o v, THE FARMERS' ALLIANCE, LINCOLN, NEB,, THURSDAY , OCT. 29, 1891. Clje larmira' 2Ulianrf, Published Every Saturday fey Tax Alluxcb Ibushio Co. Oar. Uth and M 8U., Lincoln, Neb, J.ftn.iiow 1yKd"or. J.M.Thomhiob Buslne Kmfff la the beauty of the lillies Christ was born across the sea, With a glory In his bosom That transfigure you and me. As he strove to moke men holy Let ns strive to make them free. Since God is inarching on." Julia Ward Howe. "Laurel crowns cleave to deserts. And power to him who power exerts. "A ruddy drop ef manly blood The surfing sea outweighs. Emerson. "Ho who cannot reason is a fool. He who will not reason is a coward. He who dure not reason is a slave " TO CORRESPONDENTS. Address all business communloaUons to Address matter lor publication to Editor Warmer' Alliance. Articles written on both sides of the paper OaaiMH M ultra. ery "" w."-"-- t Marulo cannot be used. rtJBLISHID WEBKLT AT CORNER tlTH AND M STREETS, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. J. BURROWS. Editor. f. M. THOMPSON, Business Ma'irr. Tks Great Alliance Weekly and the Leading Independent Paper ol the Slats. SEVEN COLUMN QUARTO. It will always be found on the elde of the people Bnd wholly devoted U taeadvocaov of safana prlnoiploe tn cute and nation. IT 18 YOUR PAPER. KUPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. Subscription, tl 00 per annum, Invariably la advance. Five annual subscriptions 14.0(5, OUR BOOK LIST. The beet reform literature obtainable oan fee had by ordering any of theae bonks. The Railway Probltm (new) Stiokney....$ HO looking uaciwara, uenaniy on Itr Huguet, (new) Donnelly 50 Oaaaara Uulumn. nu 60 60 6C 60 60 A Kentucky Colonel. Reed.. Driven from Boa to Sea, goat, A Tramp la Society, Cowflroy Klohard's Crown, weaver Great Hed Draaon. Woolfolk. Brtre'e Financial Oatechlam. Brio 60 Money Monopoly, Maker 86 Labor and Capital, Kellogg HI Msarro and John Sherman, Mrs, Todd ,. 86 ra, loaa ,, so .... loots. I ....10" V ....10" J ucren Financial vonipiraoiet. awe naisara urouiar, ueatn Batrieaand Bread. Homer Oar Kepublioan Monarchy, Voldo !"i Alliance and Labor Songster lOo, perdos t 10 lewMualoedl'n, papercuverato. too board " S6o. 60 Ta lARMtas' Am,iamci one year and any Mot. book on our list for $1.36. Sam and any 26ot, book on our list for $1.10. Addreaeall order and make all remltt- i payable to TBI ALLIANCE PCnUSHlTJO CO. Lincoln, Nebraska. independent Peoples' Ticket Independent State Ticket. . For Associate Justice of Supremo Court, JOSEPH W, EDGEUTON, Douglas County. For Regents of the University A. D'ALLEMAND, of Furnas Co. . A. IIADLEY, of Greoloy Co. Independent County Ticket. For District Judpes . WM. LEESE, A. S. TIBBETTS, OLIVER W. CROMWELL. For County Treasurer O. HULL, Mill Precinot. For Sheriff WM, F. ELFELDT, Buda. For Clerk of District Court ELIAS BAKER, of Lincoln. For County Clerk WM. S. DEMAREE, Saltillo Precinct. For County Superintendent Prof . U.S. BOWERS, Llnooln. For County Commissioner MATT MAUEL, Little S.alt Precinct. For County Judge W. S. WYNN. of Lincoln, For Coroner Da HOSMER, of Lincoln. For County Surveyor , J. A. ROBINSON, of Lincoln. For Justices of the Peace FRED SHEPHERD, J.C.MeNERNY, H.C. PALMER. For Constables WILLIAM LIVINGTON, A. J. WARWICK. Assessors, First ward, Wheatley Mjck ehraite; Second ward, C. II. Waito; Third ward, John Currie; Fourth ward, F. E.Sperry; Fifth ward, H. L. Klock; Sixth ward, C. Marshal; Seventh ward, W.J.Coates. J.V.WOLFE, Chm n Stato Central Com. C.H. PIRTLE, ' Sec'y State Central Cora. HEADQUARTERS OF STATE CEN TRAL COMMITTEE, LLNDELL HOTEL. Lancaster County Central Committee. Wm. FOSTER, Chairman. S. S. JONES, Secretary. CT"The Bee now claims that Post allowed himself to rest under the cloud of seduction to shield a friend. This is an open pjgiary on Cleveland. ..'-. PASS NO. 2 22,493. When the B.f X. Journal published its statement that the above numbered past had been "issued to Mr. Burrows, it knew it was publishing an infamous lie by withholding part of the truth. At the same time it obtained .information of the pass having been issued, it also learned could not fail to have learned that the pass had been returned un used. An editor who will resort to such infamous methods to besmirch a political opponent is a well, we cannot defile our pages by Baying what he is. POST'S CRIME. We publish on our first page full and conclusive evidence of the guilt of A M Post of seducing a 10-vear-old girl under promise of marriage. The crime was committed many years ago. Mr. Post's