u THE ALLlAiNOK-IiNDKPENDENT. MAHCfl I, m k K THK Consolidation of th Fumen0lincs5cl)rasUInflEpcnfieiii ujo M Street, Lincoln, Neb. Subscription 0k Dollar mYm OV3RGS Blne. ManaKer. WiXaw ' '::::::::::Adtertwn m .--!ana uw. a - "If any man must fall for m to rl-te, .neeekliwttocHmb. Another". ipaln I choose not for my good. A golden chain. A. robe of honor. 1 too good a prli To tempt mj hwty hand to do a wrong Unto a fellow man. Thla life hath woe ..... wmuirht bT man'a atanlc foe; And whothat bath a heart would dare prolong Or add a aorrow to a sincatB u. That a healing balm to make H whole? My besom own the brotneroooa m mu. Pnhlleherw AniiOBnoenient. The subscription price of the A"AJ'0'1,,' BiBriHDuiT Is 11.00 per year, in adano. J,M,n iutaicrlBHoaa should be earr careful that al flUkd as uiim.p-o - names are wnw spelled and proper wwttofflce given. always slim yeur name. No matter now tftn youwXuado Dot neKlech a 1 ant matter. Bverv week we receive with incomplete address, or wHhout slgna tare and it Is sometimes fllfflcult to locate CiSaVc or address. Subscriber wtahlag t" their poatofflce addree. aire tbel? former as well as their preeen wa eWwhen change will be promptly made. Bank clearings in seven principal Cltlei for the week ending Feb. 18 were 37 per cent loss than for the correspond-tag- week of last year. The failures al so numbered 320 aa compared with 197 in 1803. Prices also are like Milton's hell; for in the lowest deep, a lower deep, still threatening to devour us. opeis wide.' This Atlanta Constitution says: "The brethren of Nebraska City ought to know that it will not make a Democrat out of a gold doodlebug to burn him in effigy." Thb editor and proprietor of the Grand Island Democrat starts a column editorial with the well-spoken sentence: The Democracy of Nebraska and the nation are In a deplorable condition in deed" ' ..-.--- The deposits in the State savings banks of New York were $12,000,000 less In 1893 than 1892, and $34,000,000 more was withdrawn thah was deposited dur ing the year. The latest news reports that the suf fering among the poor in Austria Is very great, and that over 100,000 men are ' out of work in the city ol Vienna. Sim ilar reports come from Italy and Ger many. About thirty names have already been suggested for the paper, and one has by unanimous vote been decided on, The drawings for the electro are made, and the came and design including mottoes we are sure will delight our readers. The whole thing Is an Inspir ation. There is no other paper in the world named like it, or so well, and it will 'greatly help in introducing the paper. The heading plate cannot be secured belore two weeks from now, probably. Thb editor of the New Charter, edited by M. W. Wilklns, formerly editor of The Nonconformist and The National Spectator, want a business partner. Mr. Wilklns lb one of bright est and brainiest of the reform editors of the country, aad ht paper, published at Santa Cruz California, a town of 7,000 inhabitants, in the most delightful cli mate la the world, offers a fine prospect and most attractive home and business for the right man. Wb rarely think it pays to correct in a tucceeding pap r any errors in proof reading or proof correcting, but one or two In our last lasuo were so absurd that we must. The short article headed "Poems of the South." should have read ' Peon of the South." Leaving out the letter r in employers changed the wni.e of onescnn3e most bewildering lyj the word "and" wa also printed "a." It occasionally happen that an article I written at the very last and the tdltor cannot get revise of the copy, or i called away w It turn t seeing even flrt prvof. The srJWt over- eight sometime wake the worst pea- lbl alteration. Tuor. GroKUa 1. HesNon, I) 1 , of Iowa College, author of "The New lie deoiptlae." a bowk wnUy reviews la tho column. bM aa rttal (a the February U&, CongregallanaUsl i "A Christian Thory of the litrtb tla t4 Wtfttlth," whl h we nWna toi 19 publish, IVt'l. Uerrott tsrtro vitif to rubbish fro-) forgotten, mUun lr stttul law, AaJ U raUleg up ih found turu of maay gearratio, lu U aoi the teavhrr of Applkd ChrU'anltj imply for I w ldU. hut he U fre tag the !lfhelag, dlt Mint truth ta to aad ihrwuf a aU LrUwnJotA 1U I i i . , -t y. i p. a. PROPOSED POLITICAL TI0S. TWn WArW ncrald of Friday last J. UW v.. -. printed the following communication in a LI it editorial department ana in aouoie leaded favorable comment desired thit Populists and Democrat discuss fusion through Its columns: Tn th Editor of the World-Hp raid The union of the Populists and D-mo .