The; Commoner VOL. 16, NO. 9 JO UBMM k In m fe m m President Wilson Reviews His Administration . i t (Continued from Page One) a footing of equality with our own In respect of 'tho1 terms of competition, and a tariff board lias boon created whoso function It will be to keop tho relations of American with foreign business and industry under constant observa tion for tho guidance alike of our business men and of our congress. American energies are now directed towards tho markets of tho world. ItKCOKD OF PKOMI8K8 KEDEEMED IN CON HTKUCTI VE JjEGISIjATION The laws against trustB have been clarified by definition, with a view to making it plain that thdy were not directed againBt big business but only against unfair business and tho pretense of competition Where there was none; and a trade commission lias been created with powers of gu'idanco and accommodation which have re lieved business men of unfounded fearB and set thonl upon the road of hopeful and confident en terprise. liy the Federal Reserve Act tho supply of cur rency at tho disposal of active business has been rendered elastic, taking its volume, not from a fixed body of investment securities, but from tho liquid assets of dally trade; and these assets are assessed and accoptod, not by distant groups of' bankers' in control of' unavailable reserves, but by bankers at tho many centres of local ex chango who aro in touch with local conditions everywhere. ' ' Effective iheasures have been taken for the re-creation of an American merchant marine and thorovival of the American carrying trade iri dispensablo to our emancipation from tho con trol1 which foreigners have so long exercised over tho opportunities, the routes, 'and tho meth ods iof our commerce with other countries. Tho iatcrstato commcrco commission has been reorganized to onablo it to perform its great and Important functions more promptly and more, efficiently. We. have .croated, extended and .im-. , proved tho aorvlaot of tho -parcels. post, v.., ., , 1S0 .much wo, hay e done for, business AVhM other, party has .understood the task so well, or executed it so intelligently, and energetically 1, What other party has attempted it at all? The republican leaders, apparently, know , of ,no moan of nssisUnjg bVusiness but "protection." How, to stimulate it and ,pnt it upon a new foot-i ing of enorgy and enterprise thoy have not sug gested. For the farmers of tho country we havp vir tually created" commercial credit, by means of the federal reserve act and tho rural credits act. They now have tho standing of other business ihon'in tho money market. We have successfully'' regulated speculation in 'futures" and. estab lished standards in the marketing of grains. By an 'Intelligent warehouse act we have assisted to make tho standard crops available as never .be fore both for systematic marketing and as a se curity for loans from tho banks. We have greatly added 'to tho work of neighborhood-demonstration on the farm itself of improved meth-1 ods of cultivation, and, through the intelligent extension of tho functions of the department of agriculture, have made it possible for the farmer to learn systematically where his best markets: are and how to get at them. yjio workingmen of America have been given a "veritable emancipation, by tho legal recogrii- tibrt 'off man's labor as part of his life, and not a ,m6j:p "marketable commbdity; by exempting labbr''6rganizatlons from processes of thecburts which 'treated their members like - fractional parts 'hf mobs and not like accessible and rV sp'dtf.slb'le individuals; by releasing our seamen fr$m 'Vuvdluntary sorvitude; by making ade- qriataprovision for compensation for industrial accidents; by providing suitable machinery" for mediation and conciliation' in industrial dis putes and by putting tho federal department of 'IrtboV at the disposal of the worklngman when . in seaVch of work. . V'oave effected tho emancipation of the children of the Country by releasing -them from hu'rtfirt labor. Wo hnvo instituted a system of national aid in the building of highroads such as thocoUntry has been feeling after for a cen tury. :6Wg imVQ bought to equalize taxation by nieansof'an equitable inoomo tax. We have taken the ateps'that ought to have beentaken at) the'outset to open up tho resources bf Alaskan W lia6- provided for 'national . defense upon'u scald- Hover bdforo seriously 'proposed- upon the responsibility of an entiropolitioal party.-' We-ha-ve tfirlVcn I ho tariff lobby from cover -and obliged it to substitute solid argument for pri vate influence. This extraordinary recital must sound like a " platform, a list of sanguine promises; but it is not. It is a record of promises made four years ago and now actually redeemed in constructive legislation. These things must profoundly disturb the thoughts and confound tho plans of those who have made themselves believe that the demo cratic party neither understood nor was ready to assist the business of the country in the great enterprises which it is its evident and inevitable destiny to undertake and carry through. The broaking up of the lobby must especially dis concert them: for it was through the lobby that they sought and were sure they had found tho heart of things. Tho game of privilege can be played successfully by no other means. This record must equally astonish those who feared that tho democratic party had not opened its heart to comprehend the demands of social justice. We have in four years come very near to carrying out tho platform of the progressive party as well as our own; for we also aro pro gressives. There is one circumstance connected with this", programme which ought to be -very plainly stated. It was resisted at every step by the in terests which the republican party had catered . to and fogtered at the expense of the country and these same interests are now earnestly prayr ing for a reaction which will save their privil eges, for the restoration of their sworn friends to power before it is too late to recover what the have lost. They fought with particular desperation and infinite resourcefulness the re form of the banking and currency system, know--ing that to be the citadel of their control'; and mqst anxiously are they hoping and planning- for the amendment of the federal reserve act by the concentration of control in a single bank which the old familiar group of bankers can keepun dertheir eye.and direction. But while the "big men" who used to. write the tariffs and com- mand the assistance of the treasury have been hostile, rail hut -a few with vision, the .aver age business man knows that he has been deliv ered, and that the fear that was once