The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, January 10, 1908, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I&JI I IIMPIII, .
.usr7"-
f'W
ptB6ppE
V
itr
,,
a A '-
'( ' ''
14
The Commoner.
VOLUME 7, NUMBER 53
iJj..lMJ- ' f.l.
b4
v
8A'
-K
K.
?(1 -
Cm'.'" , tm
;: , &. I
f asifH m
. Vin ' i ' ' I
' SV '!
''Bki w jB
Secretary Taft
Opens Campaign
(Continued from Pago 12)
tribunals there have been revealed
as I have already said, breaches of
trust,, stock-jobbing, over Issue of
stocks, and mismanagement in some
of our largest corporations. They
have properly been severely con
demned by all, including the presi
dent. Knowledge of these things
doubtless affected our credit in Eu
rope and hastened the panic; but
those who are morally responsible
for such a result are the guilty man
agers, not those who in the course
of their official duty have made
known to the business world the facts
and commented on them.
Condemns Only Law-Breakers
"It is said that the administration
has arraigned the whole business
community as dishonest. I deny it.
The president has condemned the
lawbreakers. He has convinced those
who" have unlawfully" accumulated;
enormous powers and capital; that
they are not immune. He has put
tlie fear of the law in their hearts.
They have been acute enough to at
tempt to protect themselves by giving
JV.
the impression that his action has
been directed against the whole busi
ness community. It is true that the
business men of our community! as a"
whole, are honest and their methods
are sound. The president has never
said otherwise. Indeed, it is chiefly
in the interest of the great body of
honest business men that he has
made his fight for lawful business
methods.
"Again it Is said that the rate bill
for which the administration is re
sponsible, caused the present panic.
Could anything be more absurd. The
object of the rate bill was merely
to bring the railroads under closer
supervision of a tribunal which could
act upon complaints of individuals
suffering from their injustice. The
immediate effect of its passage was
the voluntary reduction of rates. Sub
sequently under normal circum
stances, justifying it, the rates of the
railways generally were increased.
The continuance of the abuses of the
railway management were made by
the rate bill much more difficult, but
the rate bill hatf not the slightest
effect upon the legitimate business
earnings of. the railways. The ut
ter hollowness in the cry that the
rate bill caused the panic is seen in
the' fact that b,ose who now venture
to advance this proposition have been
for more than a year contending that
H(v
flsc
ni
BOB TAYLOR'S MAGAZINE
and THE COMMONER
REGULAR PRICE $2.00, Both One Year for Only
$150
, . BB TAYLOR'S MAGAZINE is the Great Southern Magazine. The personality of its editor-in-chief,
ex-Governor Bob Taylor, stamps it, dominates it and differentiates it from all other periodicals. It is
not political, but hterarv. and it diffuse mmliini- kntw nA Imnnimx In ! fmSl St .nt.r.
This combination furnishes a mental feast for every man. woman and clidd. and the cost. $1;50 for an en.
. THE COMMONER, 52 times, and BOB TAYLOR'S MAGAZINE,
tire VMr. i witliin tVtm rsnA f
12 timet, all for $1.50. Send today. Don't delay, lest you forget
Address THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nebr.
i ' hi 7
SHORTHORNS FOR- SALE
I have an eight months' old bull (red) ;
an eighteen months' old. heifer (red-roan) ; a
two months' old heifer calf (white-roan), and
two cows (red).
Address W. J. E5 R Y A N , Lincoln, Neb.
"" i
Commoner Condensed Volume VI
numbers ofTheGommoSfnr ' 7inaildiV1, corr,ospondlng- to tho volunie
TO NEW OR RENEWING SUBSCRIBERS
One Year's Subscription to Tho Commoner... ) T ,1 ai r
Tho Commoner Condensed, Cloth Bound f DOth $ I 50
"EMITTANOES MUST ma SENT WITH ORDERS.
Address, THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nebraska.
the rate bill was a humbug and a
fraud because it had no effect what
ever because it had given promise
of a reduction of rates and no reduc
tion of rates followed. Then state
legislation against railroads is point
ed to as a cause for shrinkage in the
value of the stocks and for the panic.
Mr. Roosevelt and the national ad
ministration are not responsible for
this. It was occasioned by the same
revelations of lawlessness and dis
crimination in railway management
that made the federal rate bill a ne
cessity. "If the state measures have been
too drastic the cause of the injustice
is not with the national government.
"Instead of making a panic the
national policy of ending the lawless
ness of corporations in interstate
commerce and of taking away their
power of issuing, without supervi
sion, stocks and bonds, will produce
a change in their management and re
move one fruitful cause for loss of
public confidence.
