THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT NOVEMBER 5, 1903. Money and the Taxing Power - BYW, ILASHBY, All Rights ReserTed Ants' ii SfcAfiLfcS&SbAhLES 16 A r i 25 Years' Fuo cess ul PracUce in discuses ol tbe Nose, Throat, Ftomoch, Liver, Heart, Paralysis, Uowels, liladrter. Wood, rkin, Kid ney Diseases, Piles, Fistula, KeetnlUicera. Diabetes and V.riphl'u TlM(ma r- vvrDISEAStSand DISORDERS of MEN Younic, anlddlcagad and old MEN, If you cannot call, write today. Theprlca f cur dfpands an tbe severity of the disease. Soma can ba cured I OR $5.oo Others $5.00 I ER MONTH. Treatn cat and A'edlcin by mail. Ex aminntion and consultation tree. Call or address with stamp, P. O. Vox 224. Drt dearies & Starlri Kooms 219-220 urs. jearies & Maries, RWiar(Js mkt mil ana ms., Lincoln, Nebraska Live iiTgA Com-. Stock Jr mission ' Kye & Buchanan Co., SOUTH OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Best jossible service in all de partments. Write or wire us for markets or other information. Long distance telephone 2303 I COLUMBIA I TV! ATlTiXT A I V n i mi v OF LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. Capital, $100,000.00 2 Surplus, 14,000.00 I Deposits, 1,350,000.00 o John B. Wkight, President J. II. Westcott, 1st Vice Pres. t wrj, MiiuwciijO, su T X IDS, jy P. L. Hall, - - Cashier W. B. Ryons, - - Asst. Cashier ! Plumbing and Heating Estimates Furnished J. c. COX 33 North 14th 5treet, Lincoln, Neb. WHAT to READ on SOCIALISM A book of thirty-nix lai' paon, disenbiiitf the stan dard works on nociullsm in tiii liway thu.1 the student can readily Judge whatiH to be learned from each. An Inlfochirtoi y essay ly Charles H. Kerr on "Thm trul Thing in AoeitiM,".dd4 to the value ot the book for new convert or inquirers. llanUxomely printed en fine book paper with portrait of Marx, .nerU. I.lt tjknecht, Taiulurvcldt), Carpenter, Whit man, Blatchforri, ftlraons and other writers. Mailed for only OSK C'KNT a copy II 00 a hundred. 1UAKJ.K4 II. kt.HU, 10., fuba i lift At, UIHAtiO. T A HISTORY OF THK rttKCIOUS -jwa MKT A LH: front the earliest timet to M Vlhe present by Alex Del Mar. Second Tvv '"''Itlnn, cuini'lcte In one volume. jM- J l'. M'J vn. (loth and frold.fiMKi , fH Abounds with and prnctleal ki 'vr Athenueum. t vivid tl(i. rl'ik)ii mow lvdge. Loudon V Keplcte w ith in KepU-te with Information; evinces iiiucli care and M tidy. London Aendeiny. Knew the most eonM'tt nous advance Wy oud ltl I'redwfKtow. London ti. lievtew. A work of fjreat wriuhl and cleKimee ol style. London IVoHomM. No milt able and txmimlve work Mut e that o! S HIImih Jaeolt. London MnlUl. i A t'otii(klo le it book oU the subject. London Mo.iey, 1 aid on independent rewart h. London I n 1 1 V New. tmhe liik'brM arlenilflo value, yet tvedeble ai aiil. Nw Yotk rotu nii.1. t AMIHUIM.L 'cM,, ; w VV r-t St.. N, Y, Dr. MlttticU' Lumpy Jaw Curt Ir, Mitchell' I.u.upy Jaw f'ura H inia ran tort) t ctuo or inonry refund 4. One Application I tnouF.h. One bottl U auHUlcnt fir 4 h"l r more, Ydu curt tmy It At your t!rit?$iist or crii Rot It from hi Jot.hir. If he ou't, rli t!a direct n.J w will end you a hottle for 1.23 dellrrred, Marshall Oil CompAny, aole aaln agent for the United States, Maiahalltown, Iowa. A II 1 1 Jf 14 IfVpWBSHsp BOOK 2. Chapter XXIV. The power to coin money, thus act ually exercised by congress, instead of being, as at preseni, abdicated In fav or of the gold trust, would put an end to usurious debts both public and private, by giving the products of the people the power to perform required beneficial service, and to such com modities as all the people can produce, authority to pay tax levies and judg ments. ' , ' It would abolish poverty, among tbe pedple; develop to the utmost all the resources of the country; give to each c'Mzen the power to realize the price of his products or service, and uscer '.a an era of universal prosperity and human happiness, such, as the world has never seen. The gold trust would dissolve, and every other injurious combination for gathering profits from human toll unjustly, by means of mo nopoly of things universally neces sary, would likewise vanjsh. This is neither "an Utopian dream," tor a dream of any kind. It has already been partially, but imperfectly, tried once, and not found vanting. The plan here suggested is simply the application, on a vaster scale, up on a grander theatre, of the same principles which brought world-wide prosperity, to a small and essentially barbarous body of freebooters, inhab iting those insignificant and barren sand Islands at the head of the Adriatic sea. Their only resource was their pos FCf,sion of two metals, which the su perstitious ignorance of mankind