8 The Nebraska Independent THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT ESTABLISHED 18S9 J. M. DEVINE, Editor FREDERIC O. BERGE, Business Mgr. Publlmhed Eery Thursday 1328 0 Street Lincoln, Nebraska Entered at the postofflce t Lincoln. Nebraska, aj second-class mail matter, under the ct of Congress of March J. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION TCRKS 1 OO .so Per Tear 6 Months 3 Months Subscriptions Must be id In Advance. Subscriptions Can be sent direct to The Independent They can also be sanl through newspaper which have adver tised a clubbing rate, or through local agents, where sub-agents have been ap pointed. Ail remittances should be sent by postofflce money order, express order, or by bank draft on New York or Chicago. Change of Address Subscribers re Questing a change of address must give the OIJJ a well aa the NEW address. Advertising Rates furnished upon applica tion. Sample Copies sent free to any address up on application Send tor Sample Copies and eHbrates. Aadreis all eummunicatioos. and make au droll, money orders, etc.. payable to I nc mutrtnutni, . Lincoln 1 rUb. IT WOULD BE COWARDLY Two years ago when the Roosevelt tidal wave swept over the land level ing everything before it, when not a piping sound was audible from a single democratic politician in the Btate, the ambitious party leaders hav ing silently slunk into their tents and caverns, it seems that the fates held in reserve for the occasion a gifted leader, filled with the fire of truth, to send forth to battle for the rights of the producers and tax payers of Nebraska. It is well known that had the dem ocrats believed that there was any prospect for one of their number to Bucceed in reaching the governorship in 1904, George W. Berge would not have been the nominee of the party for that office. But, lacking a leader possessed of the necessary convic tions and courage to enter the cam paign against the adverse political tide that had set in, they consented to the nomination of Mr. Berge, and then left him to fight his battle unaided and alone. During the campaign the men who were conspicuous as lead ers of the fusion forces of the state for years remained silent as the grave waitng until the storm would blow over when they might emerge from their seclusion and again assert their divine right of leadership. The only assistance that was vouch safed to Mr. Berge by any of the for mer leaders was to caution him against being radical in his demands for reform in the government of the state. The admonition was wasted on a nature foreign to such baseness and treason to the people. Berge is not made of the material of which trim mers or time servers are made. He was not cast in such a mold. The suggestion of such a course aroused Indignation In his breast. As well might Garrison have been asked to compromise with slavery as to expect Berge to smother the fires of resent ment against railroad government that burned in every fiber of his be ing. His nature forbid compromise and his voice rung out over the state and quickened into life the giant of the prairies that lie sleeping beneath the heels of Harriman and Hill, while beneath all political banners and all sorts of uniforms, pass bribed poli ticians were holding to his nose chlor oform sponges of many political brands. Berge's campaign in 1904 was a sur prise to the politicians of both parties. He aroused the people from their lethargy and filled them with enthu siasm, and so far as he wa3 person ally able to reach the voters of the state, he created a following unsur passed in numbers and enthusiasm by any political leader of modern times, even under more favorable condi tions. Berge struck a key note that stirred the public conscience to the center in his scathing arraignment of the free railroad pass as a bribe. Those who are old enough to re member the dark days of 1861-2, when the union armies were returning run away slaves to their southern owners, who came into the union lines under flag of truce and claimed the negroes as tneir property, win re member the terrific force of the sen sation created by the use of a single word, when General Benjamin F. But ler declared slaves to be contraband of war, and refused to give up the negroes within his line to southern claimants. The effect of that declara tion was most startling. The nation seemed to hold its breath for a second in surprise, followed by a sigh of re lief and then a loud acclaim of joy. The most vexing question of the day had been solved, and the back of the confederacy was broken by a single stroke of genius from a master mind. Even as Butler broke the back of the confederacy with the word con traband, so has Berge undone the railroads by stamping the word bribe upon the free railroad pass. His cam paign was followed by the publication of his book exposing the free pass bribery