PW5FR9F,,n,My'y,, JfS ' WlfFfWIWf "" ''pwv The Commoner. WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR Et VOL. 7, NO. 34 Lincoln, Nebraska, September 6, 1907 Whole Number 346 CONTENTS ' WHERE TARIFF BARONS RULE , v . -'.'".. TRUSTING, THE INDIVIDUAL OKLAHOMA'S FIRST BATTLE" ( ' ONLY LASHES OF LOVE PROVE IT NOW HOW THE TRUSTS CONTROL CONGRESS H REASSURED THE FIRST ECHO SILENT ON THE TARIFF MR. TAFT ON TRUSTS NAME ONE GOOD TRUST WASHINGTON LETTER COMMENT ON CURRENT TOPICS HOME DEPARTMENT s WHETHER COMMON OR NOT NEWS OF THE WEEK TRUSTING THE INDIVIDUAL Secretary Taft undertakes to draw a con trast between President Roosevelt and Mr. Bryan, saying that the former trusts the Indi vidual while the latter distrusts him. Mr..Taft may be able to .speak for the president, but lid shows gross ignorance of Mr. Bryan's position. Mr. Bryan, like all other democrats, trusts "the indivfdual that is a distinguishing feature of the democrat, but the Jeffersonian democrat recognizes the weaknesses of man as well as the rights of man and the weakness of man shows itself when the representative puts his own interests above the interests of his con stituents. Jefferson declared that- confidence was the parent of despotism and that free government existed in jealousy not in confidence. The Hamiltonian republican trusts the representative but not the individual. The Hamiltonian re publican thinks that a representative is elected to think for the people; the Jeffersonian demo crat believes that the people should think for themselves and then elect representatives, to act for them and give expression to their thoughts. Mr. Bryan takes the Jeffersonian view and has expressed his views so often that Secretary Taft ought not to be ignorant of them. B3 cause Mr. Bryan believes 'in and trusts the in dividual he favors the election of senators by direct vote and he also favors such checks on our representative system as will enable the in dividuals to control their representatives and prevent betrayal. It is Secretary Taft who, fol lowing in the footsteps of Hamilton, distrusts the individual and puts his faith in the repre sentative. Secretary Taft has raised a question' which will embarrass him it will not embarrass Mr. Bryan. OOOO "MANANA" The Spanish have a word, "nianana" which" means "tomorrow." Secretary Taft may yet become famous as "the manana statesman." He seems to favor putting everything off until to morrow. He is in favor of an income tax but not just now; he believes in an inheritance tax but not for the present; he thinks the Filipinos will be ready for self government after awhile; and ho feels that tariff reform might be a good thing after the next election, or some other time in the future. How would it do for re formers to adopt his own language and say "Secretary Taft might make a good president some day, but not yet, afterwhile, say about 1912 or 1916." Present abuses- need immedi ate treatment and "manana" is not likely to be come a popular campaign slogan. 190b t . ' . A VOtArMU? of me srAjp&CirMw . citff &ft& a'T'Wf LA' r "Xr tC i.mmmK Mmamk.wiiutnA i I m ri fJILL v ijjj 'W0p vij mm yupwjB v&y r mmarmsL d ' Pufflut rtM r , ., srpiJK"' jl- ':..- i . in C v ir ' . -A v - -?,. -. , ' v r TKt.. -c 7tY? 7 JS jmm ws& d ,oiL& "r',flAU ft' 'et Wf,;1 Y-cl-jm v V ftg MM If far ilill mKDftm A CHANGED TUNE WHERE TARIFF BARONS RULE In another column of this issue is an art icle taken from the Boston Horald. In this article it is shown by republican testimony that the steel trust through the control it has over the republican ways and means committee of the house, blocked action upon Representative Lov ering's tariff drawback bills. The editor of Moody's Magazine says that he has for years known that the officials of the steel trust were dictating "standpatism" to the ways and means committee. Moody's editor says that he has seen letters from steel trust officials to members of the ways and means com mittee "advising them not to touch the tariff on any pretext." For the second quarter of 1907 the" sfeel trust earnings were "about $4,000,000 more than the earnings of any previous quarter. For the full year, ending Juno 30, 1907, the net earn ings amounted to $164,490,945. Moody's editor points out that these earnings amounted to $500,000 a day, $21,000 an hour, $350 a min ute, and $6 a -second more than three men, working twelve hours a day, could count. Moody's editor then says: "Fully half of these earnings of $164,490, 945 for the year, come from the tariff, and are really tariff taxes collected from steel consum ing industries and individuals. If the steel cor poration really were, as protectionists assume, a struggling infant industry that could not sur vive, long without tariff pap, and if the good people of this country were generous, kind and foolish enough to vote this tariff tax of $80,- 000,000 a year upon themselves, there would bo no ground for criticism or complaint. If the steel corporation officials would even confine their tariff activity to arguments and to con tributions to political parties, they would not be censurable to any great extent. But when these officials, by some means, gain control of the leaders of the ways and means committeo and the house of representatives and use their influence to suppress discusKion of the tariff, they are playing the tariff game unfairly." It is not difficult to understand the means whereby these tariff barons "gain control of the leaders of the ways and means committee, and the house of representatives." These gentlemen are merely carrying out the policy for which helr party stands. And why should not the steel trust, or any other trust, tell the republican ways and means committee when to act and when to refuse to act upon any question affecting the trust sys tem? The political party represented by that committee obtains its campaign funds from these trusts. Republican leaders and republican edi- v tors have for years drilled it into the rank and file of their party that the persistent champion ship of high protection is the purest act of patri otism and that the man who objects to the high rates of the Dingley bill has shown himself to be not only false to his party but faithless, to his duty as a patriot. The republican party can not separate It self from "the system." It can not divorce itself from that form of protection which means 1 :!. .tw'-ni foajaittoa.'. IfcWi-'-AUjJiu'-i'Ji.. ' 4-j !'. 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