the New Humpuhdo raiirtwuB arc atiuweu to uiuime me pouuy atia name the candidate! of the renubiluan uartv. '1 htilr republican employee, paid oy passes and money, coutrul the caucuses and the conven tions of the republican party, and their tools uecouie us nomiuecs. The above from a United States Sona-1 tor as an indictmcut of his own party. is sufficiently startling. It strikingly illustrates what we have so unceasingly reiterated for a long Unto pat, that the contest now going on is not betweeu the old part'ea, but between a powerful in terest which is using those parties for its tool on the ono hand, and the people on the other. Mr. Chandler goes on: All lawyers ride free. The editors and news paper inanairei s ride free. Ministers ride tree oral specint rates. Xhe frovrrnor rides tree. his council ritie ireo. ah onioers at the state house ride free. The members of tho li'irmlH ture all ride t ree, not only during the session, but during; the rest of the year. County, city and town ulliuers ilt'e free. Tho wives and children of most of the t ree Thiers also ride tree, corruption by free passes and mlleaire tickets Is alinoet universal. jfi any peison, high or low. rich or poor. Is heard to make vigorous protest hrhIiibi. any railroad wrontr, he Is approached by some rca.ly emis sary of the rouus aud quieted by a tree pats. Mr. Holdrcgo admitted to the writer that the free travel of. the B. & M. amounted to 10 per cent of the whole. The cost of supervision of this business will be equal to 5 per cent more, Hence, if the free list was discontinued (ho pas senger trallic could be conducted for 15 per cent less than at present without impairing the receipts of the companies. In other words, the general public is paying 15 per cent additional for its passenger traffic in order that the fa vored few may ride free. Theoretically all citizens have equal rights under the law. Railroads are public institutions established for the equal service of all citizens. Do they not become agencies of the grossest in equality when the millionaire banker, the well-to-do lawyer, the politician, merchant and office holder can with their families be transported free in palace cars, while Jones the carpenter and Brown tho utone-mason must pay full faro or walk? Do these corpora tions expect that Brown and Jones, earning their money by hard days' work, will continue to submit to see Field and Hall and Mosher and Whedon, and all the rest, ride over their necks and spend their money, when they can find redref s in agitation and voting? Can't these corporations see that Brown and Jones and Smith can't fail to believe that this free riding by the Hathaways, and Geres and Melicks and Burrs, on roads estab lished by law for the equal service of all is no better than stealing? Do these corporations expect to buy their laws, their judicial decisions, thtir political influence, "their business support and prestige, of these judges and lawyers and merchants and editors and politi cians, and pay for them out of the pock ets of Smith and Brown and Jones, and have the la ter submit like dumb brutes and make no reprisals? You corpora tion capping fools, is your vision so nar row that you cannot see that good crops have nothing to do with this question, and that so long as unjust social inequali ty exists and increases so long will dis content also Increase? And can you not alo see that as this discontent is based on just demands is caused by the grossest injustice and that as it is the demand of the many for inalienable right against special privileges for the fees that in the long run you mutt go down before 7? We warn you row that yon may hedge and palter as you will, train yourPinkertona, build your draw bridge arse cala control the courts, corrupt the senates and poiaor the press, still a holv aitar fire is lighted that you not only cannot quench, but that is bound to spread into a raging conflagration that will scorch you and your illcgitia ate philosophy of privilege to cinders and ashes. THE TF.V.SESSKE COAHCIS. The promise of the Governor cf Ten nesee that the grievances of the miners should be redressed, and the convict system lie reformed, remains unfulfilled. The rings and rascals got in there work, the same as they did in Nebraska last winter, and the penal mines of Ten nessee, in which human beings are woiked like slaves for the profit of po litical bosses, remains a blot upon nine teenth century civilization. Under this villainous convict lease system men are let out to hire at rates so reduced that free labor can rot compete with it, not for the benefit of '.be state or tax payers but to enrich private capitalists. The system is iden.ical with that in vogue in this state, and our convicts are not worked in mines only because we have no nines to work themln. Under this system in the south prisoners have been leased, by means of political influence, to irresponsible parties.aod encountered a fate worse than slavery, hurtful alike to public policy and public morals, and destructive of all that was humane and God like among men. Under this sys tem the free miners of Tonuosee were being driven to starvation. But the grievance of the free workers in the shops and factories