vile lie denying all guilt was ut tered onlv ten davs aeo. Do you want that man for Supreme Judge. THE LAST APPEAL Th!.s is the last opportunity we will have to address the voters of the state before the election on next Tuesday. At the opening of the campaign we fully concurred in Mr. Post's wish that the contest should be a clean one, free from all kinds of personal abuse and mud slinging. But Mr. Post's support ers did not coincide in that view, and began a battle of unsurpassed meanness against Mr. Edgerton. and have kept it up ever since. We invite attention to this fact, viz: that with all the personal abuse that has been heaped upon our candidate, not one nlsgle damaging fact has been stated against him. He has simply been pronounced incapable, and not a scintilla of evidence oflered to prove him so. He has made a brilliant campaign. Wherever he was before known he was deservedly and immensely popular. Wherever he has appeared on the rostrum he has won hosts of friends Ills election is an assured fact. We now state his majority at S5,000. This is low. Many claim a much higher figure. But the vote will be light. His chance for carrying both Lancaster and Douglas counties is good. This will be a remark able victory, and will have a marked ef fect upon the campaign of 161)2. A rev olution is impending that may give us the rresldont next year. Farmers f Nebraska, the destiny of the new party, and the future of this State, is in your hands. The Supreme Court of this State has entirely surrend ered to the railroad power. It has en tirely deserted the people, and cast its lines with the corporations. Mr. Tost is satisfactory to these cor porations. His judicial record, as we showed last week, is on their side. He Is thoir man, and that is why he was nominated. It is for you to say whether they shall tighten their clutch upon that court by placing in it another of their chosen friends for six years more. A vote for Post is a vote for extending the lease of corporate power. A vote for Edgerton is a vote for the people for honesty for manliness for integrity for Justice. Which will you have? But there is another issue which is of vital importance to you upon which your vote next Tuesday will bo consid ered in some sense a verdict. That is the financial issuo. All parties have this year made specific declarations up on this subject. That of the independ ent party is the only one which is squarely on the side of the people. The republican declaration is a complete surrender to the money power an ao ceptance of every dogma which that power is now advocating. That power has robbed you by chang Ing the standard of payment of the na tional debt atter the debt was created robbod you of untold millions doubled the burden of the debt and halved your ability to pay it. That power robbed you again by the demonetization of silver, depressing the prices of your products and property and Increasing the burden of your debts. mat power has by the same means depressed the value of all our export able products while we are a debtor country. That power has built up millionaires by class legislation, and made tramps by the same process. By the same process it has so depressed values and increased the purchasing power of money that the burden of the national debt is greater to-day than it was in 18G6. By its special legislation of the past twenty -five years it has loaded the na tion with a mountain of debt beyond even hnite comprehension, placed by tho best authorities at thirty thousand millions of dollars! a sum so vast that our producers can never hope to pay it under the present financial system. By its special legislation it has given aggregated wealth under corporate forms a potency which threatens the people with industrial subjugation as well as political annihilation. Your verdict next Tuesday is of vital importance to yeurselves and your pos terity. V ill you vote for a party name which means nothing, and surrender to the powers which are using that party to ruin you or will you vote for your selvesfor the people for independence and political freedom? BORN FOR A MIGHTY WORK. To say that the old party press, ma chines, managors and palaoe car pass engers, were greatly shaken up and confounded by the vote of the united in dependents a year "go, is to state a man ifest truth. How could a party so sud denly spring intj existence? Organiza tion is not easy, it is usually a slow pro cess, and especially difficult is it when it must grow by disintegrating other or ganizations. But the people's