.m- " 1' " ' 'JJfl'A1 51"- tptw r-MtesSft' WW?W VOLUME 8, NUMBER U 6 it ft 1 it The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. WllMAM.I. llHVAN Killtnrniul I'lnprlHor. II It'll A flit I.. MlflCAI.I'K Afforialf ICiIIIor. OiiAlti.ia W. IIIIVAK I'ubltxlmr. Killlorlnl IWioniK iiml Hiwlnrwj Ofllco SiM-aSO FoiiUl 12tli Hlrrpf. I-iilfHd nt Hip I'oMofllcr nl Lincoln. Neb., nf K-ctniiI-eliiuf mnltor OicYcnr - 1S1.0O t UMniilliH - .r J i ( 1 1 1 1 1 (il I'Ivp or morn, Ppi Yuir ,7ti 5o 5o 'llll'PD ItlmitliH muk'o 'iy KmiiplP CnjiU I'mo. I-'oiPlKti rMiip fVJ (Viilf TCxtrn. SUMSCIUI'TIONN run ho went dln-ct to 'J lo Com inoiMT. Tln-y run iil.so ho writ thfouKli nowspapcra which huvc udvorllHi'd u clubblntf rul or throun Jociil fiKditM, wlu-iv imh-fiKciitK have brun appoint ed. All ivnilttiuiccM Hhonld ho writ by poHtofllco money order, expren.M order, or hy hank dratt on New York or Chlcajo. Do not wend individual checltH, Hi iimpH or money. . , . ' DISCONTINUANCES It In found that a largo majority of mir KUbwrlbcr-H prefer not to navo their HtihHerlptloiiH interrupted n;id their nics broken in nine they fall to remit before expiration. It Ih therefore nHHiimed that eontlnuanco is desired nnleii.'i HiibKerUierH order di.seontinuanco, olther when HiihrterihliiK or at any timo durliiK tho year. Presentntlon topics: Many persons subscrlbo for friends, Intending that the paper shall stop at tho end of tin- year. Jf Instructions aro Riven to that effeet they will receive attention at tho proper time. HIONICWAI.S -The date on your wrapper shows tho time to which your subscription is paid. Thus January a I, OK. means that payment lias boon re ceived to and Including tho last issue of January, 1908. Two weeks are required after money has been received before the date on wrapper can bo eharwred. CIIA Nt.'F, OK AIl)ltns.S Subscribers requesting a change of address must give OLD as well as NEW address. ADVIOllTlMNt; Hates furnished upon applica tion. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, L'ncoln, Neb. A Chino-Japaneso war may, after all, bo tho solution of tho "yellow peril" problem. That, congressional investigating committee Booms determined to go to the bottom of the Bubmurlno Inquiry. Tho Chicago convention may be compara tively noiseless, but, the platform will emit the Biimo clouds of smoke to obscure the real issues. Tho Washington Post, says of Mr. T-Iarrl-man: "Uo is a practical man." Now, let's see; where have we heard that said of Mr. Harriinan before? "Boss" Cox of Cincinnati, dethroned bv Taft, is one of Ohio's delegates and instructed for Taft. We presume that the proper guards will bo sent along to see that Mr. Cox stands hitched. The Omaha young man who tried to Crlghton $n,000 from a banker by nourishing a bottle of water made a huge mistake. Finan ciers do not make their money by using water that way. Walter Wollman has discovered great ex citement in the south over the "Ohio plan" of reducing southern representation. Mr. Well man also discovered the north pole via the Hy ing machine route. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Public Lodger asks: "If labor must, share the profits, should it not also share the losses?" Doubtless labor would be willing to stand its share of the losses if given a fair share of the profits. Pennsylvania's "big four" are not the emi nent gentlemen selected to be delegates-at-large to the Chicago convention. Thev are tho other eminent gentlemn found guilty of grafting a few millions in building and furnishing Pennsylva nia s new state house. The Commoner. lor? We've seen criminals escape through a Loch iilcnl ity. Congress has decided to replace the motto on tho coins, and we are anxious to have ocular proof that it has been done. A Now York paper has started a discussion on how to give the democratic party new life. The best way would be for it and some of its favored interests to get off the party's neck. "Mr. Parker was overwhelmed," says the New York World. And Mr. Parker was selected by tho World as the standard bearer. Now the World wants to select another. The democratic students of Harvard have organized a democratic club and have estab lished an olllclal organ, the Harvard Democrat 1 ho Democrat reprints tho Nebraska democratic platform and refers to it as "a clear statemont of tho principles of the party." unont The Philadelphia Public Ledger assorts that the verdict of guilty secured against "fom public servants who had abused their trust will vindicate the good name of the commonwe-lth Wouldn't It be well to wait and ee hat ie higher courts of Pennsylvania do in the nun- Captain Simm's complaints about our navy's gun practice have not yet been endorsed by any one of several hundred Spanish gentlemen who witnessed that last great exhibition thereof. Tho Philadelphia Public Ledger opposes the Nebraska democratic platform because, as the Ledger claims, it is inimical to "ordinary rules of business conduct." Ordinary rules of busi ness conduct in state and municipal affairs in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia mean anything to get the money. Asserting that the "cost of living is less" the Philadelphia Public Ledger says: "Only tea, vinegar, potatoes, apples, grains and a few other food articles seem to be higher than at this time last year." But hasn't the Public Ledger included about all in its enumeration? Potatoes and food articles made from grain con stitute the bulk of food consumed by working men, and higher grain means higher meat. A reader of The Commoner suggests that "counterfeit capital" is a phrase more easily understood than "watered stock," "fictitious capitalization" or "over capitalization." The term is a good one, for the stock is counterfeit in the sense that it pretends to be valuable when it is not. The phrase "counterfeit capital" can be added to the others and those who want to call attention to the evils of the system can take his choice. Senator Beveridge says: "The chorus of denunciation of the president is swelled by wrongdoers whom he has not reached and can not reach as president." Then Senator Bever idge points to a couple of financial concerns as horrible examples, forgetful of the fact that one of the president's most trusted cabinet advisors is