. s I n i 1 1 w SI- M ! H -O - ... f L iii in II! Vol. XV. LINCOLN NEB., JULY 9, 1903. No. 7. THE REV I V A L O F POP U.LI S M Denver Meetings July 27-9 1903. , ii Jl &&&&&&&&&& DENVER MEETINGS. Headquarters, St. James Hotel. 5 Conference of Reformers, -July 27-29. .. -. V ..: -r-r. ; Allied People's Party National Committee Meeting, July 27. People's Party National Com mittee Meeting, July 29. . & : : '-, . 8 8 ' All progress is spiral. Or, to change the nure, there are periods of appar ent rest even reaction In every vital progressive movement, Just as in the movement of a wagon wheel as tthe vehicle moves forward. That part of the wheel in. contact with the ground is at rest; immediately behind there is an apparent backward movement; while at the top vie forward move ment is most rapid; yet notwith standing these seeming contradictions, the whole wheel is moving forward. , - Populism was nearing the top of the wheel of political progress in . the years " 1890 to 1896 ; it was moving downward from 1&96 to 1900; the years 1901 and 1902 represent the contact with Mother Earth and the apparent reactionary movement; and the years 1903 and 1904 will undoubtedly show a return to the conditions beginning with 1890. - For several years The Independent has been calling attention to the dif ference between the growth of a par ty and the spread of its principles, and citing the people's party as an exam ple of party 'disintegration at the very time when Its principles were being accepted by millions of people, many cf whom hardly knew of the existence of such a: party or, knowing it, held prejudices against it because of the persistent lying of the plutocratic press.-.. , ": " .. Populists have never been divided upon the three great" fundamental re forms of money, land, and transpor tation. Hence, populist principles have found acceptance far and wide. One energetic populist in a community is the leaven for the whole lump. But populists, have been seriously divided upon the question of party p o i c y and that alone. Schism3 in the repub lican and democratic parties are fun da mental and can never be wholly healed. The populist schism can be and it will be. As an educational factor the pop trlist movement has more than paid for the money and time expended in its organization, ever, if it should whol ly cease to exist as a party. It is difficult to speculate on what might have been had a different party pol- icy been followed in fact, no man knows, but can only guess. It can not be proven that fu3 Ion destroyed the organization, because the only vital people's party organization in America today is in" Nebraska, where fusion (or more properly t o-operatiou) has been followed sine 1894 with 'the exception of one year. Yet It is doubt less true that where fusion , with the democratic party - was practiced, the tendency was'-' for "tl" "greater organi zation to absorb the lesser. "However, our dut todaCy is to look ' to the . future. The question is, Is there room for a political, party . rep resenting the small home-owners, in dependent business men, farmers and ether producers of the country, who have not been : absorbed in the great trust-building movement of the past few years? '.. . , ! ' u v.-' '.' ; Logically the republican party rep- rrsents the great aggregations of cap ital (and wind and water) known as trusts. Every supporter of that par ty is either (a) a trust magnate who knows where his interests lie; or (b) a misguided wage-worker or small business man or farmer who fool ishly imagines ; that his interests are Identical with those of the beneclar ies of special privileges. Just as logically the democratic party, ought to represent the small home-owners etc. ' mentioned above; and since 1896 tit has represented those. , If it . shall continue to do so hereafter, there is no room for the people's party. But among, the sor called leaders of the democratic party are men whose interests really lie with the republican party. , They are republicans of the Mark Hanna brand, but affiliate- with the democrats in order to keep up the appearance of an opposition party and thus prevent a union of all those whose interests axe opposed to those of the beneficiaries of special privileges. This false "oppo sition" was kept up without a break since the rebellion untilin 1896 pop ulism compelled the democratic party to get back where it belongs. Indications, are by no means lack ing to show tnat among the trust magnate leaders of democracy, now that the people's party is apparently disintegrated, there is a disposition to return to the old-time tactics and to continue the old fight of Tweedledum .against Tweedledee -"tariff for rev enue only" V against "tariff for pro tection to labor" (God save the mark!) The recent Iowa : democratic conven tion is a' case in point. And these in dications point to the necessity for a reviyal . of populism, or, to be more accurate, a revival of the people s par ty, standing upon ground which the democratic party should logically oc cupy "equal rights to all, special privileges to none." ft, As to the wage-workers, the various socialist faction! claim to furnish the enly political home for thore who are "class-conscious" proletarians with "nothing to sell but their labor-power." The Independent has no quar rel with these socialist factions. Ev ery "class conscious" convert repre sents that much of a loss for plutoc racy, and makes it possible for the "middle class" to finally win because plutocracy could not stand for a day without the support of those it preys uron. But a great many of the wage workers are also small home-owners, and producers in a small way o some thing else than mere "labor-power;" end their interests lie with those who compose the mass of tfye democratic party. So if the democratic party re turn to the leadership of trust mag nates, these wage-workers properly be long to the people's party. Such is the political situation today. The American Commons Original Totm, rtad by Dr. Hfnvard S. Taylor