AUGUST 27, 1903. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT CLXYELAXD'S CHAHCKg a somewhat general view of the po litics! situation, and in doing so base any conclusion upon undisputed facts. That there is serious division in the democratic party and that, as Louis F. Post says, the Bryan democracy is making the fight of its life, goes with out saying. That' there is ar division in the republican party, wide and seri ousous, is not so well known, but there are many facts that lead think ing men, even in the republican party, to fear that it will have most disas tious effects. The Wall Street Jour nal pays: "President Roosevelt, as it well known, has offended powerful Wall street interests in three ways: First, he directed his attorney general to bring suit against the Northern Securities company; sec ond, he invited John Mitchell, pres ident of the united mine workers, to the White house, and took steps " to bring about a settlement of the anthracite coal strike in a way that, was not pleasing to the coal operators; third, he has publicly advocated, and , has had enacted into law, a policy of publicity to be applied to the industrial com panies doing an interstate busi ness. Any one of these things things would have been cause enough, from the standpoint of that lesser Wall street, which looks at everything through the micros cope of its own immediate selfish interests, to have merited Presi dent Roosevelt's defeat for a sec ond term. All three of them to gether constituted an indictment against him so strong that it has been the general belief that no measure however drastic would be neglected to bring about his re tirement at the end of his present term." Taking all these things into consid eration what conclusion can be drawn concerning the outcome of the next presidential election? Cleveland is and always has been the idol of Wall street. If the monied interests there throw their whole force and power to Cleveland, will he not carry New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jer- j sey, Delaware, Maryland and all the southern states? Cannot the monied interests buy Indiana which is al ways "for sale? The republican party in Wisconsin is in a factional fight to a finish, "and wir not the railroad re publicans there join forces with Vilas, who was a member of Cleveland's vcx u i kixt ouu tan j tuv aiui v v him? Is Illinois in any shape, after the disgraceful administration of Gov ernor Yates, to put up a fight that will liold that state to the republicans? Cleveland has always been an anti imperialist and Massachusetts is hon eycombed with anti-imperialist socie ties, every voter in them being per suaded that that is the all important question. The stagnation and suffer ing that has been caused by the stop page of so many cotton mills, the loss that wage-workers have suffered in consequence of the tremendous fall in stocks which they were induced to purchase by the republican papers, and the rise in the cost of living on account of trust prices has put even old Massachusetts in the doubtful col umn. The Independent called attention to . the fact two or three years ago that the monied interests might conclude that It would be cheaper for them to take up the democratic party than to pay the awful assessments that Mark Han na levied on them to buy elections, for they would have all the southern states without cost and womd only have to buy two or three, whereas un der Mark Hanna they had to buy a good many. Think over all these things and each man ask himself whether the claim of the leaders of the Cleveland democ racy that they "can win" is entirely groundless. In such a contest as that, the west and the northwest would scarcely be factors in the contest. All these states might go for Roosevelt with over whelming majorities and it would not affect the election of a president Wall street would not spend a dollar in them and it would be "mighty poor pick ing" for the politicians. Neither must it be forgotten that there are many shrewd republican poli ticians who think that the best thing for them to do is to let the Cleveland democrats have the next election. They believe that there will be a panic and hard times before long and if they can manage to have that come under a democratic administration they think that then they could come in and hold the government for many years with out much effort or cost, as all that would be necessary for them to say would be: "Look at the misery and suffering a democratic administration always brings. If you want a reign of soup houses and starvation, vote the democratic ticket" The quality of sophomore rhetoric never equalled at any commencement exercise in the last hundred years. DOWKIllQBBYAK The congressional committee of the democratic party, which is a very im portant part of the: national commit tee, has a press bureau which sends out during the campaigns and sessions of congress correspondence to the weekly .papers. That correspondence used to come to The Independent, but this paper seems to have been taken off the list It is beginning its work at a very early period as we see it ap pearing in some of the democratic pa pers already, although congress is not i Tt ooooinn on1 Vi ttAlUtMl MAHnjv - wvmwavu muu liattuuui