THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. November 22, 1900 tie Uebraska Independent Umccla, r.tbnska -ttZSit ELDC. CONNER OTM AND N STS f J.OO PT? y CAR IN ADVANCE rU fatfcre d not lcv for r fMUl 4:211.1 mmtmal tktn laft ru3i tbM, a4 tfc wsbct liter lilt to fitbrMtka Tndeptndent, Lincoln. Neb. Am afeMM eaauswieattaM ill eot b o- A great many upright Den are be glriiig to tay: Giren enough money arxd any state can be carried for any party. ! true? The oXcia! wast of the tote of the a tare is not yrt obtainable. When it is, and the facta, are indisputable, then The Independent will bare "something to ay. The student at iLetnJversity have got far enough along in thia "world power" buein- . to up a debate over the qtteatioa whether a constitu tional monarchy or a republic is the best form of government. 1 h United Stale senate after the 4th of neat March will consist of 54 re publican and 25 In the opposition. The honae will bate 202 republicans and UO opposition; a republican majority f 4. In the present house the re ptiblkans hare a majority of -1. No phras waa more frequently re peated by democratic orators during the campaign than, "the gold demo crat are with us this time." The re turn bow that the gold democrats were on the McKinley side just as they were in 1&S. only a little more so. It is statrd that the territorial leg irlature of Oklahoma is a tie between the democrat and republican and one lone populist holds the balance of pow er. A that pop guide the destinies of tr.st territory, we shall all watch Last week the St. Paul Pioneer-Press had a cartoon representing a grate and ca the tomb stone,, was written. -Here lie and-militarism." So it mvsi that the republican pre be lieve that - no more opposition will arise la this nation to a military, gov ernment. Well, we shall see. - OTer In Peoria. Ill, when they had competition, gaa waa 20 cents a thou sand. When a ?a trust was formed it waa li ft thousand. Trusts ar-s an relation and r-otMng can be dor -9 to tip evolution. That is the decUM ttat has been rendered and mun stand antil it is reverted. Wonder what the two or three hun dred men who were induced to tote the middle of the road ticket thought when they read in the papers that the rt yjblicma prates down in Omaha ha J chosen their patron saint, Clem Dea Ter. to be the republican representa tive oa the counting board? Did they remember what The Independent told the a about that gang? The senatorial situation is just aa The Independent said It would be If the republicans carried the legislature. It ia Thompson and Rosewater or no body at ail. These other chaps who art setting tip headquarters la Lin cola aa senatorial candidates are only here to make a show or a deal for om fat Job on condition that they pell off. The South African capitalist who brought oa the war with the Boers are cot to nappy as tney were a wnue ago. The British chancellor of the exchequer ha announced that a very large part of the con of the war will be levied epon these owner of gold and diamond mlsee. Aa their mines are still 12 le and there is no prospect ft Immediate resumption of work on account of the difficulty of keeping communication open with Cape Town, trey are beginning to find out that war Epos the Dutch burghers is not so fanny a they thought it would be. General ilacArthur' odcial report of the killed and wounded in the Phil ippine is a, mystery to all military ma. How it was possible to- kill 3, 227 Filipinos and wound only 94 ia civlliztd warfare, these men do not know. The usual rate In warfare is foiir or fire wounded to one killed. In usrHihred warfare where prisoners are shot down by the hundred, the killed kometime outnumber the wounded. Genera! MaeArthur or the war oSce should make some explana tion of this matter. A it stands, there lie ia it ground for very dark sus picions. Have we outweylered Weyler, against whose cruelties we went to war? Or are these oScial reports only gutsa work put out for political effect? LABOR OMNIA VIls'CIT. S-onethlng over two years ago The I nlependent -started a department in which tbA new i. of the week was treat ed ia a somewhat different manner thun had ever before been attenptedr Since that time several large eastern weeklies, some of which are published In magazine form, have patterned af ter The Independent and started de partments conducted In the same way. One of these weeklies has one editor employed for that express purpose and pays him $3,000 a year for that work alone. That weekly charges $3 -per year for Its publication. As far as the department of a general newspaper is concerned, it la not as full nor as ac curate as that In The Independent. The work in getting up these col umns is enormous and most perplex ing. After weighing .all that comes in the Associated press and by special correspondence to the; great dailies, one is never sure that he has obtained the truth. Take the dispatches con cerning the Illness ofthe Czar for an example. In. the beginning of last week, just before The Independent went to pressT'they""were"to to the effect that the Czar had been poisoned and his life was despaired of by his physicians. It was stated that in case he died, the Grand Duke Michael would become regent and that he would immediately change the whole Russian policy. ,1C that were true, it would of course be