?!ffW ' rmr '(W, ify w ' wgp i-Ti w-. nwwtt, nr- ",,'UT"'' The Commoner. AUGUST 28, 1903. THE REPUBLICAN OOVERNOR OP WISCONSIN ASKS AND ANSWERS THE QUESTION: "IS OUR GOVERNHENT OP CITY, STATE, AND NATION THOROUGHLY REPRE SENTATIVE OP THE WILL OP THE PEOPLE?" .... wgmmmmm, m w mw AN IMPENDING CRISIS Governor La a olletto of Wisconsin delivered a speech at Colfax, la., on August 6. The Wiscon sin governor is a republican, but ho made bold to warn his hearers against corporate greed which ho declared is drawing tighter tho halter of com mercial slavery about the neck of the people. Governor La Follette disclaimed any intention to excite the prejudice or invoke unfair judgment yi tho part of Lis auditors, but he said that "a deep conviction impels me to appeal to your pa triotism, your love of liberty, of the country to meet the impending crisis. We owe it to tho liv ing as well as to the dead to make honest answer to this question: 'Is our government of city, stato and nation thoroughly representative of. the will of the people?'" Governor La Follette's address on this occa sion should bo read by every American citizen. Pointing to the fact that ono of the causes of tho revolution proclaimed in the Declaration of Inde pendence was the imposition of taxes without con sent, Governor La Tolletto said: "Today great Aggregations of corporato wealth buy immunity from taxation in our leg islatures, and throw the burden which they should bear on to tho individual taxpayers of every municipality and state. Betrayed 1 y his representative, the individual taxpaye- is overtaxed for the benefit cf the corporation. "Taxation without representation is as much a crime against just and equal govern ment in 1903 as it was in 1776. Government by corporations is as destructive of the liberties of the people of this country as the exercise of the same power by a foreign monarch. Tho arbitrary i control of the price of coal and iron and corn and wheat and beef whether by an extortionate transportation rate or by a mon ster combination, is a more absolute tyranny of the American people than quartering the army . of King George upon the American colonists without their consent "There can be no such thing as commer cial slavery and individual freedom. Wo may" have the privilege of tho ballot, w,e may havo the semblance of democracy, but industrial servitude means political servitude. Monop oly in transportation of coal and iron and tho food products, makes a pretense and a mockery of political freedom." Governor La Follette declared that the timo is ripe for a new declaration of American indepen dence. He said: "Wo are building up colossal fortunes, granting unlimited power to corporate organi zation, and consolidating and massing tq- gether business interests as never before in the commercial history of the world but the' people are losing control of their own gov ernment. Its foundations are being sapped " and its Integrity destroyed. "What shall, it profit a man if ho gain the whole world and lose his own soul? What shall it profit a nation if it gain untold wealth and its people lose their liberty? "Tbe gravest danger menacing republi can institutions today is tho overbalancing control of city, stato and national legislatures by tbe wealth and powr of publlc-servlco corporations. "I make this statement in no spirit of hos tility to any interest, but deoply impressed with its profound significance, its vital import ance to republican institutions and its ulti mate influence upon all citizens and all citi zenship." The governor declared that tho danger Is not a new one; that it is not limited to any state or any section of our country, but ho said that tho responsibility it brings cannot bo shirked or pushed aside or postponed. Ho decKrod that the national government and every stato government, partic ularly that of every largo city, has this problem to solve, not at some other timo, but now. Referring to tho control exorcised by great corporations oYor the public service, Governor La Follette said: "The danger point In our system Is tho lawmaking power. It is just hero that all tho ovil forces of monopoly are concentrated for attack. Every executive wanting in honesty and courage, every legislator who Ib weak or corrupt, is sure to bo controlled by tho lobby agents of tho great corporations. Occasionally by straight, simple bribe, more often by in sidious indirect means, they are ensnared and captured by alluring dea7a and promises of political preferement, or frightened and intim idated by threats of ruin to private business and to bring political annihilation. 1 is tho close association of political and cprporato power that defrauds tho public of its rights, defeats legislation for the general good, and passes laws to promoto private interests. "It was in tho Now York legislative in vestigation of tho Erie railway that Gould testified as follows: " 'I do not know how much I paid toward helping friendly men. We had four states to look after, and we had to suit our politics to circumstances. In a democratic district I was a democrat; in a republican district, I was a republican; in a doubtful district, end at all times, I have always been an Erie man.' "More recently tho treasurer of the Now York Central Railway company testiiied that his company had paid out for legislation in one year sixty thousand dollars, and in an other two hundred and five thousand dol lars. "Asked whether his company succeeded In getting the legislation it wanted, he answered: .. 