22, 1896. THENEBR SKA INDEPENDENT n'T7'THmiri?W 4 ourselves dependent upon out "T7 Ii Jostle Harlan an Anarehlatf gold tock of money, or a per capita ol Justice an aa of tne supreme court $5.00. at mt the same as now employed la a Republican. When the court re more money by tn08e enlightened countries, Spain, changed lta mind, declared the Income rufkUKtu. limy uiu iucucu. " -w . v Would you, with your eyes open, rote for such a policy? And yet, this la what confront us If the gold standard prevail. To prevent such degradation our only present alternative Is bimetallism. The government statistics give, us 21 per capita, a; d the gold press of that la some moment of national peril the country refer v 1 V great gueto to this decision will rise up to frustrate 7 1 a few days now before that magnificent (!) showing, one-half its will and paralyze Its arm. I hope ) tmlzl spoil to exercise the of what little France enjoys. . it may not prove the first step toward ''C.;ed prosperity. f . Preaaa Buffering ' of Cum Woolly Artl lUk Cm Caslly Be Be- lizrmea of the United the rich should not be taxed in propor tion to their wealth, Justice Harlan, In a dissenting opinion, scored them In the following emphatic terms: "While I cave no doubt that con gress will find some means of sur mounting the present crisis, my fear Is ; 2Vtr granted you by our .1 tie right of suffrage. They do not tell us, however, that the the submergence of the liberties of the 500,000,000 and odd silver doll rs which people In a sordid despotism of wealth. citing your ballots permit go to make up the per capita were only Believing as I do, that the decision of cf yvur number, to make a secured to us after a fierce resistance the court In this great case is fraught from the gold advocates and a most with. Immeasurable danger to the fu determined fight on the part of the ture of the country, and approaches the friends of silver. Had the gold mea proportions of a national calamity, I been victorious In that contest, our feel It a duty to enter my protest per capita would have been reduced at against It" least $7. justice Harlan was only one of four Nor do the limited money aJ-ates jU8tlce8 who dissented from the in refer, at thli time, to the fact that eom6 tax decision. If the views of any it was tnroiun tneir enorts mat tne Sherman law, which added .30,000,000 to our volume of money, was repealed. Neither do they (Just before the elec- :t suggestions. f : i crest fact that stares us all V i la that of the wretched and 'l.ken condition of millions of ' ";w-workncen, ; eta the a. ful suffering of our j ti alleviated Is, I know, your I t concern. ... I &en, for a moment and rea I i yourselves as to wheLer the , '-j conditions prevailing are l rl natural or artificial causes. i cause would be the failure tlon) demand the retirement of the 7 uTto yield sufficient food to 1346,000,000 United States greenbacks, j ration a our jBopie. t auiiue woun re- , wnicn wouia reauce our volume oi J a financial panic would be a ' money to that extent. Not any of these 1 c:sMqnence. I facts do they tell you at this time be- rriilcial cause would be the fall- cause they fear that you may get on to ,;a the part of the people, in the the system they propose establishing to one of them had been Incorporated in the Chicago platform the organs of wealth would have clamored for Presi dent Cleveland to call out the troops and Imprison the platform committee One of Bryant's Trolsms. My friends, no great question was ever settled in this country until it was l s, cf bounteous harvests, to get the enslave you in the event of their being eUled by the great mass of the people. I .from the granaries. . euccessful in November. Financier never settled a question; I to obtain our food supplies, if this outfit of labor oppressors ever politicians never settled a question; i VCaes modern civilization require made one prediction which c ae true, bosses never settled a question. The I i cit The medium of exchange some slight credence might be placed voters themselves are the only ones a 7. ' in a statement from them at this crlt- who can settle or who will settle any Hs Cold for Pensioner. An old Grand Army man recently addressed the following letter to the , ew xorK woria: "Mr. McKinley a few weeks ago said to some Grand Army men In Ohio that the national debt Is one of honor, and the greatest debt the country owes was to those who preserved It in the re bellion from destruction. He then said we were In duty bound to