of vital interest to the whole world, for the present Czar la known as the great peace-maker and lover of peace among the sover eigns of the world. But was it true? The policy of the daily papers would have been, to make a sensational ar ticle of it. (many of them did) but af ter much consideration The Inde pendent concluded to say nothing at all on the subject, although there were opportunities in it for much fine writ ing. That was only one item in many others of the same character during the last week and every other week. It will be seen that the publication of reliable news is a matter of much work aa well as mental worry, since sensationalism has become the settled policy of the daily press. Then another matter has to be taken into consideration. In a paper like The Independent, which circulates In every state and territory in the union, In for eign countries and in "our colonies," the news must be of general interest. The items must be such as will be read with interest by a subscriber in Ore gon, South Carolina, Hawaii or Maine. That requires In the writer a knowl edge of the affairs of the whole worlj which can only be gained by days and nights of constant reading of all sorts of publications republican, demo cratic, populist.'socialiat, financial, re ligious, scientific, agricultural, lite rary, sociological, military, naval and educational. The Independent attempts to do all that sort of work and fur nish its readers with reliable facts in all these fields of knowledge and en deavor in a form the most condensed and readable. We are glad to say that this honest and unending work is appreciated by thousands of readers and who are grateful for the cheapness with which It is furnished to them. No other pub lication in the United States attempts to furnish such matter In any weekly publication for less than $2.50 per year. Besides this. The Independent prints an editorial page larger than any other weekly, always standing for the principles that were first enunciated by Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln. It is furnishing such a paper at such a price that makes hundreds of the read ers of The Independent active agents in extending its circulation, who work for it of their own motion and with out any hope of financial reward. Ex cept during a campaign, no specially prepared editions appear, but every week it comes out with the same amount cf matter prepared with the same study and care. Whoever re ceives one copy has a fair sample of all the rest. This uneeasiner toil tirodnrps a mih- j ,icatlon that is of vaue to all who receive it. It is an exemplification of the Latin motto: Labor omnia vincit UNIVERSITY S ET TLEM ENTS. The complete failure of the Protest ant, plutocratic church is now general ly recognized by the conscientious, educated public. Both in England and in this country Christian scholarship is protesting in most vigorous lan guage against it. Percy Alden, war den of Manifield House, London; re cently said: "Large numbers of London, New York and Chicago churches are prac tically uninhabited. The sabbath day finds them empty. As centers of in fluence they are cold and extinct. Chi cago's uptown churches those f ia fashionable quarters as' they stand, are poor investments for mankind. They do not give an adequate return for the wealth locked up in them and for the sacrifices of money and of energy which their maintenance en tails. They should be dedicated to a fuller mission. They should be made the centers of all manner of useful work calculated to Instruct and up lift the people about them." Populists have long been saying the same thing. We have pointed out the fact that th -3 rich church has become nothing but a Sunday club, to 1 which the membership resort for an hour or two oa that day for entertainment and to while away the time listening to the very best vocal and Instrumental mu- j sic that money can buy and hear a few pleasant platitudes delivered by a trained elocutionist, called a , min ister. Now the matter is being taken ; up " by the conscientious scholars in seme of the universities.. The "uni versity settlement" is taking the place and doing the work that the Protestant church, which : has become rich and corrupt, has refused to do. Mr. W. H. Dickinson of the London county council, recently said:- "We want more of these splendid Institutions. London probably has twenty of them. The city ought to have 300. Every large city on earth should adopt the social settlement and cherish it. If municipal governments are weak and ; corrupt, it is because they draw their members from weak and corrupt constituencies. Social set tlements improve 'constituencies. They radiate intellectual, moral and physi cal health. They cleanse the stream of municipal government at its foun tain head." In Lincoln, Protestant ministers have often been seen at the polls mak ing a special effort to elect the very worst man on either ticket. That was true in the last campaign. Others were willing to give a certificate of good moral character to a man whom lusiness men would not indorse. They have been a potent influence in creat ing the "weak and corrupt constitu encies" of which Mr. Dickinson speaks. By their silence, and often with their active aid, the awful corruption of our cities and large towns has been made possible! The ministers of pure char actei and influence for good, have only found work in the poor parishes and out of the way districts. Such a maV would not be tolerated for a month in any of the rich, plutocratic church(3. The professors in the universities, especially those who are connected with the department of ethics, phil osophy and sociology, are making an effort to correct this evil by the es tablishment of university settlements. An effort in that direction is being put forth in Lincoln, to which every man who deplores the corruption in church and state should give substantial sup port. It is proposed to get a location at the corner of M and Twenty-first streets and make there a settlement of educated cilJfge men who will nt neg'tct the poor, but become their ev- erv-day companions and advisor.