The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, May 02, 1901, Page 4, Image 4
THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT May 2, 1901 the Hebrjska Indeptndent Zimztim, Htbrssks ratssE two. cqxkik tun and ? rrs Ptzissmta iir Thcmdat Sl.OO PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Mki rmiuaee 4m leave wi wu esiee, pi4tn. t be frer44 fey tkm. TW freqaeetlj fr ; t t ta wiia (Wea, evi LL M.lcritf fil I t iirM ell cMwnintiMi. a ad Mk all XefU.0CT W.ee ffstl be C4 TiibrsikM Imdtptndemt, Lincoln. Neb. Axtuttfmum eoetejeaieetaa will ot fee mo EjrtJ msmci Sj4 will Mosey grow cheaper and th farm er crow fitter. Cora oM for forty cite cnt ft fcihI . la Chicago the tier day. It takes nearly fire time j xsoeb coney to bay ft buihel of corn bow aa it did la tie day of the Cle ve la cd sorp bouaea. Cleveland made democracy to dis reputable that the republicans swept the mntry with a. hurricane at the cIom of bis terra. No wonder the re pntllcaxs like CWiiand or that they will rlre all the tid possible to set tlnj tack into the control of the party. From the camber f candidates al ready announcM for the supreme judgeship. It appears that the fusioa lt have faith la doles a little re deeming them wires at the next elec tion. As for the republicans, they are still sinslcr. "Gir xa rest. Mister, Sit 9 me & rtff Fstlish a. fact and it will cerer be repeated in the plutocratic press. . A lie. they will ke-p It groins for mocthf. Tale for example the story that there Is fie or six kandred xnillioa of gold owned by the United States govern ment. Every two by six republican weekly keeps It cp week after week. Biaby don't like the style of the edi tor X The Independent ftnd says of him: "lit occht to be under the re straining InSuence of an Intelligent and virtuous press censor." L-t bin cone oa with that censor and be will more fun In five tsiautes than be tver taw la all his life before. The glorj cf the last republican leg lL.tare and their governor Is that they put the state ia the bole for nearly a quarter of a minion of dollars, gave the school s rrteza some fearful blows and sent two representatives cf the railroad corporations to the United States senate. Isn't that giory enough for one session? The Chicago American calls Tom Waisoa "A great American Historian and publishes an editorial a column long In which it declares that Tom Watson's A Story of France. pub lished ty McMillan & Co.. Is the -best history ever written by aa American." Not e nly populin principles, but many cf the populiit leaders are coming to the front then days. The Cm thing that Thompson's ; Choke did wnea be got to Washingtoa was to demand the head of Joe John ' so a, who has been having a splendid time for the last four years doing ', nothing and drawing a. four thousand dollar salary as aa oficial of a. land fSce that ought to have been abol '" lshed years ago because there was tothlng for the oScIale to do. The great life Insurance companies have made profta. according to their last reports. fna 5.000 to over 7,000 per cent on their Investments. Here is another clear case of capitalistic phil ftaihrcpj. Ail these companies are purely philanthropic Institutions. At lea that is what their advertisements say. The truth Is that they are the most audacious thieves on earth. No t wonder that they tacked up Mark 2anna with millions. An honest gov ernment would likely make trouble for J them, nd they wanted to be let alone. During the last three weeks the "three great trail have met ft foeman. la the form of organized labor, before which they Lave deemed it best to re- tire. In each instance, when a strike was threatened against the coal, steel and railway combines, the combines mad arrangements that were perfect ly satisfactory to the labor organiza tions. But it mnst be remembered that these great trusts are still In the formative stage. It was necessary for their success that strikes should not interfere with the Coating cf their loads. May it not be that the trusts yielded for the present only, and when they get cempietely upon their feet asd have control of all the other market that they will have e-qual eon trol of labor al&o? However that may be, cp to the present time the only power that ha been able to meet the trstts tion. has been the UlKr organlza- THEY WOJCT TIGHT Why the democratic papers won't fight Is past comprehension. No op position ever had ft better opportunity to fight. But they don't seem to have any fight In them. The only fighting men left are the populists. If the great democratic dailies, or the dailies that pretend to be democratic, would go to work and relate a few farts when their party platform is ridiculed, they could very easily turn the ridicule upon the other fellows. Instead of that they snivel and whine and talk about reorganizing the party so that It will be more In accordance with republican doctrines. Why