" "'"?''" l?R',''',",'"$5:$Wrfijl"' ",v "" wr - "I-.tit Commoner. WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR VOL7. No. 26. Lincoln, Nebraska, July 12, 1907. Whole Number 338. -mwvpuB m'WTr?1gy!. 9 """ TJPCv'vCTp5w: Am. A i . . Tke CONTENTS TRUSTS AND THEIR TREATMENT NOT A MATTER OF AMBITION THE LINE UP LAWSON'S REMEDY EVADING THE LAW RAILROAD MAGNATES PLEASED JACKSON ON MONEY SURPLUS LOCATING THE BLAME ROCKEFELLER ON THE WITNESS STAND WASHINGTON LETTER - PARAGRAPHIC PUNCHES COMMENT ON CURRENT TOPICS HOME DEPARTMENT WHETHER COMMON OR NOT NEWS OF THE WEEK "INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNTABILITY" THE REMEDY NOT A MATTER OF AMBITION Those who urge the nomination of a "con servative" candidate by the democratic conven tion studiously insist that "Mr. Bryan's friends say he does not want the nomination." But is this the real issue? The presidential nomina tion ought "not to be regarded as a compliment to be handed,, to some one. because .hewouldnbd-ww pleased to have it. A candidate should be se lected hecause the rank and file of the party WANT HIM NOMINATED not merely because he wants the nomination. First, what will the party stand f6r? Second, who can best repre sent these principles in the campaign? These questions ought to control the selection. Men's ambitions ought not to count for much in a presidential contest. OOOO THE LINE UP This is the way. the situation looks to some observers: Pro-Harriman Anti-Harriman Theodore Roosevelt "18 f(i . W L-- E. H. Harriman H. H. Rogers Wm. Rockefeller J. H. Schiff James Stillman J. P. Morgan J. J. Hill Thomas F. Ryan George J. Gould W. H. Moore James Speyer B. JP. Yoakum D. G. Reed Stuyvesant Fish One really responsible man in jail, one real originator of the schemes and transactions which are contrary to the public interests legally lodged in the penitentiary would be .worth more than a thousand corporations mulcted in fines, if the reform is to be genuine and pcrmar nent---President Woodrow Wilson of Princeton. Edwin Hawley ,- J. R. Keene '" , Wall Street Journal. OOOO PERHAPS Mn Bryan might as well have answered the World's plain question with a disquisition on the declaration of independence. Milwaukee Sentinel. Perhaps, but if he had, would the World and the Sentinel have understood it any better than they did Mr. Bryan's answer to the World's question, "What is a democrat?" OOOO REFORM BY "FRIENDS" As the republican tariff refoVmers Insist that the reduction of the schedule shall be left to the beneficiaries of protection, why not insist that railroad regulation be left to the railway presidents and anti-trust legislation to the trust magnates? It would be just as reasonable. OOOO FOR THE MASSES The "leaders" are still worrying about can didates' and horses light, -dark and colorless are beihgtrotted out; but the "leaders" must' not forget' that in a democratic party authority comes up fromthe people-not down from the leaders. The voter is supreme and his will is Jaw. TRUSTS AND THEIR TREATMENT Senator Beveridge enumerates seven evils of -the trusts. First, rebates, which he says "we -have ended." Let us hope that these have been ended, although the tenderness with which the public deals with the Standard Oil company, after it has been convicted of violating the law in twelve hundred different cases, is not en couraging. Many of our college presidents are still anxious to secure from Mr. Rockefeller a part of the money that he has made by violating the law. Would they be as willing to solicit from the professional safe breaker or from the ordinary highwayman? Why should grand lar ceny be regarded as a less heinous crime than petty larceny? The second evil is "contributions," and he assures us that "we have ended them." Not yet. It is not sufficient to prevent contributions from corporations, for where there is a great temptation to aid in campaigns, the officers will find ways, of contributing that will pot bring the corporation within the letter of the law. It is necessary that the contributions of individ uals shall be made public where those con- ' tributions are to any considerable amount, and it is also necessary that the publication shall be made in advance of the election in order that the voter may know what influences are at work in the campaign. One of the Wash ington correspondents has reported the presi dent as considering a law which will provide all the parties with necessary campaign funds to be paid out of the public treasury. I do not know whether this statement Is authoritative, but it is a suggestion worthy of consideration. If each party was furnished with a moderate campaign fund in proportion to the votes which it cast at the preceding election, and then all other contributions were prohibited by law, cor ruption in politics might be reduced to a mini mum. And why should not the reasonable and necessary expenses of a campaign be paid by, the public, If the campaign is carried on in tho interest of the public? At present, in any con troversy between predatory wealth and tho masses of the people, the corporations which are seeking special privileges and favors are able to furnish enormdus campaign funds to the party subservient to them, and no one can doubt that these campaign funds are furnished upon an undBrstanding, expressed or implied, that they shall be allowed to reimburse themselves out of the pockets' of the people. The third trust evil enumerated by Senator Beveridge is found in bad meats and Impure foods, and these, he assures us, "we have end ed." That remains to be seen. The pure food law is not yet perfected, and it has not yet been 4 1 , yawajjgjtotajM mt-; -.nu