JUNE i, 1003 The Commoner. 3 EDUCATIONAL SERIES Democratic Senators and Iron Ore In the United States senate, May 25, Senator Stone of Missouri made a statement in which all democrats and Americans generally will bo interested. Senator Stone spoke on the vote of certain democratic senators in favor of a tariff on iron ore. Because The Commoner will have considerable to say on this subject, Com moner readers will be interested in Senator Stone's statement. As that statement appears in the Congres sional Record of Tuesday, May 25, it follows: DUTY ON IRON ORB Mr. Stone: Mr. President, a day or two since, Colonel William J. Bryan was Interviewed at Toledo, Ohio, and the interview has been re ported through the Associated Press. I will read a brief extract from that interview, printed in the Washington Herald: "As to the democrats who voted for the im position of duties, they have, as a rule, defended their conduct on the ground that the duties voted for were revenue duties, and they have not been high duties. Measured on an ad va lorem basis, the duty on lumber and on iron ore are but a small portion of the price. I think that the democrats who voted for the duty made a mistake." Mr. President, I have had the honor and pleas ure of sustaining cordial and rather intimate relations with Mr. Bryan for a good many years, and' those relations still exist. I can speak, therefore, in a feeling of respect and kindliness regafding him. And at this point I might say that it has become a habit for our friends on the other side of the chamber to speak dispar agingly and sometimes almost sneerlngly of Mr. Bryan. That is not a difficult or dangerous thing to do from this place of security. It does not require much courage to attack under such cir cumstances. I doubt whether senators who speak in this tone would adopt It if Mr. Bryan had a seat in this body and could reply for himself. I do not hesitate to say indeed, I take pride in saying that I entertain for Mr. Bryan not only a high respect, but an affectionate regaTd. I believe that he is one of the most masterful and commanding intellectualities who has ap peared in American public life during this gen eration. Moreover, there is none -to question the en tire integrity of his opinions, the honesty of the man, his high character, or his sincerity. But, Mr. President, all men are fallible, all men make mistakes, and Mr Bryan makes mistakes like other men. I have not always agreed with him, but I have never doubted his sincerity. I thiiik in this matter he is mistaken, honestly so; and when he says he thinks that the democrats who voted against free iron ore made a mistake I do not agree with him. Mr. President, I am one of the eighteen dem ocrats who voted to put a duty of 25 cents per ton on iron ore. The eighteen democrats who voted that way are Messrs. Bacon, Bailey, Bank head, Chamberlain, Clay, Daniel, Fletcher, Fos ter, Frazier, Johnston of Alabama', McBnery, Martin, Paynter, Simmons, Stone, Taliaferro, Taylor and Tillman. Ten democrats voted to put iron ore on the free list, viz., Messrs. Clarke of Arkansas, Culberson, Gore, Hughes, New lands, Overman, Rayner, Shlvely, Smith of Maryland and Smith of South Carolina. How the five democrats who were absent or paired, and therefore are not recorded, would have voted, I do not know. Up to this time there aTe only two questions upon which democratic senators have divided to any appreciable extent on iron ore and lumber; in fact, as a rule they have voted together and the same way. Mr. President, when the question of putting a duty on iron ore was before the senate, I waa hesitant and somewhat uncertain as to what was the right and proper thing to do; but In the end the best judgment of which I am capable, not only as a party man, but as one desirous of promoting the best policy for the public welfare, I conceived it to be my duty to vote as I did. I believe in the doctrine of a revenue tariff, and .this whether considered trom the standpoint of the constitutional power vest ed in congress to levy tariffs or from the stand point of economic policy. I believe that tariffs should be levied with the primary object of pro ducing a needed public revenue, and that the duties should bo afc widely distributed and laid upon as many articles as possible always, of course, having in view tho needs of the govern ment; and I hold that tho burden should bo made lightest upon articles of common use and heaviest upon others. Under present circumstances I doubt tho wis dom, or I might more properly say tho feasi bility, of an extended free list; but at tho samo time, having in view the needs of tho treasury, I favor admitting free of duty as many articles of common necessity as possible where tho art icles are controlled by a :nonopoly. I do not as a general proposition subscribe to tho notion advocated by some of free raw m'atorlals to those who manufacture them, and at tho samo time allow protective duties on tho manufac tured products. Succinctly stated that Is my view of the democratic position on tho tariff question. Now, in applying this view to the case of iron ore, the first fact confronting mo was that the duty of 25 cents per ton was a purely revenue duty, and In no sense a protective duty. Twenty-five cents per ton on ore is equivalent to about 10 per cent ad valorem. That means that under that rate all ores coming from the outside Into this country for consumption, ex cept that coming from Cuba, would pay a duty of approximately 10 per cent. Under our reci procity agreement with Cuba, ores from that island would come in under a reduced rate, and would pay 20 per cent less than ores from other foreign mines. In other words, placing the rate at 25 cents per ton, while foreign ores generally would pay 10 per cent ad valorem, Cuban ores would pay 8 per cent. Whether In the one case or tho other manifestly the duty Is very low. Mr. President, every since wo have had tariff laws, and wo 'have had them for more than a century, there has been a duty on iron ore. In all our tariff laws up to this time, whether made by democrats, republicans, or others, a duty has been laid on these ores. The duty of 25 cents per ton, for which I voted, is the lowest duty over Imposed upon iron ore in any tariff bill ever onacted by the American congress. Even the Walker bill, that wisest, best arranged, and most celebrated of democratic tariff measures, laid a duty on these ores almost double that provided In tho bill be fore the senate; and a duty of 40 per cent was laid on those ores In the Wilson bill. And so, Mr. President, at the very inception of my in vestigation and consideration of this subject, I was confronted with this situation and with these facts. Therefore, it