'M 4 The Commoner. ISSUHD WEEKLY. Kntcrcd At tho postofllco nt Lincoln, Ncbraakn, is second elans innll matter. One Year f'.oo Six Month 50c In Clu b of 5 or more, per year... ......75c Three Month ago Single Cpy..... 5C Sample Caplea Free. Foreign Postage 53c Extra. SUBSCRIPTIONS can lie sent direct to The Commoner. Thoy enn also bo sent through newspnpera which havo adver tised a clubbing rato, or through local agents, where such agents havo been appointed. All remittances should bo sent by postofllco money order, express order, or by bank draft on New York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checkn, stamps, or money. RENEWALS. Tho date on your wrapper shows when your aubscrlpUon will expire. Thus, Jan. 01, '05, means that pay ment has been received to and Including tho last ls&ue of Jan wary, 11W5. Two weeks aro required after money has been re ceived beforo the date on wrapper can be changed. CrtANOE OP ADDRESS. Subscribers requesting a change f address must glvo OLD m well as tho NKW address. ADVERTISING rates furnlBhcd upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. Perhaps Russia and Japan are waiting for bins from tho moving picture syndicates. Sonator Burton's attorneys will now have to got busy and find tho proper technicality. Doubtless Mr. Hill has long since had his at tention called to the horrible fate which befell the beef trust. . Mr. Knox gives us the assuranco that the ad ministration "will not run amuck." And he gives it without cracking a smile. Republican Colorado is having a hard time of it. Tho Colorado voters who thought with their stomachs will know better next time. Up to dato no reorganlzer who opposes the roanirmation of the Kansas City platform has un dertaken the task of writing a hotter one. Tho radium cure for tho boodling habit has not yet been announced. Tho press agents of radium seem to bo overlooking a few things. Perhaps those congressmen would bo willing to stand investigation were it not about time for them to hurry home and begin nailing up their fences. Somohow or othor tho eminent reorganizes who so lovo to quote the election returns of 18U2 and 18 never think of the general election re turns of 1894. Panama has sold her two gunboats. But she didn't got nearly so much out of their sale as she did out of tho gold brick sale sho engineered on your Uncle Sam. There is an evident disposition on tho part of a number of distinguished English politicians to make a punchlng-bag out of the Right Honorable Mr. Arthur Balfour. Mr. James J. Hill might try inducing some court to compel him to sell his merger to another of like nature. That's tho way the sugar trust made its bost move. Mr. James J. Hill is not grumbling. All he .will have to do will be to do it some other way and then wait until tho supremo court decides that it, too, is wrong. The time has gone by when the democratic party will accept a candidate whoso sole recom mendation s that nobody knows where he S8 on the leading issues. uuh "What does Chicago want?" queries tho p. teomed Tribune. Why should the T ibuno put Us question in such dilllcult form? "What does Chi cago not want?" would be an easy one. i Jho Commoner "ears with deep regret of tii sanies, 0. Mr Long was a staunch democrat 111 rt isizx rasioV ? sssr orace' and in tfcM The Commoner. Tho "full dinner pail" orators will dc .well to steer clear of tho coal mining regions during this campaign. When a president can make laws by the mere stroke of a pen, what is the use of having an expensive congress whose sole work seems to be to provide scandals and junketing trips. Congress shows a disposition to prevent the jumping of Colonel Mills over the heads of about 800 older officers. This is calculated to call re newed attention to Kettle Hill, for Colonel Mills was there. A lot of Colorado wage-workers who could see nothing in the democratic national platform plank condemning government by injunction are now witnessing an aggravated case of government oy bayonet. Tho merger decision of the supreme court was such an awful blow to the Northern Securi ties company that its stock rose ten points with in twenty-four hours after the decision was announced. The special examiner who reported that he "discovered little change in the Indians" could have made the- same discovery among white men since the trusts secured control of everything eat able and wearable. Just about twelve years ago a gentleman arose in a democratic national convention and an nounced, referring to Mr. Cleveland, "We love him for the enemies he has made." Things have changed in a dozen years. Now loyal democrats distrust him because of the friends he has made. A Nebraska editor who had the temerity to demand a just freight rate on coal and the cour age to make the demand emphatic, had his ad vertising contract cancelled and his editorial transportation taken up. But he could well af ford to pay full fare if he could get just freight rates on coal, paper, etc. Boasts That aro of No Ava.ll. While Secretary Shaw was proudly pointing to the fact that injunctions were in full force and effect against seven corporations, twenty-three individuals and one co-partnership engaged in the production and transportation of meats, restraining them from doing certain specified things, the beef trust was engaged in revising price lists. And before the echoes of Secretary Shaw's voice had quit ring ing, tho beef trust hoisted prices some more, thus showing its contempt for injunction proceedings. Trust managers are not afraid of injunctions that do not enjoin, but they might profit by the spec tacle of a violator of the law peering through the bars of a prison cell. Mr- Baker is Very Sarcastic. Congressman Baker is very sarcastic. He be lieves that the postofllco bill should be