THE ALLIANCE -INDEPENDENT. MARCH 8, IH'4 THE CnoUAuoa of t xi to M Street, Lincoln, Neb. gCBSCMPTIOM OH DOIJUUt PB YEA If my r" most tall for m to rise, Tken seek loot to climb. Another'! rl I ekooe not (or my rood. A golden chain, A iobo ol fconor. 1 too od prlM T tempt mf kMty hud to do a wrong Onto a feUow nun. Tkl nit balk woo BaBclent, wrought fcy man saunlc fee; And whotkat hatfc a heart would daw prolong Or add ft sorrow to ft fttrlckra oul That seek a healing bftlm to aaak It wboler My bosom owns th brotherhood of nun. N. LP. A. Pwbluher Announcement. Tnbcrtptlonprlcof tho AixiahoU awsaroav la IM per rwn', in ad wm. Acuur In solicits suoscrintion anonld b rrearefnl that all nsmes are veiled and proper postolnc irlren. Blank ft? return eupUons. "It1"' tie., can bo hftd on application t this . Always sign yur nam. No matter bow often yon write a do "otnegloctthta Import ant natter. Hrerr week wa reclv letters W4th Inoomplet addf esee wiuout eigne tnrea and It la aometlmei difficult to local CBAanor ADDUaa. Bubacrlbera wtabtag to ebanca th.tr poatofflo addraaa moat al war flTaUr(ornwellaatbelr preeent ad are when change wUlbe promptly made. People? Independent Party City 1 Convention, t rtople'a Iadapeadont Party city eon ven tlon la hereby called to meet March 16, IBM, at 7:80 o'clock p- m. (place of meeting to be made known later through ward committeemen) (or the purpoae of placing in nomination the fol lowing named officer, to be voted lor at tba next city election: . City attorney, nolle indge, city engineer, water comraiHBloner, cei. Very trustee, three members of tbe school bat one councilman from each ward, chairman he city central committee and on commit! Jan from each ward, and to transact such other buslne as may com before the convention. The basis of representation will be one dele gat (or every ten Teles or major fraction thereof cast for SUaa N. Holcomb (or supreme judge at the last general election. . Tbe aereral wards will b entitled to repre sentation ft follow: first ward 11 1 Fifth wrd. 1 Second ward 10 Sixift ward 13 Third ward 1!3 seventh ward 14 Fourth ward....... iS CaucuMS for the selection of delegates will be held March 13, 1894. the time and place to be determined by tbe several ward committee men. Hy order of the City Central Committee. Eua bakkb, Chairman. V, U Mabt, Secretary. ' Wb call especial attention to Mr. J. V. Wolfe's letter (on page 5) to tbe World-Herald In reply to Its fusion proposal. It covers tbe whole question in a most masterly and unanswerable presentation. Tberc is to be a great silver meeting at rVna Mnlnna Tnwa. thn Slat, find 22nd. n-The spirit of the Populist party is atJ-moiopoly, anti-monarchy, the spirit The PresUTt was off dock shooting last week. Fltyhe couldn't be kept permanently at thaMiuslnesj, or some- thing equally harmless From Charles H. Kerr & CoOhlcago we have received for review "AJtfodern Love Story Which Does Not Entt the Altar.1' By HarrletE. Orcutt, 194ptroeJ Tine Is the last of panics and periods of tAisiness depression; for before UtOther can arrive the Populists will 'have control of the government asd through their tew financial system of government banks for loans, deposits and exebagge, the panlo-tnaklag Usur ers will be driven out of business. C0KCEEBI53 J Five years ago, 1889 and '90 elgl cent of tbe mont nry throuf h tb gold. In 1891 or was paia in goi torn receipts u and 10 per cent 8 per cent. pal4 when Cleveland gone to 4 per c ers circular, w weeks ago, "U sent out, Jbe loans be drawt local pressure business men! peal the Shert per cent, of g tbe Treasury: tbe time when dictation caTi entirely cut! supply to tuf one dollar of house at Net old After tbe The wave of popularity is now might ily lifting and bearing onward tbe I'opullst party. Between sow and 10 the Democratic parly will drop hope lessly to pieces, and the great battle wlUb swiftly fought out between tbe Republican monopoly and the PopulUt antl monopoly forces. Tut BrtttteeUc'loa la WH U In Orrgon, and the moat encouraging r ports come from that statu. The Out loo'i, tbe great New Yoik wtekly, pub lUbea the prediction of anil Cleveland Oregon l)mocraU that two-third of their party will support tbe lVjultiU la the June election. Gov. lVaaijer aauoaaoee that he sUoiU tiuarely on the Omaha platform aud will take the stump f