nrt '(-" pt f ? P The Commoner. The Ohio Platform. The platform adopted by the Ohio Demo-" cratic state convention for 1001 is as follows: The democrats of Ohio reaffirm their belief in the equality of taxation and other public burdens; their advocacy of the equal rights of all people, "With special privileges to none; their hostility to the monopolization of industry, with its tendency on the one hand to crush out individual enterprise and on the other to promote a socialistic spirit among the people as the only refuge from oppres sion, and their faith in that theory and practice of constitutional government which brought the na tion into existence and have preserved it to the present generation. For the promotion of those objects the demo cratic party of Ohio makes the following declara tion of principles and policies: The government of municipalities of the state should be radically reformed and wise general laws bo enacted to correct abuses and prevent their recurrence. Inefficient, expensive, unbusinesslike, partisan and corrupt, the system which has prevailed has encouraged the interference of the state with the government of the cities and the denial of home rule; has fostered special legislation and the im position of burdensome debts and taxes without the sanction of the people, and has brought about the corrupt employment of party leaders to secure valuable franchises without adequate compensa tion therefor, and to protect the owners of such franchises from, just public demands. For the existence and continuance of those conditions the republican party Is responsible. Though controlling the last general assembly and the state administration, it defeated the "revised municipal code" prepared by a non-partisan com mittee and calculated to produce real and lasting reforms. The democratic party therefore calls upon the people to unite with it In placing the conduct of. municipal affairs upon a business basis, that they may be administered by the people in the interest of all the people on the principle of home rule. No franchise, extension or renewal thereof ever to be granted by any city or villago without first submitting the same to a vote of the people. The acceptance of free passes or other favors from railroads by public officers or employes shall be made adequate ground for vacating the of fices held by them. All public service corporations shall be re quired by law to make sworn public reports ,and the power and duty of visitation and public report shall be conferred upon the proper state and local auditing officers to the end that the true value of the privileges held by these corporations shall be made plain to the people. Steam and electric railroads and other corpora tions possessing public franchises shall be as sessecTin the same proportion to their salable value as are farms and city real estate. The proceedings of the republican majority of the state board of equalization are a scandal Property values instead of being equalized were increased or diminished at the dictation of political bosses pursuant to corrupt combinations and con- spiracles. r , The republican majority of the general as sembly deserve the condemnation of the people for its reckless extravagance and its creation of useless offices, while it enacted no legislation for the benefit of the people. The present republican administration in the conduct of public affairs -and in the management of public institutions has been the most costly in the history of the state. Its benevolent and penal institutions should be con ducted upon a non-partisan and business basis. The reserved rights of the states and people to bo upheld. Centralization, which would destroy them, to be condemned. A strict construction of the constitution. The greatest individual liberty consistent with public order and welfare. Tariff reform, never more urgently demanded than now, when tho production of tho country so iar exceeds its power of consumption, that for eign markets are a. prime condition of its con tinued prosperity and when tho existence and abuses of trusts have been brought about by tho policy of protection of favored Industries. Tho abolition of the so-called protective system and the substitution in its placo of the traditional democratic policy of a tariff for revenue so levied as not to. burden ono industry for the benefit of another. The enactment and vigorous enforcement of measures which shall prevent all monopolies and combinations in restraint of trade and commerce the matter of first importance being to prevent the use of the government as an instrumentality for tho creation and increase of the wealth of tho few, while preserving intact tho right of private property and the fullest measure of individual lib erty of contract and assuring to every man the just reward of superior industry and skill. We de mand the suppression of all trusts and a return to , industrial freedom. As a means to that end all' trust products should be placed on the free list and the government should exercise a more rigid supervision of transportation lines and abolish, in fact, all discrimination in rates. Our merchant marine to bo restored to its former greatness and made the ally of the pooplo against monopoly by the repeal-of antiquated and restricted navigation laws. But no subsidies-for favored shipowners. ' " . The powers granted the federal government were not meant to bo used to conquer or hold in subjection the people of other countries. Their use for uch purposes not only belies our declara tion of tho rights of man, but also unbalances 'our system by increasing the centralization of power at "Washington to tho ultimate overthrow of homo rule. The democratic party has never favored and now opposes any extension of tho national boun daries not meant to carry speedily to all in habitants full equal rights with ourselves. If these are unfitted by location, race or character to bo formed into self-governing territories and then in corporated into the union