lWH''w,''iyHiwpiy''.K.'yT'Hqgjyv -v SEPTEMBER 20, lf07' The Commoner. 15 THE COST OP liXVING THE . TARIFF Up to about 1803, while the high tariff was an insidious means of tax ing the majority for the benefit of the minority, it was claimed in its defense that workingmen in protect ed industries received Hho greater share of the steady increase in pro duction. That 1b no longer the case. By 1900 the trust movement was getting into swing, but had not fully wrought its astonishing changes. In ten years the number of manufactur ing establishments had increased forty-four per cent, the total capital thirty-five per cent. The increase in value of product less the cost of raw materials was thirty-four per cent, the increase in total wages only twenty-three per cent. Production and capitalization had both grown faster than the wage fund. "Miscellaneous expenses," a sinis ter term, rose sixty-two per cent. The next five years saw the great "American invasion" of Europe by cut-rate prices, while high prices were maintained at home by trusts. In 1905, at the end of this event ful half decade, combination was in full swing. The number of estab lishments had increased only four per cent, capitalization by forty-one per cent. None of the promised economies of large production had appeared. The large factories, con trolling 81.5 per cent of the nominal capital, employed only 71.6 per cent of the wageworkers. The salaries account had risen by fifty per cent, and the sinister miscellaneous ex penses by sixty-one per cent. Wages and product had grown by almost the same increment, 29.9 and 29.7 per cent respectively, but both were far surpassed by the rise in sal aries, superintendence and miscellan eous expense, and by the swollen cap ital which demands its profits either in dividends or by "unloading" stock upon the public. In Canada within the same period the total of wages paid rose by forty-five per cent. -But 'value product per employe" rose thirty-one per cent, the average indi vidual wage only twenty-seven per cent. There also the wagearner un der a tariff did not get his share' of increased production or of the econo mies of invention. Mr. Haldane, the British war sec retary, hai just placed an order for 400,000 horseshoes in this country. Horseshoes are protected by a tariff of one cent a pound. Under Shat duty the American buyer of horse shoes pays a considerable- higher price for them than the British army. This is only one recent example of the familiar fact of high prices for home consumption, low prices for the foreign buyer. The Standard Oil monopoly is a fattened child of the tariff. Oil itself is duty free. In practice the Stand ard would stamp out foreign competi tion as it stamps out domestic com petition; and upon many of its more than a hundred by-products it is heavily protected. So It too sells abroad far cheaper than at home. The tariff duties on potatoes, blan kets, knit goods, tin plate, woollen yarns "and clothing, soap, oilcloth, linen, glassware, affect directly every shopping woman; upon a thousand articles they affect her Indirectly. A reasonable reduction'of the tariff, not In 1909, but now, would reduce in every homo the cost of living. New York World. Ahiy Don't you give your heart the same cluinco you do tho other organs? Why? Because when any other or gan is in trouble, It refuses to work, and yow hasten to repair It. The heart, tho ever faithful servant never refuses as loner as It has power to move, but continues to do the liest it can, getting; weaker and weaker, until It Is past repair, and then stops. It is just as sick as tho other organs, but because it will work you let it. However, it's not too late for a "change of heart," ho remember Dr. Miles' Heart Cure will give your heart strength and vi tality to overcome Dizziness, Palpita tion, Short Breath, Faint Spoils, Pains In Heart and Side, and all other Heart aches and difficulties. "My heart would ache and palpitate terribly, and at times I could hardly breathe. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure has re stored me. to perfect health, and I am very grateful. MISS EMMA J. BARTON. No. 1 Sill St., Watertown, N. T. Tho first bottle "will benefit,, if not, the druggist will return your money. FEDERAL LIMITATIONS Roosevelt and Taft have joined forces this week in urging a danger ous usurpation of power by the na tional government. To each of these leaders of republican thought the federal authority appears tho only effective power for the restraint of trusts and the great monopoly cor porations. Thoy would brush away the authority of the states by strained construction of the federal constitu tion, because some states, or all states, fall short of their ideas as to needed remedies for generally con ceded evils. National incorporation, which President Roosevelt so emphatically advocates, Is not a democratic doc trine and will not have democratic support. Democrats will unhesitat ingly join issues on that proposition. Democracy recognizes that the fed eral authority must be employed for the effective control of all public service corporations doing an inter-, state business, and perhaps, also, to some extent for the successful regu lation of the great monopoly corpor ations that are not conducting busi ness of a public-service character. But democracy holds that federal remedies ought to be added to state remedies, not substituted for them. There is nothing vague in tho dis tinction. Democracy would preservo that division of power between the states and the national government which the makers of the United States constitution planned with ex ceeding care and the wisest fore sight. They deny the right to force implied meanings by farfetched con structions wliich defy the spirit of the instrument and are as unneces sary as unlawful. It is not a proper function of the national government to compel the people of the states to administer their affairs along exactly tho same lines in every state, whenever these affairs touch the interests of a cor poration engaged in business of an Interstate character. " There Is just as good a reason today as there was when the organic law of the United States was framed that the people of the various states should have un restricted power to govern their local affairs as they please, except to the extent to which the constitution has explicitly conferred power on the fed eral government. In its control of interstate com merce the United States can add to the remedies provided by state laws, without attempting to displace the states or usurp their powers. That is the function it is intended to per form under the spirit of our consti tutional government which has so far preserved for us the "vital ele ments of a true democracy. To a centralized national government, dominating puppet states deprived of every substance of individual sover eignty, the American people are as much opposed today as they have ever been, and they have more than once in the past given emphatic ex pression to their feeling on this sub ject. They will see to it that this issue is not forgotten in the cam paign of 1908. St Louis Republic. Home There arc a thousand Httlc tiling to be clone abotit the farm iind the home that you munt do yourself If they nre done nt all. To do them rightly and cni)y you require flood tool. 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(. aM " A rm anl.l - - a tin iir-ai in luc wuuu iw w , Havfrtrtal.l-YVenv the f relent. i.. ...4 .... tltf lit m uuirsniccu mr icmot b""""" iffi.. MiflM ft rfcMtAalf'a arA Iliiliiuu uwimu. mw hwi . J.4.. .f ........ ...si .-a.. lrra " Vrrv rr naavnr dim or miuct irw" nmwuT trUI,batlfall7 flnlilwd. with nr ntw Impror- I n ! . . . i.l r . TJ.I AC Jnfinit lorauwi na &mi mtimmw. lUKMISr DIOT Mp III' ptMu. nirion, iw JHI2ERMK The Omaha World-Herald AIILY EDITI3D j-i . JVJMWSY l-l DJSMOCKATfti Our Special Offer PubliahcrH' Our Prlco Prlco With Tho Commoner Dally World-IIernld tyi.QQ $4.00 Dally World-IIcrnlil, ISxeefit Sundny. . .' 3.00 3.2K Scml-Wcckly World-Herald , .50 1.28 SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS NOW TO THE COMMONER, Lincoln," Nebraska WILLIS J. ABBOT. Succeeds HON. CHAMP CLARK j Newspapers desiring1 a strong democratic political letter from Washing ton, READY SET, can occuro it by ordering MR. ABBOT'S letter from tho AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION. THE I.TCTTKR IS TWO COMJMN8 IN LENGTH. THE PRICE IS 7Bc PEIl LETTISH. It will replace Jn the AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION'S service the Democratic letter so long written by CONGRESSMAN CHAMP CLARK. Address American Press Association, 45 Park Place, New York Watson's Jeffersonian Magazine HON. THOMAS E. WATSON, EDITOR Published Monthly at Atlanta, Ga. Subscription Price $1,50 a year By special arrangement with Mr. Watson we are able to offer a year's sub Bcription to Mr. Watson's Jofforsonion Magazine and g mt a year's subscription to THE COMMONER HJ K fi BOTH FOR P A V - ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO THE COMMONER LINC0LSf NEBRASKA J Ul -.u ' , -ij