pay those who loaned money to support the war, and those who fought to preserve the Union, to pay them In the best money of the nation (as, I suppose, meaning gold). Now, this month there will be something over 135,000,000 pension money given to those who, saved our homes, and I ask every one of these deserving men to demand from our government gold, and see if they will get it If they do not it will show how empty these words are. CALVIN E. KEACH. "Lansingburg, N. Y." Are. they paying you in gold, boys? Where is that "honest money" they are urging you to vote for? It is too good for you. You cannjt get a dol lar of it It is locked up in the banks, or is in the hands of gold gamblers, who are fighting for more bond is sues, on which you and your children will pay the interest 7 I :!ors, yon are directly concerned leal ti- e. great question. And, for the first time, ?-, w'nm a mrnui In oIivmiIb. I T t - ... tit- v thla num niiaatinn tiaa risian cuhm rtsri " upon that depends the oppor- throurH their secretary of the treasury, to the vote of the American people.- exebanging your labor for the j0hn B email, they exacted of Presl- . es and comforts of me. dent Hayes a veto of the Bland-Allison quantity of money be limited bill? By which bill was added over .a China to say $1 or f 2 per cap- $370,000,000 to our currency and to a very low state of civilization pre- which they now point with so much tad human beings are practicably pride as part of our volume. i!orme4 Into animals for the bene- i Were they right In 1893. when they exacted of the executive and their con gressmen the repeal of the Sherman law? Do you recall how they en' eted very banker, broker, manufacturer, corporation attorney, board of trade and clamper of commerce in the coun- tt a few individuals called mtuda- cr noblemen. If the quantity be V :r, as in Mexico, or Spain, or iC or Portugal, a higher etate of 1 Jion prevails and the people are 1 r ouch better condition than the V :i. If, as in France, a 140 per ; frevails, we reach a high grade ( itlon and find that nearly 40, r ) cf human beings can exlBt com- William J. Bryan at Boston. Secret of Parity. To a mind that gauges the values of gold and silver by the annual produc tion, statistical history must be as full of delightful surprises as a fairy tale. Take these, figures, for example, among acres more of the same sort: Percent, of Market Value. Production. Silver.' Gold. Silver. Gold. 18(11 fn 1fi1A 7ft try to Join in the demand for the re- 1RR1 (n1S(.A , 9o axaiing mat u aone prosperity would immediately follow? They, as well as every financial etu- 7 within that small area of ter- aent jn tne country, knew they were lying then as they are lying now, and 1866 to 1870.. 1895 (about).. to to to to 24 78 68 50 15.61 15.76 15.48 31 to to to to It looks as If some force must have been in operation before 1870 to keep ;;:re, In my Judgment, whether tnat nBtead of prosperity their policy, va,ues of ld and Bilver steady ln j land of fertility our per capita has been and will continue to be misery 8 '.zty be $1 o $40 directly concerns tn(j starvaUon for the masses, f .::ar'e and determines whether we , hey now have the audacity to again J7 kMt?8 men or laves. demand that you follow ttan, and l ) i-owir, losing resolution of the Penn- Bgaln are calllng to thelr M all tne- spite of fluctuations in production. It was the fact that until 1873 we had the free coinage of both gold and silver. At the present time we are producing more gold than ever before in history, ! republican convention of 1895 bankers, brokers, manufacturers, high- but Bilver, being denied coinage, in- : Int here: priced mli .sters, union generals (who evitably declines in value. the republicans or rennsyi- ftdVOcate in their reports more soldiers , tx convention assembled, repeat to better enable the masters to intlm- i regulation and gow. of Wate and coerce), boards of trade, for- : itlonal currency the following eign-ownei newspapers, corporation s oi nnance, wnicn were an- attorneys and all other influences to enttmenU of Judge McConnelL "Whether we succeed or not ln this campaign depends upon the intelli gence and Independence of 'the common people. Locally It depends most upon the Independence and courage of the workingman. I do not recall that any forward movement in civilization was ever Initiated and promoted by the well-to-do. . A full purse always makes the owner of It satisfied with the pre vailing conditions. In order to keep his purse Just as full he always appeals to the patriotism of the people, and Juggles with all the phrases of the moral code to induce everybody else to regard the present status as sacred. Because he Is prosperous he pins on the American flag the awful lie of "sound money and prosperity," and makes us walk under it day after day By "sound money" he means the present gold standard, and by "prosperity" he means the present condition, which is impoverishing the great body of the people. We are all prosperous because he is prosperous. That is his argument, and, disagreeing with him, he distrusts our intelligence and our patriotism. "S. P. M'CONNELL. "Chicago, Sept. 28, 1896." 