jf our aoifilee. To uaber of Caogrea are to b wlcwJ, aa4 It U safe to prvllv-t that Iboy Ul He I'.a Usta. mi MU.i. n.'i i : ! j.j Till lHpiUt party ha bn erjf- taUUfd S'wund aa4 by tha wt ul prlsclpW. tt I 114 together by itllu's. Therefore tt raneot fa) er trade ttllfe elievr parly fmia wkwh lu sneiaUr wrr draa I'hi he d!tr with na lafaaJaaaUl irlatUt ,.,. so who ar sw tm ru)4 y eur rlalpl. and by ru-io aotsf wa, wh wUh to trad vutvi h wffloee SMiaot W llWa4 to ry Vv( lUie o aaf prltp!e, W hat poihlsf to fata a4 evsrythlsg U U py trw4la riaeif4 fur tew. YELLOW GOD d during the year -five to ninety per paid into the Treas- us torn houses was 40 to 45 per cent In 1302 the gold cue- fallen to 25. 20, 15 January 1893 saw but in gold. In March, as inaugurated; it had (In March the bank h we printed three panic circular," was cular directing that credit refused and rougbt to bear upon d congressmen to re- nlaw.) In April but 2 was allowed to reach d for sixty days prior to leveland at Wall street's the extra tension to tbe insufficient money Inert asing needs, not entered tbe custom brk. lted silver coinage bill old came out of its hid- o 30 per cent, of custom n gold or gold certificates, being the file of receipts down to January off DIs year. But since Bland bill to coin the seigniorage d has again retired Into lies (bank vaults). On tbe ary not a dollar in gold cr tes was received at the Id from one sad seven-tenths n to none at all is tbe or paper which has since been take tin, om it is. The gold of the he hands or subject to the ankers, and all the business try kept dependent on Hand power. Tne great outcry er which they made, the hat tbe coinage of silver un- erman act was destroying e" (that the silver could bo (!) In gold), was supported by decision that the creditor and gold when coin, silver or promised him. It was sheer n and contrary to law that it bo redeemed with gold, ard silver dollar needed no n n 1 1 . i fsitt nrt MdfimAf find nptlon pledge. It was legal r all debts public and private. amnablo decision of Foster and endorsed by John Sherman, law; and passing as law ltgavo monopolists power to bring pon tne countrj ana tney t it. Tho gold was hoarded and refused, and on tbo assumption Id was the only real money, the of final redemption, the silver s repealed and the ruined csun i left at the mercy of tbe gold lyuBurerf! hat's the morcy despots feci?" the hungry, starving millions r. Let the vast army of respect- inemployed citizens made mendl and tramps reply. d what has followed a complete Oder to and capture of the govern- ft by the goldbugs? Any restora- of confidence In the commercial d? No. But more bonds for the ers and for a prostrate suffering le have been demanded and secur The gold they have irUhpaper and er been demanding out of She treasury, y have loaned back to tbe govern- nt, and have for $50,000,000 of geld Ich they bought with tbe despised ver or bsnk notes (both of whloh are changeable at par for gold) they have tained $65,000,000 of gold paper bonds with Interest), and on this coin can obtain 45,O0O,0OO of government endorse bank notes which they can either lean directly to the people, or exchange for coin and draw back the gold they have just lent the govern trcnt and compel another Issue of bonds, aid another, and another, each issue plunging the people deeper and deeper Into tbe debt and power of tbe bankers. How long will It take tbe people to learn through suffering that gold Is not a redeemer, but a des trover; that attrl butiag redemption virtues to it was a hellish device to plunder, bond aad en slave forever the toocredulous ignorant people? Why, think for a moment. It U impossible to redeem more dollar promises tuan there are dollars behind them. Any Increase of tha currency which agrees to pay more gold than there Is goli Is a fraud. It Is worse; for It not only ncrtat the revenue of the gold monopolist. buta! p'v la their power the entlr eommercln' ttructor ef bulu. was re peal log places, I receipts pa) lntroduoed) the yellow! tbe holy of I 20th of Fell gold certiif Treasury ,i per csniH range of f i You see country f i f 1 call of tb( of tbe con under tbV against M assertio? der the 11 "confidij redeem i Carlisle! could d goia, w as8ump silver; Tbe st i redeet. ao re( tendol But tii Carlii . passti i tbe g ruin? broifif credjl