Wm -- - .VOLUME 7, NUMBER 3 The Commoner, 8 M -rmiwn J I 2 tl lite' 4' SS liQ Mi&r W CURR8NT TOPICS B:rrago4vN?gB f 'H . ' nwiKKiwuv m- ATLJJ F .J t .---. - - w jytrr. ,rTS3ggTtfft'S-r-'". .-ww,,., , --.-, A DISPATCH llm estlng (o thos miiimI Iip narliciilarl.V Inter- who contend thai railroads arc hoMl conducted in private hands, was carried l).V Hie Associated Press under date of Taeoina, Wnulilmrlnii (imiiiirv r. 'The (llmintcll follows: Wlllilti tlio novl thirty days .several cargoes of coal will be received on Panel Sound to relieve the fuel shortage now existing at Taeoina and Seattle According to advices received today the steamer Lyra Hailed from MoJI Monday with 1,01)0 tons of coal. The steamship Quito Is to bring n,000 Ions and (he steamship Pleiades Is due lfere on ' February I and has 1,000 tons of, coal. Never be fore in the history of this port has coal had to be Imported from the orient to meet the local demand. Owing to the coal shortage many tugs are pre vented from going outside to pick up vessels and as a result only sixteen have entered the straits In four weeks." O FORM Hit (1OVI0KNOR M'OONNHLL, who was also late Indian commissioner, in an inter view given to an Associated Press correspondent, in Salt Lake City, Utah, charges gross mismanage ment of the Indian schools and arraigns the sys tem by which joung Indian girls are taken away from their parents and sent to Indian schools. He alleges teachers in the schools practice great cru elty upon their charges and that girl pupils are allowed to he debauched. The blame for those conditions he places upon Secretary Hitchcock, whom, he sn,s, he acquainted with conditions dur ing his tenure of olllce, but who pigeon-holed his report, lie further says the olllcials of the Interior department conceal (he true state of affairs from the president. i O THAT there are "a lot of swift minded, rapid thinking people In public ItVe In Washington" Is the opinion expressed by the New York World. The World bases Its opinion upon this statement of fact: "Senator William R. Hale, of Tennessee, died March !, l!)0.r. Yesterday the senate trans acted the usual amount of business and then lis tened to eulogies of the dead statesman, after which It 'adjourned as a mark of respect to h's memory. James Wilson, secretary of agriculture since March 4, 1SD7, has just resigned the presi dency of the First National bank of Truer, la which he has hold ten years. Ills reason Is that he was too far away to do Justice to the stock holders and depositors a reason that was as good nine years and ten months ago as it is now." O n MOS PAYNE, Clarksburg, W. Va., writer f "We notice In The Commoner of .January 4 11)07, under the caption of Current Topics Uie "fol lowing: Ceneral 11. 10. Lee was born in West moreland county, Virginia, .January 11), 1S07 Thomas .Jonathan Jackson (Stonewall) was born on the 21st day of January, 1824, In Lewis countv, Virginia, now West Virginia.' Allow me to correct an error as to Stonewall Jackson. He was born In Clarksburg, Harrison county, Virginia, now West Virginia. 1 herewith enclose a picture of the house In which he was born. The house stood on Main street, but since the war was torn down and a business block now stands there, and is owned by David Davlsson." O POINTINd OUT that the proceedings in the anti-trust law are not the only methods 1o be adopted In attacking the Standard Oil monop oly, the Sioux t'ltj (Iowa) Tribune savs- "The monopoly is protected by a proviso inserted through some of the subtle methods of which the S andard Is master and as a consequence it eniovs high protection. This clause in the free list mo- mi- nun may suan ne imposed on petroleum or its products equal to the duty imposed by e country producing It. The result his been that the Standard has an average of almost 100 or cem protection, the treasury department Iiav ing held that the proviso refers to the origin of the crude oil ami not the place where It was ret ned ,";..,, i.."., , ,"?.L "uoul JUU POi cent. Some "".' I'uiMisiii'u ugures in tie 0 1, Paint and Drug Reporter show how the monopoly ben "fits because of this high tariff. Oil which It sells for export of 7.H com n iim, i A. ..." . "b l.0L for -IS cents at wholesale Vo AinerS pu'rcha? a diuerenco of uo per cent. Another grade, 150 degrees w. w., It sells abroad for 9..1 cents per gallon In barrels and American consumers pay Vj cents. If It bo assumed that the monopoly does not sell abroad below the cost of production ami I,. ..,,...,. 1.. ..wtnHn.r li ni-lrnu nf fni'nlmi COninOtlt- in iii;i ui.y iii;;i.ij "l i.vm n-- -- ors, it Is evident that the tariff by indirection stands between the American consumer and his ability to purchase kerosene from one-third to two-thirds cheaper. It must lie rather startling 1o the Amer ican public to realize that the vast Standard Oil monopoly has been built up under the shelter of the protective tariff which had no excuse that it was fostering infant industry because Rockefeller and his associates had cornered practically the en tire business. Under such circumstances the duty was practically . gift to the trust and enabled it to pay 40 per cent a year on its capitalization. The fact that revision and the striking out of this duty would afford the people relief from the monopoly's extortion through foreign competition Is another argument for sjieedy congressional action, espe cially since such action would help the govern ment in its own Jight against this combination of capital." O THE INITIATIVE and referendum is growing in public favor. In his message to the Min neapolis legislature, Governor Johnson said: "I would call your attention to the merits of the ad visory initiative and referendum. This permits the people of a state, county, city, village or town to express their views upon questions affecting their organization and is fast gaining ground upon the theory that the duly elected otlicers are the serv ants of the people who elected them and will be guided by the expressed views of a majority. The advisory initiative and referendum is but a step farther than the right of petition, and is not binding upon their otlicers. The enactment of a law provid ing for an advisory initiative and referendum can bo accomplished without a constitutional amend ment, and I am firmly of the opinion that such legislation is desirable. There can be, I am sure, no valid reason against the submission to the peo pie of a proposed constitutional amendment pro viding for a direct initiative and referendum. This would give the people an opportunity to vote on the question whether or riot they want the right to instruct their representatives and also the further rigla to pass upon the laws enacted by their leg islature. But whether or not you would care to go so far in this direction, I would urge your con sideration of a plan for an advisory initiative and referendum." O DR. MUNIIALL, who recently closed a series of religious meetings at Emporia, Kansas, told, according to the Kansas City Journal, an in teresting story. The Journal savs: "A great many pennies had been put in the offering, and his attention was called to this. One night he held up a silver dollar and a copper penny and gave a conversation held by the two coins. 