-:r-frfjrp mciin n I. The Commoner. VOLUME 10, NUMBER S 6 4 i- m m m :' i- if? y IVr. Franklin Pierce on "Keeping Still Franklin PJorco of Now York has written to Ilonry Wnttorson, editor of tho LouIhvIHo Courior-Journal, UiIb interesting letter: "I havo read with IntorcHt your talk boforo tho National Press club at Washington yester day. So nturdy a IlKlitor as you aro will surely not tako unkindly honest difference of opinion as to tho truo policies of tho democratic party. You say, 'Keep still and profit by the enomlcs mlntakoB.' I say, go at tho republican party holl-bont on tho question of protectlvo tariffs, imperialism, ship subsidies, extravagant govern ment and costly navy, corruption and all tho othor abuses which they havo been Imposing upon this American people. Tho democratic party has been keeping still altogether too long. Froo government can not exist without agita tion, and tho democratic party ought to bo a paTty of agitation. Tho alleged safo and sano part of this party naturally belongs to tho re publican party, and there It will finally bring up. "Whon tho leaders of tho democratic party aro quiot, notwithstanding hundreds of tariff bred monopolies aro soiling their products to tho American consumor for twico tho prlco which thoy would exact if tho tariff was removed; whon theso special Intorests sit at tho hearth of tho poor, charging them extra prices for coal, oxtortlng from fiu to 250 per cent moro for ovory thread of clothing which thoy wear than tho natural prlco, and robbing them day and night, year In and year out, by enhanced prices for all Iho necessaries of Hfo, and wo democrats sit around smiling as soronoly as two summer mornings, when such a condition of affairs as this exists, I say, away, away with you faithless ones. You aro recreant to your trust and aro rocroant to tho memory of tho democratic lead ers of tho past, and from tho very heavens their voices condemn you. "Slavery was tho curso of tho south before tho war, but our modern materialism, our tarlff mado monopolies and tho rulo of corrupt special intorests Is laying much heavier burdens upon your peoplo than did slavery in those days, and you southern mon havo bowed your heads to this sin and seem to bo returning to your old doctrines that society exists for tho benefit of tho fow instead of tho many; that tho millions may bo enslaved to increase tho riches of a few thousand planters and manufacturers. God savo you and bring you back to truo democratic prin ciples or send you over to tho republican party, whoro you bolong if you do not reform. "Again, you tell us that if tho scheme to causo a breach between President Taft and Roosevelt comos to a head, wo democrats may got into power. Is not this tho cry of weak ness? Wo can got into power because of a brooch botweon our adversaries? Why not got into powor bocauso you aro entitled to get into power on your willingness to do tho right thing to tho wholo body of tho .people? I havo no groat admiration for ex-President Roosevelt. I havo spont not a littlo timo examining his usur pations of powor, but Theodoro Roosevelt at his worst is tho superior of President Taft. No prosidont in our country has ever started, in tho very beginning of his torm by making such a Income Tax Cheat Thoro is danger that in the furoro of excite ment created by tho kicking insurgents and Gifford Pinchot out ot tho republican party, tho full significance of Governor Hughes' message to tho Now York legislature urging tho defeat of tho income tax amendment will bo overlooked Tho governor, as tho Now York Herald aptly puts it, "has furnished to tho opponents of tho income tax amendment tho one thing they havo been seekinga plausible argument from a highly rospectablo source." Tho argument is that the amendment infringes on states' rights bocauso it would make it possible for congress to imposo a tax on incomes from stato and city bondsIf congress should desire to do so It is not necessary just now to aTguo the question, though it is obvious, in tho first placo that congress would impose no such tax uS driven by the spur of necessity and suprted by public sentiment, and that, in the second place, something that would discourage the ten dency to issuo immense amounts of bonds which tho people must pay might not bo wholly an un mixed ovil. And it is interesting to note how humiliating exhibit of himself as has President Taft. Tho progressive element in his party ought to desert him, and I trust that they will desert him. Government with President Taft seems to bo something of a' joke. He seems to bo bent upon having a good time at the peo ple's expense. Ho is hardly serious upon any public question, and is on altogether too good terms with tho corrupt elements of this country to please tho vigilant and patriotic citizen. His attitude on tho tariff and his attack upon tho progressive republicans of tho west, his swing ing around tho circlo .at tho cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars of the peoplo's money, his easy neglect of public duties, his good-natured lack of indignation at wrong, these all may mark him as a good fellow, but not as a faithful and a great president. "Tho hopo of tho democratic party is in get ting back to tho first principles of justice and government, throwing aBlde tho superficial men who havo been directing its councils, and re solving at onco to do justice to the consumers of tariff-burdened goods and to those who are bearing tho terrible burdens of our extravagant national government. If tho democratic party twenty years ago had cleared its decks and fought valiantly for democratic principles, in stead of talking about keeping still and profit ing by the enemies' mistakes; if it had sought not only to please tho people by honeyed words and demagogic cries, but had actually created and championed real reforms affecting all tho peoplo's welfare, it would hot be sighing for power today. It is out of power because it is unworthy of power; it is out of power because it lacks leaders who believe in tho people and who believe in justice toward all the people. It is out of power because hundreds of its leaders