SwSwwfwyfrfrnsWI IIJ The Commoner. r n.. m M" I K Iff 1 It P interesting as a novel and far more helpful than most novels. Elisha Gray was born in 1835 and died in 3903. He was a farmer's son and was left fath erless at fourteen. He worked at various forms of manual labor until he got a chance to go to college, entering Oberlin at twenty-two. His rise shows what a boy can do with ambition and per severence. One of the .virtues of his writings is that he presents scientific truth without mate rialistic coloring. His study of nature did not lead him to forget nature's God. The investiga tions of science-ought to increase rather than diminish reverence for the Creator, for each 'new discovery proves more clearly the wisdom and power of the great Designer. The patterns that He has set invite limitless effort. The soap bubble presents a combination of colors that the artist has thus far failed to match; a pint of water holds a latent energy which no giant can boast; the trembling leaf contains a laboratory more complete than the chemist has been able to construct; the tiniest seed that falls to the ground possesses a potency that man has not yet fathomed. Working in the midst of mysteries and dumb in the presence of the daily miracle of life we are constantly gathering evidence of the loving kindness of the Infinite Intelligence who has so bountifully provided for the supplying of every human need. JJJ RAILROAD RATES AND PRICES The Railway Woria says: "One reason 'for the failure to work up a public demand for whole sale reductions in rates is the conviction that freight charges-enter very little into the prices of commodities in ordinary consumption." Jn order to sustain its point the Railway World quotes from a statistician in one of the departments at Washington. This statistician attempts to show the relation between freight rates and prices of a number of articles in com mon use. He says that while the freight charges, using the 1,000-mile haul from Chicago to New York as a basis, have been practically stationary in the eight years 1897 to 1905, prices of goods have advanced in some cases fifty per cent. The Railway World makes a synopsis of this statistician's showing in this form: On wheat, for illustration, the rate in 1897 was $0.1275, and in 1905 about the same, $0,114, yet the price advanced from $.7437 to $3.08 per bushel. The freight rate on a barrel of flour advanced in eight years from 27 to 52cents' wh,Ie the Price advanced from $2.90 to $4.00. The rate on Lccon was held steadily at 30 cents, the price advanced from $4.50 to $7.12 per hundredweight. On butter, the rate per pound was unchanged, at $.0065; the wholesale price was raised from 14 to 21 cents. On eggs and beans likewise the rates were unchanged, standing at $.014 for the former, per dozen, and at $.16 for 'the latter, measured by the bushel; yet the price of eggs advanced from 11 to 20 cents, and of beans from' $.90 to $2.10. On sugar, per pound, the freight rate was $.0025 in 1897 and $.003 in 1905; the price was $.03 in 1897 and $.375 in the present year. Coffee enjoyed the same rates as sugar, and the price was raised from $.0737 to" $.085 per pound. On cotton goods, per yard, the rate was unchanged at $.0069; the price advanced from $.65 to $.0787, wholesale. On men's shoes the price moved in the contrary direction, the rate standing in "both years at $.0112 per pair and the retail price declining from $4.00 to $3.50. It will be observed that in every Instance Tout one cited by the Railway World prices ad vanced, and it is difficult to see how those cita tions sustain the World's claim that freight charges do not seriously affect the prices to the consumer. The advance In these prices was abnormal and In most instances brought about through the trust Bystem. The decline in the price of men's shoes is due, perhaps, to the fact that certain manufacturers have made a ?Zciy, in advertislng a "$3.00 shoe" and a "$3.50 shoe." Anyone at all -familiar with business under stands that freight rates are given largo con sideration when the price which the consumer must pay. Is fixed. The principle against whicli the Railway World contends is so well under stood that it Is hardly necessary to present proof in its support. It may not be out of place, however, to refer to a book recently published by "The World Railway Publishing Company." This book was written by Marshall M. KIrkman and is said to form one of the series of volumes comprised inv the revised and enlarged edition of- "The Science of Railways;" While asserting that "The rates of railway? arc governed by the same laws that fix the price of other necessaries'" of life," and that "we can no more change them arbitrarily than we can the price of fish or flour," Mr. KIrkman says: "The rates charged by carriers affect the cost of everything we use. They appeal especially to the producer and the consumer. Each sees that the amount is added to the cost." The Railway World is mistaken if it really believes that there is no public demand for re form in the matter of railroad regulation. Mr. Roosevelt's promise that he would insist upon an enlargement of the powers of the interstate commerce commission to the end that that body have the authority to fix rate:; has proved to bo the most popular declaration the presi dent has yet made. Whenever republican con ventions have been called upon to nominate can didates for office, since Mr. Roosevelt made that announcement, particular pains have been taken by republican leaders to point with pride to Mr. Roosevelt's position in the hope of winning favor for their candidate. The railroad managers have through their literary bureaus undertaken to create a fictitious sentiment, and they have sought to close the ears of members of congress to the real senti ment. But the fact remains that ere exists a strong and determined public sentiment in favor of genuine regulation of freight rates. Some who favor this plan believe that it will yet be neces sary to resort to government ownership, although they are willing to try the less radical method of government regulation; and many who oppose government ownership are strongly in favor of regulation. If, however, the railroad managers show that they are powerful enough to prevent regulation they may find, at an early day, mauy of the latter class joining forces with those who favor government ownership. It is difficult to understand why those who so vigorously oppose government ownership are un willing to yield an inch when they ought to know that if they remain obstinate they -may be re quired