don't these democratic editors point out the fact that there has never been a time of prosperity In the his tory of the world without an increase of the money preceding and accom panying .t? Why don't they point out that there never was a time of adver sity and poverty that was not preceded by a reduction of the volume of mon ey. Let th- show that the present prosperity began with the coining-of silver and gold, and the issue of large sums of paper money by the banks. The Cleveland soup house reign came about from stopping the coinage of silver and the complete destruction of the credit money of the country. It lasted with Increasing distress and disaster until that policy was over thrown. Let them rub that Into them day after day. It wouldn't be long be fore they would stop their slurs at the free silver lunacy and get on the de fensive. Why don't some of these democratic editors republish some of the "sound money articles which predicted ever lasting destruction If the coinage of silver was not stopped and along side of them the reports of the director of tho mint showing the tons of silver that McKlnley has coined and the prosperity that has accompanied the policy? t Why don't they get hold of the offi cial reports showing the cost of im perialism so far as it has been accom plished? Along side of that, let them print a balance sheet showing the state of the business. Let them show the millions that we have poured into the Philippines and count up ths dollars that we have got out of it. Let them try their sarcasm on the "business government by business men" and show the result of that "business" In dollars and cents. Let them send some bright reporters down to Porto Rico and report the re sult of Imperialism and carpet-bag government in that island. A few gen uine interviews with the unhappy resi dents of that island and a description of the life of the people there would be good fighting material and make their papers sell. Why don't they do it? They might keep a column devoted to the profits the bankers are gath ering in. They could set in a conspic uous place the facts about every new national bank organized and print in black letters the amount of money that was handed to them after it was duly engraved and printed by the govern ment. They could keep standing the amount of money that the bankers get ia this way for nothing. They could get the amounts that are deposited in the banks without Interest and figure Just how much the bankers were mak ing out of the money that had been taxed out of the people. But they won't do It. They prefer to submit to the sneers and snubs of these bankers in silence while they devote all their energies describing some function at which these bankers assemble and brag about how many millions were rep resented. There seems to be no fight left in the opposition dailies. While they act in this cowardly manner It is no won der that the republican editors sneer and pour out their contempt upon the never ending torrent. In this militant world, a man who won't fight for his principles will have the respect of no body and the contempt of all. The best thing that these democratic editors can do is to join the republicans and pretend to be respectable. A DEnJUTIOX WANTED The time has come when some word must be accepted by writers when they wU,h to express the principles of pop uli5ci. For want of 6uch a word, since the writers on the great dailies abso lutrly refuse to use the word "pop ulisn" when they rnd stake to write on the principles represented by it. "confusion worse confounded" results, Lock at the following taken from the editorial columns of the Chicago Amer- Ican: "Tnere is nothing more stupid and, of course, more unproductive, than the miscalled socialism which advocates a division of property, equality of reward and so on. "But real socialism, that great intel ligent movement which aims to im prove rocial condition and to wipe out unjust dJscrim'nation In laws, oppor tunities and privileges, is a great and eternal power." What this writer designates as "mis called socialism" is exactly what every man In the United States who calls, himself a socialist believes and what all the socialist parties advocate. What he calls "real socialism" is populism. Why not call it populism? There is difference wider than the ocean be tween the two systems. If one is so cialism, the other certainly cannot be. The writer in the American goes on to say: "The American revolution was so cialism pure and simple. "The greatest leaders of the revolu tion were socialists and the throwing overboard ofthe tea was 'militant so cialism' with a vengeance." No writer of authority in the past has ever called Washington, Jefferson and their compeers "socialists." That name can hardly be attached to them now. But there is a system which has been known .for many decades called "socialism," and it has Its full expres sion in all