1 to us at our last state conven 1 which since then have re : Ce overwhelming approval of zsas;-;:- i .' favor the expansion of the clr ? ix medium of tho country until i zaie shall amount to 140.00 per " i of our population " ; ! farmers, also, through their na l I alliance, have repeatedly de i J circulating medium of $50,00 f cpita, to keep pace with our re I .onts. L our soil yields us sufficient for t ceeds, and representing that yield force u to a continuance of the serf creating single gold standard. The question for you to decide is, will you lollow their advice and plunge headlong into poverty and serfdom, to national bankruptcy and ruin, to loss of suffrage and loss of manhood? Or will stand in the,, full strength of American manhood and by the bravery of your ballot strike a blow for the restoration of constitutional coinage and the emancipation of the American toller from the shackles of monopolies and trusts? Will Gold Sfonometalllgta Explain T The people of the United States have yet to hear from the gold monometal liets of the Republican party and from the gold monometallists lately of the Democratic' party, an Intelligent de fense of their position. The evils of gold monometallism tre positive, existent, already demonstrat ed. The evils which might attend free silver coinage are still purely supposi titious, theoretical, predicted, perhaps logically, by scientific reasoners, but still to be manifested. While we coined gold and silver, as we did until 1873, none of these disasters which are sup posed to attend upon free silver .oin- aare hefell us. Sinr.fi wa Rtonned that That vour renlv will b "ves" to this t .i u,.i Ii imall volume of money, a panic is 'lattep nronosltlon I have not the elieht- J . Z, B1. r:,lt and distress is general. i1.! .,1,,lt ln9epab,e .trT JOHN M'BRIDE, Is an artificial panic and the rs under such a state of affairs tie few who become noblemen or '.drs, and the sufferers are the y who, through long continuation :h a system, become slaves. ; let me call your attention to FALSEHOOD AND MENDACITY. Weapon Caed bythe Republican To ward the Close of the Campalg-n. President E. Benjamin Andrews' of n f ures. j orown university, tne aisunguisnea bi- : V 'volume of gold and silver ln the metalltot and most famous educator of ".1 is estimated at $7,000,000,000. New England, declares that never gold (monometallism have fallen to the lot of the nation. New York Journal. Bog-na Mex c: n Dollar. Specimens of the so-called Mexican dollars which the McKlnleyites have been using as arguments against free silver have been sent to the Mexican secretary of the, treasury, who rro- nounces them fraudulent It is not Senator Sherman has summed up the argument for the election of McKinley in one conclusive sentence. "The only way," he says, "ln which a republican administration can correct the evils of the past is by Increasing the revenue by a new tariff law, and this, I fear, Is not practicable.". In other words, a republican administration cannot cor rect the evils of the past at all. The supporters of Bryan certainly offer a more Inviting prospect than that They at least promise the abolition of existing evils. The republicans, as represented by their ablest financier, do not even promise anything. They say that the only thing they could do Is not practicable. Between a party that offers to do something and one that admits It, can do nothing there ought not to be much difficulty in mak- in a choice. FIFTY CENT DOLLARS U equally- divided between the two lace the sla ery fight of forty years surprising that the McKlnleyites have i: It. J jago, has the press of the country been been passing them at a discount. If V., as tl? gold men fear, America o completely given over to malicious the fellows who have been dealing in x'A be deuuged by a flood of silver, misrepresentations