Tufci ttinfiiMmrnmamg?! SS3pMr.iii".i.. ,i!;iMfiriv:-aii" ''&" ' .pt ' ia'" aM"ettAW jimmi vtmiimiMti iv ftnirtWi'uil'H'ii'""'"'l'"l,w' - The Commoner. 16 j i t yOLUME 5, NUMBER 18 throughout tho United States rests upon it reason; and that reason Is that peoplo are much tho same. Mon do not differ much in height, in strength, or in their needs. Tho tall est man is not much taller than tho shortest, and tho strongest man not many times stronger than tho weak est. In mental ability men differ more, and yot tho averago man in ono state is approximately tho equal of tho averago man in other states. Not so with tho corporation. Tho states differ in tholr incorporation laws, and wo find ono state permit ting what other states deny. A cor poration may bo a 'thousand or ten thousand times as great as tho aver ago individual, and it is not reason able or just that the corporate giant should bo permitted to enjoy all of the privileges granted to the natural man. Tho natural man has inalienable rights rights which tho government did not give, rights which the govern ment can not take away tho corpora tion has no rights which tho govern ment did not give and no rights which tho government can not take away when tho welfare of society requires it. Second, a distinction ought to be drawn between tho rights of the stock holder and tho rights of the consumer. There is a tondoncy to regard every stockholder as an innocent purchaser, although no stockholder in a trust ought to bo regarded as an innocent purchaser, for ho is under no compul sion to buy stock and can always in vestigate before he buys. If a man buys stock in a trust he becomes a party to all that tho trust does. He can not shield himself behind the fact that he is a minority stockholder and can not control tho company. He knows that when ho buys a minority interest in tho company, and he ought not to bo pormitted to avoid respon sibility after accepting tho benefits. Tho consumer Is driven by his God given needs to purchase tho necessa ries of life, and he is deserving of more consideration than tho stockhold er of a private monopoly. If the license plan, above suggested ' were in operation today, it would be possible to destroy every monopoly which now preys upon the public, and to prevent the formation of new ones Take the Standard Oil company, for instance; It could not do business out side of tho state of its origin withou bo defended. If, on tho other hand, competition is bad and ought to bo eliminated, tho right of tho private monopoly to exist is not yot vindicated, for tho question then presented Is whether tho benefits of monopoly should accrue to tho whole peoplo or to a few. Socialists amrm that com petition is bad, and that tho benefits of monopoly should bo appropriated by tho stato through the public own ership of all the moans of production and distribution. The trust magnate who insists that competition is bad and ought to be destroyed, defends tho basic proposition upon which the socialist rolies, and the socialist lead ers have been quick to recognize tho contribution which the trust magnatoo have made to socialistic argument. There aro three positions, therefore, ono of which must be adopted by thoso who discuss tho trust question. First, that competition is desirable and should bo protected. Those who take this position are, in favor of tho extermination of private monopolies and desire the enactment of such laws as may be necessary to preserve competition by putting the competi tors upon as nearly an equal footing as possible. The second position is the position of the trust-defender namely, that competition is a bad thing and that a few individuals should be permitted to destroy competition and appropriate tho benefits of mo nopoly. This is the position that the trust defenders must ultimately take, although Instead of avowing it they are likely to content themselves with a general denunciation of trusts, while they oppose any effective remedy. The third position is tho position of tho socialists, who regard competition as a destructive force and who would substitute public monopoly for private monopoly, the benefits of the monopoly to be distributed by the government to all the members of society. It will be seen that this question is a far-reaching one, and that it can not be considered without the discus sion of fundamental principles. It is a healthy sign that tho papers and periodicals of the United States are giving so much space to the argu ments advanced in support of the va rious positions. V NEW ZKALANU 7 Is ono of tho moat progressive) countries In tho world. Free to form tholr own government and to ahapo their legislation, unhampered by previous systems, the poople of thoao Inter esting Islands havo adopted many reforms which aro now under discussion hero and oIbo whoro. "POLITICS IN NEW ZEALAND" is the titlo of a pamphlet of 11G pages which tells all about the success of tho Torrcns sys tem of land transfers, government telegraph and telephone lines, government railroads, postal savings banks and other roforms. Price 25 onts postpaid. Address C. F. TAYLOR. Baker Building. Philadelphia. Pa. 1 ftiWMlftWWrtWwlWlWW )JMifWilMrow X DO YOU WANT O v? A GOOD STOCK PAPER C W Offer This Week the Following Combination THE COMMONER $1.00 " LIVE STOCK JOURNAL $1.00 (Chicago Established 37 years) v n! BOTH FOR $1.25 A YEAR. v WiMn'A'W'AMOT