TOsf?fg;l 14 ,(- r ? The Commoner vol. -m,- NO. 3 The First Quarter ,- The Commoner ISSUI2D MONTHLY M ' t u : . ; !'.', ' f-, & 'V, Entered nt tho Powtofllco at Lincoln, Nebraska, nn Hecond'Clatin matter. WILLIAM J. IlllVAN ClIAItHM W. JIltYAW KilltoruiHlI'ropriclor AnnxrlaloKdltorand Publlhor Kdltorlnl IlooiuB niul Itimtnrwi Offlcc, Suite 207. 1'rcM lhiMdlng One Year fl.00 Tliree Mimthn 2.1 Klx Month X0 .Single Copy 1U In Clubs of Five or Sample Copies Free, more, per year... .75 Foreign Post, 2Dc Extra. SUIIHCKII'TIONS ran bo sent direct to Tho Com moner. They can uIho be Hcnt through newspapers which havu HdvertlHod a clubbing rate, or through local agents, where hucIi agents have been ap pointed. All remittances should bo sent by post olllcc money order, express order, or by bank draft on New York or Chicago. Do not send Individual checks, stamps or currency. IIKNEWAI.S Tho date on your wrapper shows tho time to which your subscription Is paid. Thus January 1-1 means that payment has been re ceived to and Including tho Issue of January, 1914. GIIANGI-J OF A nmiKSS Subscribers requesting n change of address must give old as well as new address. ADVISIITISIXG Rates will be furnished upon application. Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. PKOGUESS OF TRUST LEGISLATION Democrats everywhere are deeply interested In tho outcomo of tho anti-trust bills now pend ing beforo congress. These bills, introduced immediately following tho delivery of President Wilson's messago on trusts beforo the joint ses sion of congress, January 20, embody the vital features of the administration's program in the treatment of this question. In another part of Tho Commoner will bo found an article on "Trust Legislation," by Henry D. Clayton, chair man of tho house judiciary committee, which fully explains tho nature and scope of these bills. The democratic position on the trust question Is founded on tho conviction that "private monopoly is indefensible and intolerable." The wbolo purpose of the proposed tniBt legislation is to write that conviction into laws that will make it possible to end the rule of monopolistic power in tho United States, and to forever free tho legitimate business interests of the country from tho restraints of unlawful combinations and monopolies. Tho passage of these bills is Jooked forward to as one of the great accom plishments of the present administration. FRAUDULENT STOCK EXCHANGE TRANS ACTIONS A number of bills to prevent the use of the mails, tho telegraph and the telephone in the furtherance of fraudulent and harmful trans actions on stock exchanges have been introduced In congress. Among these is senate file No. 3895, by Senator R. L. Owen of Oklahoma, which con tains provisions that aro aimed at tho elimina tion of tho evils and abuses of tho stock ex change system, and which, it is believed, win fully protect tho interests of the producers and tho public. Senator Owen comments on his bill in a forceful article on another page of this issue. A crushing blow has fallen upon the prophets of disaster who have for a generation been pre dicting wholesale ruin if the republican party was driven from power in tho nation. And yet a year has passed since the executive, the senate and the house at Washington all three be came democratic. The president has been in a position to recommend what he would and he has had a senate and house ready to cooperate with him. All of the departments of the federal government are administered by democrats. The affairs of the nation, foreign and domestic, are in the hands of those who believe in the de mocracy of Jefferson and Jackson, and the coun try not only lives but prospers. There has been no panic, there have been no wars abroad and no disturbances at home. Could refutation of re publican fears and realization of democratic hopes be more complete? The democratic party is not only victorious but harmonious, while the republican party is still separated in two warring factions; each blaming tho other for the party defeat. The president enters upon his second year with a record of achievement of which the party may well be proud and with more wide-spread approval of his acts than any other president has enjoyed in recent years. It will be a long while before any political opponent will again have the audacity to question the intelligence, tho ability or the character of democratic leader ship. Not only the national government but the states as well have imbibed the progressive spirit and the people and their democratic governors and democratic legislatures are reforming abuses that had grown up under republican rule, and adopting measures and methods that make the several governments still more responsive1 to the will of tho people. The first quarter is past and all is well. W. J. BRYAN. IN SIIADOWLAND Ex-Senator Forakor of Ohio is the ground hog of tho republican party. Ho came out of his retirement long enough tho other day to see tho shadow of President Wilson's forward march and then predicted a "long winter" for this country. Ex-Senator Foraker, it will bo re called, was k mighty power in the days when tho political boss grew round shouldered carry ing tho burdens of the corporations. George W. 