of states in accordance with the historic policy of the republic they should be permitted to work "but their own destiny. Only territorial expansion demanded by tho na tional welfare and the national safety to be at any time favored- the objection which should have prevented certain of our recent accessions being that they Imperil tho national safety without pro moting the national welfare; that they devolve upon us enormous responsibilities we have no call to assume; that they are certain to be unre munerative drain upon our resources; that they tend to embroil us with European powers; that they weaken our claim to supremacy on the American continent, at the same time that they lessen our ability to make the claim good; and that they furnish a dangerous opportunity and temptation for the disregard of "the self-evident truth of universal application that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed." The obvious sympathy of the national adminis tration with the British government in its efforts to destroy the South African republics and the policy which has made the ports of the United States a basis of supply for the British army, without which the war could not be successfully carried on, are condemned by the democracy of Ohio. The Maintenance of the M'onroe doctrine as heretofore interpreted and asserted by the national government. A navy commensurate with the international importance of the United Sttes and its primacy in the western hemisphere and adequate to the pro tection of tho lives and property of American citi zens tho world over,. Tho faithful observance and wider application . of civil servico principles, especially as regards our diplomatic and consular representatives. A constitutional amendment requiring the elec tion of United States senators by the direct vote of tho people. Hereafter until this Is passed when ever a senator is to bo elected it shall be the duty of the state committee to give notice in its 'call that tbo nomination of a senator will be made at the state convention. No question or the right of labor to.combino for tho assertion of Its rights and the protection of its Interests. The burdens of tho unjust and dis criminating laws for which tho republican party in responsible fall chiefly on those who till the soil or labor at othor forms of production. "All those con stitute a large majority of our citizens; they have never sent lobbyists to tho halls of federal or state leg' Matures nor founded monopolies nor demanded special privileges. They have patiently endured the operation of these laws which keep from them and give to others their just share of the national wealth. Tho democratic party pledges 'its efforts to relievo them of the burdens which class legisla tion has laid on them. That the republican party has always upheld class interests and is justly chargeable with hostil ity in both belief and practice to the above prin ciples Is common knowledge. It cannot be trusted to deal with evils of its own creation. Tho arro gant assumption by that party of all credit for everything and the threats of those who speak for ifc and its favored interests, already too poworful to create artificial conditions of stringency and distress, unless the policies they advocate are sup ported at the polls, deserve the condemnation of a pc jple who are just and propose to remain free. Inspired by the examples of the long lino of its statesmen, who have applied these principles from tho days of Thomas Jefferson to tho present time, the democratic party pledges itself anew to their cupport, and earnestly appeals to all patriotic men without iegard to party names or past differences, to unite with it on terms of perfect equality in tho struggle to rescue our government from the grasp of selfishness and corruption and restore it to Its former fairness, purity and simplicity. Ono great danger which now threatens our freo institutions is tho widespread corruption which menaces tho destruction of public virtue. Vast sums of money are corruptly employed in popular elections; official defalcations are so frequent aa scarcely to excite attention, and political bosses rule and rob tho people, all of which is a direct re sult of republican policies and legislation. We demand that all official misconduct and corruption be vigorously punished, that public vir tue be upheld and the want of it denounced. ' The July Disbursement. Chicago Tribune: Commencing next week tho July disbursements, the largest in the history of the country, will be made. These Include pay ments by tho government on interest account and pension payments; dividends, new or Increased, or unchanged, and many incidental disbursements. While It Is not possible to determine the figures ac curately it is the best opinion that they will ap proximate between $125,000,000 and $150,000,000. The greater part of this money will remain in New York City. According to the Daily Stockhold er's figures the payment to be made, including railway and manufacturing companies' Interest becomes due in July, on bonds having a par value of $3,491,062,457, calling for the payment of $69r 333,439, against $60,949,326 last year, $63,307,137 in 1S99, $56,892,623 in 1898, and $65,061,998 in 1897. Dividends are to be paid on railway and manufac turing stocks having a par valuo of $2,441,818,886, calling for the disbursement of $33,816,044, against $38,621,252 a year ago, $33,017,578 in 1899, $27,930, 158 in 1898; and $23,060,805 in 1897. The most not able addition to the dividend list is the United States Steel corporation. The government dis burses in July for interest approximately $4,500, 000 and for pension payments $13,000,000, of which about $4,000,000 will be required to meet checks of agents during tho first week of the month. Hence, according to the Stockholder's figures, there are combined Interest and dividend disbursements of $123,149,483, against $105,570,578- last year, $94, 324,703 in 1899, $84,822,781 in 1898, and $72,122,903 in 1897. -i