-.ta in th liu,t legislature was a suc cess and there is no reason why another such union should not be iormeu Be tween these parties for the campaign of 1894. With thefo parties cuviueu tu Republicans hope to elect not oniy me entire state ticket, but also a majority of the legislature and six congressman. If tha Democrats and Populists united on a state tlcitet it wouiu wj matt for them to unite on candidates for congress in each of the six districts and such a good feeling would prevail that this union would ex tend to members of the legUUturo. I a v it (a tim for the Democrats ana Populists of this state to redeem Ne hmilr. from the Remiblicsn party; divided, this can never be accomplished But with the two parties unitea it can be done. What do the World Herald readers ssy? Ad: pen and tree discus sion will be well, I suggest the party that takes the governor to taite one other office, the other five state offices to go to the other party, i sugges a conference between representative Democrats and Independents to discuss this proposition. Let us act in 18 wlta our eyes open. Nebraska should ha redefined. The Democrats and Populists united can do the work. What do you say? A William v. Allen maw. In the flrt place there was no union of the Populists and Democrats in the last legislature. The Populists united with no Democrats, voted for no Demo crat. Allen was our man, ana: Jonn n. hurston, the Union raclflo at torney and great "protectloa" orator, was the Republican candidate. The Democrats chose to vote for Allen rather than stultify themselves and their party by voting for Thurston. That was all there was to it. And think of the ideaof a Democratic redeemerl Thia"Wm. V.Allen man" is doubt less a Democrat,and it is more than likely he holds down a desk in the World-Herald office. No real Populist can be found among us so utterly devoid of political sense as to propose what he proposes. If any man calling himself a Populist did write the above letter he Is ashamed to let his name bo known that is evident; and he is a traitor in the camp. Jhepiaceior every man who wants to fuse with the Democrats is, and has ever been, with the Democrats. Ho is made of tradiDg purchasable Btulf. Such men are not Populists. They can't ba. They haven't enough of the salt of principle In them to save them from the dunghill, und they are an offense to the moral sense of every honest man. They work tbe greatest possible harm to any reform party they attach them selves to; and they b-lng to any such party complete destruction if allowed in one or two campaigns to tie it to or fuse it with either of the corrupt old parties. Great snakes! What is the Democratic party that it should come courting the PopulUts? The half masked servant of the gold bugs! The Wall street "strad dle-bug" and rake! The painted prosti tute that for a year past has been lying (In every sense) with the John Sherman crowd! Itfwaa placed In power by secret Wall street influence and funds, by platform ambiguities and lying cam paign promises, by disgusted, dis couraged Republicans of the working class, by playing the gold bug act in the east and the free silver act In the west and south. What did it do as soon as it elected the pig-headed, bull-necked Grover, the mam with a mugwump-endorsed, civil tervice-reform (!) character? Elected on a platform pledged "to the coinage of both gold and Bllver, Iwlthout dis crimination against either metal or charge for mintage," Its first adminis trative act was te call a special session of congress to entirely eloe the mints against silver; and so con uptlble were Us leaders; so great the power of Cleve land pie and the banking fraternity's ubiquitous political influence (campaign funds), that the damnable deed wa done. The Republicans helped to do it of course, but the Democratic president demanded it at Wall street's behest. and over half of the Democrat mo ruber tn the House, th popular branch of the legislative body, repudiated the Ration al platform, and struck down half of what the last l)mocratlo conviction ealUd the "standard money of the country." That one act, joining hand with the Republican kadrr aad usurers to cut trT the people' supply ef money, and double dent aad make per