$ d iM "fJtjWWl if '." nA .0 4 A SHAMEFUL FACT In Lho beef trust bases on trial before Fed eral Judge llu.ni.hrey in Chicago the attorneys lor to packers contend that because Com, s stonor Garfield had the authority to require . tlio packers to furnish him information concerning their business, and the packers yW&to thaL authority, they aro Immune cm prosecu ion Several witnesses have testified that before submitting his report to lho VmtomntiBBlonQr Garllold presented proof sheets of the same to tho packors and their representatives. So clearly has this been established as a fact that oyen Uuitod States District Attornoy Morrison is using that fact in the hopo of saving his case. Ad dressing the court Mr. Morrison said: "Tho theory of tho government is that thero was an understanding that the matter (aarflold'a report) should not be published unlosH tho packors were satisfied with the roport. Wo will show that Mr. Garfield came back with a typewritten copy of his report which had not yet been printed and that tho packors were ready and anxious to havo this roport go to tho publisher." Of course it was humiliating for a repre sentative of tho government to be required to employ this shameful fact in order to avoid tho technicality through which the packers expect a dismissal of tho proceeding's. Whatovor tho secrets revealed by tho packors to Commissioner Garflold wore, his conclusions amounted to tho claim that tho packers wore making a very small amount of money and in omo instances had actually lost money, and that thoro was, in fact, no such thing as a beef trust. The American people did not know then that boforo that report had been submitted to tho public It had passed under the critical' eye of tho very men with whose investigation the com missioner of corporations was charged. It was genorally bclloved at tho time that Mr. Garfield had not made a serious investigation of the beef trust. But until tho revelations before the fed eral court at Chicago it was not known that lho recently created department of commerce and labor was, in tho language of the street, "playing horse" with tho helplesB victims of greedy monopolists. Yet this same man who agreed that boforo his report was submitted it would bo acceptable to the mon under investigation, was asSignod to investlgato tho Standard Oil trust! It will occur to a groat many people that whatovor tho outcome of the beef trust case In Chicago may bo, Mr; Roosovolt should dismiss Commissioner Garfield from the government serv ice. JJJ ) THE SHIP SUBSIDY Although the corporation lobby at Washing ton Ib exerting its efforts to foist the ship sub sidy upon tho people, it is notlceablo that repub lican newspapers are not generally protesting against that proposed stealand we have emi nent republican authority for thus designating it. A few yoars ago when it was seriously pro posed to adopt tho ship subsidy many republican newspapers denounced the scheme and what they said then represented tho general sentiment throughout the country on this question. In December, 1900, the Indianapolis Journal said: 'Congressjnen must have mistaken tho atmosphere of Washington for that of the country at largo or the clamor of a few ship-builders and owners and their lobbyists for the voice of the people. Lot republican members go back to the platform of 1S9G, which demanded the upbuilding of our merchant marine and carrying trade by other methods than a ship subsidy' said?1 ?No hJjfnnJ0, ,tU Du?uu. Io. Times ?AV inconsiderable part of President Mc Klnloy s support in the recent election came from iast8efulOWh0m th SUbSidy illGa Is trCoV ffi About the same time the Portland Oreconinn protested against the subsidy, and said- B fact that building and Balling AmorioC shin J i2 competition with the fleets of tlTworkl tas en ffi i, f!2n!to P P colossal8 to?- irz v iuu s as operate their voce's :,Dsrs 3&Ms ed: "it may be truo of our government n w The Chicago Record-Herald, while declaring The Commoner. I bat the west was "not af frightened by the word 'subsidy,'" said "it balks over a proposition to take money from the national treasury to render the conditions of a self-supporting merchant ma rine more unprofitable than ever." Tho Record Herald denounced tho ship subsidy as a pre: posterous proposition." In December, 1900, the Chicago Tribune, dis cussing James J. Hill's prophecies of what the merchant marine of the United States is approach ing in development, said: "It was not understood when tho spellbinders were urging the people o the northwest to vote in favor of the re-election of President McKinley that one of the first items on the senatorial program when congress met would bo tho passage of a 'shipping subsidy bill which contemplates annually expenditure for thirty years for the special benoflt of a number of rich men residing in eastern cities. There is nothing, whatever in this adroit resolution (the shipping plank of the republican national platform of 1900) about fcsubsldles.' Tho word 'subsidies' was care fully emitted from the platform. Nor was anything said during the campaign in regard to the exten sion of our merchant marine by a scheme of public expenditure continuing for a generation. Nobody can recall an instance of a public meet ing at which the shipping subsidy bill was made tho subject of fair, candid argument or any argu ment at all; nor were tho claims to public aid of tho persons interested in Buch legislation ever explicitly set forth. , The republican party should not be in favor of one set of meas ures prior to November 6 and in favor of an en tirely different kind of measures subsequent to November 6." JJJ MAYBE HE KNEW THE SOURCE OF FUNDS Many of the administration's warmest sup porters as well as the people generally are greatly disgusted by tho revelations concerning Com missioner Gerfield. The Kansas City Journal, a republican paper, says: "If the testimony of the witnesses in the packers' case is to be believed, Commissioner Garfield is easily the prince of chumps in President Roosevelt's official