g,'! 4 Th Commoner VOLUME 9, NUMBER 1) The Commoner. Some of the Mysteries of Tariff Making ISSUED WEEKLY. J O t-K fe Wll.MAM J. UnYAM CUAMM W. HllYAH Kdltornnd Proprietor, rtiblteher. IUcjiakd L. Mjctcat.tk Fdltorl&l Room and Biulnn AiseclatcKiMor. Ofllco 82-30 Bouth 12th Btre ITiitfitdnitlicrostofncc nl LJnroln, Nob., hb ECCond-clM? matter One Ymr S1.0O fcix Mciullm 00 j CIlU ol Five or mora FtrYcnr ... - .5 95e Tlirea Monllm- - Single Copy . . - Fnmi'lc Copies Free Foreign rostoRcta CentftKxtra fiUllSOHll'TIONS can bo sont direct to The Corn manor. They can also bo cent through nowspapow which havo advortlacd a clubbinff rato, or tnrougft local agents, where sub-agents havo beon appoint ed. All remittances should bo sont by postofflca money ordor, oxprcsfl order, or by bank ora.it oh Now York or Chicago. Do not end Individual ohockn, ntamps or money. 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Address all communications to THE COMMONER, Lincoln, Neb. BAILEY TALKS HIGIIT OUT IN MEETING Tho following press dispatch, was doubtless particularly gratifying to those American citi zens who realize the extent of tho lawlessness of tho trust magnates: Washington, D. C., May 13. Referring direct ly to tho United States Steel corporation, and charging that organization" with violating tho anti-trust laws of the country, Senator Bailey today, in addressing the senate on the tariff bill, declared that if the officers of the law do their duty the stool trust would be dissolved, and said that he expected eventually to see this done. He added that if the present administration fails in its duty in that respect, the people of tho country would choose other officials to represent them, and he declared his firm belief that the officers of the steel corporation would be either imprisoned or made fugitives from justice. "Just put one of these malefactors of great wealth in the penitentiary and you will see the anti-trust law enforced without further viola tions," said Mr. Bailey. "Send one of these men who may be found violating either the interstate commerce law or the anti-trust law to the pen itentiary and you will stop these violations by others. You can not do it with flues, because when a1 court fines a trust the trust fines tho people, and as long as tho punishment is meas ured in dollars and cents they will continue to violate the law Men will take the chanci of pecun ary loss in tho hope of realizing a greater pecuniary gain. Send one of them to the Sen itoiitiary and it will work like magic Tho millionaire," continued Mr. Bailey, who was receiving the rapt attention of the senators on both sides of the chamber, "values one Sine moro than his fortune, and that is his Hberty He does not love justice. Ho does not love that peace of mind for which others struggle But ho loves his liberty." "ubbj. mui Mr. Bailey said that he expected the United eharged with the MmtotoA f to conform to their demands. I have im nhtt faith that the American people will call Into their service another set of men from J party. The stalwarts of tSdayou a became the insurgents of that day and the insurgent of this generation would bo the stalwarts of the r;heeGSfei0cnan g? to " " ' -nt A Republican Senator Points Out Some of the Absurdities of the Republican Party's "Sacred Policies" Following aro extracts from the speech de livered in the United States senate by Senator Dolliver (Rep.) of Iowa: Tho protective tariff system has nothing to fear from the fireside of the Iowa homestead. On tho other hand, it finds there its most disin terested advocates and its most impartial judges. For half a century our, people have defended it with their votes on every election day, with no direct concern of any large significance in any of its schedules and no purpose to serve except the general prosperity of the American people. What I have said of Iowa is true, in an im portant sense, of tho upper Mississippi valley, and I can not help thinking that there i.a radi cal defect in that party leadership which dis misses the voice of that great community, fear lessly expressed in both houses of congress, with a cynical sneer about the weakness of public men who are governed by temporary political exigencies. For it ought not to be forgotten that what we are doing here must be submitted lo the American people a jury of unnumbered millions, already impanelled, with this case un der consideration. It is not the same jury which passed upon the tariff act of 1897; It is the most momentous fact in our national life, as tho late Senator Hoar suggests in his "Auto biography of Seventy Years," that within this period the whole field of American industry has undergone a revolution. The independent work shops of American labor stand no longer as they appeared in the magnificent vision of Alexander Hamilton when he laid down the doctrine that the competition of domestic producers would guard the community against all the evils of ex tortion. The inspiring retrospect of Mr. Blaine in his "Twenty Years of Congress," in which he recounted the triumphs of the protective doctrine in the perfect fulfilment of Hamilton's predic tion, already needs a good deal of revision to bring tho narrative up to date. Tho Situation in 1807 In 1897, when the Dingley tariff law wa3 enacted, the consolidation of our Industrial sys tem into great corporations had not fairly be gun. The business men who appeared before the ways and means committee of the house were an anxious company; they spoke for silent fac tories and the dead ashes of furnaces without fire and chimneys without smoke. They repre sented unemployed labor and idle capital; they belonged to the old industrial regime, now al most obsolete in nearly all great departments of production, and they received the treatment which they would receive