THE FA KM El W ALLIANCE LlXCOl. NKH.. THUKSDAY. FEB. H. 12. Gljc lorwcra' 2Ulimue, FuUtoM IwT Balurday by TlIK AlXIAJfCI PcBLlSIiEfO Co. Cor. lit aad Bf Luwun, Keo. la the beauty of the lilKes Christ wu born acroea the sea, Wlta a glory In ais bosom That transfigures you and me. As h strove to make men holy Let ua strive to make them free. Since God is marching on." Julis Ford Fowl. "Laurel crowns cleave to deserts And power to him who power exerts." "A ruddy drop of manly blood The surging sea outweighs." Emerson "Ho who cannot reason Is a fool. Be who will not reason Is a coward. He who dare not reason Is a slave N. K P. A. TO CORRESPONDENTS. IHMi all business oommunioations to "rmaV pubiloatJo-to Editor "c&trt both .Mas of ttelger anot be ueed. Very long oomanuiioeiioua, aaeruW eannotbouaed. IHE FARMERS ALLIANCE rUBUSHKD WEEKLT AT CORNER UTH AND M STREETS, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. J. BURROWS, Editor. J. U. THOMPSON. Business Ma'gr. Tat 6ml Alliancs Weakly an ike Leasing laasttatsnl Pis of Hw SUIa. SEVEN COLUMN QUARTO. It will always be fauns on the side of the aoolo and wholly devoted to tkeadTooaa of tafem prlaelplM la state and nation. , IT 18 YOUR PAPER. CmiETE HI EVERY DEPARTMENT. ebsorlpUon, 11.00 per anaam. Invariably ta advance. FIts annual subsoripUoas $4.00. OUR I0OK LIST. The best re font literature obtainable can he had by orderlat any of these books. The Railway Prolm (new) 8tkikney....$ M aveektof Backward, Bellamy U Br Hag-vet, (new) Donnelly M Oaiiart OolumB, W A Kentucky Colonel, Boed - M Driven from Bee to Boa, Toat, M A Tramp la Society, Cowdrey H tohard's Orowa, Weaver W Great Bed Drafoo, Woolfolk U Brlca'l Fin ancrtal 0 ateohlsm. Brioo. ..... U Honey Monopoly, Baker B5 . Labor and Capital, Kellorr 8S rum and John Sherman. Mrs, Todd... M wren Ftnaaelal Oonsplraolea....l0eta,1 The Hassard Clroular, Heath... .10" r Bahtos and Bread, Houser W" J Oar Republican Monarohy, Yolde The Coning- Climax la the Destinies of Ajnerloa by Letter a Hubbard AlUaooa and Labor Boogstor 10 per dos w Muatoedl'a, paper eowerSOo. N m m m board Ho. to 110 100 160 Tsos 1 arm as' Aluaxcb year aad any let. hook on our list for II . Sana aad any Mot book a our list for 11.10. Address all order aad make all remltt nees payable to rUM AIXIAMOBl PUBLISHING CO. Maeoln, Mebraaka. fiorn The Arena. The Vengeance of Despair. Beware the bands that bef in supplloatlon now: Their time will oojoe, and then God help ual Cod help all Who through their yean of plenty paid not all they owed To Want. Want's hands are pale and thin; but there's a tore That's strerger far than flesh and blood it la a pow'r That's alow to concent rats I but crushed, it strengthens aa It (Twa, and hardens through lonr years of pressure years ' Of cold, aad sweat, and hunger years of ohllJren'atoartl And when its time Is some, Pity will not be near, Mor Faar, but set hard lips whenoe trtm bltacs have all fled. And eyes in whose iry depths the light of hope is dead. Ay, eruel as the tiger's claw from out the lair la hopeless hate! Beware the vengeance of despair 1 SPECULATORS AND RAILROAD COMPANIES. The above named are two institutions which personify selfishness. Neither of them are altogether unmixed evil, they both develope certain phases which are injurious to the community. When railroad corporation monopolizes ter minal advantages, or having gained possession of an indispensable location, refuses except for an exorbltent con sideranoa to permit another road to share its advantages, even though it bo to the great injury of the community; or when a town lot speculator aids in establishing railroad depots in different quarters of a growing city, it is time that some authority higher than either of tnem should intervene and preserve the rights oi the citizens ana the inter ests of the city. It is too late, and men, it would seem, are too intelligent to permit the estab lishmentof several different railroad depots in a city like Lincoln. There is certainly legal power enough in the corporation to control this matter, if there is not there ought to be. It would be as sensible to go back to tbe stage coach or ox team as to establish any but union depo's. No franchise should be granted by the council for any other kind. If the arrogant and domineering It. & M. company stands in the way, it would be a very easy matter for the mayor to pull it up short on Home of the illegal privileges it is usurping. Not a 1ay passes but it violates the law with impunity. Crossings are obstructed and trains are run at an illegal speod Almost every hour oat of the twenty lour. Every man of sense know that placing the depots of important lines ol road, like the R I. and B. & M. a mile or more apart would be a calamity to the city, irreparable for many years. No selfishness of any road, nor no interest of any speculator, should be allowed to accomplish it. Tbe old scheme of holding up a city bv a threat of going around it, should have no terrors fur Lincoln. Its sub urbs will soon be its glory. Let them noma and let them prow, and let Lin .oln brinir whoias&la houses within her borders, and a wealth of commerce will belong to her. But lot us bare a union depot, and no ether. " Editor 1 gtSSvr.:..:..