SEPTEMBER 29, 1904 THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT PAGE 9. Every man who knows him will testify to that fact. Berge does not ride on railroad passes and Mickey does. Berge declares that if he is elected he will use all the influence .of the governor's office to make the railroads pay their just part of the taxes. If you are any sort of, a man at all you will vote for Berge THROWING VOTES AWAY "Tlnn't thrnw vrmr vntft awav.' is the new catch phrase of plutocracy. "One of two candidates, Roosevelt or mark er will certainly be elected," they say, "and if you vote for any other candi date, you throw your vote away." Such an argument is directed to the man who . never thinks, for if stated seri ously to a man who does think, it would be met , by a burst of denunciation.- in Viq firot iilaro it resumes that iU UlUb .Miv, v the man addressed has no principles whatever, that he is only actuated by a motive to be on the winning, side and cast his vote with that party that ha3 the best chance of winning, even if winning means the destruction of everything he holds to be honest, up 'right and for the good of his country. It comes at a man with the. presump tion that he is willing to cast his vote for a system that he believes would result in suffering, toil and baiaships for the many, if only when the votes are" counted he finds that his vote was among the unknown millions wno vot ed for the winning side. It assumes that the voter so addressed has no de sire to better his own condition, ' or leave a country for his children where they may enjoy peace and comlcrt it . - ' t ' i. ii ju;n jwiugner aspirauuu wujie un una earth, no gre&tr; legacy to leave the world than to" have it r carded oi him that he was always with the mujcr'.'-y, though that majority - made slaves of him and his, and substituted a plutoc-. racy fof" the free republic that the sac rifice and blood of his 'ancestors left to him. There is nothing that can be said to an honest man that. would so enrage him as such a proposition The man who makes such an argjment is as base low and. vile as a human .can get.'".-. V--- - " ' j ' '"" ' The honest man wants" to say to his children when - he comes . to pull the green robe of mother earth. over him and . sleep the sleep that ' knows . no waking here below. "I never cast my vote or gave my influence Icr a IJ i. W . J . W L JI policy i ueneveu was wrong. i svoou olwono .avan it I hsd in atartH Wnra -for what f believed was right., though the way seemed broad and streh with flowers and the ; multitudes - walked row way, though sometimes there were few who fo.und it." ; That is , the kind of a record that an honest man would want to make. He would . not want it recorded on his crowd, he never had any principles of . - . f ii.r ms owu, ue was bo hi ram. oi imow ing - his vote away," he would v never stand up and be counted among" taose who protested against wrong. He nev er asked if a thing was right or uicng. All he .wanted to know was whether 1 I 1 I . . T . li JiU.2 LU UG WILLI LI1K Willi. 1 II ST &iuTornot. ' . . . " . Whenever. 7 r.:ojj comes to you with that catch phiascabolTt tiimrjas; your vote away,, that is the sort of a trea-: ture he takes you to be. If you are a "man" you will resent it. If he is of your size and you knock him down for so grossly insulting you, trie re cording angel will look the other way while the job is being done, for no greater insult could.be offered jou. it may not be right to knock a man down who calls you a liar or a thief, but in the case where a man tells you that you are willing to turn traitor to your country, your wife a.ul your children, just lor the sake of "win ning' the case is different. In whatever state you live go tc the pulia and can your vote for the peo ples party doctoral ticket if you be lieve tho platform xreprescnts your ptlnciplex. Do it if you are the only man in your county. Thou no hme and have your little daughter ulnr, the dd .Sunday school hymn, 'T'ra to stand alone." If you do, you wil he proud of the act an Ions as you ho. VINDICATED Th position taken by the filler of Tho Independent In regard to the fart that populist In this KUIo had refused to vote for the last few jrx ha been fully vindicated ly the vrk of on of th in-t cartful and jt ho oily Hlaihtlel an in this it wny olhrr Mat. For ome Weeki tiit cent'c man I141 o t n Invcuh-stln; the .vt'oet ae I carefully romparim? the ofl,. ial election return and the re ult if tai work ahovn that no topu!UrM hat foil over to tho republican, tint thjr r all hern and Are mpulist iiill The rrpuhlli an vote In tl.N n'at hsi Hv tnen as d even In riprilun to the increase of population and in many parts i of, the state has actually de creased. In the fight that occulted before the state convention was held .the .editor of The Independent constantly asserted that- there were 30,000 populists in this state who had refused to vote and that there could be no prospect of car rying the state