i --TP'TjRf i Trrtvr-i?r Tyt--f w M"ifj(jiH""T'"'rW,jrvl4SllT" yJMP ' Myr"1 '" wwwiwBiy 4 The Commoner. Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. Urn Entered at tho postofflco at Lincoln, Nebraska, as second class mail matter. One Year , Ii.oe Six Msnths..., goc la Clubs of 5 or more, per year 75c Three Months 3fi single Cepjr , 5c Sample Copied Free, Foreign Postage 53c Extra. SUBSCRIPTIONS can be sent direct to Tbe Commoner. They can also bo sent through newspapers which have adver tised a clubbing rate, or through local agents, where sub agents bavo been appointed. All remittances should bo sent by postofflco money order, express order, or by bank drait on How York or Chicago. Do not send individual checks, stamps er money. RENEWALS. The date on your wrapper shows when your subscription will expire. Thus, Jan. 81, '05, mcanB that pay tnent has been received to and Including the last issue or Jan uary, 1805. Two weeks aro required after money has been re ceived beforo tho date on wrapper can be changed. CrlANdB OF ADDRESS. Subscribers requesting a chango of address must givo OLD as well as tho NEW address. ADVERTISING rates furnished upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lmceta.Neb. That Formosan earthquake wasn't even a re spectable encore. Tho true democrat is not discouraged, the contrary he is already at work. On Havirg failed to find use for their roosters the democratic editors of Jie country need not run short of Thanksgiving provender. Tho tariff certainly is in the hands of its friends. But what about the people who have to pay the tax instead of spending it? In a short time General Bell of Colorado will have ample leisure in which to boast of how he waged war on women and children. No one, however, expects Mr. Cortelyou to publish a list of his campaign contributors to gether with the amounts contributed. .That slight rustling sound from the extreme east may be President lioosevelt preparing some thing equally good for Senator Spooner. If the turkey trust will have the effect of putting a quietus on the turkey hash Thanksgiv ing joke a great many of us will not complain. One of the greatest compliments paid to Judge Parker c:me from "Prophet" Dowie's Zion City. Judge Parker did not receive 'a vote in that place. Davla B. Hill is ajout tho most successful political prophet, in tho country. Long before election day he said ho would retire on January 1, I905. J The bandits who held up and robbed th'e min iature railroad at the S't. Louis exposition must have felt like they were taking candy from little children. Tho czar intimates that he has not yet begun to fight. Some 25,000 or 30,000 of the private sol diers at the front, however, have quit fighting, and quit forever. "There Is but one Grover Cleveland!" shouts the Brooklyn Eagle. Tho Eagle is entitled to thanks for digging up something for the demo crats to ue thankful for. Having admitted that the Philippines havo cosf us over $180,000,000, perhaps Secretary Taft will pause long enough to tell us what the returns on the investment have been . . The St. Louis exposition has discharged its dpbt to Undo "Sam. This means that Secretary Shaw will havo to hunt up something: -else to ex plain the deficits as they appear. ' The mere inentica of Senator Spooner for at torney general is evidence that the trusts knew what they were about when they secured the re tention of tho present administration. Tho Brooklyn Eagle It another of those demo cratic organs that won by losing. That brand of democratic organ, does not appeal,- however,' to the rank' and file of the 'democracy. Within thirty-six hours after the election of Roosevelt the Standard Oil company increased the price of crude oil 4 cents & gallon. The trusts aro quick to recognize a great opportunity. . Only $474,000 of the $500,000 appropriation for trust busting" purposes remains in tho. treasury. And it is likely to remain there until it can bo used without seriously injuring tho trusts. Tho Nashville American's attempts at explana tion are almost as sound and logical an its re publican editors editorials in support of the Nash ville American's peculiar brand of democracy. Young Mr. Rockefeller continues to warn his Sunday school class of tho folly of seeking riches. This may be an intimation that the senior Rocke feller has no intention of letting go of a bit of it. Mr. Schwab says that confidence has been re stored by the results of the election. To; be sure. The ship building trust, the steel trust, the "oil trust, and eVery other trust feels much better over 1 w The Philadelphia Ledger is. complaining about the enormous election frauds practiced- in that city, but the men who practice them are both complaint proof and masters of the legal depart ments. - v. rumored ttat Mr. Shaw will retire from the cabinet in order to incubate his presidential aspirations. We greatly fear that' Leslie M. Shaw d3 d l0Utb WaStb al0t f valuabIe time on a china A lot of administration organs, referring to tho elect on of W. L. .Douglas in Massachusetts, a V, lt pays t0 adverse." Of course it does! And it also pays to stand for principles and hon estly advocate them. Pension Commissioner Ware has resigned and will return to Kansas to practice law and wrico poetry. Mr. Ware is much better at writing poetry than in managing the pension department. This is Intended as a compliment to "Ironquill." The returns from 'Pennsylvania do not Indi cate that democrats are growing less in numbers They merely indicate that tho republican machine never stops counting fraudulent ballots in Phila delphia until it is time to return the poll books. The .,uffalo Evening News says: "The gen tlemen who figured out that Mr. Roosevelt is not a vote g- ter would better buy republican load pencils." That's the only kind tLtTan be Sought ganized apnIte trust or- The vice president-elect, Mr. Fairbanks, made a neat speech when the Liberty Bell was parted on its way back to Philadelphia from St Louis. In fact it was a beautiful speech. "It stands for liberty as the cross stands for Christianity," said Mr. Fairbanks. "A million mes would shoulder muskets and fight if necessary, to preserve this relic." Beautiful thoughts and sentiments! But they-are not intended for Filipino ears. t The politicians will do -well to study carPluiiv the vote in' Massachusetts.. Some , explanation ww mtiu cue popularity of Mr. Douglas must be offered for that gentleman's substantial vic tory, and it may be found in the low c M;iii;r": -V " H-caie- union 1 ,., "wu5 m Massachusetts, and in additio-i to being a largo, employer of union labor, Mr. Douglas had the advantage of runn nS against a competitor who had earned the enmit? of the unions. Governor Bates vetoed a bin seek ing to prevent the employment of children n large factories at night, although tho laborfS classes of the state deluged him with neMuZ I ,g ioiff? m bil1- B iSWS to veto it at tho request of the influential "hilt ness interests; that think more 01 pSA human life and comfort. As a resnlf 3, J 0t to this, Mr Douglas mad a splendid camnaiS in favor of Canadian reciprocity, which is of Tho Labor Vote Solidifying "-." ' VOLUME 4,- NUMBER moment" to the majority ot Mainiiiiii.ii . But it was tho labor vote thatwtH " to v cfory ana i the soIidiUcaUo" ' Effi lesson that,tha BoUtw- Secretary, Morton, at a banquet a few m u since, remarked, that this nation now ml K8 white house a pre jiden tih Another see to st that this nXtt! Endless Chainlargest navy in the world n ! Scheme- w long will it remain tlm largest navy after it it m such? omo other nation, viewing our .strength with alarm, win build one a litu iJT1 Another nation will build one still la vL then we will, have, to add a lot more to m! ' m Thus the "enaiess chain" will be cont nied XoTh eternity, unless tho common sense of th S.U comes to their rescue. Secretary Mo, 2 mont recalls the story of tho western Tavmjlt wanted more lahd so he could raise more corn to sel for i oney with which to buy mere hnd raise more corn to sell itfr money with which 0 buy more land to raise more corn to sell for mow with which to buy more land to raise more cor 1 etc., etc., and so on, until the Almighty interferrei and put a. stop to his greed. The story an a ? it; "bis stick" advocnoniy ' Something Good For Spooner The more fact that Senator Spooner should bo mentioned in connection with the attorney general- o " me new Koosevelt cabi net is sufficient to expose the pretended anti-trust sentiments of President Roosevelt. S'ena- TOT S'nnntiAx ... i... prominence in lare mere ST corZaZX fnTf ' "S hiS, bUSlnesa lnterest" W certain?; influence him in the discharge of the duties or attorney general. The voters of Wisconsin havo expressed their disapproval of Senator Spooner and his defeat for re-election was practicaU? sured when he showed ais inability to defeat Gov- and chief backers are interested in providing him with something ."equally good," but to even men tion.him in connection with tho offlce whose in cumbent is charged with tho duty of enforcing tho antt-trust laws is an affront to the people. One greatjroublo with the eastern press is its provincialism. The great editors of the great east ern papers too often exhibit Some gross Ignorance of all the coun- EducatlonoJ try lying west of the Allegheny Figures mountains. Even Harper's . . , . Weekly, which has for years boasted itself a "journal of civilization," has not yet grasped the bigness and broadness of this re public. In its issue of November IS it under takes to draw some conclusions from the popular vote, and In a comparison between Missouri and Massachusetts says "Missouri's educational quali SH0,? are not so distinguished as Massachu- setts ." Perhaps not, when it comes to posing and self-gratulatlon, but the figures and facts show otherwise. Out of a total population of 856,684 of voting age, Missouri has G0,327 illiterates, or 14 in each thousand of voting age. Massachusetts with a population of 843,465 of voting age, uas 53,694 illiterates, or 12 in each thousand of voting age. Taking into consideration that Massachusetts has only 10,0u0 negroes, while Missouri has 46, 000 of votjng age, and the further fact that Massa chusetts bad colleges, universities and a public school system beforo Missouri was even dreamed of as a member of the sisterhood of states, tho average man will experience difficulty in believing that Massachusetts' "educational qualifications" aro entitled to especial distinction over those of Missouri. Perhaps Harper's Weekly would Hko to make comparisons between eastern states and western sta New York and Massachusetts with Nebraska and Iowa, for instance. Or between Connecticut and Vermont and Wyoming and Colo rado. Missouri is doubtless willing to be compared with Massachusetts, and Nebraska is willing to stan'd up alongside any or all of her sisters and sub mit to tho educational test. By the way, does Harper's Weekly know that the. public library of Kansas City circulates more books annually thaa the city library of Boston? In all kindness The Commoner suggests to" Harper's Weekly that stand upon its tiptoes and pqep westward over tiio top of the Appalachian range. Artist Bem,gt"J pictures aro very pretty, but they are not typical of the west toaay : if