'Che Conservative. The populists RAILROAD RIGHTS. and fnsionists of Nebraska aud the Northwest deny the right of railroads to issue stock as evidence of enhanced value. But the right of the state to raise the valuation of railroad property for the purposes of taxation nobody denies. Thus the state in view of increased passenger and freight traffic which may have accrued to a railroad because of an increased population hav ing become tributary to each mile of its line may assess a railroad eight thous and dollars a mile today which in 1879 was valued at only four thousand dollars lars a mile. The railroad is worth more now than it was then. But its owners have no right to issue any tangible evidence of its enhancement , nor to demand dividends thereupon. For the owners to attempt it is to water their stock , we are told by fusionists and populists. But the farmer who mortgages a farm for five thousand , which cost him four hundred , and gets prices for his products which will enable him to pay the inter est on five thousand dollars , which is more than twelve times the original cost , does a perfectly proper and legiti mate bit of finance. Ho has not watered the valuation of his real estate. It is possible that the proximity to a railroad has really raised the value of his land. And this being true have not the tillage and product of the laud reciprocated by really raising the value of the railroad aud the stock representing it ? And if the farmer may innocently aud without wrong to anyone place on the market negotiable mortgages which in amount are ten times as much as he paid for the laud , gat the money for them and pay interest thereon , why may not his coworker - worker his distributor also properly and legally and justly have something to show for the Better value of his rail road ? Laud along a line of railroad which has risen from a donated homestead to a market value of fifty dollars an acre may have been watered equally as much or more as the stock and bonds of the railroad which put up the price of the land. The farmers and the railroads are interdependent. They ought to be and will be sooner or later fast friends. THE CONSERVATIVE D. E. THOMPSON. TIVE has never been politically , personally nor in a business way associated with Mr. D. E. Thompson. But it has heard and learned enough of his ability as a man and manager to affirm that he is able , fearless and effective in whatever enter prise he may undertake. There is no doubt as to his having been potent in the election of an anti-populist legis lature during the campaign of 1808. He is one of the few leaders of republican ism in Nebraska who works for his party all the year round and who can forecast the effect of elections , their defeats and triumphs with considerable accuracy. It has come to THE CONSER VATIVE that Mr. Thompson , as an advo cate of the single gold standard , seem ingly realizes the national importance of the Nebraska election next November and that he is endeavoring to innoou- late his copartisans with vigor and vigi lance. At the present writing there is no sign of his succeeding. But an awakening may come at last , just as at last , the Nebraska troops were brought home. COIN HARVEY. gtushed monetary sophist who delights in depicting the despotism of money and the imperialism of combined capital still lingers in Nebraska. The exhortations of Mr. Harvey are all for cash money with which to carry on a campaign for the debasement of the currency of the United States. He denounces money and its evil influences in one sentence and begs for more money and its in fluence in the next. If with the present number of millions of dollars in circu lation the money power is indeed a menace what will the money power do when the number of millions of dollars now in circulation has been doubled , trebled ? If money is an evil and a jeopardy to the republic what will it be when its volume has been quadrupled ? Will the money-getters of today be paralyzed and cease their avaricious efforts and their acquisitive endeavors when money shall have been made more plentiful by the free coinage of silver at sixteen to one ? What is the matter in Nebraska that Coin Harvey lingereth aud exhorteth so long ? OUESTIONS has asked RENEWED.TIVE time and again , what good has come to Nebraska , what good has come to the republic , from the denunciatory eloquence of Bryanarchy ? What county in Nebraska can find within its borders new capital , new manufacturing plants , new farms which have been resultant of the lamentations of Allen , Bill Dech or Bryan over the alleged oppression of the plain people by plutocracy ? Has that everlasting lie , that farming in Nebraska cannot pay , helped enhance lands in this state ? Have the constant ly rising values of farms in Nebraska been instituted and accelerated by the deplorable conditions of their owners as depicted by these tearful guardians of the plain people ? Has declaring , by Allen and Bryan , that railroads were rob bing and other corporations oppressing the farmers of Nebraska , caused farms to rise ten and twenty dollars an acre during the last two years ? What good has come of depreciating farms and the condition of farmers either in Nebras ka or elsewhere ? Is the American repub lic made better and grander by calumny and vituperation ? THEUE IS NO DEMOCRACY. Government by the people , that is , government which , in its legislative , executive and judicial departments , is made up of men selected by a free and uncorrupted democracy , to represent equality , justice and fraternity has ceased to exist in France and is sick almost unto death even in the United States. ' 'Representative government is Justice organized , Reason in living action and Morality armed. " Has such government a foothold in the Philippines ? Does it prevail any where in the West Indies ? Is it domi nating , directing and upbuilding the institutions of this country as they were planned and founded by our revolution ary sires ? Where is there evidence of a living , free and uncorrupted democracy any where on the globe outside of Switzer land ? Col. William IN 1890. Jennings Bryan in one of his most eloquent and irresistible orations , during the calamity campaign for the presidency , with wrathful vehe mence declared : "The promulgation of the gold stand ard is an attack upon your homes and firesides and you have as much right to resist it as to resist an army marching to take your children captive and burn thereof roof over your head. " i The gold standard has been promul gated for years. It has been estab lished more than a quarter of a century right here in the United States. It has "attacked your homes" with columns of figures showing their en hanced value. It has brightened and cheered your farm firesides with luxuries in musical instruments and with choicest literature from all over the world. You have bought gold with the prod ucts of your industry. With that gold you have been able to buy anywhere on earth all the products of other industry offered for sale. The gold standard holds "captive" for your children the markets of the world. Whatever you sell of Nebraska produc tion must be good enough for any mar ket on the globe. And the money which you buy with what you sell must be also current in all markets ; and that money is gold. "Every day makes it more evident" to the Philadelphia Record ( dem. ) "that the democratic party cannot be rallied in undivided support of the anti-expan sion policy. "