unless such a couise was pursued as would get the populists to turn out and vote. Such state ments when made to the wise politi cians, were usually met with a sarcas tic remark or a flat contradiction. The work of this statistician the totals of part of which are printed in this issue is a complete vindication cf the course1 pursued by The Independent. We are glad to announce without fear of further contradiction that there are as many populists in the siatt to day as there were in 1892 or 1836. They can never be induced, cajoled or deceived into voting for any Wall street gang. The republicans can nev er get them. They stand today as they have ever stood, ready and will ing to fight the money power, the rail roads and the concentration of wealth. They can not be bribed or forced into supporting any man who allies himself with any Wall street machine under any name. 'It would be a wise move if "the vise ones" would make some effort to get these 30,000 populists to vote. tVATTKUSON SNUUBED Henry Watterson'got a dose of Wall street that he did not -at all relish. He says-that he and Clark Howch of the Atlanta Constitution 'wtre not treated with even ordinary couriesy by the democratic gold standard papcis of New York at the recent meeting oi the editors in that city. . Those 'papers re fused Is print the speeches of W'aticr son and Jloweur Wajfterson has been cuddling up to Wall streeri- s.e eral years, doing all the dirty work in int; south for plutocracy that was demand ed of him and now he finds that he is going to' the same fate that Bene dict Arnold did. After enumerating air the discourtesies that weip heaped upon him,' he concludes that "these things make us feel in the west and south particularly in the south that we are blacklisted in New YorK, that there is some sectional ban arainst us, that, personally, politically and profes slonalljv we "bear the bar sinister even in the house of our newspaper kind red." " ;.'.' We are sorry for Henry because he takes the matter so. much; to heart. lie ought to do as the editor of The In dependent does when he goes ticvu to Wall street. : He snaps his finger at the whole gang, tells them that they are the worst thieves of all God's ages, and then on the side gives them a lit tle instruction in the science of bank ing, or how to keep order, and points out to them the fate that is intore for them. They always listen wiln the greatest interest, ' after ; which the bankers generally ask for a further conversation or offer to take hixn out automobile riding. He has found out that neither the lords or dukes of Eng land, or the pirates of Wall street have any respect for a sycophant. If a man wants to be treated" with res;wct in Wall street, instead of being obspii OJ13. he must make it plain that be is ready ' Ssht for, his money a;'d his opinions. " '''rr.., r . OOD'a ASSISTANTS It i3 doubtful if man eer achieved anything that nature unassisted would not have accomplished as the cycles of lime rolled on. Man simply hastens the processes of evolution, he can not alter them in the least. If it were otheiwi.se, chaos would result. Emer son veil says: "There is a power in nature arid ove? the heart of every man, so that none of us may wrong tho universe.' Some times man'a interference with nature vvorl.a the most disastrous con sequences .for a time, hut finally that power which dominate alt things, 'tehta tho wron;?. There ur many tit Hlanoes of man's Interference with na ture to his own Injury. Among them the introduction of tho English rutddtd Into Australia, the English, sparrow into thl country and the n-ddliiiK moth Into ManMuf husetts, Sloo. ly but liiirely thh h bilrii; righted. When man work along the linei of natural evolution, he? may bo culled iU.c. us itaist. In California there live a man ly the namo of I an her Iturhank. Ihh man hai Riven to th world, am.mi; other thlr-r. a plnnt !ih tl.o Raver of tint p.atttett pear; f- varieties of Mp!"4 all prodiiM-.l on fn tree; paint ed IntUHneral le Ii!!e n Imh uu -aM eo!.rt; reivove l tlu rm fiom llsm rat tl fantlly; put new tint Into th dah lia and n tld r of petah to th,ir tih.RHoii h ma lo dale ni larve a-t il,f palm of the baud; j reduced MinH lewi Patronize the Horse -Show and thus assist in advertising Omaha, for its success will be heralded by the press everywhere, and don't forgel; that the . . . BANKERS RESERVE LIFE COMPANY ' OF OMAIIA, NEBRASKA is continually advertising Omaha and the west by means of its scores of agents in no less than fifteen states and territories where it tausacts business. Reliable agents and capable men are always in demand by this pro gressive company. 