-i-- f-fv ,.-. rr.-w vTWR"T!rJ'rWI',AimW' ;MiwWKWipp(f5(r''" The Commoner. 6 .- ' VOLUME 9, NUMBER 2 ! r K. IV HP LP The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY.. William J. Hhtam Keillor mul Proprietor. Hiciunn Im Mj.tcai.vk Am clntc Kdltor. ClMM.XB W. MllYAK Publisher. FdltorlAl Booms and Hulnea Office 324-KO Eouth 12Ui Street i ic irr 1 1 U TttUtl ct M I jEtoln, Kcb., iccctd-den matter Cm Var CO Its Months .... -00 )i CltU cl Five or more. J ci Year .... .7 5 Three Monlba- fchicle Copy - - Famrlf Copier Free. rorcltri roMnroK CfClfKztra flUIlSCKIPTIONS can bo cent direct to The Oom monor. They can also bo sent through nawflpapora which havo advertised a dubbin rato, or througtt local a&onts, whoro sub-agents hvo been appoint ed. All remittances should bo sent by Potomc money order, express ordor, or by ank drart on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps or money. DISCONTINUANCES It Is found that a lart majority of our subscribers prefer .not to navo their subscriptions Interrupted and their moi broken in caso they fall to remit beforo expiration. It Is thoroforo assumod that continuance is dosireci unions subscribers ordor discontinuance, citner whon subscribing or at any tlmo during the year. Presentation Copies: Many persons subscribe ror friends, intending that the papor shall stop at tno nd of the year. If instructions arc given to that fleet thoy will recclvo attention at tho proper tlmo. RBNRWALS The date on your wrapper show tho tlmo to which your subscription Is paid. Thus January 31, 08, means that payment has been re ceived to and including the last Issue of January, 1908. Two weeks aro required aftor money has been recolved beforo tho dato on wrapper can b changed. CIIANGQ OF ADDUIBSS Subscribers requesting m, chango of addross must give OLD as well as NEW address. ADVERTISING Rates furnished upon applica tion. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. Lorimer! Now we know why it is called the "Sucker" state. Tho tariff was a local issue in Hancock's time; it is now largely a personal issue. Thus do we progress. Tho present style in women's headgear is a reminder of the days of the old-fashioned chop pingbowJ. .... Animal hides are on the "protected" list. Everything is , taken out of the hide of the consumer. It is reported that the Hoosevelt party has secured eighty-six pelts. San Juan count or real pelts? The senate would save time by hitching an enacting clause to Senator Aldrich and letting t go at that. Mr. Rockefeller has written a poem. Just because he has a mint of money that man thinks he can do anything. The people who pay the tax seem to he about the only ones who are unrepresented in the con gressional tariff debate. Perhaps that earthquake shock felt in the central west was merely tho echoes of an Afri can jungle interview. By the way, now that we are importing po tatoes perhaps some one -will kindly explain the benefits of the tariff on potatoes. There is every indication that the Rev Dr. Long Is storing up trouble for himself against the day of the Mighty Nimrod's return. ' Indiana reformers are preparing to prove, If possible, that base ball playing is a crime. Depends upon the position of the home team. Statesmen who ridiculed General Hancock's assortion that "the tariff is a local issue" owe an apology to the memory of that distinguished soldier. ' A good many of the Virginia democrats aro giving Senator Daniel-the horse-laugh because of his speech in favor of a tariff on quebracho and the laugh is not more musical because it is f. sort 'of chestnut horse-laugh. I Practical Tariff Talks Senator Cummins of Iowa says that if thero were complete freedom of domestic trade he would not care so much about the height to which tho tariff wall might be raised, relying upon competition to eventually bring down prices. The original theory of protection was that it shut out the foreign manufacturer, and by stimulating tho investment of capital in American industries prices were eventually brought to a point where nobody was wronged. Since tho trusts have come into being and prices are arbitrarily fixed, this justification for a high tariff wall is removed. Yet because the trusts have more influence at Washington than have the common people, the same number of brick go into that wall, and in addition barbs are put on top. The iron ore schedule affords an ex cellent example. The steel trust dominates the market largely because of its control of-the supply of iron ore. Eighty-five per cent of the mineral deposits necessaTy to the steel trade are owned by the steel trust. All steel comes from Iron ore. It necessarily follows that whoever owns the ore occupies a commanding position in the manufac ture of steel. Tho house saw the point and put iron oro on the free list. The senate put it back at 25 cents a ton. The effect of this is to make the United States steel corporation a bigger trust than ever, and gives into its hand a weapon by which it can fix prices at whatever figure it pleases. It effectually stifles competi tion in the matter of prices. Along the Atlantic coast are Jocated a' number of plants independent of the trust. Naturally they desire to secure ore from outside. Down in the West Indies are rich deposits of iron ore. These can be laid down east of the Alleghanies at about the same cost as lake transportation enables the trust to place Lake Superior and Mesaba range ore at its furnaces west of the Alleghanies. In the Mediterranean is another large source, f supply. Ships that took American grain to seaports in that section could bring back iron ore as ballast if there were no tariff. The grain rate was 3 cents per hundred less from Baltimore when this was done; but the ore tariff of 40 cents a ton was prohibitive. That source of supply is closed, and ocean grain rates have gone up. If there was no custom house barrier not only would the steel trust, operating west of the mountains, be deprived of its control of the chief sources of supply and its