independ ent party, Minerva-like, sprang full armed into the political arena, and in more states than one overwhelmed with defeat the opposing political titans. They had treated with contempt the people's cause, and all previous efforts to build up third parties. Such efforts had, tvfter the most herculean exertions, failed, f ad '.t had come to be the com mon belief that they would always fail, that the republican and democratic art ies would live forever. What brought this party of the people Into existence? It was divinely born. Conceived by infinite Justice, its birth pangs were the sufferings of the people. It was brougb into the world by their groans, by the sore travail, the unrequited labor of the oppressed. It was created for a divine purpose, a mighty work, and it will be -Immortal till its work is done." Its enemies are "legion" and tbey will com bine their political forces as they are beginning to do. But "the deep sea" will gather them in finally and the coun try will be reitcued from the power of evil. The new party is divine in its concep tion and purposes, but human in its com position. Its enemies without will strengthen it, bnt those who creep in and profess its faith while accepting the bribes of its foes will weaken it. It is however greater than any man or any number of selfish men who may be in it Foes within and foes without can not destroy it, for it stands upon eternal right and truth and justice. "Men miy come, and men may go," but the truth goes "on forever." The cause of hu manity is God's cause. The forces that make for righteousness are irresistible. TUB PEOPLE'S WILL IRRESISTIBLE. The desperate efforts of the old party press and speakers to convince the vot ing public that the Farmers' Alliauce and independent party is already in control of worse men than the old party bosses, the railread tools which the peo ple declared independence from and voted against a year since, are am using. lha piople's cause is just there is no de nying it. And they will find honest men to represent them. Their ablest enemy but a few days since stated in are publi can speech, that "for many years there had been wide-spread discontent among tho peoplo of Nebraska." The people, said he, bad become "exasperated by the domination of monopolies" and "or ganized the Farmers' Alliance" for self defense. The hitherto republicans and democrats, finding they could not get centrol of the old party machinery, concluded to unite a year ago in a new people's party to fight the monopoly power, and so notorious was the legisla tive corruption and oppression of this power that nothing could be said against the objects of te new party. It cast an amazingly large vote, and but for a republican-democratic combine would not only have passed anti-monopoly laws of greatest importance, but a people'sgov- ernor would have signed them. Tho republican and democratic machines joined their forces before and after election to defeat the people's will, and partially succeeded. Passes were pro vided by the railroads for all members, clerks and other employes who would accept them. Lobbies with unlimited money worked for the railroads, and a few poor devils ctJnld not resist the strain of temptation. The will of the people was thwarted, but a reckoning time remains. All who stood in its way must yet meet the dammed Niagara, and all who were not true to tbeir interests, true to the people who honored them with their confidence, will be swept down In the swelling torrent of popular Indignation. The people last year had had no op portunity to try thoir representatives and it could not be expected that all would come unscathed through the fire of temptation. But the false are and will continue to bo denounced, and their places will be filled by honest men. The cause is the cause of justice, and in spite of monopoly . republicans, demo crats, hypocrites, bribes, and the devil himself, it will sweep on to victory. THE CAMPAIGN IN LANCASTER COUNTY. 