NOVEMBER 19, 1903. THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT THE KE1L SOCIALISM Mrs. Avery, in a recent speech in Springfield, Mass., declared that the socialists' platform did not contain the essence of their principles and that the leaders really sought other ends than those indicated in the pub lished declarations. She claimed that after having discovered these things she was forced to leave the party as she could not give her assent to the real objects of the socialistic propa ganda. The Independent has long known that to be the fact and has often said that the logical result of socialist theories must be the destruc tion, of the family. Now the social ists are publicly proclaiming the fact. From The Agitator of Septsmber, 1903, a New York city socialist publica tion, the following extracts are taken. These are not charges made by The independent, as the reader will please notice, but the statement of socialist principles by the advocates of the co operative commonwealth, themselves. On page 26 of The Agitator, Septem ber, 1903, is this statement: "Marriage must go. It is con tinually, being weighed in the bal ance and found wanting. It is not conducive to an improving birth supply and a free, rational devel opment of the young." V ' Then on page 29 will be found the following: "Upre, then, is my arraignment of marriage, modern marriage with its concommitant divorce courts, its unspeakable, but in evitable prostitution; with its im possible and unnatural ideals of virtue and its hypocritical disre gard for them; this thing of shreds and patches permeated by an atmosphere of falsehood and concealment. This is the full flower of our .present economic system." On the same page and the one fol lowing this appears: "Socialism will give the oppor tunity. No true and worthy rela tion of the sexes, no adequate so lution of the problem of the birth supply can be attained until men and women stand on equal footing economically. The co-operative 'commonwealth will supply-these conditions and the intelligence of society must reconstruct its mar riage traditions. Part and parcel of our archaic property system, mey must go. Vi.A.n ' . . u u ,1 r . aa mi Independent first began . to hunt for relief from the economic ills tnat af flict the common people, he thought he might find it in socialism. He therefore went to the authorities on that subject without prejudice and earnestly sought it there. He was ir resistibly driven to the conclusion that the fundamental prineipies laid down by its greatest writers nust of nec essity destroy the family relation ai we have known it and which gives about all in life th.' is worth living lor. Being an earnest student, he was often admitted to the inner cir cie3 and there he found men 'advocating what he conceived to be the necessary result of the system, al though it was never openly advocated. Mrs. Avery seems to have had the tame experience. The editor knows that there are so cialists and socialists, Tiauy of whom are pure and. high-minded men advo cating the collective ownership of all property, but who fail to tee that such a condition would make the exist ence of tne family as we now know it an absolute impossibility. Hut the real leaders understand it well enough. I KT TH K C III Kl It f'KAK Mammon and Moloch! They reign together. Out of ok-curo f i ats in dark corners of station waiting rooms, out of dark doorwnjs in city M recta, and tun from' the garbage U,xm In the alley, tomes Chicago's Larvcst of foundling. Mothers mad. desperate 1 itarvathm and poverty Iwonw low er than tho anlmsh and abandon their joum:. Million upon millions, far be yond th power to u,m them or even tt give thorn away, are piled up In the Im U of ft few Ly a political j srty that givea countless fpcclal privilege to a few and on the other hand frail mothers abandon their offspring in the hope thatsome one will have pity, or haggard parents, with breaking hearts giving them oyer to hospitals. But what does it matter as long as there ic a surplus in the government treas ury that can be given to the banks, and while the railroads have , more trafiic than they can handle? Social ist and republican leaders alike join in the creed that in business there is no right and no wrong, there is no "ought" and no "ought not." We, who have contended for the oppressed, whose hearts have sympathized with the toiling masses, can only stand aloof for a whileTaTid watch the Jug gernaut of money, and greed grind v.eeping women and helpless children beneath its wheels. But there will be a revulsion. There is a greater power in the world than the power of money. It has trampled armies and money under its feet often times in the past. It is righteousness. Churches may become corrupt, they may accept bribes from the robber and extortioner and keep silence, but righteousness will in the end prevail. The progress of man is onward and upward. The time will come when the acceptance of bribes from the fl rancial pirates 'will be looked upon with as much contempt as the former selling of indulgences. There is only one vthing that will stand the test of the ages. It is righteousness. For unrighteousness the punishment in all ages has been terrible. There never has been and never will be a way of escape. It is not men like the corre spondent from South Omaha, whose communication is printed in another column, who should fear. Let the lead ers of the church fear. Their congre gations will soon be made up of those who enjoy special privileges and no others. Then there will arise other Wesleys and Savonarolas. A DECEIVED PEOPLE How a whole nation can be led to believe a lie is shown in the history of the last few years. The "stand patters' have led the people to be lieve ' that the present extortionate tariff has produced all the prosperity we have enjoyed and refer to lower tariffs or free trade as the most awful thing that could happen to a nation. Recently a book has been published entitled "A Political History of Slav ery," by William Henry Smith. Mr. Smith, now deceased, waswell known by all newspaper men. He was the editor of a bitterly partisan republican paper and for a long time was man ager of the 'Associated press. In this book appears (Mr. Smith writing as a historian) the following: "The ten years following the enactment of the Walker revenue tariff of 184G opened a wide field of controversy between the politi cal economists of the free trade and protection schools. Many years afterward the author of the tariff of 1S4C reviewed its work ings, and declared that its benefits had exceeded the most' sanguine expectations; and that none of the evils destruction of manufac tures, discouragement