Show TilE MASSIS vs Tin CLASSES li Premier Gladstone nililres > eJ overfjOOO I people In Liverpool yesterday nflcrnoon t and In the course of his remarks liueald I The Liberal party was M n rule not sun l ported by dukes ufra clergymen t t the cstnlilisliod church offlocrs of tho army and so forth Wherever there I was n liiRbly privileged publIc endowed profession almost borionthatnprrofesiontwonnan ire + every member of that profession was an f i antiLiberal lint from the legal and medical l r medi-cal which are now open toevery I t one tho Liberals received n fair share oft of-t of support The question was whether the wyh missel wero able constitutionally to overbear over-bear the classes because it trod always been bi shown 1 that wherever Truth Justice and i Humanity wore concerned Iho masses were f in Ut the right 1 and tho classes in tho wrong a In those tow words the grand old man summed the whole trouble In treat Brittiln It is simply the masses ngalnst the classes mill hRs been for BOVCII hun s dred yens lie aptly tells how earnestly the men who receive support from public 1 j + ondon inonts fight the will of tho musses ii for they know that with tho ascendancy of tho masses their sinecures would vanish L aI py van-ish and they lw forced to work for their maintenance just like the men uf tho jl tri f masses There is a similarity in the I t + si y I positions of the American Democratic i party previous to tho last prcsidentia e election and that of tho Homo ItnlcrH in Great Britain now that must attract IJtil i 5w attention on this side of tho water The 1 + Republican party in a certain sense was elf t composed of the Beltstyled classes bo iw I sir t ginning in New Kngland prejudice and ending in general intolerance and which 1Y = held their membership to bo apart from 1 I I a and above tho foreigu born citizen until I I it unfit to male with him only lit the polls 1 f i whore as now in England his voto lr was begged for tho support of melt Irl who after election religiously broke l l + their promises and ostracized bin a l i i from tho public service and afar i d i a-far as in them lay from a voice in the PjNri government of the country The intervention in-tervention of the war with its following f decade of politic measures necessary to t efface its consequences gave the Hepub i a lican party a hobby on which they rod It tr rough shod over the masses and taught I r bll i themselves to believe they were of the t G I chosen of the people and therefore superior supe-rior to the common rabble They were given rope enough of this sort and they li t finally hanged themselves so high Urn I l m r possible revulsion of feeling or resur e 1 j I f rcctionof sectional strife can over reach 4R their halter to cut them down again fy The American people arose in their t wrath and their might and forever t placed a quietus on the tint t American tendency to class distinction distinc-tion which tho Republican party tough I r to saddle on tho people of the country f t The occasion is ripe for a similar movement i move-ment among the masses in Great Britain i mJ I and the indications all point to a speed ii1 public verdict by the British people that will teach class distinctions and class t born power a lesson in political economy long needed in that sadly misgoverned I I land As it was with tho American pea i pie so it is with tho people of Great i Britain tho masses against tho classes t and tho masses have right and universal sympathy on their side Who can doubt F tho outcome < I |