!r!jr-?Pw wsf-i? wittf ft! J The Commoner. VOLUME 8, NUMBER .Jt i vr j J 0 r pr ia P ro x The "Full Dinner Pail" in a Great City See Chicag In Its issue of April 19, tlio Chicago Tribune printed an interesting editorial entitled "Tlio dis tribution of incomes." Following is tlio closing paragraph from tho editorial: "President Wright of Clarke college has giv en it as his opinion that In America tlio ques tion," Are tho rich growing richer and the poor poorer?" probably may bo answered thus: ino rich are growing richer, many more are growing rich, and tho poor are growing better off. ihis refors to Amorican conditions." But in tho same issue of the Tribune in which this editorial appeared wo find an article entitled "Men starvo in South Chicago; sleep in barns and sheds." That article was as follows: Tho shadow of starvation is hovering over 1,000 aliens in South Chicago. In tho vicinity of tho Illinois steel mills, on tho Strand, Green Bay avenue, and Buffalo avenue there are close to 5,000 men out of work. About 4,000 of the total number still have somo money, some have credit with their friends, neighbors, and labor agents, and manage to get along somehow. They llvo on 8 cents, and a great many on live cents, a day. But they live. They have at least enough money with which to buy a loaf of bread overy day. This bread, with water and salt, and occasionally an onion or piece of garlic, makes a meal at breakfast dinner and supper are cut out. Thoro are 1,000 or thereabouts who have no monoy and no credit. They live on a slice of broad which they got from one friend or another. Not Infrequently that friend himself is penni less. The slice of bread which ho gives away spoils his meal and leaves him half hungry. But ho gives it away, anyhow. He will not eat bread to satloty when his friend Is famished. CANNOT PAY ROOM RENT Rent, of course, these 1,000 men .cannot '' pay; But tho boarding house keepeiaoTten willing to let them stay. He qpuld'malce no use of the room where the--sloop. There are no -ltt. jQiawsr-A-o ;oo 1iad. Still, several board ing houso keepers have ejected numerous of their former patrons. And this resulted in the turning of alley woodsheds and barns into lodg ing houses. Incidentally, too, this resulted in somo of these wakeful lodgers becoming desper ate and laying hands on whatever came within their reach. The largo number of out of work people has affected the business of that district. Cloth ing stores do not make one-third the sales they made last year at this time. Even grocers and butchers have had their business slashed in half- People have no money and they don't buy. Tho barber shops in the neighborhood which generally aro kept busy, are empty now from morning until evening. Sometimes a couple of inen, badly in need of a shave, come in. But they do not shave. They merely come in to play a game of cards with the barber, who perhaps is a fellow-countryman of theirs. They come in also to find out from tho barber what the papers say about work, for the barber is generally con sidered to bo a worldly man who reads the papors. HARD LINES FOR THE LANDLORD Tho greatest sufferers next to the men who Are starving aro somo of tho boarding house keepers. They suffer with the men. When the inon have monoy and have plenty to eat the keeper of tho boarding house is prosperous. When the boarders face starvation the board ing houso keeper is facing bankruptcy. He is more or less responsible for his boarders re sponsible in dollars and cents to tho butcher the baker, tho grocer where ho bought the pro visions for his boarders "on the hook," and the bills ho is now unable to meet. "Tho boarding house keeper," one agent de clared, "has more at stake than tho other of our workpeople. I know here several men who kept these boarding houses and arc now nearly $2,000 behind. Tho owner of a boarding house generally keeps men who come from the same village with him. He is not afraid of them. Ho trusts them. Now, however, when the board ers are unable to pay their bills, it is ho who is responsible. He is the loser. Several boarding houso keepers went to their respective consuls tho other day to ask aid, but they failed to get any satisfaction. "Many, in fact, most of tho people would gladly go back to the old country if they had money to go with. But they have not. Nearly every one of them, too, has somo debts to pay off, debts which have accumulated during the llvo months of out of work. Many immigrants who had money have loft for the old world in tho last few days." TALKING ALWAYS OF WORK A visit to some of these boarding houses revealed scenes of wretchedness, of mental and physical agony, as well as of fortitude and noble ness of heart of which only men who have still retained their tribal ties and instincts are ca pable. In one houso about twenty men were sitting in a room and talking, talking always about one thing how to get work. Every now and then one man would come in and another would go out. The man who came in from the labor agent's office, bringing the news that there was no sign of work. The man who left went to the agent's office. He knew, of course, that ho would not find work. But he went to sniff the air of the office, as it were, to get into the atmo sphere where work is spoken of, where work is sometimes gotten. "Tell them," a boarding house keeper said when he learned tho visitor's mission, "tell them that the men will take work at any price under any conditions. They will work even if the pay 1b small. If tho wages will only suffice them to buy food they will work for it. I have been completely ruined this winter. All these men owe me money. They owe me more than a thousand dollars. They will, of course, pay. it back. I know them all. They are good people. But until thoy get ready to pay it back I will havo to go begging. "The grocer won't trust me any more. l' owe him a great deal as it is. To the butcher I have not gone for a long time. We are glad if fve- novo 'enough bread. Many of the people ' around here have not even bread. They simply aro famished. They walk about the streets or go Into a saloon. But here they are not wel come. Their credit, if they ever, had any credit there, long, since has been exhausted. If the people around here don't get work I don't know what we