of the north is just as real, in a business poiut ot view, as that of the Teanesee miners. The competition of convict labor is the same, whether employed in shops within prison walls, or in mines under overseers. The northern system may be more hu mane thar. th6 southern; but in an eco nmilo point of view this would only in tensify the competition as labor well housed and fed will produce more at less cost than labor exposed to the elements and brutally treated. The wealthy rogues who are tho real authors of these systems, who bribe committees and stille investigations, are not only the enemies of the working men, bi:, of society as well, and Rociety should not hesitate to put its foot on their necks if that is ne cessary to destroy the system they are maintaining. As long as that system lasts it will thrust Itself into legislation and morality, corrupting law, deiiliug religion, and perverting justice. In one vital point our whole prison system is deplorably at fault. Wheu a convict is immured his dependent rela tives are deprived of his support, and his earnings turned over by the state to some prison labor contractor. Thus by tho very act of depriving a family of its support criminals are created a help less mother left to die of despair, girls to grow up in sin, boys to grow up thieves. It Is the business of philanthro pists and statesmen to find a remedy for this evil. Tho produce of the labor of convicts, instead of being turned over to swell the prolits of the heartless con tractors who corrupt legislatures, should be turned into a fund lirst to help the holpless families of convicts, and secoud to give the convict a start wheu ho is turatd from the doors of tho penitenti ary. Now, after being immured years, ho is turned loose upon society iu tho very clothes In which he entered his cell, without a dollar iu his pocket, and often without any resource for a livelihood. Iu many cases he who wan only part a criminal when convicted is mado a con- lirmed criminal by tho state, and turned from tho state's penal institution to be gin a relentless war upou society. Is it tho best that modern christian society can do to maintain institutions for tho enslavement of conviots and tho manu facture of nioro convicts? In reforming these institutions in this direction t!ie grievance of honest labor against con vict labor would be removed. The out side laborer could not and would not complain of prison competition if the fruit of i he labor of the prisoner went to the support ol his laiml y, and not to les sen the taxes of the rbh or swell the prolits of capital. This subject should be agitated until the public conscience is aroused in regard to it. U. O. ARM I TAG E AXD MR. BURROWS. Mr. Armititgo senior rakes up some old matters in relation to the establish ment of The Alliance newspaper by his son, and makes statements injurious to Mr. Burrows. Mr. H. G. Armitage is dead. When this matter was dis cussed before we had no unkind word for him. We shall be very loth t utter one now. But if Mr. Armitage senior forces us to do it we can give some very cogent reasons why we could not take any financial share in any enterprise wlih Mr. H. G. Armitage. That gen tleman had every opportunity to make The Alliance a success that Mr. Bur rows had. The secretary moved his onice to the city ana made the paper his organ, and a business bouse ws established here. But notwithstanding these facts the paper in Mr. Armit&ge's hands was a .otal failure, under ex actly the same conditions in Mr. Burrows' hands it was a success. There is more to be said which we forbear to say. But if Mr. Armitage senior and the B. if .V. Journal push us we may say it. it will not be pleasant tor Air. Armitage to near. ALLIAXCE FIXAXCES. If Mr. Johnson, one of the lickspitt'e corporation capping secretaries of the railroad concern 'at ihe state house, wants some correct information about Alliance finances, and Mr. Burrows' connection with the same, he can obtain it by calling upon the latter gentleman, or upon Mr. Thompson, Secretary of the State Alliance. And we give the aforesaid Johnson onto warning now that he had better be very careful about publishing information that is not cor- rect. 'OXE IjOLUR AS GUOD OTHER DOLLAR." The pagan worshippers of an imag inary gold supply, and bribed panderers to the gold bug philosophy, from Presi dent Harrison down to the lowest acribber, delight to say that they want "every dollar in circulation to be as good as any other dollar." Yet these hirelings of the money power are the very men who have in trigued asd lrgiolated since 1S63 to pre vent the bulk of dollars being as good as any other dollars. The entire drift of legislation since that date has been to make artificial and useless demands for gold, and to cegrade silver and legal tender paper. They dare not allow free coinage of silver because they know that the value of silver bullion would rise on the market and make the pure silver in a legal standard silver dollar equal to the pure gold in a legal standard gold dol lar. Silver was at a premium, temporarily of course, over gold that is the pure silver in a standard dollar would sell in the markets anywhere, for more than enough gold to make a legal