f HE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT MARCH 1904. The Philosophy of Freedom An Open Forum for Single Taxcrs FARMER AND SINGLE TAX. The editor of The Independent as serts that the reason why farmers do not take kindly to the single tax is because it will destroy the value cf their land, and this value is about all they have left after years of hard toil. This is true not only of the farmers, but of most land owners, especially owners of small estates. It is diffi cult to show these good people that destroying the individual value does not destroy it. We use the word "de stroy" wrongly. True, the single tax will take from each Individual his social product, i. e., the land value, thus lowering tbe selling. price of his land hut the fict that all such land will yield annually to each commun ity a large revenue, proves that the value has not been destroyed, but so cialized. Indeed you can no more de stroy the value of land in a growing community than you could destroy gravitation. Both are in the nature of things. Let the farmers and email home owners consider who would be tne gainers, were all land values social ized; that is, were ground rents col lected from each according to the val ue of his land, and then redistributed back to each pro rata. Those who would pay the largest taxes would be those who are today receiving tbe largest amounts oi.uie nuciai ijiuuuvi annually such as the Standard Oil company, with its vast land values in pipe lines, men owning valuable coa' fields, or other mining properties; railroads with their valuable fran chises; choice city lots, more valuable than whole counties of farming land. The owners of such properties are to day paying smaller taxes in propor tion to their wealth than are the farm ers; but under the single tax they would pay by far the largest taxes of any; and it is right that they should, since they are receiving annually vast amounts of the social pioduct. They have grown rich by absorbing social product. It is because they feed con tinually upon social product that makes each a monopoly. The farmers and small home-owners are clinging desperately to a ays tern of taxation that robs them ol rILL SEND $3.75 FREE. Franklin fllles, fl. D.t LL. B.,the Em inent Specialist Will Send $3.75 Worth of His New Treat ment Free That Dr. , Miles is one of the most successful and reliable of physicians is proven by hundreds of testimon ials from well-known people. One pa tient cured after failure of eleven Grand .Rapids physicians, twq after having been given up by six or seven Chicago physicians, another after nine of thes leading doctors in New York city, Philadelphia and Chicago failed. Thousands of testimonials sent on re quest. . The late Prof. J. R Jewell, M. D., editor of theJournal of Nervous and Mental Diseases, published at Chicago, advised Dr. Miles to "by all means publish your surprising results." Prof. J. P. Ross, M. D., President of Hush Med ical College, wrote in is?4: "Dr. Miles has taken two courses of my private instruction in diseases 01 men e an ana tunps." col. K. o. Parker, Kx Treasurer of South Carolina, says; "I believe Dr. Miles to be an attentive and skillful phvsl clan in a field which requires the best qualities of mind and heart." Col. A. M. Tucker, late General Manager of X. Y., L. E. & W. system of n -, a " j at ' uvti ouv-i un u I'll Y9J(;lnIl has been phenorotnal." Col. K. It. Spileunan, of the yth Regulars V. S. A., tan Dieo, Cal., says; "Your special Treatment has worked wonders when all else failed. 1 had employed the best medical talent and had spent fAuna." "When an experienced and wealthy physician offers to prescribo free $1, 000 worth of treatment for diseases or the heart, nerves, stomach or dropsy, it is conclusive evidence that he hai great faith in his skill. And when hundreds of prominent men and wo men freely testify to his unusual skill and the superiority of his New Per sonal Treatment, his liberality la cer tainly worthy of serious conalJera Hon. The Doctor's new system of treat ment it thoroughly dentine- and im mensely superior to ordinary meth ods. As all afflicted reader may have his Hook and 13.75 worth of spwlally prepared treatment free, with full di rection", we mould ad v but them tu end for a Copyrighted examination Chart at once. Addrena, Ir. Frank lin MHr, 203 to 231 Male Slrtret, Chi cago, III. IMcaae mention The Independent u roup reply. much that they are producing by their individual labor, and of nearly all that they are producing socially, De cause they do not as yet realize that society produces a vaiue, as weu do tne inamauai. Because the farmer is not robbed cf his entire social product, as Is tne landless man, he clings to his small land