--V 2 The Commoner. m- i". sr tif fcj DEFINING THE ISSUE Governor Wilson is rendering splendid' ser vice when ho defines as clearly, as bo does the trust issue now befqr.6 the country. He ,; says: "I have been reading recently sorao ports of several of tho messages which Mr. Roosevelt sent to congress, in wliich bo adverted to this peculiar matter when explanation concerning it was under consideration, and in almost; every Instance ho says that the trusts havo come about through the natural development of the busi ness conditions in tho United States,' that it is a mistake to try to . oppose the processes by which they havo been built up and that' there fore the only thing we can do is to accept thorn as inevitable arrangements and make the best of it by regulation. "Big business is necessary and natural. The development of business upon a great scale is inevitable and, let me add, desirable. But that is a very different matter from the development of the trusts, because tho trusts have not grown. They have been manufactured, and they have been manufactured not by natural processes, but by the will, the deliberate planning and will of men who were more powerful than their jieig bors in the business world. I deny tho claim that the trusts are inevitable. I want to .urge upon every voter in this commonwealth to re ject all rhetorical assertions and get down to the hardpan of thinking. "In this zone of industry we have indepen dent concerns, in many instances running, upon veritable capital by efficiency and economy, and. we also have great giants carrying, staggering under tanks of water, not based upon tho effi ciency, not based upon economic principles at all, not based upon the natural and inevitable processes of business, but based upon the de liberate combination of power, to see to it that competition may not be necessary and monopoly may be secured. "Let mo tell you, these gentlemen, wh'en they cite instances across the water, are speaking in ignorance of the actual conditions acrdss the water. There is a ste.el trust in Germany, but the trust is only at the bottom and notTat tho top. The trust is a sort of pool for the-bale of the cruder forms of Jron and steel, .and the manufactured forms bought from this trust are manufactured by independent concerns which actively compete with ono another. And already they are feeling the disadvantage, the smother ing disadvantage of having to go for all their crude material to the trust at tho center. "They get their crude stuff when the men who make the crude stuff get ready to send it to them. It isn't a matter of their markets. Their markets may be crying for the manufactured product, but they havd got to wait. Their con venience is subordinated to monopoly. "I want to leave you with this thought, that no party except the, democratic party ever pro poses emancipation from the special favors of tho tariff and the special control of tho trust." .Governor Wilson, 'is right. Legitimate cor porations should BE REGULATED, but trusts should bo prevented. He emphasizes a Very im portant truth, namely, that a private monopoly Is not an economic development but merely tho outgrowth of powers exercised through law made corporations. Ho also speaks truly and strongly when ho says that the democratic party is tho only party that "proposes emancipation from tho' special favors of the tariff and the special control of tho trusts." His blows are telling ones. THE TRUST ECONOMICALLY WRONG Louis D. Brandeis of Boston 1b using the pages Of Collier's Weekly to combat the economic failures which are being put forth in defense of the Perkins-Roosevelt platform of accepting the trust as a permanent economic advance. This is Mr. Brandeis' summing up: "First No conspicuous American trust owes Its existence to the desire for increased efficiency 'Expected economies from combination'' figure largely in promoters' prospectuses; but they have never been a compelling motive in the; forma tion of any trust. On the contrary, the .purpose ul vuuiumiug uas ouen ueen to curb efficiency or even to preserve inefficiency, thus frustrating the natural law of survival of the fittest. "Second No conspicuously profitable! trust owes its profits largely to superior efficiency Some trusts have been very efficient, as have some independent concerns; but conspicuous profits have been secured mainly through con trol of tho market through the power of monopoly to fix prices through this exercise of th4 taxing power. "Third No conspicuous trust has been offi- cient enough to maintain long as against the independents its proportion of tho business of the country without continuing to buy up, from timo to time, its successful competitors. "These three propositions are, also, true of most of the lesser trusts. If there is any excep tion, the explanation will, doubtless, be found in extraordinary ability on tho part of the managers or unusual trado conditions. "And this further proposition may-be added: "Fourth Most of tho trusts which did not secure monopolistic position have failed to show marked success or efficiency, as compared with independent competing concerns" ROOSEVELT ON THE TARIFF It is only two years since Mr, Roosevelt pre sided at a republican convention in New York and without protest allowed the following In dorsement of Mr. Taft and the Payne-Aldrich bill: September 28, 1910 "We enthusiastically indorse the patriotic and statesmanlike leader ship of William Howard Taft and declare our pride in the achievements of his first eighteen months as president of the United States. Each succeeding month since his Inauguration has confirmed the nation in its high estimate of tiis greatness of character, intellectual ability, study," common sense, extraordinary patience and per serverance, broad and statesmanlike comprehen sion of public questions and unfaltering and unswerving adherence to public duty. "The Payne tariff law reduced the average rate of all duties 11 per cent by increasing the duties on some luxuries and articles not of ordi nary use, making, however, no increase on any common food product, it turned a national de ficit into a surplus." What relief can we look for from oppressive tariff taxation if Mr. Roosevelt is elected. A BULL MOOSE AT BAY For a while after his nomination Mr. Roose velt plunged around, charging everything in sight but he has at last commenced'tb1 show signs of pain the arrows of the enemy'liave pierced the skl& 'He is explaining Mr. Pericins' support, the HaWiman letter, the swallowing up of the Tennessee Coal and Iron company, and his in activity on the trust question. His explanations