standard gold dollar when the conspir ators struck silver down by the law of demonetization. Since that time, silver has been kept partially demonetized for the sole purpce of keeping it low in price on the markets. They strike it down by law and keep it down by law, and then curse it for being down, and blab and babble about their earnest desire to make "every dollar as good as any other dollar." Free coinage of silver would make an iucre&svd demand for that commodity, just as refusal to coin gold free would reduce demand for that ommcdity. Increased demand results iu advance in price with all commodities, the world over. Hence the converse of the proposition must be true. The fact that silver bullion tell in price simul taneously with demonetization, not be fore demonetization, and has remained low in price ever since, is positive con firmation of the general principle. The sophism that demand for free coinage is a class favoritism ia behalf of mine owners, is a false position. It is a demand that the natural and just rights of the victimized silver mine owners be restored. The statement that we "should be come the dumping ground for the silver of the world," has no foundation in truth. Mr. Leach, director of United States mints, ri an argument published in tha Xorth American Review, a few months since, especially designed to support the single gold money theory, admits that in only two countries of the world, Mexico and Japau, can so little gold be obtained for tho ounce of silver as in the United Stales. He gives tables to prove this, which are reliable market quotations. Since the chief nations of the earth get more gold for tho ounce of silver by keeping it at home, why should they "dump" their silver hero for market where they would get less? The pagan gold worshippers fail t6 tell us, but con tinue to harp about tho danger of dumping. If Mexico and Japan want to dump hore let them dump. A largo and often major portion would find a forced market abroad in bullion to pay for South American and East Iudia goods whore silver is always preferred, or a market to European countries whose merchants are obliged to pay in silver for teas, coffees, spices and like indis pensable supplies, and who are obliged to buy silver from silver producing countries like the United States aud Mexico, and to pay tbo market rate here and cost of transportation added. Let it be repeated: When silver is once safely lauded in England, France or Germany, costing a higher rate than here, why should they dump their silver here? The wholo befogging sophistry of gold-bug hirelings, centres round the one villainous scheme, namely, to keep tho supply of mouey for business pur poses as low as possible, thus keeping prices of all proper! y as low as possible, except money and notes, bonds and mortgages demanding money. As labor and property and all pro ducts of labor and property shrink, debts increase in value relatively p.nd in like proportion iu favor of the creditor class. Legislation tending thu3 to change the relations between the pos sessions of tho debtor and of the cred itor, is a process of giving wealth to a favored class. Good money, honest money, "one dollar as good as any other dollar," uniform currency and all the rest is just what that favored class do not want, and what the people, the debtor class, do want. The cry cf the gold bugs for all these things is the old fake. The biggest thief cries "stop thief" the loudest. 0RGAXIZE FOR POLITICAL ACTI0X. There are a great many different motives for the organization of different interests, but it seems absurd to under take to organize labor to relieve itself from the oppression and domination of capitalism by any other means thaa political action. The K. of L. Journal, speaking of this subject in a recent article, says that there is no permanent good to be gained by opposing organ ized labor to organized capitalism and capitalism is well organized all along the line now unless labor can bring into the field more effective weapons than are at tho command of its enemies. What is the weapon with which the battle has been fought in the past? The power cf endurance. The issue of the great Btrikes and lockouts has been which party could hold out longest the capacity fcr enduring hunger, cold and starvation on the one hand against the willingness to forego prof ts and lose interest on investments on the other. With the accumulation of capital, the concentration ot interests and the in- J creasing number of competitors in the labor market, the unequal contest has beea continually becoming more one sided. Every succeeding year sees the position of organized capitalism more firmly intrenched, and the prospect of labor succeeding by means of strikes or any form of organized opposition on the old trade-union lines becoming more hopeless than ever. It Is lolly to tell men to organize to be beater and crushed en masse instead of as individ uals. Organized labor must fight or ganized capitalism with the weapons which will give it the advantage of superiority in numbers. Numerical strength constitutes the sole point of superiority which we have over our adversaries. ' We are many, they are few." The only method in which we can make