1 he tight in this county has been a reasonably clean one. The iudepend ents have had no disposition to throw mud, the republicans have had no op portunity. The independent nominees are undoubtedly clean. No word of re proach can be uttered airainst such men as O. Hull and his associates oh our ticket. The financial record of Mr. Lansing is a fit subject for criticism, as he is running for an office of trust. But we do not know that his moral character has been impeached. And the same may be Baid of the other candidates. The battle in Lancaster is uon. The In dependents will carry the county. It wil be by a close vote, but we shall carry it, We shall come in from the country with an increased majority over last year, which will be mot by a largely increased vote in the city. The Australian ballot law passed by the Independent legisla ture will have its natural aud beneficent effect. Working men cannot longer be bull-dozed. They will vote thoir honest sentiments without fear of losing their job. As for the boodlors, while they would willingly buy votes if they could, they will not put their money into goods they cannot see delivered. Lancaster, sure of an independent victory, sends greeting to the rural counties, and says to them, DO YOUR DUTY AS WE WILL DO OURS, AND TUESDAY NEXT WILL SEE NE BRASKA REDEEMED FROM COR PORATE DOMINATION. ARE PASSES BRIBES' 'The Journal believes the question whether a pass is a bribe depends on the mental or moral attitude of the acceptor of the same." Tub Alliance believes that no free pass was ever offered to a public official or an editor by a corpor ation which was not intended as a bribe. There may be cases, and undoubtedly are, whore they do not have the effect of a bribe. But we do not on that account diminish our condemnation of them. And we say to all independents that you must stand by your principles, aad be willing to make personal sacri fices for the cause you espouse. From the beginning of time no great cause has been won without the devotion of adherents who would sacrifice their lives, if need be, for its success. No greater cause ever moved mankind than the one for which the independents are battling. They must show them selves worthy of the cause they are advocating. TTMiiY? lUI'V .Mil AND -THE FREE PASS VILLAINY." An open letter from J. Burrows, to whom it may concern: On my return to Lincoln on Saturday the 24 ih I was shown an article in the Slate Journal of the 22nd, under the caption of "The Bribe Takers," in which was the following: "On Feb- 25,1891, there was issued to Jay Burrows, on request of R. R. Ran dall, from the office of the C. B. & Q railroad, a round trip pass No. Z 22,492, to Chicago and return, good until March 31, lfcUl." I also saw the Journal of Saturday, in which I was critizised for having re ceived a pass while denouncing the roads for issuing and other men for using them. In bis issue of the 22nd the Journal editor said "for J. Burrows we can only blush." I now append a letter from Mr. R. R. Randall to the editor of the Stale Jour nal, a copy of which was furnished to me by Mr. Randall, as follows: Chicago, III.. Oct. 23. 1891. Editor Nebraska State Journal: In your issue of the 22(1 Inst. I find a paragraph under the head of the "Bribe lakcis, reading as iouows: un rebruary 25. 1891. there was is sued to Jay Burrows, on request of R. u. uandaii, from tna Umaha olhce of the C B & Q railroad a round trip pass, No. Z22.492 to Chicago and return. good until March 31. 1891." in justice to Mr. Uurrows, I wish to say, 1 did receive such a pass, but did not give it to him. I returned the pass to Geo. W. Holdi-ege, General Manager 11. & M. R R. Mr. Burrows was doinz what ho could to secure the appropria tion of $50,000 for the Columbian Ex position, and in view that he miaht be one of a committee appointed by the legislature to select site for Nebraska exhibit, this pass was secured to relieve mm from any personal expense, should this committee be necessary. When such committee was not named, I re turned the pass to Omaha, to the par ties who gave it. lours Respectfully, R. R. AND ALL. I will add to Mr. Randall's stJ.eruent that I had not solicited and did not ex pect any appointment on the proposed commission, and Mr. Randall's obtain ing of tho pass was a voluntary kindness on his part without my knowlege that I knew nothing of it until I saw it in the Journal on Saturday. The term "issued to J. Burrows," used by both the Journal and Mr. Randall, is only true in the sense that it was issued in my name. In the sense of its having been tendered to, lecelved by Or asked for by me, it is not true. On Saturday evening, the 24th, I wrote a short statement of the facts and sent it by a messenger to the editor of the Journal in ample time for bis Sunday morning edition, requesting him, as his article did me the grossest injustice, to give the facts the same publicity he had given the charge. This he refused to do. This would have been an actof simple justice which we would have cheerfully granted to the editor of the Journal. That editor says he "blushes for J. Burrows." That