?iBr' AUGUST 23, It 7. JW Commoner. & '$& i "rrT5tjrr tWW&W,?f'P " '',4Trv-rwrVW!" 'WW y- Quincy and the Chicago and, Eastern Illrnois lines;. then the department of justice is under stood' to have no desire to interfere "with 5tho progress of the present grand jury investiga tion. But if Judge Landis desires the grand jury, to return an indictment against the Alton or other roads, who were promised immunity for transactions in which they were offered the' 'immunity bath,' then the department of justice does not wish the indictments returned, for the reason that such action on the part of the grand jury would be regarded as a violation of the gov ernment's pledge, granted by Attorney Morrison, not to prosecute the railroads, if they would furnish information with which to secure the in dictment of the Standard and its conviction. That information was forthcoming, and it is freely admitted here that it was through this testimony largely that conviction was secured in the case of the Standard. It is not to he ascertained hero whether former District At torney Morrison brought this condition of affairs to the attention of Judge Landis before trans mitting the status of the Alton to the atTention of Attorney General Bonapare. "Whether Mr. Morrison did or did not do that it is now be- ing done by Mr. Bonaparte as the chief law officer of the government, at the head of the prosecuting department which would have the duty of pushing any indictments which might be returned against the Alton, and if those .in dictments were not stopped by the intercession of Judge Landis, it is altogether probable that the department of justice will step in and quash them, unless Judge Landis offers good reasons why the indictments returned should be pushed, or can convince the department of justice that the matter in which indictments are sought does not relate to the transactions in which immu nity was promised." ALOGANSPORT, Ind., dispatch to the St. " Louis Globe-Democrat under date of August 13 follows: "The fact that Attorney Morrison of the government had promised im munity to the Chicago and Alton and that that road would not be prosecuted for Its part in re bating was told to Judge Landis late last "night. The jurist seemed displeased with the news. 'I will not be a party to any 'such proceedings,' Judge Landis declared. The Chicago and' Alton was recommended for Indictment in the utter ances of the jurist when he assessed the fine against the Standard Oil company." THE IMMUNITY bath report from Washing ton was confirmed before Judge Landis August 14. An Associated Press dispatch' from Chicago tells this story I ' Judge Landig today postponed until September the grand jury In vestigation of the charges of rebating against the .Chicago and Alton railroad, growing but of the recent trial which resulted in the con viction of the Standard Oil company of Indiana. It was the original Intention to commence the investigation August 27, but Judge Landis said that he had received a notification from Attorney General. Bonaparte that the Chicago and Alton had been promised immunity, and the judge ordered the adjournment in order that the records of the case might be looked, into. In addressing the grand jury Judge Landis said: 'I have a communication from the attorney gen eral of the United States, the substance of which Is that, prior to the indictment of the Standard Oil company, the then United States district attorney made an arrangement with the officials of the Chicago and Alton railroad, under 'which it was not to be proceeded against, provided it would assist the prosecution, in good faith, with evidence and witnesses in the matter then pend ing. In view of this it is the conviction of the attorney general that good faith requires the department of justice to do what it can to make good the district attorney's assurance, and this presents a very grave question because it is of utmost importance that no offender should un deservedly escape punishment for crime on any such plea, as well as that even the criminal may not truthfully charge the government of United States with bad faith. What this arrangement was the court does not know, but assumes It possibly may have provided that the Chicago and Alton company should emancipate those who act and speak for it, from all obligation to " deceive and mislead' the' jury on the trial lately closed. -If this be true, whatever officer of the . department of justice fs charged with the task of determining what shall be that department's attitude rmust carefully consider 'the transcrjpt 5 of the testimony of these railway agents in order that ho may intelligently decide whether tho Chicago and Alton road is entitled to immunity. Whether tho grand jury acta in this matter will depend entirely upon tho conclusions this offir clal may reach. Tho jury is therefore at liberty to take a recess until Soptombcr 3.' A trans cript of tho record in the Standard Oil case will bo sent to Attorney"" General Bonaparte for ex amination, and if ho concludes that the railroad fulfilled its promises in the. Standard Oil case, the grand jury will not investigate further." FOLLOWING IS AN interesting dispatch sent to the Chicago Record-Herald from ,Clovc land, Ohio: "Tho great secret of success, truo success, is to get away from the butterfly pur suits' of life and devote yourself to doing good to those around you." In these words, John D. Rockefeller this morning gave advice to tho members of the Sunday school of tho Euclid Avenue Baptist church. Tho richest man in the world seemingly was at his best. It was his first address to the Sunday school in nearly a year, although ho attended church tho last three Sundays, and his friends ray it was the best talk he ever made. Mr. Rockefeller briefly re viewed his experiences in tho Sunday school. "How long do you think it has been since I joined Sunday school?" tho oil king asked of a little boy in tho back scat. "Fifty-three years," responded the lad, evidently well informed as to his questioner's life. "It will be fifty-four years next September since I camo into tho Sun day school," said Mr. Rqckofeller. "I was four teen years of age, and I consider that event tho most important in my life. An old lady camo to me one day and asked if I belonged to a Sun day school. I told her I belonged to tho Baptist. She was a Presbyterian and did not have much use for Baptists, but she told me to stick to it, and I always have. I regret that I !iavo been away from you so long. As I stood on the stairs leading to the church rooms this morning, I noticed a great many stran: faces. White thlB -is a sign of my delinquency, yet it .shows that the church is prospering and growing every day. Mrs. Rockefeller also wishes me to tell you that she misses the Sunday school work very much. We both are greatly interested in it." Then turning to the benefits to be derived from .Sun day school work, the speaker dwelt briefly upon happiness and success, declaring: "Tho