independent rivals able to get their ore where they could buy cheapest and thus in a measure be indepen dent in price-making, but the farmer would benefit by reason of cheaper ocean transporta tion made possible by the carrying of ore as a return cargo. All of these benefits are set aside, and for what? That the steel trust may con tinue to dominate. tection with the republican platform yardstick measure, that tho tariff shall be tho difference between wages here and abroad, with a reason able profit to the manufacturer? Why is it placed so high? There is but one reason, to give the corporations that dominate that in dustry a protection from competition that en ables them to fix prices. There is no other reasonable conclusion. C. Q. D. THE TARIFF AND THE JEWELERS Cedar Rapids, la., May 10, 1909. Editor Tho Commoner: A large number of jewelers through out the United States have for many years had watch movements made for them in Switzer land and on each movement has been engraved the name and place of business of the dealer and the number of jewels contained in tho movement, namely seven jewels, eleven jewels, fifteen jewels and seventeen jewels. Nowin ad dition to tho fact that the Payne tariff raises the duty on these movements, the American watch manufacturers are trying to impress upon 'the members of the ways and means committee the importance of compelling Swiss manufac turers to engrave on these movements the name of the manufacturer, tie city, the state and the country where such movements are made, and the number of jewels contained therein, and all this is to be done, mind you, in the in terest of the dear American consumer. Now tho fact is it is done so that the American retail jeweler can not have his own firm name placed on these movements, he can no longer say to his customer, here is a watch that is made for us, our own name is on the movement, we guarr antee this watch to give you satisfactory service, and we are personally responsible to you, and will see that you get what you pay for. He can no longer sell, these movements bearing his own name, for the only space where such name and place of business could be engraved has been utilized by the name and place of business of the Swiss manufacturer. It deprives the Amer ican retail jewelers of the right he has to profit by the good impression goods sold from his place of business may bring to jhis firm in tho demand for other goods bearing his own firm name, and it has only been in recent years that the American watch manufacturer has been willing to sell his product to the retailer with out his own factory name ttamped on the move ment, but he will do so now, very willingly, be cause the Swiss manufacturer has forced them to do so, and right now they reluctantly accept an order for "O" size movements for the rea son (not stated by them, however) that if Swiss manufacturers can not supply them as hereto fore, they will do so later on, at an advance in price. (See the "nigger In the wood pile?") And as is always the case the dear public will pay the advance. LUDY & TAYLOR CO. By J. G. McMasters. The lead schedule in the Aldrich bill excited a very long debate in the senate. Several very interesting facts were developed. One of these was that the finance committee refused to let representatives of the lead manufacturers appear before them to give their views. Mr. Aldrich said that he was convinced these men, because they consume lead, aimed to tear down this schedule, and he did not wish to hear them. The consumer is a man whose case does not appeal to the senator from Rhode Island. Lead is one of the most useful of metals. Every man who builds a house or a business block must use it, when ho paints his house he is paying his trib ' ute to the lead industry. If he buys wire or ammunition he also pays. There are rich de posits of it in the United States, many thousands of men are engaged in it. To protect them a duty on the ore is levied. Then to protect the market for the refined ore, a differential be tween the ore and the metal of five-eighths of a cent a pound is levied. This differential means $12.50 a ton. Sworn testimony beforo the ways and means committee of the house was that the cost to smelt a ton Is only $8. One of the largest manufacturers in the country said that the paragraph was so drawn that only two smelters could comply with it. Several men swore that tho interests of the trade would be well cared for -if the differential wera re duced to two-eighths of a cent a pound. Other testimony before that - committee -was to' the -effect that it cost to-reduco ore into lead $15.93 a ton, and the same ton was sold for $19 38 The tariff is $30 a ton. Where is the mathema tician who can reconcile that nmount of pro- IN VIRGINIA Something more than a year ago The Com moner printed a poem entitled "In Virginia." The author of this poem is unknown to The Commoner. Mr. W. A. Sullenbarger of Belle Plaine, la., set the poem to music and sent the same to Mr. Eggleston, state superintendent of public instruction for Virginia, expressing his desire to present it to the schools of that state. The Virginia Journal of 3ducation, published is. Richmond prints, in its April number, Mr. Sullenbarger's song. The poem "In Virginia" follows: The roses nowhere bloom so white, as in Virginia, The sunshine nowhere shines so bright, as in Virginia, The birds sing nowhere quite so sweet, and no where hearts so lightly beat, - -For heav'n and earth both seem to meet, Down w in Virginia1, Down in Virginia. The days are never quite so long, as in Virginia Nor quite so 'filled with happy 'song, as in Virginia, . . . And when my time has come to die, just take me back and let me lie, Close where the James-goes rolling by, Down in Virginia, Down in Virginia. There nowhere is a land so fair,-.as in Virginia1, bo full of song, o-free of care, as in Virginia, And I believe that 'happy -land; 'theLord pre pared for mortal man Is built exactly onUhe plan of Old Virginia, Of Old Virginia. m OS A