- , -, -mr mmy-rrvi'''',m'm'-,'PVWV ''" ' W J,l'pip'llliyWfl?!)IMJM!ppJl The Commoner. 6 VOLUME ,. NUMBER 45 "W'U ' i V v7ftlfs:$Ssr I II Iw-J It. - IX I I II .1 11 11 2EMlEcy agiSA vvUIvlvVll 1 wvr iwn jii ft Mi til .m, A BRIDGEPORT, Conn., dispatch to the New Haven Union says: "In some respects the democratic victory' in which Edward T. Bucking ham was elected mayor by 3,043 is the most re markable result of a municipal contest in the history of the state. The contest hjnged upon a most drastic set of proposals for municipal reform proposed in the platform of the demo cratic party and urged by Mr. Buckingham in his speech of acceptance. A program of tax equali zation will, it is said, bo immediately carried out. The manufacturing interests and public service corporations will be most affected. There will be an investigation of the United Illuminat ing company, which furnishes the city and its inhabitants with electric current, and the pri vate water works will be acquired by the city as soon as steps necessary to that end can be. taken. The democrats captured nine out of twelve members of the common council and control that body." THE LONG contested indebtedness In St. Clair county, Missouri, has resulted in another judgment. A Kansas City dispatch carried by the Associated Press says: "Bernard J. Burke, a New York capitalist, was awarded a judgment of $662,000 against St. Clair county, Missouri, in the federal court here last night, because that county in 1870 floated bonds for the Lebo & Neosho railway, which was never built. "When the bonds were issued the officers of- St. Clair county thought the railroad would be built. Mr. Burke owned about $200,000 of the county's bond Issuance, and after hearing the history of the case the court held that he was entitled to a judgment for the full amount with interest. The controversy over the St. Clair county' railroad-'case lioe caused' endless litigation. ' All the" power of the United States courts was used in an effort to collect from the county. Tlie people elected county judges who refused to obey the court's orders, and more than fifteen county judges served jail sentences for contempt of court. The men received their regular salary while in jail." THEY ARE TO have a special election to fill the vacancy in the lower house caused by Mr. Lorlmer's election to the senate. Referring to the contest that is on over the republican nom ination the Chicago Record-Herald says: "There is a unique opportunity for the republi can voters of the Sixth congressional district of Illinois. They may, without peril to party domi nance, give an object lesson to the whole coun try. Mr. Moxley is running as the exponent of Lorimerism, Cannonisra, Aldrichism'. His em phatic defeat would mean that the republicans of even this stronghold of reactionary republi canism would stomach no more. It would in no way affect the republican majority in congress, but would act as a wholesome warning of the state of mind of the middle west. Mr.. Barnes, the Independent candidate, stands on the tariff platform on which President Taft was elected. He believes in a tariff that will protect American Industries and labor not in a tariff that Is a shield to protect extortionists. He believes that pledges should be sacred not tossed to the wind after election. He should be elected and a great warning given." THE AMERICAN Federation of Labor, in ses sion at Toronto, was addressed by Samuel Gompers. He reviewed the proceedings in the case against, Gompers, Mitchell and Morrison and denounced the court's decision as an attack upon the free press and free speech. He said: "I say advisedly that the whole people of our country are aroused to the seriousness of the situation. They realize that this attack upon a freo press and free speech among the workers is only the insidious beginning of the entire withdrawal of those rights from the whole peo ple whenever it might suit tho plans of those who dqslro to profit by injustices and tyranny. Tho response of the masses of the people to the campaign of the American Federation of Labor for tho preservation of constitutional rights shows how thoroughly our labor movement is in harmony with tho spirit of liberty and the love of justice and right which makes a nation great. The struggle is far from ended. Jternal vigil ance ever was and always will be the price of tho liberties of a people. Let no one doubt my great respect for the judiciary of our country; I. have confidence in their integrity, no matter what their decision, still they are human beings and as such liable to err. I say this with re spect not only to the three justices of the dis trict court of appeals, but with reference to the judiciary generally. I repeat and emphasize this fact, that the doctrine that the citizen must yield obedience to every order of the court, not withstanding that order transcends inherent, natural, human rights guaranteed by the con stitution of our country, Is vicious and repug nant to liberty and human freedom, and that it Is tho duty, the Imperative duty, to protest. The history of the human race has beerifull of tyranny and the denial to the people of the right of expressing freely by speech or in the press their opinion. After the people established a government they recalled that they had omitted to safeguard this vital right in framing our con stitution. Therefore, the first amendment to that instrument was that guaranteeing the right of freedom of speech and press. That means something. Wo do not need this right to please those entrusted with the authority of govern ment. Free press and free speech were guar anteed that men might feel free to say things that displeased;" WRITING IN Collier's Weekly L. R. Glavis, recently dismissed By President Taft from his post as chief of field division of the general lahd office, charges that Secretary Ballinger while land commissioner, - favored the granting of patents to Alaska coal lands of great value when the claims to these patents were under grave suspicion. The hand of the Guggenheims in tho alleged attempted grab of 5,000 acres of coal lands, containing 91,000,000 tons of coal, is traced, according