l-CLUUpCLigll is nearly a year in the future. Among the papers in this state that are print ing it is the Fremont Herald-Leader. Here is an extract from it: "Many men who supported Bry an in 1896 and 1900 agree that he" cannot possibly be called a candi date again. They realize that the issues will not be the same next year and that the people have put the seal of their condemnation on, some of the issues on which he twice led the party to defeat." What The Independent wishes to call attention to is that the national committee of the democratic party has joined the crowd that has been deter mined to down Bryan and the Kansas City platform. This committee is the one that fought the Bryan campaign in 1900. These are the men who made the Kansas City platform and nominated Bryan. Now they have deserted both Bryan and- the platform. They are in control of the democratic organization. With that fact staring every man in the face, what possible hope can there be that Bryan prin ciples will prevail at the next demo cratic national convention? The Den ver conference sized the situation up right. RACE PREJUDICE The lying tendencies in the great dailies are not confined to matters political at all. They cater to every vice and every prejudice of mankind. They endeavor to create the idea that tnere is but one section of one race that is really entitled to be called "men" and that is the Anelo-Saxon. Everybody else in their plan is "in- lenor. instead of cultivating the broad principle of "the brotherhood of man" they teach race prejudice. It crops out against the Indian as well a3 all other races. That has gone to such an extent that Colonel Pratt of the great Carlisle Indian school felt called upon to make a protest against it in his official report to the com missioner of Indian affairs. He says: "From time to time throughout the history of the school illustrated stories have appeared in the public prints, especially in the Sunday editions, making most flagrantly false allegations against returned Carlisle students. Within the past five years as many as twenty such stories have been printed, all of them entirely false, and some of them most malignant in character. There has seemed to be a syndi cate of fabricators moved by a common purpose to disparage and manufacture prejudice. My re peated contradictions of these stories to newspapers themselves did not stop these misrepresenta tions." He then calls attention to the story about White Buffalo which was printed in the Philadelphia North American, which was profusely illustrated, con cerning this graduate of Carlisle who was said to have murdered two or three wives, every word of which was a lie made up out of whole cloth. Colonel Pratt sued the North Ameri can for libel, but that paper made a full retraction and prosecuted the cor respondent who sent the article. All the great educators and large numbers of the best citizens of this' country lot upon the great dailies as distinctly demoralizing in their ten dencies. The idiocy of the claim that the possession of the Philippines strength ens the militarv nowpr of iha TtnHo I X ' vm. vuv tlllyU States should be so plain that a mul let head could see it We are weaker by just as much force, naval and military, as it will take to guard and defend a thousand islands 7,000 miles away, whose inhabitants will join with the first nation that proclaims war against us. How many soldiers and how many ships will it take to keep control of those islands against a foreign enemy and all the inhabi tants thereof? The European mon archies were jealous of the power of the United States and every one of them urged the imperialists on to sub jugate the Philippines for the purpose of restricting the power of these Mates. . i 'i j f' ( t i finWrM' I ri I II III .. -I lft- j s- UULU LLbUVldwolnin ale Write lor Samples or Send Your teed Satisfactory Special $5.00 Suit Coatand Vest $3.75 Pnts not sold separate Men's Suits made from all wool worst eds wili be sold by Hayden Bros, for $5.00. All well made and have good lin ngs and trimmings. They're; put to gether to stay together; and come in iegular sizes also stout and siim cuts, rmade in four button cutaway sack style. In all sizes from 34 to 4G. Your home merchant will tell you that t is cheap at $8.00. If you don't like them after you get them we want you to send them back to us and we will refund your money. This applies to anything we sell as well as these suits. NEW GROCERY LIST NOW READY FREE FOR THE ASKING n Wholesale Supply A WORD TO POPULISTS It is hard for the ordinary! man who is not acquainted with "the pro position that reform papers are up against" to fully realize the nature of the difficulty that confronts every per son who attempts to print a paper that is opposed to trusts and corporations. Competition we will meet without a word of grumbling, but when we are forced to enter a field where our com petitors give away their goods that is another proposition. The Independent has often called attention to the fact that the farmers' homes are flooded with newspapers that are given away. During the last year these plutocratic papers have invented a new scheme which enables them not only to give away their papers, but to get unlim ited advertising of the