tt wir&Ai9S'ftv'ml , iwwtftimmrKmiUi'ijH)rA 4 M APRIl20, 1007 3 rjfr Uiority. The ex-presidcnt bases'hls" opinion on tho theory that no'lino can be drawn between the nat ural person and the corporation. While it is true that some of the courts have confused this lino it is, nevertheless, a very clear and distinct lino. The natural person has natural and inalienable rights while the corporation has only those rights which are conferred upon it by law. Man was created to carry out a Divine decree, the corpora tion was created as a money making institution. It is only fair that the natural persons in one stale shall stand upon an equal footing with the natural persons of another state, but there is neither rea son nor logic in the position that a state, can create corporate giants and then without property controlling them demand that they be given all tho rights and immunities of natural persons IN ADDITION TO THE SPECIAL RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES CONFERRED BY LAW. The whole object of an incorporation law is to grant to the corporation certain rights and privi leges which the individual does not enjoy; if the corporation is to have these and then have all the rights and immunities of tho natural person, the man-made corporation will be placed on a higher plane than the God-made man. If the insurance companies begin a systematic crusade against state control they will develop a sentiment in favor of state insurance just as the railroad man agers, by resisting state regulation, create a sen timent In favor of government ownership. Mr. Cleveland's position is both undignified and un democratic. oooo "THE PUBLIC'S" ANNIVERSARY The Public, Chicago, edited by Louis F. Post, has just entered upon the tenth year of its use fulness. The Public is one of the very best journals published in the interest of reforms that appeal to the better elements of American citi zenship. Mr. Post is one of the best informed men in America on public questions, and his style of writing is clear, forceful and concise. The Pub lic has been doing a splendid work in educating the people along higher lines, and The Commoner wishes for it many added years of usefulness. In announcing its new volume the Public says: "While remembering that tolerance, sanity and pa tience are conditions of progress, the Public will not' forget that without liberty progress Is impos sible and that 'eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.'" - '- - OOOO IN TEXAS The Houston Post usually a very well informed paper, finds fault with Mr. Bryan's statement that the value of the railroads should be ascertained and finds insuperable difficulties in the way. And yet Texas is one of the few states which has solved tills problem, the railroad commission hav ing ascertained the value of the railroads of Texas. The Post says: "If it should be determined in Texas that the railroads should earn sufficient money to pay all operating expenses and four per cent interest on the real value of the property, then in all likelihood the commission would have to make a substantial increase in existing rates." According to the state railroad commission of Texas, the railroads of that state made consid erably more than four per cent on the actual .value of the roads. OOOO JUST THAT LONG The New York Evening Post, republican, asks: "How long are the trusts to enjoy their present license to pick our pockets?" Just so long as the people keep in power a party which derives its campaign funds from the trusts. OOOO "REGULATION" The St. Louis Globe-Democrat saysf "Colonel Bryan will observe that it is federal regulation and not government ownership that is to settle the railroad question." But the regulation that regulates will. not come from a party whose campaigns are financed by the railroad magnates. OOOO GRAFT In Arkansas a former state senator is serving a pentitentia'ry sentence and doing work with the other convicts as a punishment for graft. How ever, humiliating It may be to have a state official in the chain gang it speaks well for democratic Arkansas that she administers punishment to the guilty without regard to position in society or politics. Lenleppy iij more often shown to those standing high (In public esteeni than to those who are obscure, but,, jasa rule the; Jowly are more deserving of gynjpattiy. Those ,w,ho are prominent have usually ,ha'(l greater advantages, arid are hedged about with' influences whjph strengthen and support. Those, on the other hand, who arc reared in tho slums or who live upon the ragged The Commoner. C(1fhJn n2CiC,ty nnd lmvo a struggle for existence thSfSin S8 Vttlfl.ed ttgal,,8t temptation, if thon ?w?0stwh0 sln aga,nst the "But then tn fhnS6800 til? sovest punishment who add Invo,t Lnin GS f110 l,?,trayal of Publl confidence SSmn innf" ?e,r fcs. cty commissioner 2?h? f?ni ,traCtS' ity cou"-'ils barter away val Sii?n c,,8C8,?na 8C,,0I trustees collect com violate their oath of office to call for vigorous en-l ofTK f Crlm,nal law and tbeSltivnSJ miwii; - c l)micm whIcb win coraPel honesty, In public servants. Arkansas is doing her part In the S ZQTSnt ? H10 law aud er example ought rin 2?,,owcd.; tJle m,n,sters and editors slumld do their part In cultivating public opinion. . OOOO WASHINGTON LETTER Washington, D. 0., April 23, 1007. It is one thing to earn a dollar, sometimes a hard thing. It is quite as material a thing to Hud out what that dollar is going to buy. Today, ac cording to the figures collated, it will buy almost iSo?1" n?' aU,te' aS ""y-five cents would in nSX-f ? V, commercial Agencies of Dun and SS J ?i0ti make a Plnt o' studying the increased attention to the enormous Increase In salary of the heads of corporations, trusts and general public . utility corporations. But on the point of the In crease in the cost of living we find according to "The price fixed for commodities at wholesale December 1, 1000 was 40 per cent higher than on uuiy l, lo'Jb. It will be remembered that 180G was a lean year for men who worked for wages. But lean as it was, are there any following the same trade who think their wages have been increased 40 per cent since, as according to this wholly partisan commercial agency, their living expenses have been? Bradstreet's tnbles show also an increase of 50 per cent over the prices of ten years ago. The editor of Moody's Magazine, after a careful in vestigation of wages and prices, concludes, that the increase in the cost of living-has been 40 per cent In ten years) and that wages have risen only half ns much. Is this prosperity? Is it prosperity to earn possibly fifteen per cent more and to have to pav out fifty per cent more for living.? Do these figures justify the statement made long ago in an official book issued by the republican national committee