jUJHHymiHWIKiHHpiiiilDI iililiMllinHiUi) W ' iapm'T 'I 'JfUgpf'1! " 'IW7qgypWMt"-1 f ' "H'W T tt "T 7""B -l " r APRIL 21,. MOB The Commoner. 15 ment "must tax and manage all cor porations, must oversee Insurance and trust companies, and must either own the railrojids or dictate to their owners the minutest details of their business." He asserted that these things are re ' sented not "because they are new but because they are old as old as tyran ny itself." Meeting of New Issues All new issues and all novel depart ures, he said, must be met with "firm ness and perseverance." He pointed out the way: "If we are to deal effectively with these various issues, whether in oppo sition or in power, it will be necessary to have a real party with real follow ers, attached to real and recognized principles. It is not enough that it shall have a collection of fads many of them useless and some of them dan gerous and opposed to the historic position of our organization. We have already had too many of these, because it is safe to assert of a pplicy that if it is radical it is not democratic; if it is democratic it is not radical." He touched on the monetary crazes "which swept over the country only to sink faster than they rose," and as serted that the lesson to be learned was that "whether as Americans or as partisans, we must struggle out of the treacherous bogs of opportunism and get back to the solid ground of prin ciple." And to do this he said the first and most important step "is recog nition of a fact inherent In our society, fixed in our laws and institutions, and the consistent policy of the democratic party from the earliest days, that hon est thrift, the natural fruit of industry, must' be encouraged and "promoted." He asserted that if the democratic party is to continue its being "it must In the future as in the past draw Its member ship from these representatives of work and thrift." Warning on Confiscation -Mr. Parker denounced any policy "which shall directly or indirectly sug gest even the possibility of- confisca tion, or which, by any agitation, so much as threatens the measure of values." Taking up the subject of corporations and trusts, he said of the former that his recent experience in politics had not inclined him to favor overmuch the management of some great corporations. But he said the developments' of corporations is not only logical, but is necessarily so. He said the maJ6ri'ty of them are man aged honestly, and that the wrongdoers are punished. Mr. Parker "mentioned" trusts, say ing they were sometimes "good" or "bad" according to their disposition toward the party in power. He dis cussed at length the remedies for these evils, saying that first there are existing statutes and the common law. He declared that since the decision in the beef trust case little has been heard "about the impotence of the law." He referred to "executive auth ority" and averred "it had fumed and fussed; It has thundered in the index and failed to enforce the law, except in ' a few cases." He continued: "At the instance of the attorney of a foreign railroad with a branch in this country also the representative of a governor of a state It has very . properly and legally broken up a great railroad combination. "Was It because ' of satisfaction with having- suppressed a 'bad' combination that a dozen oth ers, larger, more flagrant in their vio lation of the law, each of them affect ing the interests of ten times as many people, have not been punished or even prosecuted? Is this the natural re ward of a 'good' trust? Sincerity in Trust War "We have seen one department give a character to a great and far-reaching combination just as the local branch of the government started out to lay the case of the same combination be fore a federal grand jury, ,1s th"is the way of the prosecutor who Is pi 'earn , .est?- In anotner instance the mana gers iof a great railroad, .having admit ted that they have paid rebates, tho government, some years after the fact has been avowed, appoints special counsel to prosecute. Meanwhile the official in power at tho time, and main ly responsible for this admitted in fraction of tho laws, is now a member of the president's cabinet Must wo construe this to mean that tho trust which was once 'good' has now be come 'bad?' He said that when a trust or rail road has violated the law "tho place for the guilty official is in jail or the penitentiary, not in the cabinet or in the board rooms of great railroads." The second effective way of dealing with the trust proper, he said, "is to take away all tariff duties on articles made by any great combination so long as it violates the law or while it discriminates in price against the American customer in favor of tho for eigner." He continued: "The tariff is the fertile and nurs ing mother of all the abuses to be found in these trusts, and yet, the very moment the sacred subject is mention ed, the president of the United States draws a red herring across the trail, all others in republican authority raise their hands in holy horror, the order to stand pat is passed along the whole line of beneficiaries, and tho time-honored process of throwing dust in the eyes of the people is revived." Points Way to Success The speaker closed with the sugges tion that there be an honest attempt at democratic organization. His parting words were: "I would not for a moment convey an impression that organization is not important. It is even more it is vital, if we are to give effect to the