- bu.. new THE DEMOCRATIC E0RIZ05. The events of the pant few months which bear upon the action of thi next democratic national convention possess unos"l interest, and show in a striking manner the extent to which political schemes and personal ambition which are absolutely unprincipled may effect the destinies of this nation These events revolve around one man a maa whoso steady political success has never been excelled in the history of this country This man, in the last year, has seemed to be the center of democratic politics, and the source and inspiration of every democratic movement. His name is David B. Hill. We have long regarded Mr. H Jl as a successfal ward politician temporarily transplanted into the broad er theatre of state politics. But we are eompolled to revise our estimate of the man. While he was that at the start, be is now something more. He is now forty-eight years of age. For fif teen years he was a successful lawyer. In this time be gained a reputation for great industry and great temperance, and was an acknowledged leader in a local bar of much ability. Entering politics, be seems to have never met a reverse. He was successfully alderman of Elinlra, mayor, member of the assem bly, Lieut. Governor and Governor. He was president of the decocratio state convention in 1871 and in 1877, and was for two successive terms President of tbe New York State Bar Association. Jan. 1, 1889 be became Governor on tbe resignation of Mr, CJeveland, who had been elected President. He was elected Governor in the (all of 1885 and re-elected in 1888, and served out the full term to which he was last elected, which expired Deo. 81, 1801. In the spring of 1801 he was elected a U. 8. Senator from the State 6f New York, aad took his seat Jan. 7, 1803, His sovon years of continuous service as governor of Now York Is the longest period servod by my one man in tbe last 70 years. Mr. Hill is in one sense a political anomaly, and it is safe to say that no other cuntry in the world could produce exactly such a man. In his personal characteristics he sooms to be absolutely clean, lie is a total abstainer uses tooacco in no form is scrupu lously honest in his business relations cures little for the accumulation of wealth and yet in political methods is absolutely unscrupulous and unprin cipled. lie is a bachelor, and seoms to be alone in tbe world. He has the reputa tion of being almost a woman-hater. He has one mud passion, and that is the political advancement of Dvld li. Hill. Politics is his religion, his life, his wife, father, mother, family and littlo ones, and self is his center and bis circumfer ence. He is possessed, soul and body, mind and heart, by the devil of his own ambition. We have been thus particular in do- scribing his personal character, because be Is either to be the loremost man oi the national democracy, or meet his first political defeat in the next national democratic oonveutlcn. He is to-day the chief of Now York politics. Tammany Is his sorvant. He aided by the most unscrupulous means to steal tbe Suiiate oi mew x oru ior tne democracy. The mistakes of his po litical associates havo been his blessings. Gov. Flower seems to be at bis service. Cleveland has, en several important oc casions, blundered into Hill's bands. In permitting his nomination for Governor in 1888, iii(duclaring against froe coinage, in cooling his friends in Ohio by refusing to speak lor uampbeii, in failing to se cure Mills for speaker, Mr. Cleveland surrendered the democracy of New York Into tne bands of mil and bis ambitious friends. As tbe Bayards long carried Delaware, Mr. Hill now carries New York in his vest pocket The date for holding the N. Y. State demecratio convention to solect dole- ?;ates to the national oonvor tion, is iixed or the 122nd of this month. This is done to give Hill the solid delegation, before the situation ean be canvassed and tbe present danger understood and averted. The usual time to select those dele gates has been in May or June, just be fore the national convention. All this means tbe nomination of Hill for President. That it also means the defeat of democraoy is not certain. Hill has always been a successful man, and nothing succeeds like success. lhe people of this country should wake up to the present situation. The man wbo today boldstho most powerful position in this nation the man who has back of him the prestige of the Empire state holds it by virtue of the Dorsonal Dolltics of the ward oalitician. No man has yet had the hardihood to pronounce David u. Mill a statesman. The day of statesmen is gono-r-the day of the more politician is come. Is the high omcs oi f resident of this repuUc the oiUoe honored by Washington the office which is equal to that of any crowned potentate on earth to be do- gvadea to be tbe mere spoil of tbe fixer oi conventions and tbe thief of senator ial district? Are peanut politics to be the ruler is tbe pot-hunter and spoils man to be the king? If the people are not to rule If either of the oid parties both steered by Shylock and monopolies are to elect the next President, we bave no choice between them. The present administration has not originated a single measure for the benefit of the people, and the next one will not. The sooner the people come to see the present situation in its nak ea deformity the better; and pen por traits of such men as David B. Hill may neip tnem see it. THE GREAT CONFERENCE. Tbe meeting to assemble at St. Louis on the 22d will probably be the largest industrial conference ever hold in the United States. What its results will be in the direction of consolidating and solidifying the reform sentiment of the country cannot be foretold. But the action of tbe Cincinnati convention forestalled failure to favor the forma tion of a new party at St. Louis. That convention appointed a national com mittee and instructed it to call ana tional nominating convention, in case the St. Louis conference failed to take such action. This fact will probably bave seme influence in determining the action of this