has permitted to be clothed by infamous statutes with a purely artificial pow er to perform beneficial service for rx.an. Under the same system, extended so as to include all that vast array of commodities endowed with real power for beneficial human service, produced in this country, America would become and remain the clearing bcuse of the world. That Inexpressible Infamy, consti tuting the master injustice of human history, called "free coinage," and the compulsory use of another man's cemmodity to supply an Imperious and universal statutory need, at a price fixed by statute and stamped upon it by your government, which coldly re fuses the like favor to you, would cfase to torment and make miserable the human race, in order that the gold trust, by exercising the taxing power, may own and plunder the world. 4 Under the proposed system ' man kind, at present condemned to a worse servitude than Israel suffered . in Egypt, would cease to be boDdmen ?nd bondwomen, toiling through a hopeless life of death to .pay to the f,old trust the usury upon the bonds 01 the nations, payable in one sole cemmodity, which they cannot pro duce, and every ounce of which, when driven by the bayonet or the knout to obtain, they must procure from the gold trust, its indefeasable owner, by means of bonds of all nations which hold it in a vulture's clutch. Under the proposed system, what ever a man possesses, if taxable, will pay that tax or any judgment. It should be tried without :ear of mak ing things worse, because If Satan had devised a system with a view to make n anklnd miserable, he could, not have made it to exceed the present scheme in injustice and horror. Its far-reaching consequences manifest themselves U the multitude of combinations in ull departments of Industry, by which csch useful vocation seeks to protect Itself from the ruinous competitive lattle to get the sola trust's gold, the only means by which they can satisfy the enormous tax levies against their vealth, and meet the vast sums re quired to bo expended In their opera tions. The competitive system hecot the koM trust; and It la turn fowls a uooii arter Its kind. A tax la the Just tribute the rltUen Vayn to government as a return for He protection of hi person and prop erty. Surely he should te permitted to Ship ; Hides, IV Youi "Thos. McCulloch. CSTAOLISHCD 1070. Th oldest etl!ihed hlda housa In Nebraska. Vj4 highest rntrkat j ricea. Makn Nniipt rtur. Writ tot price and ahlpidn! Ug. 017 Q STREET, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, pay that tribute in something which is his, and not another's. Let us now in closing view again, in panorama, the matters involved in this investigation, so that the various points set forth may not be seen as "through a glass darkly," but stand ou: distinct ajjd clear and definite as the white peaks of the Sierras against a clear, twilight sky. When we define utility, in the ab stract, we can only say that "it is the capability to be compelled to perform beneficial service for man." This power is found as an endowment of a multitude of things, each of which selfish, greedy man, following the nar row system of beasts arjd plants, seeks to reduce to sjection to his own ex clusive, individual will. Each thing endowed with Ails power he endeav ors to bring under his exclusive indi vidual dominion, and make subserv ient to his personal control. As man himself is endowed in a superior degree with this power, the crnnibalistic methods of the plants and lower animals, retained by man( impel the greedy to seek dominion oyer others of their own species, as a means of commanding that power to perform beneficial service for them selves. Hence, has resulted, first, can ribalism; then chattel slavery; then the modified form known as feudal Ism; and last, the present system of wage slavery. The incessant struggle between men for exclusive individual possession, ad verse to all others, of things suscepti ble to exclusive possession, thus en dowed, the struggle being carried on under governments restraining vio lence, transforms humin enerev. be ing expended in that struggle, into the force of demand for those things. Value," in the abstract, is quantity or degree of intensity of that force of demand, just as "length," in the ab stract, is quantity of linear extension; and as "weight," in t e abstract, is quantity or intensity of the force of gravitation. Definite quantity of linear extension is ascertained by the employment of some concrete implement, and com parison, by means of that concrete im plement, of other concrete things with each other, enables us to determine relative quantities of linear extension. Definite quantity of