I X5he Nebraska Independent PAGE 8 DECEMBER 1, 1901 Ce Uebraska Independent Lincoln, Rtbrasks. LIBERTY BUILDING. . 1325 0 STREET Entered accordina to Act of Cooeresscf March V ,87 atthe Toftofece at Lincoln, Nebraska, aa eccond-clasa mail natter. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. SIXTEENTH YKAR $1.00 PER YEAR When making retnittancea do not leart Money with newt agendas, postmaatera, etc, to be forwarded by them. They frequently forget or remit different amount than waa left with them, and the aubacriber faiU to get proper credit. ... .y.: Addreaa ftJl 9UJmniiicstions, and make all drafts, tnofci oi-dera, ett., payable to tbt Tltbrask Jndtptndtnt, Lincoln, Neb. Anonymous comm Jicationi will not b ajoticed. Rejected manuacripta will nut U returned. - " T. H. TIBBLETirorr "" C. Q. DE FRANCE, Associate Editor. P. D. EAGER, Business luaiiager The vote in Holt county, Nebraska, for president, was: Roosevelt, 1,740; Parker, 634; Watson. 706. At the close of the St. Louis conven tion the situation .was: "Either fish or cut bait." Well, he cut bait. Dr. Ross says the, south is hyster ical and the north graft-rotted, all of vhich comes from the slaying of our best men during the civil war. The Illinois building at the St. Louis fair that cost $80,000 has been sold for $4,250. Still that has been a much bet ter investment than steel common. , Tom Taggart says he don't want any reorganizing done. Perhaps he thinks if that thing once got started it might reach his French Lick gambling house. Silver has . been ... going up lately. That is a good thing for the mine owners,- but as it is ; no longer being coined in . the United States, no one else is benefited. , Even Tillman has. surrendered. He says that he will no longer oppose a vote on the appointment of the negro, Crum. Does Tillman fear that Tom Watson may come over and capture South Carolina? There is.; a very good reason why B'jrii3 of the railroads do not join with the Burlington in resisting the pay ment of their taxes. They pay less taxes under the new, than they did under the old law." 1 Mr. Alfred Griffin of Topeka, Kan , writing to The Independent says: "The -most of the"" populists voted for Roose velt and many thousands voted the republican ticket straight to emphasize their dislike for the democratic party and the idea of fusion." . "The labor question is not one that concerns employers and employes alpne, it concerns the entire commun ity." After you have taken out the employers and employed, who are left aside from the little children, the sick the apupers and the criminals?, Socialism bases itself or. "the econ omic interpretation of history." Ac cording to this interpretation, the so cial, political, mora and religious facts of any age, come trailing along as a result of economic conditions. That necessitates, and all the socialist lead ers and writers do it, the necessity of explaining everything in terms, of ma terialism and the allowance of nothing to the moral sense. In facttJn social ism there can be no such thing as the "ought" and "ought not'' Free Ptvsse The Bee wants private individuate to begin prosecutions against the rail road managers for giving free passes under the following Nebraska statute: , If any person shall directly or indirectly give any sum, or sums of money, or any tnuer unue, turacui, -or reward, or any promise, con tract, obligation or security for the payment of any money, present, or reward, or anv other thing to any, judge, justice of the peace, sheriff, coroner, clerk, constable, jailer, prosecuting attorney, member of the legislative assembly, or other officer, ministerial or judicial, but such fees as are allowed by law, with intent to induce or influence such officers to appoint or vote for any person for office, or to execute any of the powers in him vested, or . perform any duty of him required -with partiality or favor, or other wise than Is required by law. or in consideration that such officer hath appointed or voted for any person for any office, or exercised any power in him vested, or per formed any duty of him required with partiality or favor, or other wise contrary to law, the person ' so" giving and the officer so receiv ' ing any money, bribe, present, re ward, promise; contract, obligation or security, with intent, or for the- . purpose or consideration aforesaid, shall be deemed guilty of bribery, etc. - That is the kind of a : aw that the railroads have been loading down the state books of the various states with for the last forty years. It is hard to reply to such a proposition as the Bee makes without using langvage that the postoffice authorities would not- allow to pass through the mails. To prose cute successfully a railroad manager under that statute one ,wou!u' have to prove that the pass was given "with intent to Influence such ' officer" and several -other things which the Bee knows are not susceptible of proof. How is' one to prove at "intent?" That statute was enacted, to protect the railroads ; in pass giving. The man who jdrew it did so for the express pur pose of preventing conviction for that offense. - , Passed Over While walking along the B. & O. tracks, Sampson H. Piersol," for ten years state chairman of the people's party of Pennsylvania, and in his ear lier days identified prominently with other political movements, was, last week, struck down and almost in stantly killed by a yardx engine at Parkcrsburg, W. Va. Mr. Piersol was a faithful worker and a man always true to the fundamental principles of the people's party. He leaves a record of which his family and friends may well be proud. ; - Massachusetts Rottenness Thomas W. Lawson remarks: The Massachusetts legislature is bought and sold as are sausages and fish at the markets and whar ves. That the largest, wealthiest and most prominent corporations in New England, whose affairs are conducted by our most representa tive citizens, habitually corrupt the Massachusetts legislature, and the man of