-,7 iVffwixwsnw'"- pwr wSW'l1W,"i,,"' oral; his wealth, considerable for that day, might naturally have mado him partial to the rich, hut ho oast his lot with the common people. Many with less education havo from a fooling of supe riority hold aloof from their follows, but ho em ployed his knowledge of history, of law, of science and of art for the defense and protection of the masses. lie believed in the right of the people to gov ern thomselvcs and in their capacity for self-gov-crnmont. When near the end of life, fortified by an experience and observation such as few men have had, ho wrote: "I am not among those who fear the people. They, and not the rich, are our dopondonce for continued freedom." Only four years before his doalhho said: "In dependence can bo trusted nowhere but with the people in mass. They are inherently independ ent of all but moral law." At another time ho said: "No other depositaries of power than the people themselves havo ever been found, which did not end in converting to their own profit the earnings of those committed to their charge." ' And, to add still another extract from his writings: "The people are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty." Ho not only believed in the people, but he understood the people and recognized the distinc tions which everywhere exist, however much con cealed or denied. Read tho analysis which ho gave of parties and see how completely it has been born out by tho history of the last hundred years: Men, by their constitutions, are naturally divided into two parties: 1. Those who fear and distrust tho people, and wish to draw -all powers from them into tho hands of the higher classes. 2. Those who iden tify themselves with the people, have confidence in them, cherish them and consider them as the most honest and safo, although not the most wise deposit ary of the public interest. In every country these ' two parties exist, and in every one where they are free to think, speak and write, they will declare themselves. Call them, therefore, liberals and ser vilcs, Jacobins and ultras, whigs and tones, republi cans and federalists, aristocrats and democrats, or by whatever name you pleaso, they are the same parties still, and pursue the same object. The last appella tion of aristocrats and democrats is the true one ex pressing the C3sence of all. Jefferson not only announced groat funda mental principles, but he applied them to so many different questions that he can be read as an author ity on all questions of today.- Ho was opposed to imperialism and believed in self-government;' ho was for a republio composed of equal and self governing states and entirely opposed to tho colo nial idea. He was opposed to a largo army and believed that a government was stronger when resting upon tho lovo of tho people than when tolerated only because of fear. Ho was so opposed to tho principle of monop oly that he only excepted copy rights and patents. Hero is tho amendment which ho suggested to the Constitution: "Monopolies may bo allowed to persons for thoir own productions in literature, and thoir own inventions in" tho arts, for a term not exceeding years, but for no longer torm, and for no other purpose." At another time ho suggested fourteen years as the limit for patents. His hostility to monopoly was exemplified in 1787, in a communication to John Jay, in which The Commoner. he said: "A company had silently and by unfair means obtained a monopoly for the making and selling of spermaceti candles (in France). As ' soon as wo (Lafayette assisted him) discovered it wo solicited its suppression which is effected by a clause in the Arret." He denounced as a fatal fallacy the doctrine that a national debt is a blessing. Ho was tho relentless enemy of banks of issue. At one time he declared that banks of issue were more dangerous than standing armies. At an other time he said: "I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength, and bid defiance to the laws of our country." In 1819 he said, "Interdict forever to both the state and national government the power of es tablishing any paper bank; for without this inter diction we shall have the same ebbs and flows of medium, and the same revolution of property to go through every twenty or thirty years." He was a believer in bimotalism, and no one who understands his principles can for a moment conceive of him yielding to the financial influences which controlled Mr. Cleveland's administration and the republican administrations which preceded and followed it. He warned his countrymen against the dangers of an appointive judiciary holding office for life. Of the freedom of speech he said: " The lib erty of speaking and writing guards our other lib erties." Of the freedom of the press he wrote, "Our liberty depends on the freedom of tho press and that cannot bo limited without being lost." He was the author of the statute of Virginia guaranteeing religious liberty and was also the father of tho University of Virginia. He favored a free school system which would bring to every child an opportunity to secure an education. He was an advocate of the jury system; and ho argued in favor of freeing the slaves three-quarters of a century before Lincoln issued his eman cipation proclamation. His writings fill many volumes and cover almost every conceivable subject, but through all that ho said there runs the evidence of a great heart as well as a great intellect. There is need today of a revival of Jeffcrson ian principles. He was not an enemy of honestly acquired wealth, but he believed that the govern ment had no right to exaggerate by favoritism the differences between individuals. He believed that all should stand equal before the law and that every department of government, executive, legislative and judicial, should recognize and pro tect the rights of the humblest citizen as carefully as it would the rights of the greatest and most influential. Jefferson's principles, applied to the problems of tho twentieth century, would restore the republio to its old foundations and make it the supremo moral factor in the world's progress The application of his principles today would re store industrial independence and annihilate trusts lho application of his principles today would drive tho money changers out of tho temple in sure to the people a stable currency and harmon ize labor and capital by compelling justice to both. Society today has its aristocratic and its dem ocratic elements; whether Jefferson's principles are applied depends upon which element controls tho government. Scant Honor to Harrison. The Boston Globe calls attention to a fact which would indicate that some of tho citizens of tho "Hub" have more interest in things happen ing abroad than they have in similar events in the United States. It says: When Queen Victoria died Boston ians were very prompt in displaying their flags at half mast to do honor to her memory. It was quite noticeable yes terday to many people that the national colors were hung out very scantily, considering that an American ex-president had just died. Is an English monarch more worthy the homage of the flag than an American president who helped to defend it? Is sentiment fad ing out in this mammon-hunting country, or shall we confess that republics are becoming more and more uugrateful with the growth of material allurements? No wonder the anti-imperialists of Massa chusetts are in earnest. They evidently see that European ideas are being transplanted upon American soil as well as in the Philippines. W Lincoln and the Silver Republicans. The San Francisco Call, speaking of the action of Senator Dubois and other silver republicans in joining the democratic party, takes oc6asion to misrepresent the position of Abraham Lincoln on the silver question. It says: "The messages and writings of Mr. Lincoln prove him to have been the predecessor of Mr. Cleveland in declar ing the principles of sound money, which Mr. Cleveland made the pole star of his administra tion. Both Lincoln and Cleveland stood exactly in line with Jefferson and Jackson on the issue of sound money." It also denies the right of the Bilver republi can to claim any kinship with Lincoln or his principles. It is not strange that tho gold stan dard papers attempt to distort history, for they are compelled to do so in order to find any sup port for their financial theories. Jefferson believed that the money unit should rest on the two metals, gold and silver; while Mr. Cleveland believes that the money unit should rest on one metal, gold. Jackson affixed his signature to the bill which provided for the free and unlimited coinage of gold and silver at the legal nitto of sixteen to one, without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation, and in changing the ratio from fifteen to one, to six teen to one ho reduced the size of the gold dollar. Mr. Cleveland is tho leader of those democrats who are opposed to the coinage of silver into legal tender money at any ratio or under any cir cumstances. Raymond's Life of Lincoln, published ' soon after the death of President Lincoln and before the republican party began its crusade againt sil ver, reproduces a message which Lincoln sent to the miners of the west. The following is an ex tract from it: Mr. Colfax, I want you to take a message from me to the miners whom yon visit. I have very large ideas of the mineral wealth of our nation. I believe it practically inexhaustible. It abounds all over the western country, from the Rocky Mountains to the pacific, and its development has scarcely commenced.' iJunng the war, when we were adding a couple rtl ,. I !"-