The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, December 20, 1907, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
VOLUME 7, NUMBER 49
The Commoner.
o
"TPIFilf Nurseries Pay Cash Weekly
1 1 BlwtM AND Want More Salesmen Evekv
Mir vviiEnE. Best Contract, Best Outfit,
l" Largest NORSEniES-wiTH an 82-Yeah Record.
STARK BKU'5, LUU1B1AWA, MU.
STOLL'S STAYTHERE EARMARK.
TI10 best nntl cheapest earmark
marie. It pos.sc.SHcs moro polnta
of merit tlinn any Uik made.
Sond for samples.
H. C. STOLL, Beatrice, Neb.
beside his mother in the cemetery at
Niantic. Wo sent him there after
the brief funeral services at the un
dertaker's shop. And Mother
O'Hara's tears left their imprint up
on his coffin. Hi Wheeler is some
where in tho Philippines, wearing the
chevrons of a sergeant upon his
arms. "Kid" Saxon is somewhere in
California. The whereabouts of the
rest ia unknown, save for the old-
b b iiwiiminiiwi 1 11 mi iw ma iiuiiniiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiwii n a aw
WORD AND WORKS'
Published Monthly
REV. I R L. R. HICKS, EDITOR
The Rev. Irl. JR. Hicks Almanac for 1008
This Is a boauUlul, useful and popular book. For thirty years tho vnluo of tho Moteoro
loRlcnl nnd Astronomical publications of Itcv. Irl. 1U Hicks havo been tested. Tho demand,
for IIcVifl' Almanac has Increased nuuunUy nnd. tho-circulation is now lnroand general. Tho
rotftilncprlco of theso two porlodicnls is . ,t
Word and Works. .....:.... $1.00
Tho Commoner 1.00
Total . . .$2.00
Wo will now offer theso two periodicals each onoyear for 81.35;. Tliosowho accept thin offer-,
will savo 0.1 cents oireach subscription. With each subscription also one-copy of Hicks' Almanac
for 1003 will bo sent IfltEE. Sond yonrordera to
THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb.
NOW READY
FOR DELIVERY
Volume VI " The Commoner Condensed
As Its title Indicates, this book Is a condensed copy of Tho Com
moner for one year. It is published annually and the different Issues
aro designated as Volumes I, II, III, IV, V and VI, corresponding to
the volume numbers of The Commoner. The last issue is Volume
VI, and contains editorials which discuss questions of a permanent
nature.
Every important subject In tho world's politics is discussed in
The Commoner at the time that subject is attracting general atten
tion. Because of this The Commoner Condensed is valuable as a
reference book and should occupy a place on the desk of every
lawyer, editor, business man and other student of affairs
OCTAVOS OP ABOUT 480 PAGES ECH; BOUND IN Wl?Avv
CLOTH, AND WILL MA1CE A HANDSOME AND VALBLEDm
TION TO ANY LIBRARY. VALUABLE A DDL
TO NEW OR RENEWING SUBSCRIBERS
One Year's Subscription to Tho Commoner. . . ) . 1 a 1 - i-w
Tho Commoner Condensed, Cloth Bound )Oth $1.50
To subscribers who have already paid the current year s subscription
ClotK bound, 75c. By Mail, Postage Paid.
i r, 11C? PT ws af for clthcr volurao- M moro than ono volume
, Is wanted, add to above prices 75 cents for each additional omTta
cloth binding Volume I is out of print; Volumes H, HI IV, V rind
VI are ready for prompt delivery. ' ' 1V v anu
REMITTANCES MUST BE SENT WITH ORDERS.
Address, THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nebraska.
The Omaha World-Herald
AllIiY EDITED i-: NEWSY :-: DEMOCRATIC
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f Publishers' Our Prico
Prlco Wun Tho
Commoner
Dally. World-IIcrnId 94.00 1(54.00
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THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nebraska
time "print" who grinds out "these
lines and often wishes as he grinds
that he could hark back about a
quarter of a century and again "hold
cases" with the other old-timers of
the hand-set days, when we wore so
confident they'd never make a ma
chine to set type'that we .spent our
wages like princes, sure of a "sit" in
the next town.
THE REPUBLICAN PARTY AND
THE PANIC
(Continued from Page 9)
$200,000,000. Then the republican
law making machine, with throe 'sen
ators, heavy holders of tobacco stock,
passed a law giving proper protection
to the great tobacco interests of the
United States, and the printing and
engraving bureau continued its good
work until in 1907, the total-capitalization
of this great home industry,
including its dummy and subsidiary
companies, aggregates the enormous
sum of $500,000,000.
This five hundred millions of
American Tobacco stock and the
stock of its. subsidiary companies is
part of the thirty-six and .one-fourth
billions of stock and bonds men
tioned in Moody's Manual of 1906,
and has been swallowed by the
American public and it is the effort
of that public now to digest these
stocks which has given the American
stomach that violent cramp which
we call the "panic."
