APRIL 16, 190 .' " best and most economical means of supply, it is not only foolish but useless to seek to de stroy them. The trusts have come to stay. Instead of wasting time and energy in fighting tliem it is clearly the sensible plan to welcome them, and guide them into safe and beneficent paths. Legislation can and should be devised to extract the fangs of the beef trust and other cruel monopolies that oppress the poor by in creasing the cost of living. But the beneficent trusts and nearly all of them can be made so should be encouraged and fostered by wise and progressive laws. Kansas City Journal (rep.) RAISING THE COST OF LIVING Burdens Which the Payne Tariff Bill Will Im pose Upon the People and Benefits to Special Interests The Payne bill is distinguished from all other tariff bills in the last thirty years by a duty on importation of tea. This is a' wise provision. Every penny, less the cost of collection, upon importations of tea will reach the United States treasury. The greater part of the other duties proposed are simply in the nature of a surrender of taxation in favor of special private interests which our government clothes with power to levy tribute on the great body of consumers. To illustrate: We will import under the Payne bill probably about $500,000,000 worth of high ly protected products which will pay an average ad valorem rate of duty of at least 40 per cent, while the domestic producer, by reason of the prohibitive or restrictive duties of that bill, through the agency of the trusts, will raise to the duty line the selling price of more than $10,000,000,000 worth of like domestic ' pro ducts to the consumers of this country. In short, the bill, when enacted, will not only impose high duties upon $500,000,000 of im ports, but in practical effect will permit a few thousand manufacturers to make 90,000,000 consumers pay them tribute of $4,000,000,000 in the enhanced price of their goods. France exempted its nobles in the eighteenth century from taxation, while the peasants and the middle classes defrayed the expenses of gov ernment. We go further and delegate to a few thousand men the exclusive privilege of practi cally taxing for their own benefit the whole body of our consumers. This proposed bill of Mr. Payne's will not curb the plunder of a' single trust. It will not add a dollar to the public revenue, and revenue we must have. We have a deficit in the pay- -ment of ordinary current expenses of the gov ernment of about $90,000,000. The appropria tions for the fiscal year 1910 are $1,044,000, 000. It is evident that Mr. Payne and his asso ciates appreciated the danger that this bill would not produce sufficient revenue for the expenses of the government, because they provided for the sale of $40,000,000 of Panama bonds and authorized the issue of $250,000,000 of treas ury certificates. Our tariff makers have simply provided for forced loans to defray the current disbursements of the government rather than to lessen the burdens of consumers by reducing prohibitive duties and thereby making the bill produce a sufficient revenue. The cruel wool and woolen schedules remain unchanged except as to a slight reduction in carpet wools, while the duties on carpets of every description continue, and average from 136 per cent to 156 per cent upon the cheaper grades of carpets used in flats or apartments by the poorer people. William Whitman will still enjoy six cents per pound duty on "tops" notwithstand ing the cost of changing 100 pounds of wool to "tops" through "combing" is not five cents. Not only have the woolen men been secured in the continuance of high duties on woolens, but the glass manufacturers are to enjoy even increased profits on a considerable part of their product. The duty on the smallest size of plate glass has been increased from an equivalent of 82 per cent to 103.04 per cent. The second in size has been increased from 63 per cent to 73.3 per cent, while window glass, now made in this coun try more cheaply than anywhere else in the world by the use of recently patented machinery controlled by a single corporation, remains still protected by duties of from 80 per cent to 200 per cent. In the schedule devoted to cotton goods and yarns no material decrease in duties exists, but there has been an -increase of duty on mercerized fabrics and an Increase of duty on hosiery so great as to amount to almost a prohibition of imports. While a reduction of the duty on leather has been proposed, still the duty on women's and children's leather gloves of certain The Commoner. sizes has been increased from 30 per cent to 300 per cent over the rates existing in the Ding ley bill. There Is, however, no agitator in the world so powerful as injustice, and ere long the great body of consumers will appreciate their help lessness, and then they will unite and put an end to these oppressive duties. Franklin Pierce in the New York World. IS THE "G. O. P.'S" DOOM DAY AT HAND? Genoa, Ohio, March 15. Editor The Com moner: Enclosed you will find a clipping from a local weekly paper. The editor of this paper is an old republican, eighty-four years old and I think it quite Interesting to note the view he now takes of the republican party. He seems always to have been one of those standpat fel lows, but he now seems to think that the re publican party is about to close its career. G. E. NEIHOUSEMYER. DOOM DAY The fate of the republican party seems to be sealed. President Taft has called a special ses sion of congress to meet Monday next, to revise the tariff; which means that it will bo placed on a comparatively free trade basis. This Is to be done "to increase the revenue," that the government may have the money to continue its extravagance as demonstrated during the past ten or fifteen years. It Is a little singular that our lawmakers never think of economizing never think of dispensing with a horde of useless officeholders and cutting down the extravagant salaries of those necessary to transact the busi ness of the country. One-half the duties on lumber and the man ufacture of lumber are to be cut off. Hides are to bo placed on the free list. The duties on wool are to be greatly reduced, as well as the duties on all imported goods of every descrip tion. A duty is to be put on coffee, and that on tea Increased. Won't that bo nice? There also is talk of a revival of the war taxes on telegrams, bank checks, and so on infinitum. There is also talk of Imposing an inheritance tax and of re viving the stamp tax! All of which forebodes dire disaster to the re publican party and to the country. If such statesmanship (?) is carried out, the republican party has elected its last