of agricul ture and increase ot frauds on the revenue predicted of it had been realized. He gave to his tariff the whole credit for the great Increase of wealth from 1850 to 1SC0, which wag In excess of 125 per cent nearly double that of the preced ing decade." The whole country looked upon the results of thia tariff in the same llht. It tamo the nearest ta being frto trade of any law ever enacted, Now when It U to the Interest of tho tariff Kraft trs to Wlaro that low tariff and "roup ho'-Ui'V always go together, the whole country ixenu to betlevo tho tl. That It dimply because tho whole ptirt h pr.T tli ally In tho hands of the tarifjruftcm and plutocracy. The democratic hour bona never fill to make afjt of thenwlTe wheni-ver on opportunity offi r. They did It hen they nominated He wall, when they turned down Towue, ami they l.ow eee a (banco ta repeat tho per- HAYDEN BROS. The Reliable Store. Ladies' Cloaks and Furs. This department of our mammoth store is always busy, for we are selling the latest and nobbiest Cloaks find Suits to be had. We pride ourselves in taking the lead in this line. Our Ladies' Suits range from $10.00 up to $25.00. Our Ladies' Cloaks and Coats from $5.00 up to $20.00. We also show tome tine bargains in Children's Cloaks. You will rind theee prices from $1.00 to $5.00 cheaper for the same garment than you can obtain elsewhere. We are selling a nice line of Pur Scarfs, Coats, Muffs, etc. Wlen's Underwear. Men's $1.20 wool and fleece Hoed Shirts and Drawers, in all t 7R Sizes and Colors umi ihh 'iiimhiii nun iiin iihhWhii nni9 ll v Men's 11.50 wool Shirts and Drawers, natural gray and camel's hair, gQ Men's Union Suits at $2.00 CIKfl and ..VliwU Men's 75c heavy fleece lined Shirts and Drawern, single or double JC breasted rrd Men's 50c heavy fleece lined Shirts , 2Jj Men's $4.00 and $5.00 silk and wool Shirts and Drawers in pink and CO Rfl blue, at , , .... .. .... .... ....vZiUU Our Grocery Department. This is one of the departments in our large store with which you ahou d be acquainted. IIereyou can secure any and ail of the good things to eat at prices that can't be beat. Koiice the Daily Papers for Special Sales from Time to Tims. : We give free coupons with every purchase in our store, no matter how small the amount. Theo coupons are very valuable in connection with our gift carni val. Kemember we sell everything. HAYDEN ROS 16th and Dodge St., Omaha, Neb. . formance at Washington. There is not the slightest chance that they will fail to make use of the opportunity. The attempt to make Panama the great issue in the next 'presidential campaign Instead of the all-important economic and sociological questions that press for settlement is in line with their work for the last thirty years. IIARHABOUS TRAITS OF CHARACTER Years ago when The Independent began to warn the people concerning what the result would be of the deifi cation of wealth, it was like theoice :of one crying in tho wilderness," where no one would hear. The whole literary world seemed to go mad, and rot an article appc-M anywhere in defense of the old ideals. There was nothing In life but the accumulation of money. The reply to any protest vas: "What does he know? He has lived forty or fifty years and never accumulated any money." If a man had not accumulated money, that set ted it. His opinions were worthless. Metaphorically, the God of our fathers was dethroned and Mammon was wor shipped In his stead. The Independent has lately drawn attention to the fact that a revulsion has begun against thi3 sort of degra dation. It Is seen In many of the magazines that three or four years ago had nothing but derision, scorn pnd contempt for those who did not think that such men as Rockefeller, Carnegie, Morgan and Schwab were the highest types of American man hood, Leslie's Magazine attached that sort of peoplo along one line this month and The Reader Attacks them along another, Even some of the great dailies have lately admitted ar ticles to their columns, although they put them off In Inconspicuous col umns, that they refused two and three years ao, IMlm Carman, In HIhcush Ing In Tho Reader the moral d i,en- orutloii resulting from the worship of. money, eay: "AukIo-S ixon civilization, to upe'tU of no other, ha become a humiliating and nn rupihmm Kanuv O tr fathers an I grand fat hern eared for many td-al. for tumor, for honexty, fur patriot' Urn, for culture, tor hUh breed. I:u:, fur nobility of hii . t- r, and unseUis! ne ; of purpose, We taro fjiilr for wealth, au l rpeit only tho reb-titloiiH and barbarous tr!U of character by which it 1 1 AlUllK'.t." Tho Independent It not aa much alone as it was a few years ago. There are others now beginning to voice the same sentiments and are defending the same principles. We bid them welcome. The guard post, so far in the front, has often been a very lone station. , THE FARM M1CKOISB The chemists and bacteriologists are constantly making astonishing discoveries. There used to be a theory that the world must of necessity at some time become uninhabitable. All the coal would be consumed, the soil would be exhausted of its fertility and the' globe remain an uninhabited waste. But the discovery of radium and the work of the bacteriologists have given that theory a hard knock. The farmer for thousands of years has known that certain kinds of beans would grow on soil too poor to produce, anything else, though the beans produced food of the highest utility. A bacteriologist In his re searches has discovered that the beans were, populated with numerous col onies of germs that, coming into ac tivity when the beans were planted, multiplied .by the millions and ex tracted nitrogen from the air which served to enrich the soil. So this scientist went io work to propagate that kind of germs. He found that they could be preserved in a dry con dition in cotton and this cotton, plant ed In the poorest soils, soon was found to be alive with them. Drawing im mense quantities, of nitrogen from tho air, they soon transformed the poor est soil into a condition to raise Im mense crop:. The most valuable con stituent of commercial manures con sists of nitrogen and this farmer mi crobe when properly set to work Hill oon produce mure nitrogen than erer came from tho guano deposits of Peru and Chill. The experiments mado phow that the fertility of land In which tho mic robes were et to work was inm r.'e l from 100 to 1.W0 pet tent. Hurrah for tho farm microbe! Bume men have accumulated for tunes greater than the world ever baw I efutJ, They are not the rcmilt of la lor. They ur not the result of eaph tal. They are In every case tho ro ult of upoelal privilege!. POULTflYANpCGa MONEY