Sni'TF1" '' .-t.,,-- ...- -, - '-vyq ,r -.3- r'-7fgu?at:jarjraMrK mm w-ww1' $ r f'!, '& 4 v L'i 'r itn -i-f. -is .28 dollvorod a greeting to the delegateB naving high trlbuto to tho work .' tho loacuo and congratulating It on tho hearty co-oporation and inspira tion which it has given tho members of tho democratic party. Tho convention was closed Jam. ary 8 with tho election by acclama tlon of Mrs. Wm. A. Cullop, wifo of Representative Cullop of Indiana, to Uia presidency. Mrs. Edward Taylor, wife of Ropresontativo Taylor of 'Colorado, was eloctod first vico presi dent; Mrs. Duncan U. Fletcher, wifo of Senatoi Flotchor of Florida, sec ond vico president; Mrs. John E. Raker, wifo of Ropresentativo Raker of California, third vico president; Mrs. L. G. Hoffman, Washington, D. C, recording secretary; Mrs. Randolph D. Hopkins, Washington, D. C, corresponding socretary. Undor tho income tax law senators and representatives will havo lighter pay onvolopos than usual this month, as tho ?'K will bo hold out for each unmarried nmn and $35 for each married member. Prosidont Wilson lot It bo known that somo other corporations besides tho American Tolophono and Tele graph company had shown a disposi tion to tako tho initiative in reorgan izations to conform with tho Sher man anti-trust law. A general outlino of tho tentative draft of anti-trust legislation pro pared by majority members of tho house committee on tho judiciary for action by tho full commltteo, subject to a conforonco with President Wll ion, was mudo public January 8, and covors theso main points: 1. Interlocking directorates. 2. Trade relations and prices. 3. Injunction proceedings and damage suits by In dividuals. In ovory case President Wilson's Idea of providing penalties for Individuals as well as for corpo rations in case of violations, has been followed. I A sweeping declaration In favor of he principle of government owner ship of telephone and tolegraph lines and an assertion that the postal serv ice now' is" solf-supportlng for the first time Binco 1883 are features of the annual report of Postmaster- General Burleson, transmitted to congress. Concerning tho acquisi tion of tolophone and telegraph linos, Postmaster-General Burleson ays that the government has demon strated its capacity to conduct pub lic utilities, and, from his present information, ho is Inclined clearly to tako ovor by the postofilce depart ment of tho telegraph lines, and pos sibly also of the telephone lines. Tho froo wool schedule of the new tariff act wont Into effect January 1. The date originally fixed was Decem ber, but It had been extended by tho secretary of the treasury. The Hicks Almanac for 1914 will bo sent postpaid, without additional cost, to all who accept tho follow ing spoclal limited club offer: Sond us only $1.00 at onco, and wo will send ypu Tho Commoner and Word nnd Works, both for ono full year each, and ono copy of Row Irl It. Hicks' Almanac for 1914. i Novor has tho groat Hicks Almanac boon more valuablo or moro needed -by all classes than the 1014 Almanac will be. Tho great Omaha tornado, Tlift ilrmlth nt tt Tintjf cinmninn flux vnn nno nn ..11. ..f. i ... past year, besides many storms of less note, wero forecasted by Prof Hicks For oyer a quarter of a contury The Hicks Almanac has predicted storms, tornadoes, blizzards, hot waves, cold waves with wonderful accuranv Tho 1914 Hicks Almanao contains 100 pages with a cover printed fn colors It Is illustrated with tho usual number of halftone engravings, wood-cuts and other diagrams. Worfl nnd Works is a high-class homo monthly masa ztno for all tho family. Contains Rev. Hicks famous monthly weather fore casts. Total regular price of all throo, $2.00; now for only ail 00. If now a subscriber to either publication, your present oxpiratlon date Will bo oxtended for ono year. Sond your order today. l t0 Address Orders to The Commoner, Lincoln, Nebraska i The Commoner -Ideaned From the Month's News The democrats of South Dakota have named tho following ticket: Senator E. S. Johnson, of Yankton; congressmon First district, T. M. Bailey, Minnehaha; Second district, J. II. King, Hand; Third district, Harry T. Gaudy, Pennington; gover nor, J. W. McCarter, Edmonds; lieutenant-governor, J. T. Heffron, Law rence; auditor, Charles B. Fousek, Aurora; attorney-general, L. W. Bicknell, Day; land commissioner, W. J. Toner, Perkins; treasurer, Jacob Fergen, Hutchinson; secretary of state, J. E. Bird, Coddington; railway commissioner, J. J. Batter ton, Roberts; superintendent of pub lic instruction, Will Chamberlain, Yankton; state chairman, Dr. Rock, Brown. Kansas City, Kansas, has adopted an ordinance prohibiting the display of liquor advertising ,in street cars, on sign boards, in windows, on wagons or on motor cars. The pen alty is a line of $500 and a jail sentence of thirty days. A movement to build a $1,000,000 monument in Nashville to the mem ory of General Andrew Jackson, the hero of the battle of Now Orleans and seventh president of the United States, was launched at a banquet held in Nashville, Tenn., January 8. Messages of approval of the project have been received by tho committee In charge from all parts of the coun try. General Simon Bolivar, former governor of Kentucky and candidate for vico president on the gold demo cratic national ticket in 1906, died at his homo in Lexington, Ky., at the ago of nearly 91. Sex hygiene lectures in the public schools of Chicago were ordered dis continued by the board of education. Tho lectures had been a special course during the last school term. It was decided that no more should bo given ponding a general expres sion from tho public. The withdrawal of J. P. Morgan & Co., tho leading American banking firm, from more than a score of great corporations, and the statement Bhortly afterward by George F. Baker, another dominant figure in finance, that he would take similar action, is taken in Wall street to in dicate a momentous move towaTd the ending of 'interlocking direct orates and the adjustment of "big business" along tho lines of public sentiment. A movement is on foot to secure the passage of a bank guaranty