petual stave of the people, should make the IVirtorratla party a kissing and byword, a horror and hmlhUg to the poop!. Hut that wa not all. It In national platform d'ouao4 the robWr trust aud monopoly combinations of capital, and said, "W demaad. the rigid ra foroeiurBt v4 law mad to prevvat and cuttral thim, Wg'thsf ith. luctk fur ther lU!U..B la m'ratat tf tlt at.u a ipriBo may show to b teMry," AJ the la the laUrt wf the tru' aal ewpurailoa CUy!a4 rpulatod toe hi aitrary-grartl ta who ta hi annual-report declares 'The I'al'vd ttUW raaaot limit p'l VeU rUltoM ta their !fcts t t-uiuu twwirrM intent and purpose of citizens in buying and selling." Anil ha In tha same reoort adopts as hU own this Judze Jackson definition of Re pub ican an ti monopoly "MonoDolv as prohibited by the statute means an exclusive rljrbt la one Dartv. couvltd tttth a Ug&l it triction or restraint upon some other party which prevents the latter from exercising or enjoying the same rignt. That is the sort of sham anti trust and anti-monopoly party we are asked to fuse with; the kind that makes bonds for Wall street and the people, and which defines monopoly to be something we haven't got Itjis an anything and every thing, free stiver, single gold stand ard, wildcat banks, bonds and-promlses for-all, goldbug, straddlebug. high pro tcctive-Wilson-tarlff-for-incidental-re ven u t o-create-a-deficit-for--green- Dack-boupht-gold interest -bearing-paper, sucker-catching, intrinslc-boodlc- Democracy, and the devil behind it, which we are asked to trade with. And just look at the Dsmocraey in thU state. It is simply Republican machine number two, run by Sterling Morton, Tobe Castor, Jim Iioyd and t lot of railroad, Wall street, adnlnlstra tion pie biters. In tbe last convention but one It was for free silver and elect ed Bryan on that platform. In the last convention tt turned goldbug to please Cleveland and eet the post offices, and threw Bryan down and trampled him in the mud by a vote of three to one a?ainst sustaining him in his course, a course marked out for him by the pre vious convention. ' And how did the Democrats vote in the last election? The returns showed that in Otoe, Cass and other counties where they were strong enough to elect their entire county tickets they elected their county officials, and on the state ticket, instead of voting far their own candidate, Irvine, or for our candidate, they threw their strength to the Republican railroad candidate, IarrUon. They in fact elected Harrl- and defeated Holcomb. To the Republican party with all your fusion. We are not in it. We can just thresh tbe earth with you botb, and we are going to do it. If the honest rank and file Democrats and the Calhoun. Bryan, Hroady sort of men haven't got sense enough to come over to the Popu lists where they belong, they can just literally go the dogs and stay there. ' ALL HONOR TO JUDGE CALDWELL. We had our penail just ready to write up the subjscfc of the Dundy Caldwell decisions last week when interrupted. It seems almost too late now to write regarding them but wo will put the case briefly before our readers for the bene fit of some who may not take other papers than ours. The Northern Pacific Railroad some time ago passed into the hands of receivers who reduced the wages of its employes seven and a half per cent., and Judge Jenkins of the U. S. Circuit court approved this action and accompanied this approval with an order restraining the employes from striking. It read as follows: The men are to refrain from combin ing and cunsplrlng to quit, with or with out notice, the service Ajsaid receivers with the object and intent ol crtppurg the property in their custody, or em barrasslng the operation of said railroad j and from so quitting the service of the said receivers, with orwlthout notice, I as to cripple the property or to prevent or hinder the operation of said railroad. The men were given no hearing what ever, the judge riding rough shod over all the rights of free men and free con tract, guaranteed by the constitution. Judge Dundy's order was like Jen- kins'. But the high and mighty Dundy who also considered men nothing and money everything, had a higher judge over him who is a man, and stands for the rights of working men. Judge Caldwell of the U.S. Circuit court (above Dundy) sent the railroad's Re publican party eulogist (Thurston) home with the words: Go back to Omaha and revoke that order, then I will take your case. Pre pare and advertise your schedule, and Blve the men notice, and I think that sixty days might not be unreasonable. 