aro actually in league with the tariff-made trusts and aro voting tho republican ticket three fourths of the time and are real republicans and ought to be in tho republican party and stay there. Theso leaders havo simply be trayed tho people, and among them aro your United States senators from the south, who have been steadily taking care of your large land owners and manufacturers, Instead of taking care of the great body of your poor people. Our millionaires are expending hundreds of millions of dollars yearly for charities of all kinds. Let us democrats advocate justice, which will make charity almost unnecessary. Let us urgo the people to fight for little things when those little things involve a principle of liberty and justice. Our forefathers fought a seven years' war from Lexington to Yorktown for relief from taxation not a millionth part as burdensome as congress has just imposed upon ninety millions of con sumers. "In short, my dear Mr. Watterson, let us be lieve in liberty and justice and in their final triumph, and hate from our boots up oppres sion and gird ourselves anew to fight for the old democratic ideals, and then there will be no uso of 'keeping still and profiting by the enemies' mistakes.' Sincerely "FRANKLIN PIERCE. New York." quickly republican leaders grab at "states' rights" as an excuse to defeat the Income tax Massachusetts republicans made the same plea --while at the same time they are preparing to take away from the states tho right to regulate the great corporations which control commerce and the necessities of life, and while they look on, with benign complacency, while inferior fed eral judges annul at their own irresponsible whim and pleasure the carefully framed laws of sovereign states. Wo desire, though, to direct attention to a Washington dispatch printed in the Chicago lribuno, a great republican paper, which franklv admits that Governor Hughes' message is on y one step in a plot to defeat the income tax which plot was clearly in the minds of the rZ publican leaders in Washington last summer 32f ,US?d ,thQ Proposed amendment to defeat tho inclusion of an income tax in the taT!LlaT; Tne Tribune dIsPatch says: Ynrwn flW dealt bJ Governr Hughes of New York to the proposed constitutional amendment authorizing the levying of an income tax has produced undisguised satisfaction among ? Aldrich following in congress and equally patent dismay among the progressives. The latter ad mit that the attempt to obtain tho adoption of an income tax amendment now is an uphill 4 fight, with the result in grave doubt.' "The outcome is believed to be exactly' what . was foreseen by Senator Aldrich last summer when he executed his flank move and headed . off tho inclusion of an income tax in tho tariff law. Senator Cummins and the insurgent re publicans had nineteen votes for the proposition in the senate and were ready to combine with, the democrats and tack the provision on to tho Aldrich bill. "Then Aldrich hastened to the White House and offered to concede a corporation tax if the president would call off the insurgents in the senate. The president accepted, the corporation tax was included in the tariff law, and a resolu tion was adopted submitting to the stato legisla tures a constitutional amendment to authorize an income tax. "Now that Governor Hughes has taken action which likely will block the ratification of the amendment in New York the progressives realize the pitfalls of the trap that Senator Aldrich laid for them. Georgia and Connecticut so far . have failed to ratify the proposition, and it is believed that the objections raised by Governor Hughes will be voiced elsewhere, with the re sult of sidetracking the whole amendment." The republican party makes a business of fool ing the people, then breaking faith with them, and then swindling them in the name of the special interests. It does these things brazenly and impudently, because it has found it can escape the penalty when election day rolls round by threatening that it will bring on a panic and make the corn stop growing in the event of a . democratic victory. The process will continue as long as the peo- . pie are willing and not any longer. Omaha World-Herald. 7 - "EDUCATE THE PEOPLE" Predicting that the prices of meats will -go even higher than they now are Harold Swift, member of the Swift Packing Company, says . that the remedy is "educate the people to the use of tho cheaper cuts of meats." This vis some improvement over the other suggestion .; . that the people be educated to do without meat,. i" altogether. 0000 "GOOD GOVERNMENT" BY THE RE PUBLICAN PARTY In the making of a- tariff law, one would naturally suppose that those least able to bear the burdens of taxation would not be discriminated against in favor of those best able to pay the tax involved in any tariff levy. But what are the facts? The man who imports $1,000 worth of diamonds pays a tax of but $100 10 per cent. If he imported a thousand shirts worth a dollar each he would have to leave at the customs house and tack onto his selling prjees $601. GO 60.16 per cent. If he decided that he would bring in $1,000 worth of champagne, one of the items upon which there is a large in crease, the tax levied by the tariff is $500. If he brought in $1,000 worth of blankets he would pay a tariff tax of $1,645.42. If he brought in $1,000 worth of paintings and statuary, all he would ?aXe t0 pay as customs duties would be $200, but if it were sugar he would pay $788.70 tax on $1,000 worth. If he brought in $1,000 worth of jew elry he would have to pay $600 tariff tax, but if he brought in $1,000 worth U.0B0S2 uSS. g00ds he would pay IfheJmiorted a ?5'000 automobile 9k5 rlflak?rB would relieve him of $2,250. If it were $5,000 worth of yarns the tariff tax would be $6,960 If the importation were $5,000 worth ? fujs the tariff tax would be $1 650 but if it were $5,000 worth of clothing that tax would be $4,330. E , If S0mNew York millionaire brines in a $100,000 ocean-going yacht the SShSWOuW be $35'000 but "the im portation were stockings the tariff col lected would be $87,950. C Q D. - ' 0000000(5J .',! i f't . 4.V 1 ,j,