AUGUST 18, 1911 Ward, N. C; Chas. J. Mauror, Mo.; Geo. W. Gerhart, Pa'.; "W. B. Bradford, Cal.; W. R. Young, Wash.; G. H. Hosklns, 111.; W. T. Colo man, 111.; J. E. Genlson, Conn.; T. A. Randell, Tex.; W. H. Grant, 111.; K. S. Kennedy, Wash.; A. L. Hardy, Mo.; Wm. A. Parr, Ariz.; Jno. A. Harp, Fla.; J. T. Goodwin, S. D.; S. A. Gray, Tex.; J. F. Smith, Okla.; S. P. White, Ky.; C. A. Chamberlain, Mich.; F. D. Lamb, N. Y.; Martha Weisanburg, 111.; W. C. Wilson, Tex.; B. S. Gillespie, Neb.; JaB. A. Smith, Del.; J. B. Wal lace, Kan.; G. B. Ballard, la.; Joe McCarville, la.; Oscar Kerns, Mo.; J. E. Sprigg, Va.; Leon Bartlett, la.; W. R. Smith, Ala.; J. H. Starkey, Okla.; G. Clark, Mich.; J. F. Davenport, la.; C. Wesenbach, O.; W. H. Lester, Okla'.; A. J. Krutsenger, la.; J. A. Statler, Kan.; N. M. Proctor, Tex.; S. E. Bethel, O.; A. J. Cleve land, la.; G.eo. W. Hughes, la.; Lous. S. Malono, Pa.; Jacob Schopp, O.; J. T. Zlmmer, 111.; C. K. Hawley, La.; T. H. Kuhn, Ind.; Wm. D. Holi day, D. C; L. A. Betzer, Neb.; W. Ballard, Mo.; David M. Tice, Md.; Jno. Gresham, W. Va.; J. C. Bigham, Mo.; Wm. P. Gregg, N. Y.; F. J. Hanlon, N. J.; F. L. DaviB, Okla.; J. B. Mowery, Wash.; F. D. Turner, W. Va.; W. 0. Thormiley, O.; L. B. Ikard, Colo.; L. G. Loch, Pa.; Jno. W. Crockett, Ark.; M. C. Hamilton, Tenn.; G. H. Lillard, Cal., 5; F. A. Yindra, Wis., 10; A. A. Piper, Maryland, 25; V. B. Weeks, 111., 5; T. A. Willmore, Neb., 5; Mack Rittenbury, Ala., 29; H. P. Wharton, Ariz., 5; B. B. Guilford, 111., 6. Travis Sanders, Ariz.: Enclosed please find money order for one dollar ($1.00) covering two years' subscription to The Commoner, under your recent agreement. A friend of mine here has facetiously termed The Commoner my bible. However I can, without scruple, read my politi cal articles of faith from it. It may not be amiss to suggest that in responding to my sub scription you may find yourself in the peculiar role of one who "casts pearls before swine." Not so much in my particular instance but rather collectively in the weekly pilgrmage of The Commoner to your constituency in Arizona. Since the unfortunate condition resulting from congressional consideration of statehood for 4 Arizona-has unhappily fdrced us fntd the unenvi able' position of beiiig considered "vandals, sav ages, mobs, etc.," and wholly unfit for 3olf- gov ernment. Such terms of opprobium, it seems to me, to be palpably unfair to be applied to a great community of people living in juxtaposition to other cognate divisions of the union, living in such felicitous enjoyment of a great nation's favor. Withal it may be- that my dissenting from the propriety 'of justness of the opinion as held by such worthy men of the administra tion as President Taft and Attorney-General Wickersham and Senators Bailey and Root and -others equally distinguished in our national congress, is further specific evidence of the cor rectness of the estimate placed upon the people of Arizona. However, the particular averment of the people of Arizona to the contrary, as ex pressed in the ratification of their constitution, seems to be void and of no effect. The judicial recall, Mr. Bryan has been the innocent cause of bringing down upon our too progressive, if not too devoted heads, the tempestuous, fretful criti cism of a nation, of course expressed through its appropriate official mouthpieces. They have not denied us the privilege of formally entering con gress in the assertion of a constitutional right but they have rendered that assertion nugatory by denying us tho constitutional incident. Yes, there is an immediate solution, Mr. Bryan, but the acceptance of the pending condition Is tanta mount to voluntarily submitting to political emasculation. A, M. Garrett, Iat Please find enclosed draft for '$35,0.0 to pay for thirty-five two-year cam paign subscriptions. Pretty fair is it not for one small town in a' republican state and part of these subscribers are republicans? J. A. Relnbold, Pa. Enclosed pleased find $7.00 for which you will send The Commoner for two years to the following names and addresses. Chairman Underwood accuses Congressman Ja-mps of "talking to the galleries," because the Utter objects to a fifty-year franchise to a power company. Now will Mr. Underwood rise to a Question of personal privilege and amid the plaudits of tho house explain to what part of the audience he was talking? The Commoner. 