1 will come to Omaha aad hold tho con ference with your receiver and the representatives of the labor societies, and we w ill see if we cannot agree upon a scneuuie mat wui be just to tho em ployee, and will be such as tho receiv ers can afford to pay. If the men are working under what Is termed free contract, the contract be tween private parties, si one party to the contract they would undeniably be free to quit, alogly or In a body, when the other party to the contract InaisUxl on changteg tt term. Oa the other hand tf both parties to the contract ate aodiT state control and wage are to be fixed by the ceurt, then, a an catera editor ha welt ald, "both parties must be represented before the tribunal, and th corporation, or receiver, must have no mon right to ducharge em ploy w ithout notice and without can than tha employe hav ta Wave their employ uiiiat- i'ha cdiliw it Th Outlook, whM word w hav quoted sail fanner, "We twlWiv that ta tbe ca (4 rl tarrying cwpurattoatt state eootml t bettor than frevdan of cut trait, aad w Wflcom tf ry approach to It. h'at control of r:m4! a few ytar ago wa rvgarded a lb holloa ol bf few uepractivah:; now (Hialog practically lataarTeut through jad total Wt ! by tha eeurt anion ar not uur bMttaU regarded ftlleprettatlaf - . j - mm , THE 14TSTEET OF LITE- We are moving the world this week a never bf f ore. At least that is true if the proverb L-true resrardicg "the hand that rocks the cradle." We firmly grasp the graphite with our right, and gently tip the rocker with our left, while (the baby sweetly sleep ing) weighty problems slowly solve themselves and serious words begin to multiply, for "copy." Then comes pa ternid punctuation. Can we expect the masses, the com mon people, the poor, the ignorant and the oppressed to free themselves? Docs history record a single instance where the oppressors, conbcience smitten, gave a great class of slaves their liberty? Is there a force "that makes for righteous ness" which moves the world of men straight on to better deeds and just? Is truth eternal, resistless, the majesty and power of God? The poor are not to be left to free themselves. Brave men and true, and mighty men of mind are rising up to advocate their '"Hush, my babe, lie still and slum ber'." Rockety rockety rockety rock. "Bl-lo ba-by-bun-tln, Dad dy's gone-a-hun-tin,For-toge t-a-rab-bi t-skln To- wrap-the-baby's foot-ies-in." (Wonder if that boy isn't what you would call a regular calamity howler?) "Well he fell det wight up. Ho pa pa's darlin' baby." Did they 'buse him? Let him starve, wouldn't they, if he didn't do some howlin'? Has just as much right in the world and to tbe world, as anyboly else, hasn't he? And what do his rights amount to if he can't work or eat, and nobody cares for him. Here, nurse, take him to mamma." Bjrn on last press day, Tuesday Feb. 20tb, jugt in time to play havoc with proof reading, to the editor and his wife a splendid boy, weighing: eight and three-fourths pounds. WHAT DOES THIS MEAH? Tho New York Tribune commenting On Secretary Lamont's recent report, advocates as a preparation fcr war that we begin with the children and "give them at a receptive age such military drills as will enable them to become, if need be, good soldiers in later life." It goes on to say: This plan has bsen on trial for sever al years In the public schools of Boston, with admirable results. 1 he Grand Army has taken up the subject and ex- President Harrison has commended military instruction in schools. Plans for extending such teaching have been been brought to the attention of the War Department by Captain E. L Zalinskl, and there is a growing senti ment in favor of having all American boys learn that they have a country to defend and bow to be able to defend it. This training should be provided for by the National and State governments, aud might well be made to include ail boys in the public schools not physically disqualified. Boys learn the manual of arms readily and delight in the drill. I heir physical condition Is Improved by the exercise, -and habits of obedience and self-denial are inculcated and made permanent, which are not only advan tageous in their effect on the school deportment of the pupils, but are also of great benefit in