- f 9 ' The name of the now club will be the 'Demo cratic Hub and its evontual membership will consist of two representatives at largo from each ward and a representative from each vot ing precinct. The two members at largo will bo choson at a mass meeting of democrats to bo held April 14, following tho city conven tion. At that time the permanent organiza tion will be put under way. The objects of tho club, as Btatcd in tho constitution, are tho formation of ward clubs and tho fostering of steps which will bring about the unifica tion and co-operation of theso clubs. Tho contral body will enable the democrats from all parts of tho city to become acquainted and to profit by tho Interchange of Ideas. By a section of its constitution tho club must con fino its efforts to tho formation and unifica tion of theso clubs and tho good of democracy gonerally. A letter, received from William J. Bryan, stated that ho hoped tho movement would bo a success and that, it would spread over tho pnttro country. Ho enclosed blanks and membership rolls of other similar clubs and wished tho now organization every suc cess.' JJJ A Shameful Situation. Ono of tho most shameful .spectacles upon, which tho people- of i great stato were ever re-. Quired to gazo has recontly been presented at tho capital city of. Nebraska.. In 1902 at a conference of corporation law yers, tho man who was subsequently chosen by tho republican stato convention as its nominee for governor was. picked for that honor. Representatives of the corporations selected, very generally, tho republican nominees for the. legislature. Tho republicans carried tho legislature by an overwhelming majority, .electing more,. than one. hundred out of tho 133 members. , , In spite of the fact that.it was known that tho republican candidate for, governor was chosen by-tho corporation .lawyers,,, ho, was elected, al though by a, reduced majority. Tho corporations promptly accepted the re-' publican victory as a triumph for corporation rule nnd it seems, also, that a majority of tho repub lican mombors.of the legislature agreed with the corporation agents on this point Threo corporation lobbyists were on duty in Nebraska's capital city, openly directing this re publican legislature. Tlioro has been a general domand on tho part of tho people for a revision of tho revenue law and a very general complaint because tho rail roads of tho stato wero not paying thoir proper proportion of 'tho taxes. In responso to this sentiment, a revenue bill was framed by tho republican legislature in which' bill new and larger burdens wero placed upon taxpayers gonerally, while tho corporations wore given overything they demanded with respect to tho method of corporation assessment Tho situation is so humiliating to republicans who do not indorso such mothods that oven re publican newspapers have found it necessary to enter bitter 'protest The Omaha 'Boo, a repub lican paper, has entered frequent protests against those proceedings, a .fair sample of these protests being an- editorial in a recent iBsue in which the Boo said: " If any man or set of men should deliber ately concoct a scheme to set tho town on fire . or blow up Its public buildings with dyna raito tho community would rise up as ono man ' to have them thrown into prison or lynched but when men sot about deliberately to un dermine and destroy self-government, tho peo ple tamely allow them to proceed with their devilish work. And yet this is precisely what has been going on at Lincoln for tho last six ty days under the leadership of John N. Bald win, tho head pusher of tho most rotten lob by that has tfyer infested tho stato capltol. Corporation lobbies have infested various state capitals at various times; -'and yet, as a rule, they have done their work in a covert way But In Nebraska tho mask has been entirely The Commoner. thrown aside and upon the theory that the peo ple will indorse- whatever may bo done by tho republican party the corporation agents have de manded of tho official representatives of that party tho fruits of tho victory which the corporations won at tho last election. Tho republican editorial to which reference has been made was entitled "Shameless Betrayal of the People." Tho situation is, indeed, a shame ful one, and yet when men had good reason to be lievo that the republican candidates were chosen by the corporations, what reason did they have for placing confidence in those candidates? What reason did they have for believing that those can didates, if elected, would do anything to provide the people with relief from corporation imposi tion? If the people of Nebraska shall become aroused because of the manner in which the cor poration lobby dominated republican representa tives at Nebraska's capital city, then even out of this shameful condition great good to the people may result Figs may not be gathered from thistles; and measures designed for the greatest good to tho greatest number may not bo expected at-the hands of public officials who owe their office to corpora tion influence. JJJ Victory For Working Hen. Organized labor won a decided victory in the United States circuit court at St Louis when Judge Adams refused to make permanent tho temporary restraining order which ho had issued in which order tho railroad men were forbidden to quit work. Judge Adams holds that laboring men have the right to organize, that they have a right to demand higher wages and to. quit work if their demands be not complied with. He holds that the effect of a strike in delaying the mqyement of freight or