seemed to me, un less some excellent reason could be given to tho contrary, that I ought to vote to impose this low revenue tax, and I felt that in doing so I was following not only democratic policy, but democratic precedent. Of course, this was a question about which democrats might well and consistently differ. The question was whether Iron ore should go on the free list, or be subject to a low revenue duty. Whenever that question as related to any article Is presented to a demo cratic legislator it is one he is at liberty to de cide according to his own judgment according to his own view of the whole situation and this he can do without in any degree violating his party obligation or ignoring his party policy. Hence, when ten democrats voted for free ore, and ten democrats, too, who have the confidence and respect not only of this body, but also of the entire membership of the democratic party throughout tho country, so far from criticising what they did, it tended rather to accentuate tho doubt In my mind as to the correctness of my own conclusion. But, Mr. President, I lis tened attentively to what was said on both sides of the chamber during the debate, and gave such time as I could to a personal examination of the matter. The chief arguments against the tax were two in number. The first was that Iron is a natural resource of the United States and that it ought to be conserved as far as pos sible. It was argued that If outside ore, mined with cheaper labor, could be admitted free, that It would be used in much larger quantities, and that to the extent that the use of foreign ore was increased to that extent the use and absorp tion of domestic ore would decrease, or relatively so, and In that way, it was said, our own supply would be husbanded. This contention, however, seemed to me so remote In Its possibility that it did not appeal to me strongly; and then against that contention it was urged, it seemed to mo with groat forco, that an almost nominal revenue tax of 8 to 10 per cent would not hav tho effect of materially limiting Importation, but that, on tho contrary, substantially aa great a quantity would como in undor that tax aa would como If tho ores were free. Thoro was a wido differenco expressed In de bate as to the amount of Iron oro in the United States. Somo placed tho amount so low that it was said that, at tho present rato of annual consumption, tho supply would bo exhausted In fifty years, while others placed It so high that it was said that, at tho samo rato of absorption, it would requiro hundreds and even thousands of years to exhaust it. I think there woro ex treme statements mado upon both sides; but, taking it all In all, I have no doubt that tho known and available supply of Iron oro In tho Unitod States Is sufficient, at tho presont rato of consumption, to last probably for several centuries. It did not seem to mo, thoroforo, that there was much forco in tho contention that oro should bo admitted free in order to conserve our resources. The second argumont against tho tax waa predicated upon tho assertion that tho United States steel corporation, known aa tho "steel trust, favored tho imposition of a tariff duty on iron oro. It was assorted that this great cor poration had acquired possession and control, through ownership and leaseholds of enormous areas of land containing iron oro, and that in consequence that corporation practically hold a monopoly of the American supply. One senator, at least, and perhaps others, assorted that the trust controlled about 85 per cent of the Iron oro area of tho United States. Assuming theso almost Incredible statements to bo truo, it waa urged that foreign oro should bo admitted free in the Interest of Independent manufacturers of iron and steel. Now, Mr. President, It is un doubtedly truo that tho "steel truBt," so called, has obtained possession and control of a largo acreage of oro bearing land, but to say that tho trust controls 85 per cent, or oven 50 per cent, of these lands is, to my mind, a gross ex aggeration. Tho senator from Alabama (Mr. Johnston) says that tho trust and its allied In terests do not in any way control as much aa 50 per cent of tho oro lands and mines of his state, and tho senator from Michigan (Mr. Smith) 'dor Clares, as a mattor of personal knowledgo, that tho trust does not control as much as 50 por cent of the oro lands ot life state. Tho same is declared to bo truo as to tho lands and mines of other states. In fact, It la affirmed that In somo of tho states, as in Vir ginia, where great quantities of iron oro exist and are mined, tho trust hp no property In terests whatever. Mr. PresP 3nt, to my mind it Is perfectly evident and clear that if we should exclude and shut out every acre of ore landa owned or controlled by the trust there would still bo left vastly moro than could be used by all the iron and steel Industries of the country, including the trust, for a century. Of course; I may bo wrong as to this, but I do not believe so. I have the utmost confidence that my esti mate In this behalf Is at least approximately cor rect. If this be so, then tho independent man ufacturers of steel and iron, if indeed there really are any such, can obtain their domestic supply on equal terms with tho trust; and if that be true, then of what peculiar advantage would free ore bo to tho "independents?" If foreign ore should bo made free, tho trust could go out Into the world and buy and import as well as the "independents," and at least upon equal terms with them. One would hold no advantage over the other. But It has been asserted that tho steel trust magnates favored a duty on Iron ore. The junior senator from Maryland (Mr. Smith) stat ed that some person, I do not know whom, who in somo way represented the trust, I do not know how, had said to him that tho trust favored a tariff duty on ore. As for myself, I have no acquaintance, so far as I have knowledge, with any person connected with the steel trust in any capacity whatever. I am sure I have never at any time received any advices, suggestions, or information from any such person not that I would have been unwilling to have heard what they might have had to say, if they had any thing to say, but, as a matter of fact, I hav never been in any way communicated with by anyone connected with the trust as to Its posi tion. I am frank to say that In my view of th situation, as I have stated it, I am unable to perceive how the imposition of this duty can possibly work to the advantage of the trust, or how free ore would contribute to its dlaadvan- tage. I must have clearer, more definite, and certain evidence than has been submitted to con vince mo to the contrary. I can not Ignore what v y 5 ". Vtl u &'