-. The Independent washes it abundant suc cess. ARUAM DEMAGOGUE. During the campaign President Schurmann was cock sure that the war in the Philippines was over," but since the election he has changed his mind. The other day he ad dressed one of those heathen Sunday clubs, called a church, and said: "I .ay, put down the insurrection, make life secure, set up courts, give the people all. the home rule they are capable of. That is the immediate duty. Leave the rest to our grand children. The population of the isl ands will then be fused in one nation. If they demand complete separation, our descendants will grant it. But it is a question if they will want it. Do not send a sufficient force, but an overwhelming force." If President Schurmann thinks that the announcement to the Filipinos that the ime of their independence has been put off for action by our grandchildren will have a tendency to quiet them he is mistaken. The Inde pendent has not changed its opinion about President Schurmann since the election and his last deliverance only confirms it in the opinion that he is the most arrant demagogue that ever appeared before the American people. But he is the right kind of a man to keep at the head of a plutocratic uni versity. He fits the place exactly and if you want your son educated under the influence of such a man, send him to Cornell. Where the government is going to get its naval recruits is bothering our rulers a great deal. The Philadelphia Record, a true blue, imperialist, pluto cratic sheet, says: "The service is so distasteful that there were 2,452 deser tions from the navy during the past year. It would 'appear to be folly to go on building new battleships to be kept out of service for lack of men." That is a very plain squint towards conscription. It will have to come sooner or later. The people have voted for it and they ought to have it. Don't let there be any kicking. The department stores still keep ex panding and spreading out. Some of them are going into the publishing business and by that plan they will have the means of doing their own advertising. Wanamaker will hereaf ter issue a magazine and the , next thing he will do will be to issue a daily paper The North American is osten sibly owned by his son, but it is all in the family and the magazine and that daily will do pretty well as ad vertising vehicles for one store. Some of these big department stores down east can give the trusts a tip or two worth knowing.- '- ' 'Vl A MODEL NEWSPAPER. Dr. Parkhurst says that the sup porters of the Sunday clubs that meet in the costly temples in New York city j are going to start a newspaper which i will be after their own hearts' desire. The plan of the newspaper he puts forth is as follows:. A newspaper that will tell the truth. : A newspaper that, will print all the news. " , A newspaper that cannot be swayed by advertisers or business men. A newspaper ( that - will lead public opinion. ' " . A newspaper that the people will be lieve. 1 ' I : . A newspaper beyond the reach of patronage." , - . A newspaper of. limitless enterprise and resources. - " ' '- -"; In short, an ideal journal rthat no party can buy, and no interest intimi date printing all? the great news of the world, and telling the whole truth regardless, of friends or foes.. t Would it not be just as well if those $10,000 and . $20,000 preachers ; down there should get together and resolve that they would give us a great min ister in a great and costly church who would tell "all", the truth, one . who could not be swayed by the million aire contributors and "business" in terests, a man beyond the reach of patronage, who would preach a truth if he knew every subscription to his salary would stop the next week, a man limitless in his resources in con demning theft in the highest as well as lowest places, who would not spend all his time' in berating vice on the east side while Sherley dinners with stage attachments in the "altogether" were in vogue on Fifth avenue, who would denounce the reception by the church of money obtained by robbing the people just as severely as he would the party that collect assessments from the dives and. saloons, who would denounce . Mr. - Hayemeyer or Mr. Rockefeller when they made a rise in sugar or coal oil arid gave a dole to the colleges or churches, as they do the Tammany politicians when they wink at vice in the dives and dens for a consideration. The s newspapers are bad in many ways no doubt the plutocratic kind can outlie the devil himself during a campaign but their owners and edi tors