thatfj moni . ...! a Dill tryf mofj am ay car sut n tj Ik t r "THE LOW PRtCEOr WHtAT." Thotna A- loahi) of Hartorls, Neb,, evedt u la a flipping from lh Kana t"a fe'ar, aa KdltorUl, entllUd "The Low pika t t Vha.B Th Star man woojr if the prU') wl'.l go lower, sal think another 10 cent fU i a probable asj almoet a cal'y ptwelbU a the tail 19 ivat JUu. TrUera thoifUt wba h-at wa ln teat attfhef that a fartfcue fil im ltiol' bl. Tk ri'ar editor I Uc'ia4 13 tdlak lh prvwat prU' at lat ha c ta Ut tty, UauM th 'ainter I4 hot d rrva) to aay OistileraH ttat hrl terra f f, whraU And UKM from tt fa t thai thtre W at the 4r- at, of at ImI fail prtol t lt, a g arowt (rswsNlfvr la ralseMi-ai ays if as much wheat Is sown ss utmal this spring, "the conclusion will be al most forced upon the trade that there la a Drofit in wkeat raising at the pres ent range of values, and that the low prices of wheat will contlrfue," untU crop calamities ehewhere increase the demand for our surplus wheat Then he goes on to assure tbe farmers that they are better off now tbaa ihey were with wheat at double tho price; because, he says, dress goods cost now but a fifth to a half what they cost then (untrue), sugar was four times as high (false), coffee 50 per cent, higher, tea five times as high (widely false), building material two to four times as high (not tbe fact), and "farm machin ery has been reduced fully one half." He thus endeavors to Instil content Into the minds of tne farmers, and get them used to the thought and life of raisin ir wheat for less than they have often go, for their corn. lie states that "In soma parts of Kaneas today these twoceresls are selling for about the same price." But there are some very large, im portant facts which this "Star," or ignis fatuus, obscares. First he forgets to state that debts calling for money did not fall in value, that they are now demanding two bushels of wheat In stead of one, twice as much labor to meet them. Tbls is an enormous in justice to the farmers of Kansas who owe 1235,000,000 secured by interest-eating farm mortgages, and to the farmers of Nebraska who owe 132,000,000 se cured the same way. And the lent of billiom of indebtedness of the producing classes of the entire country, affected in tbe same way by falling prices, this Star throws no ray of comfort or pro mise to. What is fun for the creditors is death to the debtor. Another thing. Have you noticed that railroad freights have not taken the tumblo that wheat has? and that the price of coal isn't affected by the business paralysis or tbe mild winter? and that other necessities of life too numerous to mention are as high or nearly as high as ever, being in control of trusts? And have you thought that when what wo must buy keeps up and what we have to sell goes down.falllng prices are a great calamity even to those of us who are out of debt? And have you thought that the salaried and pensioned class have become a double burden? Tbe great drop of wheat indicates that the back or support of the business world, long strained by panic and idle ness, Is brokerj; and every form of wealth and capital not supported by monopoly power, resting on the staff of life, must go down with it. The em ployer, still employing men must cut down wages. Every man, except the monopolist and usurer, must lower his scale of living. The number of wage- earners must ' be reduced still more. Tbe farmer must quit hiring help and work harder, though he die, and more people must come to the city and bo supported by the charity (?) of the rich. All this the two old parties, legislat ing for the Shylocks and capitalist!, have brought us to. And the conscience less dally press by suppressing the truth and using Its utmost power to de ceive and misload, Is and has long been the principal agent of the plundering and enslaving power. How long will the people support such papers and be deceived by them? SHOWN UP BY CONGRESSMAN PENCE Hon. Lafe Pence, the elcquent Popu list representative from Colorado, in his speech on the Bland seigniorage bill, put tho matter very plainly regard ing the motives and objects of the oppo sition. He said: Mr. Chairman, why is it that gentle men here from New York and else where, some ranking as Republican? and some as Democrats, should desire that this protit to the government upon its purchase