after life. Now what does all this mean? What nation on earth is going to make war on tbe United States? There Isn't even the remotest possibility of any foreign power fighting U3, and everybody knows it. But the capitalists of this country know there will be need of a drilled, disciplined army to keep down and shoot down the organized brotherhoods of working men, the men who are cer tain to firmly and unitedly resist re ductions In wages which the advancing power of capital (If nothing is done to cut it off) will ba sure to demand. The great struggle before us is the conflict between tlie workers and their law-entrenched, military-defended masters. As the money, capital and natural re sources go on concentrating themselvei by the interest, rent and net profit pro cess into monopolists' hands, the num ber entirely dependent on the capital ists will increase, the competition for employment will get ever stronger and stronger, the result being to force wages down and compel the working class to live more anl more cheaply and wretchedly, unless they organize in great bodies and stand together to up hold gigantic strikes. It is for these times of increasing industrial war, foreshadowed by Homestead, that mili tary preparation on the most extensive ajale, reaching to alt the children of tha public schools, is being planned for and pressed. Fetlow countrymen, thla Is an alarm lng proposition, an alarming state of affairs which rail tt forth. Jay Gould coatemptuously remarked that he could htrohalf the men of thU country to h ot the other half down, llut to be sure of well disciplined soldiery who can be depended on. when command U toibcotdowB their neighbor and fellow cllUens, a ready a lt Picker- ton hireling were at llotnesfcad aad al tho CVac da AUm mine, tt t thought prudent to twgln with tha ehttdrvn aud youth. They must be fired with the Idea H at "they have a country (owacd a4 ruled by raptuiittadefia:.M that they "would t performing a patriot! da'y to fire i&ta aita break ur aay orgartlicd rll tae to the demand of ei'tal. They i.mt "habit ct cbod'cptM" formed la tarn, uaqUVu tag military obedience), wh'ch til t t trot thm ' U tr life." tgkil4 plunder, walverttt aUvwry, M tha in vi ter all h resist the and programme of the powers that be, it is oeiicvea oy inem tna. they can always divide the voter over the tariff question, that the working class will not have sense enocgh to come together in the Populist party, and, placing it Wx 1 m . ... with their votes in power, nationalize the banks, railrcads, mines and othe monop3lies. And if our present rulers are right, a class war, butchery, a reign of terror, death and destruction are in etVab't. L it ts be alive over thU questicn of another civil war to retain the owner ship and services of the wage slaves cf America. And if wo cannot frown down and put a stop to tbe military training of our young mes, youth and children, let us turn the Industrial Le gion into a military organization to prepare for the defense of our inalien able rights, and the liberties that yet remain to us. A Legion In every local i ty mat can nght as well as vote, may soon be needed, it A FALSIFIES AUD SLAHDEREE. One G. L. E. Klingbeil of Alliance, Neb., occupies four columns of space in the last issue of the Alliance Times, Box Butte coanty paper, replying to Populist neighbor who it seems has been caning him down and trying to drive a little sense into his partisan skull. In the closing part of this lengthy article, full of false statements a id wrong conclusions, the real charac ter of the man is shown. Speaking of the fact given by his Populist neighbor that out of 1 15 farms fn his precinct all but 20 of them were mortgaged. Klingbeil savs: "If these loans were inquired into it wouia De iouna to be a B'gn ol prosDerlty in ninety per cent, of the cases. People almost always go into debt to improve tneir condition." He then goes on to say: "In support of this assertion 1 will quote from a 'calamity howler 'sheet, Tni. Alliance Independent of November 0, 189S. It is good reading, sound sense, and cer tainly must have gotten into that con veyor of inflammatory ideas by mistake.' Following this sentence is a paragraph which he alleges is taken from this paper. And it was taken from this paper with the exception of one word, the important word on which the argu ment of not only its own but of several succeeding paragraphs