their platforms in the words, "collective ownership of all the means of production and distribution." That has been known' to all mankind as the "real socialism." Washington and Jefferson never believed in any such doctrine. ' v Within the last ten years a great force has arisen "aiming to improve social conditions and to wipe out un just discrimination in laws, opportun ities and privileges," and the millions of men who have been advocating these' demands have by common con sent been called "populists" and the principles they advocate "populism." If there Is any good reason why this name should not be used, let these edi torial writers adopt another. The In dependent will not object. What it does object to is the calling two en tirely different sets of principles principles that are essentially antag onistic by the same name. If pop ulism is to be called socialism, then some other term must be used when those men who believe in the common ownership of everything and equalityH of rewards are meant. There can be no clearness in the dis cussion that every thinking man must know is coming upon the country un til the terms are distinctly defined. If this movement against special privil eges and the demand that all men shall have equal opportunities, is to be called "socialism," then those who have been called socialists will have to find some other name. Will it not be better to give it a new name one about which there will be no misun derstanding and call it "populism." A GLORIOUS TIME There never were a set of fellows who had a- more glorious time than the national bankers are having un- der the McKinley regime. He has set up an immense establishment of print ing and engraving down at Washing ton for their especial benefit. There are hundreds of high class employes there who spend all their time print ing paper money for them. Among them are some of the most famous ar tists in the United States. All these ar tists and other employes are engaged in printing paper money which, after it is gotten out in the most stylish manner, is given to the bankers. The bankers are a. privileged class. Mc Kinley gives them money by the mil lions which his congress made a legal tender for a great many things. Among the monopolies secured by the privil eged few under Elizabeth and which came near producing a rebellion, there was nothing so valuable as this gift of money to the bankers. Not only do they get the new money right off the press in reams, but Mc Kinley gives them free use of nearly a hundred million more in the way of bank deposits. The bankers now have about $90,000,000 which they get free. No one but a national banker can get money of the United States without interest. The current funds of the United States, which, like the republi can treasurers of Nebraska, Gage knows how to get hold of, is nearly all given over to the banks. Gage's rake-off is a profound secret. It must be a fair division, for the bankers make no complaint. With about $200,000,000 furnished them free of cost by the benevolent McKinley, the bankers are in clover up to their knees. They, one and all, declare that McKinley is the greatest president that ever lived. The mullet head who gets a few dollars of the money that Mc Kinley has given the bankers has to pay a big rate of interest. McKinley don't give him any money free, but he also thinks that McKinley is the great est president that ever lived. That is because the poor' fellow is troubled with delusions insane delusions. All the same the bankers are having a glorious time. If any one has any doubt about the workings of imperialism, let him read the petition of 6,000 merchants, plant ers and wage-workers recently sent to McKinley from Porto Rico. If that is not enough let him glance over its re suits in India where 5,000,000 people have recently died of starvation. Whether in India, America, the Phil ippines or China, it is all the same Does anybody want any more of it? What a horror the history of the last few years will be to coming genera tions? May the men of coming times remember that there were some who- did not lose their heads when the craze imperial swept over the world and did all that they could to resist it. EXTRAVAGANCE Thompson's Choice has ,some very strange ideas about "extravagance. His delusions upon that subject need the attention of an insanity specialist. Dr. Green might take him out to the asylum and put him under observation for a few weeks. When a mother out on a farm preserves the eggs and saves all she can of the butter that she may sell them and send money to her strug gling son or daughter at the university to pay the expenses of an education, is she extravagant? Is money paid out kfor the higher education, whether saved from the hard earnings of the farmer who follows the plow pr accum ulated by the" careful savings of the housewife or collected by taxation, ex travagance? Mr. Dietrich seems