4 The Commoner. VOliTIMB 9. NUMBER 1 1 t 4 i mjR m The Commoner ISSUED WEEKLY. Encored at tho PoBtofllco r.t Lincoln, Nobraska, a.0 accond-claso matter. WIIJ.IAM J. DnVAK Editor and Proprietor RlCIIAIin L. MlCTCAI.VJi ABHodnto 'Editor Chaiimss W. BnvAN Publlshor Editorial Rooms and Business Onico 324-830 South 12th Street One Yenr $1.00 Six Month GO In Clubs of Fivo or more, per year.. . .75 Three Months 2JJ Single Copy OS Samplo Copies Free. Foreign Post. 6c Extra. SUBSCRIPTIONS can bo sent direct to Tho Com moner. They can also bo sent through newspapors which havo advertised a clubbing rate, or through local agents, . hero sub-agents have been n lpoint td. All remittances should bo sent by postoftlco money order, express order, or by bank draft on Now York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps or money. 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Addrms all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. GO SLOW, BROTHER, JOHNSON Brother Johnson of tho Houston Post seems 75. --r-oy-tuuu ttgiTatecr becaus'e"Congressman Hardy did not support tho ticket in 1896, and suggests that the "Texas democrats who were loyal to the platform and ticket that year are in no framo of mind to be lectured by Hardy now." Brother Johnston ought to go slow for he will find that, a number of his bosom friends did not support the ticket in 1896. There is Brother Kirby, for instance, and others who did not support the ticket in 1896, but with whom the colonel has been able to affiliate in more recent days. Ho ought not to open up old sores now merely because Congressman Hardy is not willing to become a protectionist. THEY ARE FEW BUT NOISY When it is remembered that the sheep own ers of Texas number but about eleven hundred 'out of a population of nearly five million it is surprising that they can make so much noise and coerce so many officials and newspapers. They remind one of General Grant's story. On his first visit to the west he was awakened early in the morning by the howling of wolves. The commander of the fort asked him how many he thought there were. He guessed five hun dred. The commander then took him to a little hill where ho could see them and he was sur prised to find there were but three they had their heads together and were howling in concert. A PERPLEXED BOY Parunts is strange. One day I came from school . And told my paw about a. swap I made, A "sight unseen" wif Mugsy, the durned fool, And swapped a old barlow wifout narry blade And got a good old barlow in tho trade. And maw looked sad, an nen she shook her head Ever see your maw look that-away? Hut paw, he slapped my back, and laughed and said: "He'll be a man some day." '. But nothor timo I said, when I was late, N "I laid up on tho barn and watched the sky And pigeons, way up yonder, flyin' straight ' And white and red clouds jest a sailin' by And wonder how them little swallers fly'' And paw, he growled, an nen he shook his head And 'lowed 'at I was gittin' purt-nigh grown But maw, she drawed me 'gainst her side and said: "Let tho dear child alone." St. Louis Globe-Democrat Standpatism" Wins - William J. Moxley, standpat candidate for congress to succeed Mr. Lorlmer from tho Sixth Illinois district, was elected at a special election. Ho defeated the democratic and ttib insurgent candidates. This victory and tho character of boasts made by the Aldrich and Taft supporters, together with tho defiant speech delivered by Speaker Cannon at Kansas City on tho evening of November 26, indicates that no mercy is to bo shown tariff reformers within tho republican party. The Chicago Inter Ocean, republican, prints this editorial: MOXLEY WINS WHO LOSES? After a most embittered campaign the Hon. William J. Moxley, regular republican candi date for congress in the Sixth district, was elect ed cleanly and handsomely by a tremendous plurality over a regular democrat and a repub lican "insurgent." The nature of the campaign made against Mr. Moxley; the manner in which he was at tacked by six allied newspapers in this city for tho policy of the republican house of representa tives in Washington; the extent to which he was made the heir to all the old anti-Lorimer hatreds and falsehoods; and the venom and vigor with which the Chicago newspaper trust and its work were revived to defeat him, have made the Moxley campaign and the Moxley vic tory matters of tremendous national and local importance. What do they mean? They mean, in the first place, that the bolt from the republican party which was organized by the so-called insurgents in the senate and house at Washington has been promoted for All it was worth in this test campaign and has failed ignominiously failed not only to defeat the regular republican party but even to serious ly imperil it. They mean, In the second place, that the friendship of the Hon. William Lorlmer, now senator of the United States, has become a posi tive asset to the aspirant for political honors in this city and that any attempt to mako that friendship look liko a liability, such as has been made by tho resuscitated newspaper trust in the campaign just closed, defeats its own object and actually helps the candidate whom it is expected to hurt. They mean, in the third place, that the old old lesson of the newspaper profession and news paper business still holds good; that a cam paign mado by newspapers no matter how numerous on false issues, false presentations of fact, and false representations of the candi dates is .foredoomed to failure if only courage ously encountered and exposed. From the national viewpoint, of course, tho most important result