and the mendacity this counterfeit money are ever caught "We have no controversy with Great Britain or her fiscal system. She is free to adopt the one which her states men believe will best subserve her wel fare and that of her people. Each na tion must settle Its own domestic pol icy; each is supreme in that sphere and should brook no Interference from the outside. We exercise that undoubted fundamental right ourselves and for ourselves." William McKinley, Feb. 12, 1891, before the Ohio league of re publican clubs. This was before he surrendered the republican party to English gold brokers and bond-holders. . U see) what that flood would count to in the event of the fulflll eat of their prophecy, j 'rf the entire world's stock of silver f ' 1 (3,500,000,000) wereexchanged merican labor and products, uch would we get? Fifty dol r capita, or a trifle more than ftlume of money France employs ijcy a country possessing about one th of our area. zat think of It! To accomplish such f. :3ult we must deplete the treas 1 1 of every country upon the face ; tie globe! France must yield to cae-half of its specie wealth and iract its volume of money corre "ugly. Mexico, China and India 1 surrender their all, and there- ij business upon some other basis . a specie one. this Is the dire prediction of the 1 ctandard advocates in' the event United States adopting blmet- i, af greed as it is today in its fight igalnet bimetallism. As the campaign proceeds, It becomes more and more venomous and unscrupulous, and It Is perfectly evident that the Republicans ind their allies will hesitate at no thinghowever desperate, that offers them a hope of success. I The Democratic national committee I is advised from several different lources that the Republicans . have iprung the charge ln certain communi ties that Mr. Bryanls a member of the A. P. A., and that he once edited an A.. P. A. paper. In other communities i .t is alleged that Mr. Bryan bqarded in t Washington with a Catholic family ind attended mass oftener than he did His own church. To such contemptible methods has the Republican campaign ;o maintain the gold standard come. Against all such as these the public Is warned. The dally peddlers of malice ln Mexico they will find trouble. The Republican national committee nas succeeded in selling 200,000 of these counterfeit Mexican dollars. They re ceived $100,000 for them, nearly all tf which is net profit. They have put this In their campaign fund. By this Illegal and criminal transaction they have robbed American workmen of $100,000. This is what they term an ar gument in favor of "honest money." ind mendacity will do their worst be-Im-PAn thla ttm and the dav of elec- ) r:u believe such a result would don Durlng the next two weeks the y our return to a bimetallic pol- Republican press will revel in false : z& U yon do, would you not be loodg Md misrepresentations. Let no vote ior a nnancmi wj .,., BrvRn an(! free B.lver be mis. .ed, discouraged or Influenced in the lightest degree thereby. radically give to us one-half " j wealth of the world? i examine Into our stock fit ;re are no available, proofs -crxess tv gold stock of $350,---- r f,S.OO per capita. But, for a to i 4 "e, I will admit of such a sgk . 1 " ' Lady Londonderry has a vast knowl- ..crzo m. --e of acriCUitural matters, and man ---o plA 'ror i 0U,. c .-I Ws an estate better than many pro " !r-. hacpe i 18m nd W' " SecrfT lesslonal farmers. out or uu "The west can nominate and elect the next president, or the majority of con gress. The financial question will nev er be settled until it Is settled right, and It will not be settled right until it la placed upon a bimetallic basis and a ratio of 16 to 1. It is the money of the country, and It was the money of the country during the period of its great est prosperity. Let us have a presi dent who Is not controlled by eastern Influences. The people will rule this country in 1897. The combined rule of Cleveland, the New York bankers, and the free traders has been more disas trous to the country and has cost the country more than did the civil war." -J. S. Clarkson, Republican nationa committeeman, in a speech at Denver Jan. 10, 1895. If a silver flood is coming We never saw one yet ' It will take about a million Apiece to make us fret! We've heard too much of parity, Too much of sound money. We want a dollar big enough To go half way around! We've heard enough of tariff, Too often we've been sold, And we're very tired of singing Hosannas to