iULWium '.' .rTfrwrtsyiw' v$W ' " 'X- i IK 'miitimmtmmm I 4 The Comntoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. Entered at the postofiicc at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second class mail matter. - TERMS-PAYABLB J ADVANCE One Year.; $1.00 Six rionth. 50c a Club of a or more, per yar , 75c Three tenths 35c SlnRle Copy g Sun. pie Copies Fr. Foreign Pottage 52c Extra. fe SUDSCI1PTI0NS can be tent direct to Tbs Cerataoner. They can also be 'ecnt through newspapers irhichhave adver tised a clubbing rate.or throuch local agents, where such agents have been appointed, All remittances should be sent by post office money order, express order, or by bank draft on New York or Chicago. Co not tend individual checks, stamps, or tooucy. RENEWALS. The date on your wrapper shows when your tubfcription will expire. Thus, Jan., '04, means that payment has been teceived to and including the last issue of January 1904, Two weeks arc required after money is received before he date en the wrapper can be changed. CKANQE OP ADDRESS. Subscribers requesting .a change ef address must give the OLD as well as the NEW addres. ADVERTISING rates furnished upon application. Address Jl commuuicatious to TUB COMMONER, LIrmIs, Nek. Put none but loyal democrats on guard; Organize a democratic club in your votinrr :inct! . precinct! Organize democratic clubs and be prepared for the battle of 1904! That Venezuelan revolution seems to have suddenly reached a Cleveland boom finish. If the "Hands off" slogan fails to work, Mr. Hanna might suggest the "full baby cab" cry. The fact that the old Liberty Bell is cracked Is not the only reason why it is not sent to the Philippine islands. x The Brooklyn Eagle should read Mr. Cleve land's fishing article and try a new kind of re organization bait. The public shows a disposition to open somo of Postmaster General Payne's "closed incidents" with a crowbar. The value of "asset currency" may bo cal culated by using the depreciating stocks of Wall street as a basis for figuring. The dollar's worth of commerce that costs five dollars' worth of powder ia profitable only to the powder manufacturers. Those thrifty gentlemen in the postal depart ment doubtless will indorse the "speak softly" portion of the president's advice. A great many people who had never heard of Borvla until a few weeks ago are now able to point out its location on the map. Think of it! The men who supported Mr. Mc Klnley or the Palmer and Buckner movement are auestioning Mr. Bryan's democracy! "Beware of the Greeks bearing gifts!" Or ganize a democratic club in your precinct for the preservation and propagation of democratic principles. Mr. Chamberlain will have to try somo other argumorit than the old one to the effect that "the foreigner pays the tax." The British voters know v uetter. The Ohio republican convention "pointed with pride to several things, but not to the report of the Ohio senate investigating committee in regard to the methods by which one of the Ohio senators secured his seat. T?,?, meL sftatement of the fact that hundreds are still suffering from the effects of the recent floods in the west and south should be sufficient :o bring them relief from the people of the more tavored sections of tho country. The Commoner. Mr. Babcock, erstwhile tariff reformer, has at last succeeded in making his forgettery envelop his recent appearance as an advocate of tariff revision. Mr. Hanna may pose as the leader of Ohio republicans, but it is safo to say that his fol lowers have to see the J. B. F. mark before they take hold. As the days go by the people realize more, and more the necessity of some one like Joseph "W. Folk to push the investigation into the postal frauds. Now Whitelaw" Refd isfsaying some harsh things about "high society." Is it possible that society has been saying means things about Mr. Reid's knickies? Of course Mr. Hanna fondly hopes that Tom Johnson will heed the wailing cry of "Hands off." Mr. Hanna is still nursing a varied assortment of bumps and bruises. Would any defender of the Administration's Philippine policy be willing to dopt for the Philippines the same conditions made when the Louisiana territory was acquired? Mr. Hanna loses no opportunity to rejoice over what he calls Mr. Roosevelt's devotion to Mr. Mc Kinlcy's policies. Mr. Hanna's idea of devotion seems to be in need of extensive repairs. Perhaps Russia would be willing to promisa evacuation of Manchuria on the date that the trust beneficiaries permit the republican party to revise the tariff in the Interests of the consumers. The trouble with the Ohio republican platform plank concerning the tariff is that it means what the trust magnates wish and only appears to mean what the consumers think it means. A prominent trust magnate says, this labor agitation must stop or prosperity will be threat ened. Has he ever thought of giving labor a square deal as one method of trying to end the agitation? The efficacy of the "Subscribers' Advertising Department" is amply demonstrated by numerous letters written to the publisher by those who have tried it. Full particulars concerning terms, etc., will be found on page 12. A reader of The Commoner inquires whether Mr. Heath, formerly assistant postmaster general, and now proprietor of the Salt Lake City Tribune, was in office at the time thv. newspaper guessing contests were given the use of the mails, and if so, whether Mr. Heath's contamplated guessing contest had anything to do with the rendering of the decision. The Commoner is not able to answer. The imperialist who can detect a similarity between the acquisition of the Louisiana purchase and the acquisition of the Philippine islands is equally capable of detecting the similarity