value in his little farm. But thi3 system is so enslaving to botn labor and capital that under it wages and the profits of capital can never rise to all mat tney reany earn. Students of Henrv Georee know that so long as the social fund is so un equally distributed just so long will wages be low, and business depjes sion increase. The truth is that under the single tax, the farmers and small home-owu-ers would receive far more land val ues than at present. Then people are generally so constituted mat tney can not comprehend that they possess ownership of land values, unless it taues some tangible shape, as in thtr particular farms. This is the result of hundreds of years of Individual land value owner ship. When we have had fifty years or social land value ownership each one will readily comorenend that his share is an equal pro rata part of the whole, however great it may be. In such a social state, there will be a community of interests a common brotherhood in which men- will no Ipnger worry for fear they cannot find work to do at good wages, or that old age may leave them homeless. There is still another reason why the masses fear this chanee In taxa tion, and that is because politics are so corrupt at present that they fear the social fund will not be equally distributed even were it fairly col lected; but it is the grabbing through special legislation of the social fund that is the cause of political corrup tion. Tax away from monopoly what she is receiving of the social product, and she will have no incentive to bribe the political boss, and-he will disappear. Were each farmer to receive his share of the annual ground rent the social product of his community, be will receive far more than he gives. His taxes would be about' one-third less than now. That would represent what he gives the community; but his social benefits would be two-thirds more than now.' This would repre sent what he would receive, such as better schools, better - roadsr three cent fares, lower freights, low tele graph or telephone rates, cheaper coal, light, and if nationally intro duced cheaper prices for almost ev ery manufactured article. . These advantages would increase the power of his earnings from 10 to J7 per cent ' Thomas G. Shearman, after years of study upon the subject, stated it as his conviction that to remove all taxes from everything but land values, and tax them so lightly as to collect only one-half of the social product, would result in raising wages 50 per cent! Think of it! Labor unions conduct costly strikes at great suffering foi a rise of 10 per cent. If thev would but study this question, they would soon vote a new system of taxation into be ing, that would raise their, wages i0 per cent and end commercial denres- sions; for as Mr. Shearman so well said, wage-earners rarely save their wages. A rise of 50 per cent means a home market that would set all wheels of industry la motion, and keep them so. Mr. Shearman also showed that to day the farmer was beine taxed nn his land values nearly as much as he would be under his plan, but that mo nopoly was escaping this tax almost entirely. Tax its Bodal privileges at their full valuo It would soon tease to be a monopoly. True, under thelngle tax the farm er would not bo at.! to all hla land for a large lump sum. Neither would any one cIhc, bo ho would not have to pay a large sum tor homes for his children. The conditions would be no changed that only thoe who realize how .differently men ad and appear under hardship and privation from what they uo hn they have leisure and plenty only those who dwell hi lovlns thought upon thla great s.heme of Justbe can fully appreciate alt th.tt the slnjjle lax ha In store for hu manity. But we should not view thin sub ject wholly from that of jxronal Kaln, but look rather at the justue of tt. What the Individual producet lori to him. What aodety ruducai pillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllilllilillllll!lllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIII i ol That Tells j All About ! I Boys & Little Fellows Clothing I SENT FREE J To subscribers of The lndenendent. The book s shows correct styles by illustration, correct fabrics bv E sample and then goes on and. tells how to get the' uiuuies. . S3 Parents should write for this book todav. A penny postal card request Will get it. 3 Address s I Armstrong Clothing Go. 1221 to 1227 O St. LINCOLN, NEB Ifllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllffl I REE CITDDf ICC DYetailed. Ferguson, Langstroth and Alter- $ 5 DEE mUII L1C3 nat,nS Mves; sections, foundation, smokers, . veils. Bend for free catalog. Bees wax wanted, 2 I mmt mm I mm m-l I I I U B ' W . ' X 103 SO. nth St, f -" . LiiivuLii