Conservative. arc framed. In them are gathered up Iho principles which have boon forged out by my rinds of centuries of evolution and which at tbo snmo time become guides to and limitations of government. They are essential to republics , where government is in the hands of the mul titude who would otherwise bo ignorant of the principles upon which good government - ornmont must rest , and who , forgetful of human limitations , woe Id be liable to adopt measures which would destroy all government. In this rospoot the maxim that the voice oC the poDpla H the voice of God , is a dangerous fallacy. That voice never can relieve us from the higher laws upon which the order and progress of society depend ; and when , therefore , these standards fail , wo may justly look with apprehension upon the future of any society which has sub mitted to their control. Our standard has boon in existence 117 years , during which many wars and other events of vabt importance have transpired , and the geography , both of the world and nation , has been changed. The only wonder is that our standard has endured so well , and that under it our people have made btrides in progress which have never been equaled in his tory. Yet to mo it seems that wo have either outgrown or drifted away from our standards of the constitution. "What student of American history -will assert that the power to issue demand notes as lawful money ; to create national banks ; to maintain colonies and hold conquered territories in which the people should not bo citizens of the country ; to sup press the circulation of state banks duly issued in accordance with the laws of the states under which the banks were organized ; to create corporations for any and every purpose relating to com merce ; to maintain a corrupt and ineffi cient civil service based only on partisan fealty ; and finally to enact laws exclu sively to protect and aggrandize special lines of business , we're ever contem plated by the framers of the constitu tion or by the people who rutiQod it , as parts of the permanent policy of the country ? Yet today all these stretches of authority exist , not merely as a means to exercise some power expressly granted , but as independent and permanent - nont institutions. Ell'ect of Encroiichmonts on the Consti tution. The effect of these insidious en croachments upon the constitution , is shown by the present state of the two political parties. The republican party has aways held to a construction of that instrument which permitted it to ac complish whatever it deemed expedient , but has limited its transgressions to such as the people would accept without no tice of their effect upon their political standard. A strict adherence to the constitution was the basic principle of the democratic party. Where does that party stand today ? It has adopted the "green-back" idea , has attacked the sanctity of the supreme court upon con stitutional questions , advocates the tak ing possession by the government of all railroad and telegraph lines and other so- called public utilities , is in favor of repealing the laws which protect person and property against the violence of labor combinations , and finally lias abandoned its righteous protests against discriminating protective duties and bounties. With both parties , therefore , the constitution has lost its position us a sacred standard. Perhaps it would not bo correct to say that all these encroachments are wrong. It is to bo presumed that some of thorn are the outgrowth of a natural develop ment , and may bo necessary to the con tinued happiness and progress of the people ; but in so far as they exist with out the sanction of the constitution , they are outlaws , and if meritorious should bo brought within its terms , if injurious should bo placed tinder its ban. Time to Itoviso the Constitution. Iii my judgment , therefore , the time has como when the people through their loftiest and most cultured minds , should revise and restore this great instrument , by placing it in full harmony with the changed conditions of the now century. A study of the history of the last cen tury , however , must prove to a practical mind that no real revision can take place under existing methods , which appear to have boon framed to prevent amendments except after a revolution like the civil war. As preliminary , therefore , to a revision of the body of the instrument , there should be a revision of the methods by which amendments can bo made , and such methods made to harmonize with the cautious exercise of the right of a ma jority to govern , oven in the recognition of fundamental law. During the last three years wo have heard a great deal about imperialism. To mo it seems that every traveled road leads for the present to the goal. The republican party openly advocates au thority by conquest alone , and coloniza tion without citizenship , which is im perialism in one form. The democratic party has boon swallowed by the pop ulist tiger , and now rests safely in its stomach. Populism , with its proposed supreme control of finance , and its threatened absorption of the great industrial enterprises of the country , means socialism , and socialism always ends in imperial government. Therefore our only hope lies in the restoration of the constitution. JAMES DENTON HANCOCK , Franklin , Pa. , August llth , 1900. GEUONIBtO. People who , at the Omaha exposition of 1898 , made the acquaintance of this venerable murderer , and perhaps paid him twenty five cents for his autograph , were pained to learn a short time ago through the newspapers that his mind and health were giving way , owing to the hardships of his prisox house. And no doubt all such have rejoiced proportionately tionately siuco at learning that it was a mistaken report , and that Gorouimo and his excellent wife and all the other condemned Apaches are still doing busi ness in the customary way at Fort Sill. Goronimo's confinement need not necessarily break him down in a thous and years , if it is no stricter than that to which ho was subjected at Omaha. The writer was entering that wonderful en closure one afternoon and mot the old man and a friend of his at the gate : wrapped in their thoughts and their gorgeous blankets , both alike sacred and impenetrable. Reaching the gate , they halted and looked about for the guard whose business it was to see that no redman man came out without proper creden tials ; but that functionary was not in sight. They were evidently used to making allowances for the United States government , however ; they stood and waited a reasonable time for it to do its duty , muttering to themselves the while ; then a flash of impatience lighted Gorouimo's wrinkled features " " up , "ugh" he said , and "ugh" said his companion , like engines on a double-header freight train signaling each other , and forth they waddled down the Midway. COM. THE CONSERVATIVE for the next three months , or until the close of the cam paign , for 150 cents. Address , Morton Printing Company , Nebraska City , Nob. The modern office SAVIOlt. fice hunter , who generally begins his career by saying that "it is the money and not the honor" of the office which ho seeks , always poses as a protector of the poor and a savior of "tho plain peoplo" . In one campaign he may lecture on money , the danger of world-current money , and the diabolism of the gold standard. And four years thereafter , when every one of his financial fore casts have boon proven absolutely false in gouoral and in detail , the same pa triot , with affectionate solicitude , poses as the only preventive of "Im perialism" . Ho is the proclaimed protector of the poor and the plain. He everywhere in forms voters that Protector. unless anti-imper ialism , be exalted the republic will be demolished and the empire uplifted in its stead. Such protectors and saviors should be employed as nurses for child ren. Ghost , fairy and bogy stories may frighten urohiuhood , but manhood is not disturbed by them , even when told by a peerless prophet with a silver tongue that rolls out sixteen platitudes to one original thought.