are welcomed to the best seats in the synagogues and taken into full communication in the churches with the assurance that they are among the saints whom H was ' foreordained should inherit . eternal yfe. When preachers denounce .newspapers in stead of the" men who create them, it is like talking about the rights of capi- ,tal instead 6( the .men who have capi-? tal. Getsthe right kind of men and it will be easy to get 'the right kind of newspapers. r Give us the right kind of men and we will have the right kind of preachers. . When Dr. Parkhurst and the $15,000 preachers of his class find out that their mission is to re form men and make them better, in stead of reforming newspapers when they arrive at that state of life that they feel uneasy of nights as they go to their ""richly ' furnished bedrooms, warmed to just the right degree of heat and think of the thousands in their own city, who, like the master they pretend to serve, "have not1 where to lay their heads," . when they can stand up in their pulpits and say with out an apology to the millionaires in the seats in front of them: "Woe unto you that are rich," "You catinot serve God and Mammon" after they are that far along, then Dr. Parkhurst and others like unto him may begin to talk about starting a model newspaper. At the hour, of . going to press the official returns or the election were still unattainable. The only reliable figures which were to be had at the office of secretary of state were the following: Total vote of state (Hitchcock ' county estimated) 1900 250,960 Total vote of the state, 1896 230,795 Increase of vote in 4 years.... 20,165 Vote for highest rep. elector. . ..121,385 Vote for highest Bryan elector. 113,485 Republican majority........ 7,900 About 12,000 men who voted failed to vote for any presidential electors at all. In many instances two sets of presidential electors wee , voted for. The latter fact does not appear In the returns, but from reports which come from the various counties. , The vote on governor will stand as given last week until the official report from Hitchcock county is received. All of the republican state officers are elected by small majorities, and the legislature is republican on joint ballot by seven. The Ithaca Democrat is telling some plain truths about the democratic campaign in New York. It says in sub stance just what The Independent has said on that subject. There was not a daily in that state that gave Bryan a hearty support. Mr. Chester C Piatt knows what he is talking about when he says: "The comments since election of leading democratic papers, the New York World and the New York Jour nal among the number, prove that their-' support of . Mr." Bryan was re luctantly-1 given and was due more to their opposition to McKinley and the policies of the republican party than to : any. harmony between their own views and , those of .Mr. Bryan, upon the issues of: the campaign." The truth about the matter is that the masses in New York were for Bry an and his principles, but the demo cratic leadership was against him. The only reason that the leaders did hot' openly Joppose him was that they knew the people . would throw them overboard if they did not make some pretense of supporting him. WHERE DANGER LIES. In a private letter to the editor of The Independent a professor in one of our great universities says: "The posi tion that you took in regard to the campaign, and while It was at the very hottest, wa3 the wise one to take. As soon as the government reports were available, giving the official figures of the output of gold, the party in opposi tion should have proclaimed the fact In all' their publications and every public speaker should have given a portion of his time to making his au dience acquainted with the fact. Then they should have said: "Here is a demonstration of the correctness of the quantity theory. We have always said that when the mines are prolific, times were good. The output of gold is greater than the output of both gold and silver at the time we made the fight in 1896. But to add to the volume of money the administration has been coining ninety-four millions ounces of silver that was the - output of the mine3 years ago. That is the cause of the rise in prices. The feeble denials of the increase in prices and conse quent prosperity, lost votes instead of gaining adherents. Such a course would have been honest. It would have been a lesson in political econ omy never to be forgotten.' " If . the mines continue to produce gold at the same rate in the future as during the last three years, the nec essity of increasing the volume of money H by the free coinage of silver will not be so pressing. But a greater question has arisen, one that will af fect people more disastrously than did the stoppage of the coinage of silver. Soon all the productive forces of this country will be in the hands of trusts. That does not mean simply that all the profits of labor shall go into the hands of the few, but twice as much as ever before will be turned over as the share of capital, for the trusts are capitalized for more than twice their real value. Such a system cannot fail In a few years to lay burdens upon labor such as it has never borne be fore. The economic fight must be turned in that direction. , There.