conference. There is undoubtedly much diversity of opinion as to the advisability of formlog a new national party. This variance has cropped out at all the anti monopoly conferences that have been held. At all of them there were men who thought all desired reforms would be secured through tho old parties sooner thsn through a new one. But the sentiment in favor of a new party, tne oenei mat tne oia parties are irre vocably corrupt, has grown with the growth of the antl-monopely sentiment of tne country, until u is quite certain that no national reform conference will take any other view. While there Is not much diveraity of sentiment as to tbe reforms which are needed, there is much as to the details of method by which they are to be reached. We will all agree that money, bind and transportation are tbe central points In which reforms are essential, but tbe details of those reforms are subjnets of great difference. This dif ference is more marked in the money question than in any other; aad it is upon these details that differences will arise at St. Louis, if they arise at all. We are firmly convinced that the wisest thing to do' is to abandon details in a national platform, and state enly broad general principles Tbe aim should he to make a platform that as many people as possible can agree upon, instead of as few. Three leading general prin ciples can be stated on the questions named uion which all reformers can agree Attempt more than that number and divergencies will begin, and will increase In a geometric ratio with every added subject. Our object is union in- s.ead of disunion; harmony instead of discord. Tbe great comber of organizations has been a source of weskuess in this attempt to harmonize them all in one grand national movement, Iadnr have been jealous of their supremacv and fearful lest their pet society should lose its integrity in a general movement Tbe word "oon partisan." lu tho con stitutions of certain societies, has been a misnomer and a misfortune. The meeting at St. Louis is to be a great one, numerically. We hope and expect that It will also bo a great one In its results. We do not believe any success will result from an attempt to harmonixe societies. We would ignore i bum, and go direct to tho people. We believe now, as late as it is, that the plan adopted in this state In 1800, of circu lating a declaration for signatures, would secure millions of signers before time to make nominations UNCLE JERRY AND DR. BILLINGS. The American publie has recently had a now sensation that of seeing a cab inet minister assail a professor in a state university. We not long ago gave a short statement of the relations of Dr. Frank Billings to the bureau of animal Industry and the agricultural depart ment at Washington. Since that time the relations of tbe parties have not im proved. Dr Frank Billings seems to nave proved more than a match far Dr. Salmon, and the small fry of Uncle Jerry's department, so U. J himself bad to throw the great weight of his minis terial title into the scale against Dr. Frank. And still the department kicked the beam, and Dr. F. is several tons the heaviest. Wbo is Jerry Rnsk, any way f He has posed before the country some years as farmer, me fact is be never farmed day in bis life. He once owned eighty acreg of land in Wisconsin, and may owa it to-day. But Instead of farming he kept a little eountry hotel. He went into politics, and became very sue cessful all-around political pot hunter. Ia all his caruer not one single impor tant publio act can be brought home to blm. W hen tbe Alliance succeeded in inducing congress to make the agricul tural department a cabinet position, Mr. Harrison plckod upon Uncle Jerry, a pretended farmor, as a useful man to till it. It was hoped then that the de partment would be organized on a scale proportioned to its importance and tho magnitude of the country. But it has continued to be a bucket shop for spec ulators, and its hoad a third class poli tician and factotem for a fourth-class administration. The hardest thing be has undertaken since he obtained the granger portfolio was to dress down Dr. Billings. ' ANOTHER SINOH IN THE BELLY- ' BAND. Producers of Nebraska, hero is an other lick at you to prevent you from doing your own business. Business is done safely on knowledge ef markots Anything that obstructs early knowl edge very much increases rbk. Yoa see by the following rule only the buyer aud shipper will be entitled to early market reports, free, wnat do you think of this latest outrage? AS TO MARKET MkSSAGES. . At the regular monthly meetinir of the South Omaha Live Stock Exchacge, held February 1st, the following rule was adopted: RULE IX. SUCTION 13. It shall be deemed a violation of this rule for any member of this exchange or firm of which he may be a member or employe to prepay or in any way be some responsible for the payment of any telegram or telephone message sent giving iniormauon concerning the con ditieu of the stock market, except to give actual sales of stock mads for the party te whom such telegram er tele phone message is sent on day such sale is made, and q toting therein tho condi tion of the market. This soctlon is applicable only to mem bers who are commission dealers for sale of live stock. All penalties and references attach the RHnifi as if this snction had been an original part of said rule 9. 