-,- j Tmil i-i-r f m i m) i infrBW ' i, -" Vv The Commoner. VOLUME 6, NUMBER 17tw i w tr" f " f s - f K ff IP a a Vfl t The Commoner ISSUED WlUUIAM J .UttTAW KUllor and Proprietor. IlIOUAUD L. MjrrOAIiVM Associate Kdltor. WEEKLY OllAlUJW W. UllYAH Publisher. Kdltorial Rooms and Business Office JKM-330 So. lSth Street. filtered at the poatofflce at Uocoln, Nebraska, as second class mail matter. One Year $1.00 Six Months ...30o In Club of 5 or more per Year 75o Three Month ....25o Slntfle Copy....- So Sample Copies Free Foreign Postage 52o Extra. SUBSCRIPTIONS can bo ocnt direct to Tho Comi monor. Tlicy can also bo sent through newspapers which have advertised a clubbing rato, or through local agents, where sub-agents havo been appointed. All remittances should bo sent by postofllco money order, express order, or by bank draft on New York or Chicago. Do not send individual checks, stamps or money. . , DISCONTINUANCES.-It Is found that alartre majori ty of our Bubscrlocrs prefer not to have their subscriptions interrupted and their flics broken in case they fall to remit before expiration. It Is therefore assumed that continuance Is desired unless subscribers order discontinuance cither when subscrlhlnir or at any time during the year. PREbkrJ TATION COPIES: Many persons subscribe for friends, in tcndlnir that the paper shall stop at the end of the year. II instructions are Riven to this effect they will receive atten tion at the proper time. . .. RJENEWALS. Tho dato on your wrapper showfl when your subscription will expire Thus, Jan. 31, Ob, means that payment has been received to and Includ ing 1 o last issue of January, 380G. Two weeks are required after money has been recolved beforo the dato on wrapper can bo changed. CHANGE OF ADDRESS. Subscribers requesting a change of address must give OLD as well as the N1S W address. ADVERTISING rates furnished upon application. A.ddrcss all communications to THE COMMONER. Lincoln, Neb .' ..After all the "man with stirred congress quite a hit. the , muckrake" ' Senator Spooner's reply to Senator Bailey's great speech seems to have exhausted itself in the preliminary advertising, The French having perfected a new battleship, destroyer it is up to some other country to per fect a battleship destroyer, .destroyer. .'',. A scientist says that automobiling will euro insomnia. Perhaps; but trying to get the auto mobile causes the disease in the first place. ; In 1896 the man who spoke of a federal judge as President Roosevelt spoke of Judge Humphrey was called "anarchist," "agitator," "traitor," and a few other choice names. They did it then to earn their pay; they refrain4 from it now irl order to retain their place on the payroll. The democratic national committeeman from Nebraska, James C. Dahlman, has just been elected mayor of Omaha by' a majority approxi mating 3,000.' He is the first democratic mayor elected in Omaha In sixteen years. He promised the people a thoroughgoing democratic adminis tration and his word is good. The Milwaukee Sentinel claims that the dry dock "Dewey" continues to smash all slow pro gress records. In its enthusiastic republicanism the Sentinel has overlooked the progress of re publican revision of the tariff. Compared with republican tariff revision the drydock "Dewey" makes a San Francisco relief train look like it was going backwards. VJP? hOU!e bil1 t0 remve the revenue tax fiom denatured alcohol is now over in the sen- wPSln? Jmmjttee of which Senator Nel ? 3f nldri?h,is chirma- Senator Aldrich is the father-in-law of John D. Rockefeller, jr. Free denatured alcohol will be a severe blow to the Standard Oil company. Puzzle: What will become of the house bill to remove the revenue tax from denaturized alcohol? PREACHING VS. PRACTICE 4 A,fTY weeks ag0 Mr- Jonn D- Rockefeller, 3;., told his Sunday school class that a lie, either spoken or acted, was never justifiable, and he animadverted at length upon tho wickedness of lying. Tho other day young Mr. Rockefeller vis ited a Connecticut town and registered at a hotel as "John Davidson." True, that is .the young man's name, but just tho same ho registered it with the purpose of deceiving! people and hiding his identity. It was one of Hiose "acted lies" which young Mr. Rockefeller s severely repro- bated a few weeks ago. It is with sorrow., and. anguish that we call tho attention of the Sun day school class to this lapse from virtue, and we beseech its members. to immediately wrestle with their erring teacher and give him every needed assistance in getting back into the paths of y'tue and truthfulness, It is, sad to see such prominent examplars of our youth lapsing, and we dq not intend to witness it without rising in protest. JJJ WHERE THE ELKINS' LAW IS LAME In imposing a fine upon the railroad men convicted of granting rebates, Federal Judge Be thea at Chicago expressed regret that the im prisonment clause had been repealed. Judge Bethea said: "If there was a provision for im prisonment in the penitentiary much more might be accomplished." It will be remembered that the imprisonment clause was repealed by the Elkins law, and we were assured that a mere fine would make the law much more effective. But these so-called cap tains of industry havo just as much dread of prison bars as tho ordinary mortal has. As Jere Black .said in discussing tho violations of law committed by the railroad magnates of his day, if these men knew that a continuation of imposi tion oh the public meant imprisonment in jail "they would no more rob a shipper on the rail road Mian they would pick a pocket in a prayer meeting."' JJJ DANGER OF ARBITRARY POWER The danger of conferring unlimited and ar bitrary power upon men has been emphasized by occurrences at San TTrancisco during the reign of terror in that city. It is now generally con ceded that the troops were altogether too reckless in their shooting, and that a number of innocent people were killed by over-zealous militiamen. No one will deny the necessity of extreme measures under circumstances such as confronted the peo- pie of San Francisco. All civil authority was ; destroyed for 'die time-being, and' even martial , law was not given control. Under such condi tions it was necessary togive unusual power to the troops on guard, and doubtless