'Wickershara, who was attorney general for the Taft administration, told the academy of political and social science the other week that tho Sherman law meets every require ment of present conditions as to trusts and un fair competition. Mr. Wickersham says the president means well, but he disapproves of the legislative measures Mr. Wilson has sponsored Evidence of tho president's wisdom seems to keep piling up all tho time. It was charged before the steel trust hearine the other day that the United States Steel cor poration and its subsidiaries receive rebates through their ownership of ore carrying roads Well, at any rate it sounds reasonable enough GET TOGETHER The democrats in Illinois who are opposed to turning the party over to the special interests should recognize the importance of getting to gether on a candidate for United States senator. Roger Sullivan may be expected to marshal under his banner every element interested in the misuse of government. There will be no division in their ranks; knowing that they constitute a minority, they will be held together by the in stinct of self-preservation. There will not only be -no division among the favor-seeking forces, but these forces will exert themselves to divide the opposition by the stimulating of ambitions and by giving false en couragement to those whose vanity can be played upon. Those who desire to see the great state of Illinois worthily represented in the United States senate should confer and select the man most available and put the entire progressive democracy of the state of Illinois behind him. No man's ambition should have weight in mak ing the selection, and no man fit for this high honor will allow his aspirations to be considered. Devotion .to a cause is shown by willingness to sacrifice for it and not by the desire to profit by it or through it. While it is entirely proper for any man to offer himself for an office, his choice should depend, not upon his wishes but upon the strength which he is able to lend to the cause which he represents. Now is the time for men to exhibit the virtue of "preferring one an other" rather than assert their own claims. The future will have many honors to award to mem bers of our party if Illinois is brought fnto the democratic column. Those who make personal sacrifices now will lay up merit and be more eligible in the future. Let no unseemly scramble rob the party of its great opportunity. The pro gressive democrats of Illinois should get to gether and give the nation a man whose heart is with the people and who has the courage to be their champion. w. J. BRYAN. THE HIGH COST OF LIVING Addressing the American Economic associa tion at Minneapolis, Dean A. W. Small, of the University of Chicago, pointed out some of the causes which he believed contributed to the present high cost of living. He said: "Our inquiry into the central problems of our time will amount to nothing until the leaders of our thought and action consent to a policy of candid and thorough inquiry as to whether there is something radically mistaken in tho capitalistic system itself. Now, when we are paying for to day s dinner we are paying also for dinners served and paid for long ago and we are also paying installments on other dinners that will he served generations hence. Yet we marvel at the growing Blze of the bill. We are still paying interest on $441,000,000 of national debt incurred before 1865. Interest payments al ready have equaled the original loans twice over. Through continuance of the annual in terest payments which do not reduce the prin cipal we are now discharging these loans a third time. Americans for the next fifty years will he paying interest for portions of the Panama canal and at that time will have repaid I the original borrowings but the principal and in terest still will be just as much due as if no payments had been made. Improvements of railroad terminals completed or projected in various cities are bonded for $100,000,000. The interest will be a permanent charge upon the earnings. It will press down upon wages and lift demands for higher rates. Our industries will repay these loans over and over again to the children and the children's children of the original lenders." Dean Small pointed out what he described as "functional fallacies that radically ignore social efficiency. The fallacy of treating capital as if it were an active agent and of crediting income, to tho personal representa tive of capital irrespective of their actual serv ices. The fallacy of incorporating the- fallacious capitalistic principle, thus promoting the local person to immortality. The fallacy of a system of inheritance which assigns the powers and privileges of incorporated capital to sentiment ally designated individuals. This creates herpdi tary economic sovereignty, which must eventu ally become more intolerable than the heredi tary political sovereignties overthrown by revolution." COUNTRY VS. CITY LIFE Theschances of attaining old age are much greater if we live much of our life in the fresh country air, according to a bulletin of the American Medical association. "Statistics go to show," says Dr. Dezso of Budapest, "that the fourth .generation of the town dweller is un known; but enough is' currently reported to make the conclusion inevitable that the sine qua non of longevity is a certain amount of time spent in the country. The city child is subject to a number of disturbing conditions other than mere absence of creature comforts, which under mine the constitution by throwing too heavy a burden on the sense organs, through which ex haustion of the central nervous system follows; among these conditions are noises, a perpetual round of hurry, and unending sequences of inci dents exhausting the attention, to which are super-added the physical discomforts of vitiated air and effluvia from human beings and waste iVanCB'tbeBiJLeB offensive gases and infection-laden dust. To attain old age we have vfeHieV0 ?S.rSelveB from worry, strains and J? ile?; 7rltlldfaw Periodically from the whirl "rf existence, modify our diet, omit the use of stimulants and narcotics, and spend rea sonably long periods of time under pleasant con- Sn? ,5tlC01. reSement- Above all amuse ment should he simplified and accepted rather Z wUg ter' 0nly vegetable -and semi animal foods should he eaten." The New York savings banks show an increase I ep0sitBm, 0Ver 5M0,000 during the past wVti, aittiI1,onf f W increase in bankable wealth in one state during the first year of the democratic administration is not a had showing. Some men like to make themselves consnic hV?8' WillianiWimame wote "S I0'? Xorld tQe other day demand- wJJSJ? tb,e5;ited StateB mediately recognte Huerta and -thus put an end to the revolution.'' Ifjt x. - . lUaiUt.