this numerical superiority tell is by using the ballot. The only tactics which the capitalists really fear are those of political action. So long as organized labor throws away this opportunity of striking at the root of social injustice capitalism can afford to look very complacently at the progress of labor organization, well knowing that, no matter now perfect the system or how strict the discipline, the odds are all in favor of those who possess the means of production and, control the necessaries of life. Instead of "or ganize" simply, the motto of labor reformers should be "organize for political action." THE WA Y TO GET THERE. There is such a thing as being too in dependent. If we would get help from others wemustinkall minordifferences and work together for the chief good. The people must unite against their oppressors, or they will not succeed in overthrowing and driving out the com mon enemy. We cannot end the war if we carry on a guerilla warfare agoinst individuals. It is not individuals we are fighting, but the money power and corpoiate monopolies, combinations of capital controlling great political ma chines with one object, to rob the peo ple. Tho power of the machines then must rii"s t be broken. Every thought ful independent must see the necessity of subordinating his judgment to that of the honest majority in its choice of leaders, and he will vote for every man on his ticket with a determination to elect representatives of the people to till every office, from the lowest to the highest, executive, legislative and judicial. There is not a man on the people's iudependent state and county ticket whose character can be ques tioned. There is not one whose loyalty to the people's interests is doubted. Even our enemies dare not charge the independent candidates with dishonesty. Aud honesty is tbo first great qualifica tion for office. For a long period honesty his practically disqualified him aud rendered well-nif;h impossible a man's election, if nominated. But honest men aro the kind asked for by the aroused people, and such will re ceive their suffrages. Honesty and good sound sense are the essentials. Brilliancy can bo dispensed with in the public servants we aro to elect, especi ally where it must be mortgaged to the railroads and bankers to got the nom inat ion. Therefore think twice before scratching an independent candidate. whatever the old party press may say of him. Let us have a sweeping victory that shall completely break up and demoralize the political gangs that have for so loug robbed and enslaved the people. OpBlaine is rescued from one serious danger. Dr. Burchard is dead. His mouth is closed. CST Jiseph Watson, of Watson & Co., Beatrice, Neb., was a caller at this office last week. He had just returned from Topeka, Kan , and goes to the Kausas City exposition with stock this week. t"Geo. B. Braco, vice-president of the Eureka Gate company, Waterloo, Iowa, was a caller, at Alliance head quarters last Saturday. This company has completed arrangements with State Agent Hartley so that ho will handle their celebrated gates in Ne braska the coming season. He mac'ie our business office a yisit also and we fouud him an agreeable gentleman and one whom it is a real pleasure to get acquainted with. Do we think more of the prohibition party than we do of the princip.t of prohibition? Yes! a hundred times more. Why shouldn't we? The prohibition principle, anv principle, is a mere abstraction. The prohibition party is the realization of the principle, in fact and act. Doesr.cy sane man think more of a dream than ot the reality? Disembodied prohibition that is the principle. Embodied prohibition that is the party, we are for the party first. Stand up aad say so, boys. Voice. We remark to the Volet that last year in Nebraska disembodied prohibition that is the principle received about 80, 000 votes, while embodied prohibition that is the party received only about 0,000. The people don't seem to agree with the Voice. SCREED OF A VEXAL IVAXDERER. Edward Rose water is reported in the columns of his own paper of October 3d as saying: I did not see half a dozen men drunk outside of England. The people on the continent take an occasional glass of beer, but there are no bars and no treating. Then why the anxiety of the emperor of Germany, at the present time, over the alarming prevalence of drunkenness in that empire? Rosewater is further reported as say ing: "Americans who are prohibitionists at home take their wine or beer there and seem to think that it is all right." Rosewater prides himself as being at home personally an abstainer from the use of alcoholic liquors and tobacco. Are we to infer that ho got drunk as soon as he crossed the ocean, and staid drunk till alter he uttered the above insulting lie? SaJwcribe for Thk Alliance. LANCASTER CO. DEPARTMENT Owinatotbeateenceof Mr. Burrow, who IS Slllng' appointments la Nebraska, this de partment baa been siren to the Lancaster Independent Campaign Committee. They furnish the matter herein eontalned and ase responiible for the facta. AL1EX JT. FIELD AXD S. W. BVRX HAM MILL PLEASE TAKE THE STAXD. Both of you gentlemen occupy boner able positions, the gift of tho people; and you at all