'Yes, we succeeded in getting the legislation.' " m Tho governor quoted from the correspondence passed between the late C. P. Huntington and-General Colton In regard to tho payment of money for the passage of legislative measures and for the control of congressmen. Extracts from that cor respondence havo already been presented to Tho Commoner readers. Describing tho powor of rail road corporations tho governor said: "Their Influoncc hna boon moro powerful than that of tho people; their wishes and their whlsporcd directions havo been moro potent than tho outspoken and oft repcatod demands of their constituents, the recommendations of tho commission or even those of tho president of tho United States. No proof of thl3 declar ation is required. Tho record Is tho proof." Hero tho governor read a letter bearing upon tho action of tho last congroso. This letter has al ready been printed In Tho Commoner, but It can not bo too often published. Tho letter was wrltton by a United States sonator under date of Fcb 'ruary 9, 1903, and contained this paragraph: "It is expecting too much from human nature that senators, whoso ovcry association is with tho great railroad corporations, and whoso political lives largely depend upon them, should, in good faith, approvo a meas ure that would, to an extent, mako tho rail roads a servant of tho people and to be sub ject to tho decision of tho commission when a question of rates Is raised. Tho senate com mittee Is, by a decided majority, men who bear those relations to tho railroads." "How clearly," said Governor La Follotto, "this discloses the naked truth. How startling! How abhorrent! The United States senate with ita honored name which glorify the pages o Ameri can history, In close association with the great railroads and corporations. Yet wo cannot reject tho testimony offered. It must bo bravely met How to make this august body servo tho people instead of corporato power not a hundred yeara from now but right soon, Is the part of the pro blem I shall dlscuBs in speaking of the remedy for tho evils considered. The railroad prefers to deal with largo shippers and it squeezes out tho small ones. It encourages centralization in busi ness. It creates and encourages monopoly. Ev ery great trust and combination in this country la either the direct offspring or foster child of tho railroad. Let mo invito your attention to some il lustrious examples of tho methods employed by the railroads to create a monopoly and control legislation. Passing by the ono with which wo arc familiar the Standard Oil monopoly, with Ita history of unspeakable wrong, which has de stroyed prosperous, Independent, thriving commun ities and towns, happy homes and individual hopes which has left all along its course desolation and despair passing by this appalling record, with its hollow pretense of cheapened product enough in itself for an entire discourse, I present to you, in a word, some of the methods of pro cedure which the railway company pursues in tho formation of trusts and combinations." Republican Party on Trial. When Caleb Powers sought contributions from postmasters throughout the country ho declared that the republican party in Kentucky was on trial. The evidence recently produced at the trial seems to bear out the assertion. Youtsey produces an agreement signed by Powers "waiving the truth or falsity" of an affi davit made by Youtsey for tho assistance of Pow ers after both were convicted. In the agreement Powers promises not to mako tho affidavit public and to return it within fifteen days. The affi davit was given at the instance of a federal offi cial, whose name Youtsey gives a federal official who was a son of a republican judge and who desired the affidavit to use with republican mem bers of tho court of appeals to secure a new trial for Powers. , ... Youtsey's testimony is strengthened by this paper and it will be difficult for any one, after reading it, to deny that the killing of Goebel was a political conspiracy formed among republican officials and carried out with a shameles3ness that would disgrace an absolute monarchy. Will Durbin still refuse to give Taylor up? His rigid enforcement of the law against those who Interfere with thejrights of the black mam is all right, but this will not atone for his re fusal to deliver up a prominent republican who is Indicted for tho assassination of a democratic gov ernor. It raises a now race question if a man must be black In .order to receive consideration from a republican governor. JJJ Compliments from the Enemy. The Commoner does not publish many com plimentary notices, but the editor feols so grate ful to tho Nashville American for its hostility that he is constrained to reproduce its latest eulogy. This is not referred to to show the sincerity of the reorganizes' plea for harmony, but rather to prove that The Commoner is earning the opposi tion of papers which, like 'no Nashville Ameri can, are owned by and published in the interests or certain great corporations papers whose chief purpose is not to print the news or to defend tho principles of a party, but rather to lay in wait for the unwary and play tho part of the "bunco steerer." BecauEO The Commoner exposed the American and challenged It to disclose the name3 and politics of Its owners ani editors, it says: "It is too late for The Commoner to frighten or cajole the Iowa democrats. They have expressed their opinion of The Commoner " and its owner's views in a way that leaves no room for misunderstanding. As for the American, it is disposed to deal leniently with The Commoner and its ("'scrcdited anil dis gruntled owner, who finds his Influence slip ping away from him and only his vanity and ' his stubbornness remaining. The American is one of his pet aversions, because It ha not hesitated to give hlifl the boot when others were afraid to speak. Now that even former worshippers do not scruple to kick him down stairs, the American Is disposed to deal with him as it would with a political tramp who has seen bettor days. The American takea no notice of dead politicians or of barking newspapers that cannot bite. The once 'peer less leader' has degenerated into an Impotent kicker and a cheap, common scold to whom nobody who Is anybody pays any attention. As for The Commoner, Hostetter's Almanac has a larger circulation and more influence." But Tho Commoner will continue to defend tho principles of democracy from both the open, and secret enemies of the party. JJJ If you see a quotation from Abraham Lincoln In a daily newspaper, you are perfectly safe In assuming that it is not a republican paper. ft I m llWJahMlini'jVl'ltfillMIMWt