that wages rose more than prices. They do not. Wages rose for a time, now are stationary, and in some instances are decreasing. Prices go up and up. What! is this prosperity? Is it for tho people, or the plutocracy? The debated question of railroad regulation versus railroad ownership by the people had a new chapter added to it when Senator Cullom of Illinois said, "If I could have my way and there was a law to do it, I would put Harriman In ,the penitentiary for his work In the Alton deal, 'and keep him there long enough to make him pay the full penalty for looting the road, and bringing about conditions for which the bondholders will have to suffer." Thus a senator of the United States. This is what Harriman Is reported to have said and I think reported authoritatively: "If Senator Cul- lom said that he could not have been sober." It is late now to go over the Harriman record in high finance. To tell the story of the way in which he used the funds of the Equitable Assur ance company to finance his deal would be 10 thrash over old straw. To recall again the per fectly composed manner in which he said to the Interstate commerce commission that he had bonded a railroad that was never built, and sold the bonds to a confiding public would simply be to repeat a matter of common notoriety. But when a senator of the United States de clares with perfect frankness that the man who does an action of that sort should be j?ut in the penitentiary, that opinion should carry somo weight. Senator Cullom is not young either in -years, or in public service. In years he has passed the scriptural limit of three score and ten with a good margin on the other side In public servipe he has been a man of prominence locally from 18G5 to 1873 and since then has been a distin guished figure nationally. That his views do not agree with those of the democratic party does not detract from the dignity of. his position. And that a railroad manager and stock gambler should an swer Senator Cullom's criticism of his fiction by saying that the senator could not have been sober indicates the growing insolence of the railroad oligarchy. mScfc,rry Tnft.lins never boon a candidate for ofllce before tho people. His first office was an f onT I? Ohio 'n 1881 when ho was VA j ears old. He has held public office over slueo 2hie exception of four years betweon 1800 2!!.Yi. iSrJv, , was a curIos tact Uiat until Presl nnfl. uey',wh08e antagonism to Foraker was notorious, appointed him president of tho Philip Si?? co,nn,,8sion, all of his public honors had been SlW,.upo" ,l,m e,thor hy d,roct "PPolntment, or tho Influence of Foraker, now his rival. TT,iiS2l0Qre Ppos!dcnt Roosevelt's friends In tho United States senate? Senator Lodge Is generally S?,"8 the president's henchman. Spooiier, Knox, Allison, Burrows, Carter, Dolliver, Gallln'. ger, and Ileyburn and many others were In the presidential retinue. When tho railway rate bill was being considered how did these men vote on the various proposed amendments to that mcas- iUfi , wS, ny UloIr ctortH ttml votes that the Bailey and Culberson amendments forbidding un united Injunctions against the rate orders of the interstate commerce commission were defeated. By their efforts and votes Senator LaFolletlo's throe proposals; first, to determine tho valuation of the railroads as a basis of rale making; second, to increase tho legal liabilities of railroads for In juries to their employes; and third, to prevent a judge having stock in and privileges from-railroads, from Issuing an injunction against the rate schedules of the commission, were ail killed. During tho assassination of these measures tho president practically stood by and saw the murder committed. A word from him might have saved these amendments. As propf of what the pros! (lent could have done, had he been so Inclined, take the history of. Senator LaFollette's railway hours bill. This measure seemed destined to th'. fate of the other proposals of Senator LaFollettc. I he president's friends as usual were belligerent Suddenly public pressure was brought to boar, through the efforts of the railroad employes. The administration wavered. A conference was ar ranged betweon Ihc president and Senator LaFol lettc. The word was given and tho president's' friends allowed the bill, at Uic eleventh hour, to become law. IC tills could be dofie why could not tho other measures have been saved? A true radi cal in the White House, with control over Lodge Spooner, and Knox might have done much. Conservatism? Who today is personally most popular in the United States among the men In public office? I say it with thorough understand ing of what it means. -He Js the head of Uic party which I Jn a small way oppose. There Is no public official in all the land who is so popular as Theodore Roosevelt.- And why? Because he is ponservativo? Because he Is safe and sane? Be cause He has the approval of the great financial interests? Answer these questions for yourself. It Is not necessary for me to answer them. I may say that he has made tho public believe rightly or wrongly that he stands for radicalism and so has won popularity. As a matter of fact he stands for a halfway position. But going even the brief way that he has, ho is now in a position to domi nate his party and to be idolized by a great num ber of its voters. The tariff question will purposely be made'an Issue of the next national campaign. While every reason for its rorision lias existed for some years that exists nowr the republicans will hold' off the question of tariff revision in the GOth congress Just as they blocked it in the GOth congress, so that they can go before the country In the next campaign with the battlecry, "Let the tariff bo revised by Its friends." Tariff revision is to be purposely delayed for political purposes. In the meantime it might be well to consider some of the things our high tariff has accom plished: A duty of 75 cents a ton on coal made possible the Anthracite Coal Trust, with . its advanced prices. . The Boot and Shoe combine was materially strengthened by a duty of 25 per cent on boota and shoes. The tariff on brooms was raised 40 per cent and the prices were raised accordingly. The duty on pearl buttons was raised nearly -400 per cent, and the Button Trust has had ito own way since. The tariff on cartridges was increased 45 per centNand since November, 1800, they have been sold at prices nearly 100 per cent higher than in 188$. They are, however, sold to foreigners about 40 per cent cheaper than to Americans. The Harrow and the Harvester Trusts both sell to foreigners cheaper than to Americans, and" ' are both protected by high tariffs. Prohibitive duties on white lead have made It possible for the LeadCombine to sell abroad at -n i. I I i'i VI i -vl .fl i wsm ti