to think that it Is. In his mind to pay out $2,000 for hot house flowers, $35,006 to purchase land for a state fair, pay $75 an acre for farming land down at Beatrice, or to pay $3,000. for rich furnishings for the governor's mansion is not extravagance, but to pay"the necessary expenses of the higher edu cation of the young men and women of the state is extravagance. ' If Dietrich is honest in the reasons given for his vetoes, he is . certainly suffering from delusions and needs the attention of Dr. Green. But suppose that he is not honest, that he does not believe that the appropriations for the university and the preservation of the buildings already erected there is extravagance. What then? Shall we conclude that he is such a vindictive partisan that seeing a chance to annoy a few men not of his party who had charge of a great educational institu tion, he deliberately, and with malice and forethought, struck a blow at edu cation? What is the mental calibre of a man who will do a thing like that? Is a party fit to govern that will put such a man as that in the office of govern or and afterwards elect him to the United States senate? HIS CHARACTERISTICS A lady writing to the editor of The Independent, says: "Please give a de scription of a mullet head so that they may be known at sights I have a strong suspicion that there are a few in this neighborhood." . A mullet head may be known by the following peculiarities:' He sees things gold and glory is forever before his eyes. He is generally very religious. He has a wild Jook in his eyes. - He is always very violent whenever the do ings of the emperor of the Philippines is mentioned. He has delusions of all sorts, especially about grand and glor ious armies, and het firmly believes that the sparkling waters in the brooks of the Philippines run down to the sea over pebbles of gold. He is most always in a state of excitement, and his excitement grows in intensity as the dateof election approaches. He believes that the less money he gets for his wheat and corn the richer he is and always demands that money shall be so regulated that it will buy enor mous quantities of everything and be money of the greatest purchasing pow er. He will eat raw corn and shout for the millionaires hours at a time, especially when a presidential cam paign is in progress. He believes every one who disagrees with him is a luna tic. Such are his general character ises, but he has many more of the same sort. The' care of the insane costs the state of New York annually more than five million dollars, and every year without exception the number of in sane grows larger. The semi-sane crowd, in enormous numbers, follow closeiy upon the heels of the others. Let any man or woman do anything that attracts attention enough to be published In the newspapers and that unhappy person will immediately be beseiged with; swarms of cranks. It is the votes" of that country of cranks that decides the policies of this gov ernment.. That is where the gold bugs and the imperialists get their tremendous majorities. Worse than all that the editors of the big dailies printed In that land of cranks contin ually denounce the sane men of the west as lunatics. That there are many men who do not believe that Senator Pettigrew, has been rendered entirely harmless 'is shown by the persistent repeating of the story that he has recently made a million dollars by gambling on' the board of trade upon tips given him by Railroad Magnate' Hill. The truth about the matter is that the senator some time ago invested what money he had and his wife had in land through the advice of Hill, who has since run a railroad into that part and Pettigrew sold his land at a great rise in price. WHAT WAS HIS MOTIVE It seems to be impossible for a me tropolitan daily to make a correct statement about anything. Now here is 'the American which says: t "England offers to sell consols at 94. They pay 2 per cent on par now, which is 2.91 per cent on the sell ing price; they will pay 2 per cent after two years, and in twenty-one years they will be redeemable at par. A month's extra interest is to be paid as a bonus. United States 2 per cent bonds sell at 106." - r , ? ' That is a partial statement and for that reason a most vicious, lie. Any man of common sense knows that there could, not be that difference in the rate of interest between the bonds of the two nations as long as both are supposed to be able to pay the interest on their debts. There is a vast differ ence between an English consol and a United States bond. If a man buys an English consol he gets his interest and that is all. If he buys a United States bond he can take it to Washing ton and get the full face value of it back in national bank notes, or if he is, in favor at the Washington court, he can leave it there as security and get gold for it to its full face' value. The banks have today nearly a hun