of silver bullion should bo postponed, as to the use of It, for three or four years, lnntead of being used at once? Tbe reason, sir. Is perfectly plain to some of us, at we conceive it. We know that in tnts Uouh there are manr members who desire that there shall be an addltiontl Issue of government bonds Tlieee gentlemen are found on both d of th Chamber, but you will p r m t mo to say mat you do not nod aty of them In the band of Populist. . Laugttter. Moreover and mote par ticularly, l win say we Una a line of men who, a high protection WU, want the government left short on finauee always, la ordr that that condition msy m umh! a an etcueo for raising the schedule of tariff duties. Moreover, and mure par.lcularly y, there are thoao here, and an Inoumei aM band bohtad them ouWtJt) la s bJ, who want the prvseal condition ol atUir to b continued so that the only powr that can protida for aa aJJi- Imal Uu of mouvy for th um of the hoU thai! bt tbe aaUoaal baud. lur Kit were statomxaW r s'eruleg Implication In aa open lottor f Mr, IHv's adJifewd to Prvt Cm' K'.lbtt Hoa.d, prlakd la our Uu Ut week, which sway wnt a very rf twpteetUin r?gntlf lVvt, Uor4 Ui tHtr rtre la th I rat p? a ha be a a iy aardtstetf aludtat. aad has a4 oaly lb help h' a his w taWt aad labor ot maM! la the eeeond n'ac. to fif we know, ha I foUowieg hi mJi e nl,,tU'i and vok'uUj bsMef. e4 li welottmlng all truth watch 4 io era Wt dUI not ha th plaut tf lUt lag to his addr, bitl frvHt o prvwlaa of hi rviortad ha sppvar to tw twlif the sua rUlag THE EAILE0AD3 GREATER THAN THE LA.W. An Important judicial decision was delivered February 26, by Judge Gross cup of the United States District Court, in session in Chicago, holding that wit nesses cannot bs compelled to testify in cases where their testimony would in criminate themselves. It was a case of the Inter State Commerce Commission against the railroad company represent ed by General Freight Agent James (Lake Shore Railroad) and Gordon Mc Leod, agent of the Merchants' Despatch Line The witnesses refused to answer questions whose intent was to draw out information as to illegal cuts In rates by the companies which they represent. Tbe prosecution asked for a rule to commit them for contempt if they did not testify. It will be remembered that Congress amended the Inter State Com merce act February 11, 1893, with the in tention of remedying tbe constitutional defest pointed out by tbe Supreme Court in the Counselman case (like the above), the change in the law being that wit nesses should be exempt from prosecu tion for anything tbey might disclose. Judge Grosscup, however, holds that this later act amending the Inter State Commerce Law so as to protect wit nesses from liability to prosecution and punishment on the strength of their own testlmony.ls still a violation of the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution. The language of his finding is in part at follows: Wbat, then, was tbe Intention of the makers of tbe Fifth Ameadent? This can only be ascertained by transferring ourselves a nearly as possible to the time in whic'i tbey lived, and to the In fluence and conceptions that were then in vogue.. Tbe oppression of crowns and principalities ia unquestionably over, but the more frightful oppression of selfishness, of ruthless and merciless majoritles.mav yet constitute one of tbe chapters of future history. In my opin ion, the privilege of silence against a criminal accusation guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment was meant to extend to all the consequences of disclosure. It Is astonishing that men of the 18th century, our onco respected but greatly deluded forefathers, could have rebell ei against the princes born to rule and then committed the reins of govern ment to the people, to their "more frightful oppression of selfishness," to "ruthless and merciless majorities" But before the ruthless majorities with frightful selfishness brought the minor ity to ruin, the Fifth Amendment was added to the Constitution, and behind this the oppressed railroads can plunder partially or impartially and be safe. ' Commenting on tbe decision of Judge Grosscup District Attorney Milchrist "id: The decision applies to every case in this district, but it does not necessarily govern in any other district. That it will carry weight In