rvv-SnwmmmrnmFi ! r,i rjUr ; b r rtrtn ' IH'lB'ljP f"(" 4 The Commoner. LN. The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY, Kntcrcd nt the postofiicc at Iincolu, Nebraska, as second dM uinll innttcr. v. , , , , .,'',, ,', v TERMS-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. One Year .'.... $1,00 .SIxHontlis eoc Tli re e TlentUa age Single Copy fie Sample Ceples Fret. Foreign P&ttaqe ga Extra. 1 ' ' , , SUBSCRIPTIONS can be flent direct to Tha Commoner. They can also be sent through newnpnpera which have adver tised a clubbing rate, or through local ngenta, where such agents kftve been appointed, All remittances should be sent by post ffice money order, express order, or by bank draft on New York or Chicago. Do not send individual check I, stamps, or money. RENBWALS.Thc da,te on your wrapper shows when your subscription will expire. Thus, Jan. oa, mean that payment laaa been received to and including the last issue Qf January, 1903 Two weeks are required after money is received before the date a the wrapper can be changed. CHANGE OP ADDRESS. Subscribers requesting a change f address must give the OI.D as well aa the NRW address, ADVERTISING rates furnished upon application. Address 11 communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. 1 Laboring men can enjoin monopoly at the bal lot box. It's a wise injunction that recognizes its own limitations. MivBabcock seems to have ping ponged the tariff question to a good situation finish. It seems that the beef trust used that Injunc tion to step-ladder its prices a Httla highor. Senator Burton of Kansas Is compelled to work his explanation department overtime. It appears that Mr. Babcook performed all of bis tariff revision, thundering in the index. Democratic victories are not to be -won by fol- lowing the lead of republican sympathizers. t ' " Doubtless Mr. McLaurin would take it if ev erybody would agree to say nothing about it. It seems that Mr. Babcock takes pride in hav ing his public record scored in the error column. m t Mr, Babcock should have told those Iowa re publicans that he was only joking when he aid it. The injunction against the coal miners sticks, but the injunction against the beef packers ia ignored, Of course a trUBt magnate behind prison bars ould not feel inclined to contribute to. the party campaign fund The man who Invented "postal cards Is dead, "but the woman who writes both ways across them still survives. King Edward's coronation was pulled off with out a single hitch, even of Mr. Reid's abbreviated unmentionables. The steel trust is working overtime, but not because it is filling any orders for shackles from the administration. Having enjoined the beef thrust Mr, Knox should now mandamus it and compel it to ac Jcaow ledge the injunction. 1 The anti-smoke crusaders should turn their attention to Mr. Knox. His, efforts to curb the trusts always end in smoke Secretary Shaw nas been doing a little keynat iag up in Vermont. Cltn.it bo possible that Ver- imont republicans, need it? ' 1 'Addicts announces that he wants what Is com ing to him from Delaware,, and if he will expose 14s nCck he is likely to get it. mii"i.n'i'i 1 William B. Curtis urges that we are In no immediate danger from the trusts. Perhaps Mr. Curtis has been mislead by the fact.tbat Attorney General Knox entertains so little, fear of them that he can go right to sleep alongside of one. The attention of The Commoner's readers ia called to the "Lots of Five" subscription offer printed on page 3 of this Issue.' Why is it that an injunction against a laboring man is so speedy while the process ia so slow when applied to the beef trust? After investigating himself Crowninshield ab solved himself from all blame. Qencral Smith seems to have overlooked a sure thing. It must bo confessed that Mr. Knox's attempts at exploiting tho stronuous life suffer greatly from the effects of amateur press agent work. Tho Memphis News unkindly Insinuates that perhaps Mr. Morgan objects to poker becauso the other follow stands some sh6w of winning. Mr. Roosovelt may plug the bull's eye five times straight with a revolver, but ho appears to be unable to hit a trust with a blunderbuss. Tho planet Bros has been found again, which fact leads us to hope that tho president will yet find tho criminal clause in the anti-trust law. Tho man who believes that private monopolies are good, things draws on his imagination while tho private monopolists are drawing dividends. .Attorney General Knox is a "good soldier,' according to the Roosovolt definition, for ho seemed "not only willing, but anxious to fight" After vowing that he would never be taken and would live to a green old age, Mr. Harry Tracoy has executed a Babcock tariff revision finish. Tho gentleman who claims to bo a democrat and urges his party to adopt a straddle platform is always sure of a hearing in the republican papers. The Chicago men detected in the act of violat ing the law against counterfeiting will bo prose cuted as criminals, not tenderly handled by writs of injunction. It seems that a labor nnion cannot declare a dividend of food supplies, although an anthracite coal trust can declare dividends of money wrung from labor. The Chinese estimate a man's ability by the size of his gall, not by the weight of his brain. The average trust magnate would be a great man in China. The Iowa democratic state convention should congratulate