times must answer to the people. As a starter, it is we believe a fact. that both of you are now, or at least very recently were, large stockholders in the Lincoln park. Is the rumor true that the stockhold ers or officers of Lincoln park borrowed 120,000 or more of the county funds from the cointy treasurer, S. W. Burn ham? or how much was it? If it is true, has that money been re turned into the treasury of the county? Do not both of you gentlemen know that it is unlawful for the county treas urer to loan any of the county funds to any person, company, or corporation? Is it not true, that the Lincoln Park company, repeatedly this past summer, have for a good round price, rented its base ball grounds to professional base ball t3ams who played this game on Sundays to vast crowds on these grounds in the park? When christian people had the play ers arrested ono Sunday for desecrating the Sabbath, did you or did you not idduce Judge Willard Stewart to make a most remarhable decision, holding it lawful to play base ball on Sunday? Is it not true, thatoue or more picnics or parties have been held in Lincoln park on Sunday, during the past sum mer, where many keg of beer were drank and many persons became intox icated, noisy and disorderly t Is it not true, that during many re cent Sundays in this park this oompany has had, or allowed, band concerts, balloon ascensions, steamboat excur sions, circle backs, merry-go-round amusements, horse-training shows and many other noisy performances? Do you think all the foregoing per formances in this park on Sunday are in the interest of decency, order and good morals? Do you think the christian fathers and mothers who have children here going to schools, colleges and churches, would like to have their children attend all the foregoing entertainments at your park on Sundays? Instead of being upholders and en forcers of the law, do yeu not know that both of you, and your associates, have been violators of the law at this park on Sundays? Do you think because of your stand ing in community, and the cowardice of ministers in the pulpit failing to rebuke your conduct, that it is right, corrupting the morals of the young by repeated desecrations of the Sabbath? While many good citizens go to your park on Sunday, is it not a fact that your paik is a great Sunday resort for gamblers, prostitutes and other vile persons, who parade themselves with stunning conspicuousness and use the park as a trysting place for immoral purposes? Was your large and expensive dance hall, in your park, erected In the inter est of good order and good morals? Do j'ou know of any public parks in America where the authorities tolerate or allow Sunday performances, like the foregoing given in Lincoln park? Is not your park run on Sunday solely is a business enterprise to make money? Now, Messrs. Field and Burnham, we would be pleased to have you answer the foregoing questions equarely and without evasion. If you do not, the people will answer for you, on Novem ber 3d, with the Australian ballot. HOW ARE YOU, X0X-PARTISAX JUDICIARY. The republicans in taking their medi cjne ul their late convention intended to place Judge Tibbetts on tho ticket with Field and Hall, but the dose was too much for the rank and tile to stand, and the next best thing was for them to shut off such republicans as Woodwirl and Johnson, and leave tho place vacant for the third judge. But as all unfair schemes fail, so did this one, and apparently Fields and Hall aro not in it to any great extent. The convention was packed with B. & M. strikers, and the country delegates thero found it out, and went home on the cursing train. It is amusing to hoar the different factions talk. The democrats are mad because the machine did not comply with their agreement and endorse Mr. Tibbetts, thereby making their judicial ticket non-partisan in fact. The republicans are mad because a republican convention refused to place a good republican on the ticket with Field and Hall; and between them both it looks like Field and Hall are iu the soup. To stem the tide of public dis favor a aew scheme ha? been struck, and that is, to get a third republican to come out as an independent republican; and Judge Parker has been selected as the man to use his one arm to pull the republican chestnuts out of the fire for Messrs. Field and Hall. This fact is simply breaking faith with the demo crats, as it is well known that hundreds of republicans cannot be induced te vote for Mr. Tibbetts because he is a democrat, and such men would go to Leese or Cromwell. Parker has been selected to catch these votes, and the question is, can he do it? Tho democrats can see through the gauze without spectacles. That Field aud Hall will fail to deliver to Mr. Tibbetts the republican vote, there can be no doubt. If the democrats really desirs to clean out the republican court houses the best and surest way is for them to endorse the independent i04"01'1 t,cket- Tb pendent, pnt iui i iisksx. vaa mvi atvv ovvaueo ajv is a good man, and will make a good judge. We did not ask for any barter or sale in so doing. Our object was to Mr Tlhfiaila An that if titlra KaWaa...aa kam get a good, clean ticket and we have it. We have never