V." -? . .-.' !, ft l.W -Ti r-t IKM rjllJTBV .. PI5,;I ;&f..y.;....,j ni wwWKjr " i' J iv;mv' ' 1 " . ".". The Commoner. 3 'V' Vol. -a, No. 3o. .if i 1 i1rww&m Wr$!Ww$ 4 bl FA announcoa that ho will "in his county convention opposo a general Indorsement of the Kansas City platform and Insist upon specific declarations on each subjoct Included In the platform. He ought to bo accommodated, for the friends of tho Kansas City platform aro not dodgers. A general Indorsement of tho national plat form iswusually sufllclont in a county convention bocauso It covors all national Issues and a reitera tion of each plank, added to the declarations on state and county matters, would make tho plat form unnecessarily long; but If any Hopkins man thinks ho can. prevent a roforohco to tho money question by-demanding a specific plank ho should bo answered by a demand for tho specific indorse ment of evory plank in tho platform. If he objects to the wording of any plank, lot him present his substitute. If ho opposes bimetallism, let him present a plank indorsing tho gold standard. If ho objects to 16 to 1, lot him name some other ratio at which ho favors free coinage. If ho is opposed to tho plank condemning banks of issue, lot him prepare a substitute favoring banks of issue and stating whethor notes should be issued on bonds or assets. If ho wants specific declarations ho ahould havo his deslro fully and completely satis fied and ho should bo compelled to meet honesty with honesty. If tho democratic party is to in dorse tho gold standard for which, republican leaders plotted secretly for twenty years and which they now dofond by arguments which they dis puted six years ago if the democratic party is going to indorse this policy, it ought to buy a ticket and enter tho republican tent In a dignified "way and not crawl in under the canvas when Hanna and our strenuous president aro not looking. JJJ Republicans and the Tariff. Representative Tawney of Minnesota is a member of the ways and means committee. Mr. Tawney is a candidate for re-election. The ropub- Hcajvsof Minnesota in their state platform indi- Eed a desire for tariff revision and Mr. Tawney has issued a statement in which he declares that he is favorable to revision, reciprocity, the elec tion of senators by the people, and the enactment of legislation for the regulation and control of trusts. Mr. Tawney points out that at the last session ho cast two votes Jin favor of rovislon of the tariff; one for the. Babcock bill creating a re duction in the duties on the products of the steel trust, the other in favor of the amendment to the so-called Cuban reciprocity bill removing the duty on refined sugar, the product of the sugar trust. Mr. Tawney then says that ho heartily in dorses every principle and declaration contained in the Minnesota republican platform and that he adheres to and favors every principle or policy of the national republican platform adopted in, 1900. He promises not only that he will work for tariff revision along the line of reduction of du ties, including reduction of duties on lumber, but he adds: "I will say to you that if the republi cans control the 58th congress, thore will be such revision of the tariff." Perhaps Mr. Tawney means woll, oven though he assumes the somewhat inconsistent attitude of giving cordial indorsement to the Minnesota platform of 1902 while at tho same time he indorses the republican national platform of 1900. His statement indicates that he appreciates the strength of the popular demand for tariff revi- slon, and yet It is difficult to understand what au thority Mr. "Tawney has for giving his people, tho assurance that if republicans control the 68th congress, there will be a revision of tho tariff. Tho republicans had the opportunity to revise the tariff ( at the last session, but they neglected it, They had the opportunity of passing tho Babcock bill, and thus reducing the duty on the products of the great steel trust, but they neglected this oppor tunity. And now even Mr, Babcock, the father of that measure, has abandoned his position, while there is nothing in the attitude of republican lead- era generally to give encouragement to the" ad- a vocatcs of tariff revision. Tho campaign book recently issued, by. tho republican congressional committee, of which com mittee Mr. Babcock is the chairman, devotes con siderable spaco in an effort to show that the so called "protective" system of the republican party has benefited the country; there is, however, in this book nothing to give encouragement, to the hopo held out by Mr. Tawney. At its last session the republican congress failed to provide tariff revision, reciprocity, tho election of senators by the people, or the enact ment of legislation for the regulation and control of tho trusts, four accomplishments which Mr.. Tawney would have his people believe they may expect at the hands of tho republican party. Failure in these respects was not mere oversight, for the republican congress deliberately defeated measures introducd for the purpose of accom plishing these results. The republican state convention of Minnesota and the republican state convention of Iowa were conspicuous because of the position taken by these two conventions on the tariff question, a position that was in marked contrast with that of other re publican conventions. Do these republican leaders expect that tho people of Minnesota and the people of Iowa will ,elect republicans to congress in the hopo of ob taining tariff revision, while the people of other states will elect republicans to congress in tho hope of preventing tariff revision? Manifestly they do, and it may be that the republican major ities in these two states are so large that repub lican leaders have good reason for the faith that is within them. But some time in the not dis tant future there will be a change. It will occur when the people of these two states and the people of