'You poor little red cent, you: you don't amount to anything. I d hate to be you,' said the big dollar. 'I know I'm not very big,' replied the cent, 'but the children like me, and I can buy a good niany tilings.' Hull you can't buy anything at all said the dol lar. Just look at me, big and bright and shin v. 1 can buy a whole lot more than you can.' 'May be so,' said the little led cent, meekly, 'but I so to church a heap oftener than you do anyway.' " O SENATOR BAILEY was re-elected by the Tex as legislature, receiving 10S votes out of 147 cast. A committee of the legislature is now pro ceeding with the investigation of charges filed against Senator Bailey by Representative Cocke An Associated Press dispatch from Austin Tex ' says: "The special committees apointed by the two brandies of the state legislature to investigate charges preferred against United States Senator Bailey met in secret session today. Because of the grave character of the charges involving a possible violation of a federal statute the commit tee has decided to limit the range of the inquir until more definite information can be secured rI ho committee decided that Senator Bailey would not be required to appear until all the evidence was In, inasmuch as he is on the defensive Sen ator Bailey will not leave Austin until after 'the investigation is concluded. The additional charges preferred against Senator Bailey by Representa tive Cocke concerning deals in Indian territory land charge that in 1001 Senator Bailey repre sented S. B. Burnett of Fort Worth, relative to thti leasing of certain lands in the Kiowa and Co manche reservations from the department of the interior; also that in 1900 Senator Bailey repre sented the linn of Sugg Brothers, before the de partment of the interior in reference to approval of leases of Kiowa and Comanche lands which the firm was trying to lease and that large sums of money were paid Senator Bailey. The charges also declare that Bailey secured a loan from Judge J. M. Lindsay of Gainesville, Tex., in 1892 while pro curing from congress right of way through Indian territory for the Gainesville, McAlestor and "St. Louis Railroad company. Another charge against Bailey is specified as follows: That in the spring of ISOa F. B. Stuart of Gainesville, Tex., a former law partner of said Joseph W. Bailey, was ap pointed a judge of the United States court for the Indian territory and appointed J. W. Philips of Gainesville, Tex., to whom Bailey owed consider able sums of money, as clerk of said court. That the compensation of said Philips as clerk was on a salary basis under the law as it then existed; said J. W. Bailey at said time being a member oC the judiciary of the house of representatives of the United States congress procured the passage of an act which was approved November 3, 1892, (United Slates statutes, at large, volume 2S), which, put said clerkship on a fee basis and increased the compensation of the otlico of clerk to the sum of about .$25,000 per annum and thereafter, during the life time of Philips, now .deceased, and during the incumbency of the office, Bailey procured large sums of money from time to time from Philips as compensation." THE ADOPTION by the senate and house of the amendment increasing the salaries of sen ators and members, reminds the Nashville, Tenn., Banner of the "salary grab" of the session of 1872 3. lhat increase of salaries applied to the members of congress voting the increase as well as to those of future sessions, while the increase recently adopted will take effect March 4, 1907, and wlil not apply to the present session. Referring to the 1872-3 salary grab, the Banner says: "The re sult was a wave of popular protest, which caused many of the congressman who voted for the bill to try to 'hedge' to appease their constituents. Some of them covered their extra pay into the treasury, some devoted it to charity, and not a few lost out in the succeeding election." O D EFERRING to the passage by the house of tha p. bill prohibiting corporations from contribut tag to campaign funds, the New York Evening Post says: "It marks a distinct step forward iS the purification of our elections. It does not. however, as was pointed out in the debate yester day estop any wealthy candidate from paying out a million dollars if he chooses. To some limitation on that, as suggested by Governor Hughes, we shall yet have to come. It was not a very pleasant de bate for the republicans. The democfaTSder John Sharp Williams, did not neglect : to opoS mty to ask whether, 'with his great popularity tiiroughout the country,' the president should not demand of his party the return of the money con tributed unlawfully by the insurance companies from their trust funds to aid in his election Friends of both Mr. Roosevelt and Mr Corte yon will always have to blush for this failure to do J simple act of justice and right a great wroiU Republicans have been justly wfuStag Mayor the title to which is clouded. Mr. Roosovolt nimh to be the first to wish to wipe off the Kist ? ttat rests upon the campaign for his re-election Per haps, now that the bill has passedfhe may feel inclined to do his best to make the law reSctive by insisting on the campaign committers tarnma back the moneys taken f rem widow nS I oipSs" O JSlnhL5lJTf y1113' kll0Wn t0 farae kJ Joslah Flynt," died at Chicago TTo onlimi 7f.V?A??""r"" W1U1 sriu-t. in fact it is be- book in the name m m r m a a r f rt r t r t a ; X" " WP. M Ho wrote a v, v' ,. " I"1.1" ol. uralt" A writer T AuMi iayunmg rosl sayg. ..Undei, th0 !' - r .niLtJiitea&item