wealth among them who would enter protest against the iniquity would be looked on as a -"class anarchist." I will go fur ther and say that if in New Eng- -land a man of the type of Folk of Missouri can be found who will give over six months to turning up the legislative and Boston mu nicipal sod of the past ten years, .. who does not expose to the world a condition of rottenness more rot ten than was ever before exhibited in any community in the civilized world, it will be because he has , been suffocated by the stench of what he exhumes. .. :. In reply to that the Springfield "Re publican says: "Massachusetts is by no means spotless," though not the ex treme sinner which Lawson would have her." . . . . ; Murdering Civilization Three or four years ago when The Independent began to point to the degeneracy that was sure to follow the condoning of crimes in high circles of DC A Man's All Wool Overcoat For........ gOO Made of good all-wool cheviot, lined with a heavy Italian lining, velvet collar. Coat is single breasted, 44 inches long and will make good looking, as well as a serviceable overcoat. V Your local merchant will tell you it is impos sible to get such an overcoat for $5,00i We'd like to convince you order one, and if you v don't think it's worth $7.50 or $8.00 you can return it and we will cheerfully refund your money. ' '. Send for Samples of this wonderful Overcoat at... . . . .... . . ... FThTh The Samples are as free as the air brUJJVU' you breathe OH AH A, NEBRASKA society, where men who robbed and stole millions were not called thieves, but "Captains v of industry," it was mocked at! by the "cultured" and even the use of such terms as "degenerate" and "degeneracy" denounced. It jgives no satisfaction to now see acknowl edged that everything that was then said has come true. To stand alone, four ; or five years in advance of , the multitude,' to be as ' the voice of one crying in the wilderness, where there are none to hear, is not a thing to be desired. It separates one from every body so . that ; he has little .companion ship, and it produces no joy.- Such ,a position is very lonely. After these years however , there are others ;who begin to see the evils so long ago pointed out by the editor of The In dependent. Of misrule in city and state, which is held largely .responsible for the increase of crime, McClure's Magazine says: ' - Can a body of policemen engaged in blackmail, persecution and in shielding lawbreakers make a com munity law-abiding? Can a body of policemen engaged in criminal practices prevent others from com mitting crimes? Can a board of aldermen who for private gain combine to loot a city govern a city well? . ; . ' : . The criminal oligarchy consists of these three classes: x 1. Saloon-keepers, gamblers and others who engage in business that degrade. . ' ' :r 2. Contractors, capitalists, bank ers and others who can make mon ey by getting franchises and other , property of the community cheaper by bribery than by paying the com munity. 3. Politicians who are willing to seek and accept office with-the aid and indorsement of the classes al ready mentioned. . These three classes combine and get control of the party machine. They nominate and elect men who" will agree to help them rob the city ' or state for the benefit of them selves and who will agree also not to enforce the laws in regard to the various businesses that, degrade a community. - . We find under various modifica tions this criminal oligarchy in control of many communities Jn the Uhited States. We find reDre- ? sentatives of this combination in the United States senate, among governors of states,, state legisla tors, mayors, aldermen,' police of ficials. We find them among men in business life captains of In- . dustry, -bankers, street railway magnates.- In short, wherever franchises or contracts' of any kind are to be secured from a commun ity we find leading citizens in the ring, to rob their own neighbors, managers of corporations bribing lawmakers, lawyers for pay help ing their client to bribe safely, jurors refusing to render just ver dicts. .., ! : These men bribers of voters, ' -voters Who are -. bribed, ; bribers of aldermen and legislators-: ' and & s- dermen and legislators who are bribed, men who secure control of : law-making bodies and have laws passed which enable them to steal from their- neighbors, men who have laws non-enforced and break' laws reguatling saloons, gambling houses, and, in .short, all men who pervert an J befoul the sources1 of Jaw these men are the enemies of the republic, , - - , They are worse they are ene mies of the huma- race. They are destroyers of a people." They are murderers of a . civilization. Distinguished jurists and educators are quoted as saying that the increase in lawlessness .endangers the future of the nation. Learning Self Government Russia has been a "christian" gov ernment for over a thousand years and after all that time it is solemnly declared at St. Petersburg that "neith er the statesmen nof the people- are prepared for self-government.'-'' The question naturally arises: "When will they be prepared under an absolute autocracy?" It has been seven hundred" ears since the English people wrested the Magna Charta from their king and declared, without waiting for the opin ion of the ruling class, that they were ready - for self-government and pro ceeded to establish it. That cry from St Petersburg is a very familiar one in these United States. " Whenever a governing race wants to ride the back3 of another the excuse is that the in ferior race is not prepared for self government and the rulers are only acting as philanthropists in establish ing a government by, force. It is the logic of the mother who' told her boy thct he might learn to swim, but that he must not go near the water as ha might be drowned. - - - One of the distinguished Russia- statesmen says: "We have not had the opportunity to learn the art of government." He never will have the 1 , 1 ll