all tbe other dis tricts is certain. Tbe only hope for the Interstate Commission now is to raise tb same question in another district and obtain a contrary decision, thu compelling tbe railroads to appeal 'to tbe Supreme Court. A G. Safford, who represents the Interstate Commission, acknowledged that tbe decision cripples tbe Commis sion in so far as prosecutions are con cerned. There is just one way to eettle the railroad question. It is a waste of time and effort to try to control the gigantic corporations and let them keep their own books as private concerns. No law can intelligently reach them and be operative. They must bo owned and operated by the government. We should then have transportation at cost, aad we should eliminate from present transportation charges and revenues not Eimply the net profits paid to rail road stock and bondholders. We should save the cost of railroad lobbies in Con gress and every one of tbe state legisla tures, the expense of which corruption gangs tbe people are now forced to meet. We should save also 8200,000,000 present waste a year by consolidating all under one system. These are the figures of a railroad president. THE WI8D0M OF THE WISE. Think of the absurdities which thoe who uphold the present order of things fall Into. For example. The people are thrown out of work because there Is no market for their goods. Is It because they have mido themselves to rich they have need of nothing? It would seem If things are right as they are, tbey are com pelled to go hungry because too much wheat, corn, potatoes and meat are raised; and to shiver and f reese b-cau tM mach clothing and fuel are market ed; and million live In hovel and are eroatded Into sickening tenement bo eut there not enough work for carpenter, bricklayer and the who ansa budding material The econoanto writer of tho profes sional variety Wavh that W. W, A tor ouht to be paid 'J.IWU.W0 yearly a th rardof "abitlsenc. Hut th poor wMch who abstain t.MUX) or inur a year botWr thaa Aelr, I paid olh tag at ail for hie ahttlaeaoe, It It th Usurious "ah.tlaeaiH uf tboeo only who Jo aot bate to abe'aia, wbloh d wrres to draw aa lxat? AB4wrloM that there it irr tay la clreulallatt thaa th ooot! sxfd, the ft.Un brief that It U aef la irvuUtU, lut ki4 up t the batk and fw are aittB fer It. Aad that taora Wad saould b ImiJ, aid latorwst W arlag dvbU laoae4 to ar M aad th fctatre lrm th curs of too Httea woy, That stabta aad mortgaf am Mvvaearl t Ufa aad measure our prosperity, so that the more we barrow and the more interest we pay with our own labor, the more prosperous we are. And the only way out of the present evil of high tariff or fear of a low tariff "lack of confidence," is to eonfidtitly borrow tbe money out of the bank and cut wages still more, we are told. It seems to us we have heard of a world of men who "professing them' selves to be wise, became fools." THE FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION AGAIN. We have received by mail the past week two requests to make clear the wrong or injustice of taking interest or rent. Before entering into the discus sion of it we wish to say, an evil Is not nnder all circumstances a wrong. War Is an evil, but sometimes it is a neces sary evil. Tbe takfng of interest, rent and dividends Is an evil, but as(war measures they are for the present as justifiable as war Is not more so. They are In fact industrial war measures. Bovel says truly: "In former times war was a business; now business Is war." In our February 22nd issue we dis cussed interest, rent and dividends or net profits from an economic standpoint, and showed that accumulations thus gathered are the cause of our panics and reeurrlng periods of business de pression, our great inequalities of for tune (so-called), and the principal evils, the temptations and sufferings, that s 111 let human society. The People's party has a specific remedy for this evil in the government banking system, which it proposes, a financial system which will provide money at labor cost, money without interest, for the people. But the friends who have written us seem to think it will be necessary, or advantageous and right, for the government to charge a per cent abave the cost for its money. Before considering this we wish to treat the question of usury historically, and we believe not a few