to Glavis, through what are known as tho 'Cunningham claims,' it being alleged that Cunningham acted as agent for the Guggenheims, the real influence being that of the latter. In consequence of the Guggenheim influence, charges Glavis, Secretary Ballinger- then land commissioner took a friendly atti tude to the Cunningham claims, albeit Glavis alleges that these claims had been shown through his personal investigations to be of the shadiest character." MR. GLAVIS makes charges as follows: That tho land office ordered the Cunning ham claims to patent without due investigation when Commissioner Ballinger knew they were under suspicion; that while in office Commis sioner Ballinger urged congress to pass a law which would validate fraudulent Alaska claims; that shortly after resigning from office he be came attorney for the Cunningham group and other Alaska claims; that there is a statute ex pressly prohibiting a former officer of the gov ernment becoming within two years a private attorney in any case pending in the department with which he was connected which arose or was pending at the time lie was there, despite which fact President Taft approved Mr. Bal llnger's employment; that soon after Mr. Bal linger became secretary of tho Interior his office rendered a decision that would have validated all fraudulent Alaska claims, and that if there had not been a reversal of that decision at every point by Attorney General Wickersham every fraudulent Alaska claim would have gone to patent; that the Alaska coal claims are still in danger. He says: "I assert that in the spring of 1909 the land office urged me to an early trial of these cases before the investigation was finished, and when Secretary Ballinger, as the President has stated, knew "that the Cunning ham claims were Invalid. When I appealed to Secretary Ballinger for postponement he referred me to his subordinates. The department of agri culture Intervened. I was superseded In the charge of tho cases, and the man who super seded me Indorsed my recommendations, and the postponement was granted. Immediately thereafter I made, my report on the Cunningham cases to President Taft, and was dismissed from the service for insubordination." Glavis traces the history of his connection with tho Alaska cases from its beginning in the fall of 1907 to his dismissal. Ho insists that ho found much evidence of fraud, that ho laid that evidence be fore Commissioner Ballinger and Fred Dennett, first assistant commissioner, and that his official superiors constantly took an attitude of friend ship to tho Cunningham claims and of hostility to his chaTges against those claims. REPLYING TO the Glavis article in Colliers, Secretary Ballinger makes the following statement: "My attention has been directed to the text of an article purporting to have been written by L. R. Glavis, which is to appear in Colliers Weekly, and advance copies of which have been furnished by that weekly to the press. The Glavis story is a tissue of falsehoods and in sinuations, utterly unwarranted in view of the facts, easily obtained by anybody who wants them. It is not surprising that a publication which could, in pursuit of this same propaganda, recklessly, under date of October 30, reproduce a view appearing on a familiar railroad folder of the Grand River canyon in Colorado, as a pic ture of an available power site which was in danger of unlawful acquisition on the South Platte river, 200 miles away and across the con tinental divide, should be willing, without the slightest effort to ascertain the facts, to give wings to a1 story which had heretofore been sub mitted to so. great and just a man as the presi dent of the United States who, after a most care ful consideration thereof, in which he had be fore 'him the complete files of the general land office, and of the secretary of the interior, relat ing to each and every one of the matters pre sented, pronounced the chaTges, without justifi cation. The statement of Glavis has gained nothing, either as to its veracity or justification, in the interval since its presentation to the presi dent, and in view of the complete vindication by the president of myself and other officers of tho department concerned, I will make no further statement at present." CHARGING THAT the cotton schedule in tho Payne-Aldrich tariff bill permits the pro tective policy to become a plunder policy, United States Senator LaFollette denounces that schedule bitterly in LaFollette's Weekly. Under the caption, "The Disgrace of the Cotton Sched ule," the leading editorial says in part: "In the cotton schedule of the Dingley law, perver sion of the protective principle was conspicuous in all its forms. In the Payne-Aldrlch-Cannon 'downward revision' tariff, the outrages of the cotton schedule are perpetrated and accentuated. The power behind this new cotton schedule was the power of successful public plunder. And the incentive to it was more plunder. Under the Dingley cotton schedule, the duties levied on the imports of 1907 amounted to a fraction less than 45 per cent of the value of the goods imported. The duties of the Payne-Cannon-Aldrich cotton schedule applied to the importa tion of 1907 would average over 50 per cent of the value of the goods. Under the new schedule there are more prohibitive duties high er than before. Conservatively estimated the new schedule is at least 25 per cent higher than the old. There is no justification for increasing the cotton schedule. The labor cost in cotton manufacture in this country is decreasing, not increasing." THE EDITORIAL declares the average wage of cotton mill operatives in 1905 was $6.47 a week and the pay of skilled operatives but $8.53 a week. The editorial concludes: "Tho indictment against the cotton schedule and its beneficiaries is made. The case against the 'coptians of co.tton' is in. The evidence of their grafting and embezzlements is abundant and conclusive. Charged by the people with the ad ministration of a great trust fund for the benefit of 'American labor,' they loll and surfeit in wealth while the lawful beneficiary of that trust mKMKKUMtUtUKStMttKSKtttmitamaMBmmammuamiimamamMMaumtm,-. ... :