only way to be perfectly happy is to do good to others. The great secret of success, true success, is to get away from tho butterfly pursuits of life and devote yourself to doing good to those around you." Again taking up his connection with religious duties, he said: "Deacon Skedd was my first teacher in tho Sunday school. Of course none of you present remember him. Ho was a good old Scotchman, honest and whole souled, as most Scotchmen are. I have great Jove for that race. I met Dr. Ingersoll the other day while playing golf. He Is still as spry as I am but, of course, he is eighty years old, while I am still a young man," and the master of For est JH111 smiled. "Well, I have been talking by New York time," he concluded, "so that I really have used more than my share of your time." At the close of his address Mr. Rockefeller shook hands all around, and later attended church ser vices, returning to Forest Hill in his automobile. REFERRING TO THE telegraphers' strike, Willis J. Abbott says: "Briefly sum marized, the demands of the operators seem to be fair. They ask a ten per cent wage increase, this demand being based on the equitable prin ciple of equal pay- for equal work. It would seem that tho telegraph companies which have recently raised their rates from twenty-five to fifty per cent, could afford this advance and treat their various employes with equal justice. The union men also ask an eight-hour day, something that is fully justified l)y the frightful nervous tension under which the operator is forced to work. They ask that promotions bo governed by merit and the sliding scale now in force be abolished. They ask that their organ ization as such have recognition from the com panies and that discriminations against union men as such cease. These are the principal de mands of the operators. It seems hardly cred ible that the companies should refuse them. But not only do the telegraph companies re fuse these just demands but they ahsolutely refuse to treat "With their employes concerning them. Vice President Adams of the Postal, for instance, says: 'There will be decidedly no compromise with the union. They brought on . the strike; and they can settle it by going. back, to ' work when they please. We will have no , difficulty in filling th'clf places.' IfoSV can not read in those lines tho samo spirit hhv act uated tho remark of tho French aristocrat, when Blie heard tho peasant mothers crying for,brcad, to feed their starving offspring, 'If they can't eat broad why don't thoy cat cao?' he is blind indeed.' Then there Is Assistant General Manager Barclay, of the Western Union, who says: 'Thoro is nothing for the companies to discuss with tho men. Wo will havo no troublo In filling tho plnces of thoao that quit.' T. P. Cook, general superintendent of tho Western Union, adds this comment: 'Wo will not deal with any representatives of tho strikers, as this company only treats with its own employes. There will bo no union recognition In this con troversy and emphatically wo will not meet or accept thp good offices of President Gompors of tho Anierican Federation of Labor.' Read thp demands of the operators, then read tho arrogant remarks of tho officials, and ask your self If it is any. wonder that cvon the poor Httfc messenger boys who can 111 afford to sparo their earnings, are joining the strikers; and tho tele phono girls arc jeopardizing tholr positions by .refusing to carry out tho collusive conspiracy of tho telopbono and telegraph monopoly by which tho former Bonds tho messages of the latter over its long dlstanco wires? Is it any wonder that from all sides the operators are receiving the most unexpected support?" IT WAS FROM tho late Governor Hogg of Texas that Mr. Roosevelt, according to tho St. Louis Republic, drow that portion of his Indianapolis speech which deals with over-capitalization of railroad property. Tho Republic says: "Tho laws passod by the Texas legisla ture, on Governor Hogg's recommendation, to limit a fair ratio between tho actual value of tho property and tho securities based upon it might well have glvon tho Inspiration for this portion of the president's address. It is no more than fair to tho Investing public that it should havo knowledge of the real value of the property in which it Invests, as well as of the securities outstanding as liabilities against it. And tho president is as right as he Is just to tho roads in his contention that tho Interstate commerce commission should U.now-vYmtr,-Tonv is worth before It can Intelligently fix a rate that will bo equitable to tho roads and to tho shippers of freight. Neither tho courts nor tho interstate commerce commission can guarantee tho owners of a road costing, lot us say, ?1,000, 000 a good profit on that sum. But tho courts havo rightly hold that men who have put their money into the enterprise shall not bo forbidden by law to charge rates sufficient to bring a rea sonable profit. Tho president's recommendation that the commission bo empowered to increase Its force of experts so that it can investigate and ascertain tho value of any road with which it may have to deal looks, therefore, toward compliance with tho spirit of judicial decisions and to an equitable adjustment for the roads and those who use them." THAT THE TASK of ascertaining tho value of a road for rate making is a difficult one the Republiq admits, but it says: "Though it might not be difficult to ascertain the physical value of a given road that is, what ItTwould cost to build and equip it at the present time it would never be easy to ascertain the amount of capital honestly invested in older and pioneer roads before they began to pay adequate profits on the money of the bondholders and stock holders. And, as President Roosevelt truly says, actual cost and physical value are not tho only standards of valuation to be considered. One hundred miles of road, well built and equipped, in a thickly populated district, and running between large cities, are worth more than the same length of road, equally well built and equipped, in a sparsely settled district with no large cities to feed its traffic. But informa tion of the highest value both to the interstate commerce commission and to the investor in railroad securities may be obtained by the ap praisements which the president proposes. Doubtless, inquiries along this line will result in knowledge that will be helpful to road build ers themselves. And all information which helps and encourages the building and betterment of railroad facilities is what the country now most urgently , needs. It may be a generation be fore we can possibly have in interstate commerce the close adjustment between railroad capital and railroad net earnings which Massachusetts , has attained, but ,tho suggestions of the presi ' dent'.fi , Indianapolis address carry us well for ward in that direction." I M m ! '-ftltfrtlMWWfl '""-trllWMi MilM''g).'!lUJiitiii&. LuJJffi-4u3i&.iS Mijuiir mft.A.wV f .. ,Mtrjit,'-t.to- '.