shown bad faith, but will stick to Mr. Tibbctts because we believe, if our judicial ticket is elected, every man and every corporation wilL receive his or its just dues without dis tinction, and all litigants will stand be fore an independent judiciary equally before the law. That Judge Parker will receive some voles no one can deny; but that such vote? will come largely fiom Mr. Tibbetts is a foregone conclusion. The inducement held out to the democrats to vote for republican judges has failed, and as Parker fids the vacancy left by the republican con vention, the democrats are no longer under any implied promise to vote for any republican judges. Now it would be no more thaa fair for the democratic party to vote for Tibbetts, Leese and Cromwell, then you will be sure to have a non-partisan judiciary, such as Lancaster county ha never had. No railroad Influence can control them. No promises to be re deemed, except to deal out justice with an even hand to all alike. EDQEkTOX. sng before the Independent State Convention the nomination of J. W. Ed gerton was an assured fact. From all parts of the state came news of delega tions instructed for him, until a large majority of the delegates were so In structed; and when those delegates met at Hastings it was only to carry out the wishes their constituents had already recorded. So to-day, long before election his se lection as Associate Justice of the Su preme Court is an assured fact. Judge Broady, the Chevalier Bayard par excellence of the democratic party, Is unquestionably for him, and brings with him nineteen-twentieths of the demo crats of tho state. County democratic conventions are endorsing him all over the state. The people are enthusiastic for him, and the familiar name of "Our Joe" will be a household word from one end of Nebraska to the other. Last, but not least, the Omaha Bee is opposing him, and making upon him a low-down personal fight, which is an unfailing presage of his success. Senator Kciper, Chas. II. Brown. Adams county, Phelps county, Gage county in fact, men from all sections and all parties, are for Edgerton. The people are making "medicine" and all the money they can raise in Omaha will cot avail to beat Edgerton. t5jT Allen W. Field ran on the repub lican ticket four years ago with Samuel M. Chapman, for district judge in the second judicial district, composing the counties of Otoe, Casn and Lancaster. Field the special favorite of the B. & M. R. R. company, and without the Au stralian ballot, and after the freo use of mouey, and the most strenuous efforts of his friends, ran more than four thou sand votes behind Chapman. REPUBLIC.1X REMIT. Many of the veteran republican work ers in ilw city, who worked hard and spent money freely to elect Allen W. Field and the republican ticket four years ago, are causing great terror to the railroad bosses by cutting and rip ping up not a few candidates of the B. & M. R. R. party. Among these slash ers may be mentioned Parker, Johnston, Woodward, Billingsley, Courtney, Mc Brine, McBride; and to thesi may be added Reese and Hose and many others. The Grand Army republicans goner ally carry loDg, sharp knives. TLe above parties are not backward in say ing tbat they are ired of tho B. & M. railroad bossism. Let the good work go on. Let us for oae term, at least, put new men on guard in the offices. Let tho books be overhauled. Tens of thousands of dollars have gone in to the privato pockets, made out of county funds. Sheriffs, treasurers, clerks, and other officials, have fattened on ill-gotten gains. The railroad and Slate Journal bosses, with their cappers, heelers and strikers, struck down Judge Reese two years ago, and brought the party legislative defeat. Nino of the Lancaster county republican delegates to Hastings convention two years ago, bolted their instructions to vote for Judge Reeso for Supreme Judge. All of these nine delegates are red hot supporters of Field and Hall. Hundreds of republicans in this city bolted Roggen for mayor, among whom are three candidates on the republican ticket Field, Hall and Lansing. Hun dreds of republicans last spring bolted the Journal and the B. & M. R. R. can didate for mayor. Bolting in fact, is fashionable among the republicans in this county, and successful, too. So it will be this time. Railroad bosses, cappers, heelers and strikers must take a back seat. Nothing is more certain in politics, than that that the rotten B. & M. R. R. gang will be routed and bur ied in Lancaster county, in November, by Australian ballots. Pack your trunks, gentlemen, and be ready to vacate your offices in January, for the people are camping on your trail. Notice to People's Party. By request of all the members of the national executive committee of Pf eple's party, I call a meeting of said committee at the Bates House, Indianapolis, Ind t November 10, 1991, at 10 o'clock a. m. I have also been requested to invite the three members from each state con stituting the national central committee of the People's party, and all other friends of our cause to meet with us on above date. Let every one be present. Reform Press Association please pub lish notice. II. E. Taubenkck. Chairman. Marshall, 111., Sept. 23, 1891. 1