he can blush will be a revelation. But he can save his blushes for a moro deserving subject. His ef fort to smirch the writer of this letter has signally failed, and always will fail. The day I am recreant to the principles I support I will cease their advocacy. J. Borrows. THE HONEST MILLIONAIRE. "Christianity is the only sure founda tion for character, and character is a positive advantage to anyone, from the day laborer to the millionaire." Rev. Chas. B. Newnan. We find tho above clerical statement in the Church Helper of this city. But we fail to comprehend how such preach ing and teaching can help the church or tho world. If Christianity helps make millionaires the day laborer doesn't want any of it, and if it helps the day laborer to secure what is justly due him the millionaire is most surely op posed to it. But we find the millionaires in the churches and they hear nothing there which offends them. Does not Mr. Newnan know, do not tho churches know, that a man of character can not become a millionaire, that to become possessor of a million he must be a thief, he must rob day laborers of their rights? We invite the reverend gentleman's attention, to a line of thought which may ba new to him, which will sustain our position. Lest we should be thought an enemy of the church we hasten to say that we consider "the preacher of righteousness," the most needed man on earth, and that no man's services to the world, to men here and note, are worth as much. Now, how long would it tako such a "laborer," "worthy of his hire," to accumulate a million dollars? If ho is paid $1,000 a year and can lay half of it up "on earth" he will have to live and preach two thousand years be fore he can earn and save a million dollars. Is Mr. Newnan prepared to admit that the preacher must preach that long befofe he benefits the business world as much as the millionaire? It is hardly likely that ho will caro to ad mit it. But let us see how much a man must lay up each year of an ordinary business lifetime, of fifty years, to amass a mil lion. After paying all his living ex penses he must put by an average of $20,000 a year surplus. Our United States supreme court judges, who must bo men of most extensive learning and the peers of the world's greatest in in telectual gifts, after many years of prac tice and preparation we elevate to the highest, most useful, permanent office, and they are ready to serve us for $10,000 a year and pay their necessary very considerable expenses out of this salary. They would probably as just judges have to bear cases on the supreme bench at least 200 years btfore they could be millionaires. But we need not confine ourselves to estimates of a million. Rockefeller thirty years ago was a poor man. To day he is worth at least $150,000,000 and his income is admitted to be about $25,009 a day. He is a deacon in the Baptist church in good standing, has never been rebuked for 'laying up treasures on earth,' and his character in the church to which he belongs is unquestioned. Must we then conclude that he is a just man, a man of charac ter in God's sight?. If so he is worth to the country 0,125 times as much as the average minister, 912 times as much as the chief justice of the United States, and 185 times as much as President Harrison. These figures are enough to shake any man's belief in the honesty and usefulness of millionaires. Let us then question how they obtain their wealth. Tbey are not intellectually greater than other men. They labor no harder than other men. They produce no more, and are no more economical than their equals or superiors who remain poor. Rockefeller obtained his fortune by an agreement with the railroads to deal unjustly with his rivals. They granted him rebates which enabled him to financially ruin and crush out all in the same business, and now he sits as king compelling all the world who would have illuminating oil to come to him and pay him a price which he despotically fixes, a price so far above the C03t as to amount to the enormous net revenue of $25,000 a day, and more to others. O.hers share the Standard oil throne with him, and their royal, self-decreed revenues are added his and paid chielly by the laboring classes. It is these monopoly thrones which make and have made all our millionaires, railroad kings, coal and iron kings, and the rest. The usury kings of this country, taking traitorous advantage of our national peril and corrupting our representatives, secured the passage of acts of congress which enabled them to buy up our bonds in