-iS' where danger lies. The republicans are fond of talking of the landslide to McKinley. How much of a landslide was it? There are about 15,000,000 voters in the United States and ' Mark Hanna with all his trust contributions, with all the banks, with all the railroads, with all the protected manufacturers, with nearly all the great dailies, with all the influence of the army and navy and all the millionaires to aid him, got a majority out of the 15,000,000 million votes of about 700,000. There isn't much landslide business in that. That majority would be considerably cut down if the southern people voted on election day in the same numbers they do at their primaries when their can didates are chosen. At least 300,000 of that majority should be taken off. In the southern states where the nomina tion is an election, nearly one-half more voters appear at the primary than turn out on election day. Because of that fact, the Chicago Record wants their representation in congress cut "down. The South American republics have been holding what they call an Ibro American conference in Madrid. The reports of the discussions which have reached this country are to the effect that the cordial relations with this country which were brought about by James G. Blaine have been completely effaced by the McKinley policy of war for conquest. In several sections of the congress bitter allusions have been made to the United States and harsh things are said of England on account of the Boer war. These sentiments were loudly applauded by the Span iards and the Spanish-Americans. These delegates are making arrange ments for closer trade relations with Spain. .The sum and substance of the whole matter is, that while McKinley has been waging a war of conquest in the Philippines, 10,000 miles away, for the purposes of trade, he is driving away ten times as much trade which lies right at our very doors. The In dependent has often said that that would be the result. From many articles in the New York papers, some of them highly il lustrated, one Is forced to believe that polygamy is quite as common down east as out in Utah. Some recent revelations show how divorces have been put through the courts by the score. The plutocrats had a law passed by Teddy's legislature making divorce proceedings absolutely secret. Many a man and woman have been di vorced land never knew anything about it until it appeared in some of the SPECIAL xOur annual Thanksgiving Sale of TABLE LINENS. 72-inch double Satin Damask, Irish manufacture, open borders, new designs, worth $1.98. Thia sale. $139 yard. . 72-inch double Satin Damask, Irish manufacture, new open bor 5 ders and designs, extra fine quality, worth $L65 This sale $110 yard. 72-inch Irish Damask, new designs, extra quality, regular $1.25. This sale 93o 7 Mn 72-inch Irish Damask, good weight, no dressing, all Linen, new patterns, regular price 98c. This sale. G9c yard. ' 66-inch Irish Damask, extra value for 75c, good designs. This sale ..55oy!lrii 68-inch Dice Damask, good weight, a good hotel linen, worth 50c. This sale.. 35cyrd- Watch for these weekly specials in Independent. Send in Mail Orders early. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. newspapers. , One Ziemer has been running a divorce mill and it turns out that he was' never even admitted to the bar.. Another man is in Ludlow street jail who says that he has four wives at present, but cannot recollect how many he has had during the last few years. Polygamy is wide-spread down that way. It is no wonder they ran up big majorities for McKinley and the Sultan of Sulu. The announcement of Perry Heath that the republicans will establish a permanent bureau at Washington to furnish patent insides and editorials for the mullet head country editors, indicates that the legislation proposed will need a more vigorous and con stant defense than the republican par ty has heretofore deemed necessary. Let them do it. If you read The Inde pendent you will know all about it. As between the beliefs of Cleveland, Whitney, Don Dickinson, Gorman, Dave Hill, Olney and McKinley, Han na, Roosevelt and Lodge there is no essential difference whatever. To or ganize two parties headed by these men would be a needless expense. There could be no contest, between them except as to who should hold the offices. The fight is whether money or men shall rule in this country. Those men are all on one side of that ques tion. They are for a government by the rich' for the .benefit, of the Lobars of trust slock. One item in Dietrich's campaign ex penses, filed with the secretary of state, is liable to occasion a good deal of comment. It reads: State Journal company, 10,000 cards, $90. There is not a job printer in Lincoln who would not have Jumped at an order for 10,000 campaign cards at 80 or 90 cents a thousand and here they are charged up at $6 a thousand! That is the first job of republican printing recorded since Tim Sedgwick's feats in that line. It is probably a forecast of what is coming in the next two years. But the people voted for it and they are en titled to have it. The New York ice trust was a mat ter of great concern to the republicans during the campaign. As soon as the election was over the republican attor ney general of that state submitted a report to the effect that there was no trust at all and no case could be made against the accused. Some of these