1 ins section shall be in lull force on and alter its adoption. JIMMY BLAINE'S PROTECTION. Jimmy Blaine's protection is free trade, and that's all there is about it. The republicans wbo have been shout ing themselves hoarse over the glories of a high high tariff and tho blessings of the McKluley bill call it by the euphoni ous name of reciprocity, but it's free trade pure and simple And the ' high tariff B. & M. McKialey bill Journal is bragging in high gleo about its beauties. It prints an Assooiated Press dispatch in leaded italic at the top of its editorial column, teiang of the wonderful in crease of the imports of American flour into Uuba since the reciprocity treaty went into effect. It is a very satisfac tory result, and justifies the free trade principle entirely. Foreign trade is an exchange of com modities. The freer that exchange tho m ire it will promote the welfare of the countries engaged ia it. For nations to lay ocean teiographs, and build oaean greyhounds to promote such commerce and then legislate customs duties and custom houses to reland it, is quite as intelligent as putting a store in one end oi the moat bag, or tbe irishman s car rying part of the load on his shoulder to rest the donkey ho was riding. Raising the price of goods by law to promote prosperity is quite like open lug your own veins to get something invigorating to drink. If increased ex changes between nations aro good unaer tne name oi reciprocity they are gooa unaer mat oi iree trade. " Every Dog Shako his own Paw." O'DydeandO'Thareraauthe Samoaet chair Didn't soem to ag-reo very aiiely. Whon attending the wake O'Thayer wished to rhake. And O'Byde rtfusod so icily. WILL THI2E BE AN EXTRA EE3- BIUN? J Since it was learned that Mr. Boyd would soon be re'us.tated as g3vernor there has been much speculation as to an extra seosion of the legislature to make a legislative re appotoinment This is still an open question, and no one but Mr. Boyd can aoive it. The constitution is mandatory as to the duty of making are-apportionment after every state and national census. As a matter ol fact the legislature at its first session could not constitutionally bave prssed an apportionment bill for the reason that it bad no knowledge that an enumera tion of the' population bad been made. After the session had been well advanced unofficial information was received ef tbe number of inhabi tants of the si ale and counties. We cannot ascertain at tbe state depart ment that official information as to tbe census has ever yet been receive! A called sesiion, therefore for tbe pur pose of an apportiontment, would be legal and regular In fact, it seems to be mandatory upOB tbe governor to call it. If if is cut d ne no apportionment can he roadn until after the state census of 1805. The governor can include some other objt-cts to be acted upon if he chooses to do so. But as we now under stand 1-, it is imperative that be should call the legislature together. The plain intent of the constitution cannat be otherwise fuelled. MR. BOYD GOVERNOR. Last Monday afternoon Gov. Thayer turned ovor the executive office to Gov. Boyd. The situation was about this: It was only a question of a short time when Mr. Boyd would bo seated by a man date. Gov. Thayer bad important in terests in Texas which demanded his personal attention. Tom Majors was too shrewd a man to be put in a hole by attempting to bold tbe office against Boyd And, more than all else, the railroad influence which has been con trolling Thayer concluded that tjie con stitution tarred Gov. Boyd from calling an extra session to re-distrlot the state; so Gov. Thayer was allowed to retire In his manner of taking possession Gov. Boyd betrayed extremely bad tem per, and much worse taste. But he has bad great provocation. OUR ARENA 0FPER AND THE ARENA MAGAZINE. We urgently repeat our Invitation to Alliance readers to read our Arena offer. The Arena, The Arena Port folio and .The Farmers' Alliance one year for $3.00. This is the subscrip tion price of the Arena alone. It will be of interest to our roadsrs to note some important political and eco nomic papers which will be features of early issues of the Arena, and which will necessarily aid immensely in the great campaign of education in which reformors are engagod. Wo are en abled to give a few of the papers now in band, or wbiob are now boing pre pared and will appear in the Arena during the early part of 1803. I. Hamlin Garland's great Alliance story, "A Spoil, of Office." . by far the raest powerful . novel of the year; a story which ought to be read and cir culated by every political reformer of the age. "A Spoil of Ollioj" com mences in the January Arena and runs six months. Published only ia this re view. II. President L. L. Polk of the F. A. and I. U., "A United Nation." III. Hon. John Davis. M. C. from the Fifth Kansas district, "Tho Money rrobiom." IV. Ex-Governor Lionel A. Sheldon, The Government Control of Rail ways." V. C. C. Post, author of "Driven from Sea to Sea." etc., "The Sub Treas ury Plan." VI. Genoral J. li. Weaver, "Privato Monopoly in Transportation, Money and Land." VII. Hon. Walter Clark, associate judgo of the supreme court of North Uaroliua. "lhe telegraph ana leio phone; Proporly Part of tho Post Office system." v in. The Aiiianco leaders proruseiy illustrated by line portraits three papers, viz: "The National Council," The itate Leaders," and "Leading VV omen in tho Work," by a woll-known author. IX. " Personal Impressions of the Alliance Representatives In the National lapitol" by tlamlin Uariand. These are a few of the important papers which will help make the Arena indispensable to every thoughtful mem bor of tho Farmers' AUiince, tho Peo pies' Party and other bjdies of political reformers. Kvery Sab-Alliance and every labor organization in America should have the Arena for im'l on tbe table oftheir reading room, as many of its gr:at panel's will