-y rmpi!jryywwMpm 'iiiww yiw'inMyyw '-rwwwmjr-mT, i The Commoner. WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. mm Wol 5, No. 7. Lincoln, Nebraska, March 3, 1905. Whole Number 3i5 s CONTENTS Public Ownership Vindicated Wanted More Democratic Weeklies "Frenzied Finance" in Insurance Not Butting In Statehood For Territories A Low Plane LaFollette's Opportunity Should Morton Retire The Guessing "Contest News of the Week Week at Washington ' Wanted-More Democratic Weeklies The weekly paper i3 the strength of the reform lovement. It is in close touch with the people? Hits editor is in daily contact with "the rank and 'file and what he says has influence in proportion R ' - . as he has character. We need more democratic weeklies there ought to be one at every county seat. It does not require much time to prepare the necessary editorial matter and to select for i reproduction such clippings as the editor desires to lay before his readers. Usually a well con- ducted weekly is more than self supporting and some democrat ought to be found in each county willing to risk in such an enterprise the small capital required. Where such a person can not '.'be found tlie democrats ought to join together and guarantee the amount necessary to meet any :possible deficit. There can be found in every . county seat some young lawyer, not yet over whelmed with work, or some old lawyer retiring from the practice, or some business man with ready pen who can furnish editorials in case the pub lisher can not attend to both the business and i the editorial department of such a paper. The democrats of the country ougnt to ad dress themselves with earnestness to the estab lishment of these papers and The Commoner will not only be glad to exchange with all democratic papers but it will give space for the free insertion of advertisements calling attention 10 newspaper men who are looking for a location or to local ities which desire a democratic newspaper. JJJ Be Careful Speaking before the house committee on ways and means, Secretary of War Taft said that it would be as just to establish a tariff between the slates of Ohio and Pennsylvania, as between the United States and the Philippines. He insisted that free trade would have to come between the islands and "the United States if we continue to hold them. kh mt.i. .1- 1. 1!Va n InnnitlloMn" runt isuuuub veiy uiuuu mc u. twijwui.w speech. If Mr. Taft is not careful he may be rlrivpn nut nf tho rpniihlicnn nartV. "along with 1 other republicans who insist that- the government 1 should not be conducted for the benefit of the SAFE FOR THE PRESENT ' vIA JMSf&WffMMfWlSMirW, I f v&zzZ ' " mAhmW 'f9 v The Goose that Laid the Golden Eggs Has Found Refige m 4 . 1 - I Ill ! 1 !. M - I.I - 11 I ' 1-- . 1 - M I Public Ownership Vindicated a The administration has not only endorsed the democratic policy on tho question of rail road regulation and in regard to requiring an in terstate commerce corporation to take out a fed eral license, but it has gone farther and endorsed a populist policy in acquiring a government rail road. If Mr. Bryan had not last summer an nounced himself in favor of the public ownership of railroads he would have suffered the mortifi cation of seeing the republicans pass him on the reform highway, but he is in position to welcome them to this advanced ground. Of courae tho republicans say that the conditions are excep tional in the case of the Panama railroad, but that makes no difference. The right of the gov ernment to own and operate a railroad is estab lished and the necessity or advisability of exer cising the right is the only question left open to dispute. If tlie government ha3 a right to own and operate a railroad in Panama, connecting the oceana, it has a right to own and operate a road jn the United States, connecting the oceans, and it can proceed to build or buy such a .road when ever the people are convinced that public interests can 'be promoted thereby. Tlie precedent is es tablished and a precedent is a potent thing in leg islation. Tho right of tho people to protect them selves, like tho right of self-defen3e in the individ ual, is a paramount right and can always be re sorted to. In Kansas the people have resorted to a state oil refinery for self-protection; if neces sary they can build a pipe line or a railroad to carry the oil to the refinery or from the refinery to market. If they can do this for oil they can do it for wheat, oats, corn or cattle. This re serve power enables the people to defend them selves against monopolies of every kind. For years tho people of the various states have tried to regulate railroad rates, but they have found tha railroad lobbyist ever present with his pocket full of passes and other "persuaders." A few state railroad lines would have done more to regu late railroad rates than all the laws that have been passed. The United States judges have usu ally been prompt to suspend 3uch laws but tho United States courts can not suspend the right of a state to regulate rates by building a competing line. One of the purposes of the Isthmian canal is to regulate transcontinental rates a thing that could be done more cheaply and more effectively by a transcontinental line. The canal can only reduce through rate3 on things that can stand special interests. inf- fwriltt tfrh ) r- -t- - "- wuto j ; i.- k ?-. J . -4t.&Kdf -. .. - Lt 3h. t t'b U .atU i.. & j Jf. lk.