The independent. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1902-1907, August 27, 1903, Page 10, Image 10

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    A.UGUBT ZT, JS3X
THE UtVfMU INDEPENDENT
I
1 !
S
:
1 WITH DEL MAR
The position always maintained by
.Jb Independent ou
- u-a . Hnaa nntiur fill 1 1 M '- "
:zot even in these columns, than by Del
:-ar in his History of Monetary Crimes
(page 16) which is a hook that should
,1 in the hands 01 every vvVw
r? tfcat mid is most fre-
-uently found in placers and lv
--a t,af when a placer field is
Uncovered many thousands of men
v - all of wnom can
1 X 1IK II ill mf w
! orlc at once and thus throw immense
quantities of gold into w .cu,l;Uia"
I ihile silver is only found in veins
-where only a few can work at a time
Utua rendering it impossible to pro
. dure such sudden changes in tu
sr -m Mn o v Via rhv K I
- "t m n have it inferred from
1 1 these remarks that I prefer silver to
' u - .ranaroi measure Of value.
A general or universal measure of
'Walue is a chimira invented by the
: bankers of Threadneeaie sirt w
' J their metallic scheme upon the worm
Und render their city tne
'tional measure of value, consisting ol
? . ti minape'M system,
' ' la little better than one o , rold metaL
ao euh ran measure value
; with precision or equity. This is what
j MONEY alone can eneci, uu u
i MAiinv in i ill' iiid.L
was no quesiiun ui ijww
i t nivnratft a monetary sys-
K . j j nt v,nth metals. But
, It 111 juueycuucuv w- " . .
!, mnnptarv nuestion is a practical
'i t.U juwv-v j -
--j luuni o Wp cannot ignore
- history, law and practical poliths, tne
lnost that can be done is to reform it
r' in the Interest of the government, Uat
; is to say, of the people."
7 While The Independent holds firmly
- " tho r.nniiiist theory of money, it
r-tmWoA that, it was a question
;V of politics, and for that reason alone
t and not from any economic imju ,
... Z rr r oil-
-n has advocatea tne ireecumse
ver.
ar.r?rnxfiAifi Reoublican calls at
mo wfuuo""' 1 . -
ontjnn nf th( rfiDublican papers wmcn
seek to give all the credit for the
passage of the government irrigation
hill to President Roosevelt to the fact
'ha rionprni Miles nreceded the pres
ident twelve years in the advocacy of
! measure. General Miles in an
article in the North American Review
i W Mnrr.ii i RflO entitled "Our Unwa-
; tered Empire," urged the passage of
i o.ivi a law with so much eloquence
and loeie that the article was made
; the basis of speeches in congress when
I the bill was before that uoay.
fcfAffl in th Union ex-
cept Ohio under th rsls cf Mark
Hanna. The average aaiair ui
ttachers in Iowa U $37, and of the
women teachers 31.45 per montn,
Many of the Iowa teachers are de
prived of the ordinary comions 01 me
while the state produces $400,000,
000 worth of agricultural products.
That is what results from a people
who are inspired by the gospel oi
greed and who always "vote er
straight."
Mr. Wilshlre makes the following
t-omewhat astonishing statement in the
August number of his magazine, page
8. He adopts the republican iasnion
of calling the social democrats of Ger
many "socialists" and then says: "The
socialists In Germany have exactly tne
same platform fundamentally mat an
t,ccialist3 have the whole world over,
viz: the demand for the ownership of
the machinery of wealth production by
the people and its administration dem
ocratically." Will Mr. Wilshire print
the platform of the social democratic
party of Germany? The independent
has printed it two or three times.
It Is announced that Morgan has
perfected his plan and the four hard
toal roads have been "merged" into j
one organization. There is now a com- j
plete monopoly of the hard coal sup
ply controlled by one organization. It
will control the prices for next win
ter's coal. Prepare to make your con
tributions to Baer and Morgan and
aiter that go and "vote 'er straight."
There is nothing like being a mullet
head.