president. It has been a grand old party, but it looks as if Its "doom day" will soon be here. Well, we were in at its Inception and it may be fitting that we should witness Its exit. A STUPENDOUS HOLDUP . Olof Larsen, a hardware dealer of Lyndon, Kansas, makes the following interesting contri bution to tariff literature: In the March 12th issue of The Commoner, Mr. Harry Boarman of Washington makes a few remarks concerning the tariff robbery that the American people have endured a long time and are now called upon to endure in a more aggra vated form than ever for at least four years more under the monopolistic trust worshiping administration of Mr. Taft and his cabinet, made up without a single exception of old cunning, skilled and unprincipaled corporation attorneys whose life has been spent in defeating the ad ministration of our laws, justice and keeping our rich malefactors out of the penitentiary where they in all justice and decency belong, by virtue of such men's works and he assistance of the corrupt machine ridden republican party and laws and courts are now become the laughing stock of the civilized world. I very much doubt if Mr. Boarman or the majority of The Commoner's readers realize the magnitude of this stupendous hold up that we are forced to stand for. The writer has spent several years in the employ of the International Harvester trust, the last four years of which I spent having charge of a large territory for them in northern Europe, quitting their employ about seventeen months ago, am now engaged in the hardware and implement business here. During my trips to Europe I sold to European dealers harvesting machinery F. O. B. cars at Chicago as follows: Binders $33, mowers $12, hay rakes $5, and reapers for $15 less than "they are sold to American dealers, besides selling the Euro pean trade a special, stronger made and more durable machine than domestic types, in order to handle the heavy crops raised over there and compete with the substantially built European machines. Here the trust is free from any such competition as our tariff imposes a prohibitive duty on machinery, namely $85 on a self binder. All other American manufactured articles are sold abroad at about the same ratio, for instance, a certain Waltham watch movomont which costs liero $18.50 is sold all over Europe for $12, m i1 mlght so on and mention hundreds of articles. The fact Is wo can manufacture goods cheaper hero in tho United States than they can in Luropo in a great many instances. There lore there is no need of any tariff, only for tho purpose of robbing our own people for tho benefit of a few "undesirablo" citizons. In Denmark, Norway and Sweden, whero I worked, tho railroads are owned and operated by tho government and although it costs moro to operato tho roads there than here tho nominal first class passenger faro is only seven-eighths of one cent per English mile, and freight and express rates in tho same proportion; neverthe less tho roads are making a yearly dividend, a portion of which Is divided among the em ployes annually, who aro also pensioned for life after serving tho government in this capacity for a certain term of years. Nice comparison, this, hero in our boasted advanced civilization tho government in tho hands of the republican party serves tho office of tho highwayman hold ing up tho people while tho trust robbers go through our pockets. OLOF LARSEN. STRAWS -BY A WOMAN Chautauqua, N. Y., April 8, 1909. Editor. The Commoner: I enclose some political "straws." Sometime you may care to uso them. Before tho late election democrats and many republicans expressed unreservedly their bellof that if Taft was elected tho twenty-nine million dollar fine of tho Standard Oil company would never bo collected or cut in half. A staunch republican recently said to mo: "Even Mr. Bryan's bitterest enemy never Imagined tho case would end as it has recently done. The lane may be long. I think I can forcseo tho turning." Last week I asked a "doubly dyed" and most zealous republican tho following questions. I am sending you tho result: If tho democratic party had been in power for twelve years would not you and all your newspapers bo crying out over tho "damning ex travagance" of the democrats because of tho present large deficit in the public fund? If a democratic president had been elected and you knew It took moro than a million dollars to elect him, and five million moro to inaugurate him, would not you have been indignant and soundly denounced tho party for their wanton extravagance? If Mr. Bryan had been elected and had asked for and received an annual appropriation of $12,000 for automobiles and their care, would not you have "fussed" long and loud? If a democratic president had been elected and had promptly made up his cabinet from cor poration lawyers giving tho bureau of corpora tions into the hands of a Standard Oil lawyer would you not have said to express It mildly the people are not considered plutocracy con trols our national government? If a democratic president had been elected and immediately tho business men in many In dustries had reduced tho wages of labor and closed many plants would you not have laid tho whole blame of business depression and tho ills of the unemployed on the party in power? If a democratic president had been elected and in a public address, following that election, had said would you not have said that the thought behind the expression was treason to the federal constitution and that personal lib erty was far from safe? Now I can not at present recall the exact wording of that last question and have "passed on" my papers containing It to neighbors and voters, but it was a plain statement of what the legislative, executive and judicial folk must do. By legislative action, executive decree, and judi cial interpretation the constitution must be ma nipulated to fit present conditions. Am sure you have tho exact wording. Bishop Warren Candler of Atlanta makes a fine reply to this same. My Atlanta Journal is also "passed on." Well, I asked of my good republican friend a reply to these questions. The gentleman frank ly replied: "A' vigorous and a most emphatic, not to add an Indignant, yes, to each and all your very pertinent questions." ' It is a bundle of "straws." If they are of any use to "our party" and the cause of right you can use them. Not over my name, however, for they would loso their force. They are a woman's questions, and being so would ba "pooh-poohed" by many of your readers. 41 1 I m It i '! J II ' Id-' I 4 ' Iri J M ie,1 y ft. .4t.3tuVW - -. jih-.ii ,'. ,lJa itoa.wmiMohv .J rfK Miwta 1 1 miU-tM-o- a.-mjEiOi. iM4j-nAAgK'.i..ijLj.