to yield- considerably more. JJJ SOCIAL DISTINCTIONS AT YALE Dean Wright of the Yale academic depart ment in his report to President Hadley complains that one of 'the worse evils at Yale is the segrega tion of rich students in expensive dormitories. He says? "Perhaps the most- serious eril connected with this segregation of' the well-to-do students is that it is bringing together, especially in the sophomore year, those who aim to form the so- ' ciety set, whose chief purpose in college is popu larity and social recognition, and to whom for this reason the claims of scholarship become secondary." -He adds that fathers sometimes ask for these expensive quarters and give as a reason that they do not want their sons to be at a social disadvantage. The protest submitted by Dean Wright is a healthy sign. y Snobbishness ought not to be tolerated in our colleges and it is more apt to make this appear ance in the large colleges than in the small ones It is even uangerous to have rooms of different prices. It is better to hr.ve all rooms rented at the same price and let the best rooms go as a SSfngfiiT11 t0 U,e bGSt' lhG higto -There is evidence of a revival of democratic spirit and it seems to have struck Yale. May the tide continue to rise until aristocracy win SI eliminated from our institutions f learning JJJ A GROWING SENTIMENT ai,oJ;he &'Yns puWic sentiment in favor of the abolition of the pass system finds reflection these ' papSersn edUortal PagGS f mai "S SaveTKoS inspired by Secretary Xante's rectnVacK In returning passes offered him by certain ran- in to say, these officials, according to the ex planation offered, feel that the United States government can better afford to have its cab lar i Linni?v 5J" ? ,pay a few tnouaana dol- tlir they accept passes the fact only makes the mentT wbnX!0U5-, The United States govern ment is not a mendicant. The American nonin are scarcely likely to tolerate the SSSSo5gSt ' .TOLUME5.XUMBERH it properly can play the role of one humw ing favors from private corporations"; the pass-takers confined the use of thei nri, l strictly to errands of official business mS "!S3 and the present explanation implies th? do not-they still must feel the sense of Sey personally under obligations. The man an,? !8 official cannot be completely dissociated The Chicago Tribune in an editorial ptiti "Prefer Passes to Office" says: The itric? S? forcement of Wisconsin's law prohibiting 1 1 2! lie officials from riding on iailwav started an epidemic of resignations. Some of the officials who have resigned are railway men who get transportation favors for themselves and their families because of the nature of their em ployment and who quit their public positions rather than give up privileges which they receive as private citizens. Others of the resigners an. parently accepted office mainly to get favors from the railways and lost their desire to serve the public along with their passes. The Wisconsin anti-pass law is a good one, and the resignation contagion should cause no relaxation in its en forcement. A few public officials, such as rail way employes, are given passes for reasons un connected with their public positions, but usually passes are given to public officials for no purpose but that of genteel bribery. Those who get them are expected to give value received at the ex pense of their constituents, and they generally do. Otherwise the railways would have quit giving free transportation years ago. The ran way pass has probably done as much to corrupt American public life as any one instrumentality. It is not so palpable and gross a form of bribery as money, and many public men have accepted passes who would have turned away indignant and angry ifthey had been offered the equivalent in cash. Having accepted passes they have naturally, felt under obligations to those who gave them. Feeling under obligations to the givers and being imperceptibly biased in their favor, they have drifted along until they have become willing servants. The people of Wisconsin can get men to serve them in public positions without freo railway transportation as one of their perquisites. In attempting to suppress the pass evil they are setting a good example before the people of other states." It Is a good sign when newspapers of the standing of the News and the Tribune denounce the pass system. The News is eminently correct when it says that the government cannot afford to have its cabinet officers place themselves un der obligations to the railroads, and the Tribune does not err when it denounces the pass as a bribe. If any one doubts that those who receive passes are expected to give value received at the expense of their constituents, he may learn something to his advantage by reading a letter referred to in a recent number of The Commoner written by the president of an eastern rail rod and sent to members of congress who had voted for the Esch-Townsend bill. These public officers were frankly told by this railroad presi dent that they would get no more free passes because they had failed to prove themselves worthy of the favor. JJJ NO DISCRETION In the November, 1895, number of the Cosmo politan an article from the pen of Theodore Roose velt was printed. In that article Mr. Roosevelt discussed the proposition that the New York po lice be taken out of politics. Among other things Mr. Roosevelt said Tt is a lamentable thing when the people and the public officials aliKo grow to think that laws should only be enforce" as far as the officers of tlie law think that public opinion demands their enforcement. It is sucn a belief that inevitably leads to lynching, wniw capping, and kindred forms of outrage. An on cer to whom is confined the carrying out of uiu laws has no such discretion." . , Again he said "Some years ago a then noieu politician stated that the Golden Rule and tuo Decalogue had no place in practical politics, ami that the purification of politics was but an irrwes cent lream. The base cynicism of such an uU. ance endears it to the lniave and the fool, ana undsr one or the other of these categories ,e must place every man who does not condemn u. The anti-rebate law provides for the prosecu tion of "persons" as well as corporations, jet" his ruling in the Morton-Santa Fe case air. Roosevelt undertook to say just how far the should be enforced; he undertook to exercise nij cretion in the carrying out of the laws; and aw action in that case had the- effect of persun. lint sono who had learned to place conf dence in h that "the purification of politics is but an irr.ats cent dream." II v H