The independent. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1902-1907, June 09, 1904, Page PAGE 8, Image 8

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    PAGE 8.
THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT
JUNE 9, 1904.
the Uebraska Independent
Lincoln, UtbraskM.
LIBERTY BUILDING.
132S 0 STREET
Entered according to Act of Congressof March
j, 1879, at the Postoflice at I,iacoln, Nebraska, aa
second-class mail matter.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
SIXTEENTH YEAR.
$1.00 PER YEAR
When making remittancea do not leavt
anoney with new agencies, postmasters, etc.,
to be'fcrwarded by them. They frequently
forget or remit a different amount than waa
left with them, and tha subscriber fail to get
gropei credit -
Address all communications, and snaka all
f rafts, money orders, etc., payable to
tbt ttebraska Jndeptndtnt,
Lincoln, Neb.
I Anonymous communications will ot
diced. Rejected manuscripts will not
returned.
be
ba
T II T1BBLEP, Editor.
C Q J)E FRANCE, Asocia1r Editor.
J. P. EAGER, Business Manager,
The state of Pennsylvania Is In a
terrible uproar over the selection oi a
new -boss to take Matt! Quay's place.
An old editorial friend in writing a
private letter says: "If one editor in
ten should give credit for the matter
taken from the Nebraska Independent,
there would be no chance for any of
the rest of us."
Some Of the trusts raise prices be--cause
they need the money, but God's
trustee, Baer, makes no such excuse,
1 ' t 1 . . it a
11 e any a 11 ej raises pi ices uecause vuo
article he deals in is a luxury and the
people are willing to pay.
' The platform adopted at the demo
cratic state convention at Omaha goes
along all right until it reaches the
'subject of railroads. There it falls
down. After, that ".it gets its second
breath an,d proceeds along right .lines.
The Chicago Chronicle 'has things
1JACU U V ail - ilhlll. it oaj a . - .
and faith and hope abide in the.demo
i ciatic-party the nomination of Grover
; Cleveland will be accomplished on the
pecond ballot at St. Louis. The plat
form wrll then take care of itself." -
r The slackness in business shows up
in government receipts as it always
does. The government expenditure for
May exceeded the receipts by $54,
7?0,413. Wall street is looking for
ward with great joy to another term
for Cleveland and more bonds.
The Bryan democrats are calling
themselves political mavericks. . They
realize that with the Kansas City
platform abandoned and a Wall street
crowd in control ot the party, they
will be left like Mahomet's coffin, sus
pended between heaven and earth.
The emperor of Japan, out of his
cwn private funds, has supplied the
wounded Russian prisoners brought to
Japan with artificial less aud arms
. whenever they have lost either of
Ihose limbs. The Japanese are con
ftantly doing things that surprise the
vhole world. '
The United States has established
the agricultural experiment station to
Advance the material welfare of the
Ration, New Zealand has established
tin "economic" experiment station' fur
the lone at of the whole world and
the nation will do well to watch the
mult.
pome of the Jude-a have lately been
mmmoulng person befure them and
fining Ihcm for criticism ot dccMou.
after they havej tern banded down and
published. Whenever a court trie to
Bupprr criticism of Its dentition It
fuakei au open confcu.ilon that It U
iotfen and that it decision cannot
tear lumllsatloa.
NEIT CLEM DBA YKUIU
The infamy of Clem Deaver con
sisted of the fact that while he claimed
to be a populist, he was working in
the interests of another party, and
was paid for that work by appoint
ment to office in the party that was
most antagonistic to every interest
and every principle of the people's
party. ,
There has arisen another set of Clem
Deavers, few in number, it is true,
but working along the same lines.
They still claim to be populists and
wish to take part in the councils of
ti e party, direct its policies and con
trol its nominations, while at the
same time they claim that the people's
party is dead, and that it should not
held a national convention. If these
men think that the people's party is
dead, if they look for reform only
through the , democratic party, then
the honorable thing for them todo is
to affiliate with the democratic party,
attend its primaries and conventions
and stay . out of the populist party.
Tfcey have that right. Such a course
would be honorable, and to it The
Independent would make no sort of
objection It would honor them for
taking such action. But it distinctly
and earnestly protests against- such
r en pretending that they are popul
ists and endeavoring to control the
policies of the party in the interests
of another political organization.
The men of brains in the democratic
party, the men who hope for reform in
this state, are just as anxious for the
people's party to maintain and build
up the populist organization as ever
The Independent was. They -know
that if the people's party should dis
organize and go put of existence, that
the republican party would carry this
state by 50,000 majority and that, no
campaign fund would be necessary for
tbem to do it. There are democrats
in this' state of ability and . who are
just as much interested and as earn
estly desire ! reform ; and release from
corporation rule as any populist. And
they are just as honest,, too.' Many of
these menhave come to the editor of
The Independent and purged that , the
people's parly organization mould be
kept up in every county and precinct.
These democrats are as bitterly op
posed to the new Clem Deaverites as
they are to the. Wall street reorgan-
Nebraska is the only state , where
here has never been ' any fusion-?-
that is, the uniorv or blending together
into one substance of two separate
sibstances the people's party has al
ways maintained a complete and sep
aiate organization, and Nebraska is
the only state where the people's par
ty is alive and enthusiastic. There
are many other states where the en
thusiasm is growing at an astonish-
iogly rapid rate, but there would have
been no enthusiasm anywhere had it
not been for the firm stand that Ne
braska populists have taken against
"affiliating" with any other party, and
rinety-nine out of every hundred
l'.pulists in Nebraska are determined
to pursue the same policy in the fu
ture. Whether the people's party
bhall "co-operate" with one or more
Parties in the attempt to wrest this
state from the rule of the railroads is
another question entirely and does
not como within the scope of this ar
ticle. One thing la certain, the now
Cicm Deaverites will get cold com
f( rt from any OHsemblage of populists
111 tlii state.