dred million of money in their vaults or loaned out, which has been depos ited with them without interest by Sec retary Gage. The editor of the Ameri can knew all these facts and yet he wrote the above item and inserted it in his. paper. What was the motive that prompted him? A TOUGH JOB "Farm Hand" writes the editor ofThe Independent that he went to town and stepped into the office of the local re publican newspaper. He says it was quite a while ago and the weather was rather cold, but the editor was sitting at his desk with great drops of sweat running down his face and dropping from the end of his nose. He says he asked the editor what made him sweat so, and the man of the. quill replied: "I guess you would sweat, too, if you had the sort of a job that I have. Here I had set up a whole column praising the legislature for passing the su preme court bill, telling the blessing that it would be to the people and roasting Poynter for having vetoed a similar bill two years ago. Then we got the news that our . governor had vetoed the bill and I bad to throw all that type in and write one praising Dietrich for reducing taxation and all that sort of thing. I worked all day at that and had it fixed up all right, then this morning the news came that Dietrich had taken back his veto and the bill was a go after all. Now I'm trying to re-write that first article with corrections up to date and the paper will be out a day late. If you think that praising a republican legislature for passing bills and praising a repub lican governor for vetoing them is an easy sort of a job, just sit down and try it." THE OLD STUFFED PROPHET The president on his imperial jour ney points with pride to the resources of the United States treasury? He does not tell the people that if there had been no bonds issued during the last few years and if old debts due the United States had not been paid there would be just as great a deficit as there is in the English treasury. Be sides the bonds that have been sold, the government has received from the Pacific railroads in payment for old debts more than one hundred and twenty-five million dollars. Two hun dred million of bonds were sold at the beginning of McKinley's administra tion, and not counting those sold prev iously during the last decade there has, by these two items, been added to the money in the treasury more than $325,000,000. Take that money out and there would be a big deficit, as big as that of the English government. Dur ing the next few years there will be no debts to collect and when the full effect of annual taxation of ten dollars per capita begins to be felt, there will not be such a glorious tme in the treasury department as there is now. When that time comes which republi can management in the creation of millionaires and trusts will make un avoidable, they, will quietly help the Cleveland democrats back into power and let them bear the brunt of the disaster. In the next campaign after that they will go out and point to the horrors of a democratic administra tion. That is exactly the game that they played with the old "Stuffed Prophet" before and it worked so ad mirably that they are anxious to try "it again. Everybody knows that bonds were printed and ready to.be issued before Harrison went out of office. But the republicans managed to slip through and left the odium of their issue and the soup house reign that followed to rest upon the democratic administration. The old Stuffed Prophet accepted it with a great deal of complacency and now wants to play the same game over again. There is not a political fool on earth equal to that old Stuffed Prophet. The Chicago American, in speaking of the Illinois republican legislature, says: "We have never known any thing like the bold, impudent, undis guised subserviency to the wishes of the corporations that we have see4, at Springfield this winter." That is also the record made by the republican leg islature of Nebraska. That is, what railroads keep legislatures for. No one of common sense supposes that they would issue thousands of free passes and contribute to the expenses of re publican campaigns without expecting some return. - THOSE HAPPY ISLES . The imperialistic craze that has swept over this country during the last four years is like a thousand other crazes which have driven humanity wild during the last hundred years. It is like the fads in medicine, the Brownr Sequard elixir of life, the salt cure and faith healingl It formed in a little circular movement in Washington, Just as a twister forms out on the plains. At first it was only a little spiral cloud of dust, but It swept on, ever Increas ing In power and leaving desolation in its track. Look back now to the time when Beveridge stood up in the senate and talked of those happy isles of the sea where the bread. fruit hung ripe on the trees, where the brooks rolled down to the sea over nuggets of