The coolness with which a republi
can daily will lie is shown in a re-
lr ark by the Indianapolis Journal in
speaking of the chart that was used
in the last two political campaigns
showing the range of prices of wheat
1 . 1 1i . HTTTIll. 1- 1. n i-
anu suver. n says: wuu wutat, ui
one dollar and silver down to 43 cents
this chart might look somewhat out of
tune just now. The Chicago price
of wheat at that writing was 81 cents
snd of silver 55 cents. Since the pros
pect that the governments of the
world would re-establish bimetallism
at the ratio of 32 to 1 silver has ad
vanced 11 cents an ounce. It is prob
able that every mullet head who read
the above item in the Indianapolis
Journal actually believed that he was
retting $1 a bushel for his wheat
That is the way they are made.
u 50 Household Articles, 39
. mm
Send ni P. O. money order for Me and we will send you the foUowtaC JM eomMns.
tte"uVriaarnl to sell C0 a day. Uauaf price la 16.00. Up-
ueFuu;,inuBcjr Dv nl .C-. . f h . ..-fame
1 TibpIc pnveloDes
1 pack note paper
'1 ounces Ink
2 steel pens
1 pen holder
1 lead pencil
1 box crayons
1 coin puise
1 aluminum comb
1 dee mirror
1 box tacks
1 good sponge
1 box fish hooks
1 wire strainer
1 egg beater
1 nutmeg grater
1 star patty pan
1 heart patty pan
1 set tea spoons
1 set table spoons
1 pair scissors
1 aluminum thimble
12 agate buttons
12 pants buttons
12 hooks and eyes
6 collar buttons
6 shelf papers
2 shoe strings
1 paper pins
1 lancT bat
1 card safety ping
1 fane:
pin
1 needle cabinet
1 box hairpins
1 cone ironing wax
1 sb tehei perfume
1 kazoo, 6 Inch
1 boxwood whistle
1 spool emb. cotton
1 paper bluing
1 microscope
1 necktie
1 watch chain
1 screw driver
i mkiia I.iiiii1tn)i1af 1 rtalnt hrnah
1 yard French lace 1 combinationtool,
1 yard green ribbon can opener, glass cut
1 yard red ribbon ter.plier, etc.
STANLEY CAMPBELL CO., Dept. 6, Milford, Neb. J)
0 'C"
1309 O STREET, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA.
Our Fall Trm Opens September 7.
Why not decide now that you will take a course this year in business or
shorthand and typewriting? Why not decide now that you will tike the
course at the Modern Commercial School where the instruction is the best,
where the equipments are the best, where the courses of study are the
most practical, where the instructors will take a personal interest in you
and do all they can to help you, where personal instruction will enter large
ly into your work, where the expenses are the lowest for the quality of
work you receive. Why not decide now to begin this course September 7
at the opening of our fall term. Our catalogue is free, shall we 6end it to
you. J. L. STEPHENS, Pres.
I', t
ThP rerfint decision of Judge Rogers
at St Louis legalizing the black list
is another step toward the degradation
of the courts to subservient tools of
capitalists. It shows that the courts
nre willine to contradict and overturn
their own interpretations of -the law
whenever it is to the interest of large
accumulations of wealth to do so. The
courts have held constantly that the
boycott was illegal, that it could not
be employed to injure a firm's or an
individuals business. In Great am
ain, and it is from there that our
courts set their precedents and their
inspiration, the jails have been filled
with persons charged with boycotting.
The Eendine out of a "black list"
which prevents a man from obtaining
employment at his vocation, is simply
. hovcott and nothine else. The deci
sion of Judce Rogers therefore is that
the capitalistic class can boycott, but
the men who work for wages cannot
is it not about time that these wage-
workers ceased to cast their ballots
for the party that puts such judges as
Rogers on the bench?
,
The Springfield (Mass.) Republican
seems to take seriously the fake news
paper story to the effect that all for
eign corporations doing business in
Kebraska will be required to incor
porate again and pay a fee gauged to
lhA amount of capital stock. The
Kepublican should know that the state
administration is repuoucan and can
Le depended upon to do nothing which
iWOuld cause the Standard Oil or any
other foreign corporation any grier.
