APRIL 19, 1906 PAGE 9 Nobraoho. Independent being at all times for sale, the ex change power of a single unit is gov erned by the whole number of units in existence. And price levels are high or low as the total number of money units in existence is great or small. Therefore, a given money volume makes a given price level for all things. However, things remaining the same an adition to the money vol ume will cause prices to rise, prices being an expression of the relation between money and other things. If the money volume be "diminished, o'lher things remaining the same, it follows that each unit of money must be stretched to cover more value and to perform more work than before, causing prices to fall. Falling prices is the bane of indus try ' Investments are made in terms of money, and profits and losses are reckoned in money terms. Hence a change ' in the value of money itself disturbes all values and . upsets all business calculation.. Money, the unite of price, is also the. unit of credit and liability, there fore fluctuations- in the value or ex change power of money, transfers property from one person to another without rendering any equivalent therefor. If the fluctuation occurs through a diminishing money supply with its accompaniment of falling prices, debtors are robbers by being compelled to sacrifice more of their property or goods to obtain the money to pay their debts, and the stocks of material in factories and merchandise in warehouses and stores must be sold at lower prices and at diminish ing profits. , If these condition continue enter prise becomes, .the unerring road to tatikrupte-i ; Under such circum stances the: law' of self preservation impels men to-curtail business in or der to avoid loss. The natural instinct of all is to ac quire the article that is increasing in Value and to dispose f articles that are decreasing in value, and when prices are falling everything is depre ciating in value except money, which is appreciating. Under this condition production is reduced to a minimum, labor goes unemployed and distress becomes the general lot of mankind. At such a time the philosopher of despair cries out, over-production, be cause he sees goods piled up unsold which, idle labor has.no power to pur chase, and the wail of distress is heard on every side. The prosperity that . now abounds everywhere is due to the phenomenal increase in money supply from the gold mines. The argument that under modern methods credit takes the place of money does not effect the case, credit merely enables, a given volume of money to do more work than it could do. before. But credit itself is in terms of money and expands and contracts as the volume of money ex pands and contracts. Credit bears a certain relation to money. Without money there would be no credit. At some future time this, phase of the question will be fully discussed in these columns. ' ' President Roosevelt evidently pre fers the white wash brush to the muck rake in the Cortelyou-Bliss life insur ance campaign fund matter. But an African cannot be made white by the use of' whitewash. Bailey is a senator of .the United States. Bryan and Bailey -a suggestion in euphony. The effecls of Bailey's speech was instaneous. , Railroad ownership of public officials in "Nebraska must go. The demand of. the. hour is for the public ownership of public officials. John D. Rockefeller is . again' at large. The . process servers -did not barm one, hair of . his -head. .Governor Cummins of Iowa is mak ing a canvas of -renomination on a dem ocratic platform. It is unnecessary to say the federal gang and the free pass brigade are. against . him. With an overwhelming majority of intelligent voters having interests in common in our stat, nothing but bad management can account for railroad domination. There is something wrong somewhere. The name of George W. Berge at the head of the democratic and peo ple's party tickets next fall will prac tically insure the election of an anti railroad legislature, and a democratic United States senator. WThen the muck rake stirred up the Cortelyou, Bliss Perkins, Andrew Hamilton life insurance steal-campaign contribution scandal, it exceeded the limit and President Roosevelt could not longer stand for it. Anti-corporation voters are in an overwhelming majority in both politi cal parties, and party lines are no longer strong enough to hold the voters away from candidates in whom they have implicit confidence. Senator Bailey has spoken. The country has heard him. His amend ments are to be voted upon and Pres ident Roosevelt and his republican friends in the senate will please take notice that the people are interested in the result and are looking on. If the estimates contained in over one thousand letters recently received by The Independent frbm all parts of the state are correct, George W. Berge is stronger by twenty-five thousand votes than any other candidate than can be named in opposition to the re publicans. If President Roosevelt is handi capped by the brains of his own party being against him, why should he fat ten Spooner his enemy on federal pap and starve LaFollette his friend who has proven his superiority over Spoon er by whiping him and his machine to a finish in Wisconbln? If the president and his man Gar field are possessed of just sufficient capacity to discover criminals, tat lack the ability to either punish them or stop them in their career of crime against the public, we fail to see why he should object to the magazines taking a shot at them. Since Senator Bailey