supply tho reform' ers with the very arguments they most need. Blerbower, Ogden, O'Bj cle, To the capital came to reside; But O'Bjdo no welcome would tftko, Grimly decllnlag to shako. O' t hayer remembered too lato He should have offered ihem Bourbon straiirht. THE CROWDED CITY. Thomas Kane, a Chicago business man wbo has under mm many em ployes, writing to the Interior in the in terest of country boys and girls, says, referring to all places, "Thtre are hun dreds ef applications for every position. Any business man in Chicago will -tell you that if ho were to advertise for someone at four dollars a week to ad dress circulars or other similar office employment, he would receive from one bundled to two hundred replies." He writes this to show country boys and girls what cempetitiou there is in the city. The "competition grows hotter," ho says, aad " business drifts into stronger hands. It is only in story hooks that the good Doys from the country become partners, or marry their employer's daughters. Ia real life their so-called success, if thoy attain it at all, consists in becoming cogs In wheels of dlierent sizps in eoa o ma chiie of greater or less magnitude. It may be, and in raauy cases it is. years before they havo even a spwakiQff ac quaintance with tholr employers. Your great risk will ba that of bo coming city drift woed, compared with which the most humble eouatry life is bliss." 0- P. MASON ON NEBRASKA RAIL- B0ADS. "Nebraska railroad management, for systematic buneo-slccrlcg and robbery, would put to shame any bandit or high way robber In American history, not excepting tho Jamen gang." ADDREE8 CF HON. J. H. POWERS At the Animal Meeting of the National Farmers' Alliance at Chicago, January 27, 1892. Friends and Brothers of the Alliance. I greet you today. I look iuto your facts to catch an ex pression of the hope in the future of tho Alliance, and the faith in the purity cf im irincifit- anu ineir uuimiis in urn ph. which isaa earnest of success. 1 am not disappointed. Your counten ances betoken an intelligent, firm de termination to persevere in advocating the rights of tre farmer, and enforcing the interests of the .honest laborer against tbe encroachments of concea trated capita), by your acts as well as your arguments. 1 leei that although obstacles have riaen they bave been surmounted as often as met. Though changes have beon made, they have not indicated a sacrifice of principles, but a change in tbe mtdium through which they are sought to be put in practice. A tendency is manifesting itself in all our Ailianc-js, to take a broader view of the questions of reform which are tbe distinctive feature cf our organization. I ne question is no longer, "How may we give the farmers an advaatago over olirer industries or classes f " but rather " How may the farmers use their con stitutional rights, and discharge their obligations as citizens, so as to secure the best welfare of all tbe people, and to enable and maintain the right and duty of the people to control their own government to their own advantage." That the Alliance is primarily and d stinctively an educational society, I think b now already understood by all our members, and even those who are oulwide and perhaps inclined to wilfully misrepresent our objects, are forced to concede that our declared purposes are legitimate and right, and will result in great good if they are consistently car ried out. Another encouraging feature is that whereas at the first, our members, while agiesiog on the primary and gen eral statemeut of principles on which our organization is based, differed widely in their ideas of the proper ap plication of these principles, a persis tent discussion of the subjects and a friendly comparison of the views, often divertt d, but always sincere, has led to a practical uniform conclusion as to the details of the plans for the necessary reforms. Pardon me my brothers if I soem to forget, while addressing you on these subjects, that vou have perhaps made them a study for a long time, and don't need to be taught the a b c's of political economy. But I hold to the idea that ones appreciation of truth depends moro on simplicity of statement and concise ness and clearness of plans than on tbe learning and ingenuity with which some seek to unfold it. Let me endeavor to thus state a few of the foundation principles of our agreement. 1. In a peoples' government every thing which is Eecessary for all the peo ple, ana which it is the province of government to provide, shall be put directly into the peoples' hands by the government. 3. Each is dividual should be secured by law in the use and enjoyment of those gifts of God which are general to mankind. Among the most important of tho first class are: Money, right of way, and tbe elective franchise. Of the second class are: Land, air. water and electricity; the minerals; the natural spontaneous products of the land, and tbe right of the worker to own the products of his own labor. J ho rights of the people, and the duties of the government, in relation to these things, form a large part of the science of "economic government," the study of which is one of the principal objects of all our Alliances. Money is that article, in any country. whieh by law will pay all debts. In our country the abstract term "dollar" is tho measure of all values, and what ever is made by law to represent that abstract term dollar, or parts of a dol lar, or sums of dollars, will pay debts and is truly money. Ia a great country like onrs it is question of great importance of what material money should be made. Some claim that the precious metals, gold and silver, are