depended. He cuts out the word "value" and Inserts the word"volume" to serve his purpose. The sentence as printed in our paper ads: "A continued increase in the value of money paralyzes business. Now notice how changing the one word value will give a statement diametrically opposed to the above. He has it by deliberate perversion in this form: "A continued increase in tho volume of money paralyzes business." The firat statement is true, the gar bled statement is false. The sentence was not ours but was with the argument which followed, reprinted from Mr. G. P. Osborne's book, Principles of Eco nomics, because it supported oar argu ments regarding the evils of a steadily appreciating gold money. A man who will thus ascribe false teacking and insert words not his own into the utterance of another, is a falsi fier of the meanest, most unprincipled sort. He doubtless calculated that the paper in which his forgery of our teach ing was published would not reach our office aud be seen. But he is caught and branded. Let him next time re member that our words are on file, and that it is dangerous to misrepresent our teaching. For tbe benefit of his neighbors who may get lost iu his fig ures, unsupported statements and false reasoning, we will append below the two paragraphs which followed and which were in argument connected vlth the oua Kilnabell garbled. Mr. Osborne went on to say: Nothing is so discouraging to a debt or as to feel that he must pay more than he borrowed, and where money Is In creasing in value he must pay more. The price of goods is continually falling, and men will not do business on a fall ing market if they can help It. They would rather be out of business and let the production of the country stop; and this means a financial panic, in which rich and poor lose ten times what tbe creditor ha gained by getting a littlo more valuo than he loaued. If there were to be any continued change In the value of money, It would bj bolter to hove it aiowiy titcrtasi rather than slowly iarrtaso, because busines 1 always active on a rtdng market. Nwt tt 1 not simply that busines men, who are mostly borrow er, make a little more profit; the im portant rtiult 1 that busines is active, and every man ta the country ha an opportunity to work; al. capital 1 euv t lcyed. Mill do n t tami idle. More good are produced, ant.' the popltlm mom. Wmt are better suppiU'd. It t a question, ibdi't'd. if full tUlty t ewrcn except on a rising market, wlA at least a ;lght fall ta the vlu vf money. D.t Stanton, Coif t f the I'alve'slty j .tUment, New Vftk, rtscomuicndslbe tiedltgrof ftA tXXi.OtA) ta that city fur needed pub! Id wor'a which would gh the poor inptoymrat. He would haw fcine pibita baths, fute new echo 'I boufcrs, tho underground rlly, park Improve' rue nts aad a (prcdaay, AU t bo built made by the city lteir. Hal lh raptuHtl who wish to clear aw to iweaty fiie pvr cat. dl (deed an pnf its en ail -eU job i t cmr rait ih cry of sx'.ilUm; and thi rr 4hty of j f"U kt ta b afraid of eoruaiea at ADDRESS OF 5 ATI05AL COMMITTEE The People's party national committee at its February 22nd, meeting prepared an address to the Populisms of the country which we give below. It would have been a stronger document if it had held up the government bankin sys tem as necessary to take tbe place of the national and state banks, which it proposes to do away with, which we all agree must be done away with. The address is eimply the best thought of a. handful of men who happen to be now on the committee, their opinions being worth no more than the opinions of an equl number of men In the party who have as carefully studied the issnes of the day. THE ADDRESS. The union of the leaders of the old parties under Grover Cleveland nt John Sherman has forced down the volume of the circulating medium to the single gold standard, thereby en hancing the purchasing power of monev and depreciating tho price of all the products of labor, as well as the earn ings of wage workers. The oollcv promised by the campaign promises of the Republican and Democratic parties to restore silver to the place it ( ccuoied as a money metal previous to the crime of 1873 has been used to consummate that iniquity. The tactics of deceiving the people by sham Issues, which have been so successful in the past, will be . employed to maintain the gold standard and retire greenbacks. The British policy of a single gold standard