-vu "j: !5!T?5T?wriwniviwi" vhwhm&)$ ,.. t i.. , (T$ i ii i. community, wo find leading citizens In the ring to rob their own neighbors, managers of corporations bribing law-makers, lawyers for pay helping their clients to bribe safely, jurors refusing to render just verdicts. These men bribers of voters, voters who are bribed, bribers of aldermen and legisla tors, and aldermen and legislators who are bribed, men who secure control of law-making bodies and have laws passed which enable rs ' mum 10 sieai xrom uieir neicnuors. men wno havo laws non-enforced and break laws regu lating saloons, gambling houses, and, In short, all men who pervert and befoul the sources of lawthese men we havo called Enemies of the Republic. ' They are worse they are enemies of the human race. They are destroyera of a people. They constitute a class of criminals very different from ordinary criminals who break laws; these men destroy law. Then the symposium concludes: Our governments city, county, and state are inefficient and sometimes criminal. Under inefficient government the strong individual oppresses the weak. Take, for example, the extraordinary story of the Standard Oil com pany, with, its years o successfully crushing competition, that practically deprived men of t their property and their business, with its con trol and selfish U3e of railroads that were given their franchise by the state for the good and equal use of all. A despotic government could I do no worse. It Is well for public interests that publications like McGlure's undertake the task of impressing truths upon the people even though those truths are unpalatable. The remedy lies in the enforce ment of law the enforcement of law against the strong as well as against ;he weak; and law will be enforced in this way whenever the good citizen pays proper attention to his duties as a citizen, casting his .Vote for those principles which, after careful study, he believes will best serve the pub lic interests and voting for candidates for public office whoso character and record justify the be lief that they will be servants of the people rather than the tools of designing men. '. , JJJ. Sneers For Faithful Servants It has been charged that the Atchison, To peka and Santa Fe railroad, during the time that Paul Morton, now secretary of the navy, was one or its vice presidents, violated the law by giving rebates and that the action of the railroad's traf fic manager in this respect has been publicly ap proved by Mr. Morton. Representative Baker of New York introduced in the house a resolution quoting that portion of the president's message which declared that it is necessary to put a stop to rebates, and providing for an investigation as to Mr. Morton's responsi bility. The Washington correspondent for the Chi cago Tribune, a republican paper, refers to the Baker resolution as "this piece of impertinence," and say3 that Mr. Baker has so "exceeded the . bounds of common decency that some of the re publican leaders favor his expulsion, or at least a public reprimand." Walter Wellman, Washington correspondent for the Chicago Record-Herald, also a republican s paper, says: The author of these resolutions is known far and wide as "Baker, the anti-pass crank." He attracted much attention a year ago by refusing to accept passes from railroad com panies. In the house he has been a well meaning, but eccentric, member, with a pen chant for objecting to everything in sight and a habit of- making the most passionate speeches denouncing somebody or something whilst hi3 fellow members stand around and roar-with laughter. No one except Baker takes him seriously, and of course his resolu tions will be laughed out of court. Is it or is It not significant that a man, who. b.eing elected to represent the people in concress was so conscientious that he refused to accenf railroad passes, brings upon himself the sneers and the jeers of republican newspapers? When these newspapers havo no word of criti cism for. the public official who accepts favors at the hands of these great corporations, should not . a conscientious official who refuses to accent -, buck favors, be at least exempt from the attacks of w..i.li,w.B nuuw culture waini to De striving for l IV fc y tho elevation of the country's moral tone? The Commoner- It would seem that Mr. Morton and his friends should be anxious for the widest publicity concern ing Mr, Morton's connection with the rebates given by tho railroad company with which he was formerly associated. Mr. Roosevelt has for mally declared that rebates must cease and wo are told tnat he is about to enter upon a great campaign on these lines with Mr. Morton, be cause of his great railroad experience, as his chief advisor. To say the least, the .confidence men may havo in Mr. Roosevelt's sincerity on this point is not increased by tho knowledge that his chief advisor is a railroad man himself, and one who is charged with having publicly sanctioned, if not privately engineered, the bad practice against which Mr. Roosevelt has inveighed. It will occur to a great many people that Mr. Baker is not the man under trial .and that he. owes no apology to tho people because he refused to accept corporation favors or because he took steps toward an inquiry into the conduct of a high, public official. Whatever explanation may be due, is due from Mr. Morton. These sneering references to Representative Baker dp no credit to their authors. No word has ever been uttered affecting Mr. Baker's integrity. .The only thing ever charged against him has been that when he entered his official duties he refused to accept favors at tho hands of men who were seeking special privileges from congress and that he has been active in his efforts to bring about reforms in public affairs. In the senate and tho house are many men whoso pockets are filled with railroad passes and other forms of corporation favors. Whatever these men do in an official way it seems to please the corporation managers. These men are conserva tive "eminently conservative." They have spent sleepless nights in the effort, generally successful, to strangle measures, that have been framed in the public interest. Day after day and year after year these men have voted in favor of corpora tion measures; they have, with cheerful abandon, voted public money into private pockets; they have publicly supported measures, some of which even the most truculent of republican newspapers have not dared openly to defend. Yet we do not find in the columns of republican newspapers any sneering allusions to these men; they are