of Clilcago at thiFalrv lew Fourth of July Celebration.) When Liberty, wounded, betrayed and oppressed ( By the Insolent, tyrannous kings of the world, ' Fled over the sea to the ultimate West And, here, In her refuge her banner unfurled; When the hopes of mankind in the balances lay, And the unborn, wondering centuries stood ,' To witness America's Passover Bay And the sign of her door-lintels sprinkled with blood, Then Liberty, menaced by envy and hate, From the seats of the mighty, the thrones of the great; - W ith tocsin and summons Called forward her commons 1 ; And marshaled and made them her Pillars of State. They were men from the mines, from the shops, from the farms; They were hunters and herdsmen and fishermen, bold; They were homespun minute-men, springing to arms, With a faith that could neither be bought nor be sold And these were the paladjns, nobles and knights ' Who conquered King George and his hireling host; Who penned with their weapons our charter of rights, And made our republic humanitys boast. Whfl gave to posterity riches untold ' A heritage greater than mountains of gold. :: It is no man's nor woman's. -It was won by the commons, For them and their children to have and to hold. ' A blend of all rjwes, in many creeds bred, They were fused in the white-heated furnace of war. United, they followed where Liberty led Asthe wise men once followed the Bethlehem star. Go question the flag It will tell in a breath How itR trl-color hues by their spirit were planned; That the white is their honor, the blue Js their faith, And the red i their valor on ocean and land. - ; -; f Go search through the myths of the ancients in quest Of their builders of empire, their bravest and best; But Grecians and Romans . Are dwarfed by the commons Who founded the Great Commonwealth of the West. The fathers are gone has their faith perished, tooT Has the, spirit that moved them declined and decayed? Have their lofty ideals grown dim and untrue ' v In the hurrying scramble of pleasure and trade? i Have the fanes of our patriot altars and graves ' Sunken downward to mix with insensible clods? Are we parting our race into master and slaves With only fierce Mammon and Moloch for gods? Ah, no. By our bells and our jubilant guns, By the stars and the stripes where our proud story runs! By a score of good omens " : We still have our commons! And the hearts of our Fathers still throb In their Sonsi ' The republican party consistently rep repenting the interests of a compara tively small, but financially powerful, class who live by the-toil of others, robbing the great mass of small pro ducers through special privileges in the way of "protective tariffs;" fran chises to build, own and operate pub lic utilities and to tax the public at their own sweet will for the use of these; an Illegally granted powen to issue money; and in numerous other, but smaller ways. The democratic party struggling to prevent the trust rr.agnate3 from making it a mere echo of the republican organization and thus far showing an inability to expel the traitors from its ranks. The so cialists, divided and quarreling, try ing to educate the proletariat into 'class consciousness," and receiving aid from the republicans in order to divert attention from populist de mands. Was there ever a better time to repair the broken-down populist organization and be rea'Uy for emerg encies next year? This -issue of The Independent con tains three calls for meetings to be held in Denver, July 27 to 29, 1903, as follows: - . Call by J. A. Edgerton, secretary of, the people's party national commit tee, for an unofficial and informal con ference of reformers, to discuss how to provide a political home . for the large army of American . voters who "are " not Mark Hanna republicans, Cleveland democrats, or Karl Marx BocialISts..!. . ' ; ' - hM2'ki . T Calf! By ;, JoA. barker, chairman of the' allied people's party.for' a" tneet- -ng of, the national executive and cen-A tral rcommittees of that party. Call by J. H, Edmisten, vice chair man of the" people's party national committee, for a meeting of. the na tional and executive committees of that party. In addition to these, a number of communications are printed, together with excerpts from letters printed In former issues of The Independent. ' '" i ' s . " NATIONAL CONFERENCE. (Excerpts from "A Call to Arms," p. 1, Independent, June 18.) The immediate thing Is to get to gether. For that purpose, I make the following proposition;- , - : A conference attDenver on Mon- ' day, July 27. at 2 p. tt." You are hereby cordially invited to be present at such conference. This means every reformer in the United States . who loves God and the com mon people more than he does any party whatsoever. The conference will be unofficial and informal. It will have no walls about it- I have faith that only those who belong will come. I want fuslonists, m'd-roaders, advanced democrats, sin gle tsxers. lovers of liberty. We will have an old-fashioned love feast. It matters not how many or-liow few come, important" results cannot but flov? from our meeting, c : . Th reason that Denver is chosen Is that is is convenient to the populist strongholds of Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, Texas, the mountain states end the Pacific coast. ; From all points east there are half-rates to Denver all summer. . .The reason that July 27 is chosen is" that it Is the natural time for a vacation. Denver Is the coolest and most delightful spot on the continent for you to take that vacation. To those attending the conference free , trips will be arranged into the moun tains. Come and let us have a reunion, scuth and north. -Come and let us. talk about next year and the future. This letter will eo to national, state, county and precinct committeemen throughout the country. The doors are open and the invitation is gen eral. Yet we are sure that the most representative men will come. Those "who nroDose comlne write me. Those who cannot, write your f j V :t" ft