r--IUI-UlJf.l-im Mtnuwmwinninmiii'w w.. 4 j n- 1-' The Commoner. VOLUME 8, NUMBER 1 4 The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. Wll.MAM.T. llHVAtf Killlornml Prnprhitor. iIicimuii l. MunrAi.i'it Airoeliili' ICilllor. GlIAltMW V. llltVAM l'liblUllPr. Ktllfriilnl TtiKifriH mid nntliif Ollkc 221-WO Hiiiilll 12tli Klifft, Klltricd nt tlm l'oMnn'eo nl Lincoln, Net c ( contl-cltu iiinttor )iiYi!iir - ttl.OO Ha Mouth - - .1 li (.'lull nl I'lvc or more. 1'cr Vrnr tS 5 .1 TIlH'K iMolllllH MiiBlu Copy Hmnil( CopIck Krcc .SUIIHOHII'TIONS can 1)0 writ direct to Tlio Com- . moner. They can iiImo bo mint through nuWHpapura Which havo lulvi'i'tlHfil a clnbbJiitf rate, or through local iiKcntH, whoro Miib-UKoiilH have been appolnt d. All rumlUaiicM-H Hbonld br mMit by poatonlco money order, -xpr'HH order, or by bank lrari on Now York or Chlciitfo. Do not hoikI individual oIiccIch, HtampH or money. niNf'OVl'IXtrANCKH It l found that a largo majority of our HtibHcrlbern prefer not to havo their HiibHcrlptlonH Interrupted and their nioH lirolcen In cane thy fall to remit beforo expiration. It Ih therefore aHmimed that contlnuanco Ih deslrud unleMH HtihKcrlberti order discontinuance, eltbor when HiihHcrlbliiK or at any tlmo during the year. Trenentallon (Joplew: Many peraonn mibscrlbo for frlundH, Intending that the paper Hliall stop at tho end of tho year. If IriHtruetloriH are given to that effect they will rocolvo attention at tho proper time. UMNMWAI.H Tho date on your wrapper shown tho time to which your Hubnerlptlon Ih paid. Thus January HI, 08, meaiiH that payment ban been re ceived to and Including tho hint Ihhuo of January, 11108. Two weekH are required jifter money has been received before tho date on wrapper can bo changed. (HIANCH OK ADDUKSS SubHcrlber.s requesting a change of al 'i-chh miiHt give OLD as well a N13W addreHH. A1)V!0IITISIN(; Hates furnlHhcd upon applica tion. AdilruHM all communleatlonH to THE COMMONER, L'ncoln, Nob. Volumo Eight, Number One. ISlr. Tuft skated deftly all around the tariff question while In Boston. With this number Tho Commoner begins Its eighth year, feeling very well, thank you. Tho "million army" Is being recruited at a rapid rate. Join and assist in tho work of organization. Perhaps a doctor was put in command of a naval ship so as to be handy in caso it was sud denly afillcted with (hat sinking feeling. Tho Roosovolt-Brownson affair does not boost tho llobson $200,000,000 naval appropria tion plan. Next time tho "round robin" system will bo used In disagreeing with tho president, prece dent pointing tho way. Another flvo to four decision of tho supremo court, tho llvo bolng against tho best interests of tho common people as usual. A remarkablo thing happened recently at Muncio, lnd. A mob was subjugated there with out General Frederick Funston being called upon to parade. Political battles avo won by thorough organ ization and woll defined plans. Now is tho time to organize and perfect plans for tho triumph of democratic principles. Tho Now York World's "map" is not nearly 130 black as tho faco of the Now York World when it contemplates tho possibility of a triumph of gonulnoly democratic principles. With tho postoillco department making laws to suit itsolf, and tho supromo court declaring unconstitutional the laws that tho people enact, things seom to bo in a somewhat mixed condition. And of courso some time in tho .future our military and naval manouvors will havo to bo postponed whilo tho surgical head of tho army holds a consultation with tho surgical head of tho navy. Buffalo, N. Y., has a "Smilo club." Tho K?n.iW J8.. n,ot oliSlbl membership in a Smile Club during tho prevalence of tho kind wm"w" u??ihQr ,wo 11!,lv. beo enjoying is uuvu,w tu illvJ "lumuursuip in a "Urouch Club. Washington Letter Washington, D. C, January 13. The bitter fight being made in Ohio upon Secretary Taft as a republican nominee and the fact that both Indiana and Illinois have their own favorite sons with quite a possibility of New York pre senting the name of its governor forward, puts tho Taft candidacy in a very serious position. Undoubtedly today he is the strongest man whoso candidacy has been presented. That means it is the Held against Taft. He has back of him tho strength of the administration, of course, but ho has the weakness as well. Most recent successful candidates for presidency on tho republican ticket have come in without any record of their own or any record which they had to father. Benjamin Harrison was elected as a result of a revolt against Cleveland; Cleve land was re-elected as a result of a revolt against Harrison. McKinley was swept into office be cause of the unpopularity which Cleveland had built up, and for divers other reasons which everybody knows. President Roosevelt with his famous luck was elected by the greatest popular majority known to American politics, and the greatest electoral majority, though he polled scarcely four hundred thousand more votes than his predecessor, and ran behind the vote given to Mr. Bryan in 1900. Thus it appears that you can not always be sure that the nominee who represents tho policies of an administration is going to bo strengthened thereby. Politicians in Washington think that Mr. Taft will suffer if he appears openly as the residuary legatee of the Roosevelt administration. But it is worth while considering three men, two of whom are national characters, one a state figure. One of the most prominent finan ciers of Washington said to me today: "Watch out for a ticket made up of Cannon and Hughes. Cannon is a national character. All his life has been spent in public service. Ho has been speaker for three terms. He represents the revolt against the Roosevelt radicalism. He has the best machine in the United States, for he has every republican member of congress with him. Hughes is strong in his own state, and with the well-informed people of other states. But ho is not known widely throughout the coun try. Furthermore he knows little of national affairs. If he should come here for a term as vice president he would learn much about na tional matters