--..- ,$! . t.vv The Commoner 6 VOLUME -7, NUMBER 24 The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. Under the Sherman tablet in the Half of Fame Is the inscription, "War is cruel, and you j can not refine it." The censored Hall of Famo is not expressivo onough. Since tho exposure of the Pennsylvania iBtato house grafters they have been filled with deep regrets;" Thoy overlooked $14,000,00Q in the state treasury. Tho beef trust offers the pure food law as an excuse-for higher prices. When the time comes for another excuse to be' necessary, tho beef trust will have it. WlM.rAM .7. IlKVAN Kdltor and Proprietor. TticiiAnn I. Mktcamtk Associate Kdltor, Ohaui.ks W, IJllVAM Publisher. 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CIIANGK OF ADDHKSS.-SubscribcrH requesting a chango of address must glvo OLD as well as tho N12W address. , ADVlSltTIS-NG.-itatcs furnished upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. .. i , Oystor Bay must have beer named by a, "nature fakir." Chancellor Day seems to be Jeremiahing pretty steadily these days. , The czar is suffering from recurrent, sympr torris tof grand dukoism. ' , Mr. Watterson says his preferred candidate has a "winning smile." He must take mint in his'n. General Lawton's eulogy consisted of an hour's explanation of the administration's rail road policy. ' "When wheat went up flour followed suit. "Wheat declined soon after, but flour hasn't heard of it yet. It seems that the czar is willing to grant representative government provided he is the only ono represented. , , . .. --' - This is a representative government until some federal judge takes a notion to make it a government by injunction or mandamus. Governor Hughes' statement that nothing the corporations may do will justify retaliation will be heartily endorsed by the beef trust. Doubtless the Japanese warriors are watch ing with interest the fight the American war department is making on one lone woman. The state house grafters of Pennsylvania point to the treasury surplus of $12,000,000 as a vindication. They might have taken it all. When General Kuroki finishes tolling his countrymen about the size of Uncle Sam's do main there -will be a falling off in Japanese war talk. The Butte, Mont., baseball team has a pitcher named Roosevelt. Up 'to date he has made the wielders of the "big sticks" look lonesome. The postofflce department .is on the Trail of some gross frauds in the transportation , of the mails. The department sleuths ougfttvto'' experience but little difficulty in followingcsol broad a trail as that. Tho winder is that' thoy did not stumble across it a long time ago. " r Secretary Harry S. New says the next re oublican national convention will bo a "fight to a finish." Pish, tush, Harry! Also fudge! Hasn't the president already settled upon Mr. Taft as his successor? If Harry 'keeps on talk ing that way the "undesirable class" will have to hunch over to admit a new member. Senator Daniel says the next democratic candidate must bo 'neither too radical nor too conservative." But that does not help solve Mr. Watterson's dark horBe puzzle. A recently discovered'lntoxicant impels tho drinker to tell the truth. Great care will be taken by tho party managers to kqpp it away from tho majority side of congress. One of Oklahoma's senators-elect is a blind man, but ho will havo no difficulty in seeing wherein a lot of senators at Washington have failed to represent the people. This agitation in favor of getting the upper .berth cheaper than the lower berth simply means that the price of the upper will remain as it is, while that of the lower will be higher. "King Peter of Servia pays his debts," is tho sensational headline in the newspapers. Peter will doubtless be consigned to the unde sirable class by his fellow monarchs. A Missouri exchange tells about the joys of "juggling" for catfish in the Mississippi river. Some of the biggest fish we ever heard about were evidently caught by the jug route. If ever it is discovered that Mars is in habited, the advocates of a protective tariff will use the fact as an argument against revision. "No 'competition with Mars." will be their cry. Mail parcels are carried from New York to London cheaper than from New York to the nearest village. No wonder the postoffice de partment is trying to economize by saving the twine. Senator Knox will run up against his first hard chore when he tries to make the republi can national convention believe that he is tho only man that can save Pennsylvania to the party. Wouldn't it be a hard jolt on the Missouri railroads if the people found out after three months' trial that the two-cent fare law was too profitable and forced the roads back to three cents? President Roosevelt addressed the National Editorial association on the evils of swollen for tunes. The president is clearly eligible to mem bership In