the only proper metals, and certainly there is a popular prejudice in their lavor. inre are certain reasens why they should not be the only material used for the manufac ture of money, if they should be used at all for that purpose It causes im menso waste. It is said that there are now existing in San Francisco, and per haps some other of the largo cities of this country, what are called Chinese gold mills. The mill consists of a small room, with a rough table in the center A small number of Chinamen sit around this table, each of them patiently shaking a buckskin sack full of gold coins. This is continue-; until the coins are worn as ranch as is deemed safe, probably i of their weight, when the money is paid out, or deposited in the banks and the gold dust carefully extracted from the Hacks and sold What tho "heathen Cliiaee" thus ingeniously gains, onr enlightened people recklessly waste when gold and silver are circulated as money. It is computed that the aver age wear of the metallic currency in actual circulation is one-half of one per cent pei year. This amounts io a vast sum every yoar and is hopelessly lost. In thirty or forty years the whole'should be recninod at a cost of at least one-half of one per cent and the waste continu ally goes on. Again, when (61,000.000 of gold coin (and tho sum will apply to monetized silver) is Issued, it costs the government $64,000,000, or if all contributed aiike to the support of the government, about 95 to each head of a family. And yet when the money is thus coined and paid for dollar for dollar, if any man gets th i use of his $5 he must pay 15 worth of labor, property, or note for it. Ho is thus obliged to pay $2 for tl. If he lo?es 15 in gold, it in the end costs him $10 to replace It. The most economic material fur money is that, which being suitable for its manufacture and circula tion, ran be obtained at least cost by the government. Tho practice of the government itself ef orisg bullion and issuing silver and gold certificates thereon, and the evident choice of busi ness men all over tho country point to paper as the most suitable material that has yet been discovered. Tho amount of money existing ia a country ia a matter of great importonce te the pros perity of a people. That there is not eaongh in our country iu circulation no one denies, bat when moans to increase the amouut are considered there is yet some diversity of opinion. Some think the free coiiage of silver will afford all relief necessary. But these people seem to forget that tho most of the silver bullion in the country is practically in circulation i& the shape cf certificates, and that the yearly product of tne pre cious metals doe not keep pace with to growth of the population and busi ness of the country. Others claim that promises to pay in specie, or an issue cf paper money on a specie basis is the only safe and. eco nomical plan. But we mast remember the government gives the people as in dividuals no mortgage to secure its promises, aud that any qualifications or exceptions render tho security less complete. As, a promise to pay between individuals in a specified article Is con sidered so unsafe .hat the common law Interferes and compels payment io money if tbe article itself is not pro duced. Were it not for that, a premise to pay In wheat or corn would only be valuable as the debtor possessed wheat or corn, while sn unlimited pronrse would cover any kind of property or money a man possessed. 'I he stamp of the United States government plsi-ed in obedience to act of congress on any ma terial of any amount, as a dollar, or as a certain number of dollars, pledges the government or any individual or corporation of the people, to receive it at par for the payment of debts to tbe amount of its face, unless it is repudi ated by direct law, as it was the case when silver was demonetized. The questions involved in the land, loan and sub treasury plans, do not re late to security given by the government to the people, but by the people to tbe government, and do not affect the basis of the issue. Many people seem to think that a large amount of money existing in the country is all that is needed to secure prosperity. They forget the fact that unlets the channel ol distribution are changed it will only make the burdens of tbe working people, the government supporters greater, aa they must pay the expease cf the issue. To illustrate, enough moisture rises from the Pacific ocean and is carried in the air eastward to amply water this whole continent. But the Rocky mountains drink up into iu reservoirs all the moisture in the lower strata of the atmosphere and de prive the plains all along their eastern slope ot sufficient rainfall. But the water is not destroyed. It flows "soles-ly down the channels of the Mis souri, Piatte and Arkansas and many lesser streams towards the Atlantic. Now it makes no difference to the farm ers oa those arid plains whether the channels are dry, as sometimes in Aug ust or are full banks as in June. Tho water Imports no fertility to their farms except through expensive irrigalio Ling all oitcnes, tne cose oi which destroys tne prom, so under tho present ar rangement tbe capitalists stand between the government and the people and make tho money issued by the govern ment so expensive to the mass of the people that it destroys all the profits of their labor. Those who seem to be so apprehen sive that if tho people are permitted to obtain money direct from the govern ment they will receive so much as to ruin the country, forget that money can only be issued by a direct law of con gress, and if the amount is based on the amount