passenger trains would be too remote and incidental to make the authors of it even constructively guilty of conspiracy to interfere with interstate commerce or defy the authority of the United States by obstructing the transit of the mails, which were some of the allegations set up in tho petition on which Judge Adams Issued his tem porary restraining order. Whllo the decision 'is a victory for tho work ingmen, Judge Adams undertakes to justify the temporary restraining order. That order should not have been Issued even if the facts alleged were true; and we need go no further than tho state ment of the conclusions reached by Judge Adams himself to justify this claim. If workingmen have an unquestioned right to organize, if they have .a right to demand higher wages and to quit -work if their demand be not complied with and Judge Adams says they have theso privileges then the court waB not justified in Issuing the re straining order forbidding these men to quit work even accepting the statements made in the rail road company's petition as being entirely correct This Is true because it may bo said, with re spect to the temporary restraining order as Judge Adams says in his refusal to grant the injunc tion, that while the results of a strike might be delay in tho movement of trains, interferance with interstate commerce, and obstruction of the transit of tho mails, these are too remote and In cidental to make the authors of it even con structively guilty of a conspiracy; and it is also true because It was never Intended to confer upon a court tho privilege of interfering, by the issue of a writ, with the unquestioned rights of men. The objection to government by injunction Is not merely against the evidence on. which the writ is based; it is against tho writ itself, as It is applied in enabling powerful men to in erfere with the plain rights of other men and as S resents that extraordinary power' assumed by a .VOLUME 3, NUMBER 12. j judge which power has, properly,' ho place in our system of government k" The very men who have been quick to resort to the writ of injunction against workingmen would become very indignant if the workingmen could summon sufficient influence to persuade a judge to issue an Injunction in their behalf deny ing to tho employer the exercise of his unques tioned rights. " One of the most striking utterances with re spect to the temporary restraining order, issued by Judge Adams was made by Edward MShepard recently in a speech delivered in Chicago. Mr. Shepard asked: "Is it anything less than calam itous that in the armory of law weapons should be found to restrain that kind of freedom; when thus far the armory' of lawhas been ransacked in vain for weapons equal to the prevention of combinations expressly forbidden, by statute?" Men who have been ready to resort to the injunction in order to deprive laboring men of their plain rights would not only be indignant if they -were made.the victims .of similar injunc tions'but they have neVer been slow to give ex pression to their indignation when, it has been suggested that.the armory, tit law he rapsacked for weapons in' order to protect-the people arid in .the effort to require powerful and influential men to abandon their impositions upon the. 'weak' .and tho helpless. . ., . JJJ Addlcks Ethics. Senator Conner, one pf the Addicks members of the Delaware legislature, in defending' the voters' assistant law said: "The voters' assistant system again comes in and commends itself Jpr fairness. It in sures delivery of the goods. "When' I buy a horse I wa'nt my horse. "When a republican buys a"votG'-h6 wants his vote." I '-contend that there is no politics in the jnatter, for when a republican or democrat wants ,to buy a vote he has an opportunity of thus securing it instead of being cheated out of it, as has been tho case so many times in this state." This is the most candid statement "yet se cured of the ethics of Addicksism and yet Mr. Addicks represents the republican organization in Delaware. JJJ Thsn and Now. ; Recently The Commoue.r- congratulated the "Des Moines Register and Leader, a -republican paper, bepause 4t had summoned sufficient cour age to print a. quotation frojn- Abraham Lincoln. Commenting upon this compliment, fthe Reg ister and Leader insists that no republican. paper has reason in .view of, the party's policy to feel embarrassed by quotations from Lincoln's speeches and that the government that has been established in ,tho Philippine islands is not In .violation of. the principles oftho Declaration of Independence. The .editor, of this republican paper is, in deed, a genius if be. can present -Intelligent argu ment in line with. his contention. The principles of the Declaration of Independence should bo well understood;, but, i this day .when so- many re publican leaders, are4 sneering aj those principles and when republican editor . has the hardihopd to insist that our Philippine, policy is in line with those principles it will not bo out of place to re fer, in passing,, to, the, great state paper which Moses Coit Tyler called ."a passionate chant -of human freedom' " , -That all men. are created equal and endowed ay their creator with certain inalienable rights., among theso being life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, ia the . statement of the ,preapiile; ana it is further declared that to secure these r ghts governments are instituted among mm de riving their just powers from the consent pf thr governed. ' r It is hardly necessary to dwell upon tnis point Nt,' . v gAJ8afe&... BMHK