FEnntTAItY 23. IMS X5ha Nobraalctx Independent PACK 3 TOM VATSO I I HEWYOHK The Campaign Put Fire on the Ter rapin's Back and That is What Is Making Him Crawl WHO GAINED GROUND IN CONTEST Legislation Has Been k Helping the Strong to Plunder the Helpless And Weak That the movement in the east which followed Hon. Thomas E. Watson dur ing the late campaign, is a permanent one was shown by the pleasant little banquet given Mr. Watson at Union Square Hotel this evening, at which between one and two hundred persons were present. It was under the aus pices of the city committee of the peo ple's party and was attended by many of the best known leaders of thought in New York, among whom may be mentioned J. G. Phelps-Stokes, Justice Samuel Seabury, Dr. John H. Girdner, Melvin G. Palliser, Gustav W. Thom son, George A. Honnecker, late popu list candidate for governor of New Jer sey, Mr. J. M. Hazzard, managing edi tor of the American Press Association, Mr.. Charle3 H. Tcwne, editor of the Smart Set, Mr. John Milton Scott, edi tor of "Mind;" and the Hon. Charle3 Q. De France, secretary of the national people's, party. Among others in at tendance were the editorial and busi ness staff of Tom Watson's Mazagine. Short speeches were made by Mr. Phelps-Stokes, Mr. George L. Rusby of New Jersey, Hon. A. J. Boulton, peo ple's party candidate for governor of New York ,and several others. Every mention of. Mr. Watson s name was cheered to the echo, as were also the many predictions of renewed populist activity in the future. Mr. Watson was given an ovation wrhen he was in troduced which was repeated again at the close of his address.- He spoke in his happiest vein. "In civil life as in war," he said, "a crisis may demand that some one should lead a forlorn hope. Victory is not expected, glory may not be won; but duty calls the soldier and he an swers 'Here' to do or die in her exact ing service. "During" the presidential campaign of 1904, it fell to my lot to lead the for lorn hope. - ' 1 . . ... "With full ; knowledge of the 'weight of the burden, I took it up and bore it as best I could; and I am proud to meet tonight so many -cf those who stood by me throughout that ordeal. "I am sure " that I express your sen timents when I saj, we glory in the fact that, in spite of all ths abuse and Ladies Onlv. T To Wnmon Who Need Most Relief , From Little Irri- ; tating Pains and Aches, - f Trr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills are for Aft " j Woman's delicate nervous organism iWngles to the least jarring mnuenue, aw nLt,A le tViA faculty f The remedy is at hand i Dr.' Miles' Anti-Pain Pills. : They act most marvellously on worn en's nervous organism, and relievo and .icure the pains to which she is a martyr.; Headaches, neuralglac pains, monthly pains, and all kinds of pains disappear as ir a gentle hand had lightly soothed; Ithem away. . Dizziness, Rush of Blood '$o the head, Toothache, Backache are 8.11 cured by these "Little Comforters."; ' ' Cured without danger of disagreeable after-effects; cured quickly; cured witlw i out unnatural action on liver, stomach, or other Internal organs. ' , . Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Tills please the .women, and the children take them be- , cause they are easy to ta1t3 and soothe B.11 their sufferings. "For years I had spells of sick head ache, at times suffering untold agonies. i could not endure any excitement." i'Going to church, and even visiting, brought on these terrible spells. I tried (numerous remedies without relief until il tried Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills, and 'they have cured me. When I feel symp toms of sick headache I take a pill and i.ward off the attack. When I am tired iia.nd nervous, a pill soothes me." MRS. .'BARAII WATK1NSON, Blalrstown, la. Price, 25c a box. Never sold In bulk. 'Xitjtit-i Write to us for Free Trial X AXjUi package of Dr. Miles' Anti ifaln PlllSr the New Scientific Remedy - tor Pain. Also Symptom Blank. Ou iepecialist will diagnose your case, tell wou what Is wrong, and how to right it, Yee. DR. MILES MEDICAL CO, ridicule which beat upon ua, we upheld the banner of Jeifersonian democracy at a time when its trusted leaders had weakly surrendered or basely deserted. "The democratic party had grown weary of the virtue which meets with no substantial earthly reward. "To lay up treasure in heaven is apparently no part of Its program. "For eight years prior to 1904 it had done business on principles for cibly borrowed from the people's party; but, while these principles were right they had not yet become sufficiently popular to command a majority vote. " 'We are tired of being in the mi nority! 'cried the democratic, leaders; aiid they astonished mankind by try ing to win the game with the cards which the republicans had already dealt to themselves. "The result was precisely what might have bean expected by anybody except the party which, after having sent its prayers skyward through a megaphone, chose August'Belmont for its cashier, Grover Cleveland for its wet nurse, Tom Taggart for its prophet, and Dave Hill's favorite pupil for its candidate. "The smoke of b?ttle has now lifted; the campaign liar is taking a well earned vacation; James Creelman has turned his attention to Thomas Law son; and we may, at length, form some accurate estimate of what was ac complished by the campaign of 1904. "Who gained ground by that contest? "The Radicals. " "The republicans stood for conser vatism; the democrats stood for con servatism. No issues were raised. "The two old paries were so deter mined not to alarm anything, or any body, that they did not even alarm each other. "On every subject Finance, Tariff, Imperialism the attitude of the two presidential candidates was so nearly identical that neither of them .ever could or would define the difference. "The radicals stood for vital reforms. "And now what is the result? "The conservatism of republicans and democrats has been cast asid$, and the dear old twins are doing their best, in congress, to convince the people ihit they themselves are radicals. "They realize that the great deeps of American thought have been brok en up and that irresistible waves are beating against the walls of special privilege and monopoly. "Suppose that