ft- 4""r r?fWi,j& y 4 VOLUME 5, NUMBER 24 The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. Entered t the postofflcc at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second tlaes moll matter. Ore Year $1.00 I Three Months ....350 Six Month 5e I SlHfle Cpy.... . 5 InClubaof 5 or more, per Sample CopleH Free. year 75c I Foreign Postage 52c Extra. T, ' " SUBSCRIPTIONS can be sent direct to The Commoner. They can also be sent through newspapers which have adycr Used a clubbing rate, or through local agents, where sub agents have been appointed. All remittances should be sent by postolucc money order, express order, or by bonk draft on Kew York or Chicago. Do not send individual checks, stamps or money. RENEWALS. The date on yonr wrapper shows whenyour inbscriptlon will expire. Thus, Jan. 31, '05, means that pay ment has been received to and including the last issue of Jan uary, 1905. Two weeks arc required after money has been if ceived before the date on wropper.can be changed. CI1ANOE OP ADDRESS. Subscribers requesting e. change Of address must give OLD as well rb the KEW addrcu. ADVERTISING rates furnlbhcd upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nb. - :' Some strange Equitable tales go with the Equitable Mr. Hyde. Secretary Taft seems to have reposed quite successfully, too, on the Shaw presidential boom lid. That royal wedding in Germany caused al most as much stir as a divorce in the New York "400." It does look as if the Equitable policyholders would be settled a long time before' the Equita ble's squabble is. Is it possible that Norway's action is the forerunner of a regular South American system of ' revolutionizing in Europe? .Mr. Blgelow broke" down when he reached .tbe-.doors of the penitentiary. A lot of his dupes were broken up a long time before. The senate committee on railroad rate in vestigation hopes to have its report ready as soon as the railroad managers have collaborated. If Japan insists on a billion dollar indemnity will she take a few Russian grand dukes in part payment to the amount of thirty cents each? Unanimous consent is asked that Secretary Morton be allowed to retire from the cabinet: Aro thore any objections? The chair hears none. 'The St. Louis Globe Democrat declares that "money is no shield to guilt." Perhaps not, but a lot of rascals have found it a very convenient disguise. King Oscar received only $130,000 a year for reigning over Norway, and that is $2,000 a year less that Paul Morton is to receive for managing the Equitable. Governor Hanly of, Indiana believes that the anti-pass law was made to be enforced, and the public officials are tearfully bidding farewell to the pasteboards. Japan has won because of thorough organiza Vc?nnQ ocrocy has a great battle da.ted for 1908, and right now is the time to begin the work of .thorough organization. , I am determined to turn every rascal out " declares Mayor Weaver of Philadelphia. If he succeeds Philadelphia's democratic majority will be something enormous. Secretary Shaw says that no one is autho rized to announce that he is a candidate for the presidency. The secretary believes himself amply able in the line of vocalization. Even the most suspicious people must admit now that President Roosevelt meant it when he said he would not again accept a republican nomi nation for president. His declaration that ho would buy canal supplies in the cheapest market Byes ample proo: that he never will: - The Commoner.1 t Protectionists who disagree "vitb Secretary Taft's ideas on purchasing canal supplies will doubtless be referred to Mr. Roosevelt's remarks on free trade a few years ago. The "standpatters" and the "no shelter" dis putants might wait until President Roosevelt is through with Russia and Japan and then ask him to take charge of their dispute. It is beginning to strike the most sanguine that the prosecution of the railway managers who violated the rebate law is about to exhaust itself with thundering in the index. Doubtless General Gosvenor.has figures at hand to prove that the opponents of the "stand patters" are materially aiding in making the general's re-election extremely difficult. The Atlantic Monthly declares that "eating is no joke." There are several thousand people in this country who would laugh heartily on receiving an invitation to a square meal. Henry James says the English of American newspapers is appallingly bad. Perhaps, but it makes more interesting reading than the "splen didly good" English of Mr. James' novels. With a fine eye for future possibilities the Houston Post remarks that if the railway mana gers do not meet the people half way the people will yank the railway magnates all the way. St. Louis wants $100,000,000 from Uncle Sam to broaden and deepen the Mississippi. What, and add some more to the charges for the longer haul over the bridge by the terminal company? The report that President Roosevelt favors a red-headed man for president reminds us that Mr. Shaw will soon be in a position to suit unless Mr. Taft quits pesticating "with the Shaw boom. ' w The newspapers that are so roundly de nouncing President Shea of the Chicago Team sters' union for accepting bribe money should