"The business men in the past
,have sympathized with the. effort to
eradicate from, the business system
of this counlry the influence and con
trol of those who have achieved suc
cess by illegal methods. Is all this
to be changed by the panic? Is it
proposed because of it to repeal the
rate bH? Shall we dismiss the
prosecutions for violations of the
anti-trust law: Shall we permit and
encourage rebates and discrimina
tionsby ratlwavs? .Tr this- film rirvnrii-
tion of sanity to which we are invited:
to return? Shall wo join in the sneer?
at the fight of the administration
for honesty and legality In business
as a youthful attempt at an alleged
moral regeneration of our business
system? No panic, however, severe,
can make, wrong right. No man who
sincerely believed the administration
right in its measures to punish vio
lations of law qan now be turned
from the earliest support of that doI-
icy today. y
"I believe myself to be as conser
vative as any one within this com
pany. I believe that in connection
with personal liberty the right of
personal property is the basis of all
our material progress in the develop
ment of mankind and that any
change in our6 social and political kvr-
tem which impairs the right of private
property and materially diminishes
the motive for the accumulation of
capital by the individual is a blow
at our whole civilization. But no
one can be an observer of the oper
ation of the exercise of the right of
property and the accumulation of
capital and its use in business by the
individual and the combination of
individuals, without seeing that there
are certain limitations upon the
methods in the use of capital and the
exercise of the right of property that
are indispensable to prevent the ab
solute control of the whole financial
system of the country passing to a
small oligarchy of individuals.
"The combination of capital is just
as essential-to progress as the as
sembling of, the parts' of a machine,
and hence corporations, however
large, are instruments, of progress.
But when they seek to use the mere
size or amount of the capital which
they control to monopolize the busi
ness in which they are engaged and
to suppress competition by methods
akin to duress, they should be re
strained by law.
"Again I am earnestly opposed to
the government ownership of the in
terstate railways that are the arterial
system of this country. Those rail
ways should continue to be managed
by private corporations. Govern
ment ownership of railways means
state socialism, an increase in the
power of thte central government that
would be dangerous. It would be a
long step away from tho individual-,
ism which it is necessary to retain
In order to make real progress. But
no one could defend a railway system
in which the unlawful discriminations
by secret rebates and otherwise were
practically . without limit in the in.
terest of the trusts and against tho
ordinary shippers. These abuses can
only be reached and ended by closely
regulating the railways and putting
them under the tribunal which can
insist upon publicity of business and
Br
8B
RUPTU
New Scientific Appliance, Always a Perfect
Fit Adjustable to Any Size Person
Easy, Comfortable, Never Slips, No
Obnoxious Springs or Pads
Costs Less Than Many Com.
mon Trusses Made for
Men, Women or
Children.
SENT Oft TRIAL
I have invented a rupture appliance that I
can safely say; by 90.-years'- experience intha
.rupture business, isvthe.only one that will ab-
C E. BROOKS, The Inventor
solutely hold tho rupture and never slip and
yet Is light, cool, comfortable, conforms to
every movement of tho body without chafing
or hurting and oosts less than many ordinary
trusses. There are no springs or hard, lumpy
pads and yet if holds tho rupture safely and
firmly without pain or inconvenience. I bare
put tho price so low that any person, rich or
poor, can buy, and I absolutely guarantee it.
I make it to your order end it to you yo
wear it, and if it doesn't satisfy you send it back
to me and I will refund your money.
That is the fairest proposition over made by
a rupture specialist. The banks or any respons
ible citizen in Marshall will toll you that is the
way I do business always absolutely on tho
square.
If you have tried most everything else, come
to me. Where others fail is where I have my
greatest success. Writo me today and I will
send you my book on Rupture and its Cure,
showing my appliance and giving you prices
and names of people who havo tried it and been
cured. It is instant relief when all others fail.
Remember I use no salves, no harness, no lies.
Just a straight business deal at a reasonable
prlco.
C, E, Brooks, 6198 Brooks Bldg., Marshall, Mich.
PATENTS MSS8SEB
Froo report as to Patentability. Illustrated Quids
Book, and List of Invontlon3 Wanted, sent frco.
EVANS, WIIiXLENS & CO., Washington. D. 0.
Sufticntm' JWwrtlsliifl Pept
This department is for the exclusiv
uso of Commoner subscribers, ana
Bpecial rate of six cents a word per m
ecrtion the lowest ratehas bees
mado for thorn. Address all commum
cations to Tho Commoner, Lincoln, inbi
XANTED A LOCATION TO ESTAB
W ,Hsh a democrat!': ?p?l
onrl rtV nfllpn An llTWt 14 M
Can furnish tho very "hr
onces by democrats whe,
sant with my ability as .m
man ana, a aemocrai.
146, Bourbon, Ind.
COR SALE IRRIGATED FARMS IN
r1 California alfalfa, fruit, vegetable.
For prices and description of JanAa' ""
dross John,Kiricaid, Real Estate Ageni,
Dos Palos,' Calif.
A BARGAIN 700 ACRES LOUISIANA
A oak timber 'land. Write the own
or, Guilford Leslie, Asiuanci, um
'VPV H
w
. ,. . r,m.r,rTnTT -irrn DEftl-
AJNX XU jaaXAWLiiOiiuyw- :,iHnif
ocratlc paper; must do ' :"cvr
t ocranc paper; iiiuot "","' npxr
field. Will put In strictly moaernnw.
plant. Best references. Address J. v
Graves, Galena, 111.
mm
"i.'AM'I 'MlW'l"
.6
V ' k. AJ(jL.IM ..k. JflJ8j&-aiK mmS ''a M'-jHtr i .rjJ..MWUtij
VhvAi'i "CA '