the republican state convention upon its cordial indorsement of the democratic doctrine of tariff reform. The impudent gentlemen chastised by Mr. Knox were not beef packers. Mr. Knox barkens not to the impudent laughter and language of the men who pack beef. After declaring that the war had been prose cuted as humanely as possible tLe president re tires General "Jake" Smith for making it more brutal than necessary If Knox commenced his beef trust injunction case before Keller or Jackson could he get the mil lionaire packers into jail as quickly as the coal companies landed the miners? The reorganizers of the Rock Island seem to delight in walking right up to the cage and feed ing: raw moat to the legal representative of this cunning-shackling administration. A Texas reader complains that the democratic papers do not sufficiently contrast the spirit of commercialism and greed, now rampant in the country, with, the love of liberty and devotion to human rights which formerly controlled the peo ple. The point is well made;, it la impossible to overestimate the danger of commercialism. When he took hold of the navy department Secretary Moody declared that the naval officers who ha.d been doingr duty on shore in easy berths would foave to go to sea. Crowninshield. was the first of this class to take to the deck, and the first tiling he Cid was to jam the prow of a battleship into a lot of rocks. It would seem that it were cheaper to keep that class of sailors ashore. Vol. a, No. "30. Tho time seems near at hand when republican platforms will defend their departure rrom prin ciples of liberty on the ground that the old liberty bell is cracked. About ton years ago Mr, Bryan introduced in congress a bill to put trust-made articles on th freo list. Ho Is naturally gratified to have th idea indorsed by the Iowa republicans. A scientist declares that war Is necessary isd order to keep tho earth's population within bounds. Tho trusts in food supplies promise to take the place of war in doing tljis work. ' A bogus money don has just been raided- Iti Chicago. There is a bogus issue den in operation at republican congressional committee headquar tera that should be raided by the people. - , i Of course the bedf combine was formed to de-i creaso the cost of production and reduce the price to the consumers. All trusts are organized fon that purpose In the prospectus. One Is Inclined to shudder when he thinks of what might have happened to the battleship iTexas before the hoodoo was removed if Admiral Crown inshield had undertaken to command that vessel-" Speaking of the reorganizers, it Is well to re member the old saying: "If a man fools you once it Is his fault; if he fools you a second time t is your fault," They fooled the party once, that ia enough. Mr. Whitelaw Reid's petulant manner may be due to the faint suspicion that King Edward's ill ness was assumed in order to escape watching Whitelaw caper around in these cute little knickies. Judge Jackson seems to think that those hun gry miners deserve no help because they might have walked all the way to Nebraska or Kansas and secured three or four days' work in the har vest fields. s When the president addresses " a law " school will he tell the boys that a good criminal lawyer will not only be willing to try a case, but anxious to have crimes committed so that his business will increase? LOST In or about tho Iowa republican state convention, a large quantity of political prestige. The finder will be suitably rewarded if he will re turn same to Messrs. Allison, Dolliver, Henderson, Hepburn, et al. The Indianapolis Sentinel is reproducing the comments of the papers that commend its stand on the question of reorganization. About seven out of every ten exchanges quoted are distinguished by, the mark, "(rep.)". In addition to being "traitors" for calling at tention to the cruelties practiced in the Philip pines the members of the anti-imperialist league are double-dyed traitors for finding it out despite the efforts of Mr. Root to keep it secret. Tho Michigan democrats are trying the dan- gerous experiment of avoiding national issues in their state campaign Aside from weakness, that comes with an attempt to run from the party's po sition such a campaign embarrasses the congres sional candidates who must of necessity deal with national questions. They receive no aid from the state campaign. The devious logic of tho average republican or- , gan is beyond comprehension. The same republi can organs that protested against charging- any. brutality to the army in the Philippines, calling such charges "attacks upon the army," "firing in the rear," and that sort o thiug, are now com-s mending the president for his action in the case o? General Smith. If ther,e was no brutality, why was Smith retired? The. Indianapolis Sentinel thinks that it Is do ing the party a service when It rejoices over the repudiation of the Kansas City platform; The trouble is that the Sentinel fs only thinking: oC the democrats who left the party, and it is willing' to alienate the ones who wore faithful,in order to please the ones who were recreant. It would do the party more service if it apologized for the state convention and assured the democrats that the next convention would repair the, injury don by the last one. x ) 1 . Bm M rfiiimiiii '.r.iitftMiti'iMiirwtiMiyiitol luxi ,'gi-fflriijifliiifli K 1 'win', hi 'VitlNflfritiii a