Lincoln republicans who went around to the meetings during the campaign yelling "ice trust," will feel pretty small when they learn of Roosevelt's action in this matter, that is if they ever do hear of it, which is. very doubtful, for they never read anything but republican papers and not one of them will ever say a word on the sub ject. - Evidences that the old era of public corruption is to be revived is cropping out everywhere. The civil engineer employed by the city of Chicago dis covered a great many pipes laid in the great trust packing house yards In Chicago for the purpose of stealing water from the city. There is no man ner of doubt that these packing houses stole thousands and thousands of dol lars by this means while the poor of the city had to be charged higher rates to pay for what these magnates stole. The Chicago city council is republi can. Since the election it has been announced that all the claims against the packing company for stolen water will be abandoned. We doubt if there is a minister of a rich church in Chi cago who would dare to state the known facts of this case In his pulpit, but they have made a great furor about the little robberies that have occurred on the streets of late. A strange sort of thing, something which was never known in politics be fore, is to see men going around de claring that they are democrats who are known to have worked and voted in the interest of the republican party for the last eight years, and have done Mi ORDEft DEPARTMENT Ma all that it was in their power to do to defeat the democratic party. It Is just as strange to see men calling; them selves populists, drawing the funds for their work from the republican party, working for the interests of that party and when the election is over holding. a glorification meeting over the defeat of the populisit party, as they did up In Custer county. There must be some way found to stop such things. If there is no other way to get rid of such political scoundrels, then all the present party names should be dropped and a new name with a copyright on It adopted In place of those now In use. And the governor's Thanksgiving Proclamation was printed in blue. It was doubtless prepared by the re tiring private secretary and natural ly absorbed the azure hue. HARDY'S COLUMN Legislative War Coming No More Restraint Over Correspondents in Manila Mormonism Two Certnin ties Popular Vote Reorganization Bartleyism at Washington The Name Republican Methods Cuba Convention Canadian Law The - Majority Not Always Right Bur kett Philosophy Must Keep Up the Show Bixby and Hardy. Legislative blood and hair will fly this winter thick and fast before the two senators, are elected., Jn , propor tion to the' wealth of .the 'candidates there will be as much money used as ' there was in the election of Clark. Now since election is passed any body is allowed to write or telegraph what they please from Manila. Truth before election is a very different ar ticle from truth after election. The Mormons of Utah give us a rea son for carrying the state for McKin ley that he promised not to medddm with polygamy if elected. There are two things certain in Ne braska for at least four years more a Bryan majority of the supreme court and also a Bryan majority of th? university regents. McKinley's popular vote is only about a hundred thousand more than it was four years ago. . A reorganization of the Bryan party under Croker and Hill will fix things In the same shape as the republican party under Hanna and Quay. Some two or three hundred mUlions of surplus government money is now distributed among the friendst of Mc Kinley, just as Joo Bartley di5tri')Utod th state money. The high rate cf vaxat'on is kept up and the scrplus continually increasing To please the southern states no other name beside democrat will an swer, while the noithern stat." woald pre-er a new name, Bryan party for Instance, at th same time the est would prefer the name go.'d or trust party. ' - , j Joe Bartley should be pardoned and made deputy state treasurer, for he understands republican methods as weil as any man In the party. The constitutional convention cf Cuba Is so far harmonious for liberty and independence. The individual members show up more statesmanship than was supposed possible. The law in Canada requires a can didate for member of parliament to put up two hundred dollars in order to secure a place on the ticket. Then if he is successful or If he receives half as many votes as the saccesRful candidate the money is refunded, otherwise the money goes into the public fund. This is to cut short the number of candidates. The majority of the people are not always right, they generally get round to it after awhile. We remember the time when nine-tenths of tho Ameri can people believed slavery was a di vine institution and voted for its con tinuance. Now how changed. The majority who believe McKinleyism a divine doctrine will get around to the right the same way after a while. We had a short talk with Congress man Burkett the other day. He fav ors the retirement of the greenbacks after being once redeemed In gold and bank bills issued to fill the place. That would place the banks between the runner for gold and the government. The government would not be re quired to redeem the bills until after the banks busted, but the government