system of finance is contrary to a principle of American independence, therefore we are opposed to any international con ference with foreign nations to regulate the financial policy of this countrv. but favor a financial system that is distinct ively American. The issue is made by the declaration in tbe Omaha platform In favor of the free coinage of gold and silver at the ratio of 16 to 1, and the issuance of standard.'money, exclusively by the government without the inter vention of banks. Other reforms demanded bv the Oma ha platform are not less meritorious be cause tne old parties have thrown off the mask and made known their pur pose to enslave the people by money contraction. A declaration in favor of the free and unlimited coinage of both gold and silver at the ratio of 16 to 1. and the direct issue by the government of legal tender standard paper money, redeemable in debts and taxes, and of sufficient volume to meet the legitimate needs of our growing population and in crease in business, and which 6hallbe ' sufficient to restore and maintain stabil ity and general prices, would meet the Issue presented by the gold combination. The object of that combine Is the main tenance of the gold standard adopted at the extra session of congress, tho In crease of the bonded debt, the retire ment of legal tender money issued by the government and the surrender to private corporations of the power of tho government to regulate the volume of the circulating medium and maintain its etnbility. "Both the old parties will present tbe tariff and other issues during the campaign that they are In avor of the contraction which, by their united action they have pursued for the last twenty years, and tney will be for or gainst any and all Issues which thev suppose will givebera the most votes, bt when they secure the power they will use it in the future as they have done in the past, In the interest of the gold combination. We denounce the issue of boods in time of peaca as an act of treason and usurpation unequalled in the history of civilized government. They propose to drown the outcries of a plundered people with a sham battle over the tariff so that capitalists, corporations, nation al banks, rings, trusts, watered stock, the demonetization of silver and the usurers may be lost sight of. They pro pose to sacrifiae our homes, wives and children on the altar of Mammon, to destroy the multitude In order to secure corruption funds from the millionaires." H. h. Panbeneck. Chairman Execu tive Com. A GANG OF PAP3U0KERS AND PAR ASITES. Editor Calhoun comments with not a little pertinency and force on some characteristic administration doings in which he himself had an interest. The facts according to The Herald are after this wise: "Cy Parker who has just ben ap pointed postmaster at Fullerton was a strong and outspoken supporter ol Meiklejohn, the ltepublican candidate in whose interest Dr. Keiper was sold out and defeated for congress tn a Dem ocratic district. Not only this, but haying won a bet of a wheelbarrow ride on the election, he embullished the vehlole with the inscription. 'Cleve land and Melklejohn," lniblg letter. He had the picture taken of himself sitting In the bsrrow, and the World-Herald printed it a day or two ago with full and appropriate context. Having had such a magnificent ride, Parker should now be required to take a walk. When uin are refused poetollloe In the First district because they support ed tbe Damocratio candidate for con grcs. and other men have them bestow ed in the Third district bcaue they supported the Republican candidate, 1 the common maot iV-mocraUU liable to become confuted between duty and pohry, and aot know which way to turn. The gang of pp sucker and parasf va which pro'" to resresi-nl the admin istration la Nebraska, and which de m ti control tt ptroni;, t fast bringing tt Into contempt aud d trust among men whose ruling political mo tive 1 adherence to principle and ho first tasltnct t decency, OUR 0AU8E IS ALABAMA,. February N, m the iVoplo party and tha body know a Jeff'rtoolaa l-m.fat met a Alarum lu at eonvvattai. It wm aot A fu!o, for bith blUt ire lor the m otjt'ot, and with on tptrlt flgMt'y; the Cleveland Jons hrasd f UnnM-iacy. Ti e Hrpublkaa party Is not In It, t ept to tura tt black vot and uauatk over ta the ballot t.. stuffing Jo gang. The eoovtot tf the p..ple acralaapxl Capt Kolb with; g?t 1 I 11 .