so amended as to reimburse the railroad companies to the amount of ?50, 000 for supplying tho special trains, etc., for the president's political junkets last Riimrrmr When asked why he favored such an amendment, Mr. Baker replied that congress should not force the president to accept such favors from the cor porations, adding that "it must be humiliating lor such an uncompromising foe of corporate weaith as Mr. Roosevelt to accept such favors." It is not difficult to imagine that Mr. Baker's eyes twin kled when he said it. Tho Northern Securities people are not wor rying. Thoy are already at work on a scheme to taa circumvent the supreme court rweedledee decision. Holders of Northeia and Securities shares are notified to Tweedledum. turn them in and receive $31) 37 ,i sni7 pxt iiVOrth of Great Northern stock and $30.17 of Northern Pacific stock for each share thus turned in. ThJs will retire the Northern Se curities stocks, but it will continue t control of the merged railroads in the hands of the m who organized the merger. The Standard Oil X worked the same smooth scheme a few years 1 aifo and up to date it has proved successful. When At torney General Monnett of Ohio tried to invest t gate it he was thrown out of tho supreme court and when he still persisted a lot of Ks were burned to prevent his examining them. Mr HI and his associates seem to be well content havm been assured that the administration "wSl no? r.m amuck," being content to have the dedsion whSe the managers of the merger hold the goods was Where the "Pull" is Handy. VbliUME 4NUMBER y, A few days ago a young man in Lincoln Nh sentenced to four years' in tho penitentiary f? ployed in the county treasurer office and sequestered men Lllln I J ging rl .... . . X V "i""iig no entry unon the books. About the same timo the sunrS court decided that a number of wealthy men hn violated a federal law which, provided for finn aS imprisonment for certain acts. The wealthv m! are still at large with no prospect that the crimi nal section of the law will be enforced. The un influential young man is behind the prison bars" And yet some people profess to wonder why the is a growing feeling that justice is being abusod in this country. tu The wisdom of the gentlemen who construo our tariff laws is beyond the comprehension of T. Wj the average voter.- The law ner- The Wise pits free entry of animals in- Tariff Experts tended for breeding purposes e4 Work. uut a man who tried to import a Plymouth Rock cockrell was compelled to pay a duty of 3 cents a pound Tho wise tariff adjusters pondered and studied over it for weeks, and enough red tape was unwound to fill a bushel basket. But it was decided that a chicken- was not an "animal," therefore it could not come in free. This recalls Secretary Shaw's decision that frog's legs should be classified as poultry for revenue purposes." It may take a long time to decide these little things, but when iron steel or sugar happens to want something tho matter is settled off-hand, and always in favor of iron, steel or sugar. The Johnstown (Pa.) Democrat, one of the ablest democratic journals in the land, is not . afraid to ;foin issues with the re- iney ua,re organizers of Pennsylvania. It Not challenges the reorganizes to Accept It- meet the .ssue squarely at a pri mary election and let the voters of the party decide between reaffirmation of the Kansas City platform and repudiation. Of course the reorganlzers will do nothing of the kind. They, hope to win by evasion, false pretense and corpor ation favor. They prefer to talk about "har mony" while diligently working under cover to discredit those who were loyal in 1896 and 1900 and give control to those who were disloyal and aided in the election of the republican adminis tration. But the Democrat's challenge will have the effect of calling, the attention of loyal demo crats to the plans and purposes of the reorganizes. . The New York Evening Post insists that con gress should consider the eight-hour bill and tell .t 1 j. t.1 tne labor unions some "unpalat UnpahMable able truths." This must -mean Truths" that the Tost is opposed to tho Numerous, eight-hour working day. It is within the memory of working men yet actively engaged in earning their daily oread when thirteen hours was a day's work. Tho 'day was shortened, not by the voluntary act of employers, but by the organized efforts of em ployes. This is an "unpalatable truth" that al ways confronts tho capitalists who think more of wiPVent than they d0 of human flesh and Diood. Organized labor has not benefited union men alone; it has benefited non-union men as wen, wl n,nunIon labor is today reaping many of the benefits secured by the earnest toil and sacrifice ohi nMb?r leaders. This is another "unpalat auie truth that confronts conscienceless employ es and their subsidized newspaper organs. nT?e ?ohn p' AltSGll Democratic club has been organized under the membership corporation law Hrt of New York, with headquarters nonors in New York cIty John HoseVt to a Thomas Doyle, James Walstead, Great Democrat Jeremlah Healey, Alfred J. Boul- n. . ton, John B. Foote and Charles minEi r ai? tlle Sectors. The following is Sedf fron the certificate: "The particular ob jects tor which the corporation is to be framed fhn in, GSm bl J?h and maintain an organization for l h J? tlgatl0n and study of the science of po iiin;i econmy. and particularly to ascertain, SS nla e,lucIdate and propagate the original 5?,? fn feintI?. PrlnciIlcs of democracy as exempli fy m? ,8tor3r of tlle ttnIted States of Anieri tw t Commoner wishes the John P. Altgcld W0ctIc clu a long and useful career. It demi l fe 1!amo of a distinguishod patriot and I1SSS1 f W l0Se examPte Is worthy of being fol lite y aU Wh0 se9lc for tfae tost in political l t i