currency which their exception clause act had deprecated, thus with one law doubling their wealth and the people's indebtedness. Other robber acts sup plemented this, silver was demonetized, again doubling the wealth of the money lenders and the load of debtors, aud for thirty years the bankers have been given the monopoly of money loaning, loaning other people's, over and over, as well as their own. Each bank could buy after the war was over in currency which their exception clause act had depreciated $100,000 in bonds with greenbacks which cost but $40,000, and this $100,000 not only drew interest of five or six per cent and was exempt from taxation, but was a deposit upon which they received $90,000 of new money in government endorsed cur rency which they could loan and re loan to the people at high rates of inter est, the bonds being by after acts made payable in gold also. It was estimated by the New York Herald in 1888 that our national bank currency cost the people, and paid to the banks, twenty- five per cent yearly. Other testimony and official statistics prove the reliabil ity of this estimate. Without consider ing then the increased value given to the holders of bonds and mortgages by the steady and enermous contraction of tho currency, by the retiring and burn ing up of hundreds of millions of pre vious money to increase the value of bank notes, the rates of interest which the banks are able to charge pays all their running expenses and doubles the capital of the idle stockholders as often as every four years. It was this gang of shylockn, this foul brood of bankers who, by infamous congressional legislation doubled and quadrupled our war debt, made all debtors dependent on them for credit, got possession of the capital, transpor tation, mines and machinery of tho country, and by despotically fixing rates, wages and market prices drew into the hands of 31,000 men mora than half of all acucmulated wealth, giving to the members of this robber gang an average of more than a million each. That is the way our honest (?) millionaires were made, by class legislation, by un just laws and by enslaving and impov erishing the working classes. And the clergy says nothing against this way of making money. Instead it accepts with thanks the wealth so gathered, and educates its ministry with stolen money. Its colleges, seminaries and universities are endowed by such men as Rockefeller and these endow ments draw Bible usury from the peo plo to pay its teaching and preaching professors. THE B. $ M. RAILROAD AND THE PASS-TAKERS. What can be said of the honor of an institution that will issue passes and then exhibit its books for political pur poses to show which of its political opponents have accepted its favors. Passes are first issued as bribes, and then the fact of their issua is used for purposes of revenge or to make capital for political favorites. This is a strik ing lesson in the science of organized wealth as a political power. It ought also to be a warning to all who are dis posed to accept passes. Like Bacquo's ghost, they may rise to confront you. But what scorn is too withering, what contempt too contemptuous, for the low skunks who, to serve the causo of a soulless corporation, will issue these passes right and left, and then hold the knowledge of their issue as a threat over the takers of them? CA11 the papers of the country which are named "Post" are changing their names. A FRAUDULENT AUDITOR'S REPORT. His satanlc majesty Auditor Benton has issued a report of the expenses and appropriations of the last legislature which is a square fraud, intended solely to misinform and mislead the public as to that legislature. Of course he has done this for political purposes. He is as unprincipled and unscrupulous as any villain that was ever immured with in fonr walls. If he had his just dues he would be wearing the striped clothes of a convict to-day. and be doing duty on Charley Mosher's contract. Now for the facts about his fraudulent report. He gives as "legislative expenses, 22n1 session, $175,000." He then gives as total paid to mem bers, officers and employes of the senate, $37,410.30. Total paid to members, officers and employes of the house, $52,245 35. He then gives as the total paid for all incidental expenses of this legislature $40,023.57. He now adds as a guess for claims outstanding, $1C,000. This is probably three or four times too great. These claims are due as soon as created, and in these hard times they are gener ally filed at once. But accepting his