be tween truth and falsehood. If it were proposed to annex the Philippine Islands under the same terms and conditions assumed in the annexation of the Louisiana purchr-e the republican leaders would bo the first ones to object. .The Honolulu Bulletin is disposed, to think that the territorial government is partial to Borne 01 the politicians In its administration. This is not strange. If at home we find men lining their own pockets out of government contracts, what can we expect in remote islands where human nature Is as frail and where detection is no so easy? There are American citizens In Honolulu who arc quick to protest against vong-dolng, but the trouble Is that the people here In the United States do not feel that they are Immediately injured. A reader of The Commoner asks whether there is a law requiring that all ships, guns and am munition for use in the United States army and navy should be of domestic material and manu facture. The inquiry was submitted to tho navy department and information received that "the acts of congress making appropriation for new ships for tho navy explicitly require that they shall bo of domestic manufacture. This is con strued to mean not only the hull and machinery, but also tho armor, guns, ammunition, etc." Tho department adds that the law has been studiously adhered to. VOLUME 3, NUMBER 24, t, 4.AJ!c?ln' Neb' rePublican organ declares that childishness and bigotry are responsible S ex-Secretary Boutwell's anti-imperialtic v ew If this is true we now know tho reason Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and others took the stand they d.u But it is barely poa Se uSt the organ in question is mistaken. To .thL Graduato: May he realize that grad nation is the commencement rather than the end of his labors; may he recognize that his educa if,011 SfAnFs a responsibility commensurate with his abilities; and may his learning giVG him a deeper interest in tho welfare of his Tellows and convince him that he can best raise himself' by raising the general level of mankind. The Commoner published a definition of dem ocracy a few weeks ago and since that time has received others, the briefest of which is that democracy means "The people to govern." That is tho essence of democracy, and the test of a deni6crat Platforms must agrei with this defini tion and apply the definition to the questions be fore the question can have consideration. The .editor of Tfie Commoner receives a great many suggestions, often unsigned. He utilizes such of them as seem to be available. He receives many good suggestions entirely outside the lino of the subjects discussed. It is not the intention of The Commoner to discuss all subjects which are of interest to the public, but those rather which are immediately before the public for po litical action. Before dwelling too long upon Russian cruelty In permitting masacres like that at Kishineff let us recall certain happenings in our own countrv at New Orleairs, .at Rock Springs, at Spring Val ley and in the coal fields of Pennsylvania. The Chinese have a proverb running thus: "Swee before your own doSr and bother not your head about the frost on your neighbor's tiles." There is considerable frost on the Russian tiles, but wo have quite a bit of rubbish at our nation's door that needs some attention. A reader of The Commoner calls attention to Marshall Field's complaint in regard to "the lax enforcement of the law," and asks whether Mr. Field is as anxious to have the criminal law enforced against trusts as he is to have it en forced against a laboring man. Tho difference be tween the republicans and the democrats is that the former are very anxious to have the law en forced against small criminals, while the demo crats insist that it ought to be enforced against big criminals and little ones alike. When asked the location of the walls of Sparta the Spartan captain took his guests out and showed them the army drawn up in battlo array. "There are the walls of Sparta," he said. "Ten thousand men and every man a brick." Tho walls of true democracy are builded of the tried and true defenders of the democratic faith, not of tho men who would make the democratic party so nearly like the republican party that the trust magnates and beneficiaries of private graft would as readily accept one as the other. Some of the country banks are beginning to get scared about tho plans of the big banks, and it is well they are. It would have been better still had they been scared some time ago. If the small bankers assist the largo bankers to estab lish a financial policy which is purely for the in terest of bankers, they will find that such a policy once established will be still further extended, 30 as to put the little financiers in the hands of the big ones. The only safe course for the small bankers to pursue is to stand with their custo mers tho depositors and borrowers. They will thus find protection for themselves in the protec tion that they give to the public generally. A New York reader of The Commoner makes an inquiry. He reports that he is a market gard ner and covered some plants with one of the New York papers. In the morning he found the plants dead. It was discovered that Cleveland's picture was printed in that issue of the paper and the question is whether tho blight was caused by the picture or by the acid in tho printing ink. Tho matter Is receiving serious consideration in that section, and- It ought to be thoroughly investigated before tho reorganlzers attempt to force Mr. Cleveland's nomination upon tho party. It has long boon known that Mr. Cleveland's policies were injurious to agriculture, but this is the first in timation that oyon his picture had a deleterious effect ii-j4 i K $JM At j,