8M UWWM JU,ni,Jll ;., t- . .fVl-rV 1 m i I I lit 4 The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. Filtered ftt the iiostofflce at Lincoln, Nebraska, aBBccond c jui mall matter. OneYmr $ee SlxMoaiU 0OC In Clubs ol 0 or mora, per year 75c - - - Three Month B 5lHglCopy c Sample Coplea Free. Foreign Postage 52c Extra. SUBSCRIPTIONS enn be Bent direct to The Commoner TlicycnnnUo be Bent through newfipapers which have adver tlicd a clubbing rote, or through local ftKcnts, where BUChngcnU linvc been appointed. All remittances should be Bent by post cfllec money order, exprcw order, or by bank dralt on New York or Chicago. Do uoteend Individual checks, Btampa.or money. RENEWALS. Thodntc on your wrapper show when your lubrcriptlon will expire Thus, Jan., 'W, means that payment Lasbccu received to and Including tho losthBUC ol January, HW. Tvo weeks are required alter money 1b received before the date on wrapper can be changed CHANGE OP ADDRESS. Subscribers requesting 0 change claddreBS must give tho OLD as well as the NEW address. ADVERTISING rates lurniBhcd upon application. Address ell communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. Mr. Cleveland's victory maker was evidently out o commission In 1894. Mr. Parry's union to fight unionism seems to havo sustalnod a fow punctures. 1 Perhaps by this timo Professor Triggs has ele vated his esliinato of Shakespeare. Tho Umo for holding primaries and conven tions is at hand. Put none hut loyal democrats on guard I Secretary Shaw is advising the hoys to stick to tho farm. Tho trusts Insist on having some body to gouge. A Tronton, N. J., man has not slept for ten yoarB, say his physicians. Ho should movo out o tho mosquito bolt. Tho descent of tho republican party Is well Illustrated by events in Ohio. From a Thurman to a Dick is a far cry. The spectacle of Mr. Parry's non-union work men organizing a strike is calculated to create considerable amusement in union labor clrclos. Tho Japaneso havo thus far escaped one sad affliction. Alfred Austin has not yet attempted to' manufacture any verses about them. Wall street's pretended opposition will novo entirely disappeared by tho tlmo tho gentleman with the g. o. p fryingpan starts on his rounds. It will bo noticed that tho papers that claim Abraham Lincoln as thoir patron saint devote much less spaco to what Lincoln said than they do to what Grovor Cleveland says. Congressman Burton is earning the gratitude of a heavily taxed people by his opposition to tho overgrvn naval appropriations, oven if ho docB sccuro mo opposition of tho contractors. It is hinted that congress will adjourn early without doing anything This is not surprising Tho present congress was elected for tho purpose of lotting the trusts "do" everything and everybody. If he undertakes to bust the trusts he will 'havo no campaign fund, and if he does not un dertake tho task ho will lose the support of trust victims. Mr. Roosevelt should try this on his pianola. The New York "World carries at the head of Its editorial column dally the market quotation of tho bullion in a silver dollar. Tho peicentage con tinues to bo considerably higher than tho pci cohtago of democracy In the World's political claims. ; - Secretary Wilson, after long and patient in vestigation, has discovered that tho poople are be ing robbed by tho meat trust. Secretary Wilson ,wlll now proceed to study along lines that will reveal to him: the . astounding fact that 2 plus 2 equals 4. The Commoner. It will bo a bravo man who attempts to read aloud to his neighbors the war reports from tho Orient There are many indications that Mr. James H. Eckles of Illinois is taking himself entirely too seriously. Poet Laureate Austin's war poem is very much on tho "sucking dove" order, but even at that it gives war a close chase for horror. Tho report that the Delaware peach crop has been frosted is an indication that Mr. "Gas" Ad dicks may be expected soon to warm things up. The man who would hive tho democracy out bid tho republicans for trust support is not a safe man to put on guard in tho democratic camp. The men who pose as democrats, but who have been supporting republican policies and can didates for eight years, snould not feel offended if requested by loyal democrats to show their papers. The making of the democratic platform of 1204 will hardly bo entrusted into the nands of the men who found more in the republican platforms of 1896 and 1900 to support than they found in tho democratic platforms of those years. The Boston Herald says that Puck was tho first financially successful illustrated comic paper published in tho United States. A man must be very old to remember tho time when Puck was comic. Or, perhaps Puck issues two editions. In one of tho counties of Illinois in which Hopkins is in control of the democratic organiza tion the committee issued a call for a mass con vention to select delegates to tho state conven tion. When, however, tho committee saw that it was not a Hopkins crowd it retired to an adjoin ing room and attempted to select delegates with out consulting tho assembled voters. Of couise, the mass convention went ahead under the call and solected delegates and instructed them, but what shall bo said of a committee which repu diated its own call in order to carry out the wishes of Mr. Hopkins? This is a specimen of the politics which we can expect everywhere if the sreorganizers take charge of the party. Secretary Loeb is not yet too old to learn a few things, if reports are roliable, and they seem m- i k be' Tno other day Secretary w Si u