of our readers will be interested to follow us, though it lead us to a length of article longer than we think It wise often to write. Whether one believes the Bible in spired or not, it certainly contains truth which all men who have reason must ascent to; and we find the earliest state ment ef the law of justice in it. It reads: In the sweat of thy face shall thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground. Any method of procuring wealth by otberst' oil is manifestly unjust. Justice requires, does It not, that when a man stops work he must consume what be with previous toll produced? If he does not, he is eating the bread which others earn, and therefore is either an object of charity, a thief, a robber or a monopolist. And this requires us to say again that a monopolist in practice may be an antl-monopollstin principle, even as a man engaged in war may be a man of peace. , The interest, rent and net profit ques tions are one and the same, different names only for usury. And usury In the broad original sense means the money or property taken from a borrower in excess of what was lent him. The earliest record referring to the practice is found in the Bible, the 22nd chapter of Exodus, 25th verse, which reads: If thou lend money to any of my peo ple that is poor by thee thou shalt not be to blm as an usurer, neither shalt thou lay upon him usury. Tbe full text of the Hebrew land laws, which provided that every fifty years all lands should be restored to the par ties who were forced to sell it for a period, is found in the succeeding por tion of the chapter. And In the 35th, 36th, 37 th and 38 verses we read: And If thy brother be waxen poor, and fallen In decay with thee, then thou thalt relieve him; yea, though he be a stranger and sojourner; that he may live with thee. Take thou no usury of him. or ' crease; but fear thy God; that y brother may live with thee. Thou ahait not give him thy roony upon usury, nor lend him thy victuals for Increase. I am the Lord your God, which brought you out of the land of Kgypt, to give you the land of Cauaan, and to be your God. Again, lb spcclfio and universal terms, the law against usury wa re peated la Deut. 23; 10, 20, which reads: Tbou shalt not lend upon usury to tby brother; usury of money, usury of vic tual, usury of anything that Is lent up on usury: unto a stranger foreigner thou oiayest lend upon usury; but unto thy brother thou snail not tend upon usury, that tbe Lord tby God may bles ttu la all that tbou avttest tby hand unto la th land whither thou guest to poeaea tt. Ihe exception regarding foreigner wa,tlJently, to v a grrater evil, to prevent so much demand lor loan for rnuuey or good to outsiders, who wuld wlh to save paying latere t, a would leave no surplus capital to lend to their brvthrea who nreded Ik t"l hundred yrs later, In th 11 m of 14vUI, putting out money upon utury wa recc'gfiUed at ala that could not b tadulisd in by th poeilof tied (Pialnt IS; l And thre hundred year aft r David's time th prophet ijatl e!a e usury with robbery, murder, ad ti lery, th things worthy of d. ath. Kn . tnrmtiag Ihe cause uf Ihe subuga' twa aad captivity ff th taraeU'va, ! iUl later says; la tre jiu!a hat they UUa gift to eiwd bUonli thou hast ua usury aad ter, aud thou ! grwedily gained of thy aelghbur by tortla, and hatt tofgoue . ealth th U4 Cii. Heboid, therefor, I ialtt mine hand at thy dishonest gain which thou hsst made, and at thy blood which, hath been in the midst of thee. Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong in the days that 1 shall deal with thee? I the Lord have spoken it and T will do it. And I will scatter thee amoBg the heathen, and disperse thee in all coun tries and will consume tby filthiness out of thee. A hundred and fifty years later still,, just after tho Hebrew captives were allowed to return to their land and were nnder Nehemiah rebuilding Jerusalem, they again began the practice of taking usury. And the complaint was made: We have mortgaged our land, vine yards, and houses that we might buy corn because of tbe dearth. There were also that said. We have borrowed money for the kings' tribute, and that upon our lands and vineyards. Yet now our flesh is ss the flesh of our brethren, our child res as their children : and, lo, we bring into bondage our sons and daughters to be