V-fWf'tpyrM'ajfn V The Commoner. 4 VOLUME 9, NUMBER 25 EDUCATIONAL SERIE The Commoner. ISSUED WEEKLY. Tiyfrrw- twj I m I if m iiiii l I'll il met IIP WlIJ.MM 3. IJltVAM K!Jlor nml Proprietor. tJC!(lll I MTCAI,Y! MfdnlcKiWoT. Cjiajii.hh W. Hjiyak Pulrilirticr. ITOHorJnl Hootiib nml lluslncw Offlcd 324-3IO fc'oulh 121h Stroet iilorcilnttliol'OHtoMco nt Lincoln, Nob., as Recoml-clnw) inntlor (Ji.o Year fl.flo fcl IMaulliH SO ) CliU fll'lvcormoro. ii Ytnr .... 75 aiirco Mont Jin SJiiKl" Cory - - . 5o E'nanjilr CorJff I'rco. 1 nroJpn l'cHnro62 CcntKxIrA - ; ISUHSCKII'TIONS can bo sent direct to Tho Com nionor. They can also bo aont through nowspaperi which have advertised a clubbing rato, or through local agrontB, whero flub-affonta liavo beon appoint ed. All romittancea Bhould bo Bent by poBtofnce monoy order, oxnruns ordor, .or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send individual chocks, fltamps or monoy. 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Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Nob. i . "Tho divine -law, wounded and offended in this world, must possess the inward force to heal Itself from tho wound, to reinstate itself in Its own form. In that nationality, by whose Injury humanity has been most cruelly violated, tho idea of humanity must most powerfully vibrate. Our death was necessary, our rising up will ho necessary; in order that the word of tho Son of God, the eternal word of life, may djffuso through the social circles of tho world. It is through our nationality, tortured to death upon the cross of history, that it will bo revealed to the human Bpirit, that the politi cal sphere must be transformed into a religious sphere, and that the temple of God on earth must bo, not this or that place, this or that form of worship, but the whole planet. For tho earth is the Lord's and the fulness thereof." S1GMUND NAPOLEAN KRASINSKI. If it is true that President Taft was asked to break tho senatorial deadlock in Illinois, we prefer to believe, in view of the results of that deadlock, that he firmly refused. Western republican organs are always telling us how their senators have been taking falls out of Senator Aldrich, but the Aldrich sched ules continue to get into the tariff bill. Who said Philadelphians are slow? A Phila delphia lawyer filed a suit for personal injury damages, and the records show that he filed the suit sixty days prior to tho dato of the alleged injuries. The money invested in one modern battleship would establish an experimental farm station in every state in the union, or build two $40 000 iabor temples in every state, or build l'.OOO miles of macadamized roads in one year. Yes, a few republican senators are doing fairly well on some of tho tariff schedules, but the bulk of tho republican senators and mem bers continue to pile up tho taxes and to" laugh at the consumers who were foolish enough to expect reduction at tho hands of the "friends of protection." The Times-Dispatch of Richmond, Va., says that "even a United States senator is a servant of tho people, and the humblest journal has full freedom to . criticise his official acts." Thanks. The Qommoner appreciates this vindi cation of the right to criticise, and will endeavor to exercise tho right with wisdom and nioder- TAXES THAT ROB THE COMMUNITY Franklin Pierce writes in the New York World as followti: A large proportion of the tariff schedules aro so high and the American monopolies have made them so effective that the consumers in this country, by reason thereof, are actually paying an enhanced price for necessaries equal to the whole cost of labor in the protected manu factures How does tho reader like this? Out of your Income scanty, perhaps you pay the whole labor cost of most of the products of American protected manufacturers, and you pay it under tho humbug plea that it only covers tho differ ence between wages in the United States and in Great Britain and continental Europe. Tho value of all manufactured products in the United States in 1900 was $14,800,000,000, and tho total wages paid in factories that year were $2,600,000,000; and even then, when the trusts wero not in full efficiency, tho American people, because of the tariff, probably paid out of their own pockets the greater part of that entire labor cost for the encouragement of man ufacturing. Not only this, but the duties are so high on a great part of the dutiable imports that they actually prohibit the importation. Tho cases in which they prohibit the importation are generally cases where 'he duty is known as a compound duty, specific and ad valorem so much duty per pound or per yard, together with an ad valorem duty. The result is that the cheaper grades of materials pay much higher ad valorem duties than the costlier, and tho class of goods worn by the poor in practically all cases are kept out. According to Mr. H. E. Miles, chairman of the tariff committee of the National Association of Manufacturers, who testified before the ways, and means committee, the entire labor cost at Pittsburg of converting iron ore, coke and the other materials which go into a ton of pig-iron is 90 cents, while the tariff on pig-iron is $4 per ton. The duty on a ton of pig-iron is more than four times the entire labor cost. Before the industrial commission Mr. Schwab testified that the cost of converting pig-iron into rails was $3.75. The duty on steel rails is $7.84 a ton. Deduct $4 duty on pig-iron and we have a duty of $3.84 to cover a labor cost of $3.75 for converting pig-iron into steel. The wage cost of the American Brass com pany in making their output is 17 per cent of the total cost, while the tariff is 45 per cent; and