princi ples and policies which buttress our party faith. But however necessary and vital, it may be useless a mere empty bauble if it is viewed as the end rather than the means. We are confronted by forces which, when not purely personal, are almost wholly mechanical. They are represented by a party, well managed, indeed, in that two-thirds of the Union to which it re stricts its activities. It has everything that patronage can suggest or imply. In return for favors received it sells to the highest bidder or freely gives the powers of government. Nothing that the ingenuity of monopoly can suggest, as within its scope or interest, Is with held. "On the other hand, we cannot deal with a trust, or a self-seeking class, We neither have nor can acquire the things they want, and we can say with trutn tnat, wnen in power, we have re fused even to consider them as a pos sible asset. It may be an element of weakness, but we have never develop ed the faculty of purchasing votes in gross by turning over to chosen agents powers belonging to the people. Scope of Party Work "With us, then, organization, to be effective, must lie in the state, the county and the district. By the very necessity of our principles and our existence we must protect the rights and promote the interests of communi ties, and carry up Into federal politics only that reserve of power properly incident to our institutions and system of government. The ambitions we must foster are infinite in number and variety. All our later history has shown that it is far more Important for us to have our full share of governors, legislatures, senators, members of congress, ana or state, county and municipal officials, than it is by neg lecting these, to command a long list of places under the general govern ment." Other speeches were made by Mayor George B. McClellan, Henry T. Rainey of Illinois, John W. KernDf Indiana, J. J. Willett of Alabama, Judge Augus tus Van Wcyk and Senator Newlands. The keynote of Mayor McClellan's address was: "As the first step in the direction of commanding public confi dence so as to succeed in this patriot ic work, let us prove to the people that wo aro more anxious to teach and to practice sound political doctrlno than wo aro to framo our platforms so as to catch tho passing vote." By "patriotic work" tho mayor of tho greater city meant spreading of tho precepts "of tho true democracy." Chicago Victory Cheers Mr. Italnoy of Illinois referred to the victory of tho democrats in Chica go as a hopeful sign. Ho said tho fight there was made by tho "radical democracy along progressive lines against the greed of great corpora tions". Ho asserted tho Chicago vic tory "is tho first great victory of tho reorganized democracy thero aro many more to follow." The Hoosier orator, John W. Kern, talked to tho theme, "Tho Rank and File." He made a hit with this ex pression: "We may as well make up our minds now that tho day ofthe 'boss' in demo cratic politics Is at an end and that 'gavel rule In conventions will no longer be tolerated.' " Mr. Kern also made the suggestion that henceforth the work of organiza tion in campaigns "must commence with the voters and proceed upward, rather than commence In a so-called conference of leaders and work downward." A STRIKING SERMON The president's sermon before tho Mother's club . at Washington is at tracting as much attention as Dr. Os iers' too-old-at-forty speech though for a very different reason. If the phy sician's statements are absurd and in contradiction to innumerable conspicu ous and incontestable facts, the states man's contentions are true and dust, something to bo pondered and to be laid to heart by every thoughtful man and woman in America. The "vapid self-indulgence" and tho "pseudo-intellectuality" which he so cordially reprobates aro doing destruc tive work among us, giving us barren homes and robbing marriage of its highest and holiest character. Tho head of tho nation is not beating tho air when ho holds up to scorn tho thoughtful and tho intelligent, tho cowardlco and moral dogencracy of those who shrink from their first duty to their country nnd to tho race. Tho lesson which ho roads to tho nation will not provo palatable to thoso who neod it most. Tho "Now York Times, in a bright odltorlal, says: "Tho tenor of tho president's ad dress was to dlsapprovo of, even to stigmatize, tho childless family, as a shirker of Its responsibilities toward tho nation and tho race; and, so far as may bo, to Invito the stigma of others upon the childless family. Admitting , tho Inevitable exceptions, Mr. Roose velt classed the wives who dccllno to bring children Into tho world as In stances either of 'vapid self-indulgence' or natures twisted to 'a storilc"psou(lo lntollectuallty.' Ho says ho has tho same 'contempt,' which ho feels for a runaway soldier, for 'tho man or woman who deliberately foregoes tho blessings of children, whether from vl clousness, coldness, shallow-hearted-ness, self-indulgence, or mere falluro to appreciate aright the difference bo tween tho all-important and the unim portant.' "Mr. Roosevelt Is going to hear from those who object to being Impaled on any of these alternatives, and espe cially from tho women with whom speaking largely, tho question of race suicide among educated Americans be gins and ends. They will tell him that their family affairs aro strictly their own concern. They will say tho ho is sneering at tho blue-stocking woman. 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