of which today he is ignorant. Of course it is always possible that the president may die, either by disease, accident or the act of the assassin. We have had five such cases. In that event what better man could there be to succeed to the office than Governor Hughes of Now York?" Tho request made by attorneys for the Seaboard Air Line railroad for a receivership is a matter of national importance. "Of course the railroad controls a limited territory, running south from Washington to Tampa, Florida, with branches that enable it to touch Savannah and Charleston. It has 2,382 miles of road and a funded debt of $G3,000,000. It is one of the roads controlled by Thomas F. Ryan, the head of the tobacco trust and the man who now holds the interest in the Equitable Life Assurance company which was formerly possessed by the unlucky James Hazen Hyde. It is reported that Mr. Ryan is going to turn his interest in this railroad over to Edward H. Harriman a state ment which recalls the phrase that the last state of this corporation was worse that the first Tho territory through which this railroad runs is rich and prosperous. The business the road has been doing has been so great that it was hardly able to discharge it. But about a year ago Mr. Ryan and some men of his type sought to oust from any position of power or control Mr. John Skelton Williams. Mr. Williams 000000 Subscribers to Tho Commoner who commenced with the first issue of the paper should renew their subscription now, to avoid the possibility of inissin- an issue of the paper. & X 000000000l fought. He showed the meth'ods of which the Ryan faction had been guilty. He proved to the satisfaction at least of the investing public that the Seaboard Air Line was being run for the personal profit of Ryan.. His fight has now resulted In throwing the road in the hands of a receiver. Of course nobody thinks this is going to hurt Ryan, financially. Having milked this road and ruined it, he will milk others. But politi cally it should hurt him. The exposition of his railroad methods in Virginia is likely to reflect somewhat upon the various distinguished states men from the Old Dominion who are his close friends and earnest supporters. The record of! Ryan as the wrecker of this railroad, and as the head of the tobacco trust and as the new con trolling, spirit in the Equitable Life Assurance society, is hardly one that will add to the popu larity of Virginians in the house or in the senate who are known to be his close friends and intimates. Ohio is lost to the republican party. The Ohio republican state committee has repudiated Senators Foraker and Dick, and the Ohio sen ators have in turn repudiated the republican state committee. The factional fight in Ohio has ceased to be a state quarrel. It is now a national contest within the republican party. Senator Foraker absolutely refuses to accept the primary plan adopted by Taft's friends on the state committee. Ho threatens a snap conven tion and a contesting delegation if this plan is adhered to. In any event the Ohio fight is sure to be carried into the republican national con vention, and it will disrupt things there much, as it has disrupted things in the Buckeye state. Of course a democrat cares little which re publican dog eats the other in their Ohio quar rel. The struggle is interesting to watch and the longer it continues, the more certain it is that the democrats will appropriate the real bone of contention. The trouble is already past mend ing, and those who can not even now appreciate that Ohio is lost to the republican column will have a rude awakening the day after the next election. Ohio men in Washington and the departments are full of them throw up their hands in signs of distress and confess that who ever may be nominated, their state is going to be in the doubtful column for the first time in twenty years. In the meantime the Foraker and Taft factions are hard at it, like the alle gorical Kilkenny cats who when their battle was over, found that only the tails of each were left. President Roosevelt, who is influenced by men close to him, yielded to the surgeon-general and appointed a doctor to command a warship. Admiral Brownson resigned. The admiral hos been rebuked with very much the same vigorous language that was applied to the retiring en gineer of the Panama canal or to any other man who has dared to affront the Roosevelt imperialism. Looking back upon the record of Mr. Roose velt prior to the time he was president and while he was assistant secretary of the navy, one finds that he was always a sturdy supporter of the line officers. His writings on naval sub jects were as voluminous at that time as they are today upon the joys of shooting bears, fawn rabbits and other large game. In all his writ ings on the navy he laid emphasis upon the part to be played by the officers of the line and ignored altogether this new idea that has come to him that surgeons should be given command of ships. The controversy is an unfortunate one for the navy. The Sixtieth congress was prepared to increase the salaries of navy officers Such an increase is justified by the needs of the officers and is demanded for the good of the service. But, as a member of the navy com mittee of the house remarked today: "If the president and the navy department, the chief of the bureau of construction and the chief of the bureau of navigation are all at swords points each with a faction of the navy lined up in his support, the best thing to do is to let it all co over until another year." Of course if the president is going to scold every officer in the navy who disagrees with him and if such officers are going to resign rather than listen to the rebukes which he imposes, we are not likely to have a very effective navy! and it is not altogether certain that the fault will be with the men who were educated at Anano .lis and who have been bred on the sea. Some day the story of what the navy thinks of Roose velt may be told. It can not be told now while he is commander-in-chief and criticism of hirn. rebellion1, eaulvalent to subordination and WILLIS J. ABBOT. f