system which soon found its way.ltno practically every village of the "land. Mr. Berge's indictment against the free pass penetrated the conscience of the nation and the free pass stands condemned as a criminal device before the bar of public opin ion. Since then the free pass has been outlawed by the legislatures of Ohio, Iowa and other states. Thus, the insiduous bribe, the most fruitful source of political corruption em ployed by the railroads, is stigmatized. branded and doomed. Revolutions never go backwards. The milestones on the pathway of human progress are as permanent aa the everlasting hills. The decree against the free pass has gone rortn. its days are numbered. The collective mind cannot be de ceived by the wiles of small men, nor the will of the people defeated by the blundering of the incompetent. There fore, If perchance cowardly souls should dominate the democratic state! convention and deny to the people of the state the privilege of electing the man of their choice to the governor ship by refusing to renominate Mr. Berge, such action cannot fail to in cite the people to resentment against the treatment of their favorite and result in his being elevated to pre miership of the party in the state and made the preferred candidate for the United States senate, Politicians are prone to deceive themselves through, their inability to correctly estimate the demands of the public. The smart little fellow of pol itics sometimes scores when the peo ple are not looking. But when the people are aroused and taking an act ive part in public affairs, the coward is soon detected and men are meas ured not by the elastic tape line of their own inflamed imaginations but by the unbending steel of public intel ligence. - The deep seated demand of the people of the state for relief from railroad rule and extortion has burst assunder party lines. George . W. Berge is regarded by the people as the personification of this demand. The people are knocking at the door of the democratic party of the state, Will the door be opened unto them? meaningless ca"Uun it had posite effect of i,.,r..? nwm the importance of waging a r of e. termination aj-a riM ,,, :... wu.cn me railroad, were usin, effectively to subordinate l0 their the office holders an, politicians of the state. hat f is known politicians that "f t he sute . f Mr. Bera. for the governorship, and in vie. of the further fart that she raiw,, j ' 'uiO Ul the state are leaving no stone un turned to defeat his ivnomination it becomes a matter of no merit to un dertake to diseririhruiie rceanlin motives that actuate different inH- viduals in opposing his nomination One thing is certain, which is that the reason assigned for opposing the renomination of Mr, Berge is insult cient to constitute a motive for any important act by a man of average patriotism and intelligence. Mr. Berge is known by the people THE PRICE OF LIBERTY. Eternal vigilance Is the price liberty." The Savior of mankind was betrayed into the hands of His ene mies for an amount much less in value than that of an annual pass over the railroads of Nebraska." The free rail road pass, the most insiduous of all bribes, is doing its deadly work In the politics of our state at this time, It is being used with telling force up on the politicians of both political parties. The people who pay the frieght must arise in their might and deal a rath blow to the Iniquitous free pass bribery system. In the campaign of two years ago George W. Berge, with rare power and eloquence, pointed out to the vot ers of. Nebraska that this Insiduous bribe stood between the people of the state and the control of its govern ment Those who listened to his in dictment of the free pass as the most prolific source of political corruption, and heard" his appeal to the people to arise in their might and reclaim the government of the state, destroy the free pass bribery system and drive the professional loby from the state house, recognized the voice of a true leader who struck at the well-spring of political corruption, and they gave him their confidence and their votes, When Mr. Berge opened his cam paign and leveled his guns upon the pillars of the temple of railroad gov ernment, the free pass bribery sys tem, he was warned by a number of democratic leaders that it was unwise to pursue a course sufficiently radical to provoke the active hostility of the enemy and advised to pursue a more conservative and conciliatory course, To Mr. Berge's mind the suggestion meant treason to the people, end in- V for 1 ft'LY 19, In view of the fac generally anions the the democrat ie von vor the renoiuiiiaiinn Club Offer Any one of the following will be sent with The Independent one year for the club price: All subscriptions begin with the cur- number unless otherwise ordered. 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