act at the coming session of the Louisi ana legislature. At a meeting of tho stockholders of the Bank of Water proof (La.) a resolution introduced by Louis T. Hunter, and unanimous ly adopted, placed that bank on record as being In favor of a state bank guarantee law, such as Is now similarly In force in the states of Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, and calls upon the represen tatives and senator from its district to use their influence toward the en actment of such ji law. The state of Missouri won a final victory in the 2-cent passenger and maximum freight rate cases, when Judge McPherson of Iowa dismissed the suits of thirteen railroads en joining the state from enforcing the rato laws. The supreme court of Missouri fined twenty lumber companies $436, 000 and suspended ouster decrees pending their compliance .with anti trust laws. Four firms not incorpo rated in Missouri received similar treatment. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young was rein stated as superintendent of the Chi cago schools by the board of educa tion. Mrs. Adelia Stevenson, wife of former Vice President Sevenson, died at her home at Bloomington, Illinois. Mrs. Stevenson was 72 years old, and was survived by her husband and threo children. A false alarm of fire at a Christ mas eve celebration at Calumet, Mich., that had been arranged for the families .of the striking copper miners of that section, caused the loss of seventy-five lives in the panic tl-at followed. A Johns Hopkins specialist at Baltimore used $100,000 worth of radium in an .operation designed to cure a cancer in the shoulder of Con gressman R. S. Bremner of New Jersey. A silver dollar, bearing the date of 1804, and said to bo valued at $3,500 by collectors, was unearthed at New Haven, Conn., seven feet be low the street near the new Yale ice rink. Fourteen men were lost and $1,000,000 damage done to property in a storm which swept the upper New Jersey coast, December 26, the wind attaining a velocity of 123 miles an hour, the highest ever recorded. It was announced at Los Angeles that many railroad projects of great import to the southwest were taking place, large material orders were being placed and equipment orders were under consideration. The supremo court of California decided that the. stato railwav mm. mission could not fix the rates which tho Bell telephone system in that state should charge independent lines for long-distance calls. ' ' It was announced at Chicazn fw a new steamboat line connecting Chi cago and New Orleans with Kansas City would enter into active compe tition with tho railroads for freight and passenger business in the spring Governor West of Oregon ordered his private secretary, Miss Fern Hobbs, to proceed to Copperfield, a mining town, and close the saloons and gambling houses there. Henry Ford, head of the Ford Motor company, announced in De troit that his company would give employees $10,000,000 of the profits ;fV of tho 1914 business; would estab lish a minimum wage scale of $5 a day; would run the factory continu ously instead of eighteen hours a day, giving employment to several thousand men who are out of work now by employing three shifts of eight hours each instead of only two nine-hour shifts and. would not dis charge a man except for unfaithful ness. Mr. Ford said that 4,000 more men would be engaged to inaugurate the change to an eight-hour basis.; A check for $500,000, the contri bution of the Knights of Columbus to the Catholic university at Wash? ington, was presented to Cardinal Gibbons at Baltimore. The sentences of twenty-five of the labor union officials, convicted- in Indianapolis, of conspiracy to trans port dynamite were confirmed Janu ary 6 by the United States circuit couit of appeals of the Seventh dis trict at Chicago. Six of the thirty one were granted new trials. They were: Olaf A. Tveitmoe, San Fran- cisco; Mo.; Ind.; Ohio; Wm. McCain, Kansas City; Fred Sherman, Indianapolis, Wm Bernhard, Cincinnati, James E. Ray, Peoria, 111.; Richard H. Houlihan, Chicago. Statistics supplied by the Minne apolis chamber of commerce showed that the annual consumption of flour in the United States averages one barrel per capita, Minneapolis mill ers producing one-fourth of the total supply. ,. Joseph Chamberlain, the veteran British statesman, announced the decision to give up his seat in tho house of commons he has held thirty seven years. The supreme court of "the state of Washington upheld, by an eight-to-one vote, the right of manufactur ers having no monopoly to maintain prices on their trade-marked goods. Japan will establish a line of steamers with its terminus at Boston, by way of Panama. Calls will be made at New Orleans and New York. What is regarded as the highest price paid in a single land transac tion was $50,000,000 paid for nine teen acres in the heart of London for the Duke of Bedford's freehold property. Embraced in the territory aro several theatres, hotels and great printing houses. On January 1 free railroad passes passed out of existence in Illinois. Neither politicians, newspaper men nor big shippers will be allowed to ride free. The law also prohibits public service corporations from furnishing free gas, light, water or telephone service to any person. President. Wilson attended divine service at the Presbyterian church, at Gulfport, Miss., and listened to a remarkable sermon on the subject of thev personal accountability of the individual to his Creator. Badly beaten, suffering from three bullet wounds, two in his shoulder and one in his head, Charles H. Moyer, president of the western fed eration of miners told the story of his ejection from tho Miniitn copper country, December 27. Moyei' was accompanied by Charles Tanner? auditor of the western federation of miners, who was also a victim of the assault and ejection. The federation president is seriously but not fatally wounded. He was taken to Chicago for treatment and later recovered. t. Congress reconvened Monday, Jan uary 12, after a holiday recess dat ing from December 23. &Z -. .'K j "- tflWmJfeaW. AJ w .- .Hfr&&u&miitmlka&. . rs. lilftfel. ' -