family and that is saying a good deal. Facile princeps is no name for it; ho is tho royal flush of four flushers, and that is the limit." The Journal wants to know whether Mr. Gar field "supposes that the government's attitude toward monopolistic trusts in general and the beef trust in particular was merely a bluff," and it concludes: "It appears that Mr. Garfield has betrayed his trust as well as the packers. President Roosevelt's warm defense of Loomis and Paul Morton and Press Agent Bishop has given him a well-earned reputation for sticking to his friends, but he will have to look up the fa mous recipe that used to make such a lasting coat of whitewash for the White House if he expects to stick to Garfield." Mr. Garfield was born and raised in the re publican party and it would not be surprising to learn that he did take it for granted that the trust busting program was "a bluff." Perhaps ho has learned that the trusts have during three campaigns provided the republican party with its campaign funds. Would it be strange that far the light of these and other facts Mr. Garfield was not impressed seriously with his mission. JJJ l j CHAMP CLARK'S SPEECH All too brief reference has been made in the newspapers to the speech delivered in the house cLZrep?natiV?nuary 5 Representative Champ Clark of Missouri. Mr. Clark was fre- tZI!innterrUpt?i1 b reP"Mcan membSs! and the dialogue provides one of the most interesting mcZT in tlle lB?cSE mi. Clark s speech was admirable, and the eood- national capital. llc at tue JJJ WHERE IS THE DIFFERENCE? sevGrfiGVfr!'alT,(iaily1neW1Bpapers that have been very attention to the beams to thJl 0l1 to pay somo eyes. It developed in the ''Town Ci e? tor,al that that publication profited by vJrXtS ?Q telling what it knew'to boYoVhf aSdtTf .VOliTJME 6, NUMBER 4 people amply able to pay for silence. But is" that any worse than to deliberately publish mislead ing editorials with a view of deceiving the peo ple into the belief that policies calculated to benefit only the owners of the paper are of gen eral public benefit? Several great daily news papers aro known to be owned by railroad cor porations, and these papers are constantly trying to make it appear that they are published with a sole view of benefitting the people when they are in fact published for the sole purpose of mis leading the people. "Town Topics" seems to have profited by what it' did not print. Somo other publications are published for the purpose ' of profiting the eminent corporationists who own them by blinding the eyes of the people to the real purposes of the owners. Is that sort of. thing more honorable than the-policy pursued by Mann's publication? x .' ' JJJ A NEW DIVERSION It ,is stated that Mr. Henry C. Friek; the steel and coal baron, has purchased-a Pittsburg daily newspaper that has long made him the sub ject of ridicule. This offers a new field for the diversion of our multi-millionaires, and incident ally points the way to a solution of that vexed t question as to how the money being accumulated ' in a few hands shall be distributed among the people. Managers of big corporations long ago secured great newspapers through which to safe guard and advance their corporation -interests, but it seems to be something new for a corpor ation manager to invest in a newspaper in order to avoid its ridicule. If" our multi-millionaires begin that sort of thing and keep It up it wili be easy to see a solution of the problem of vast fortunes. Mr. Rogers will have to turn a great many Standard Oil and Amalgamated Copper tricks if he manages to buy up all the newspapers that are ridiculing him, and Sterator Depew, in stead of resigning $20,000 sinecures will have to hustle quite lively in search of more. JJJ WEIGHING THE MAILS : It is announced that some time this spring the government will weigh the malls, westTof the Missouri river for the purpose of fixing the compensation the railroads shall receive 'during the next four years for carrying the mails. Tho weighing will occupy about 100 days. The rail roads will be paid for four years on a basis of what is carried during the weighing period. This plan makes it easy to pad the mails during the weighing period. l has been charged time and again that during the mail weighing season tho mails have been loaded down with public docu ments sent out under congressional frank and shipped from point to point, weighed and re c hem, ? again during the weighing sea son, rhat the payments made to railroads for Sf,F!'tinS the mails are responsible for tho deficit in the postal department is well known. VnrLmilli0nS S dollars are paid every year to , corporations for mail service. Pound for 5S5? J toe railroads charge 800 per cent more for mail carrying than they do for express carrying; and instead of furnishing cars as they do to the SaeiSSforCtmftPanie Ul chare Uncle Sam a rif e mail cars that nually equals tho cost of the cars, and in many cases exceeds it :t i ,1 ' f JJJ CAN IT BE? LA" Even the St. Louis Globe-Democrat is scared. The Globe-Democrat appeals to the republican leaders to "do something," and concludes in these words: "On the work which will be done in the S2?i ?iree rf?Ur montus' tuerefore, will d . pend the maintenance of the republican su premacy in the legislative department of the government. The election of a aemoeralX ' tuVhv fVV6 then thTseconS ' half of President Roosevelt's term, would bo ' a bad blow to the republican party and a ' menace to the country. This peril should 1 be oftnSS 'I mId tE remainde? Sin? SS,0n by tb0 republicans In each theaUs1atfe ngreSS' part,cularly 7 those in Coming from the Globe-Democrat it is a re- ?aPSSIeiad?,,Mlon ?at "on the worl which wm be done in the next three or four months will SZov lermaintenance of the repub?lcan su premacy." For years we have been told by tho Globe-Democrat that republican supremacy was assured because the republican iSartyl i the "God andmorai,tyMorganIzatlon CaJ ?eJg; that the republican party is liable to error? - . ssjauwwj ;- -MAfc4fVlJ fcl ..!-