old gold! Free coinage now must have fair play. The silver wave Is on, Get ln the swim or out the way, We're bound to Washington! John Ramsey Graham. THEY CALL THAT, MAN A STATESMAN WHOSE EAR IS TUNED TO CATCH THE SLIGHTEST PULSATION OF A POCKETBOOK, AND DENOUNCE AS A DEMAGOGUE ANY ONE WHO DARES TO LISTEN TO THE HEART-BEAT OF HUMAN ITY. WILLIAM J. BRYAN IN HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. A Hundred Times ; Better Than Two Hundred Cent Dollars. FREE COINAGE CONDITIONS If Silver Would Not Bise Under Free Coinage It Would Be the , Greatest of Blessings. If the ministers are going to take the (tump, perhaps we'll have to assign :he politicians to fill the pulpits. t jl, ari to prevent pUterforr:rzca. which Y'orevtea ts, wt also 'rynllan nl'i ' ' Wai Seven thousand pounds worth of Jekets were sold for the Wagner per formance at Eayreuta this year la tsglani aloxa. IT IS TRUE THAT A FEW OF TOUR FINANCIERS WOULD FASH ION A NEW FIGURE-A FIGURE REPRESENTNG COLUMBIA. HER HANDS BOUND FAST WITH FET TERS OF GOLD, AND HER FACE TURNED TOWARD THE EAST, AP PEALING . FOR ASSISTANCE TO THOSE WHO LIVE BEYOND THE tSA -BUT THIS FIGURE CAN NEV ER EXPRESS YOUR IDEA OF THIS RATION. W. J. BRYAN. "If one had 11,000,000 in government bonds, you could not realize 200,000 or 1300,000 on them at this time, owing to the stringency in the money market." This statement was made by Mr. Glllman of the bankrupt firm of Hil ton, Hughes & Co., the day they failed ln New York for 11,200,000. And yet the gold bugs tell you there 1b plenty money. 1 AAA iXfl W V V . V ' It Would Bring ProaperltY. Faiububy, Neb., Oct li. 1896. To tlie Editor: Our goldite friends every where say that under free coinage of silver we are going to makb 63 cent sil ver dollars. I' wixh it were so that we could make what they erroneously call 53 oeiit silver dollars under free and un limited gold and silver coinage. What would be the effect if under free silver aud gold coinage at 16 to 1 the world's market price of silver bullion would remain at 53 cents for 412 grains of standard silver as it now is? The results would be most gratifying. The silver dollars and silver certificates would be held in firm parity with gold as they now are, and more so, because grow, while gold is a legal tender for all debts, nilver dollars are a legal tender for all debts except where otherwise stipulated in the contracts. And it is a part of the program under all free silver platforms to take away that exception and give silver an even chance with gold to pay all debts. Now if the world's price of silver bullion would remain at 53 cents for 41 2 wains of standard silver, or '17151 grains of pure silver, anj person in the United States having any product of labor to sell, could sell it outside of the United States, take his pay in the money of the country where sold, invest that money in eilver bullion at the 53 cent rate, bring that bullion right to the mints of our own country have it coined into 100 cent silver dollars every one as uood as gold because empowered by law to pay debts have the same as gold coins dollar per dollar. - This would make a most excellent and highly profitable market for any and all products of our country that may have any, demand in any foreign country, and the exporter would not need to be very particular to get a high price in the sale of Ins KondH, for being able to nearly duplicate it in thettilver deal would make it of great profit to him, and the same proeces taking effect as it would in res pect to all exportable products of labor here, all labor and the exportation of products would be KTeatly-stimulated. Now, this ih exactly the secret oi the great prosperity of Mexico and Japan tin day. Dot tne difference between this country and those two is that our op' e rat ions will be so much larger than both of these, as coon as we begin it, silver bullion will begin to rise in ' the world s market, aud the nearer it gets to 16 to lor 100 rents on the dollar, the less will be the extra profit to our people. And if the price should go clear up to 16to 1, same as the coins, as it probably will, then all our goldite pre dictions will be spoiled and that will be an awful anair. M. warren, Billion of Dollar. : ie worm Is indebted about siao,- i.OOO and has aboat $5,500,000,000 m.1 nlA with which tn nnv It flnr nniin try's d&ts, public and private, have been eBtirtated at 140,000,000,000, and per cent oathat Is 11,600,000,000, equal to all the aoney we have of every A NEBRASKA