per capita which the past ex perience of this and other countries has proved to be tho best, no great harm can result until the correct amount can bo ascertained by practical use. The principle of extending the "right of way" of the poople to ail Improved highways which now exist or may here after be invented, is now conceded by most members of tne Alliance as being correct and as one of the duties of government. The fact that more than half of the citizens of our country do not own homes is a menace to the perpetuity of our government and calls for speedy remedy, by providing by law a home tor each industrious family. The points mentioned are the princi pal ones connected with the govern ment on which the people need educa tion. Do not understand me to affirm that these are the questions which should occupy the attontion of the Alliance. Education in the science of agricul ture and the art of farming are well worthy of consideration in our meetings and apt to produce far more practical results, combined as they are with the actual experience of our members, than the theories and experiments of the so called agricultural schools of our country, many of which are fallacious and unpractical, because removed from th actual conditions and limitations which necessarily surround the country farms. Co-operation la business enterprises are also sometimes advantageous, but should always be entered into with caution, and never to any greater ex tent than may bo necessary to correct existing abuses or to prevent injurious combinations against the farmers' in terests. Tbe fact that one of the principal objects of all the Alliances is said in their constitutions to be the study of the scienee of government, seems to me to clearly indicate the relation oi aiii ance to politics. We send our sons and daughters to school for a number of years at consid erable expense of time and money and blame them severely, and justly too, if they do not make practical use of the knowledge they obtain. So what more natural than when members of the Alii- auce of mature, years who bave attend ed its school during from one to ten years, and studying the same lessons, should come to the same conclusions and try to carry iheir knowledge into practice. The natural tendency is that they should veto together. In fact no practical advantage can bo gamed iu any other way. The serious question for consideration now is shall we vote with one of the old parties, or shall we form a new party ? And to assist you in tho solution of this question let mo appeal to your own ex perience as farmers. Most of you havo probably one or two old broken down wagons ' about your farms. Suppose ou have raised a 1'irgu i rop and wish to haul it to niarU t dot- your experi ence teach you it is lc;t to try to patch up one of the old wagon6 to move your crop With? When I first began farm ing I bought an old wngen for $33. The tires were rounded aud worn thin, the felloes proved rotten, the spokes wore cracked and the axles weak. It had no box. I got each part in turn made new. You can guess about what it cost me. inn it was an old wagon still. I never could rely on it to Bafely carry a good ioaa. The Alliances - and other industrial organizatious have a great work to do. Carloads of political corruption must be hauled out of the way. Good laws must be built up of tbe heaviest and best material. This hauling must all be done and should be done this year. Shall we try to patch up the old demo cratic or republican, or any other old party wagon, which may be lying about the place, and run the risk of its failing before the work is half done, or shall we build a new wagon with all the latest improvements, of the best mater ial and strong enough to bear safely any ioaa we may piace upon lir As I trust before this session ef this Alliance closes we will elect delegates to the St. Louts Conference to be hold the 22d of February to decide this ques tion let us see to it that our best influ ence is used to decide it wisely and well. IDEALS. Wo invito attontion to the grand arti cle ia this number under the above cap tion, by Bro. J. M. Snyder. It is mln gled of truth, fervor and patriotism, each in tho highest degree. It comes from a true heart, and voices the aspi rations of every true reformer. Shall We Have Free and Un limited Silver Coinage. JOINT DISCUSSION BT EDWARD B0SEWATER AND J. BURROWS. MR. EOSEWATER'S ARGUMENT. THIRD ARTICLE. In view of the fact that my figures oa silver dollar coinage were absolutely correct and Mr. Burrows was away oft on his coinage statistics, it was an act of generous condescension on bis part te vxonerate me. While I am willing to let Mr Burrows throw dust in the eyes of credulous people disposed to accept bis version of tbe discrepancy between us, I am compelled to point out the fact that he has badly mixed his figures and included with the silver dollar coinage not only all small silver coins, but also the entire coinage of nickels ard copper pennies when he well knew tbat everr discussion of free silver deals exclu sively with the coinage of silver dollars. The act of 1873 demonetizing silver ap plied to standard silver dollars and to no other coin. It did not as Mr. Bur rows asserts, take away the legal ten der quality of tbe half dollars aud small er silver coins. They havo not been a legal tender in any larger sum than five dollars since 1853. My friend acts very much like the cuttle fish that covers his tracks with inky fluid when he gets into close quarters. He sh6ds a great deal of ink in de nouncing the imaginary conspiracy of 1873 and ascribes to it all the calamities that bave befallen the