will do." WAITING AT THE LABOR BUREAU The office of a labor agent on Ninetieth street contained about forty people, all of whom were anxiously waiting for some news of work. Every letter that the agent opened was watched by these men with breathless attention, as if their lives hung on the contents of that letter. As soon as the agent perused the letter and told them that there was nothing there for them, the crowd went out, and inside of ten minutes another crowd of forty or fifty people were waiting for further news and gossiping so as to pass tho time away. The faces of these men were a study for both psychologist and artist. A Vereshagin would find abundant material here for painting of untold horrors. The horrors of war are in a way mitigated by the excitement by the roar of cannons and the din of drums. The horrors of out of work have no background, no frame. They are there in their massive ugliness, por tentious and terrible. The furrowed faces, un washed and unkempt heads, with the wild' and sparkling eyes, excite as much pity as they do apprehenson. Slow as these people aro in getting the news and doings of the country, they are alert in matters pertaining to their own interest to work. Thus a newspaper containing a state ment that a certain corporation employing close to 200,000 men, mostly immigrants, had decided to employ Americans only henceforth, gained circulation in South Chicago In almost no time Crowds of people thronged the office of one of tho labor agents and asked him to explain iust what the paper said and meant. When the agent was through explaining in Macedonian, Servian, Bulgarian Montenegrin, and a dozen or more kindred languages, the men asked to see the paper. Each in their turn glanced n.t the piece of news which was enclosed in a circle by the agent's blue pencil. They trazeri S gazed at the paper trying to look into the secret to solve the puzzle which these words Stained: HAD NOT EATEN ALL DAY A man about 26, six feet tall and weich Jng perhaps 175 pounds, was found standing a street corner watching the flames leaping from iol cony,erter f the steel mills. Hi! looked like a piece of leather, it evidenUy had o Trib line not seen soap for a long while. His clothes were shabby in the extreme and the shoes wero held together by "home made" patches and stitches. When asked what troubled him ho re plied faintly that he had no work. Another minute's talk revealed that the man had not eaten that day, although it was evening. Ho explained that he had no one to borrow from. He had borrowed from nearly every one he knew in the last few months. Now his friends are looking for some one from whom to borrow a nickel or dime. He was waiting here, he explained, for a man whom he knew but slightly. That man was working and he hoped to be able to borrow a few cents and buy bread. The man was offered a dime. He could hardly believe it at first. Then he took it, gazed at the coin wistfully and after profuse thanks ran off to tho nearby grocery, emerging a minute later with a large loaf of black bread. SHARE LAST PENNIES WITH NEIGHBOR "Solid character is the only thing which prevents many of the immigrants in this neigh borhood from starving or else from becoming criminals," said a business man living in that district. "There are a thousand people here now who are without means, without a cent with which to buy their next day's bread. They would have starved or been criminals long ago if they had not lived in this congested neighbor hood among their own people. Here they are helped. They are given food. They are given money, even if it is only two pennies, with 'which to buy rolls. "If they have no money to give to a poorer friend or acquaintance, many of the people in this neighborhood simply will give him a few slices of bread. Nor is this charity. It simply is necessity with them. They still adhere to some of the primal customs and conceptions of justice between man and his neighbor. I know many men who are working and earning about $9 a week. On this money they keep from two to four of their friends who are out. of work." BUSINESS FALLS OFF 50 PER CENT The extent to which this large number of out of work people has affected the business men is seen in the statement of the proprietor of a large grocery and meat market on Green Bay avenue. "Our business," the man said, "has fallen off from 50 to 70 per cent and there Is no tell ing how much more it will fall within the next few weeks. During the winter months we kept on selling groceries and meats on the hook, as we always do. We hoped that In the spring, when work started up, they would pay it up. Now, however, spring has come and there is little improvement. We were compelled there fore to quit selling on credit. If we wero to keep on we would simply go bankrupt. "With the cutting down of credit the busi ness has been cut down enormously. People simply buy the bare necessities, such as bread, salt and matches. A herring Is bought occa sionally. But meat hardly is touched by a num ber of my customers who used to call for large meat orders daily. I don't know what it will come to. But I simply will not sell on credit to anyone. Credit at this time would put me out of business on short notice." INSTRUCTED DELEGATIONS It is, perhaps, too much to expect the Mil waukee Sentinel to be either fair or honest in its editorial expressions when Mr. Bryan is the subject of discussion. The Sentinel's inti mation that Mr. Bryan has asked that delegates be instructed for him is so utterly at variance with the facts that one wonders that even tho Sentinel would dare to print it. Mr. Bryan has advised the instruction of delegates, not for him self, but in accordance with the wishes of a majority of the rank and file of the democratic party in the various states. Delegates are sup posed to voice the sentiments of the voters who elect them, and a delegate ought not object to receiving and acting upon instructions. The Sentinel's references to "the Bryan gasbag," and to "Mr. Bryan's self-spun fabric of pretension to celestial virtue and oracular wisdom" reveal clearly the very fair and impar tial view the Sentinel takes of public questions, and explains clearly why the Sentinel can not be honest when referring editorially to Mr. Bryan. i'i -?jt.i.ii433;