THIS AI.MIUIITY HO! 1.AII.
The Pittsburg Leader says; It is
inevitable that the derision of the tut
irtmo court of the United State de
it)lng the rljtht of trial by jury in the
lbtllpplnea will provoke endlong ,ht?
cumlon and bltternctm," It will do
reithlng of the Mnd. The denial of
Iht right of American cltlxrn, If they
I uppen to be la the Philippine, of
0 riant of trial by jury won't ruffle
a hair im the plutocratic head, or
We Came to the Relief of a Distressed Clothing
Manufacturer. A Backward Season and Surplus
Stocks Make These Unparelelled Values Possible
We Will xFill Orders For Oar Out of Town Customers.
Wen's Custom tailored Suits at $13.50
-, ' .' ' ' ' '
We'll leave it to you whether these suits are not
: the very best you ever saw for the price. In fact
there's not one in the lot that sells regularly for
less than$16.50 and there are many $18 and $20
V values-390 suits in all. Made of handsome effects
in fancy 9ilk mixed worsteds, fancy cheviots,
fancy and plain homespuns. Made antrimmed
as good as your tailor could make them. Sizes
fit any build.
We More Than Bought Them Right, and so will
You If You Send Your Order Before
They are .ill done
cause the "full dinner pail" wage
worker to ; even give a grunt. The
demolishing of the Declaration of. In
dependence has already produced such
ead results that ' the old ideas that
once fired the breasts of all true
American citizens will no longer pro
duce even; the mildest glow. . . They are
no longer interested in the , right of
tiial by juiy. 0r.,any!otherright. ; All
that they are interested, in,is.(the -A1-:
mighty Doilar1 , : ; ..
"I ,SBM0K6f DlUKCTfON. :
Mr, Stewartj pdward White,, in his.
story of ''The Mountains'' .in The Out
look, makes some remarks about the
"sense of, direction." He says:- "Some
possess it; others do not. The distinc
tion seems M almost .arbitrary," He
seems to ; thiak that it is a , "sixth
sense," and those born without it can
never acquire It,, in which he is wrong.
We have pevermet a human being
out on these plains who, did not have
an instinctive, knowledge of north and
scuth and east and west. But in the
cities one may find hundreds who
have no idea of the points of the com
pass. In a western city in directing a
stranger we ;always ' say so many
I locks "north" or so many "west,"
as the case may be. Once in a while
a person gets 'turned around," as they
say, and "north seems east or other
wise. When that happens the sense
of direction is always wrong in that
place, even if a person Jives there for
years. It is a constant annoyance
r.nd one which causes rouca vexation.
In the titles many pimple never in
oil their lives thluk once about which
Is north or south. If those very ieo
ple had been born in the country.
especially where the original surveys
were on lines running north and south
r.nd east and west, they would all hive
tad "a sense of direction." Of course
this sonno can b cultivated like any
ether. Onco In ft fogsy night In Boa-
ten after a lecture, when wending our
v ay through IU crooked utreets,
Handing Ib-ar. wai asked In which dU
rtvtlon lay hi reservation. lie point
ed Immediately a vtry little north of
v est. I thought he waa a point or two
cut, and Indicated a little further to
the north, at which h wm very much
eMstfimtcd. A day or two afterward
ho discovered a large map ou a wall
in the hotel, lie took me by the arm
and laid In the Tunca language;
"Head Soldier Town?" (That was as
near as I could translate , Boss-town
iUo the Indian language, and that
was what he always called it.) I .
pointed !out Boston on the map. Then
he , stretched a string straight west
across the map to a point just south .
o: the Niobrara river, put his finger
en , his reservation and told me that
I. was "no good and would get lost if
J ever got out rof sight of camp."'
; Standing Bear's "sense Of direction"
was certainly cultivated to a very high
fiogree. v-;i nere he was ; wandering
round In, the crooked streets of Bos
ton at jnidnight in a fog, fifteen hun
dred miles from' home, 'and -yet he in
stantly j pointed with absolute accur
acy in th direction of his reservation.
price more I tried him at midnight in
Is ew. York. This time the stars wPr
shining: and he glanced up at them
before Indicating the direction.
COME HOME TO ROOST.
Wherever the republicans have seen
any danger to the corporations or
plutocracy from co-operation by op
posing parties, they have so manip-"
ulated the Australian ballot law that
n.ch co-operation would be nullified.
That has been done in Kansas. Uli-
i uis, Wisconsin , and several other
spates. Now it seems that the chick
ens are coming home tci roost. The
s.o'it in the republican party in Wis
consin, under the present ballot
Makes it next to impossible to carry
the state for Uoosevelt, though the
l usidential electors of both wings of
the party are the same, for no man's
ram can appear twice on the same
ticket. The democrats are now claim
ing the state and the most enthusl-
atlc republicans admit that It Is in
die doubtful column. There has been
10 more subtle attacking on free gov
ernment In a hundred years than tha
republican attacks on the Australian
ballot law. It In now almost Import
able for a third party to gt tlie
mines of ita candidates on the) official
I allot.
The official report of th ltuslar
Iosjh-3 at the battle of Kin C'hoj
where thft Japan captured the for
tification by a direct fremtnl attack,
mad by Oneral ynwH, thn rotn
ti.nndcr on the Itu.lan lde, atatef
(bat "eur hwite amounted to 30 vflU
lira t. kttf tnnn lUt. I an. I - M