villainship's guess as correct, and we have this result: Total Senate f37,410 30 Houao 52,205.35 " Incidentals 40.022.57 Outstanding. Hen ton's guess 10,000.00 Total 13,638.23 This is $35,304 less than he reports for "legislative expenses." If he had cared to be honest, and did not wish to deceive the public, he would have named this sum as an "unexpended appropriation," and thus balanced his books. ( But he prefers bad book-keeping to candor, providing he can throw a slur upon the independent legislature. Now let us compare these legislative expenses with those of the 21st session. In his report of that session, after giving the incidental expenses, Mr. Benton adds this note: "la addition to the above there are a ft w vouchers unadjusted which will be paid out of this appropria tion, but amount cannot be estimated." For tho 22nd session Benton found no difficulty in "estimating" these "few vouchers" at ten thousand dollars! Ex cluding thin guess, which he does not include in report of 21st session, the ex penses of the independent legislature was $129,638.22, against $159,815 27 as expenses for the 21st session, or $30,177. 05 in favor of the independents. The little Bohemian devil who edits the Bee is making a great hue and cry about the expenses and extravagance of the 22nd legislature. Let us look at some of the items of these "extravagant appropriations." As we pointed out be fore the legislature met, there had been large sums expended by republican offi cials which had to be met by our legis lature. These sums, unless paid, be como an interest bearing debt against the state. These were a legacy left by "extravagant" republican officials, and had to be either paid or repudiated. Some of them were as follows: Insane Asylum at Lincoln $12,000 Htate university o.ouu Norfolk - 9,516 Hastlnirs Kearney 5,300 Milford 3.SO0 Miscellaneous Items 10,000 Outstanding claims 25,0,0 Total $119,806 Now add. for capitol grounds 12,320 Capitol water works LOTS Frescoing governor's rooms and llb'ary 2.P00 Public notice of cons't amendments.... 11,733 Oxnard sugar bounty 7,364 MakiBg a total of $135,202 Every dollar of which was a legacy from the previous two years' expenses Now add as p, credit the unexpended balance of appropriation for 22nd legis lature, fraudulently suppressed by Ben ton, $35,304. For monumental lying, and misrepre sentation of statistics, the brass-collared railroad striker who edits the Bee is un excelled in Nebraska or elsewhere. Dishonest, unscrupulous, unprincipled, he and Tommy Benton should be yoked together, nod be identured by the state to Charley Moaner for time and eternity. Another legacy of the republican party was the Increase in judicial dis tricts and judges. The 21st session had to provide for only twenty-one judges and twenty-one stenographsrs, at a cost of $108,000. The 22nd, or independent legislature had to provide for twenty eight judges and twenty-eight steno graphers, at a cost of $224,000, or an in crease of $56,000. As a matter ef fact, notwithstanding Rosewater's lying, the 22nd legislature was the most economic, as well as .the most honest and patriotic one ever as sembled in the state. LET US REFLECT. Two sisters, Margaret and Bridget Breen, aged seventy-five and seventy eight years, starved two weeks since is Boston, Massachusetts. . They were found in the two attic rooms of a four story brick tenement in the rear of No. 61 Prince street, where they had lived thirty years. The lower floors of the houso are occupied by Portugese fami lies. The two sisters had not been able to work for five or six years, aud the older one was blind. Some of the other occupants of tho tenement state that they had repeatedly offered them food, but they refused to accept charity, and it ii evident that they preferred starva tion to the alternative of beggary and the hard, loveless, meager, humiliating support which is furnished paupers Both women were very much emaciated, and there were absolutely no traces of food in their rooms. What is tho sociological lesson of this simple news record ? To answer let the people grapple with these facts and re flect upen them; Death by hunger in sight of tho pala tial residences of scores of millionaires! Sixty years of labor so poorly paid that five years of attic lite in feeble old age must be ended in the agonies of slow starvation I Erect, heroic women who preferred one of the most painful deaths to the abasement and abuse which are forced upon the helpless poor! Laws and legalized monopolies which eaable some to grow rich without