7 What Happened to the New York World A STORY OF THE GREAT MONEY MONOPOLY The murk that arises from Wall street so colors tho business atmosphoro of New York that it affects the vision of nearly everybody on Manhattan island. To the Now Yorker, business is good or bad, according as tho stock ticker is actlvo or sluggish. When the clique which control tho money trust and stock inarkot find things coming their way, then New York believes that prosperity is hero. Whon Wall street finds it hard to fool tho people into playing Its game. Now York says hard timoB are at hand. With New York, business is Wall street and Wall strcot is business. One notable exception to this view has been the Now York World. For years it has carried on a campaign that rose almost to tho dignity of a crusade against tho monoy trust. It has repeatedly, in news stories and in editorials, told of tho operations of tho monoy monopoly to control indus trial activities and to crush out those who stood f or economic independence. During the last few weeks tho World has boon particularly activo In this respect, showing how the control of credit by the money trust had been used by tho Morgan interests to seizo the comont business, to form the harvester trust, and to drivo tho Tennessee Coal and Iron company Into the arms of the steel corporation. But something has happened to tho World. It has seen a light, dazzling Indeed, blinding. The change that has occurred Is shown by tho following: Editorial, Now York World, July 31, 1911: Editorial, Now York World, Juno 17, 1911: Our neighbor, tho Times, confesses its in ability to understand what Governor Woodrow Wilson means by "the money monopoly." "If he means a monopoly of tho various forms of currency," says the Times, "whore does it exist, how Is it acquired, how Is It exerted and what' are the evils attending it?" All of tho Times' questions are easily answered. "Tho money monopoly" to which Governor Wilson referred has Its headquarters in Wall street, but Its Influence extends over the entire country. It Is acquired through the con trol of banks, trust companies and life insurance companies. It is exerted through its power of life and death over credit, a power which 13 given by Its control over those vast sums of other people's money. Its evils are both economic and political. The same day the Times ingenuously asked Governor Wilson what ho meant by "the money monopoly," the newspapers announced that Mr. Morgan's Bankers' Trust company had bought from Mr. Morgan's Equitable Life Assurance society Its holdings in the Mercantile Trust com pany, and that by this transfer the aggregate assets of the banks dominated by J. P. Morgan & Co. exceeded $1,000,000,000. This $1,000, 000,000 is not Mr. Morgan's money, but it is in the hands of the Morgan interests, which say who can borrow it and who can not borrow it, how it shall be used and how it shall not bo used. When Mr. Morgan took over the Equitable from Thomas F. Ryan, he paid more than $2, 600,000 for stock that can legitimately earn only $3,514 a year, but what ho really bought was control over the Equitablo's $400,000,000 of assets and $80,000,000 of surplus. After this control was acquired the statement was made in one of the financial newspapers that no man could borrow $1,000,000 In New York, whatever the security, if Mr. Morgan objected to his hav ing it. No doubt this is true, for there are few Independent bankers anywhere who would care to incur the hostility of the money trust that has been built up by the Morgan-Standard Oil interests and their allies. The "money monopoly" controls more than money and credit. It controls oil and steel and railroads and all manner of corporations by means of interlocking directorates and 'a well-defined community of Interest. Its political activi ties are as far reaching as Its financial activities, working through railroad lawyers, corporation lawyers, country bankers and political bosses. In fact, there has been created in Wall street what is practically a central bank, more for midable than tho old United States bank ever was or could be, wholly irresponsible in