4 B. H. ROBISON, President plum; crossed thfc ?1 um and apricot; I created the paper-shelled wur't,; andj produced . that wonder of the 4'nht world, the white blackberry. His lat est achievement, however, is. to change the hue of the California poppy from a bright orange color , to a scarlet red. Without taking from or adding a leaf to its foliage, without changing Its petals either in size or number, and without reshaping a pistil or remold ing a stamen, has this complete change of color been wrought. Others have produced the needless orange atrid ' the seedless aqd cureless apple. All this is perhaps only the hastening of evolution which the ages would have-accomplished without the assistance of man. It would alo ap pear' that wherever man interferes with nature and the result is a blessing to man, the change becomes peanaucnt, where it is hurtful it disappears. STARVING CHILDREN . Dr. William Maxwell, superintendent of the public schools of New )or.-. ofy, says: "There are hundreds of thou sands of children in our school;,- who can not learn because they aie always hungry." Why are. these chhdrtu al ways hungry? Because the Wall j'rect government of that . city makes their parents pay a daily tribute to Roche- feller, Belmont and others, , in exces sive charges for gas, coal, elrctnc.iy, street car fares and in a thousand other, ways by which these privileged fe"wfe;.7r- millions and the children go hungry. Tn 'S'3ftiigad.Mit,wiU nev er support any. man, not""vifcj&Jf,4ie were clothed in the shining iobe o God's angels, as long' as ho votes for and advocates the election of any of the men who starve the children that they may gather millions. strung all along in a line on each sida of the way. Roosevelt is not a cow- ui-!. snd when he submits to such extra ordinary Amnions as that, he must be convinced that '&E.vjsf'r on the, verge of breaking out atany, igivijl What does all this portend? TUB POPULIST PLAN The pppulist plan is that tho very poor, that the men and wonrcn who toil ceaselessly ami can only obtain enough to sustain themselves atd their families, should pay no taxes, That was .the idea of all the great then of the earlier times. . They, therefore, in nearely all the states, exempted from taxation a certain amount of house-: Lhold goods, a cow, 'a team, the tools of a trade, etc. In those days we had men in charge of the government who had hearts as welf as brains. ,vXow the guvci iniituL taa . yaaseu uver liilJ, ine hands of the sons of Wall street, and the whole burden of taxes is taken fro'm the rich and placed upon the poor. A tariff tax Is a tax upon con--sumption. ' Yon pay the tax 4n the in crease put upon the price of everything that you buy,' To remedy this evil, the populists proposed an income tax, forced it through congress, and a court, in the interest of the rich, pronounced it unconstitutional,, although the same court for eighty- y.ears, had repeatedly dfi'lnr.-Jf it crrvrwl cnnnH low WHAT IOK IT POUTi;Ml? . There vvaa never such a sta t; of af fairs Known In this country us exitts In our ureat citlfs tolay. Tho lead en f The Ind'p ndcnt wore int'ormrd of the extraordinary pi'Haulien.i utken by the New York polite to g'.t the president turns the eity when ho re turned to Oyster liay from VVaMiinu ton. When h started l-ak to Wash. Inston. the New York pollee wauhl not Kiiatanten hla af pnnao through the city an i he wsm transferred fr ;u Oys ter Hay to Jersey City In a Kovernment rivrnue cutter. Ten dteuvH unr ronnded Mm on hi way frt-ni tils hous.) to the water'n fd; (to nay hi with him while u the and th other haslem-d t,y rail lo J. rs y ((ty to Rtiard th landing In Hlvatue, Ihtre, Ci(ie d.t ttHeH wrr rtlntoiitd l y a whoU I iiit.tli' n of J, t i j tlhe, The piiiM. nt wni not allowed ( walk from the ! r to tho j . i.tl eara dUtarue t.f h t tfmri mo - hut a put in a arriHi Miih , dte tivo tm tl.ft with th ilrmr an I inoro In front, on mh oti and tehind. lUwidi it'that I'll. t,. ?i n re OUH CORRESPONDENTS : , It becomes more difficult every day for the editor to choose between the Xp0ut!rjii3 of really valuable arti cles to inMfpndent. The desk is slacked high with tXi4iijf.ns that indicate In the writers an ihiiT?tsti, the political f-ituatlon of the day that would put to shame the Intellect cf tho average dairy newspaper editor, Edg ing from tho specimens of pol.ticai jot emanating from those sourccj, livery one of lhe:;o contributions la vcrthy of ppace in every paper, and Kome of them of a higher order than la often seen in the magazine. It Is a bcuiio of great embai raiment to The In dependent that upac can nut te found for all of them. However, v,e have not entirely despaired. It tmj Ih that these paper will yet appear before tho campaign Is over. Those; that do not. Land that are of a character that can be used t any tine, will app ae from time to Urn oh ore a hm wld allow. Hiring thM political eampaUn tho pieMiro upon the column of Th In dependent N so Kreat that much uews of surpasviii! intend to thlnklus peo ple ui'iM be s,iji'rei d, In that ai h uh ft all th ii" that I creatliu mh mi upheaval In iutilii riffles. The ih uthu ro i reaflni: a new l.cav en and a mw arti. I'.wn taat on. rvatlve pullualion. fH- Journal of I t hv h':, iry, til di l ,"UX rteetrtv. theiuhtry, f;tj!; "Mind tondrutn th tcdy.