labor, (legalized robbery) and force others to labor in poverty all their lives long, compelling them in old age to beg or die! A kingly, plutocrat class whose royal titles and prerogatives the law transmits to "their heirs and assigns forever!" A dependent, producing class, the toiling millions, with manhood, woman hood, aspiration and high moral char, acter largely crushed out of them! A ruling, unjust class, a dependent serving class and the gulf widening between them! Shall we have, as a result, Ciesar's Column or Bellamy's nationalism? Certainly the former, if the power of th rich to fix prices and enslave is not soon checked, and the government wrested from their grasp. LOOK OUT FOR ROORBACKS. Be ready for the customary political trick of the old parties, the seading out Lof lies on the eve of election too late for exposure and contradiction The re publican party is in a desperate case and will resort to anvthinir which promises to injure the people's inde pendent candidates. R0SETS CAMPAIGN PROGRESSING. Rosewater has again spoken his piece. this time at Genoa. He proves by "a mire of assertions" that the people's in dependent candidates are all either fools or knaves, and that the railroad repub lican candidates are the only candidates who will care for the people's interests. As is frequently remarked, any candi date for office that Rosewater endorses it is always safe to vote airainst. and anv man whom he bitterly attacks, unless he happens to Ve a personal enemy of Rosey's, it is wisdom to believe in and support. The little Bee editor is the biggest hypocrite and the worst political liar known in Nebraska. He joined in a railroad conspiracy to defeat Reese, while professing to be his friend. He knifed the republican candidate for governor last year, usinar his utmost in fluence, under cover, to elect Boyd. He has never failed to pose as the people's friend, while secretly serving their ene mies for his personal benefit and ag grandizement. He is the finished, per fect, completedemagogue.characterless, cunning, covetous of wealth and power. ruled by the worst passions of his race. but so widely is he now known that his influence is waning. THE C, B. -f Q. AND THE INTER STATE COMMERCE LAW. The pass which Mr. Randall obtained but which Mr. Burrows never received, was numbered Z 22,492. It was an inter-state pass, and as nuch prohibited and illegal under the inter state com merce law. Its eagerness to improve what it thought was a chance to be smirch Mr. Burrows has led the Journal to expose its patron saint the C, B. & Q. road, as a constant violator of tho law. Nearly 22,500 passes, probably nine-tenths of them issued to persons who are in no sense employes of the road. This exposure may probably result in a prosecution of the road. It certainly ought lo. SECRQTAR Y PIRTLE'S PASS. The following letters show the facts about Secretary Pirtle's Pass, and his rejection of the same. (" Walt " is Walt Seeley, secretary republican state com mittee:) Headquarters Republican State Central Com. f Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 28, 1891. Friend Pirtle: 1 have been unable to get your pass till recently' and when I saw you I for got to give it to you ia my " rush." "Better late than never." Please ac knowledge rec't. Yours, &c, Hastily. Walt. Headquarters People's ) Independent Party, f Lincoln, Neb. Sept. 29, 1891. Friend Seely: Dear Sir: Yours of Sept. 28th re ceived with pass inclosed. There is no doubt but that it would be improper for me as secretary of tho independent committee to retain a pass. I therefore herewith return the same with kind thanks for the kindness you have ex tended to me. Yours Resp. C. H. Pirtle. tlTln the tenth assembly district of New York city 510 people live, eat, drink, work and sleep, on each acre. Try to conceive of it, forty-two people living on a spot of ground 100 by 25 feet. tOne firm of mortgage brokers in Kansas amassed a capital of $10,000,000 between 18:0 and 1890. Chairman Mercer to Republican Speakers. ' 'lie good to the democrats. They hold the balance of pow er; we can't get there without their help. If we can't secure more of them than we have so far our cake is dough. The Australian ballot law interferes with our usual method of obtain ing votes; therefore all attacks upon the tariff should be aban doned, and it will be well to in timate that reciprocity might be profitably carried much further than it is likely to be especi ally in this election. Be good to the democrats." S. D. Mercer, Chin. Kepub. State Com.