other states learn what they should have learned long ago, that republican, platforms are not made to stand on, but are, .made to get in on; when they learn that there is nothing in the creed of present day republicanism that prevents a republican candidate in New York from making one pledge in behalf of his party, while a re publican candidate in Minnesota and in Iowa makes a wholly different pledge in behalf of the same party. Some time there will be a day of reckoning. JJJ A Simple Statement. t The Chicago Tribune, republican, in. an edi torial declares: It Is a notorious fact that some of the tariff schedules do afford shelter to monopoly. That Is, they permit certain trusts or com bines to exact from domestic consumers un reasonably high prices for their products prices higher than could bo exacted if tho tariff afforded no more protection than is nec essary to enable the American producers to compete on even terms with their foreign rivals. As some trusts make an illegitimate use of the protection they enjoy, why should tho republicans of Iowa and of the United States hesitate to say so? Why should not they promise to deprive the trusts of a shelter they are abusing? The language used in the Iowa platform is not a confession that the tariff is the parent of trusts. There are trusts in free trade England. The language is a simple statement that the party which made tho tariff will change the tariff whenever it appears a wrongful use is being made of any of tho duties levied by it. If it was proper for the republicans of Iowa to admit that some trusts make an illegitimate use of the protection they enjoy, why was it not proper for the republicans, of Illinois to make the same admission? Why did the Illinois republicans fail to make that admission in their platform? Why did tho republicans, in national convention assembled, fail to make similar acknowledgement of the truth? If it is a. notorious fact that some of the tariff schedules do afford shelter to monopolies, why . wait for' convention resolutions? Why did -tho re publican congress at its last session refuse to adopt the bill Introduced by tho democrats, pro ' viding for tho reduction of tho tariff duties on trust-made products? Why did they shelve tho -Babcock bill, a measure introduced by a republi can, providing for the reduction on the products of the steel trust? If it is a notorious fact that some of the tariff schedules permit trusts or combinations to exact from domestic, consumers unreasonably high prices for their products, why did the republican con gress, adjourn without providing a remedy for' the consumers of the country? Of what value is "a simple statement" that tho party which made the tariff will change the tariff whenever it appears a wrongful use Is being made of any of the duties levied by it, in the presence of tho fact that the party which made the tariff derives its campaign funds from the great cor porations that thrive by the tariff and imposo upon the people through the privileges obtained under tho tariff? Of what benefit Is this "simple statement" in the presence of the fact that the party which made the tariff, although being in control of tho White house, the senate, and the house of repre sentatives, failed to change the tariff even though Its candid party papers and leaders are required to confess that it is "a notorious fact that some tariff schedules do afford shelter to monopoly." JJJ Legislative Twins. ; That eminent republican newspaper, the New York Sun, does not appear to take kindly to tho tariff plank in the Iowa republican convention. The Sun directs attention to house bill No. i5109. This bill was introduced by a democrat, Mr. Ricti ardson of Tennessee. The bill was as follows": ' ' , Be it enacted, etc., That, when, it is s.ho'wjiV to the satisfaction of the president and sec- retary of the treasury thai articles and com!-? modifies are manufactured and controlled or produced in the United States by a trust or trusts, the importation of such articles and commodities from foreign countries shall be' free of duty until, in the opinion of the presi dent and secretary of the treasury, such manu facture, control or production shall have. ceased. Sec. 2. That when It Is shown to the sat isfaction of the president and secretary of the treasury that any article or commodity which is manufactured in the United States is sold in a foreign country more cheaply than. . the price at which the same article or com modity Is sold in the United States, the rate of duty on such article or commodity shall be reduced by the president and secretary of the treasury 50 per centum of tho present rate, , or to such extent as to prerent the continu ance of such irregularity and injustice, and remove the indirect tariff bounty which pro motes the same. The Sun declares that this bill is in line with the tariff plank in the Iowa republican convention, which plank Indorses "any modification of tariff schedules that may be required to prevent their affording shelter to monopoly." The Sun points out, however, that neither of the senators and no member of congress representing Iowa, either in troduced such a bill or gave any support to the measure; and the Sun refers to the Richardson bill as "the practical legislative twin of the theoreti cal suggestion advanced by tho Iowa republicans" Tho Sun goes to considerable trouble to prove, what every one must know, that democrats object to affording shelter to monopoly in any legislative act relating, to the tariff or other questions. Ten years ago the editor of The Commoner in troduced in the house a bill similar to the one in troduced by Mr. Richardson. This' bill provided ttfat whenever any federal circuit court should find that a trust or conspiracy in restraint of trade existed, in respect to any article upon which any duties wore laid, by the existing tariff law of the United States, it should bo the court's duty tQ t M U V