now freely at my hands if I had tho power to give it to them. It is a grim failure to comprehend what old Dr. John son used to call "the sad vicissitudes of things" when the leaders of a political party summon their followers to practically re-enact the tariff of 1897 under the conditions which prevail co day, and when men are derided because, having helped to frame that law, they seek to have it re-examined in the light of present-day expe rience. Is it possible that a man, because he voted for the Allison tin-plate rate of 1889 and heard poor McKinley dedicate tho first tin-plate mill in America, can be convicted in this chamber of treachery to the protective tariff system if he desires that schedule re-examined, after seeing the feeble enterprise of 1890 grown within a single decade to the full measure of this market place, organized into great corporations, over capitalized into a speculative trust, and a'' length unloaded on the United States Steel com pany, with a rake-off to the promoters sufficient t buJ te R Island system? If a transaction like that has made no impression upon the mind of congress, I expose no secret in saying that It has made a very profound Impression on he thought and purposes of the American people'. Tho Special Duty of Congress I repeat, therefore, what I said the other day. that tho duty of this congress Is to reduce the margin of protection provided in tho Dingley rates wherever it can be done without substan tial injury to tho productive enterprises of this market place. It is our special duty to take un those schedules which represent the largest in vestments of protected capital and at least take out of them the rates that are now everywhere known to be extravagant and unnecessary, which rise so far above the level of our real industrial needs as to bring the policy of protection into ridicule without doing anybody any sort of good. I recognize the peculiar preparation of the sen ator from Rhode Island for that work. He has already successfully applied sound principles to some of the excesses of the iron and steel sched ule. I do not know that he has gone far enough, but he certainly has gone in the right direction. He has failed, in my judgment, in those sched ules which relate to the textile industries, and it becomes the duty of somebody not helplessly preoccupied with local interests to bring this failure to the attention of the senate and of the American people. I need not add that in doing so I shall speak with perfect good will for those who differ from me and with perfect charity to those whoe unconscious political bigotry makes it hard for them to recognize, even in the senate chamber, those rights of free opinion without which our deliberations are a humbug and a fraud. A Scale of Duties Twenty Years Old Turning now to the duties on yarns and woven and knit fabrics of wool, I desire to call the attention of the senate to the abuses which have grown into the schedules, many of them without the knowledge or consent of the finance committee of the senate. I spoke the other day about the difficulty of understanding these schedules and alluded to evidence now at every body's hand that they were so complex and un intelligible that only one man on the committee was able to comprehend them. My friend from Rhode Island was instantly on his feet to say that it was not the woolen schedule but the duty on tops that bewildered the late Senator Allison and the late Senator Piatt of Connecti cut, two trained and alert students of our prac tical affairs, whose names do not suffer by com parison with the greatest statesmen who -have illustrated the intellectual dignity of American public life. In the name of sense, If these men could not understand the top question, what excuse is there for seeking to belittle the efforts of others who in trying to serve their own day, and generation are engaged in exposing the trickeries that in the course of a half centurw have found hiding places throughout the woolen schedules? The chief .fault to be found with this schedule of the pending bill lies in the fact that it adopts ai,BCe f utleB twenty years old without tho slightest effort to readjust them so as to miti gate the Inequalities which they have imposed upon more than one department of .the Woolen industry in the United States. Another Joker I desire now to speak of some of tjie morbid and abnormal influences which have gone out from schedule K to vitiate the tariff system of the United States. The high rates imposed 0oUJ?0Ut; schedule have been peculiarly attractive to laborers in other departments oi! the textile vineyard, and it Is easy to trace tho XnlT8 fgr.e ln'mo than one schedule fraDmnd to protect these Industries. Manufactur er J? ? ST feXtiie deDartments have been per ?l fIU their ef?rts t0 get tne advantage oft S nnSnJ?-on ro?1Sn g00ds Malers of silks, of cottons and of furs, not satisfied with the own rates, have sought shelter among the slip pery provisions of the wool tariff. We have al pn?fnyST?o,n !lW SPitably the manufacturers of cotton have beenreceived. It takes only a slight ijfwfw11 ofie sIlk schedules to see how tton&X. pnts itself Int0 P"1 ton?1t0n2SiVlnUrerB of fur Stents, not con aocnr,?J a0fUll aept tne modest 35 per cent accorded them by the present law, have been J1" h the increase of their rato t dn f i Cent provided they contain no wool. or It fiT7h;tller t1 are entitled to that h JiiZJX d0 know tnat ey ought not to in ?i i?i n accunt the presence of wool Sm ovii grt0P elswhere in the garment to tion ?n i,i r1?6 Wo1 BChedle, where, in addi- w T per cent ad valorem, they will SSESi SgUS tcoPenflatory of 44 cents per SJnf ? JS WteIght of tue wnole garment. Tho root of this abuse lies in schedule K, where- --- -c. i -1. . - -wi- -fri.i.di vmt i)Xn 2-2XiE!SZS3B 'il.t I K ,