VVW'VWVM' JUST WHAT YOU WANT THE PLATFORM TEXT BOOK Bbimpul or Political Information Brought "Down" to Datb." "CONTAINS DEGRADATION OF INDEPENDENCE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES ALL. NATIONAL PLATFORMS OJT AH J?OMTICAI PARTIES, 8INOK THE IB KOHMATION, TO AND INCLUD ING THOBB OV 1004. V V V V V V V EVERY PUBLIC SPEAiqEB: OR WRITER NEEDS IT. PAPEB COVEB, 188 PAGES, 25 CENTS, POST-PAID Address THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. AAAAWWAAvAV PAT'S QUERY General Frederick Grant tells how, securing a license. To secure the li- at a certain military post in the west cense it would have to make applica tion to certain officials and present the evidence of its compliance with the conditions. Tho evidence would show that it controls so large a pro portion of the total product as to virtually fix the price of oil. It would ho denied a license. It then coujd not use tho mails, the railroads, or tho telegraph line3 to carry on its business, and ' would have to sell enough of its refineries to bring it within th5 provisions of the law. And these independent refineries would re store competition and, as no one of them would be permitted to obtain a monopoly, the reign of the Standard Oil company would be over. The same is true of the sugar trust, the steel trust, tho coal trust, the cracker trust, the starch trust, thealt trust, the har vester trust, the tobacco trust, etc., otc. It must bo remembered that a fed eral license is entirely different from federal incorporation. Tho license adds a federal remedy to existing state remedies without depriving the stato of any remedy it now has. Federal incorporation would interfere with Btato regulation or control, and for that reason is desired by tho trusts. As was said in the beginning, the s first question to bo decided is whether a private monopoly is bad. If bad, it ought to be destroyed, and it can be destroyed. Whether a private monop oly is bad depends somewhat upon whether competition is desirable or undesirable. If competition is desir able, then a private monopoly can not one night, just after the soundin? of "taps," a detail was called for from one of the companies to brine: from the married quarters to the guard houso a private who had been beating ins wiie. mrst Serceant Mumernii called for Corporal Needham and Pri vates Clancy and Moore to form the detail. The corporal and Private Moore at once got up from, tho cots and dressed for duty, but apparently Clancy was fast asleep, although but a moment before the appearance of the sergeant he had been animatedly conversing witn nis rellow soldiers "Como, Clancy," said the sergeant', poiung mm in tne ribs, "get up" Whereupon the Celt in great disgust arose, exclaiming as he did so: "Why don't ye wake some wan that ain't asleep?" San Francisco Examiner. THE POHICK PH10SOPHER "Now about these "noomerous scan dals;" observed the Pohick philoso pher, as lit bit off a fresh chew of navy plug, "the situation is jest this The papers say they wouldn't print 'em If the people didn't read 'em, and the people say they wouldn't read 'era IE the papers didn't print 'em, and thero ye bo." Louisville Courier-Journal. WAtWMWiniMEW A New Book By William J. Bryan, Entitled Under Other Flags Travels, Speeches, Lectures, HNCEMr. Bryan's Earopcantour a year ago ho has boon boslogod by requests for'coplos of lot tors describing his travels abroad. Thcso lottors togothor with a number of his lectures an other public-addresses, havo boon gathorod togothor and published in book form. Tho Kuro poan lottors contain Mr. Bryan's account of what ho saw and loarnod whllo In Europo, and present lntorostlng views of Iroland, England, Scotland, Franco, Switzerland, Germany, ItusBla, Holland, Bolglum, and tho Netherlands, togothor with a description of his visits with Count Tolstoy and I?opo Loo. In this volumo Mr. Bryan writes ontortalnlngly of tho "Birth of tho Cuban RopubUo." Ho also includod his locturos on "A Conquering Nation," and "Tho Valuo of an Ideal." Other artlcloffin tho volumo aro "Tho attraction of Farming," written for tho Saturday Evonlng Post; 'Tcaco," tho address dollvorod at tho nolland Sooloty dlnnor In 1901; "Naboth'a Vineyard," tho addross at tho gravo of Philo Shorman Bonnott; Democracy's Appeal to Culturo, addross boforo tho Alumni Association of Syracuso University; and an account of his recent trip to tho Grand Canyon entitled "Wondors of tho Wost." Tho book is lllustratod, woll printed on good papor and substantially bound. One of tho foaturos of "Under Other Flags" is tho "Notes on Europo," wrltton after his ro turn from abroad, and giving in briof form a resumo of tho many lntorostlng things ho saw. The sale of Under Other Flags has been Very gratifying to the author. Although the first edition appeared in December the fifth edition is now on the press. The Volume of sales increases from day to day. Agents find the book an easy seller and order them in lots of from 25 to 100. RIGHT1 How doth the little grizzly bear Shudder at his own shadow, For, soothly, these bo parlous times out tnero in Colorado. Now York Mail, Address The Commoner, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Tit .vrrri YiViVJvvviyiri;rfwnrLrrjuwiM Neatly Bound in Cloth 400 Page Octavo Under Other Flags, Postage Prepaid ". . $1.25 With The Commoner One Year $1.75 ...AGENTS WANTED... i I 'HimMNlMtW "j"3"- WU