iiCDKA9NA & collectively belongs to each member of that society equally: and this means equal rights for all, and special priv ileges, ror none. ELIZA STOWE TWITCHELL. Wollaston, Mass. , . Entirely Wrong Editor Independent: . The good things that are to be found weekly iri the columns of your paper emphasize the wonder at your giving over the front page in your last issue to the letter by Mr. John S. De Hart. I take it that the looseness of his reasoning has your approval else you would not give it so prominent a place in your paper. The absurdity of his reasoning is evidenced in the contradictarincs3 of his statements relative to Mr. George's system of taxation. At the bottom of the first column he says that "Mr. George and his followers propose a single tax upon land values as a substitute for custom, house taxes and all other kinds of taxation." Then in the third column he says, "Had Mr. George's system of taxation Internal taxation upon wealth been practical and," etc. One who assumes to inter pret for your readers as Mr. De Hart does should know at least,1 the mean- ng of his terms and that Henry George's proposition of a single tax upon land values did not propose a system of taxation upon wealth. Plainly it is my opinion that Mr. De Hart does not know the meaning of the word wealth and if you would have your readers credit you with having a clear understanding of Henry George's philosophy such articles as this would not find a jJace in your paper, without at least an editorial ex pression from you as to it. DANIEL KIEFEH Cincinnati, O. (The Independent has said a thou sand times, more or less, that it does not hold Itself responsible for the views of correspondents. It is an open forum. It allows access to its col umns to every man who honestly bc- ieves he has something jor the ben efit of mankind. It never will adopt the policy of the plutocratic dallies and shut out from discussion every thing that It docs not itself fully ap prove. The Independent is not In fallible. Neither Is Mr. Klefer. If Mr. Klefer had read in The Indepen dent anything except the single tax matter he would have no trouble r finding out whether Its editors were In favor of a protective tariff or not. -Kd. Ind.) GREEN GABLES ' The Dr. Benj. F. Bailey SANATORIUM. For treatment of nervous diseases, diseases of women, rheumatism, and In fact all non contagious diseases. All baths and electric currents useful in treatment of sick. Mas sage and physical culture. This is the lar gest, best equipped and most beautifully furnished sanatorium in the west Write lor particulars. Address . Dr. Bnj. F. Bailey Sanatorium, Lincoln, Nebraska. , Ksfor HOMESTEADER'S GUIDE pages of valuable inormation. MftrUt H and full instruction how to get vilKISl 180 claim op tho , , ..Rosebud Reservation Forbea Locating A Bonesteel, South Dakota. t FARMERS, ATTENTION. Do you wish to sell your farm? JJ so, send full description, lowest price and est terms. Or, if you wish ta buy a farm, ranch or Lincoln home, write to or call on Williams & Bratr. 1105 O St., Lincoln. Neb. DEL MAR'S WORKS. Ancient RHtnln to AUAMA a 'Augustus Ca.'sar,3;Uist.ofMonev.A n cient State.,$3;Ilist. of Money.Modero States. 8U: Htstnrv nf fnn.. t lea, Ji.80; Science of money, 1 ; Mono iiy mimes, toe.; venus mlilo, Wa History nf I'ro.lno mi . Vu " .... - - 'v.ua .ij c mis, no. r ilia naner. bpst ninth Wnrtirura h.ni.n..i.. .1 ' CAMBRIDGE PKE4S, Box'160 Madlaea Sqaara P. O., Ntw York. . m Prof. Gray of Chicago university hat tabued an order that any student tu the tiAijKea of hla department of po litical acleme who rciorta ouUldn any thing that h aaya ahall te summarily dlatnlaaed from the department. Per h pa Prof, Gray haa In mind what happened to Prof. Hernia and aever-l other teaehera In tho Hotkefellr In stitution. Yet President llairr de clare that Itotkefeller never Inter ferea th the profiwmra there, per haps he will not Interfere when ha seti hla temple built oa th Neoras ka unlvcrsttj campus. Cancers' Cu red Why suffer pain and death from cancer? Dr. T. O'Connor cures cancers, tumors and wens; no knife, blood or plaster. Address 1300 O St Lincoln, Nebraska. Imperial Hernia Cure Rupture radically cured by new process, in a few weeks, without inconvenience or loss of time in bed. Send for circular. O. S. WOOD, M. I). Hi K Y. UltBMg.. ' Omaha. N.b. STEEL ROOFING. 100 NuiAitK rr.KT ta.oo W ! rrlkl rU mt VmiUm. mrU-Hf oW, fwrlm ml hrvl4 MpI (himta, U I (u h-iir. Mm roofW, tMlrif ttr cvitliif ul ran umm, fl V mrimmmt. H rtki Iw tro A. U KITC1IKN. Heal Katate anj Ucntat Agency, 1222 O 8t., Uncola, FAUM9 WANTKD. If you want to buy a farm, or If yoa want to tell a farm, s9 t. I have several buyers who want to buy. Uat your farms with ma.