Toha Nobrasktx Independent JANUARY 19, 1905 PAGE II 1 r I K'i u 4 mi - 5z 13! V inconvenient laws, and an Innate thinness of profit to dwell therein, one might better in many cases turn from the trade of stocks to that of the pick purse; for with morals the same the padder at least escapes the Wall street vice of an inevitable treachery to his friends. Long ago,t the homestead as our records disclose of Captain Kidd occupied the present site of the stock exchange. Is there no suggestion .here?" Every district attorney and other officer of the law whose duty it is, is constantly engaged in an effort to sup press gambling, and the pulpits . of every church in the land, earnest ap peals are constantly being sent up to the throne of God for aid in the de struction of their great evil, tb-at is said to be corrupting the morals of the young manhood of the land, but these efforts seem to be directed alon against the faro dens, pick purses, crap and other games, and have no relation whatever to the greater gambling that includes among its votaries, it is said by Mr. Lawson in "Frenzied Finance," even senators and representatives in the. United States congress. The im ..j2orfant fact that I referred to above, wasWifcSfiwoiic aa ibf arbvernment allowed the gambrers6rrrH to manipulate the finances of the coun- try mruugii me gaiuuuug ucntw therein, there coujd be no change what ever in present conditions of a per manent character, for whatever metn- -n nrnrhiners and their friends may ZtuOpt lor tUeJr protecuou, thvl gfttiS&teXSi ft P?ffa (ipiiiKl Hi&i? .-nam- Mm m.msw Vera UibyUlUUIliD .. ieriiiK In Men's Suits and Over Coats During Our Great After Inventory Sale Coryiight, 19M, Kohn Brothcri, CLici. Jn futures can always, by playing with "-aacked cards, skin any sucker wnp thinks his ' system" can beat the game. Temporary relief is not what is want ed, but a large dose of your "Uncle Samuel" directed straight at the heart of Wall street gamblers, i3 what is needed as a permanent remedy. TAYLOR McRAE. Dallas. Texas. . ' Defense of Socialism . Editor Independent: It seems to. me that your editorial concerning econ omic determination In" a recent "issue of your paper was unfair that you -at- UlUUlt) IU VV. J. UUCUt. SCUUUiCUli) UUl expressed in the quotation yjou m? I have never read bis book -from which you quote, but fail to find the lack of moral Jorce in his , words you have set forth and "entitled "repulsive dictrine." Mr: Ghent has indeed made y repulsive statements but are not these repulsive statements true? ' ' You repudiate the following qubta- tion: . . " '' . " "Whatever may be our vague incli nations, our nebulous aspirations to- srtalnniversal moral law, the stern necessity :f!a4.9?nomc process aetermmes ana nxes our piae- tical ethics and controls our actions, The prevailing mode of production and exchange is the closely enveloping me dium which conditions all activity, bodily and mentally. 'The American revolution was prompted in the main . by economic motives," etc. Is it possible you deny these state ments, Mr. Editor? Why, they read like populist doctrine. They read like your, many editorials. Do not populists declare that our economic conditions result in debasing slavery, want and crime and press down so heavily upon the many wealth - producers that the majority are too Ig noi i to vote for their own best in terest? As a general proposition, what there false in the statement that "econ omic process determines and fixes pur practical ethics and controls our ac tions?" Is it not true that, our indus trial conditions constitute a heavy ' layer of clay compressing the real -;f within only waiting opportunity Lor a development of moral force? I fail to discover that Mr. Ghent denies this latent moral force. . r You complain of his doctrine being selfish. S'elf-preservation, the first law of nature, is all selfishness and the majority of men ase struggling for self-preservation. A man will steal be fore he will starve and to such there is no "ought" nor "ought not." -;-. - nd nowhere in your quotation a denial of your statement that moral force "ic an essential part of man's nature." Neither does your author fly in the face of evolution by proclaim ing the retrogression of even the low est. ' According to my mind, Mr. Editor, Jfj men who have a clothing need to supply that will' not make aneTimi ' ' .... fc w y this sale. To buy here and now is to buy highrFlcf ccods It Jit fl. frflYtinn Af fTiftiti trnlnna All Aim Vvn4- wiaItah ama) i ved ) in both Suits and Overcoats. This Is The irrangomon If lalo The Independent and Kansas City Weekly Star, both one year for $1.10. Burlington Bulletin. Whv Hibernate? .; WINTER TOURIST RATES to Cal ifornia, Colorado, the Gulf Country, Florida, South, and Southeast. Ask -the. agent, for, f urthe" informa tion or write to L. W. Wakeleyt.Gn eral Passenger gent, Omaha, Neb. : 11,1 .. . . vq At 6.95 At $10.75 u At thia ? price we offer Suits and Here we offer choice olevcral Overcoats worth - $8.75, $10.00 ' and thousand Suits and Overcoat! Which ' " " -$12.50. . Better garments for the price- formerly sold at $13.50, $15.0 A end were never made. All are in the new $16.50. Every garment offered l ljjtb: ctoribg8rjitjeom wool fabrics price is hand tailored and made jjozi and cut strictly in fashionT'T'l-iine.rfabrics. if J At $14 75 At $18.75 A wonderful assortment of hand- This price commands the best some Suits - and Overcoats are here clothing in the world. Little wonder offered at the one price of $14.75; ' The men who are accustomee to buying the garments formerly sold at $18.00, $20.00 fi1nest clotlliDg are 80 enthusiastic about v . ; , these Suits and Overcoats. The gar- and $22,50. We offer here the broad-, ments formerly sold, at $25.00, $27.50 est possible assortment. All sizes, too and $30.00. Buy now and here the. are represented. , price is $18.75. Armstrong Clothing Company Good Clothes Merchants. 3 1221 to 1227 0 Street 3 1 n Mr. Ghent simply states facts as they exist today and because they exist the people's party wa3.born. You say "that in discussing this question of graft, the author indulges in a thousand contradictions of his theory 01 economic determinism." Now may not the trouble lie in your inter pretation of economic determinism in stead? . ; . MRS. MARION TODD. , (Mrs. Todd and , all. othr$ can rest assured that the quotationr. in ,TUa 'In dependent . aro reliable. Mr. Ghent states the true socialist idea. Any thing aside from that is not socialism at all and parade it3elf under false colors. The proposition that economic force determins our ethics and con trols "all" our actions bodily and men tally, is disproved by the history of all mankind.. Did the economic, close ly enveloping medium, .lead. the Man named Jesus Christ to submit himself tq persecution . and death. .Did an econ Qmic.. force ( lead, , thousands rptQth.ers since his day to. abandon every selfish interest end lay down their lives for the advancement of the human race? Self-preservation is not the first law of nature, if by "nature" we mean all the works of God. Self-preservation W the first law of brutes and not of the ethical man. Cast an eye over Man churia and then answer If "self-preservation" is the first law governing the hundreds of thousands of men in the trenches. Populists have neve adopted this damnable doctrine. They have never gone before the people- and rde clared that their: economic- environ ment produced their -morals.) t!