ni.iia.iihii.frn Conservative * The secretary of PATEUXAIISM. . , . , agriculture , Mr. Wilson , has been advising the people of the Pacific coast that ho is going to do everything ho can to help build up their interests. "Congress , " ho has said to them , "will give me all the money that is needed to do it , and the president wants you to feel that everything his administration can do to help you will bo done. " This is paternalism with a vengeance. Mr. Wilson would proba bly resent being called a socialist. Yet he is a socialist without the socialist's sense or justice in distribution. Social ism proposes to make government pater nal. It proposes to have the govern ment promote business operations. But the socialist would sec to it that the profits of these operations were enjoyed by all the people ; whereas Mr. Wilson's socialism stops with production , leaving the strong , the rich and the privileged to grab the profits away from their brethren. Mr. Wilson appears to bo a socialist or paternalist for the benefit of the few. When one inquires into the manner in which Mr. Wilson proposes to help Pacific const interests one is as much surprised as at the one-legged species of socialism he affects. For his object is to promote the export of Pacific coast products. No thought does Mr. Wilson give to importations with which to pay for the exportations. If he can help the Pacific coasters to get rid of their pro ducts , ho will bo satisfied. Whether they got any returns or not is a matter of indifference to him , and , as ho sup poses , to them. For is it not the thorough ly grounded belief of protectionists that people are enriched not by getting goods , but by getting rid of them ? Of course , protectionists explain that they expect exported goods to bo paid for in gold. But then the gold never comes. For in stance , the gold brought into this coun try in excess of what went out , during the fiscal year that ended with June , 1899 , was $58,552,766 less than in the year ending June , 1898 ; and it was only about 10 per cent of the excess of merchandise exports. Since merchan dise is not wanted by protectionists in payment for exports , and gold comes only in small quantities relatively to the excess of merchandise exports , we are left to infer that protectionists rather enjoy the kind of trade that consists in giving without getting. If their mo tives wore unselfish they would be per fect types of the altruist. The Public. 9 * * ° * * " * KX-GOVEKKOK HOLCOMH. rejoiced and was exceedingly glad in the presence of many plain people because he "was proud of the humble part" ho took in the election of Governor Holcomb. And this is a part of the proud record of Holcomb which seems to show that cooperation in rent-paying and in voucher-making is a profitable style of petit larceny. The State Journal of the 18th says : "The warrants drawn by Governor Holcomb for house rent during this period show that ho received on an average more than $50 a month. The money was drawn quarterly in advance and as the statements of the witness show , was not then paid out and when paid was only to the extent of about half the amount drawn. "Records in the auditor's office show that in the forty-five months of Gov ernor Holcomb's incumbency during which an appropriation for house rent was available ho had drawn for that purpose $2y03 , or more than $50 a month rent. During nine months ho occupied the Crandall house on the northeast corner of Seventeenth and A streets , for which the owner drew $60 a month rent. The remainder of the term he occupied the Gould house on the southeast corner of Eighteenth and A streets , to pay rent of which ho seems to have drawn $49.75 a month. Three of these warrants the governor refused to swear to the correctness of but after a conference with Auditor Moore the latter ordered a warrant drawn any way. " Coinu Into Court. The same issue of The Journal con tains an invitation to ex-Governor Hol comb , of the proud record , which Bryan boasts he was humbly instrumental in bringing about , to appear before the in vestigating committee of Prout , Van Duseu , and Rocke and show how he , Hol comb , is absolved from participation in the attempt to fraudulently count in two populists as members of the supreme court of Nebraska ? To prove that he , Holcomb , was in no wise connected with a conspiracy to debauch the ballot box is the pleasant task which the ex-governor is invited to outer upon : The Invitation. "Honorable Silas A.HolcombLincoln , Nebraska. Dear Sir : We have the honor to acknowledge receipt of your communication of the 14th , which has just been received. In reply wo beg to say that on the 10th inst. the committee notified you through the sergeant at arms of the taking of testimony , and in vited you to bo present , to which noti fication you replied , in substance , [ that you had no interest in the subject mat ter of the investigation. On the 12th iust. , a subpoena was issued by the com mittee directed to you and commanding you to appear before them to testify relative to the recount of the ballots. The sergeant at arms failed to serve the subpoena for the reason that you were reported out of the city. "In view of the fact that you have been courteously invited to bo present at the sittings of the committee it would seem to us that your request to bo pres- nt , and to bo given an opportunity to refute the evidence already offered is somewhat gratuitous. "The meetings of this committee are all hold with open doors , and they cor dially invite all persons to come before them and give any evidence they may have , touching any irregularities rela tive to the conduct of the executive or other officers of the state. And we would further suggest that when the committee is seeking to discharge a duty imposed upon it by the senate of this state , it would seem that in such pro ceedings it should not meet with the opposition of or the questioning of its power by one who has held the office of governor of this state. If there was an attempt to change the fundamental law of this state by fraud through re marking the ballots , and filling out blank ballots , none ought to bo more interested than yourself in discovering that crime , and in punishing the guilty parties. You should be interested since you were governor at the time when it is claimed that this crime was attempted to be committed. "The committee shall be glad to have you appear , but you must come as a wit ness , prepared to demand and receive all rights due to a witness , as well as to submit to such examination as the com mittee may on its own behalf or by di rection make. "The committee will bo in session at the Lincoln hotel at 2 p. m. today and will bo glad to have you present to an swer such questions as may be put to you touching the conduct of the execu tive office during your incumbency , and any evidence yon may have touching the recount of the ballots cast for the constitutional amendment at the elec tion of 1896. "Wo have the honor to be , respect fully , "F. N. PKOUT , "J. H. VAN DUSEN , "JACOB ROCKE. " lilxby Umvls. But the most touching and pathetic part of this incident , which has rent the populistic ex-governor's reputation , is the gloom and sadness which have en veloped the poet Bixby in a halo of woe and caused him in tearful verso to thus break out : Silas Holcomb , I'm nfraid It wore bettor you hail stayed In the pleasant homo you purchased long ago ; Where , deep-buried , is the wreck Of the spotted cow called Speck , And the boar black pig still squeals , at Broken Bow. You might never have been known Far beyond the mortgage loan While the fleeting moments hurried on their way , Nor have known this now disgrace , That you are now forced to face , "Holding up" the stnto for rent you didn't pay. And yet Colonel Bryan is proud of Holcornb's record !