(" The Commoner. WILLIAil J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. 1 N & IW Wiuwp "W vm0tmiumvi rr suwii i Vol. 3. No. ii. Lincoln, Nebraska, April 3, 1903. Whole No. 115. Missouri Bits the Trusts. The Missouri supreme courf has found five great beef packing companies Luiity of maintain ing an unlawful combination to control the price of beef in that state, and has levied a fine of five thousand dollars on each. of the companies. The 'opinion of the court was unanimous, and the companies affected are the Armour, Cudahy, Ham mond, Swift, and Schwarzchild and Sulzburger companies. . A fine of five thousand dollars in such a case is, of course, insignificant when compared with .the profits made by the companies, and this calls attention to the fact that in large violations of the law the punishments are not in proportion to the magnitude of the offence. It may be said that from a moral standpoint the crime is as great when one steals a small amount as when he steals a large amount, and yet it is well known that public opinion does hot condemn large violations as it does small violations, and therefore the pecuniary penalty ought to be great enough to protect the public from repeated infractions of the law. In the cases mentioned, the fines imposed, while they may be the maximum fines allowed un der the law, will hardly restrain the companies from another conspiracy against the public. The court could, upon the evidence, have prohibited them from doing business in the state, and yet such a judgment might havo hurt the people of the state as much as the corporations. These cases bring plainly to view the inabil ity of one state alone to furnish a complete or satisfactory remedy and prove the wisdom of the Kansas City platform, which suggested a federal remedy. The present anti-trust law, the Sherman law, is sufficiently broad to cover such a conspir acy against trade as that formed by the pack ers, and, if enforced by imprisonment, would strike terror into the hearts of the trust magnates. But the present law only relates to conspiracies between separate individuals or corporations. An other remedy is necessary when a number of cor porations are merged in one and the one cor poration controls the market In tne case re cently tried in Missouri it was shown that fiva distinct and separate corporations conspired to gether to fix the price of meat, but suppose the five corporations should consolidate, and form one corporation? The injury to the public would be even greater because, instead of having to agree among themselves, the corporation would act as a unit, fnd yet if such a consolidation was formed neither the Sherman anti-trust law nor the anti trust laws of the various states would reach th9 evil. The Kansas City platform remedy does, however, reach this very evil, and that remedy added to the present remedy, and the two rem edies enforced by an administration really in sym pathy with the public, would kill the trusts. Let the criminal clause of the anti-trust law be enforced against the officials of the various cor porations if they combine against the public, and then let congress declare that large corporations, before engaging in interstate commerce, must se cure a permit from the federal government which permit can be granted only upon conditions that will make a private monopoly impossible. The state of Missouri is to be congratulated upon the enforcing of its state law against these powerful companies, and the federal government is to be censured for not having used the crim inal law against these same corporations. But congress and the administration cannot escape blame for failure to enact the legislation needed to protect the public from trust extortion. The failure of the president and congress to do some thing really effective shows how absurd it Is to expect the trusts to be killed so long as the gov ernment is in the hands of officials who secure election through the aid of contributions collected from th,e corporations. , The Cincinnati Situation. The Commoner is asked whether it will apply to the Cincinnati situation the same argument that was made two years ago when Holla Wells was nominated for mayor of St. Louis. Yes. The readers of The Commoner will remember that ob jection was made to the nomination of Mr. Wells by the democratic party, and the reason given was that the party should not be held responsible for the conduct of a man who rejected the principles of the party as set forth In the national platform. But at the same time The Commoner suggested that whenever it became necessary to take non partisan action in municipal affairs it should bo done through an independent nomination. Mr. Ingalls of Cincinnati has been nominated for mayor by an independent movement, and has not been indorsed by the democratic convention. Ho does toot, therefore, stand in tho attitude that Mr. Wells did. Whether the local democrats should support him is a question which they can decide 'for themselves. They do not need advice from .without, because no outsider can be as well in formed about the conditions that they have to meet. The fact that Mr. Ingalls is not in har mony with all of the Kansas City platform Is not in itself conclusive proof that he is incompetent for the place because he does toot deal with na tional quostions. His views on the local questions that are up for settlement are more important It has been suggested that if elected mayor he will become a candidate for governor, and afterward for president If he does, tho democrats will scrutinize his views on national questions. Not being a democratic candidate he cannot appeal to democrats as a party nominee. Democrats should vote for him or against him according to their opinion of his merits. It would be a reflection upon the intelligence of the people of Cincinnati and Ohio to assume that they could not distinguish between the availability for a city office and