The wavs of bribe-eivers and corrup-
tionists have been the same since long
before Christ until the present time
Ihe railroads are adepts in tnat ousi-
ress and they produce the same ef
fects that they did more than 2,000
years ago. When these same sort of
rcen were laying the foundation for
the ruin of Greece Demosthenes spoke
of them as follows: " What is it that
has ruined Greece? Envy, when a
r an gets a bribe; laughter, if he con
fesses it: mercv to the convicted: hat-
led of those who denounce tne crime
all the usual accompaniments of
corruption." That description applies
to everv one of that listless and
funereal crowd that assembled in the
auditorium the other day and nomi
nated Barnes for supreme judge. That
i& the way all the republican papers
talked when Congressman Baker re
turned the passes sent him.
Farm Insurance.
Fire, Lightning, Windstorms
On Live Stock, Dwellings,
Out Buildings & Contents.
Farmers and Merchants Ins. Co.,
Lincoln, Nebr. Established in 1885.
LOSSES PAID to patrons over three quarters of a MILLION.
Security to Policy Holders $354,175-54-
No assessments. Assured assumes no liabilty.
your town write direct to the company.
If there is no agent in
The hold that the "reorganize'
ihave on the south may be surmised
from the following insulting paragraph
'-concerning Bryan which appeared in
fihfi Atlanta Constitution, which dur
ing the last two campaigns claimed to
re his steadfast supporter, 'ine Lon
etitution now remarks: "There is one
isupreme debt that Mr. Bryan owes to
tthe democratic party and which he
should be generous and humble enough
itc pay in full. He should either talk
srnse when he talks politics or quie
down and come tome!" It is very evi
dent that the editor of the Constitu
te has relapsed into a Cleveland
tunco steerer
Iowa is a hide-bound republican
fetate with immense majorities of that
nartv in almost every county, and it
pays its school teachers the smallest
That the railroads have some big
scheme that they want the supreme
court of this state to sanction no rea
sonable man can doubt. They wanted
to know their man and how he stood
on that question and having found out
thev did follow their ucual custom of
allowine the different republican rail
road attorneys to hght It out among
themselves. Months beforehand they
:ricked their man. and there was not a
republican attorney in the state that
dared to announce himself as a can
didate after that. One attorney said
to the editor of The Independent some I
veeks ago that t would oe tony tor
anv lawver to announce himself a can
didate after the railroads had made
their selection, for he could no more
ret. a nomination in a republican con-
ention with the railroads against mm
than he could lift himself over a
fence by his boot straps. And every
man in the state knows that to be true.
A. .A.
NOW ABOUT YOUR FALL SUIT. $
A Suit to be satisfactory, fits cor-
rectly, is made of serviceable fabric,
v
and stays in shape to the last. These
features characterize the cloths we sell. O
Oar new fall suitg are better than
We give in them, cloteh, work.
manship and durability, the best we
know how to give, at prices as low as
we dare make them.
The Wall Street Journal says that
the trunk line situation has been
Folidified into a trust. Allied with it
i'. the steel trust." That is a state
ment of the truth. All the "publicity"
that the new department of state may
give to the matter will no alter the
situation. It was not intended to.
Neither of the old parties will allow
Anv alteration. Too many bie demo
r.rats and republicans are interested
They will soon spread abroad the
catch phrase, which has already ap
rrared in some of the hlar dallies:
"Trusts are our salvation," and eyery
mullet head in tne iana
"Yep. That's bo."
o
o
2
z mm
o
Ami HBHBMH
ever.
Our suits at
$10, $15 and $20
made of fancy and unfinished Worst
eds, Serges and Cassimeres, certainly
deserve personal examination. Well
padded shoulders, hand shaped collars
and stay-in-shape coat fronts.
We are behind every suit with
your money back if not satisfactory.
One thing sure, our clothes FIT.
We prefer to miss sales, than miss fits.
The vcrv Rett School Clothes for Bow
.... - - j j
Visit eras toro and see our showing of ill New and none V
but GOOD Clothes. O
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MAGEE & DEEL1ER
CLOTHES
THAT
FIT.
1!
i
AAAAAA
1t09 O
STREET
t... Tha Tni1nnflAnt atinuld I and tnka arYvnfa,a iKa Kaml.. -m
will renlv- examine the advertisement in U eoi- fered. Always mention TH lndene
w' umni, U wfll pay you to read them dent, -T - . . Vv
. -v..-. .4 r
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