w SEPTEMBER 28, 1905 The Commoner. 15 through Kearney ana Grand Island and other points. In other words, they charge a dollar a ton more to stop a car at Kearney than they do to haul it 200 miles further to Omaha. And Lincoln is in the same class with interior cities. Southern coal pays nearly $5 a car more into Lincoln than it does through Lincoln to Oma ha. An estimate given me is that six thousand cars of southern coal is brought yearly to Lincoln. The in defensible discrimination which the commission would remedy if it had power costs Lincoln something. The southern lumber rate into Lincoln is a cent a pound greater than the rate on lumber hauled through Lincoln to Omaha. This makes a higher rate here by practically $5 a car over Oma ha, and a low estimate is that 3,500 cars are used and distributed each year in Lincoln. These discrimina tions cost something year upon year to Lincoln. I have only time to give a very few illustrations of this kind. The California fruit rate to all com mon points is $1.25. A carload of California fruit pays the same freight to Lincoln and Omaha that it pays to New York and Boston. Is it a reason able rate to haul it for nothing for half the distance? If we here accept the discrimination, do we get an equal ization in return? This is becoming a great fruit state. From southeast ern Nebraska points to southern South Dakota points, a distance of 250 miles, the apple rate is from 50 to 52 cents. From New York to the same South Dakota points, a distance of 2,500 miles, the apple rate is 39 cents. A Lincoln wholesaler yesterday told of shipping two cars of dried fruit from California. For convenience in dis tribution he had one car stopped at Sheridan, Wyoming, and it cost him to have it stop there $135 more than the other car cost him brought on to Lincoln. A friend recently cited a case where he had a small shipment of family relics sent from his old house at Pittsburg, Pa. He paid 22 cents on the shipment from Pittsburg to Chicago, it cost him 75 cents from Chicago to the Missouri river, and $3.78 from the Missouri river to Sher idan, Wyoming, a shorter distance than the Pittsburg-Chicago haul. In stances by the hundreds of injustice to this section could be cited, and they are everywhere. Wichita's corn rate was 9 cents more than the Kansas City rate was through Wichita to Gal veston. The commission recently heard this case, found it unreasonable, and after allowing the railroad claim of competition at Kansas City, fixed five cents as a sufficient differential in favor of Kansas City. The roads re duced the nine cents one-half cent, and the commission was powerless to enforce its findings. How can we es cape the conclusion that common jus tice demands the power be given to the commission which the president asks? "In a auestion of such magnitude there is of course another side and the railroads undoubtedly believe that they are justified in their interests in combatting the giving of this power to the commission. A number of briefs have been made from the noint of view of the roads. One that was widely circulated was an attack upon the commission, in which with infinite elaboration the work already done by the commission was minimized. It Bhowed that the commission had cost the government 3,804,000; that it had In its life held trial on 353 cases, mak ing the cost of each case $i 0,778, and that but two of the cases had been carried' through the court of last re sort and won, making the cost of fin ally adjudicated case3 up to the mil lion dollar roint. If this wro nil th work of the commission, it would be a better argument; but the commis sion has had before it 3,525 cases, a jarge majority of which the roads tnemselves remedied as they did the Lincoln case, without letting a ver dict be reached. The work of the commission in requiring safety appli ances and in publishing statistical in formation is worth all it has cost out side of trial cases; and the fact that it has been a means or publicity for rate cases causing 90 per cent of them to bo settled without trialbecause of the fear of publicity on the part of the roadsmakes the argument of this brief a matter of little force. "The most complete statement of the railroad side that I have found is incorporated in a brief prepared by th president of the Southern Railway system. 1 can only briefly summarize from it. The brief holds that rates are now reasonable in themselves, and cites that since 1870 to 1893 the aver age earning per ton per mile has de creased from 1.9 to .76; that prefer ences between individuals that have existed through secret rebates have been greatly exaggerated; that they preferences between localities have been greatly exaggerated; that they always will exist, and that present statutes are sufficient to .meet them; that the change proposed Is not de sirable as a future system, because Ic changes the rate-making power from the railroads to the commission, and that this would be dangerous to val ues of railroad properties; that it would be a step towara socialism in volving manufacturers, shippers, and carriers alike. "Again the argument is made that the legislation would arrest commer cial progress. That present methods are in aid of shippers, extending their business, which rigid legislation pro posed would curtail and abolish. The proposed legislation is defined as drastic beyond constitutional limits, although In this the fact that the courts are the final arbiters is overlooked. "The proposed legislation, it is fur ther claimed, would not secure antici pated results, because of the volume of litigation that would be opened and the inability of the courts to pass upon it all. The remedy offered in this brief is for the commission to promote better relations between the parties, and that a more rigid enforce ment of present laws be followed. "The argument, both that made in briefs of this kind, that made by rail way adherents in public print, and that made by represented railroad in terests in congress, all finally center in the demand to be let alone. When the Esch-Townsend bill passed the lower house, carrying the idea urged by the president, the Hepburn bill that was side-tracked only proposed remedies through a tortuous court process, involving the creation of new courts, and a long highway of appeal that would wear out the litigants be fore final results would be obtained. "The proposed legislation ought to be such as to get fixed results quick ly. It ought to be such as to safe guard the rights of property through a review by the court of last resort. It ought to he enacted be cause injustice exists now, because the spirit of the interstate commerce act is violated, and its provisions Inopera tive. Corporate power more and more unrestrained does injustice to Individ uals and communities, through its es tablished policy of building up a few localities at the expense of many, and through a rate-making system that, brought to its initiative, is based not upon the rights of shipper and carrier, but on what the traffic will bear." REAL CAUSE OF HUNGER A learned physician says that hung er is the sensation felt because of the contraction of the musdularis either oL the pylorus or possimy aiso tne entire stomach or of the duodenum, or of the contraction of the muscula ris of all these structures. The con mh, nf thn. nonketbook caused by the heef trust price list may also have something to do with it. Wash ington Star. uuaui2auaQaDauuQaQuuut2umuau . .. . 1 me aetrerson Bible i BY THOMAS JEFFERSON AUTHOR DECLARATION OP INDEPENDENCE I 102 YEARS AGO 1 I Thomn Jefferson cut nuch pnvtiiffcfl from the KranircllHU oh he believed would licxt nrcjent the ethical teaching of Jesus, nml "urriwiucd them on the nnt ch of a blank book In a certain order of time orRUbJcet.'-' Thin book lie called "The Philosophy of Jcsiw of Nazareth. ConirrcsH recently ordered It Insuod as n public document but In very lim ited numbers. 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