i.hhi,. i it'iiplW!IWlP'IWI''W'!l'lMllWWIJ'Jl'J;lliyWl "JW4Mi '" i 'H irn "", w AUGUST 4, 1905 The Commoner. 15 political and commercial life of the community appeal 3 to bo lioney corabed with fraud, graft and the pros titution of public office. Will the state stand it? That is not the problem. The question is, will the people put up with it? Will the God who governs human states suffer it without the penalty he in flicts upon the disregard and viola tion of the very first principles of society? The old Roman empire rot ted away before the greed of her princes. Venice fell prey to the avarice of her merchants. The Stu arts lost England because they stole the people's privileges. England lost her American colonies through ex tortion, and Spain has been stripped of her possessions through the cor ruption of her foreign service. Would it then be any great wonder if our own great republic, harassed by the same internal disorders, should lose the confidence qf her citizens and , fall a prey to the Iniquity of those to whom the people have committed the integrity of her institutions and the honest administration of her po litical and commercial life? Don't ask me what all this has to do with religion and find fault with me because I mix religion with politics and business. For where in the sphere of our existence as a people is religion more needed today than in these very spheres of political and commercial existences? Religion is the life and very source of justice, honesty, and every form of moral in tegrity. Never before in the history of our republic has religion come to us with a more weighty message than the one she b-ars to the people now. Hitherto, a man's career was sup posed to be built upon the principle of honor, integrity and justice. To him the great law of Sinai was as sacred as the faith that made him Christian. Thou shalt not steal was the law of Tiis public life and his pri vate transactions. Now that law is changed, and the man who is to succeed in life must go forth with the warning ever speak ing to his conscience, but with the crime in his face. If thou wilt suc ceed in life; it thou wilt have things and be something, thou shalt steal, and thou shalt steal in every shape and form anything and everything, and in every form and manner that craft, cunning, experience and the devil himself will show thee. No law will control this degeneracy but the law of the other world, the law of religion with its sanction of eternity, with its menace of the ever lasting ills of God. No other remedy is at hand. Surely not education. For our education an education without God, and, therefore, without morality is not only not a remedy, but with out religion it only makes more cun ning rascals and smarter scoundrels. Take God out of man's conscience and you put the devil and all his words into it. Publicity is something in the right direction. But publicity only repairs evil. It will not eradi cate the iniquity that is overwhelm ing us. Publish one rogue's trick and you but sharpen the wits of a thou sand others. The evil lies In the public con science. It is Godless. It is with out faith. It is without a Christian code. And until it shall have been renewed in the principles of C-hrlstian truththe whole truth the people shall remain at the mercy of the pas sions of evil men and still more evil systems. "LOOMIS THE EXONERATED" A correspondent thinks our criti cism of the president for exonerating m$&rmim 5S'l fIA i avaiaar. i ivy mgramiv 4103 Mr. Loomis entirely too severe- that the president relied entirely upon Sec retary Taft's report to him. Yet Taft, In that report, said, in a very gingerly way to be sure: "I sincerely hope that his bitter ex perience in this case makes it un necessary further to point the moral that one who occupies tho position of minister of the United States can not afford, in any country in which he is accredited, in which business en terprises must more or less be affect ed by government favor and conces sion, to make personal investments of any sort or to leavo the slightest doubt as to the absence of all personal interest in any matters which ho may bring before the government to which he is accredited." But tho president had more than this before him. He had the record the absolute proof or Loomis' guilt as contained in tho report Itself. As the conservative New York Post says, "let that record speak"; (1.) Mr. Loomis exchanged checks for $5,000 with the New York and Bermudez Asphalt company a lit igant for asphalt concessions in the Venezuela courts whose claims he had vigorously pressed. Let this pass for a patent indiscretion; obviously he should have banked elsewhere. (2.) Mr. Loomis advanced $5,800 to tho putative American, Mercado, on the security of contested torpedo-boat scrip issued by the Venezuelan gov ernment. In other words, an Ameri can minister enters into an unex plained note-broking transaction in tho scrip of the nation to which he is accredited. (3.) Mr. Loomis, stipulating that ho should first resign as American min ister, agreed with Charles R. Mayers to engineer for an estimated profit of over one million dollars the re funding of Venezuelan loans held by aa American syndicate. Of this trans action Secretary Taft says: "He (Loomis) was certainly tread ing on dangerous ground in bringing his offlci 1 life so close to a transac tion in which, after receiving Mayer's letter, he must have expected to have a great personal interest." (4.) Mr. Loomis became the agent of a West Virginia corporation or ganized to obtain mining concessions in Venezuela. Like the exchange of checks with the Bermudez company, he explains that the transaction was purely nominal. Quoting again from the New York Post: "In a capital which fairly reeks with financial scandal, Mr. Loomis contrived to bank with a litigant con- cessionnaire, to dabble in contested government claims, to engage to re fund a large portion of the national debt, and to negotiate for a group of mines. Grant that this is the entire record of Mr. Loomis's extra-ministerial activities, concede that he drifted intd these dubious transac tions merely as a convenience to himself and to oblige friends, and one cannot fail to admit that he is either too guileless for this world or too restless for the diplomatic calling." ' Yet the president 3ays he Is all right and has given him a "certifi cate" of good character." San Fran cisco Star. SAF7TY VS. DOLLARS In this land of freedom the rail roads run with about as much regard for safety as they choose, the national government taking no part and the. state government being frequently controlled by the road. Why is not the block system of signals every where in vogue? Because it costs money, and the absence of it only costs lives. Why are cheap tinder cars allowed everywhere or any where? Corporations and money in terests generally in tL'-j country are pretty leniently treated by the law. The amount a man's life is worth is often less than what ho can recover for being Injured. Tho amount a steamship company can bo mulcted for an accident due to cowardice or negligence of its own, ns in tho Bour gono and General Slocum cases, scorns to be limited by the amount of prop erty saved in tho accident. Positive favors of the law, however, have less to do with tho unexplained danger of travel by land In America than Its nog atlvo influence tho fact that it has so littlo to say in regard to methods and appliances for safety. Regarding water travel, where tho government takes more part, tl o danger la less m inadequacy of tho laws than In what may be described as Indifference or as tho case with which Inspectors arc corrupted. Collier's Weekly. fzrw M -F' r V lr J -. T-.r.;i 'Jll( . - zZtM&WWg&t K!lffiSsS I rh-w2xc-ssst3:-r rra. SJs?iiCK Srii!F.ra2L i I I ill - i V . .1 1 i Ffc. " tZUf --tr'-Tj-- - Orzz . r, r. txKh If hh ; :iM -rTt) ij"'' ;- m.0 , , --W vbc.mm rjr ."s-i5"ji fi. d wttiII'lU" j" -LifZjtilJ mmmL' mmP'M n&c r, &r l&s&m &! n -rasi&B. m TX3- 1 s 5f- V S mC llio above Ulmtratlon ropi-nnmls our new 20 ncro plnnt. Our aurccvi Is soumUiliij: nmrTolou and In duo to ttio ftulcndli! thIuuh wis Iiiivh alwayH Klvcn, nml tho II burn I trrntmmit ncconlJ lo our cuntora ors. 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