its use of power except as restrained by the merely technical provisions of the banking laws, and more dangerous politically than a regime of Nick Biddies such as Jackson crushed. Governor Wilson, we think, could tell the Times a great deal about this money monopoly if it is really ignorant. Unless common report Is mistaken, tho governor fs already on tho monopoly's blacklist, and It has decided that he would not be a proper candidate for president Wo hold no brief for tho money magnates. Tho World was tho first nowspaper to exposo and oppose tho menaco of what is called tho monoy power represented by Mr. Morgan and his financial associates. Wo have denounced re peatedly tho wrongful use of that power, Wo print olsowhero an extract from Gover nor Wilson's Harrlsburg speech concerning what ho Is pleased to designate as "tho monoy monopoly," with comment thereon by tho Springfield Republican. ,Tho charge made by Governor Wilson, with consummate phrasing, brovity and lucidity, without regard for tho facts, is that "the groat monopoly in this country is tho money monopoly," and that its power is used for per sonal ends by a fow men who "chill and check and destroy genuine economic freedom." How like Mr. Bryan's languago of sixteen years ago! Tho Springfield Republican points out that there aro In tho United States 20,000 banks in dependently owned and operated and engaged In actlvo competition for business. Governor Wilson misrepresented tho money situation. Ho has painted a vivid picture of misused concentrated power not warrantod by facts. Why has ho done this? Suroly so able and intelligent a man would not presume to teach tho people on a subject of which ho Is ignorant. Can ho have any purpose save, tho exposition of truth and tho direction of public thought into safe channels? Thinking men must deplore such unjustified statements on the part of Governor Wilson. It is especially regrettable because unquestionably there is a general tendency toward exaggera tion of any public wrong a tendency to yield or appeal to public clamor instead of to public in telligence. Some public men magnify existing evils and create others. They affright tho un thinking and unintelligent with visionary wrongs. These hectic imaginings aro peculiarly pernicious when tho public is excited over real abuses. There is a popular prejudice against great corporations and against men controlling enormous financial resources who undertake large capitalistic enterprises. Why does Governor Wilson add to the clamor with the baseless and preposterous claim of a money trust of 20,000 banks spread through forty-eight stages? Is this true statesmanship? Is it tho part of a man of courage, conscience and conviction? None realizes better than he that false and futile agitation Incites passion. Only demagogues foment unreasonable fears and prejudices. Statesmen correct them with candor. Most of the American people aro busy. They hayo neither tho time nor the Inclination to gather and comprehend facts bearing upon political and economic questions. They do not analyze and correlate them. They take opinions from men whom they trust. The responsibility of wise, honest guidance rests upon gifted lead ers like Governor Wilson. Tho trend toward irrational leadership makes it Imperative that ho disdain tho appeal to the unthinking and prejudiced, and adhere rigidly to conscientious thought and truthful speech. He can not afford to mislead. He should speak to enlighten, never to arouse passion or prejudice. of the United States. The day after Governor Wilson delivered his Harrisburg speech the World said in an editorial: "Compared with tho profits of the money trust, tho earnings of industrial trusts on their In vested capital appear paltry. It is not from oil, steel and tobacco that the greatest gains come, but from money changing and the exploitations of the proceeds of Industry. "As Woodrow Wilson said in his speech at Harrisburg last night, 'THE GREAT MONOPOLY IN THIS COUNTRY IS THE MONEY MONOPOLY. ' " The capitals are not ours. Nor yet are they Governor Wilson's. They are the New York World's. It Is plainly ovident that since June 17 something has happened to tho World. What was it? 'Philadelphia North American. 'i Art ". o'Jto.- ". I if - 1 J 4