avail ability for a higher office which must deal with other questions. The fact that Mr. Ingalls is the president of a railroad suggests that his sympathies may be "on the side of the corporations in contests be tween them and tho people as a whole, atod this might effect his action in matters of taxation and on questions effecting municipal ownership, but his position on these subjects ought to be made known either by his platform or by the speeches which he makes. The Commoner would urge in dependence ito the selection of municipal officials. Men ought to be judgod upon their merits and upon their ability to meet e isting conditions, rather than because of their membership in a na tional political party. In some of the smaller cities no party nominations are made, all the candidates being brought out either by petition or by movements organized Jtor the securing of some specific reform, or the enforcing of some line of policy. Much of tho corruption in the large cities is due to the fact that the politcial machine, strengthened by tho patronage it has to dispose of, controls nominations and forces unworthy meto upon the party. If every one felt free to decide between men, considering only their character and the policies for which they stand, a great ad vance would be made toward pure local govern ment. The republican party ito Cincinnati is domi nated by a political boss and must also be con sidered. Whether Mr. Ingalls is the man best fitted to overthrow him is a question for the voters to determine. JSJ The reorganizers are making an effort to cap ture the democratic convention about to be held in the Wichita, Kas., district to nominate a can didate to succeed Senator Long. It behooves tho loyal democrats to be on their guard. We need more voters in the democratic party than tho railroad attorneys, financiers and federal office seekers can supply, and wo cannot expect to get them unless the democratic party stands boldly and consistently for the rights of the people on all questions. And nowhere is Kansas City plat form democracy more essential than in the west ern states. Harmony and Harmony. The, editor of Tho Commoner has received an unsigned lettor such letters are usually unsigned asking why Mr. Bryan is not willing to worj: for "democratic harmony;" why ho docs not "make an effort to unite all men bolleving in democratic principles;" why ho "keeps up a war in tho democratic camp?" This unknown corre spondent Insists that "peace and harmony are essential to success," and suggests that Mr. Bryan ought to "try to rehabilitate tho democratic party and bring it into public favor." As a clincher ho asks who Is to be "tho proper judge or judges of genuine, sound and sterling democracy?" There are other things In the letter which in dicate that the writer's sympathies are really with those who bolted the ticket father than with thosqj who supported the paity in recent cam paigns, but an answer is given for the beneflt of those readers who have to meet theso inquiries. Mr. Bryan is interested in securing democratic harmony, and certainly has more personal reason to regret a lack of harmony In tho party than .tho men who, after voting for tho republican ticket, now clamor so loudly about "letting by gones bq by-gones." Mr. Cleveland was electcl by the democratic party in 1892, and no one will seriously dispute the fact that ho proceeded at once, knowingly and wilfully, to misrepresent tho people Who elected him upon an Issue which his own conduct made paramount for tho time being. Waiving for the present the right of a party nom inee to betray those who nominated him and to barter away the suffrages that ho had received, it is sufficient to say that Mr. Cleveland was tho greatest disturber of party harmony of tho pres ent generation. Never before in the history of the party did a democratic president undertake to change the party's attitude upon a great pub lic question, or to force upon the party as a party measure a bill identical in purpose and almost identical in language, with a bill drawn by tho leaders of the opposing party. This Mr. Cleve land did. The bill introduced by Congressman Wilson in August, 1893, was almost an exact copy of a bill introduced for the sanrn purpose by Sena tor John Sherman a year before. The president's action was made the issue in the fight for delegates to the national convention of 189G, and in spito of the influence of patronage, the influence of money and the Influence of all the great corporations, the rank and fllo of tho party by a large majority repudiated the presi dent's policy and adopted a platform that in effect condemned his course and pointed out a course directly opposite,. This was the' most democratic convention held in fifty years and probably the most democratic ever held in the United States. Seldom, if over, before had a battle been waged between the voters at the primaries on a definite principle, and never before did a convention inore perfectly reflect the sentiments of the voters of the party. What wai the result? The administration and all who could be influenced by the administration, tho great financiers, the great corporation lawyers and all who held their service to corporation above their party allegiance, joined in an effort to de feat the democratic ticket and elect tho republi can ticket. Some of these bolting democrats went directly into the republican party and have been there ever since; some stopped half way, and tried to organize a new democratic party. Having failed in this, some of these went over to the re publican party and some returned to the demo cratic fold. Of the prominent ones who returned nearly all boasted of what they had done, and few have ever announced a change of heart or a change of opinion upon public questions. They now demand harmony. And at what price? Tho J .... ,.z, gggggggjj. . li.... "t-i-"" WiWtoMilttnfHi.nii'Wr.nMlMiMi ,?rtiiimii,mm., (UiaL.-