fact. Their form of procedure is illustrated in an item in the Greeley (Neb.) Citizen. The Citizen says: "The Nebraska State Journal sends us an advertising proposi tion, offering to furnish their weekly edition to us at 15 cents a year. We presume our democratic neighbor will advertise the Jour nal's proposition, as it did that of the Chicago Inter-Oceans a short time since, and as the price,of the Journal is so small it might offer it free to new subscribers." The Greeley Citizen has guessed right That is just what the corpora tion papers have been doing for over a year. They first tried it by putting their papers down to 25 cents a year in clubbing offers with country week lies and now they have reduced it to 15 cents. The State Journal is not the only one in that sort of work. The whole gang is at it. It is, not to be supposed that the publishers of these plutocratic sheets foot the losses. There is a fund somewhere to be drawn upon. That is the proposition that The In dependent and every other reform pa per is "up against." We must enter a field to supply a newspaper demand where our competitors give away their papers. It will be a hopeless fight un less the readers of The Independent take a hand. They have done so in all the years of the past. They and they alone have given this paper the w."de circulation that it has. The war upon plutocracy is no child's play. It takes brave men to carry it on and they must have self-sacrificing sup porters to back them. No greater calamity could happen to this nation than to drive out of existence every raper that will not sell its editorial columns to the worshippers of Mam mon, and no more truly patriotic work can be done than in extending the circulation of a paper that fights plutocracy and corporations from one end of the year to another. The eastern dailies hold up their hands in holy horror because Mr. Bry an called Cleveland a "bunco steerer." II is tfco opinion of The Independent! sPecia! nai! 0pdcp5 Order. Every Garment fcx or Your Money Back Pure Worsted Four-Button Sack Suit $9.06 Coat and Vest, $7.oo. Pnts cci sold separate. Men's fine pure worsted suits in a neat stripe and cut in the very latest styles, four button cutaway sack. This material is made from pure long worsted yarn, will probably wear longer and give as much satisfaction as any cloth that you can procure no matter what price you pay. The coat ismada with hand padded shoulders, hair cloth fronts which keeps coat in perfect shape; also lined with a good serge lining and well tailored throughout Comes io sizes from 34 to 46, regulars. - House Omaha,Neb. that Bryan let Cleveland oil alto gether too easy. It was a common practice with senators of national, reputation when Cleveland sold J. Tierpont Morgan those bonds at 13 cants on the dollar less than the mar 1 et price and out of which Morgan cleared about $9,000,000, to call him worse names than that It has also teen the practice of these same dailies whenever they wanted to round up the mullet heads up to "vote 'er straight" not only to talk about "Cleveland soup houses," .but to apply to that individ ual epithets such as only those schooled in political strjfe can invent and apply. Now they would have us believe that their tender sensibilities have been most, severely shocked be cause Bryan called Cleveland a "bun co steerer." Judge Brewer's advocacy of the ex tension of government by injunction and abolishment of the rights of ap peal for persons accused of crime in dicates that he has become a believer in the doctrine that the judge can do 10 wrong. He would abolish all safe guards that the people have set up against the human frailty and fallibil ity of men elevated to the bench. There is no need of them "for the judge can do no wrong." Thj editor of The Independent once told ih Lporation lawyers who were acsembled Deiore tne board of transportation that when the patriots of '76 shot the doc trine clear across the Atlantic that "the king could do wrong," there went along with it that other and more in famous doctrine that "the court could rot err." The power that railroads exercise over their employes Is shown in the state of affairs in the First and Third wards of Lincoln. The populists and democrats carry those wards and have cow the two councilmen, but there are scarcely enough known populists and democrats to be found in them to fill the delegation to a county conven tion. Most of the voters are railroad employes and a e known on primary registration books as republicans. When it comes to voting the republi cans are largely in the minority. The words "populist" and "popul irlic" and ."populism" have become a permanent part of the English lan guage. What the final meaning that will attach to them will be cannot be told. All the plutocratic papeTs use them at present to describe anything that is opposed t? the continual domi nation of money, the schemes of the trusts and consolidators of railroad systems. In this they include all the reforms demanded in the Kansas City platform as well as the distinctly de fined populist principles. Such expres sions as "out-Bryan Bryan in popul istic principles" is often used. In the eastern papers and reform, any change from the doctrine of liassez faire is called "populism.' h t