the eminent legal authority that showed these wrongdoers how they could keep the letter of the law while breaking its spirit. WHERE IS REESE M. CHAPMAN? Mrs. Sarah Chapman, Saltville, Va., desires to learn the whereabouts of her son, Reese M Chapman. The boy left his home ten years ago and tho last word from him received by the mother, was in February, 1908. Mrs. Chapman believes that her boy is in some one of the west ern states. When last heard from he was in Mason City, la. If any one knows of tho where abouts of Reese M. Chapman a message to tho mother at Saltville, Va., will be greatly appreciated. SENATOR LAFOLLETTE'S GREAT SPEECH (Continued from Page 5) lion companies of the country and those inter ested in their securities have been able to sue cossfully exert in preventing legislation m "Today we are confronted with tho aston ishing proposition that congress shall hold out legislative inducement for the exaction of trans Donation charges which shall net a continuous tour per cent dividend on railway capitaliz-i Hon It is idle to say that this measure , 8 In ite d in ts scope, that it has reference simply to -i United issue of railway bonds as security t-Tp is blind, indeed, who does not see the ultimnro effect of a proposition which direct!? " indi rectly raises a standard for the payment on hxed dividend upon the railroad cap"taH7atio2 without regard to the valuation of the pronortv "The certain effect of this actionTy" con gross is to stimulate every railroad company within the purview of this statute to mainta n the position of its bonds within the favored class, and every other railway company to ni nl iiy at the earliest possible moment for ic? mu son to the favored class. It is plain sir t the noonday sun, that the direct effect of this proposition will be to advance railway charges, and that it will identify the government with a maintenance of rates in all cases where it has accepted railway bonds for currency cir culation." He insisted that the interstate commerce commission is not empowered to ascertain tho value of the physical property of the railwiy companies of the country and strongly favored such a valuation as the only means for fixing railroad rates. "When once the government invites the na tional banks of the country to invest in them for the patriotic purpose of averting financial disaster, these railroad bonds will become sacred paper," he said. "The good faith of the country will be pledged to defeat any legislation that suggests a disturbance of the four per cent divi dend upon the stocks. The senator from Rhode Island will be heard in solemn warning. We will be told that the bonds were bought by the banks, not to make money, but to be held in readiness to protect the credit and commerce of the country; that bond markets are easily disturbed; that such markets are delicate and sensitive; such legislation menacing dividends even upon grossly watered stocks would alarm the holders of these bonds and force them upon a falling market at great sacrifice, possibly pro ducing panic and leaving the banks but partially prepared to take out emergency currency. "Could any plan be devised which would be more effective in blocking the way of legisla tion for the physical properties of railways and defeating the final reduction of rates to a just and reasonable basis?" Senator LaFollette resumed his speech March 19. The Washington correspondent for the Chicago Record-Herald referring to this sec tion of the address says: He read a letter signed H. R. Vermilla, aud itor of the Washington Life Insurance company, calling upon an agent to send premiums, collect ed weekly, to New York, and he said such let ters were sent to agents of that company all over the country. Senator Gore of Oklahoma interrupted to ask whether in view of the charge made by the senator from Wisconsin the president was justi fied in congratulating the men who brought on the panic. "Does the senator think," he said, "that President Roosevelt and Secretary Cortelyou were not star actors in that performance or at least that they congratulated the chief actors when it was over?" He quoted from a letter sent by President Roosevelt to Mr. Cortelyou. "Whatever the agencies were back of that panic," said Mr. LaFollette, "whatever the pur poses were behind it, the president and his sec retary of the treasury were confronted with a condition. The panic was on," declared the sen ator, in tragic tones that rang through the cham ber. "The panic was on! I do not know how the president regarded it. He was sitting there in the White House. He was a man who had faced all manner of dangers without flinching, but he was confronted with a situation and tho panic was on. He saw that legitimate business was put in peril, and the .responsibility came to him as the head of the government and to his secretary as the head of the treasury de partment. Where else could the money have been sent to stop the panic, no matter what in fluences might have been behind this bill?" Senator Bailey said he sympathized with the Oklahoma senator; that the money should have been sent to the banks throughout the country, whose money was in New York and was kept from them. Mr. Gore said he justified the president "in standing and delivering to these pirates and de positing with them the people's money when their dagger was at his throat. But I can not," he said, "excuse him for congratulating tho pirates as public-spirited benefactors." Mr. Gore stated that he heartily agreed with the senator from Wisconsin, "that Mr. Rocke feller and Mr. Morgan brought on this country a panic which had ripened to the point of fall ing, but he did not think they should be hailed as benefactors afterward." There was quite a large attendance of dem ocratic senators in their places, but compara tively few republicans. Occasional conversa tions between senators on the republican sido caused the senator from Wisconsin to discon tinue tho reading of his remarks. On one occa sion he remarked: "If there is any comment on my remarks I would be glad to have them made so audibly that I can hear them." After speaking for more than two and one half hours Mr. LaFollette yielded the floor, with the statement that he would resume his speech Monday. , lift x