BOOK. It Should Be Read by Evtry Citizen of the State. There has just been issued a book, en titled "Golden Rod," by a "Daughter of Nebraska," dedicated to W. J. Bryan, Silar A. Holcomb and the Mary Bryan club oi L,incom. it is a novel with a pur pose, well written, full of interest from beginning to end, and should be read by the whole people of the state. If all the people should read it, some of theiri would know a great deal more than they do now. On pages 75-75 occurs the following passu gi One day Freddy came running in verv much excited. He said, "Oh papal paps! "What is it, Freddy V" Why, Joe Harnes called you a pop What is a pop? Do they like pop corn?" "My child, a pop is a populist, a man who gets too big to beheld dowu by any party, when the party don't do right, and he just pops out. "Say, pupa, did you pop outr' ''Yes, my boy." The rcult of the movement was great deal of legislation that has helped all the people, the laborer and the pro ducer. In Nebraska alone the following legis lation has been brought about by the people's party: 1 It enacted the maximum freight law. 2. It enacted the eight hour law. 3. It gave 1 he state a warehouse law. 4. It cut dowu extravagant appro priations. 5. It secured the passage of an ant trust law. , 6. It sernred the passage of an and Pinkerton Idw. . 7. It made possible the passage of the Anstralian ballot law, 8. It repealed the special bounty Kiven to suuar refineries, 9. It brought to light the corruption existing in state institutions, 10. It was instrumental in securing the passage of a law to have the books of all county treasurers examined at least once every two years. 11. It enacted a law requiring inter secting railroads to build transfer switches to ship all freight the short est distance to destination. 12. It enacted a bw requiring state and couvty treasurers to make all banks give bonds, tMt handle public money and to collect interest paid for the use of such money and'lat a it into public funds. . LADIES, I make big wages at home and want all to hni-ethe same oppor tunity. The work is very pleasant and w II asily pay f IS weekly. This is no deception. 1 wanfifiio money and will gladly send full psvticulars to all send ing ftamp. Miss JM, A. Stebbims, Law rence, Mich. 21 FREE ! (4 pun Madias! I a- Book, slviaa; voluble toforaotloa to b; man or ira maa flrtad vita aa.r form of piivata or pedal d I a a. Addraaa tha laadtoc Pbialaaa aaS Rn alaltata of thla Coaa- BE. HiTHiWiV CO., 70 DMrbora atrmt ChV cao. wa, CUMe QUARANTIID. Consumers ParebasinarftgencT, will bar anything yon want at cheapest possible price. D. Cucm Dbavkb, Haoh v Oranite blk., Omaha, SsO. . Ho Foi Colorado. Would you like to own a Fruit Farm, Berry Farm, a Vineyard, a Potato Farm, a Melon Farm, an Alfalfa Farm. a Stock Farm, a Dairy Farm, a Bee Farm, a Farm or Country Home, for profit; health and Independence, with the beat oil, best climate, bet irrigating eanaL best water supply, best railroad facili ties, best markets, best titles, and the most rapidly growing country in Ameri ca) The Colorado . Immigration ft De velopment Co.. 1621 Curtis St.. Denver. Colo., is a state organisation for assist. ing people to just such locations. Write them fully and receive by return maO handsomely illustrated literature tolling about the climate, irrigation and won derful profits to be made in Colorado by growing fruit and other farm products: fricet on nos irrigated farm and orcaara lands were never so low as today, and those who take advantage of the oppor tunities now existing will never resrret their change. 12i52 KimballS M - t U.S. L MAIL 1 o Ml Ji. 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The Rock Iglnnd la foramoat In adopting nay plan calculated to Improve aperd and give that oxnr.r. axfety and comfort that the popular puir enure demands. It eqn pment ia thoroagn ly rompleta nilb Vextibnled Traina. BEST DINING CA R SERVICE IN THE WORLD. Pullmnn Sleepers, fhnlr Oara, all tho moet ele gant and of recently Improved pattern. Its specialties are 1 FAST TIME, FIRST-CLASS KQDIPMT ami first-class SERVICE given For ftlll partlcnlarg ae o TIcketn.Mapa, Rntea, ipplv to any coupon ticket airent In ibe United Stated, Canada or Mexico, or address JOHN SEBASTIAN, G.P.A.. Chicago. The Ideal Hotel on South 14nt Lin. coin, Nfb., is a quint whII cotiMtructod and wall mansged Hotpl. A favorite re sort for country people. Stop thmv when you come in Lincoln. Kates vsiy ow. 19 r to '. was perfected Djr mt. niwvMiM.lm I V