the American PresS Humorists' association. It having been decided not to prosecute Mr. Harriman that gentleman may now move up into the Paul Morton class. It will be remembered that the chief executive decided not to prosecute Mr. Morton. "Prices are on a higher level" says the bureau of labor. Wonderful how obtuse those government officials are. We know a lot of higher prices that lack a great deal of being on the level. Senator Piatt's express company has sent a poor scrubwdman to jail for stealing a bar of soap. She doubtless thought the managers of the company had no intention of using any cleansing material. The announcement that the legal -department of the government Is going. after the pow der trust simply means that the" senator from New Jersey will invoke the fetich known as "senatorial courtesy." Jam es-J; 'Hill' says the government will have to come- to the ald'Of the railroads and advance money try provide the equipment necessary for the proper handling of freight. Uncle Sam will first have to come to the aid of the 'people and advance money so they can pay the freight. The corporation papers are now singing the praises of Governor Hughes because he had the "courage" to veto tho two-cent fare bill. That's nothing; the United States senate has several members who ifor years have had the courage to oppose every good measure and follow the dic tation of the railroads. Leslie M. Shaw is again smiling like a man who thinks he detects the faint humming of a presidential bee. A close examination', however, is likely to result in the discovery that the cogs are not properly meshing. By postponing revision of the tariff until after election the republican managers find themselves in a position to decline to revise tho tariff on the ground that, failure to revise was endorsed by the people. The New York World calls the initiative and referendum "something new." It is, how ever, as old as the republic. If the World wants to see some examples of the referendum it might look at any one, or all, of the amend ments to the federal constitution. Viscount Tani of Japan says the American people are radically commercial in their senti ment. All right Viscount; but a little dip into history will convince you that we forget it every, now and then when occasion demands. - It is asserted that "outside of the federal officeholders the republicans of Georgia are op posed to President Roosevelt." Impossible! Some of them have to hold two offices in order to keep the plums Inside the party lines. v The Roanoke, Va., correspondent for the Philadelphia North American tells of a nine days old baby that talks of heaven. That is not so very wonderful. We have seen lots of babies even younger that reminded us of heaven. The New York Mail says that Mr. .John Temple Graves' assertion that a paraggapher , can not enter heaven is not founded on Matthew xix:24. Yes, we've read it, but you'll nave to look it up for yourself, so get a hump on you.- The St. Louis Globe-Democrat is still clam oring for a free bridge for St. Louis, but for "standpattism'' at the ports of entry; The es teemed Globe-Democrat experiences great diffi- . culty in keeping the pilot of its logic from col- , liding with the caboose. . ' PARAGRAPHIC PUNCHES After an experience that has thoroughly convinced it that the private ownership of pub- lie utilities is most unsatisfactory, San Fran cisco Is about to undertake municipal owner ship by taking over the Geary street railway. There is no school like experience. Denver News. The packers' remarks about ' "diseased cows" and "dirty, filthy farms-" are a bit remind ful of Upton Sinclair."" But one can't help won dering why the packers were so long in decid ing to resort to those belated measures for tho protection of the consuming public. Sioux City Journal. There are too many pestiferous thinkers in this country.. A good many of them believe, in view of the mighty promises the protection leaders make of doing something two, three or four years hence, that congress should do at least enough next .winter to demonstrate its sin cerity. Cincinnati Enquirer. An Alabama man has been sentenced to the penitentiary for stealing a peck of apples. If the courts had proceeded as they do when a railroad is charged with rebating, he undoubt edly would have been fined the peelings, and, if it were a very aggravated case, perhaps tho cores, -as well. Washington Herald, 'In passing a law prohibiting the smoking of tobacco by persons under twenty-one years ofMage, the Wisconsin legislature may have been seeking to confine the youth of that state to cigarettes and five-cent cigars. Washington Herald. Postmaster General Meyer has instructed postal clerks to save the twine about their let ter packages so it may be used-ttgain. He must 4iave been re-reading the old'"whip cord" story in McGuffey's school reader. Omaha World Herald. "