\ < " fx "t ' x it V C , 4f77 < -j * - XV VOL. II. NEBRASKAxfelTY , NEB. , THURSDAY , MARCH 29 , 1900. NO. 38. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. OFFICES : OVERLAND THEATKE BLOCK. J. STERLING MORTON , EDITOR. A JOunNAT , DEVOTED TO THE DISCUSSION OT POLITICAL , ECONOMIC AMD SOCIOLOGICAL QUESTIONS. CIRCULATION THIS WEEK 7,200 COPIES. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One dollar and a half per year , in advance , postpaid , to any part of the United States or Canada. Remittances made payable to The Morton Printing Company. Address , THE CONSERVATIVE , Nebraska City , Neb. Advertising Rates made known upon appli cation. Entered at the postofflce at Nebraska City , Neb. , as Second Class matter , July 20th , 1898. * * * * * * HEREDITY. . Anatomy of Mel ancholy , 1652 , quotes an old French physician to the effect that : ' 'It is the greatest part of our felicity to be well-born , and it were happy for human kind , if only such parents as are sound of body and mind should be suffered to marry. " He adds : "How careful , then , should we be in begetting of our children I" He alludes to the cruel measures made use of in ancient Scotland for the re pression of undesirable parentage and says : "This was done for the common good , lest the whole nation be impaired or corrupted. A severe doom , you will say , and not to be used among Christians , yet more to be looked into than it is. For now by our too much facility in this kind , in giving way for all to marry that will , too much liberty and indulgence in tolerating all sorts , there is a vast con fusion of hereditary diseases , no family secure , no man almost free , from some grievous infirmity or other. * * * It comes to pass that our generation is corrupt , we have many weak persons both in body and mind , many feral diseases raging among us , crazed fami lies ; our fathers bad , and we are like to be worse. " Human intelligence and human self- control are shown to be at a low average by the sophistries A Low Level. , , , and delusions which frequently control the actions of large numbers of citizens. There are many striking instances of the kind fur nished by history. The tendency pre vails today in various parts of the world , nowhere more dominantly than in the United States. Initiatives are not sup plied the common mind from within itself. It gets motives , enthusiasm , action from external and stronger in telligences. There are a majority of mentalities which simulate the tree-toad which is always the color of the bark upon which it feeds and lives. "The average man , " says Doctor Mo- Kim , in his admirable work upon "Heredity and Human Progress , " recently published by G. P. Putnam's Sons , "enjoys an enthusiasm , but is too indolent or feeble , intellectually , to find for himself an object sufficiently novel or imperative to induce in him this pleasurable emotion ; when , therefore , a more energetic individual presents and recommends , however unreasonable , some idea or thing as worthy of enthu siasm , his proposal is quite sure to be accepted with acclamations of delight , and great masses of men may follow with docility the originator and his delusion. " This was illustrated by the religious mania called Millerism and also by the following of the money fallacies during recent times in the United States. Mil ler said the material world would burn up , be destroyed by fire , within a given time ; Bryan said the commercial world would be annihilated by gold as soon as it became the single standard of value. Both prophets had myriads of disciples. Neither prophet proved himself worthy of credit. "Whole communities suddenly fix their minds upon one object , and go mad in its pursuit ; Mud Nations. . . . . * , millions of people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion ( say sixteen-to-one. ) We see one nation , from its highest to its lowest members , with a fierce desire for military glory ; another as suddenly becomes crazed upon a religions scruple ; and neither of them recovers its senses until it has shed rivers of blood , and sowed a harvest of groans and tears to be reaped by its posterity. " [ Doctor Elain ] , Communal insanity existed in the tenth century , when nearly all believed the end of the Examples. . , , world was at hand. From that belief the crusades were evolved. During centuries of the middle ages all believed in witchcraft , and even our dear New England ances tors hung people for witchcraft. Among commercial delusions the "South Sea Craze" and the "Mississippi Bubble" of the eighteenth century and the recent "South African Boom" are quite emphatic. But the most accentu ated of the more recent epidemic lunacies is that which teaches that the free coinage of silver in unlimited quan tities at the ratio of 16 to 1 , by the government of the United States , would raise the price of all the silver on earth to more than twice its present value , that is , to $1.29 an ounce. Can the men , who believe that , be otherwise than "defectives ? " Must they be descended from any other than an ancestry with impaired powers of analytical reasoning ? Thoughtful Oiti- A SOLACE. zens who reason for themselves came long since to know that the validity of a doctrine in finance , economics or religion is not to be safely measured by the number of its ad herents. The impious adage that the voice of the people is the voice of God is seldom office-seek quoted except by - ing demagogues and never believed save by those who follow their teachings. The great majority of the people of the United States have not formulated their own opinions. They have never moulded their own sentiments. Their opinions and sentiments are second hand ; they have been given to them by self-assertive , dogmatic teachers. There fore , the conclusion that a thing is right , proper and useful because approved by a majority may be altogether erroneous. The voice of the people is ofteuer the voice of a demagogue or the devil than of a god. The majority is a merciless tyrant , at times ; and an ignorant democracy is more dangerous than an enlightened , humane and real aristocracy. A govern ment of the best is better than a govern ment of the vicious , the worst. POBTOBICANS CAPABLE.military governor of Porto Rico , in speaking of our dilatory congress , said : ' As free trade and constitutional rights have become political questions , I cannot enter into the controversy. I have given the government the facts , and have pointed out what I believe to be the only sound policy for the govern ment. That ends my duty. "The people of Porto Rico are civil ized and are more capable than the people ple of New Mexico , who were given tor- itorial government fifty years ago. "