every day In his heart, that the men who controlled credit and directed enterprise from the committee rooms of congress would crush him, is there no more, and will not return, unless the party that consulted only the kbig inert" should return to power, the party of masterly inactivity and cunning resourcefulness in standing pat to resist change. ' . REPUBLICAN PARTY CAN NOT 3IEET THE CONDITIONS OF THE NEW AGE Txi?vpul,lican party is ust the Party that CAN NOT meet the new conditions of a new age . It. does not know tho way and it does not wish now conditions. It tried to break away from the old leaders and could not. They still select its candidates and dictate its policy, still resist change, still hanker after the old conditions, still know no methods of encouraging business but the old methods. When it changes its lead-" ers and its purposes and brings its ideas up to . date it will have the right to ask the American people to give it power again; but not until . then. A new age, an age of revolutionary i change, needs new purposes and new ideas. i In foreign affairs we have been guided bv't principles clearly conceived and consistently lived up to. Perhaps they have not been fully comprehended because they have hitherto gov erned international affairs only in theory iiot m practice. They are simple, obvious, easily stated, and fundamental to American ideals. We have b'eon neutral not only because ft ' was the fixed and traditional policy of the United"' States to stand aloof from the politics of BurSS and because we had had no part either of action or of policy in the influences which brought on the present war, .but also because it was man" festly our duty to prevent, if it were noslibla tho indefinite extension of the fires of hat J JS desolation kindled by that terriMe conflict and,' seek to serve mankind by reserving our strengt and our resources for tho anxious and difficult 22" 2 l!" n halinS which mwtfoM ". wmJiave to uuild its house- rights can be vindicated by claims for damn when the war is oyer, and no modem nation p decline to arbitrate such claims; but the fun mental rights of humanity can not be. ThG cZ of life is irreparable. Neither can direct viok tions of a nation's sovereignty await vindica tion in suits for damages. The nation that vio lates these essential rights must expect to be checked and called to account by direct chal lenge and. resistance. It at once makes the quarrel in part our own. These are plain prln ciples and we have never lost sight of them or departed from them, whatever the stress or the perplexity of circumstance or the provocation to hasty resentment. The record is clear and consistent throughout and stands distinct and definite for anyone to judge who wishes to know tho truth about it. Tho seas were not broad enough to keep the infection of tho conflict out of our own politics The passions and intrigues . of certain active groups and combinations of men amongst us who were born under foreign flags injected the poison of disloyalty into our own most critical affairs, laid violent hands upon many of our in dustries, and subjected us to- the shame of di visions of sentiment and purpose in which America was contemned and forgotten. It is part of the business of. this year of reckoning and settlement to speak plainly and act with un mistakable purpose in rebuke of these things, in order that they may be forever hereafter im possible. I am the candidate of a party, but I am above all things else an American citizen. I neither seek the favor, nor fear the displeasure of that small .alien element amongst us which puts loyalty to any foreign power before loyalty to the United States. . t -1 M I. , The rights:' 6f "'our oWn citirpno f . did-this was-our guiding principle: that property GUIDING PRINCIPLES,., QF ' AlftHXjgTRA. TION'S POLICY IN JRDGXICAN AFFAIRS While Europe was' at war our own continent, one of bur own neighbors, was shaken by revo lution. '' In that matter, too, principle was plain and it was imperative that we should live up to it if we were.'to deserve1 the-ttfust of any real pa'rtisan of the "right as fr'eo men" see it. We haVe iirttfessed to' 1elieve, &ndj we "do 'believe, that the people of1 small 'and -i weak' states 'have" th'b right to expect to W& 'dealt (with exactly as the people of big and' powerfuKstates would be. We have acted upbn that principle in dealing with the people of Mexico. Our recent pursuit of bandits into Mexican territory -was no violation of that principle. We ventured to enter Mexican territory only because there were no military , forces in Mexico that could protect our border from hostile attack and v our own people from, .violence, and we have committed there no single act of hostility or in terference even with, the sovereign authority of the republic of Mexico herself. It was a plain case .of the violation of our own sovereignty which could not wait to ,be vindicated by dam ages and for which there, was no other remedy. The authorities of Mexico, were powerless to prevent it. Many serious wrongs against the property, many irreparable wrongs against the persons, of i Americans have been committed within the territory of Mexico i herself during- this confused revolution, wrongs which ,could not be effectu ally checked so long as there was no constituted power in Mexico which was in a position to check them. We could not act 'directly in that matter ourselves without denying . the Mexicans the right to any revolution at all' which -disturbed us and making the emancipation, of her own people await our own interest and' convenience. For it Is their emancipation that they are seeking, blindly, it may be, and as yet inef fectually, but with profound and passionate purpose and within their unquestionable right, apply what true American' principle" you will.- apy principle that an" American 'Would publicly avow. The people of Mexico have not been suf fered to own their bwn country br direct their own institutions. Outsiders,' men 'out of other nations ahd with interests too often alien to their own, have dictated -what their privileges and opportunities should be and who should control their land. 'their lives, and their re sources, some 'ofthem' Americans, pressing tor things they coWtfever have got in their own country. The 'ivfeJclan people are entitled to at tempt their lfljertyI'from such influences; ami so long as I b&ve1 a'ny thing to do with the ac tion of our gregovernment I shall do every thing in my jldWGP'tti prevent anyone standing in their way. tf Hffow'ihat this is hard for some persons to understand1; but it is not hard for in plain people of the United States to understand f- V-