Show editorials E 1 1 TOR I 1 A Ls B TT 0 H U tim tile new now herald having haying apparently parent ly worn down J is now ridin riding a horse honse of another color and Bu chuly chull Is i his fancy name the last nido rido of the 71 ri herald 11 crata erald extended to this territory the tho leader of the herald for nov 11 1 i upon the silver mini in company of utah limited to ta which a column and a half is devoted by our enterprising and sensational sat ional lonal contemporary the following ia is the tiie opening paragraph no financial achievement of modem times has produced so gratifying anim an im pre pres slon siou upon the minds of our oar patriotic people as the of the tho silver mining ning company Com of utah limited whether we dwell direll upon the tho genius that planned the campaign or ahn energy with which it was fought or the triumph which marked its close we are alike lost in admiration two great results were accomplished many of our most camin 1 ent public men like a senator from arizona for ln instance became wealthy and were enabled to devote their gigantic intellects to the public welfare untrammeled by financial cares perfidious england whose treatment of america during the tho revolution and rebellion can never lie excused or fo forgotten motten notten was compelled t to 0 pay an addition additional indemnity Kinnity In of tive five millions of dollars the lie lle cardinal principle of finance fi nanee nance according to the herald is that all true business consists iu in obtaining values for valueless commodities with this view of the case that paper presents the history of this particular scheme in which the managers a needy german baron a keen yankee banker and a handsome senator with the american minister to st james interested proceeded very successfully to bleed john bull to the tune of five million dollars which the merald herald thus distributes when wilen the subscription books of the little budhu were closed it was found that none of tha the eld old id rats of the london money market had nibbled at tho the toasted cheese there was not a name known in financial circles not a name familiar with the waya of money and shares but there was a ion lon long iong 7 list of clergymen clergy men and widows and ancient maiden ladle ladie and humble people from every town in the united kingdom the subscriptions were for small amounts the savings of oue one or two years of many years perhaps it was pitiful to see this list and to read the names and to feel that those these simpleminded people had hurried to buy these worthless shares in the belief that the they y were endorsed and protected by the honor of A america marl a and when the mine went to smash and the shares fell to bothin nothing p one could not but think of distant english h homos homes the humble fireside the villa village ge manse where misery f un mid 4 its way thron through li the influence of the re representatives p besenta of f american nationality other side of or the question is thus stated the baroa baron went with hii his share chare to hesse liesse the senator returned to washington and a nd built a balace palace and is mentioned in con A atlon with the presidency the cx ex ped ier irr began to endow theological seminaries narles and to subscribe for the tile propagation of the gospel in foreign parts when the widows and clemy cleny clergymen men went vent to tot the bankins banking house for their money maney they were told that hak hat all business had ceased with the orinc when they went to the minister be dimply said sald 1 I have sinned and only regard me as a fool in order that you yon may not condemn me as a scoundrel and when the president of the united states came to review the transaction he gave it his hia approval as not being in any way in Tio violation lation of principles of his ela administration tho the two glorious results q accruing to this country were the senator r became rich enough to give his whole mind to the coun england was compelled to pay another indemnity for her perfidious conduct to america at divers times during the last century r a 0 o RETURNING EASTWARD THOUSANDS after thousands of skilled operatives in various cities and towns in the eastern state states s owing more or less to the present finau financial cial elal crisis and to some of the causes of the same are now either out of work entirely or are reduced to short time which also mean means Is short wages k in addition to actual reduction in the rates of wages received cc ved with no prospect of any material improvement impre during daring tho the 40 winter at least in consequence we hear ilear of numbers of these wera operatives concluding to go to europe what do they expect there they expect to obtain work and they certainly can live much cheaper there than in tho the eastern states and with the same outgo far mora morel comfortably in england notwithstanding the tile common report of poverty 2 etc etcy wages have risen considerably of late insomuch that we have seen it stated that if ir they continue to go on that way they will soon soon equal the rates of wages paid in ih the eastern states tates while a certain amount of cash in europe is ear far superior in the power to purchase se and aud luxuries to what an equal amount is in many portions of