MAT 15, 11 0 The Commoner. 5 ti "RpiiWicans in Peril Pray Cannon to 7 M ' '' $ .''- Under tho headline "Republicans in Peril Pray Cannon to Act . the Chicago Record Herald in its issue of May 4, prints from Waltor Wellman, its Washington correspondent, a dispatch from -which tho following extracts are taken: "It is at last dawning dimly upon tho re publican leaders of congress that they are in danger of losing the next house of representa tives, and pqrhaps the presidency as well. It is CONCEDED THAT THE PRESENT SESSION, .highly-" important from the political point of view because it immediately precedes the gen eral elections, HAS BEEN A FAILURE. Tho .party in power has missed its opportunity to gain the good will and approval of the country. Something may be done, hastily and rather desperately, in the closing hours, but it will .not avail much in the way of restoring popular confidence in a leadership now pretty thoroughly .discredited. "I have said the leaders are dimly realiz ing the danger which confronts them. The word was well chosen. They are just beginning to have a vague consciousness of the truth. Even yet they do not fully realize it. They have PROCEEDED UPON THE THEORY that the country is republican and THAT THE PEO PLE WILL STAND ANYTHING. Many of them have not even yet got their eyes opened. But the rank and file of the republican membership of. the house is laboring under no illusions. THOSE WHOSE DISTRICTS ARE AT ALL DE BATABLE ARE NOW IN SOMETHING LIKE A PANIC. THEY HAVE HEARD FROM HOME. They have heard of the mutterlngs of discontent and disapproval among the people. They know what a hard fight lies before them in their efforts to secure re-election. They have tried to tell Cannon, Payne, Dalzell and the other members of the house oligarchy how things stand. The speaker and his lieutenants smile and smoke and tell the boys not to get excited: they have heard such cries before; It will all cdihe. out Tight in the end. "The well-nigh Inexplicable attitude of Speaker Cannon and the other leaders of the house on the wood pulp question HAS DONE THE REPUBLICAN PARTY MORE HARM THAN ANYTHING ELSE THAT HAS HAP PENED DURING RECENT YEARS. It is not that the country cares so awful much about this one item of pulp, Important as It is and unjust as are the extortions of the trust. But the people, through the actions of the leaders on this matter, are getting their eyes opened to the actual policy of the republican bosses when ever the 'tariff! is involved. THE PEOPLE WANT TARIFF REVISION. THEY EXPECT IT. They have been demanding It a long time. Again and again they have been told to wait till after this campaign or that election, or for something else. Now it has all crystallized in what appears on the surface to be a tacit agree ment all around that revision shall be taken up at a special session to be called immediately after the coming election. "Representatives of a great industry, the newspaper press, come to Washington and ask the leaders to give patient hearing to their plea for reform of a certain part of the tariff. Instead of being met with politeness and fair treatment they are treated most cavalierly. They are accused of selfishness. Their wit nesses are pilloried by the lieutenants of the republican speaker as if they were some sort of malefactors proposing an unlawful action in stead of a simple reform of the tariff in the in terest of justice. The investigation, so-called, is not fair, impartial and thorough. It is an In vestigation held for a purpose and that pur pose not the. ascertainment of the truth with a view to action, but the framing of an excuse for non-action. "All over the country the people are watch ing these maneuvers. They understand them. They are now asking: IF THE REPUBLICAN LEADERS WILL TREAT THE NEWSPAPERS OF THE COUNTRY IN THIS MANNER UPON THE EVE OF A PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN, WHAT IN HEAVEN'S NAME WILL THEY DO TO THE REPRESENTATIVES OF OTHER IN DUSTRIES WHO GO TO WASHINGTON SEEK ING REFORM. AND JUSTICE AFTER THE ELECTION IS OVER? What chance will the 'buslnesa. men and the consumers and the pro- Act" See Chicago Record-Herald ducers have to secure a fair hearing alone, much less actual legislation In the way of lower du ties? And as they consider these things, tho people come to tho conclusion that THE RE PUBLICAN LEADERS NOW IN THE SADDLE ARE DETERMINED TO FOOL THE PEOPLE AGAIN AS TO THE WPIOLE MATTER OF REVISION. Thero will be just enough of promise of revision In the action of congress and Jn tho national platform to tide over the exigencies of the campaign and after election some excuse will bo found to broak tho promise, or postpone it again. If the republicans are put back In power In the lower branch CANNON WILL AGAIN BE SPEAKER. Thero is no way of stopping that. And with Cannon as speaker the people are beginning to fear tariff revision that means anything of actual reform will be impossible. "Thero may possibly bo some attempt at revision, JUST ENOUGH TO MAKE A RECORD AND A PRETENSE of redemption of Cio ante election pledges. But it is much MOR:i3 LIKE LY TO BE A REVISION UPWARD THAN A REVISION DOWNWARD higher tariff duties Instead of lower. The truth is the republican party, not the masses of it but the men who are sent here to act as its leaders In congress, have become bourbons on the tariff question. They live In the past age. They do not keep step with the advance of public opinion. They still think it their solemn and sacred duty to keep alive that old co-partnership between tho republican bosses and the eastern manufactur ers which has made every republican tariff in the past. The leaders of tho present believe In repeating the practice of the past, which was to permit associations of manufacturers in, the eastern part of tho country to write the tariff. And the manufacturers, accustomed to that sort of thing and in the past paying smartly in tho way of campaign contributions for the privilege, have not neglected their opportunities and would not neglect them now. Naturally they write higher duties instead of lower. The con sumer is not talien into account. The demands of business to have duties adjusted to world conditions to the end that the United States may have a fair chance in the race for foreign commerce are not taken into account. "Already