Cbe VOL. II. NEBRASKA CITY , NEB. , THURSDAY , MAY 17 , 1900. NO. 45- PUBLISHED WEEKLY. OFFICES : OVERLAND THEATRE BLOCK. , T. STERLING MORTON , EI > ITOH. A JOnilNAL DEVOTED TO THE O180UBSION OF POLITICAL , ECONOMIC AND BOOIOLOOIOAL QUESTIONS. CIRCULATION THIS WEEK 7,281 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 postofflco at Nebraska City , Nob. , as Second Class matter , July 29th , 1808. Honorable GIGANTIC TRUTHS. JJ8 William Vincent Allen can unload an avalanche of truths upon an audience with all the smooth ness and force that the Alps let go a , glacier upon a Swiss village. Of course the Alps are not as "rocky" nor as "long" as a William V. Allen oration , though the Alps may equal the number j | ; of William's facts with icebergs , not colder than his gems of veracious eulogy. This last triumph of Allen was at Sioux Falls and in this absolutely pro- cine and exact statement of the sublime and exalted gifts , powers , experiences , characteristics , accomplishments , virtues and vast intellectual powers of the only American who has over been able to coin candidature into cash , William Vincent is superbly strong. From his great thought factory he reels out this , while speaking of the gentleman whom ho names to the vagarists as their normal candidate for the presidency : "Ho embodies in his political convic tions , in his life , all that is good in an American citizen , all that is pure and loyal , all that the most exacting could desire ; a statesman of ripe experience , a philosopher , a patriot without a peer , either in this or any other continent. Peerless , bold , determined , thoroughly devoted to the interests of the great mass of his countrymen , who would make and will make au ideal candidate for the exalted office of president of these United States. Since the result of the election in 1896 was known to the American people , among the fusion forces of theUnited ; States there . -has been but one'fname connected with the office and \with the nomination , at this time. lie is the embodiment of all that opposes plutocracy , that opposes greed , that opposes the exercise of criminal power in public lifo. Ho is in my judg ment the most American citizen of the ago. I think ho is , as an orator , as a statesman , the equal of Webster and Olay , if not their superior. Ho was a Nebraskan , but belongs now to the world. Without further discussion , without further description of this man , I present to this convention this hero , statesman and orator , William Jennings Bryan. "Ripe experience" too has been quick er in its maturity than an early Ohio potato. "A philosopher , a patriot without a peer , either in this or any other contin ent , planet , firmament or universe. " "Peerless" he had no peer in the period preceding ' 'bold , determinedthorough ly devoted to the interests of the great mass of his countrymen , who would make and will make an ideal ( not a real ) candidate for the exalted office of president of the United States. "Ho is the embodiment of all that opposes plutocracy , that opposes greed , that opposes the exercise of criminal power in public life. " That is the reason he first sought office. Ho wished to cet the money out of it which he could not get out of his profession , nor by any occupation of which he had any knowledge. He op poses greed. His appetite for oratory ia indulged merely to prevent greed for office. The exercise of duplicity and misrepresentation "in public life" is the utilization of "criminal power" and that is why Allen and his eulogee never make predictions which are untrue. That is the reason why , in the un erring - - - - judg ment of Allen , Mr. Bryan "as orator , as statesman is the equal of Webster or Olay , if not their superior. " Every man. who has road Webster either as a lawyer or a statesman and then listened to or read Bryan either as a candidate for railway commissioner ; for Congress ; for the committee of ways and means ; for the sonatorship ; for the colonelcy of a volunteer regiment or for the presidency , must admit the relative pigmyisin of Webster. Allen is a great and good judge of statesmen. And when he places Bryan alongside of Bis- marok , Gladstone , Webster , St. Paul , Demosthenes , Solon , Moses , Salisbury , Washington , Jefferson , Lincoln , Riche lieu , John Bright , and all the other heroes , statesmen , orators and benefac tors of mankind the contrast makes them mere mice up against a mental mammoth gnats exploring the blue empyrean in the shadow of the gorgeous and spreading tail of the American engle. IJUNCOMHE. 18 % . Mr. Bryan made a prophecy , the fulfillment of which ho was so confident about that he put it into cold type in that marvel of marital biography called "The First Battle. " Upon page 464 , one can read the cheer ful prediction of that great calamity forecaster , as embalmed by the Bryan family canned , as it were , to be used at luncheons in 1900 , when he and his zealots must eat their own words every day. "If we win this fight now reform will begin at once ; if we are defeated in this campaign there is nothing before the people but four years more of harder times and greater agitation , and then the victory will come. Our opponents say that they want to restore confidence , but the republican party cannot restore prosperity in this country so long as that prosperity is doled out to us by foreign ers who profit by our distress. ' 'Business men complain that business conditions are bad ; I warn them that business conditions cannot be improved by following out the financial policy which has brought business to its present conditions. " When one reads the foregoing from Mr. Bryan , a man whose profound in vestigations and experiences in finance have astounded the world by their depth , breadth and height ho can but be amazed at the sago and sacred character of that great and gifted interpreter of future events. Beside Bryan , the 7th daughter of the 7th son is , in the prophecy business , like a tallow candle competing for the illumination of the world with the sun at its zenith. The marvelous verifications of Bryan's ' readings of the financial conditions of the years 1897 , 1898 , 1899 and 1900 , down to date of this issue of THE CON- SBUVATivn , knock the ordinary clair voyants , mind readers and palmists clean out of the ring of pretenders and quacks. They make Mr. Bryan the royal seer , the king prophet of commer cial and financial affairs , who alone predicts , with unerring accuracy , the ab solute truth and'stands as sixteen to one amongst all other1 modern soothsayers ,