Eugene Debs had not made his splendid fight; suppose I had failed to answer the call of the Spring field convention, does any one believe that congress would now pretend to be so eagerly interested in reform? "Year in and year out the wrongs under which our people suffer had cried aloud for redress and no presi dent had rushed to our relief. "It was the campaign of 1904 that put fire on' the terrapin's back and made him begin to crawl. "Can the republican party give the people the reforms they need? Impos sible! "There are too many republicans per sonally interested in keeping things substantially as they are. "Can the democratic party do the work? Impossible! There are too many democrats per sonally interested in keeping things substantially as they are. What then is the hope of the coun try? The union of all reformers. We must draw from the republican party those who oppose class law and money bag aristocracy; we must draw from the democratic party every true-hearted Jeffersonian. We must gather into one compact aggressive movement all pat riots, no matter what they call them elves, who are broad-minded enough to agree upon essential reforms which are within the reach of this generation. We must choose for leaders men who have in their make-up the fire of the crusader and the ; consecrated zeal of the martyr men who are not to be tempted, or bullied; men who fear nothing in God Almighty's world ex cept to violate their own sense of right. . "This people will, not be redeemed from misrule by leaders who never dare to take a stand upon any question until they-have first considered, anx iously, how it will affect the vote. Sich reform as we need will 'never come if we wait for those who measure right and wrong with ; the yard-stick of a political convention. That party, or that set of leaders, which never knows what it believes in, or what it stands for, until. its national convention has adjourned, deserves no toleration from gods or mfin. The only party and the only set of leaders which deserves re spect, or can hope to make the world better by Its labor, is that which adopts it screed with conscientious intelli gence, fights for it with fearless de votion, and clings to it, throughout the night and the storm, with a fidelity. which no discouragement can shake. "Great is the original thinker; great the emotional orator; but thought, how ever wise, speech, however sublime, avail nothing until the worker comes into the field. Rousseau a thought was profound, but it was tho worker of the French revolution who shaped rad ical ideas into laws and institutions. For many a generation, England had her democratic thinkers and her dem ocratic orators, but the people had no civil liberties until the workers and the fighters had made the creed of the student the chart by which they moved, the plan by which they worked and fought So in this land, we have had the thinkersfrom Jefferson's time down to that of Henry George; we have had the orators, from Fatrick Henry down to well, down to John Sharp Williams. But to win, we need workH ers. We need men who put principle above party, patriotism-above self, duty above hunger for office. We want men who are not afraid to be in the minority, if they are right; men who would rather hear the still, small voice of an approving conscience than to listen to the roar of a nation which blindly applauds the wrong. "To the men who want thus to work, the American world offers tasks wor thy to enlist all the strength of the mind, all the zeal of the heart. Com mercial slavery holds in chains tens of thousand of the 'little boys and girls of our land. We are cowards and be come parties to the crime, if we do not heed the cry of the children, and do our utmost to strike the fetters from their helpless limbs. Ten millions of our fellow" citizens are in poverty, and their condition threatens the whole body politic for with poverty comes an infinity of woes not confined to the poor. Almost exclusively the poverty from which we suffer results from bad laws and dishonest administration. Legislation has been helping the strong to plunder the weak; dishonest admin istration has been aiding piratical cap ital to exploit a submissive public; dishonest- officeholders have been giv ing away to greedy corporations the most valuable property which belonged to the people; and franchises which should have been exercised for the ben efit of all, are being used by the few to rob the many. "Again, we see everywhere that we no longer have representative govern ment. The people do not control. The senate of the United Statfs is selected by organized capital,, and obeys its master. The federal judiciary, ap pointed for life, owing nothing to the people, and not responsible to them, is hhe bulwark of money-bag aristocracy. When corporation tyranny shall have been checked at every other point, it will entrench itself behind this un democratic and irresponsible power, and it may happen that the president, and congress will assault in vain the common enemy when it is shielded by those judges who claim and exercise the right to nullify legislation upon which congress and the president have agreed. We must give back to the people the power to initiate and vote legislation; the right to control their representatives; the right to remove the officeholder who betrays his trust. If we had had no other doctrine beside that, in the last campaign if we had no other now that doctrine alone would justify us in the determination to keep in the line of battle. "Comrades, in this, the dawn of the new year, let us revive our energies, strengthen our purpose, and press for ward. For my part, my motto shall be that of Seneca's pilot when, In the midst of the tempest, he cried out: " 'O, Neptune! You can save me if you will; you can sink me if you will, but whatever be my fate, I shall hold my rudder true.' " CITRONELLE CHAUTAUQUA March 2-20, 1905 . In the Pines of Alabama The very best Chautauqua talent has been engaged for this assembly; an auditorium seating over 2,000 has been erected; there will be a golf tourna ment for the Fulford Cups offered by C. E. Fulford of Leeds, England; and other out-door sports of minor import ance will be indulged- in. 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