servants, and some of our daughters are brought into bond age already; neither is it in our power to redeem them; forother men nave our lands and vineyards. Nehemiah was very angry when he- heard the cry of the poor, and he re buked the nobles and rulers and said unto them: Ye exact usury, everyone of bia brother. And he set a great assembly against them and charged them to fear God and regard his law. He showed them what it was bringing on the poor, that It wat taking away their freedom, that it was an evil thing. And he said: Let us leave off this usurv. Restore. I pray you, to them, even this day, their lands, their vineyards, their olive- yards and their houses, a1 so the hund red tn part of the money aad ef the corn the wine and the oil, that ye exaet of them. Then said they, we will restore them and will require nothing no usury tri bute of them: so will we do as thou sayest. Then I called the priests says menemianj, and took aa oatn of tnem that they should do according to this promise. Also I shook my lap, and said. do uod snake out every man from his house, and from his labor, that per formed not this promise, even thus be he shaken out aud emptied. And all tne congregation said. Amen, and prais ed the Lord. And the people did according to this promise. The above quoted record shows that the usurers of those days were charging on.y one per cent, "the hundredth part"1 of the money, corn, wine, oil, &c. Our friend In Creighton, who thinks inter- -est and usury two different words would not call one per cent, a year usury. But this leads us to say that usury, or in crease, any net profit charge for money or capital, was preached against by the early Christian fatherj and throughout all Christendom through all the cen turies down to the time of the Reforma tion and beyond. Luther thundered against it. But Calvin wrote a shallow, sophistical argument defending it. Tho church leaders following Calvin Instead of the Bible teaching, began to either justify it, negatively or by silence at least, and political and other defenders of It began to multiply. Henry the Eighth, who made himself the head of the English church as well as a despotic lawmaker, made a new law allowing- usury (interest) to bo' taken. And with the church silenced, tho word usury in its original meaning ia the course of a century or more became entirely obso lete. The political economists of the old and prevailing school have endeavered to justify interest by calling it the re ward of "abstinence." But nothing in creases without labor. And he who labors should have the increase which his labor makes. He who abstains from consumption perishes. He who con sumes without reducing his wealth, must either have Divine power to work a miracle, or he lives by the sweat of others. But now, to ans nrer a point raised by one of our correspondents. If tbe gov ernment should do the banking business providing loans, deposits and exchange, it could only charge such a percent, on loans as would meet the expenses of the general government. And why should the entire expense of the government be borne by a part of the people, the part needing to borrow capital? Our correspondent thinks It would take away his means of family supitort If at 00 year of ago he could not rent his farm or sell It and put hU money at Interest with the government. If it la the ca that he has no children ta work the farm and share present crops for a share in past crops and labor, which ho hat put iota im provemuats. others wjuld ha glal to do tt. That I only just. That Is not monopoly rent, or uury. Another thing. Tho who are now paying usury would by deputing thl sum with the govt.rmneut have much more to fall bk on la old ago, I'ajtir the Populist regtm lawhabm r form aealth I a cumulated It can tm ld and the money deposit with tho gov ernment la thn prfslly a1o ptaJ snvlng haahs, and the fund tran on as nnd rulr. Tla PpultsU ec gv.ulag the crWlt uf try thing !4 aad don I t'ongrve aad out of Cua't whh h in! la the kast th hay lock rlt and k.U 4Urt of th ye'.Ui gttil, Tt.U1r4.llt la Intended a !Uty; but what they the"W frlh shame reach the Just a fn. Th Pvultt r d ieg thl 4 th pvpulUtt ar Mrg that, aad svrv Um It t awuiethlnt th usurer do a! tike, Th vkr and Souther IVtikHwraVt ha l.ato o 4 ay ivai aad tatay ballots wh!h la aay way A .-Hats"i-,1'