Che Conservative VOL. III. NO. 45. NEBRASKA CITY , NEBRASKA , MAY 16 , 1901. SINGLE COPIES , 5 CENTS. PUHM8HED WNEKIA' . OFFICES : OVERLAND THEATRE BLOCK. , T. STERLING MORTON , EIHTOU. A .TOUHNAlj DEVOTED TO TIIK DISCUSSION OK 1'OMTIOAI * , KCONOMIO AND BOGIOr.OOICAI , QUESTIONS. CIRCULATION THIS WEEK , 12,300 COPIES. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. OHO dollar and n half per year in advance , postpaid to any part of the United States or Canada , llomittances made payable to The Morton Printing Company. Address , Tun CONSERVATIVE , Nebraska City , Nebraska. , Advertising rates made known upon appli cation. Entered at the postolllco at Nebraska City , Nob. , as Second Class matter , July 29 , 1898. Our intermittent SYMPTOMS. friend , Colonel Bowlby , of the Crete Democrat , defines "symptoms of republicanism. " He avers that any one who has "frequently , of late years , openly supported the republican party and its ticket , " has decided symptoms of republicanism. By a parity of reason ing , then , Colonel Bowlby would assert that any one who , of late'yearshas sup ported the populist party and its ticket has symptoms of populism , and that any one who has of late years supported the silver republican party and its ticket has symptoms of argentiferous republican ism , complicated with indications of protectionism , of a virulent type. The admixture with these isms of the irre deemable currency theories of the populists , for all of which political medley Colonel Bowlby hasjin late years , labored , constitute alarming symptoms of a malignant appetite for the loaves and fishes of office. This motor for propelling the politics of Colonel Bowlby whistles in this sentence , referring to a man who for forty years never feared I to accept the nominations of the minority of the voters in Nebraska , and , at his own expense , to make campaigns for certain economic and administrative principles , knowing that their repre sentative could not be elected in this state. "Yet , he , ( Morton ) regardless of the cold potato diet , the republicans have dished up to him , tune and again , joined hands with Crounse to kill off Yan Wyck. " The colonel's chronology is mixed. The scramble for 'the * United States seuatorship , to which he so pathetically alludes , came in * the winter of 1892 and 1898 , after the democratic candidate for governor of 1892 had made the canvass in which Crounse and Van Wyck figured so successfully. But there was no big or little "hope" of a United States seuatorship warming the ambition of "the sucker , " as the colonel felicitously styles the democratic gubernatorial candidate of 1892. He had been an apprentice first , and then a journeyman , in the art of malting political campaigns , where , over the door of candidature , had been written in flaming italics : "Let all who enter here leave Hope behind ; " and take a check for it , re turnable after the election. He never asked any man to help nominate him , and after nomination he never asked any man to vote for him. He always was an impersonal candidate , merely the representative of a set of political principles , which can not be held honestly , nor honestly supported , either by real populists or by real silver repub licans. Against protective tariffs and all class legislation , of whatsoever variety , that man has remained steadfast and defiant. He has opposed the making of artificial prices by law , whether those prices were to affect iron or silver. He opposed making railroad steel sell at one hundred and twenty-eight dollars a ton , by statute , just as he opposed forcing silver to one hundred and twenty-nine cents an ounce by the same process. But Colonel Bowlby sees in public life , only diet. He laments the' 'cold potato' ' and yearns for the Diet. terrapin stew , the large , cold bottle and the small , hot bird of the rich man's table , the republican restaurant for political pot hunters. But offices for the "money that is in them instead of the honors" were not the ambition of democracy as taught by the ancients. Colonel Bowlby evolves words and assertions , only upon the corporations , all of which he Trusts. terms trusts. He assumes to expose the "one object of trusts , " and then to denounce them all vigorously and with out mercy. But any trust or combina tion , too highly capitalized will fail , just as the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1 would fail to enhance silver bullion to $1.29 an ounce. That something can be made out of nothing , is a self-evident absurdity. That any "something" can ib3 ! " expanded , attenuated , and aerated indefinitely without diminishing its ai value , is as evident as the fact that the moon cannot compete , in lighting the world at midday , with the sun , which ; ias a trust for lighting the globe at that liour. No corporation or combination for manufacture can succeed except it bo capitalized honestly. No combination can succeed which attempts extortion. No combination can succeed which is not honestly and economically managed by skilled and intelligent men. If Colonel Bowlby will visit Nebraska City and examine the Starch Works and the Cereal Millsho Locally. will find them ex panding , running full head and proving a great benefit. He will find that each of these plants grew to adult influence in competition with all the world and all the world's combinations in such industries. He will find that starch sells now for one half the price it brought ten years ago , and that cereal goods rise and fall gen erally , with the fluctuations in corn prices. He will find no advances in the outputs of Nebraska City industrial establishments because of "trusts. " There is recorded a fool who had a goose which laid golden eggs. He killed the bird to see how Not Fools. the eggs were sprouted. The owners of the manufactories at Ne braska City are not fools. They will not , by extortion , bad management , or from malice , kill patronage which will pay profits. No man , woman , or child has been wronged by the combinations at Nebraska City. The owners and managers of these institutions propose to merit , to get , and to hold a constantly- growing patronage , and to themselves keep pace with it in steady and sturdy growth. This they will accomplish by making their commodities pure , straight and good goods , by honest dealing and by not being undersold. The world of cereals is wide. There is no monopoly possible in the manufacture of its products. Competition is free. The markets are open to all. Anybody and everybody is at liberty to come into Nebraska City and establish similar plants. The more corn and other grains consumed , the bigger our trade , our town , and the prosperity of all of its 'inhabitants. ' But the moment that ex tortion picks pockets in any one of our industries , that moment the arrest of growth and thrift is accomplished.