their pres ence prevented many horrible crimes. But, as might have been expected, the granting of such unusual power resulted in tho death of niapv in nocent people at the hands of men only toor.udy to exercise power without discrimination. There is the danger in granting unlimited power to falli-r" ble men. A JJJ HOW CAN THEY EXPLAIN IT? A recent bulletin from the bureau of labor presents some statistics that would keep the tariff "standpatters" busy with explanations were it not for the fact that tariff "standpatters" never ex plain anything. The bulletin shows that the cost of living has increased 29.2 per cent since 1897, and that most of the commodities upon which the increase in price has been made are sold more cheaply for export than for home consump tion. The tariff "standpatters" may not now deem this matter worthy of attention, but the men who work for a wage that has not increased in pro portion to the increase in the cost of living may take a notion to do some voting at coming elec tions. JJJ THE CHAIRMAN KNEW The Kansas republicans in state convention assembled reaffirmed their devotion to the high protective tariff, but the voters of KanBas will not forget that W. R. Stubbs, chairman of the re publican state committee in calling the conven tion to order said: ,"We know that the greatest robber in this country today is the great steel trust; made possible by an unreasonable protec tive tariff. I believe that reasonable and conser vative resolutions should be passed along this line." - WASHINGTON CITY LETTER Washington, D. C, May 7. -South Carolina has more farmers in congress than any state in the nnion. Both of the South Carolina senators before they, were sent to Washington were com pelled to make their living by tilling the soil. Senator t Latimer, however, in recent years has been engaged in other pursuits and is reputed to .have gotten, together more of this world's goods than his colleague, Mr. Tillman in the upper branch of congress, Two of the members of the house of representatives from South Carolina also record themselves in the congressional di rectory, as farmers. They are Mr. Aiken and Mr. Ellerbe. But the. former has had a side busi ness, for hevis a fine shorthand writer and before coming to congress earned good pay in report ing for the courts. Colonel John H. Bankhead of the Sixth Ala bama district, who was recently defeated at the primary by Capt. Richmond, Pearson Hobson has never had any other occupation except that of farmer. His, district is particularly agricultural but the voters preferred the naval hero and de cided that Capt. Hobson should represent them. Representative Pollard, of Nebraska, writes himself down in the directory as a farmer and in addition records the fact that he has a 200 acre apple orchard. "Always lived on a, farm," is what Col. "Lon" Livingston, of the Atlanta district of Georgia says about himself in the directory. Several other members of the house put themselves down in the directory as "farmers and bankers." They are Mr. Hull of Iowa, Mr. McKinley of Illinois, and Mr. Reeder of Kansas. Mr. Reeder states that he has the largest irrigated farm in his common wealth. Some of these other combination farmers and business men are recorded as follows: Repre sentative Sibley, of Pennsylvania, manufacturer and farmer; the same is true of Mr. Gordon Lee, of Georgia; and the Hon. James W. Wadsworth, chairman of the house committee on agriculture commonly called by his friends in-that body Farmer" Wadsworth, owns immense landed es tates, but his principal business is breeding fino stock, horses, cattle and sheep. "By occupation he is a farmer." That is what the Hon. Wm. W. Cocks, of the First dis trict of New York writes in the directory about himself. Mr. Cocks represents the district in which President Roosevelt has his legal residence He goes on to tell that the district is normally democratic by about 2,000, but notwithstanding that fact he managed to pull through two years ago by a plurality of 329. A few days ago Ex-Senator James L. Pugh, of Alabama, for the first time this session visited the august body of which he was an honored and influential member for eighteen years. Mr. Pugh was a member of the house, of representatives as long ago as 1859. There is now no man in public life at Washington who was in either branch of congress when Mr." Pugh was first sent here by his constituents. The nearest one to him is Senator Allison of Iowa, but he did not come to Washington until about the middle of the civil war, having been first elected a member of. the house of representatives from, his state. Senator Allison is In his 78th year. Ex-Senator Pugh is going on 87, and although he had an at tack of illness last winter he seems to be fully recovered and his friends would not be surprised if he were to round out another decade. It is a remarkable fact that the two most venerable men in the .senate are from Alabama. Senator Pettus will be 85 his next birthday and' Senator Morgan will be 82. Among the other venerable senators are the following: Messrs. Teler of Colorado, who will be 76 on May 23; Cullom of Illinois, 77 in November; Frye of Maine 75 on September 2; Piatt of New York, 7d on July 15; Depew was 73 last month; and Proctor of Vermont, will be 75 on Juno 1. All ? . , ,senators named are actively engaged in legislative duties except Mr. Depew. .. Inasmuch as Captain Hobson has announced that his sole desire in getting into congress is to work for the construction of a stupendous navy to cost anywhere from one to two billion dol larsit is appropriate to mention that the am bitious young retired officer will have a hard time as a democrat getting on the naval affairs com mittee of the house even should his party con- ? tllat body ln tlle next congress. Until the big Btick" policy of the government is sent to the rear large appropriations for the navy will be made. Business concerns, of course, are deep ly interested, and it is natural that they should want to get as many contracts as possible. Older members of the house will demand to be appoint ed on the naval affairs committee, and the chances for Capt. Hobson aro looked upon as being rather slim to land on thig committee. ALFRED J. STOFER. v I. ,i)j-ijtA,. v.BdlAlClVY'&tM