the warning has been sounded, and by no less a personage than Senator Aldricih, the high priest of high tariffism in the uppor branch, chairman of the finance committee and bulwark between 'the interests' and any possible harm that may come to them through tariff revision. Mr. Aldrich, perceiving that revision Is a possibility that the republicans may have to promise it in order to carry the election and after the election may have to do a little some thing toward making their word half-way good has pointed out that the revenues are decreas ing and the appropriations increasing, and if this goes oh much longer the government will have to raise more income by putting up the tariff on imports. This is an old excuse. It has been worked many times. And evidently tho leaders of the party in power are MAKING READY TO WORK IT AGAIN. Their attitude is like this: 'None but stupid fools would de mand any revision of our sacred tariff. But if there are a lot of such fools and if we must do something, to appease you, all right, we'll give you revision upward. HOW WILL YOU LIKE THAT? And perhaps after you have been given a dose of higher duties you will learn to keep your proper place and let us and the eastern manufacturers run the tariff to suit ourselves.' "This question of tariff reform is one of the two great issues before the American people upon which President Roosevelt has shown no capacity or courage. for leadership. The other is financial reform. He is in favor of both. But he has never made a fight for either. When he came Into the White House one of tho first plans he formed was to force reform of the tariff, but as soon as he ran against the form idable entrenchments of the stand-patters he abandoned all serious efforts to secure action and has never renewed them. He has been busy in other directions and it is not probable the people will blame him for not making a fight which would involve him In such bitter warfare, with the congressional leaders that probably nothing else could have, been achieved. Tho fact that as bravo a fighter as President Roosevolt, thoroughly believing in tariff reform, knowing tho iniquity of parts of tho present system, realizing how great an obstacle it is to tho progress of American commerce, how un just it Is In spots to tho millions of consumers, has nevertheless not dared to broak lances with the defenders of It, shows how hard tho peoplo Tvill have to cry for this reform and how hard they will have to voto for it before they get it. 'The danger to tho republican party Is that many of tho peoplo will come to tho conclusion that the only way in which gonuino tariff reform can bo achioved is by putting another party In power. To this plight tho reactionary and In solent leadership In congress has brought tho republican party. "WALTER WELLMAN." '' BIAKING $100,000,000 WITH THE STItOIOi OF A PEN Tho reports current in Wall Streot for some time that tho capitalization of tho Standard Oil company of Now Jersey tho parent organiza tion was soon to bo Increased from $100,000, 000 to $500,000,000 have been confirmed. Sine his return from Bermuda H. H. Rogers, the vico president and controlling manager of the corporation, has been engaged with a corps of lawyers in working out tho details of tho re capitalization plan, which will bo announced to the public as soon as conditions warrant. "Steps already havo been taken," said a man who is conversant with tho insldo workings of Standard Oil, "to Increaso tho capitalization In proportion to tho earnings. It is tho policy of tho Standard Oil company to bring tho capital of tho subsidiary and parent organizations to a figure more in keeping with tho actual assets. It may come next year and it may come sooner." In speaking of next year the Standard Oil man used characteristic Standard Oil tactics. The increase in tho capitalization, as a matter of fact, is due at any time. That tho knowledge of tho proposed in crease has not been confined solely to the inside Standard Oil circles is shown by tho extraordi nary advance Standard Oil stock has made since the panic. During the troublous days last win ter the stock sold down to 390. Then, camo a steady rise. In tho last month the stock has gone up more than 100 points. It sold on the curb today at 614. The capital stock of tho Standard Oil Com pany of New Jersey is divided into 1,000,000 shares, which havo a par value of $100 a share. On the basis of price of stock today tho valuo of Standard Oil capitalization is $014,000,000. But when the dividends are paid they naturally are figured by the public not upon tho market valuation of the stock but upon the par value. Tho net profits of tho Standard Oil company last year were $85,000,000. This figures at eighty-five per cent of the capital stock at par and many enemies of the corporation have con tended that it is, on Its face, exorbitant. That this complaint is in a measure justlr fled has been admitted by Mr. John D. Archbold, the public champion of the Standard Oil com pany, and one of its brainiest officers, In several magazine articles of late. Mr. Archbold con tends that the profits when figured upon the actual investment of the corporation are not more liberal than the profits of other great cor porations that have been builded up by modern business methods. So, in a measure, the forthcoming increase in capitalization is in deference to public senti ment. If tho corporation had been capitalized at $500,000,000 last year, the profits would have been figured on a basis of seventeen per cent. The plan is to give each of the stockholder of record in the present Standard Oil company five shares for each of the shares he now holds. Of course the price of stock will go down 'In mathematical proportion, and on the basis of today's market each share be worth only $123 . Instead of $614. But the holders will get the same actual amount of profits. There is another consideration In the pro posed increase In capitalization. The stock has sold as high as $842 a share. That was in 1901. At $842 a share or even at $500 it is beyond the reach of the general stock trading public. . f ? '!'! '!:!' Ml . .1 t in t M i it M r. U A "fl ! a v u - -.0 Utitt tiUmikiomimm Himi i ! i ii in in i mi i mi mWmmkMmluiimiiMmmM mttUfMij. iii .- i ITIitMliEtrtB . .",. a........!? . - !- ... . -,L : ' " '