this country this is a novel movement the emigration of the working classes from america to E europe drope it is the reckless go a bead right or wrong make mako haste to be rich at all hazards policy that has brought abndt in uis mis this country a plate tate of things which renders such rennex reflex emigration lioun a fact or even possible on a scale worthy of notice and partly by this reaction do populations and thin things politico economical seek their level in the west we see another in move ve in the same general direction emigration returning to the pa east 11 in the departure of and China women from san francisco for their novt on n country though this departure arises from a very different cause it not being the lack of employment or the financial crisis for they are not afflicted with either to any serious bertous extent on the pacific but from the studied and determined inhospitality of many of tho the caucasian to the tho mongolian race this reve reversion plon nion of the stream of emigration at least in the eastern states is likely to be but temporary and not run to an al alarming arming extent it is sl M I 1 y th the e 0 outflow of at present superfluous ous labor and skill but it is an tin ul ultima ti matel mated teb tei loss to the country the outflow is likely to be but temporary because becatti te this country is large new sparsely settled and undeveloped and it contains vast rich and multifarious resources it Is rully folly capable of 0 standing on its own merit before the world as a desirable place for surplus populations to flow to under the present circumstances this temporary reflux of population will be of a relieving and healthful nature though perhaps most of these families going eastward to E europe drope would ultimately do M much uch bette better rif if they were to come westward further into this coun help to develop the lament latent resources of the soil soll and thu tho mineral resources in which many parts ar the country abound california LAND MONOPOLY SOME soun of the Cal california 1116 refis papers seem to think thi uk that the golden state can equal england for land monopolists and to be ready to dery defy the monopolists of tho the old country to show more inveterate laud grabbing propensities than the monopolists of california monopoly is monopoly wherever it may be and it is difficult to see wherein it is less heinous in california than in england or any other country if it acts the devel and prosperity of one country it is just as likely to have ssi fil similar milar eff ellece act in another country political writers and orators like bradlaugh point to the great estates of noblemen and other monopolists in england and expatiate eloquently upon the benefits which would result to that nation from a sort of agrarian or some other division of these monopolized lands among the landless political writers and orators in in california point to tho the vast land laud claims af f 1 monopolists in that state and to the h e check which such auch monopoly holds upon the settlement of the state and the development of its varied varned and magnificent resources these enormous land grants and claims and the insecurity of titles partly in consequence are charged with hindering the free emigration of valuable classes of the population from the atlantic to the pacific slope and the question is agitated how to counteract the depressing influence of this monopoly A probably the best system would bo forthe for the state to own tile the landane land and parcel it but judiciously butas but ay society isnow is now co constituted n i that if Is impracticable the best laws and systems require the best people to handle and live under them otherwise such jaws laws and systems are of little account some other and more feasible way of checking land monopoly and avoiding its evils must be found by our california neighbors and some of them ame are earnestly endeavoring deavo leav af oring ring to t discover such fiu flu feasible ibie ible way POLITICS AND PARTIES THE decided gains of the democrats and consequent losses ot of the republicans in the tile recent elections in the east lia lla have ye surprise surprised d many ly people ople opie the tile financial crisis appears to have set many to thinking seriously and some of them recollect that one of the arguments used against galust il tho the elec tion flon of greeley was this that a crus crushing hing bing financial crisis would be the tho result if he were elected and that it was necessary to reelect re elect grant to stave oil off this crisis well grant gant was elected reelected re and the c crisis ris is ame notwithstanding now the bou country instead of having 1 greeley the has grant and the brials crisis A good many of the people are anxious to know how it is that things have come to this pass seeing that they went wert west for grant with one express purpose of pr preventing the crisis and now tuey they ta are arc a little doubtful whether whet lier ller the party in power is really BO so great and so good as it has hits been represented they waver in their allegiance legi leg lancia ance to it and thus the democrate democrats gain iven even harpers weekly y that staunch advocate of the re B riu flu publican publican party has begun to faulter a its fidelity and