country within the last 18 years. The bill was pending ia congress for nearly three years. It was discussed during five different sessions, and the debate occupied 148 pages of the Congressional Globe. No unbiased person will contend that it was smug gled through by the connivance of a majority of members in both houses of tbe national legislature. Its character was perfectly understood and clearly explained by the late Judge Kelley of Pennsylvania, Stoughton of Michigan, oenaior ingaiis and otner members of both houses, who have never been sus pected of being chumps. Air. Burrows contends tbat the act of 1873 is responsible for tbe widespread industrial depression and world wide shrinkage of prices. He draws a most pathetic picture of tbe concentration of wealth, the spread of poverty and dis tress amid unparalleled prodm tion. and caps the climax of exaggeration by as serting that the demonetization of silver has lost the farmers of this country an average of one thousand millions a year or eighteen thousand millions since 1873. The whole national debt, the debts of all our states, counties and cities, the bonded debt of all the railroads, and the debt of all the corporations, added to all the farm mortgages of this eountry, are computed at less than 128.600,000,000, aud the farm mortgages are less than one-eighth of the total. He points his oony uager at me gnast iy spectre wmcn his over-heated imagination his con jured up and challenges me to toll him, u i can, whether the cause of all the calamities.industrial depression and bus iness failures were duo to over-production, speculation, intemperance, licen tiousness, extravagance or waste of wars. And then he answers the Ques tion for himself: "No, it is none ot these! It is tho direct result of the di RPAtui that. 'attacked us in 1873 in the ill-advised at tempt to discard tbe use ef silver as a full legal tender money." With tho same propriety he might charge that the - grasshoppers that de vastated Kansas and Nebraska in 1874-75 and the cyclones that have swept Over Iowa and Minnesota, were due to the silver conspiracy of 1878. And on top of these calamities might be added all the other terrible visitations by iloed and lire, earthquakes and pestilence. Lot us now take a retrospective viow of the ten years prior to 1873 when the couitry had free aad unlimited coinage, and according to Burrows, was prosper ous; when money was plentiful aud prices of all commodities were high. It was on era of extravagance and reckless expenditure in public and privato places. The enormous volume of de preciated currency stimulated gambling' in stocks and all kinds of commodities including gold which commanded a pre mium. Merchants, manufacturers and farmers were paying ruinous rates of interest because the speculators and gold and stock gamblers were payiDg from 1 to 10 per cent a month for the use of money. The Black Friday of 18G0 was followed by the crash of 1878, which, par.ayzed eur entire industrial and commercial system, and left it strewn with wrecks like tho Atlantic ocean after a terrific hurricane. This was before the silver dollar wa, slrickea from our coin age and at least two years before silver began to depreciate. Will any free coin age man explain why the prosperous era fo'lowing the war, with its abund ance of money and high prices, culmi nated in national bankruptcy and a general prostration of all industries and enterprises, from which it took the country more than ten years to recover? Tho true explanation is that this boast ed prosperity was fictitious. The nation w as groaning under an enormous public deot and an inflated currency which cre ated fa'sova'm'S and extravagant prices. Men of moderate means, believing themselves rich became spendthrifts and paid exorbitant rates cf interest as if the day of reckoning never would come. Thi3 era of iuflation and bogus prosper ity proved of no real advantage to the producers or tho working people. It was an exhausting stimulate and hai about the same effect as if the natiom had been en a big drunk, from which, it sobered up with a terrible headache, and general prostration. ! Tho key note for the shrinkage of prices since 1873 has been unwittingly; furnished by Mr. Burrows himself, Our population in 1873 was- about, forty-two millions and a half. Comput ing the present population at sixty-five-hiillions, the increaso in population has been 53 per cent. In the same period! we have increased the produat of pig iron 600 per cent, iron and steel 500 per cent, petroleum 209 per cent, cattle 125 per cent, cotton 133 per cent, sugar 130 per cent, corn 110 per cent, and wheut 78 per cent. The total number of bush els of grain produced in the year '73: was 308 per capita, in "89 it was 53 4 S bushels aud in U1 we had 61 bushels per capita. The marvelous development of our national resources has during tho past eighteen years multiplied our pro ducing capacity far beyond the increase of population. The fall in prices has been in accord with the law of supply and demand. The proof that the eoui morcifd decline in the value of silver has had little or no bearing upon the fall in prices of other commodities is conclusively furnishod in tho market prices of farm products. In 1856 the price of wheat in Chicago, was i l 55 per bushel; in 1857, M.23;.in 18o8, 71 cents: in 1.r,si i;k i , ultLk. GH cents. During thww fivn va h. bullion io the silver dnii.' " '.u from $1,02 to $1.04 in gold. How are iu ixcuncue toe doeline ot 00-oents a el ',n,e Prrico ot wheat between IboO and 18c0 In lStfr, wht .i i,i.,. was $1.60 per bushel and a silver dollar was worth all the way from $3.00 to'