The thirty-six and one-fourth bil
lions of stocks and bonds comprise
an enormous amount of stocks and
bonds issued in the same manner as
the tobacco stock. It was issued or
iginally, of course, by the frenzied
financiers to themselves, but not to
be held by them. Calling a dollar
ten dollars and then holding it does
not enrich the holder, but calling
one dollar ten dollars and getting an
other man to pay ten dollars, or nine
dollars for it, does enrich the man,
who succeeds in making such a trade.
That Is what the kings of finance,
under the protection of republican
rule, have been doing for years.
They incorporate an enterprise
for ten times its value, list its stock
on the exchange at that fictitious
figure, hold it there until honestly
or dishonestly a couple of dividends
are declared, then sell- the stock for
such prices as they can get a bun
coed public to give. Their brokers
will take five per cent margin from
any gamboling lamb, and their bank
ers before the . crash would loan
seventy-five per cent on the quoted
value of the stocks. Anything and
everytmng to get the money of the
confiding public.
By such methods and artifices the
dear confiding public were induced
to bolt, but had not digested, an
enormous amount of this thirty-six
and one-fourth billion stocks and
bonds, and found itself, In the sum
mer of 1907, suffering from a bad
case of financial indigestion. Some
time prior thereto our strenuous and
well meaning president discovered
that some of these mighty monopo
lies, notably the Standard Oil com
pany, the Northern Securities com
pany, and some of the big railway
corporations were not only skinning
the public by stock maninulat.lonR.
but were violating the interstate
commerce act by giving and getting
secret rebates and other devices. Not
being a man so constructed as to
differentiate between a big criminal
and a little one, he ordered their
prosecution and exposure and public
ly and emphatically declared he
would continue to so act while he
held public office.
This announcement may or may
not have affected the spirits of the
patient suffering from indigestion,
but whether , it did or not it was
not the cause of the malady.
Tho vicious policy of the republi
can congress in throwing a high pro
tective wall around the products
manufactured by theso mighty mon
opolies, and its refusal to enact and
enforce anti-mononoly and effective
interstate commerce acts, which
would prevent rebates and discrimin
ation, has enabled these oppressive
combinations i;o become powerful and
dangerous, so dangerous as to
threaten the perpetuity of this re
public. These great combinations
today control the republican party
and through it, the. government of
this country.
Dizzy 3pBi3
That dizzy spell is an important mes
sage from tho heart a plea for help.
If this messago receives no attention
others come; shortness of breath, pal
pitation, weak or fainting- spells,
smothering or choking sensations,
pains around tho heart. In side or
shoulders, and so on, until it receives
the necessary help, or is compelled to
give up stop.
You may furnish this aid with
DR. MILES' HEART CURE
which cures-heart disease in every
stage.
Every day we read of sudden deaths
from heart-disease, yet-it is a fact that
the heart had been pleading for help,
and gave up the struggle only when it
had exhausted tho last spark of vital
ity and they call it sudden.
"For more than six years I was
troubled with my heart. I would have
dizzy spells, then difficulty in breath
ing, choking sensations, my heart
would flutter, becomo painful. I could
not breathe lying down. I commenced
taking Dr. Miles' Heart Cure, and In a
few weeks I was entirely cured."
MINNIE E; JOHNSON, Olivia, Minn.
The first bottle will benefit, if not,
tho druggist will return your money.
PLATFORM
TEXT BOOK
Containing: the Dcclnrn
tlon of Independence,
tho Constitution of the
United StntcM, nnd nil
tho National Platform
of all parties since the
organisation of our
government.
BOUND IN PAPER, BY r.IAIL,
POSTAGE PREPAID. TWENTY
FIVE CENTS PER COPY.
Address ull Order, to
The Commons
LINCOLN, NFB.
Subscribers' fltfwrtisittg Dcpt.
This department Is for the exclusive
use of Commoner subscribers, and a
special rate of six cents a word per in
sertion tho lowest rate has been
made for them. Address all communi
cations to The Commoner. Lincoln, Neb.
CHART 26c, FRAMES ANY ROOF.
C. M. Osborn, Box1 1920, Llncola
Nebraska.
UAUR CHILDREN IN THE OTHER
LIFE," by Giles, comforting to
parents, one hundred forty pages; "Tho
Secret of tho Bible," by Doughty,
shows it has a spiritual meaning, two
hundred eighty pages; Swedenborg's
"Divine Love and Wisdom," three hun
drod forty-eight pages. All throe books
sent postpaid for fifty cents in stamps.
Pastor Landonborger, Windsor Place,
St. Louis, Mo.
FOR SALE Two sections grass land,
fenced, running water, Pratt
County, Kansas. Address C. W. Os
wald (owner), Hutchinson, KansaB.
FOR SALE IRRIGATED FARMS IN
California alfalfa, fruit, vegetable.
For prices and description of land, ad
dross John Kincaid, Real Estato Agent,
Dos Palo, Calif.
'bbe
" Si