hardly knows what to make of things but seems to have a pretty good g 00 a idea that th at there is something rotten in denmark in it late number of that paper occurs the following corruption Corrupt lon loa wins more than bon bor honesty caty 11 it is true la in politics as in eveny every other department part ment of human activity when cor begins in a party when those who are ate unworthy representatives of the party principle become it 11 leaders and its mea bures cures betray the recklessness and insolence of df power the party bem beg begins wius glus to decline if it today to day there are many republicans who look gravely upon their party prospects it is because they see sec it apparent uy liy id 0 untitled with certain unworthy men and measures it is no answer to such sueh republicans te to say thit that there are bad men in all parties and alid especially in one so supreme that Is freely admitted no party ought to be judged by its worst members but when those who are arc not the best control a party and when the best bast cannot honestly defend its measures it is idle to suppose that it will not cot be judged by those men and those measures we do not say that such is the present condition of the republican party but there Is no sincere republican who reads these words who does not see sec much in the party tendency that makes him restless aud and ap but nut anre uhe the democrats going to become become the me dominant party again cne one can hardly think so for they have llave been so long and so hopelessly divided against themselves and a house divided against itself can not stand the democrats may have been gaining i ing largely lately but it will take a vast deal of gaining to make them the dominant party again besides the question arises would there be less in the government if the demoe were to come into office again than there is now that the republicans are in much might be said on both sides fildes but one thing would still basure be sure that men are more important than measures and that patriotism is more important than party give us really good men and either party would be more satisfactory than either is now another thing may also be conis dered certain that the republican party will not go to pieces until there is another party ready teady to take its place what is wanted is a party comprising the best men in the nation and to institute this party there must be an important issue around which it can rally an issue which the party will consider vital that it may bo be eam earnestly estly resolutely and uncompromisingly advanced the grange movement Js is bacad orn orf this idea and the issue s in that is against corruption and specially against mc monopoly the gr angers have also hold I 1 of another good idea that of sending the mere po politicians liti clans adrift and putting good solid substantial building up citizens in office nut but but nut the grange movement is very partial very one sided so that it might almost be termed the farmer class consequently that will not be the coming party unless it shall become liberalized so as to be no longer sectional but embrace all classes of the tho population any issue to be of absorbing ab interest I 1 in n the union must be a national fue ami dud any party to become the dominant party must be a national party working along with the current of the tho national ua dional issue until something of this kind is seen tho the republican party will be tae safe only in the contingency of one possible condition a general crumbling of all parties the natural result of which would be anarchy THE SALARY GRAB tim tile back pay and salary grab gr as it 19 i called continues to excite considerable sid erable atte attention nolon nelon in various I 1 qua quo quarters ir and if ib it can be fie made available it will not only be heard of in the papers and at the polls but in the halls balls of congress the coming winter the cincinnati times contends that the doubling of president grants salary was wag clearly unconstitutional tut ional in which idea some other bourna journals Is concur to support its argument g u in ent the tames refers to the debates b teg in the philadelphia convention of 1787 upon the adoption of the constitution the seventh of mr nir randolph Randolp hs fifteen resolutions provided that the national executive should receive a fixed compensation in which no increase or diminution shall be made so as to affect the magistracy existing at the time of increase or diminution and the convention did not raise any objection to but approved of that idea dr pran fran franklin klin kiin advocated that the executive re relve no salary at all and alexander hamilton seconded the motion but the convention thought otherwise mr patterson of new jersey presented substitutes one of which contained the provision that the federal executive should receive a nixed fixed compensation in sensation pensa tion for their services in which no increase or diminution shall be made so 60 as to ann the persons composing the executive at the of such crease or diminution on the inhibitory clause aate afterward arward assumed the following shap shape gih he the F executive X shall at stated times receive lor for his services ices a compensation which shall neither be increased nor diminished during |