' ' - - " ' ' - 'v'Vfifj- . . . - „ , W- I- , > < J PSSi , ! ! S5 , : X'W'V:7'7' ; ! . " ' fit * " * * . ' ' ' A I1 * , ' ' ' „ * * ' * ' " * ' t/- . - ' V 4 f ' * - ' ' ' ' A J " ' ' ' ' * / ' ' " - ' ' ' i - - : /J' ' k V / S- > Sawyer AI % M32. Cbc4s . Cbc servativc. ' ' $ Tv. VOL IV. NO. 81. NEBRASKA CITY , NEBMSKA , FEBRUARY 6 , 1902 SINGLE COPIES , 5 CENTS. * v. . PUBLISHED WEEKLY. OFFICES : OVERLAND THEATRE BLOCK. J. STERLING MORTON , EDITOR. A JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THIS DI80UBSION 07 POLITICAL , ECONOMIO AND 80OIOLOOIOAL QUESTIONS. CIRCULATION THIS WEEK , 14,000'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 , Nebraska. Advertising rates made known upon appli cation. Entered at the post office at Nebraska City , Neb. , as Second Class matter , July 29 , 1898. The delight with AMERICAN which the average FREE TRADE , protectionist exhorter - er denounces free trade , as English , and yells in paroxys mal wrath about the Cobden Olnb , is known of all men. Therefore , a his torical fact which The Conservative herewith submits , is refreshing and re futing. The celebrated report of Rob ert J. Walker , Secretary of the Treasury of the United States during the admin istration of James K. Polk , was pub lished in December , 1845. On page 12 near the center is the following : "Commerce , agriculture , and naviga tion , harassed as they may be by foreign restrictions , diminishing the amount of exchangeable products which they could otherwise purchase abroad , are burdened with heavier impositions at home. Nor will augmented duties here lead to a re duction of foreign tariffs , but the re verse , by furnishing the protected classes there with the identical argu ment used by the protected classes here against reduction. By countervailing restrictions we injure our own fellow- citizens much more than the foreign nations at whom we propose to aim their force ; and in the conflict of op posing tariffs we sacrifice our own com merce , agriculture and navigation. As well might we impose monarchical or aristocratic restrictions on our own gov ernment or people , because that is the course of foreign legislation. Let us , with revenue duties only , open our ports to all the world , and nation after nation will soon follow our example. If we reduce our tariff , the party opposed to the corn laws of England would soon prevail , and admit all our agricultural products at all times , freely into her ports , in exchange for her exports. And if England would now repeal her duties upon our wheat , flour , Indian corn and other agricultural products , our own restrictive system would certainly be doomed to overthrow. " ( The italics ate The Conservative's. ) This report is invaluable as a reference book , and particularly soothing to a free trader , because it proves that the United States preached free trade before England advocated it or repealed her infamous corn laws , which excluded , by prohibitory tariffs , the products of our farms from her markets. Cicero , in his PAGAN AR60RI"Tusoulan Disputa- CULTURE. tions , " talks of tree- planting. He de- olares that the labors of the' man who plants trees , "shall be enjoyed by after ages. What is the purpose of the tree- planter ? It is to benefit posterity. " "Shall then the industrious farmer plant trees , of which he shall never see the fruit ? And , on the other hand , shall not the statesman plant laws , in stitutions and republics ? " This shows that long before the birth of Christ , arboriculture was planning for posterity and endeavoring to make the world more beautiful and better. The tree-planter of the Present arbor- phones his affectionate solicitude for the welfare of Posterity to all the coming generations , whose Present will be made out of our Future. Plant trees ! Elder Smith , who OIL. lives just south of Nebraska City , re ports indications of coal oil , so strong in a well of his 47 feet deep , that the water is undrinkable because of the petroleum flavor and smell. There are others who report oleaginous symptoms upon their lands in Otoe county , and it is high time that the earth beneath us should be perforated to a sufficient depth to demonstrate that we have either coal , oil or artesian water , Messrs. Bodeiibrock and Buhlman are circu lating a subscription paper for the purpose of raising money for making investigations as to what is concealed beneath us. Already the subscriptions amount to quite a sum of money , and it is sincerely hoped that the woik may be begun within the next sixty days. The Fremont Tri- BARTLEY'S bnne seems affection- PRBDECESSORS. ately solicitous about a long line of re publican predecessors to Bartley in the office of State Treasurer , and differs trom The Conservative as to the pro priety of the pardon of Bartley by Governor Savage. The esteemed Tri bune ignores the custom of former State Treasurers , which permitted the deposit of public funds in banks friendly to the ruling party. It ignores the fact , that in republican state conventions , for nearly a generation , promises of such deposits did secure nominations. It is either ignorant or forgetful that Wil- lard was nominated for State Treasurer of Nebraska years ago because of the promise of a loan of twenty-five thou sand dollars of public money to a certain republican banker in Alma. And has that money ever been repaid to the state ? Did or did not that note pass from State Treasurer to State Treasurer as cash ? Could a custom like this do otherwise than influence Bartley to ac cede to and obey it ? The Conservative does not ask the Fremont Tribune or anybody else to take "Mr. Morton's un supported testimony * * * * against previous State Treasurers , " but it chal lenges the records if they have been kept intact to show that he has mis stated their case ? What Bartley did with the state war rant proceeds , about which the Tribune talks , nobody knows definitely. Per haps United States Senator Millard , who has stated that the said warrant came into the Omaha National for pay ment as the property of the Chemical National , of New York City , is as well posted as anybody except Bartley can be ? The Conservative has not endeavored to exculpate Bartley because many of his predecessors notoriously handled ' state funds just as he did , and happened to escape detection and destruction. But it has objected , and it does now ob ject , to making Bartley a vicarious sac rifice for all the sins of his party and its representatives and agents. The Con servative wishes to inculpate the other guilty men of all parties who may have mishandled or misappropriated state cash or allowed partisan favorites to dose so and screened them from punishment. We have no excuse for Bartley except that he was in bad company , surrounded by bad influences and inspired by a long line of bad precedents. And now we