the for:e of gravitation is ascertained by the em ployment of a concrete appliance, called balances or scales, and com parisons made by its means enable us to determine relative quantities of the force of gravitation. But such 'is the peculiar nature of t' force of demand that no concrete appliance can be employed to 'ascer tain it3 quantity. We accomplish this end by a mental process of "val uation" or "appraisal," and so, in the only possible way, determine quantity ot that force. Necessarily, all com parisons of relative quantities of the lorce of demand are mental acts. No physical appliance Is conceivable. When we have ascertained, by the employment of the yard-stick, a de terminate quantity of linear extension, moans of expressing that definite quantity is necessary.. We employ for this purpose the term "yard," as a symbol selected to express not a yard-stick but that fixed quantity of linear extension. When by the employment of bal ances we have ascertained a f.'eter minate quantity or the tone of gravi tation, a means of expressing that quantity becomes necessary. We em ploy for this purpose a device consist ing of the term "pound" as the sym tol selected to express not a pound weight but that fixed quantity of the forte or gravitation. So. likewise, when by the Inlellert i'al act of ''appraisal" or "valuation." w havo ascertained a determinate quantity of the force of demand, a means of expressing that quantity, h. comes necessary. We employ fur that purpose a device toubtlnsr of the 'pound sterlins or "dollar.1 trie symbol riicwen to fvprrnot that mental act, tor a roll., nor any othrr physical object-but that fixed quantity of the foro of demand. (Continued Nest Week,) o o I s and Furs The Use of Arm, Heart Trouble. Could Not Bat, Sleep or Walk. , Dr. Miles Heart Cure Cured Entirely. Tf it hadn't been for Di. Miles Remedies I would not be here to write this letter. Two ' years ago last June I lose the use of my left arm, could not use it and could only move it With the help of my right hand. My heart was so weak I could not sleep nights for smothering spells. I was out of sorts ail over and couid eat nothing. I gew so weak that I could nofwalk without staggering like a drunken man and my home doctor said he could do nothing for pie. I was in so muca pain I was almost wild. I could not take - morphine nor opium as they mae me worse. Spigot to thinking about Dr. Miles' Heart Cure and Nervine and the more I thought about it the more I wanted to try them. I wrote to the Dr. Miles Medical Co. for ad vice which 1 followed to the letter. I can say today that I am glad I did as I am a well woman now; can work and can walk two or three miles and not m'nd it' I can also use my arm again as well as ever. You do not . kr.ow how thankful I am for those grand medicines Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure and Nervine. I think Dr. Miles' Rmi are the best in the world, and if I should get sick again I should take the same course. The remedies also helped mr daughter Vida. so wonderfully that I should have written you before to thank you, but I wanted to be sure that the cure was permanent, which I now know to be tbe case." Mrs. Frank Loomis, Allen, Mich. All drueeists sell and guarantee, first hnt. tie Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free, hook- on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address ur. Miles Medical Co.. Elkhart. Ind. 2 Several hundred finished monu ments and tablets on hand. De signs and prices sent free. Please state whether a medium, email, or a large monument is wanted." , Get our prices no matter where you want the work Bent. Address, KIMBALL BROS., for, 15th & 0 fts. Lincoln, Neb. Csncers Cu red Why sutler pain and death from cancer? Dr. T. O'Connor cures cancers, tumors " and wens; no knife, blood or planter. Address 13GG O St. Lincoln, Nebraska. CANADIAN LANDS Millions of Acres of tha Fln.st Farming and Grazing- Lauds Open for settlement. Small taxes, cheap fuel, good climate, enormous crops. Lands sell at $3.50 per acre and up. payabh In ten annual in stallments. Wh," rent a farm when you can buy one for less money than you pay as rent? Thousands of U. S. settlers are going. Tor full information apply to A. C. SHAW. Gtn'l Apt., I'ass'r Dept. Canadian radfic U'y, 22$ Sa. Clark street, Chicago. III. Tho Hotel Walton is ii o ai iik. r. TI ItMatid Jii.!r,.!tv nlrnt !. f t, p, liotiie !t the i ty, L 1 J I liny mi I iij., Tirr 4NY' J Kara ftal!i (a l k (lowdtri irtbk!4 ia t&. tmi ki )or fnt t rM t tu L ....... it- r4 sn.l lb. IM1 rhu 's kwwn!!sh i 1 1 A ,Jkk I i Ht.fi.al t I fr It .. reWa f vtjrT.Qr l riou. tw po.,irfv.ru. "Is 1 Kilt n! Ii i latul. Nest,