do not. explain but the fact that lie is now on the defensive shows that he feels that he is losing ground. The rank and file of the new party are honest, earnest men and they can not, when they understand the program, indorse the Perkins Roosevelt scheme to make trusts permanent. That may be good for Mr. Perkins' children, but it would not be good for the children of the rest of us. u A SUDDEN SILENCE When charged by the, friends of Mr. Taft with having arbitrarily tmt,a stop to the proposed prosecution of the 'harvester trust, Theodore' Roosevelt replied that at the cabinet meeting in which tho matter was discussed, Mr. Taft acquiesced in the president's plan and gave it; support. Going further into details Mr. Roose-i velt gave the date of the cabinet meeting and' mentioned other subjects that were discussed. Then ,came the information that v not only did,1 Mr. Taft not acquiescpMn the plan, and did not commend tho stand taken by tho president, but was, in fact, not even in Washington on the: date mentioned, nor during several weeks be-' fore and after. . After which revelation Mr. Roosevelt sud denly found something else to talk about. MR. PERKINS CHILDREN The cartoonist can find an excellent theme in Mr. Roosevelt's innocent explanation that Mr. Perkins political activity is duo to the latter's interest In his children. What a picture Mr Roosevelt carefully guarding the Interests of the trust magnate's children, each child, a stock holder by inheritance, but hiB back turned to the children of those who. are the victims of the' trusts! Under which flag, the flag of the trust magnate, or the flag of those who Relieve in' equal rights to all and special privileges to none? WOODROW WILSON'S GREAT VICTORY ; Governor Woodrow Wilson won a sweeping? victory in the New Jersey primaries in his fight against tho proposed ' nomination as United States senator of James Smith, jr. An Associ ated Press dispatch says that Representative Hughes, tho Wilson candidate for senator re ceived a plurality of 20,000.. .All honor to' Governor Wilson for his splendid campaiEn' against the system and its bosses. VOLUME 12, NUMBER 33 , GOOD TIDINGS Dr. Charles W. Eliot, former president of Harvard, has returned from a trip around the world with the opinion that for ono reason or another neither tho classes or tho masses in foreign lands are partial to the idea of disarmament. The principles of peace are really growing among men as individuals in China and Japan for instance, he noticed a strong and general desire for peace. Dr. Eliot says: "I look for a greater and grander work for The Hague tribunal from year to year, and I would bo willing to prophesy that countless lives, wide-spread misery, and unknown mil lions of money will be saved the world by the application of the grand principles of arbitra tion. ' "I would not be willing to come out and state broadly, that the nations are taking seriously the idea of universal peace. There is a strong senti ment for it everywhere, of course, but such a sentiment is as old as the hills, and has been found more or less in all times and climes. Men individually all over the world do less fighting today than-, at any other time In 'the history of the world; and they have a greater and more abiding respect for the in stitutions of peace, the courts and legislative bodies than they ever had. This- is perhaps largely because of a natural growth toward a better civilization and a higher Christianity, and not so much due to -any special peace propa ganda. Some of the leaders in vari ouo countries are sincerely devoted to the splendid principle of arbitration, and are op posed to war on various unselfish grounds, but I fear, that the time is not yet here when the truly strong men the men "who. are in power or who may be in power tomorrow are un equivocally on the side of reason and humanity as opposed to the sword and savagery." It Is true, however, that the "truly strong men" do not always -recognize revolutions even when they are rat hand. Nor is progress entirely dependent upon them. The fact that the arbi tration idea is growing in favor is anv index to the advancement of the principles- of peace. Dr. Eliot's statement with respect to Japanese feeling toward Americans ottgnt to be repro duced in every American he'wspaper. On this point he says: ' r ' "It is criminal for politicians, newspapers or others to give voice or lend ear to statements to the contrary. Japanese statesmen are not ordinarily willing to speak of a possible war between their country and the United States, so very absurd do they regard the idea to be. In spite of the treaty, offensive and defensive to a degree, between Great Britain and Japan, there can be no question but that the Mikado's empire, government, and people',' is actuated in all things by even a friendlier feeling for us than for Great Britain. Remember, I am not saying that England or the English are dis liked that would be an untruth but I am simply using the comparison to indicate the de gree of good-will in which tho 'American gov ernment and people are held. ' "Two days .before leaving Japan I was re ceived, by the emperor. '" He spoke in the friendliest terms of the United States." A LUOn) INTERVAL Editorial from Henry Watterson's Courier Journal November 6, 1908: "The result shows that we oversized the spiritual and undersized the material 'in the hearts and minds of the people. They ivore deaf alike to precedents, to reason and to eloquence; for npthihg could sur pass, as" nothing has ever equalled, the personal cnvass of Mr. Bryan; its wondrous lucidity and power of statement; its splendid intellectual and physical endurance; its unanswerable argu ment. Nor did Ignatius of Loyala sweep through a world of incarnate evil bearing the Cross of Jesus to triumph with greater force of inspira tion a'nd truth than did the heroic soh of Ne braska traverse a land gaping with curiosity, but too busy over its work and, play to consider any danger to the immortal soul of its con stitutional fabric. "There ' is something yet "better than being president of tho United States, and that is the real sense of duty done. Tllden will live in his tory, when Hayes is forgotten, or execrated. History will say of Bryan that in three great popular movements, clouded sometimes by errors of judgment and obstructed always by corruption as we know by insurmountable corruption he led sublimely i that he set be fore his countrymen the standards alike of God and Truth; and that he went down beaten with clean hands and high repute, carrying with him the homage of patriotic men." ' i iJJMjVjJ, i4