gold, one of which he took out of his vest pocket and exhibited to the won dering gaze" of the gaping senators. Where is Beveridge now? Gone into inocuous desuetude. No one hasever heard of him since. But Beveridge was a big man when the craze first started. Under the craze, grave sena tors abandoned the principles of a life time, repudiated the Declaration of In dependence and defied the constitution. Great armies were raised, blood ran In rivulets. Crazy soldiers, driven mad by the sights of cruelties which their whole education had led them to ab hor, were returned to the insane hospi tals of the United States by the hun dred. Men dreamed or nothing but gold, gore and glory. But the craze has spent its force. Men are coming back to reason again. Even the would be exerciser of imperial power is be ginning to crawfish and has issued an? order to abolish the tariff on the Porto Ricans. A r soldier in the Philippines in a letter in the New York World, now that the craze is subsiding, gives the following description of these hap py isles of the southern seas in the following language: ! "The Filipinos are a bunch of trou ble gathered together on the western horizon of uncivilization. They are bounded on the north by rocks and de struction, on the east by typhoons, on the south by cannibals ; and earth quakes, on the west by hoodoos and smugglers. ' "The soil is extra6rdinarily fertile, producing large crops of insurrection and trickery. The climate is pleasant and healthful for scorpions, centipedes, snakes and alligators. The principal exports are rice, hemp, sick soldiers and war bulletins. The principal im ports are American soldiers, arms, am munition and beer." No wonder the transport "Garonne, arriving at San Francisco from Manila on Saturday, had on board sixty-four stowaways. The results of the observations of common-sense American eyes may gradually bring home the truth to the common-sense American people. NEWSPAPER ORGANIZATION A farmer's wife who reads The Inde pendent writes: "The Independent makes public questions . interesting even to the women who, like myself, have, never taken any active part in public affairs. The articles about the unreliable news published in the daily papers is it seems to me, something more than a political question. I wish you would write some more about it. Give us a description of the important departments of a great dally." A detailed statement of the different departments of a great daily would make an article rather too long for publication in The Independent. It may be said that there are four gen eral departments in all the great plu tocratic newspaper offices. Each has a presiding genius. There is the edi torial liar, the head-line liar, the cir culation liar and the reportorial liar. The product of these four departments make the great daily. The latest reports, sent out from Washington are to the effect that the war in the ' Philippines is over, and tat it will be necessary to 'maintain only 60,000 troops in those islands. Suppose all that is true. What is the result? To maintain 60,000 troops In the Philippines will cost at least $90, 000,000 a year. It has for a long time cost $1,000 a year for each soldier in the United States and it will not Cost less than $1,500 to maintain one and pay transportation to and from the Philippines. . Where will the profits come? The whole trade of the islands will not amount to that much. The de moralization and the destruction of the health of the greater part of 60,000 men every two years will be a greater drain upon this country than the $90,000,000 that we will have to pay for their maintenance. There never was a craze that equalled in idiocy this imperial istic craze. It already shows signs of disappearing. The remains of Abraham Lincoln were changed from the old . vault to the new a few days ago withtJut any formalities and in the quietest manner possible. Under other circumstances this would have been a matter of great ceremony, but the " powers that now rule in Lincoln's state have very little use for his teaching and it is to their interest to attract as little attention as possible to the memory of the life of Lincoln. BEST FOR THE If you haren't a regular, healthy movement of tB bowels every day, you're ill or will be. Keep your bowels open, and be well. Force. In th shape of vio lent physieor pill poison, )s dangerous. The smooth est, easiest, most perfect way of keeping h bowels clear and clean is to take , CANDY EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY ' Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Good, Sever Sicken, Wen ken. or Gripe, 10, 25, and M cents per box. Write for free sample, and booklets on health. Address 8TERLIX0 RIDEDY COMPiNT, fHlfAOO er KBW VOuK. KEEP YOUR BLOOD CLEAN Bee-Keener's SuddIibs ' r -rr--- . , You can save freight by ordering from us. 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