threw himself Into the breach and clarified the at mosphere of the doubts and fears, cre ated by the ingenious corporation sen ators President Roosevelt is afforded an opportunity to save the rate bill from defeat and save his own repu tation. To fail to do this will be fatal to his future. . President Roosevelt professes the principles that LaFollette stands for, and Spooner fights against every prin ciple upon which-Roosevelt's popular ity is based. Under such circum1 stances 'it ' is difficult to understand why Roosevelt is using the power of his administration to build up Spooner and tear down LaFollette. Something wrong. President Roosevelt made a nice talk at the laying of the corner stone of the annex of the house of represent atives. His inheritance tax sugges tion is all right. ' But we wish to re mind him that prior to this last utter ance of his he was a long ways ahead of the game in the matter of promises and lamentably in the rear in the mat ter of performance. The people of the state of Nebraska will elect George W. Berge governor this year if given a chance to do so. Letters from all parts of -the state from voters of all parties are be ing received at The Independent office daily, by the score, expressing a pref erence for Mr. Berge over all others for the position, and giving estimates of his superior strength over any other candidate that can bo named, in their respective localities. District Attorney Jerome of New York who has steadfastly refused to prosecute the life insurance thieves who stole the money of their policy holders and gave it to Cortelyou and Bliss to elect the republican ticket in -1904, was the first to set up a howl about the muck rake. If the president ha& a notion of standing pat on the life insurance campaign fund scandal, would it not De bter for him to leave the muck rake talk to others? There are plenty yof corporation democrats, and anti-corporation re publicans. Traditional party lines on the corporation question are not a safe guide, neither were they on the silver question. Therefore, the indi vidual voter of all parties is com pelled to carefuly scrutinize the can didates his party offers him and not to blindly follow a party name lest by - so doing he may cast his vote to further principles and purposes to which he is opposed. The confederated monopolies will meet their Waterloo at the polls as soon as either one of the political parties gets its lines straight on the corporation question; and tfie people are satisfied that the corporations ho longer dictate Its nominations. The corporations in the republican party were unable to prevent the nomina- -tion of Roosevelt, and all their money would not have sufficed to compass his defeat at the polls. Unfortunately for the people, however, he is a weak man, merely capable "of causing the enemy considerable annoyance, but in capable of doing them serious damage. President Roosevelt now knows, it he did not know before, that the rate bill with the Bailey amendments added will be constitutional. He also knows that , the Bailey amendments will add great strength to the bill.' And, if the is at all discerning he must know that the reception of Mr. ... . I .... , , - t ' Bailey's speech by the country Is such that, to refuse to work with Mr, Bal- ' ley and; to divide - honors with him will be to commit a blunder that will engender suspicion of. his own sincer ity. If he is really conscious of the true cause of his orn popularity, he will immediately join drives with Bat ley to perfect and pass the rate bill, and hold himself in readiness to veto the bill should it pass with vicious amendments added. The genesis of a political party la fhe coming together of a body of men for a common purpose. A political party can always be depended upon to- carry out in good faith the object for which It was formed. But when new issues arise they do not divide opinion on old lines, and a new align ment necessarily follows. For in stance, when the slavery question was ripe for solution every attempt of ex isting parties to deal with the ques tion proved abortive. When the sil ver question became acute, both of the then existing parties split, and a gold democrati national convention met at' Indianapolis and put up a de coy ticket to catch the votes of 'party gugeons, while the national committee and candidates of the party worked for the success of the republican ticket. At the same time a silver republi can national organization gave Bryan over a million votey. Again in 1904 Roosevelt received nearly two million votes of former democrats because he was considered by such voters more likely to resist corporate aggression than would the regular democratic candidate. Today we see Tillman and LaFollette working side by side in the United States senate. What difference can be detected in the principles of Folk and LaFolette, or Bryan and Cummins ? The publishers of The Independent want agents everywhere to canvass for subscriptions and sell Mr. Berge's new book, 'THE FREE PASS BRI BERY SYSTEM." See advertisement of book elsewhere in this paper. We receive hundreds of orders through the mails. It Is the only book writ ten upon a subject in which the peo ple are Just now "vitally interested.' The people everywhere will want the book. Ex-Governor Larabee of Iowa ordered ten books before same were off the press. We receive orders from all parts of the country. This. book is a seller. All you have to do is to telf about it. You can make $100 per month. Write at once for terms. THE INDEPENDENT, Lincoln, Neb.