wGH,,cal!ed up th0 edit0r " Has Much Washington Post and demand to Learn. ed the dismissal of Miss Wade , 1 , BOciety edItor of the Post- 'he demand was made on the ground that Miss Wade had refused to stand in a corner at a Residen tial reception the command being issued by an wlZ rner,Secretary Loeb's direction. Miss Wade said sho was present by invitation nmi would mingle with the other guests ThG mi w asked Loeb to explain bis reason for the demand and Loeb replied over the 'phonef "ComTSn here and I will tell you all about it." To th,s !hn,flt0Veplied: "My offlco iA the Post building; if you want to see me you can rS down here." Miss Wade is BmS&mcSm Post, but she does not visit the White houSP The newspaper correspondents alcte with M? "Wade, and declare that the president's Tsecetlrv 22 for a ZS A Sanitary orebeni0 breald b7 Problem SAfi V In Panama expended in improving t?8 tion through whlchtfcLrr0"5 ' 'ffi sec! route is through mos VZT' The ca western hemisphere d Sft tly R of the made but a small begtSninfnn fi tho Preut sands of lives wero S ? the work thou Clmgres fever and the poisonous JS thG deadly isthmus. Of the flffrnn s miasmas of the and clerks taken to Manama ZT' aSSlstants four died within three Sh a Lesseps' fifty appointed to investigatrcondiHnlnaVal 8uiec a shocking condition0 VOLUME 4, NUMBER , that the surgeon general of the navy refuses to havo the report made public. The .refusal of the president to accept the alternative canal propo sition, anrl his determination to forco his own plan upon the government, will result in a vastly increased cost and in the sacrifice of many lives Merely a Question of Politics. For some time past northern newspapers have been devoting considerable space to denun ciations of what they under stood to bo the position of Gov ernor Vardamann of Mississip pi upon the race question. Theso newspapers experienced diffi culty in finding words to convey their detesta tion of what they conceived to be Vordamann's position, and they practically accused bim of be ing ready to condone lynching in any of its hor rid forms, providing the victim had a black skin. But In this case, as in nearly all cases wherein northern newspapers undertake to discuss tho race question, they were mistaken, and some of them are fair enough to admit it. Governor Vardamann recently intervened and saved from lynching a negro charged with a nameless crime, and tho negro will be tried by jury. The Com moner has said, and now repeats, that what repub lican newspapers call the "race problem" is with them merely a question of petty politics. Those -who express righteous indignation at what they term a growing contempt for the courts should busy themselves in tho Why Contempt work of making the courts of Court more entitled to respect. In is Growing. vew many court actions and decisions the masses are not to be censured for believing that justice receives lit tle consideration in many cases. The case of ex-Mayor Ames of Minneapolis is one in point. Ames was tried and convicted of accepting boodle from a fund raised for the purpose of corrupting public officials. The Minnesota supreme court, however, overruled the lower court and released Ames, deciding that he did not receive thf boodle from a fund, but from individuals. If there is a growing contempt for the courts, that growth will be hastened by decisions of that kind. Congressman Lucius N. Littauer of-New York has been renominated. It will be remembered that Littauer was accused of congressmen breaking che law by sharing in by government contracts, but es- Llmitatlon. caped through the intervention of the statute of limitations. Only a short time before Littauer was accused, the president spoke of him as "one of my dearest friends." But the convontion which renominated Littauer refused to indorse Roosevelt. This may have been duo to tho tact that the president did not intervene to prevent investigation of that famous glove contract. But oven this should not nave sufficed to make the convention overlook in dorsement. The president may have been aware of the fact that tho statute of limitations would suffice to keep Mr. Littauer out of trouble. m, ?ew York EvninS Post is of the opinion tnat the halo the president threw at Postmaster General Payne will act as a Boomemnu "boomerang halo" and return . Hallos to shine above his owu head. For Pixyne. There Is reason for the' Post's view of the matter. Tne pres ident has written a letter complimenting the post master general for having diligently prosecuted the men charged with corruption in the postal department, but the letter sounds very much Pickwickian when one considers that it was ad dressed to a man who denounced the charges of corruption as "hot air" ar.d who replied to the correspondents who asked him what he had to say about the charges, "Say that the postmaster general just laughed." wy An American steel rail mill has just con tracted to deliver to the Canadian Pacific railroad nut 1 40,000 tons of steel rails at uillcing $21.25 per ton. The price to the Home domestic railroads at the mill Consumer. Is ?28 Pr ton. A reasonable al , lowance.for the cost of delivery at Montreal makes the price to the Canadian Pa- i tt at tho mill or $1 Per ton less tnan tho United States consumer has to pay on ac count of the tariff which protects the "steel In fant." Tho homo consumer is held up for 55 per cent more than the foreign consumer bj tue aid of the tariff. This fs only a fair sample of the manner in which tho tariff works to bulwark tho trusts and rob the people. Y v- n ! KWn ,,