not "anti-pass cranks;" they are. "statesmen!" In the senate as in tho house there are men who have repeatedly been branded as the special representatives of great corporations but no word of criticism concerning this form of representation in our national body has found its way into re publican newspapers. New York will re-elect one railroad senator, Minnesota will re-elect another . railroad senator, Nebraska will elect a senator who was chosen by the railroads and one will search republican news papers in vain to find any sneers at these men. They will go to Washington, not as the faithful representatives of the people but as the pliant tools of special interests. All the world knows thi3 to be true. No one knows it better than the repub lican editors who seek to place the brand of infamy upon Baker, the conscientious public servant, while they place the halo of purity above the heads of those men who, chosen for the senate and the house by the corporation lobbyists, are to" become tho representatives of the corporations, rather than the champions of public interests. JJJ Why Do They Dodge The Sioux City, la., Journal, a republican paper, seeks to make light of Bourke Cockran's bill pro viding for the establishment of a commission to inquire into and ascertain the amounts of money expended by the democratic and the republican parties at all presidential elections from 1892 to 1904, inclusive. The Journal refers to the fact that Mr. Cockrans supported the republican candidate for president in 189G and makes certain references to "Cockran's campaign earnings." Certain re publican leaders. Mr. Dalzell of Pennsylvania among the number, as well as several republican editors have insinuated that-Mr. Cockran was paid for his services to the republican party in 1896. Mr Cockran indignantly denied these charges and he has shown that ho is not only perfectly willintr but anxious for an investigation. This is all to Mr. Cockran's credit. But it will bo observed that the objections to the Cockran resolution comes from republican leaders and republican editors Whir are these gentlemen afraid of? Would they have tho public understand that the record of the "nartv wS?idandi?n0raJlty,''wm not beai' inspection? Would they have the public imagine that the ! any truth in the charge made by Thomas W Law son tnat a few days prior to the election day f ' VOLUME I. NUMBER 52 189G a "hurry-up cairVwaa mnrt i for $5,000,000, the same tobe Ssed fo I.T" of "buying a bunch of states?" e puri)oso JJJ A Poor Excuse Tho New York Times has refuel . u Thomas W. Lawson's adverUsemen wh T t vertisements havo been admitted to C column: of many other newspapers, in an editor T Times explains: editorial tho As a justifying reason for their exclnRin from its columns it is sufficient to say & tho Times is not that kind of newspaper tho responsible for its character and contents dS not care to make that kind of newspaper. 'tIiq Times does not believe the charges which Mr Lawson make3 against some of the irreati corporations in the country, corporations man aged by boards of trustees including many of the chief men in tho country, men in whom the pubHc has entire confidence, men who are the custodians of hundreds Of millions of the people's savings. If tho Times did believe Mr Lawson's charges it would itself begin a rig orous Investigation, and it would print the re sults, not in its advertising columns, but upon its news pages, as information which it would be a newspaper's duty to lay before its readers. But Mr. -Law3on has been very explicit in his statements. He has given tho Times all informa tion necessary to the commencement of "a rigorous investigation." Why does not the Times act upon this information? Why does it not take the hints furnished by Mr. Lawson and begin that investi gation, printing the results as it says, "not in its advertising columns but upon its news pages." It is true that "that would be information which it would be a newspaper's duty to lay before its readers." Then why does not the New York Times discharge its duty to its readers? It is not a question of whether the Times believes that Law son's charges are t-ue . If those charges are false it is no less the Times' duty to expose their falsity than it would be the duty of the Times to present the fact that the charges were true. Mr. Lawson's statements have been so clear and explicit that a newspaper would have little difficulty in finding a basis upon which, to rest "a rigorous investiga tion." The tfimes should make that "rigorous in vestigation" to the end that if its opinion that Lawson has misrepresented the facts be sustained, the Times readers may learn the truth and so, also, if the result shall be that Lawson's accusations are confirmed the Time3 readers will not remain in ignorance. JJJ Railroads Oppose Regulation President Marvin Hughitt of the Northwestern railroad announces his nmalterabla opposition to President Roosevelt's plan of giving the inter state commerce commission power to fix railroad rates. Mr. Hughitt, speaking to a committee of the Sioux City Economical club, said: We are always interested with the wishes of people on our lines, and try to meet every demand of business, but you gentlemen do not realize, Congress does not realize, the country does not realize, the tremendous seriousness of the questions the president raises in his mes sage. This proposal of the government making our rates means, if it be carried into effect, that the capacity of the railroads to make ex tensions and improvements will depend on the willingness of a commission to allGW them to earn the wherewithal. It means that all competition will be done away with, for there can be no competition when uniformity is enforced by government. It means that there will be no use for cities to seek advantages or to keep their eyes open to extend tlteir trade territory opportunities. Be cause under the arbitrary system proposed ev ery city would be confined to its own little garden plot of trade territory and there would be no chance of extending it. The country does realize the tremendous seriousness of the question and it is because of tho tremendous tax levied upon the country by tho railroads that the question has become tremen dously serious. President Hughitt is trying to scare the people by threatening to withhold im provements, extensions, etc., but the people know it is not necessary to pay dividends upon watered stock in order to secure the necessary railroad facilities. ' President Hughitt also brings out another w r v && -. y- -rimhbitot6iii li,