turn a little of 'their attention to the liberal ad vertisers who put up the bribe money, if any was really up. Cutting Government Red Tape President Roosevelt has appointed a commit tee to investigate and report on what changes are needed to place the execu tive business of the govern ment upon the most efficient and economic basis. It other words, President Roosevelt wants to sever the immense tangle of red tape that is wound roun,d the business of the govern ment. Surely the committee appointed has a job before it in comparison with which the job of stable cleaning tackled by Hercules. sinks into insignificance. If the committee succeeds in its mission, however, it will be entitled to the thanks of the people. Uncle Sam is entitled to better returns for his money than he now gets from the clerks and bureau officials who occupy elegant suites and offices in the magnificent buildings n Washington. The more red tape the president cuts the better he will please the people who are footing the bills. Deserves Punishment the More Speaking of the Bigelow case the Milwaukee Sentinel says that "considering his "age, habits ut me, anu tno Honorable po sition from which he fell, that penalty (ten years) is heavy enough to suit evsn vo of 1 ,, - . , vindictive enemy he could have." But what has his -habits and liis former honorable position to do with it? If anything at all It should have added to his sentence! There is entirely too much mawkish sentiment evidenced every time a man like Bigelow is punished. Men who have the advantage of high position, and all that sort of thing, have even less excuse than the average man for sinning. They know better,, which is not always the case with the poor criminals caught in the act. The better a man's opportunities for realizing the dif lerence between right and wrong the more de serving he is of punishment when he does com mit a sin. There is no vindictiveness manifest by the general public against Bigelow, but a renovated public sentiment is growing very tired ' of pleas in extenuation made for aristocratic, edu cated and prominent men who have been cauehf stealing from the public. " Ught It is too much to .hope that th ,.. . against our present barbarous methods of c 1 keep Agitating Reform hrniinp- tho Vntiiu - -. . uei have any appreciable effect this year. A system that is the result of two or thrPO 1 erations of indulgence is not to be wiped out in a year or two. But the pro tests should continue, for in. good time reform Vill come. Common sense will triumph sooner or later, and when it does the Fourth of Jul instead of being a day of blood and slaughter and noise, will be a day of intelligent rejoicing over the winning of independence. As it is now. the day is looked forward to with dread by people who are old enough to appreciate its dangers, and looked back upon with sorrow by those who have foolishly toyed with the dynamite cracker and the deadly blank cartridge. There is a queer situation in England queer from the standpoint of American politics. For three years the govern Very ment has been trying to hush Refreshing up a scandal growing out of Sight the administration of the war department during the Boer war in South Africa, and involving the loss of $35,000,000 through corruption and graft in the handling of war supplies. But both parties in Great Britain insisted on a full and fair investiga tion, and the result is some disclosures that catch numerous people of high degree. The party in power was just as anxious to hae an impartial investigation as the minority party. This is so contrary to what has been happening in the United States during the past seven or eight years that it is postively refreshing. Look ing back upon the postal scandals, upon the trust investigations and the transportation disputation it is. easy to see how different- things are over in the "right little, tight little isle." LENDING A HAND H. R. Thomas, Logan, Ohio., writes: Here .Tvith list t of 13 new subscribers for. The Com moner. N. P. Condon, Donora, Pa., writes: I tako pleasure in handing you herewith eleven sub scribers, ten new and one renewal. . John C. Winterringer, Buckeye City, Ohio, sends list of seven subscribers, part new and part renewals. - J. A. Snyder, Easton, 111., sends list of 12 subscribers. Dr. J. M. Young, Little Rock, Ark., sends list of six subscribers, five new and one renewal. W. C. Rove, Galion, Ohio, sends in list of seven subscription cards. L. B. Wall, Starks, Fla., sends in eleven sub scription cards for eleven new subscribeis for The Commoner. , According to the terms of the special sub scription offer, cards each good for one year's subscription to The Commoner, will be furnished in lots of five, at the rate of $3 per lot. This places the yearly subscription rate at 60 cents. Anyone ordering these cards may sell them for $1 each, thus earning a commission of $2 on each lot sold, or he may sell them at the cost price and find compensation" in the fact that he has contributed to the educational campaign. These cards may be paid for when ordered, or they may be ordered and remittance made after they have been sold. 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