of the election is tho utter collapse of the insurgents. Prom the local viewpoint the most important event is tho triumph of Senator Lorlmer. Cradled politically in a tempest of newspaper vituperation; fighting every inch of his way from a' precinct leadership to the senate of the United States; contending unceasingly with the most terrific newspaper onslaughts; "met on every sido with abuse and always facing a storm of detrac tion from every newspaper of this city, except the Inter Ocean, ho stands today vindicated not only in his own right and in his own ambition, but even in that intangible and impalpable some thing known as political popularity. It Is a great thing for the republican party that in this test conflict the LaFollette insurrec tion has been smashed to flinders. But it Is a still greater thing, for the cause of manhood in the public life of Illinois, that Senator Lorlmer has routed his newspaper enemies so utterly and completely that they today this morning look little less than .ridiculous in their impo tence and their defeat. Chicago Inter Ocean, republican. i i Senator Aldrich' s Western Trip New York Evening Post, Ind.: Senator Ald rlch's incursion into the west promises to be the most interesting political Odyssey of recent times. Here is a man who, heyond the Missis sippi, stands for almost everything evil in our political life. A director of trusts as well as an organizer of them, a largo stockholder In protected enterprises, a friend to Standard Oil, Wall Street, corporate wealth, and swollen for tunes; the man who is responsible for tho Dlng ley tariff really, there are people in Kansas who can not think of Senator Aldrich without horns and a tail. Now, there were those who thought ho was going among the heathen of the west to teach but, dear no; in Philadelphia he let it be known that it Is not as a missionary but as an humble scholar that he is venturing into tho great and noble and all-knowing west. Its leaders are to teach him what are financial truths and what financial errors and, merely as an incident, Mr. Aldrich will let out just what tho monetary commission Is really trying to ac complish and how unselfish and patriotic afe its objects. The west will find Mr. Aldrich per sonally attractive, entertaining, and able; It will come to understand better how it is that he is the boss of the senate, and it will learn from the senator's own lips how eager he is to do a ' thoroughly sound piece of financial reform be fore quitting public life. Evidently he has the courage of a Daniel, and the result of his going boldly to the western lions can not but impress the whole country whether it holds its thumbs UP or down when the tour is over. America from which we could create or recruit the administration and control of such an insti tution, while to Isolate It from our political life is hopeless. Indianapolis News, Ind.: Senator Aldrich made his first speech in his western campaign Saturday night at Chicago. A few days beforo his appearance it was announced that tho sen ator had no thought of urging any special plan on the people and that his principal Idea was to give us westerners a chance to becomo ac quainted with him that we might see that he was unadorned with horns and hoofs. As our objection Is not to the Aldrich personally but to tho Aldrich theory of government, "we aro not able to see how an exhibition of his per-, sonality will do much to change our attitude. What we "in these parts" quarrel with p .tho control of the government by such men as Aid rich and Cannon in the interest of "tho interests." New York Sun, Ind. Rep.: The Sun will al ways oppose a central bank of issue. Such a bank is intended by the monetary commission. The policy of that body, as now formally dis closed by Senator Aldrich, points to no other consummation. It Is our conviction that a cen tral bank of issue bearing tho same relation to the money of this country that the banks of France and of England bear to the money of those countries would prove a national evil. This country is traditionally and temperamentally un suited to such an Institution. If Mr. Aldrich and his associates by their united genius can fashion a central bank whose functions and pow ers shall be purely automatic and mechanical well and good. But such a bank with us is impossible. We havo developed no class in Ohio State Journal: On his visit west, Sen ator Aldrich will talk on the subject of the future system of money circulation. He will not speak of the tariff or other political themes, but will confine himself solely to the question of finance. While he says he goes west in search of information, ho will no doubt make use of his trip to prepare the public mind for his currency plan, which is reported to be the establishment of a central bank at Washington as tho main feature. He seems to have won over President Taft, if he was not already there, to this scheme of currency; but he will have great difficulty in winning over the country. The people are inclined to fear a great central banking Institution, and the close relation of politics, Wall Street, the trusts, and. tho great money interests to it. They are afraid of it, and It is not "likely that Senator Aldrich, with all his sophistry, will quiet their fears. CAREFUL, OF COURSE Washington dispatches say that the Taft ad ministration will "proceed with care" in its at tack upon the trust system. In other words it will not "run amuck." In other words, also, it will "proceed against the trusts" in somewhat the samo vigorous way in which it revised tho tariff. 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