this company exports $4,500,000 worth of product yearly and sells it in competition with the rest of the world. The builders of railway cars have a wage cost for their product of 19 per cent, yet the tariff on their product is 45 per cent, and they export about $9,000,000 worth yearly. The wage cost of labor in refining to the American Linseed Oil company is, according to Mr. Miles, about 3 per cent of the value of the product, while" the tariff on the product is 50 per cent. The Glucose trust has a total wage cost on its product of about 11 per cent, while the gov ernment extends to it a duty upon importations of from 46 to 69 per cent, and this trust actu ally exports about $3,000,000 worth of product. The government kindly extends to the tobacco trust duties running from 147 to 155 per cent on imports of competing product, while the wage cost of its product is only 19 per cent of the value of the product. The internal revenue tax upon tobacco is the reason for a considerable part of the duty on tobacco. The rubber trust pays in wages about 15 per cent of the value of its product, while the gov ernment affords it a protective duty of 20 to It ?Z nn?1' anM ?Is rust exDorts about $5,000,000 worth ,of product. The sugar trust, with a labor, cost of 3 per cent of the cost of its product, is protected by a practically prohibitive duty of 72 per cent on. refined sugar. The woolon goods trust, with a labor cost of. 18 per cent of its product, is protected by well nigh prohibitive duties. of 55 to 135 per cent' on cloth, 70 to. 118 per cent on dress goods, 96 to 141 per cent on knit fabrics, 86 to 144 per cent on flannels, and 96 per cent on felts Mr, George IL .Mayor of the house of John Lucas & Co., of Philadelphia,, appeared before the industrial commisison in 1900 and testified that the Pittsburg Plate Glass company con trolled 80 per cent of all glass sold in tho United States, and that since the passage t.f the Dingley hill in 1897, the Pittsburg Plate Glass company had increased its price to John Lucas & Co. in the amount of 150' per cem. Testimony was given before the ways and means committee recently that the specific duty on the foreign cost of many imports of plate glass is in the neighborhood of 160 per cent of tho cost value abroad, and that all branches of im ported plate glass, figured 'cut on an ad valorem basis, runs from 89 per cent to 160 per cent. Paragraph 364 of the Dingley bill provides that "wool and hair which has been advanced in any manner or by any process of manufacture beyond the washed or scoured condition, not specially provided for in this act, shall be sub ject to the same duties as are imposed upon the manufactures of wool not specially provided for in this act. This provision was made for the benefit of the Arlington mills, which have a monopoly in what are known as tops chang ing wool through combing, at a cost of 2 to 5 cents per 100 pounds. The provision which we have cited above, to gether with paragraph 366 of the Dingley bill, results in giving to this mill a protection of 1,480 per cent on the cost of combing wool. When yc;U buy a jack-knife of foreign make for 50 cents, you pay a duty of 150 per cent thereon. When your wife buys a pair of the cheapest foreign scissors, slie pays a duty of at least 100 to 150 per cent, and she pays on the commonest table knives and forks a duty of 100 to 22 per cent. The duty on a pound of Sumatra tobacco, the foreign cost of which is 75 cents, is only $1.85, or 34 per cent. The educating process in religious matters of these monstrous duties is well illustrated by the zinc producers of, Joplin. Mr. S. Duffleld Mitchell, of Carthage, Mo., appeared before the ways and means -committee on November 25, 1908, and asked for a duty of 1 cents per pound on calamine, an ore of zinc, produced far away in Mexico, and brought from Mexico to' the Kansas and Missouri smelters at a cost for ore and freight of abo.ut $12 a ton. Al- though admitted free, only 59,000 tons of this zinc ore found its way to the Joplin district in 1907. The Mexican ore has only 40 per cent of metallic contents, while the Joplin ore has 60 per cent. This 1 cents duty per pound on metallic contents would mean $12 a ton on the 40 per cent Mexican ore and $18 per' ton on the 60 per cent domestic ore. While Mr. Mitchell, and his associates were pleading with the ways and means committee to keep out Mexican ore, and thus materially increase the price of galvanized and brass products, the clergymen of Joplin were praying for the con version of the ways and means committee, and while the clergymen prayed the choir sang a hymn, the refrain of which we are told was: So now we humbly pray that we Be saved from ruin's brink; We will accept whate'er must be, But Lord remember zinc. FRANKLIN PIERCE. New York, March 15. THE HANDS OI? AGE The hands of, youth are smooth and beautiful, And round, and finely formed, and white, and cool. SSL1,1"1 knwn two old and twisted hands, with knotted veins; and fingers bent with work, No grace of form is left to those worn frames Wherein the hidden grace of life doth lurk. But thin, and cramped, and old, they on thent bear The scars of those who toil and struggle much The patient strength of all the 'earth is theirs. And tenderness untold is in their touch. The hands of youth are white and soft with ease. But God hath clasped such twisted hands at these. Henrietta Sperry in Smith College Monthly Mr. Carnegie is going to .-write a . magazinq story and .tell us how much he .has spent for. libraries, and how it made him feei to, spend it He should follow up this story by another one confessing just liow he made it iMtffmx wtmmmmmfm ZlisdUimihli.Ji,